Technical_Hair_4383
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9qcd7q wrote
Somebody get DeSantis and Abbott on the phone -- they can scout up some residents double-quick and have them on buses here inside of a week!
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9qc541 wrote
Reply to comment by homeostasis3434 in People are leaving Mass. Thoughts? by Original_Musician103
Your motivation to leave is pretty common. So when people point to states like Massachusetts and draw the wrong conclusions ("it's high taxes! etc) it's wise to consider that housing costs are the real driver. It's why a higher minimum wage can be a game-changer for so many people -- they can stay at their jobs and in their homes.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9gm0r0 wrote
Reply to comment by RedditSkippy in Over 60 degrees last week. In the 30s this week, with sn[o]w [c]oming on Wednesday night. by TheConeIsReturned
And on Cape Cod spring lasts a week.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9f188x wrote
Reply to comment by H2Omekanic in Anti-Suspension Laws and lack of consequences are taking a toll on our K12 schools by bostonteacher90871
I take it you have never seen a school official deal with a parent who has hired a lawyer. Do you know how much your local district has had to spend to deal with lawsuits brought by parents?
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9f0yx4 wrote
Reply to comment by H2Omekanic in Anti-Suspension Laws and lack of consequences are taking a toll on our K12 schools by bostonteacher90871
First, cops aren't leaving in droves. See HEREfor a more measured take. Second, the violent crime rate has been dropping for decades. NYC, for instance, long a Democratic stronghold, has become a very safe place to live -- safer than Indianapolis.
Perhaps we don't need as many of those cops as we used to. Perhaps municipalities can spend the money more usefully on other services.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9bljl8 wrote
Reply to comment by Mindless_Arachnid_74 in Anti-Suspension Laws and lack of consequences are taking a toll on our K12 schools by bostonteacher90871
It was recently amended to make suspensions more difficult for administrators to implement.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9b62aj wrote
Reply to Anti-Suspension Laws and lack of consequences are taking a toll on our K12 schools by bostonteacher90871
Admin have been using suspensions freely or not depending on their inclinations for a long time. The law is MA makes suspensions without an attempt to re-engage the students a thing of the past. See https://vdhboston.com/massachusetts-legislature-amends-student-discipline-law/
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j8pbou7 wrote
Reply to comment by Workacct1999 in Massachusetts has the 2nd earliest average high school start time in the country (7:38am) by LuckyLaceyKS
I'm reading Johann Hari's book, Stolen Focus, and it is hitting home with me.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j8ong0a wrote
Reply to Massachusetts has the 2nd earliest average high school start time in the country (7:38am) by LuckyLaceyKS
Our local district moved the high school starting time to 8:45 am. Now if they'd only ban cell phones, the students might have adequate attention to stay focused in class.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j60ogj8 wrote
Reply to Someone at work tried telling there’s schools with litter boxes for students who identify as cats or furries. Does anyone have first hand knowledge of this? Buy first hand knowledge have you seen it yourself or at least a photo? I’m looking for someone to say I heard it from so and so. by lectrician7
Yes! Also, we don't say the Pledge of Allegiance, even though it's required by state law! /s
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j3t53dz wrote
Reply to comment by AxemanFromMA in Why do I need to inspect my car and need 2 license plates? Why can’t MA be like the other 30+ states by AxemanFromMA
Front plates bring in revenue for the state (both in license plate fees and tolls) and save money on insurance costs, as others have pointed out on this thread. As a motorist and a cyclist, I am 100% in favor of front plates.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j3qlc83 wrote
Reply to Why do I need to inspect my car and need 2 license plates? Why can’t MA be like the other 30+ states by AxemanFromMA
Have you seen our potholes?
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j2i4vn3 wrote
Reply to Why do we keep on increasing the number of roads even though statistically more roads create even more traffic? by [deleted]
I see very few new roads constructed here on the Cape, except for new developments, which are private. Most of the construction here on the roads are improvements -- widening to include bike lanes and pedestrian sidewalks, putting in roundabouts to increase safety by limiting speeds. Local businesses here hate any construction, of course, because it limits access temporarily in a seasonal economy, so they fight it like hell.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j24w9kw wrote
Reply to Violent Crime Rates of Massachusetts Municipalities (2020) (OC) (re-upload based on constructive criticism) by potkea
Wow! Points to SE Martha's Vineyard for nearly as much violent crime per 100k as Pittsfield, Springfield and Fall River!
Submitted by Technical_Hair_4383 t3_zv7g0y in massachusetts
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j0wy2tl wrote
Reply to Considering moving from NJ to MA to teach by hamdenlocal
I find the licensure folks in MA difficult to work with, mainly because they are understaffed. Massachusetts schools offer varied working conditions and salaries. SPED teachers are in short supply.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_j08tt9g wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
I teach mainly psychology these days, and the graduates from my classes are not behind the counter at Starbucks, lol. You seem to form your opinions based mainly on personal experience and conjecture. Have a nice day.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_j08lr1w wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
What evidence do you have for your claims? That's what I ask my history students.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_j04335f wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
>What period are you talking about? How long has it been since you observed a history teacher doing anything in the classroom? Or looked in a recently published curriculum? Or examined state history frameworks?
>
>Most well-qualified high school teachers now use primary documents regularly and teach students to read them critically. That's teaching the basics, I think. And there is more support now than ever. Here is one of the foremost institutions working with teachers: Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. Take a look around the site. Here is another worth looking at: https://www.neh.gov/ and these videos.
>
>I think you don't know as much about teaching history as you think you do.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_j03q7s4 wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
"The cure for the ills of Democracy is more Democracy." - Jane Addams
Public schools require a public consensus of what is to be taught, because they are public schools, not private ones. That's why we have elected officials overseeing school policies. While it might seem like a good idea to have experts decide by themselves what history curricula should include, it isn't. If you look at the countries where there is no democratic process for education, you find top-down decision making results in worse biases.
Most people don't know much about history, and that's been true for a long time.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_izzz36s wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
It's public education; the stakeholders can't be "removed." And public schools aren't going to eliminate history from the curriculum. The problem isn't the history curriculum in Massachusetts -- the state frameworks are pretty good -- the problem is that any test, however fact-based, must leave out a lot of material, and it must be approved by the state. That means that LOTS of people will get to weigh in on it, all of them with opposing views of what needs to be included.
My money is on a repeat of what happened last time this was attempted: It was tried out but was eliminated.
Technical_Hair_4383 OP t1_izz9nrf wrote
Reply to comment by March_Latter in The Pioneer Institute has found that most MA residents favor a history MCAS for graduation by Technical_Hair_4383
"He who controls the past controls the future. " The content of the MCAS history test could be entirely factual, and still the stakeholders would never agree about what was to be included and what was to be left out.
Technical_Hair_4383 t1_j9r183c wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in People are leaving Mass. Thoughts? by Original_Musician103
I agree that a rise in the minimum wage would not solve the housing shortage in MA, and I agree that much of the shortage is due to zoning restrictions that make more affordable housing difficult to develop in most parts of the state. Lots of NIMBYism.