DeSantis for the win

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Tsing Tao, May 21, 2020.

  1. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Which goes to show you how asinine this is. One of the most ardent supporters of Israel, disinvited by the Jewish Heritage Museum.

    I have breakfast regularly with a friend who is Jewish and very religious. I ask him why many Jews vote liberal and support the democrats when the democrats clearly don't support Israel like republicans. He shrugs, and tells me this is the limo-lib mentality. But he doesn't get it any more than I do.
     
    #6561     May 6, 2022
    traderob likes this.
  2. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    But DeSantis gets the win!
     
    #6562     May 6, 2022
  3. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    The universe hates an NPC.

     
    #6563     May 6, 2022
  4. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Last edited: May 6, 2022
    #6564     May 6, 2022
  5. ids

    ids

    This is quite a ridiculous requirement. Why would anybody return the money? Politico is exceptional in inventing a crap.
     
    #6565     May 6, 2022
  6. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    If the “woke” Disney is so evil then why are the GOP politicians keeping money donated from this corporate supporter of “groomers”.
     
    #6566     May 6, 2022
  7. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    The most amusing example is the high school math text book which merely contained two pictures of black mathematicians with no other contentious material (beyond equations) and somehow considered to be CRT. So in summary, the large majority of the Florida text book reviewers found no CRT material in the text books, only a tiny minority of right-wing Republican reviewers such as one lady linked to conservative Moms for Liberty magically found "woke" material. As expected most of the conservative reviewers had no qualifications whatsoever to be reviewing textbooks and were somehow recently appointed to do so in Florida. Nearly all of the right-wing reviewers were "parents", not education professionals. Welcome to DeSantisLand.

    Most Florida reviewers of math textbooks saw numbers, not ‘woke’ concepts, but a few did

    https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article261184047.html

    Dozens of state reviewers found no evidence of “prohibited topics” like critical race theory and social-emotional learning in math textbooks, a partial review of nearly 6,000 pages of book examinations shows. However, a much smaller number of reviewers did find examples they disagreed with on those topics.

    The textbook examinations were part of a “thorough” review process that led the Florida Department of Education to reject 54 of 132 math textbooks proposed for use in public school classrooms over claims that publishers were attempting to “indoctrinate” students.

    The department later announced that 19 books were added back to the state’s adoption list, claiming that publishers made fixes that included “removing woke content.” The state has not explained what publishers had to do to get their books on the approved list so quickly, raising questions about exactly what content the state’s review process found objectionable.

    The textbook examinations were conducted by more than 70 people, including elementary and high school math teachers, college professors, principals and math curriculum coordinators.

    Many of those educators assessed the books to see whether they would be easy to navigate, understand and keep students interested in the subject of math — and the majority found no evidence of “prohibited topics” like critical race theory in the books.

    But one parent, who is affiliated with the conservative group Moms for Liberty and who assisted the state in reviewing two math books, said other reviewers may have glossed over content that she flagged to the state as inappropriate, “agenda driven” and “biased.”

    “I wish they could’ve seen the information I saw,” Chris Allen told the Herald on Friday, speaking to the possible disparities between her responses and those of other reviewers.

    Maybe, she said, the others were focusing on “other aspects of the curriculum.”

    Some reviewers were trained in the state’s B.E.S.T Standards, according to Allen, “so maybe they were focusing on how things aligned with the standards instead of the words or examples being used” in the problem-solving portions of the books.

    For Carl Clark, an assistant professor of mathematics at Indian River State College, the materials presented a different picture.

    “It is a math textbook. I found no evidence of any instruction or indoctrination of social issues,” Clark wrote after reviewing a high school-level algebra and trigonometry book that was rejected by the state. He confirmed to the Herald Friday that he was a reviewer but declined to comment further.

    Lots of questions but still few detailed explanations


    The ways in which state reviewers approached the content underscore the tensions that are emerging in Florida’s book adoption cycle as Gov. Ron DeSantis and his administration criticize publishers for attempting to “indoctrinate” students with “woke content.”

    The math textbook rejections over issues like critical race theory, an academic concept that is generally not part of the K-12 curriculum, has drawn national attention and left many educators scratching their heads. The state Department of Education has provided few details on the objectionable content, beyond posting four examples provided to the department by the public with no explanation.

    Sen. Manny Diaz Jr., R-Hialeah, who was recently confirmed as Florida’s new Education Commissioner, posted on Twitter Friday that the department has “an extensive review process and compiles all pieces of evidence when adopting textbooks — including reviews, evaluation scores and public comment.”

    He said there were “several reviewers” that found CRT in submitted math textbooks, but he did not share examples.

    Allen, an aerospace engineer, applied to be a book reviewer in January after seeing the department was seeking participants in the review process. She had already been involved in a book-review process in her district, she said, and figured “why not?”

    She reviewed “Thinking Mathematically,” from Savvas Learning Company, a book for the course “Mathematics for College Liberal Arts,” and concluded the state should reject it “based solely on critical race theory elements.”

    Allen said the content contained CRT because it put an “emphasis that racism is embedded in American society,” pointing to a lesson plan answer that said, “The United States has eradicated neither poverty nor racism.”

    There was also evidence of CRT in the math book, Allen said, because there was “no mention of the Federalist Papers to understand why the Electoral College was established.”

    “The American history of context is presented as something other than the creation of a new nation based largely on universal principles stated in the Declaration of Independence,” she wrote.

    Closer scrutiny just for CRT?


    The Herald’s partial review of the book examinations also shows that in many instances, book reviewers only answered whether the books’ contents included critical race theory, not the many detailed other questions found in most of the reviews. The Department of Education did not immediately respond to requests seeking comment on why reviewers only focused on that part of the standards.

    In a statement, the department said it seeks reviewers with “content expertise and an in-depth understanding” of the state’s standards. Those reviewers “must meet minimum professional qualifications.”

    “Each instructional material is evaluated by multiple reviewers, just like would happen for any state agency competitive bid process,” the department said.

    When asked for the state’s definition of “woke content,” the Department pointed back to state rules and laws that reject the inclusion of “critical theory, inclusions of common core, and unsolicited addition of social-emotional learning in mathematics” in instructional materials.

    Critical race theory is a legal academic concept that examines systemic racism in American institutions and policies.

    Social-emotional learning is the educational practice of teaching students skills such as creative problem-solving, understanding their emotions and showing empathy toward others.
     
    Last edited: May 7, 2022
    #6567     May 7, 2022
  8. the far right in FL just swallowed what their leader fed them....never even asked to see what was so objectionable that books were kicked out..

    Gov said the math book had CRT? ok we believe you.


    The scariest part of politics for me is the fields of sheep on both sides who swallow without asking for proof or.examples or further reading.
     
    #6568     May 7, 2022
  9. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    DeSantis supporters outside of Disney this week.

     
    #6569     May 8, 2022
  10. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Curious, how did you come to the determination that they were DeSantis supporters?
     
    #6570     May 9, 2022