Texas TOY Ceremony

Okay, it’s a few months after the fact, and I didn’t shoot this myself… I just searched for Texas education videos. And there it was, the Texas TOY Ceremony over at the Sheraton around Thanksgiving of last year.

I actually stopped by this luncheon on my way back from Johnston one Saturday. It was inspiring to see the kindness and enthusiasm and optimism of the teachers. I think this should be required attendance for the entire SBOE and every senior administrator at the agency. And, truth be told, all of us who get a little grouchy when the House Pub Ed hearing lasts more than 4 hours. This is one reason why we do it.

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Cheerleading Scandal Immortalized

It appears the McKinney cheerleading scandal will be immortalized in a cable movie.

Two things bummed me out:

First, it’s been a whole FIFTEEN YEARS since the Wanda Holloway Channelview scandal. How old does that make me? How old does that make Holly Hunter, for Pete’s sake? Has the daughter in question hit menopause yet?

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(Although I must say Holly Hunter has aged a lot more gracefully than Priscilla Presley.)

And, second, I couldn’t come up with a good spoof off the top of my head, like a movie about a smackdown during an Academic Decathlon Super Quiz or big claymation hand-to-hand combat scene over a yearbook theme or such. It just doesn’t have the same ring to it. Bummer.

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From Mr Rogers To Gray Rape

Yes, it’s just one of those days… From Mr.Rogers to Gray Rape and Teacher-Student Sex.

I’m looking at two particular Broadsheet pieces in Salon.

First is this clip:

Download I find the comments on this one more interesting than the predictable outraged feminist rant.

Yeah, it’s a terrible thing that rape happens and it is rape, but women and men who avoid getting drunk at parties probably don’t put themselves in the high-risk category for possible rape or accusations of rape. (And, yeah, it probably should apply to men as well as women.) As one letter writer wrote, it’s the same reason most of us learn to park in well-lit garages. You aren’t at fault when you get attacked, but you can minimize the risk. Duh.

But the comments on this piece get even more interesting, include some thoughts on how poor communication skills often create misunderstanding between the genders; how certain rape studies have colored our subsequent coverage of the issue; and the different interpretations between men and women looking at the same conclusions.

If you’re interested, here’s the original Los Angeles Times op-ed piece by Heather McDonald. (As for the crisis hotline situation, I found in college that most of the calls I took were either student depression or some guy with a fetish for feet. No lie.) I don’t know if I agree with everything she says, but here is the latest DOJ report on acquaintance rape on college campuses.

Salon’s Broadsheet also goes after a report on teacher-boy sex that aired on ABC News this week.That was the topic of criticism on Broadsheet, but here’s the ABC News overview story.

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(Side note: I have now watched, ripped, uploaded and posted a video. I have the competency of an 8-year-old girl.)  

The reporter makes the point I would: Why are we worried about fingerprinting? If we really wanted to address the issue, wouldn’t we combine such a massive effort with some type of psychological testing? Another “duh” from me. The possibility that a teacher is going to make a poor decision of such magnitude is not going to be revealed by a fingerprint registry, although I have given credit to TEA for noting that, at least, a registry guarantees a person’s criminal record will travel with her from school district to school district… via a centralized DPS database.

Obviously, the difference equated between male and female teachers on this issue could certainly lead me down another rabbit trail. I know it’s wrong to say it — I don’t excuse it — but the younger the victim, the creepier it gets for me.

I Like You Just The Way You Are.

Let’s make the most of this beautiful day.

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Farewell, neighbor.  

15 Reasons Mr Rogers Was The Best Neighbor.

Sweater Day is March 20th.

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Considering the What Ifs of Various Races

I was driving home from the television station tonight thinking about just what races are going to be important on March 4th.

I typically insist I am not in this business for the politics. The usual platitudes bore the life out of me. Yet here I am, at almost 2 a.m., writing about politics and political races next week. Who woulda thunk?

First off, I’ve got to wonder about the Dawnna Dukes race over in House District 46. I never thought that the vote for Craddick was a fatal flaw — heck, what Dem didn’t vote for Craddick at one time or another with the exception of Lon Burnam? — but with one scandal after another piling up lately, I have to wonder: Are we about to lose the only African-American in the Travis County delegation? I think old timers are frustrated, even irritated, with Dukes for not jumping off the Craddick bandwagon late in the last session.

When Pat Haggerty marched out during that surreal late-night session, why wasn’t Dukes with him? When Patrick Rose — who has sided with Republicans as often as Dems — finally chose to disengage from Craddick, why wasn’t Dukes by his side? For someone with impeccable timing, Dukes made some serious mistakes, one local Dem leader told me at an endorsement session.

The cynics say that Dukes has jobs tied to Craddick allies. Well, heck, if that was true, surely the woman would be in a better financial position than she is right now. Even now, I have to wonder how much she has benefited from her position as a lawmaker. Frankly, many of Austin’s high-profile minority inner-circle contractors got a piece of the CTRMA pie. I think one person told me it was the cost of doing business in the city and to gain the goodwill of the various stakeholder groups. It was a lot of goodwill…

I will make this observation: I think Dukes squandered  a key opportunity last session to cement her role in the Travis County delegation. Of all the members of the Travis County delegation, it was Dukes and Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos who stepped up to represent the interests of state employees. With Gonzo’s departure, Dukes had every opportunity to step up to the plate. And, to my recollection, nothing much happened. I would have expected her to be front and center on the TIERS issue…. if only to provide a voice for state employees. 

I think the chips will fall where they may. Brian Thompson has stacked up endorsements — and a rather half-hearted Statesman endorsement — but it’s still not clear to me how many of those people who endorsed Thompson actually live in HD 46. I guess we’re going to find out next week, aren’t we, just how gentrified East Austin has become. Austin’s African-American base already is unraveling to the point where we can’t draw a single-member district. (Sigh.)

The second race… of course… is Pat Hardy’s primary challenge for her State Board of Education seat. I don’t have a clue how this one is going to turn out. Does Barney Maddox have the network of supporters – either with or without Terri Leo — to provide a significant challenge to Hardy? I don’t know.

Hardy often has said she pulls part of her base from Democrats. If that’s the case, then she may have some worries about the primary. What Democratic primary voter is going to crossover in this election cycle?

Going back to look at Hardy’s election history… if that’s any clue in all this… She was elected in 2002 in a field of 3 candidates and re-elected unopposed in 2004. I see her closest challenger, Warren Norrad, has run for a number of offices. So I don’t find him to be of the same ilk as Maddox, who now has a key supporter in Donna Garner, who saw her proposal for English-language arts curriculum go down in flames during the recent SBOE meeting.

I haven’t talked to Hardy about her primary strategy, but I would suspect Hardy would call in reinforcements if she expected to be taken down by a serious challenger. And by reinforcements, I mean the teacher groups who recognized her support of Diane Patrick.Looking through the archive, I was reminded that the Patrick-Grusendorf showdown was a high-dollar endeavor. Hard to believe it was only two years ago.

Since I was sitting here, I went ahead and pulled Maddox and Hardy’s campaign finance reports.Maddox had to loan himself $55,000, which doesn’t suggest to me he has a strong base. Looks like there is some major mailings going on in the Maddox campaign. On Hardy’s side, Hardy has raised very little and spent very little. Stay tuned to that race. I’m wondering how it will turn out.

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