Archive for education

From Gig Harbor, Washington comes the most outrageous bullying story I have seen so far this year

It’s bad enough when kids bully other kids — but what if it happened in a classroom and the teacher allegedly participated in the bullying? And what if the teacher was simply moved to another school building and will be teaching middle school math this fall? Would you think that was outrageous? I would, but that’s just my personal opinion. Of course the teacher’s statement (fourth link below) is quite at odds with what is said in the articles, but even if you believe that, it appears that he knew the incident was being video recorded and still allowed it to occur, which if nothing else makes one wonder how much control he had over what was happening in his classroom.

The second link includes a video clip — it appears that the teacher (or at least some adult in a yellow shirt) enters the frame at about 20 seconds in, and although the audio isn’t crystal clear, it sounds like he does nothing but taunt the boy. And even if that’s all he did, I still wouldn’t want him teaching any child or grandchild of mine (again, just my opinion).  But the fifth link includes a video where that same adult appears to be taking a more active role in the incident.

Here are the links — see what you think:

Gig Harbor teacher accused of bullying, taunting student (KOMO News)

Child was bullied by students, teacher, say Kopachuck parents (The News Tribune)

Family wants teacher fired over classroom bullying (KING5.com)

Teacher’s statement on what happened (Scribd)

Bullying at Kopachuck MS recorded in cell phone video (KING5.com)

I call out attention to things like this because I never want to see another kid wind up like this one:

My bullied son’s last day on Earth (CNN)

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Review of FreeSWITCH Cookbook by Anthony Minessale, Michael S Collins, Darren Schreiber, Raymond Chandler (Packt Publishing)

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Know anyone with asthma or COPD? You’ll want to read this!

You’ve doubtless heard of cases where asthma sufferers have been caught out without their inhaler, or where the inhaler just isn’t working for them as effectively as they might hope.  Well, it turns out that there may be a more effective alternative to expensive pharmaceutical formulas, though if the big drug companies have anything to say about it, I’m sure they’ll try to bury this information.  Since I am not a doctor, I won’t say much more than that, but you can read your own inferences into this information. A couple of excerpts from the press release follow:

Taste receptors in the lungs? Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore have discovered that bitter taste receptors are not just located in the mouth but also in human lungs. What they learned about the role of the receptors could revolutionize the treatment of asthma and other obstructive lung diseases.

…..

The researchers tested a few standard bitter substances known to activate these receptors. “It turns out that the bitter compounds worked the opposite way from what we thought,” says Dr. Liggett. “They all opened the airway more profoundly than any known drug that we have for treatment of asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).” Dr. Liggett says this observation could have implications for new therapies. “New drugs to treat asthma, emphysema or chronic bronchitis are needed,” he says. “This could replace or enhance what is now in use, and represents a completely new approach.”

[Emphasis added]

Like I say, I’m not a doctor, so I don’t want to even appear to be giving you medical advice.  But I’ll bet this turns up in a TV show someday – a person is having an asthma attack and no inhaler is available, and the show’s hero(es) whip up an inhaler using some sort of available spray mister and an available bitter substance (a few possible candidates are mentioned in the press release).  Whether that’s actually a plausible scenario or not I don’t know, but then it only has to be barely plausible to get put into a TV show, right?  Anyway, I am NOT telling you to try that under ANY circumstances.  If your doctor says it’s okay to try that in a dire emergency then that’s a whole other matter, but don’t do it because I or some silly TV show might have suggested it as a possibility (also, note that inhaling any kind of fluid into one’s lungs could potentially be fatal if not done under a doctor’s supervision).

Anyway, go here to read the full press release.

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Comment Policy Additions

I’ve made a couple of additions to the Comment Policy (located in the right-hand sidebar).  The two main changes are these:  First, I won’t accept comments not written in English – I’ve always tended to reject those anyway, but once in a while I’d take the time to do a Google translation on them and approve them anyway.  But that’s silly — this blog is written in English, so if you can read the blog then you ought to be able to comment in English.  No malice intended toward speakers of other languages; I just want to be able to read your comments and make sure you’re not posting spam (or worse).

The other change is the one I really want folks to pay attention to:

… I AM NOT YOUR TECHNICAL SUPPORT. If you are commenting on a “how-to” article, it’s okay to ask for help or post any issues you’ve uncovered, but please don’t be offended if I don’t reply. Maybe I will, maybe someone else will, or maybe no one will — and if I do reply once, and what I suggest doesn’t work, then you’re probably on your own. There are probably hundreds of reasons why something might work for me and not work for you, and I’m not real good at guessing what those reasons might be.

It’s not that I mind trying to help people, but when I post an article that details something that worked for me, and someone else cannot get it to work, I usually have no effing clue as to the reason why! Your hardware may be different from mine, your operating system may be different, you may have a different version of the software, you might have made a typo entering something, you might have skipped a step, the electronics gods may have decided to smite you… I have absolutely no way of knowing why something isn’t working for you.  And pardon me for being so crass as to say it, but it’s not my job to figure out why something won’t work on your system — it’s yours! I may or may not be able to make a suggestion or two, but if that doesn’t work, seriously, you are on your own.

Please understand that I am not trying to discourage anyone from posting a comment in which you are asking for assistance, or detailing a problem you’ve had.  I’m only saying that you should not be offended if I, personally, do not reply.  If I don’t, you should probably take it as a “doggone if I know what your problem is” response. I’ve also had the experience that a particular piece of software that apparently works fine for others crashes or behaves erratically when I try to run it, so you have my sympathy, but just saying that I sympathize with you is probably not what you’d consider a helpful response, so I’m not going to post that.

Finally, please keep in mind that I do not sit in front of the computer 24/7, so if you post a comment it may be anywhere from a few minutes to a couple of days until I get around to approving it (maybe even longer on rare occasions, such as the time I lost Internet connectivity for several days). Please be patient; if it doesn’t violate my comment policy and hasn’t been automatically flagged as spam, it will appear (assuming you successfully posted it, and didn’t forget to click the correct button or something). WordPress actually does send me an e-mail notification when someone posts a comment, unlike the service I had previously used that let comments build up without sending any notifications!

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Review of FreeSWITCH 1.0.6 by Anthony Minessale, Darren Schreiber, Michael S. Collins (Packt Publishing)

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United Airlines fliers must now ask yourselves: If I speak to a flight attendant will I get thrown off the plane?

Saw an item on The Consumerist site today, entitled “United Removes Passenger From Flight After He Asks Whether A Meal Will Be Served.” It contained a link to an original blog post that details the story of one Joe Sugarman, an Internet marketing consultant who was on his way home from a seminar in Austin, Texas (why does this sort of crap always happen in Texas or Florida?).  And his blog post tells the story:

I get to the airport, boarded my plane and I’m sitting in first class. The flight attendant was right in front of me and was curious if they were going to serve meals onboard. So I asked her, “Are you serving any meals during our flight?”

She looked at me kinda funny and said, “I can’t answer that for security reasons.”

A little puzzled, I wondered how it affected security but I let it pass as she went into the cockpit. About three minutes later, two armed Austin police officers boarded the plane, looked at me and said, “Sugarman, follow us.”

Picking up the story a bit further down…

Finally a United representative approached me with my bags and said “We are taking you off this flight for security reasons.”

“Why” I asked.

“You apparently asked the flight attendant if the Police were onboard,” said the United representative. We’re not taking any chances and the captain asked that you be removed.”

“But I only asked her if a meal was being served,” I said. Only to be told that it was her word against mine and the Captain was not going to take any chances based on what the flight attendant claims I said.

Thrown off the plane for asking if a meal was being served was ridiculous. And why would I care if there was a policeman onboard anyway?

Strangely, United had a customer service representative ready and willing to book Mr. Sugarman on the next flight, so apparently at least someone in United has common sense. But, as The Consumerist said about the incident,

… WTF, seriously flight attendant? You couldn’t even say, “I beg your pardon” or “Would you repeat the question” to confirm that you had an evil ‘sploding terrorist on board?

Then there is the lazy Captain, who apparently could not be bothered to go talk to the passenger and do his own assessment of the situation.

Mr. Sugarman further comments,

Another thing that puzzles me is that I am what is called a 1K flyer on United flying over 100,000 miles a year at a minimum. I have flown 2.5 million miles on their airline through the years as well. Couldn’t they use common sense and realize that I didn’t suddenly go off my rocker after being such a good customer of theirs. And why did they believe the flight attendant over me when they let terrorists on board with bombs in their suitcase? Can you make sense of this?

Now, when I read Mr. Sugarman’s blog post, I scrolled down and viewed some of the comments, and noticed this one by Robert Clay:

This reinforces something I have observed for some time. It is often said that the United States is the land of the free, and at gatherings people are often asked to celebrate their freedom. But I wonder if this is all really brainwashing. After all, for all it’s many excellent qualities America right now has the largest percentage of its population in prison of any country on Earth. One out of four people, one out of four humans in prison in the WORLD are Americans, imprisoned in America. This excellent TED talk by Chris Jordan really makes the point” http://www.ted.com/talks/chris_jordan_pictures_some_shocking_stats.html

The ridiculous experience you had is another symptom of this. Interestingly I saw a TV program where Russians were being interviewed about why they were seemingly so disinterested in “democracy,” and what came out is that they just don’t need democracy. Nobody bothers them. They get on and can live their lives without interference.

That said, I don’t suppose the authorities would be too impressed if you were a political activist pushing views that oppose their own. But it’s no different in the US. Or Singapore. Or China.

But I agree with you, it’s right to ask what America is coming to when the average person really isn’t as free as they’ve been brainwashed to believe, and freedom and America are far from being synonymous for millions of people.

Mr Clay sort of verbalizes a feeling I’ve had for a long time. When I was a kid, our teachers tried very hard to brainwash us into thinking that America was the greatest country on earth. Of course, the way they framed it was that if we didn’t love America, our only other option was to live in a place like the “evil” Soviet Union, where people might be shot for asking for a loaf of stale bread to feed their families (seriously, you can’t begin to imagine the lies we were told about the Soviet Union as kids – it actually came as quite a shock to me when I finally realized that Moscow was a major city with modern buildings and electricity, even if not exactly up to U.S. standards).

But the worst thing about the old U.S.S.R., or so we were taught, is that the people there had no freedom – the government basically dictated their every move, morning, noon, and night. The U.S.A. was the closest thing to heaven on Earth, while the Soviet Union was the closest thing to hell, and if there were other choices our teachers sure weren’t about to mention any of them.  We weren’t even taught anything about our closest neighbors, Canada or Mexico, except perhaps in passing references. According to our educational experience, the only countries that mattered were the United States, England (primarily for historical reasons), Germany and Japan (primarily because of their involvement in then-recent wars), and the U.S.S.R.  Occasionally we’d be taught about what we now call a third-world country, like Malaysia (where the natives were still slaving over rice paddies or running around using blow darts to get their food when they weren’t dying of malaria, according to my elementary school education), but probably only to reinforce how lucky we all were to be living in the United States.

This kind of teaching occurred with some regularity throughout elementary and junior high schools, and didn’t really even begin change until about the time I got into high school, when the VietNam War basically divided the country and started causing many people, including some of my teachers apparently, to start questioning whether the U.S.A. always took the most noble course of action. The fact that we had two fairly awful presidents in a row (Lyndon Johnson, a Democrat, followed by Richard Nixon, a Republican) probably didn’t help matters any. But then the war ended and the Bicentennial came along in 1976, and that invoked a new wave of patriotic fervor.

But back in 1967, just about the time that our teachers were starting to sound a bit more enlightened, a movie called “The President’s Analyst” came out. It’s probably one of the few movies I ever saw in a theater (suffice it to say that I am not a big fan of the “theater experience”). And at the time, there was a line in the move that impressed me as being somewhat prescient, at least for the U.S.A.  No, not the one about everyone hating the phone company, although I did get quite a chuckle out of that one.  I actually could not recall the exact line until I went to the The Internet Movie Database, and right there it was, posted in a user review by Merwyn Grote, who wrote,

My lasting view of Soviet-U.S. relations was clearly defined after watching THE PRESIDENT’S ANALYST. Soviet spy/assassin V.I. Kydor Kropotkin, played by Severn Darden, explains to kidnapped American psychiatrist Dr. Sidney Schaefer, played by the irrepressible James Coburn: “Logic is on our side: this isn’t a case of a world struggle between two divergent ideologies, of different economic systems. Every day your country becomes more socialistic and mine becomes more capitalistic. Pretty soon we will meet in the middle and join hands.” Beautiful, simple logic, clearly stated in a whacked-out, slightly psychedelic satirical farce about Cold War paranoia. A gem of genius in a world gone mad.

The trouble is that, in my opinion, we’re not just becoming more socialistic – we’re also beginning to take on some of the negative attributes that our generation was warned about, only we were warned they would happen if we allowed the “evil Communists” to take over our country.  Well, virtually all the recent laws that have seriously curtailed our freedoms were passed during the junior Bush administration, and I don’t think the Republican party is quite ready to take on the mantle of “socialist” or “communist”, though at times they seem to approve of actions that seem not too far removed from something Joseph Stalin would have approved of. Admittedly, the current administration doesn’t seem to be in any big hurry to give us back our stolen freedoms, and that worries me a lot – if we can’t trust either of our political parties to do the right thing, what hope do we have as a nation?

The incident with Mr. Sugarman and United Airlines is certainly not the worst thing that’s happened to an air traveler in our post-9/11 society, but it is symptomatic of how wacko our nation has become, both in that this sort of thing could happen and that most who read about it will think, “Well, that’s just what you have to put up with when you fly nowadays.” Most people in the U.S.A. don’t even blink when TSA screeners do full body scans on children (as this article explains, “In the United Kingdom, scans are not performed on anyone under 18 because they would violate child pornography laws”). And the people of the former U.S.S.R. are probably saying, “Welcome to our world.”

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Mini-review of Beginning OpenVPN 2.0.9 by Markus Feilner and Norbert Graf (Packt Publishing)

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Review of Building Enterprise Ready Telephony Systems with sipXecs 4.0 by Michael W. Picher (Packt Publishing)

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Review of FreePBX 2.5 Powerful Telephony Solutions by Alex Robar (Packt Publishing)

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Review of OpenVPN: Building and Integrating Virtual Private Networks by Markus Feilner (Packt Publishing)

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globeandmail.com: Late risers lobbying for workplace recognition

As someone who has suffered the scorn of early birds most of my life, I am so happy to see that finally there is some small recognition that we are all different, and that some of us have different rhythms, and we just don’t do well when forced to rise with the chickens (wake me up too early, and I’m likely to bite your head off with the slightest provocation)!

Quote from an article on the Toronto Globe and Mail web site:

“Why should we have the work hours of farmers and peasants forced upon us in this day and age?” says Danish engineer Camilla Kring, an emerging international force in the fight to recognize night owls in the workplace. “We all have different day and night cycles and it’s time workplaces created new structures that support our different rhythms.”

…..

This year, Ms. Kring launched B-Society, a group devoted to lobbying companies to stagger start times and better accommodate those whose circadian rhythms are a little delayed. In just six months, the group attracted 5,500 members and sprouted offshoots throughout Europe. The group’s website is adding a job board on which B-friendly openings throughout the world will be posted.

globeandmail.com: Late risers lobbying for workplace recognition

So, late risers of the world, rejoice – maybe if you push hard enough, you can have workplace accommodation for your sleeping schedule. In the meantime, you can always consider being a telecommuter for some company that’s located about three time zones west of wherever you live, assuming you are lucky enough to find such a position.

The expectation that everyone should be an early riser is a perfect example of what is sometimes termed “tyranny of the majority” – because the majority of people do things a certain way, everyone is expected to do it the same way. It’s like expecting left-handed people to write with their right hand, because that’s the way “normal” people do it (something that some teachers still believed back when I was in school).

By the way, I suspect that one reason online universities attract students is because no one is forced to take early morning classes. I don’t think that there was anyone who hated going to school more than I did when I was a kid, and while there were many reasons for that (it was almost a “perfect storm” of negatives, in fact), one of the biggest reasons was that I was always in a really bad mood when I had to get up early, which of course was the case on almost every school day. And while my parents would try to put me to bed at an appropriate time (I say “try” because I never wanted to go to bed that early), many was the night I would toss and turn until around midnight or later.

I had a friend who, during his high school years, almost NEVER showed up for his first hour class, and missed his second hour frequently as well (there were days he didn’t straggle in until almost noon). He was enough of a pain in the posterior to his teachers that they didn’t press the issue of his non-attendance (frankly, I think they were happy when he didn’t show up!). I think he only graduated because he was somehow able to pass the exams, and because the school really did not want to hold him back a year. It makes me wonder how many kids would do much better in school if the schools would offer an alternative of classes from, say, 11 A.M. to 5 P.M., or even noon to 6 P.M. (I’m sure they could find teachers who are not early risers by choice!). It would be an interesting experiment, if some district would agree to try it. They already have “alternative” schools for problem kids, so why not a school for night owls?

I have a suggested motto for the night owls: “To be woke before noon, is to be woke too soon!” Take THAT, Ben Franklin!

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