Mon
Jul 23 2012
12:47 pm
One step closer to Idiocracy*....
(*a 20th Century Fox production)
|
|
Discussing:
- Swastika, noose downgraded to "potentially divisive"?!?!? (4 replies)
- Knox County Juvenile Detention Center troubles grow (2 replies)
- Racist role model (2 replies)
- Here's who attended a white nationalist conference at a Tenn. state park (5 replies)
- Republicans clueless on health insurance (4 replies)
- Trump said he’s looking into an Australian-style retirement program for America. Here’s how it works (3 replies)
- This needs further checking (1 reply)
- President remarks about sedition and treason, but... (2 replies)
- Affordability, aspiration, rise up (1 reply)
- Tech data centers using up water (1 reply)
- WOW 19+ years (2 replies)
- Can we trust the FDA? (1 reply)
TN Progressive
- Alcoa Safe Streets Plan Survey (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- Report on Blount County, TN, No Kings event (BlountViews)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- Lee's Fried Chicken in Alcoa closed (BlountViews)
- Alcoa, Hall Rd. Corridor Study meeting, July 30, 2024 (BlountViews)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Department of Justice releases new documents, photos as part of Epstein files (TN Lookout)
- Trump health agency proposes rules to limit gender-affirming care for youth (TN Lookout)
- U.S. Senate approves TVA nominees, minus Beaman (TN Lookout)
- Trump signs order to loosen federal restrictions on marijuana, but it’s still illegal (TN Lookout)
- Stockard on the Stump: Tennessee leaders put weight behind Turning Point USA chapters (TN Lookout)
- Judges hear case on requiring immigrants without legal status to register and carry documents (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- Old basketball Vol Hank Bertelkamp dead at 94 (Knox TN Today)
- Storm closes Smoky Nights Lights till further notice (Knox TN Today)
- Lady Vols seek ranked win in New York (Knox TN Today)
- Zoo Knoxville welcomes Giraffe Mokolo as part of AZA Species Survival Plan (Knox TN Today)
- HEADLINES: World & national news to state & local news, events (Knox TN Today)
- The science of Santa (Knox TN Today)
- Harrington hikes to John Oliver Cabin (Knox TN Today)
- Paws for the Holidays: A call for holiday fosters (Knox TN Today)
- Dishing It Out: Boursin Gnocchi Bake (Knox TN Today)
- Dietz & Watson, Food City donate to Second Harvest (Knox TN Today)
- Dining Duo finds delicious change at Kobe’s (Knox TN Today)
- Knox says head to Winter Farmers Market (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Knoxville Weather: Unusually mild and quiet weather continues (WATE)
- Sevier County teacher arrested, charged with statutory rape (WATE)
- One dead after house fire in northeast Knox County (WATE)
- One dead after shooting on E. Magnolia Avenue in Knoxville (WATE)
- KFD asking information after fire in apartment parking garage near UT campus (WATE)
- Tennessee basketball great Hank Bertelkamp dies at 94 (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Chattanooga Now Events - Synesthesia: Silver Linings Edition - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Police investigating homicide on Jackson Avenue - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- ‘I was trying to put it in park’ and other notable quotes from a week in Chattanooga area news - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- ‘Bakery bullies,’ Frazier Ave. ‘mess’ and more rants - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Thousands left without power in SF after massive PG&E outage - KTVU (Business)
- Exclusive: US seizes oil tanker off Venezuelan coast, officials say - Reuters (US News)
- Powerball jackpot balloons to $1.5 billion ahead of Saturday drawing - NBC News (Business)
- Available to download Friday, some Epstein files no longer there Saturday afternoon - NPR (US News)
- First wheelchair-using astronaut touches down after ride to edge of space - The Guardian (Business)
- AG Pam Bondi has 'conflict of interest' in seeking death penalty against Luigi Mangione, defense says - ABC7 New York (US News)
- As officials uncover more information about the Brown and MIT professor shooting suspect, key questions remain - CNN (US News)
- Delaware Court reinstates Musk’s $55B pay package, penalizes him $1 instead - Electrek (Business)
- 3 police officers shot 'without warning' while responding to domestic call in Rochester - ABC News (US News)
- CENTCOM Launches Operation Hawkeye Strike Against ISIS in Syria > U.S. Central Command > Press Release View - centcom.mil (US News)
- Rep. Stefanik ends her campaign for New York governor, won’t seek reelection to House - PBS (US News)
- Is the Economy Improving Heading Into 2026? - Morningstar (Business)
- It was called the Kennedy Center, but 3 different presidents shaped it - NPR (US News)
- What the deal between TikTok and US investors means for users - ABC News (Business)
- Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Announces Largest Developments to Date in Bringing Most-Favored-Nation Pricing to American Patients - The White House (.gov) (Business)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

For those who haven't seen the movie
The first two minutes sum it up: (link...)
Interesting note
(link...)
There are no comments.
"But Knox County
"But Knox County Superintendent Jim McIntyre said charter school officials have had "ample time" for organization and to identify a viable site.
" 'The request for an additional five months and 15 days to identify a location is in a fact an extension of an extra year to open the Knoxville Charter Academy," he said. "Given over the last 18 months, the Charter Academy has demonstrated almost no discernible progress toward opening a high quality charter school, there's no reason to believe that the additional time would have a more positive result.' "
Yeah, he's bending over backwards to shove a charter school down the throats of the community.
Can you blame him?
For not wanting to deal with this group of
(pick one of the following)
A) Educators
B) Businessmen
C) Clowns
I don't know if McIntyre ultimately supports charter schools or not, but putting an inner city charter school in Crestwood Hills is not the sort of garbage even a populace as apathetic as ours is will buy.
Currently, diversity is the name of the game. Good luck to you if you are a parent of a child with any sort of gift or needs. Most schools I've seen have a transfer policy for a limited number of students to enter every year, but have fun matching your child to the right school.
Neither Lindsay nor McIntyre have been do-nothings, in fact, if one was to look only at either's highlights, one might come to the conclusion that all is great. And it can be if you make the right decisions. My concern is that one wrong decision can really screw up a kid. If one gets the right teachers, joins the right extra curricular activities, has the right coaches and is held accountable while still being allowed to be a kid, public school works.
What I worry about is the drugs and violence and crime and hunger and disease and the sloth created by both too much wealth and not enough money for economic sustenance. Charter schools can't fix these problems and contrary to the anti-tax crowd it will take money. One bad decision, either on a parent's or child's part puts that child in harms way. That's what being a parent in Knox County Schools is like. That's why we worry. That's why we're broke. The tuition to public schools if one wants one's child to be able to participate runs 2000 to 5000 dollars a year, depending on the level of participation one chooses. Plus, you get to get condescending lectures from members of the local media telling you that on top of your full time job, your volunteer work at the school, your independent time you spend working with your child at improving their skills and your actual showing up at events to watch and support your child in his or her efforts, you should be writing press releases because the media is, you know, busy and actually digging in to what's going on takes time. No shit.
Many of the parents could and should do a better job. And every time she writes on education, I thank God for Tamara Shepard because she's actually taken the time to ask the questions and research the answers to the problems I haven't faced yet. The same goes for Cathy McCaughan, Glostik, Stick and a host of others. The media, particularly those in charge of decision making have to be accountable. Giving a free ride to public officials while overplaying semantic issues does not do a community justice. We need information on what's being done right, as well as what's being done wrong. We need someone on the inside calling down to sports and saying, "Hey Jesse! How come you quit reporting on the junior golfers but kept publishing the senior scores? If these volunteer coaches and underpaid First Tee employees can teach them golf, we can teach them to read newspapers." That's what real reporters and real editors do. That's how you build your market and protect your profession.That's how you help our schools. Hold your people accountable and make sure there is something in the paper that kids don't want to miss. Even if this is an industry-wide problem, the solution has to start somewhere.
But I digress. I think McIntyre wants the right charter school, and by that I think he wants one that conforms to his way of doing things. He wants the funding as well. One needn't look past middle schools to see the management problems downtown. Middle school parents have begun to get worn down and overwhelmed with the finances of child rearing. Between tuition, glasses, braces, extracurricular activities a middle class budget gets stretched pretty quickly. In other words, the middle school years can be overwhelming , but then they're gone, in the blink of an eye. Both the board and administration recognize this and as a result cut middle school programs at will. At Bearden Middle, Spanish was an experimental pilot program. Seriously? Really? To compete on an international basis, our kids should be working on fluency by middle school from a choice of at least two languages. I think what McIntyre is doing is developing a market to force this community to accept whatever changes he mandates. And I think he is doing it at the middle school level.
And I think you guys are helping him regardless or your intent.
A final note before bed
(link...)
Knoxville STEM Academy serves the purpose of a charter school for real estate agents concerned that prospective downtown school zones may scare off clients. It is a novel approach and I'm not yet sure what my ultimate opinion will be as to whether or not it is a good idea. During the course of researching high schools, I found things I liked as well as things I wasn't wild about. Time will tell.
I think one reason charter schools have had a difficult time gaining a foothold in Knoxville is that during the integration period Knoxville City and Knox County were two different school systems and as a result of that Knoxville's path to integration was fundamentally different than both Chattanooga and Nashville.
As a result, many of our school problems come across as unique to our community.
The L&N STEM Academy is more
The L&N STEM Academy is more like a magnet than a charter. There is no criteria or test for admission.
Very True
In fact it would lose much of its funding if there was.
I try to talk to as many students and teachers from L&N STEM and on the balance I think it is a good thing. Their student talent pool is quite impressive. I haven't talked to enough of their faculty to really even have an informed opinion.
I would probably use a new term like experimental community concept educational facility focused on modern technology and academic excellence if I were to try to describe them. Magnet or charter just don't sound right.
Beyond stepping back and going,"You know, this is a really interesting concept and they may just have the right kids to make it work" at this point, I don't really have a passionate opinion.
Of course, it's always easy to be neutral and look at things in a flat manner when one doesn't have a dog in the hunt. Every day high school looms closer for us and making the right choice is a huge deal. L&N STEM is on the table but may or may not be our best fit.
Indeed
"Welcome to Fox-Pilot Flying J Charter School. I love you."