Business Group Pledges $500,000 Campaign for Common Core — Who Will It Really Benefit?

Who supports Common Core? Who opposes the new national standards? Are the critics right or left?

A new group in New York has been created to spend $500,000 to promote Common Core. This article says the group consists of business organizations but its prominent supporters are the Gates Foundation, the Helmsley Foundation, Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst, and the Gates-funded Educators for Excellence.

Allegedly, business wants “higher standards” because the CCSS will close the skills gap and produce more qualified workers. Is there any evidence for this belief? No. On the first round of Common Core testing, 70 percent of students in New York failed. The failure rate for minorities, English learners, and students with disabilities was even higher. Among students with disabilities, for example, 95 percent failed the Common Core tests.

Where is the evidence that Common Core will make all students college-ready? There is none.

Would business groups be equally willing to invest in a campaign for equitable school funding, reduced class sizes, universal pre-school, pre-natal care, after-school programs, school nurses, and a raise in the minimum wage? All of these have a solid research base. They are proven strategies for reform.

Do the business leaders think that CCSS makes those investments unnecessary?

It is certainly appealing to fiscal conservatives to believe that higher standards can somehow magically solve the problems of huge economic and social inequality. CCSS, they imagine, can compensate for the fact that nearly one-quarter of our children live in poverty.

Someday, maybe 12 years from now, they think, all children will be college-ready, even if they live in squalor or have no home, even if they attend overcrowded classes with inexperienced teachers. Are they gullible? Or do they believe the public can be easily deceived? Remember when the same groups believed that tougher standards, tests, and accountability would raise up all children and “no child” would be “left behind”? We spent billions on tests and consultants, on closing schools and opening schools, and that didn’t work out.

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

'Game Of Thrones'-Style Map Giving Bastard Surnames To Every U.S. State

If you’re a “Game of Thrones” fan, keep reading. If you’re not… just keep reading anyway, this is fun.

A bastard-born child in Westeros (the land where “GoT” takes places) is given a surname based on the geographical area they are from. Those bastards from a northern city like Winterfell are given the last name Snow — like Jon Snow — and those from a southern area like Dorne are given the surname Sand. It’s freezing and snowy in the north, hot and dessert-y in the south… see where we are going with this?

So, if you’ve ever wondered or discussed what your bastard surname would be if life really was like “Game of Thrones,” wonder no more.

A wild, wild genius (thank you, Randal Olson and Redditors all around) took the time to create a map of the nifty fifty United States and assigned a last name befitting each state. The wee ones born out of wedlock in Wisconsin and Louisiana arguably get the shortest ends of the stick, but a tiny tot from Idaho would be a little gem.

Have a look and find our your bastard surname below!
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Attack on Titan Cosplay is a Wearable Spoiler

This is your last warning, Attack on Titan newbies. Drabblemeister’s ball gown is a very clever costume, but if you haven’t seen the first episode of the anime or read the second issue of the manga, go elsewhere.

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All clear? Here you go:

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As you can see the cosplay is a reenactment of the scene that pushed protagonist Eren Jaeger to become obsessed with the eradication of Titans. Seeing their mother be eaten alive has that effect on people.

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Breach Drabblemeister’s blog for more pictures of her costume.

[via Fashionably Geek]

This Week On The TC Gadgets Podcast: Apple/Beats, LG, And A $200 3D Printer

gadgets140530a Apple bought Beats, for $3 billion. LG released the next generation of the G2, which is aptly named the G3. Snapchat’s Evan Spiegel had a few old emails leak that don’t paint him in the best light, and we stumbled across a new 3D printer that is available at the low, low price of $200. Read More

Google Said To Be Planning Android TV Launch At I/O In June

android-tv Google has long been rumored to replace Google TV with Android TV, a new crack at the home media market with more roots in its mobile OS and less of a separate focus, but a new report from GigaOM today suggests we’ll see it very soon; in fact, it’s apparently set to make its debut at the I/O developer conference taking place at the end of this month. The Android TV platform… Read More

An iPad-Controlled Drum Machine That Plays Whatever You've Got

If you’ve ever realized how much potential a box of dry pasta has as a shakeable instrument, you’ll immediately understand why Lorenzo Bravi’s Hit the Beat drum machine is so wonderful. Because whatever you’ve got on hand, from dry beans to bottle camps, suddenly becomes a real-life drum sample.

Read more…



How Verizon Tricks You Into Paying for the Privilege to Pay More

How Verizon Tricks You Into Paying for the Privilege to Pay More

Earlier this month, the FCC voted in favor of a pretty thoroughly terrible proposal that would kill net neutrality as we know it. A proposal that would give broadband companies an absurd amount of powers that they themselves delineated. A proposal that would also give Verizon (and broadband carriers in general) the ability to act as internet gatekeeper—playing favorites and charging whatever the hell they damn well please.

Read more…



How to Hack a Car and Control It From 1500 Miles Away

Imagine this: You’re cruising along when the car suddenly brakes. The doors lock. It starts accelerating backward. A hacker hundreds of miles away has taken control of your car over the cellular network. This is how it happens, as explained by a video from the good folks at Motherboard.

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Google Stars bookmarking app makes brief appearance on Chrome Web Store

Google’s Stars bookmarking app showed up ever so briefly on the Chrome Web Store, and then disappeared again. The app, which was leaked early this month, seems to allow you to “star” web pages from Chrome’s address bar. You’d then be able to organize…

iTunes Radio eyes local reach with broadcast content and focused ads

The Beats Music purchase may help Apple compete with Spotify, but iTunes Radio remains focused squarely on Pandora. According to a report from The Information, Apple is said to be working on local advertising while serving up content beyond the scope…