New York to Enact Nation’s Toughest Gun Laws!!!

Dear Commons Community,

New York State is on the verge of enacting some of the nation’s toughest gun-control laws, one of the first states to act in the wake of the elementary school shootings at Newtown, Connecticut.

Yesterday, the state NY Senate voted 43-18 in favor of a broad bill that expands the types of weapons outlawed in the state and restricts the capacity of magazines from 10 rounds down to seven.  The bill also mandates that mental-health professionals report troubled patients they deem to be likely to cause harm to others. The state will then seize that person’s guns, if they own any or have a license.

The NY Assembly, dominated by downstate Democrats strongly in favor of the bill, is voting as this post is being made—which already has the backing of Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Cuomo has previously said the ideal solution is federal action, since people in theory can purchase guns in other states, with different restrictions, and bring them into New York.

Congratulations to New York!

Tony

MOOCs Getting Real: Partnering with a Major State University to Offer Remedial and Introductory Courses!

Dear Commons Community,

Udacity, Sebastian Thrun’s MOOC start-up company, is entering into an agreement with California’s San Jose State University for a series of remedial and introductory courses.   The New York Times is reporting:

” [San Jose State University’s] deal with Udacity is the first time that professors at a university have collaborated with a provider of a MOOC — massive open online course — to create for-credit courses with students watching videos and taking interactive quizzes, and receiving support from online mentors.

Eventually, such courses could be offered to hundreds of thousands of students in the state.

California Gov. Jerry Brown, who has been pushing state universities to move more aggressively into online education, approached the company to come up with a technological solution for what has become a vexing challenge for the state.

Ellen N. Junn, provost and vice president for academic affairs at the university in San Jose, said the California State University System faces a crisis because more than 50 percent of entering students cannot meet basic requirements.

“They graduate from high school, but they cannot pass our elementary math and English placement tests,” she said.

The Udacity pilot program will include a remedial algebra course, a college-level algebra course and introductory statistics.

For the pilot project starting this month, however, the courses will be limited to 300 students — half from San Jose State University, and half from local community colleges and high schools — who will pay lower than usual tuition. The cost of each three-unit course will be $150, significantly less than regular San Jose State tuition. Sebastian Thrun, one of the founders of Udacity, would not disclose how much the company would be paid for its participation.

San Jose State will receive funds from the National Science Foundation to study the effectiveness of the new online classroom design.”

The situation in California is similar to what many large public university systems face vis-à-vis the remedial needs of its students.   Several  aspects of the  news report bear mentioning.  First,  class sizes will be limited to 300 students.  This is much less than the 100,000 plus enrollments that some MOOC courses have publicized.  Second, faculty at San Jose State University will be involved with the development and implementation of the MOOC courses.  Third, the article comments that Udacity will make every attempt to overcome the biggest failure of open online courses today — their 90 percent dropout rate.

“Despite high enrollments, about half the students who sign up for such courses, whether at Udacity or other providers, fall away at the beginning, never even looking at the first assignment. Many of them are browsers without real commitment to the classes. But others, Mr. Thrun said, just need more support.

“I am personally troubled by the 90 percent dropout rate,” Mr. Thrun said. “The students signing up are highly motivated — and MOOCs will only succeed if they make normally motivated students successful.”

In the San Jose pilot, Udacity will have staff mentors monitoring the courses and offering a range of student support services that could include regular check-ins with a mentor, or automated e-mails providing encouragement and help for students stuck on a problem.”

Good luck to Udacity and San Jose State.  If successful, a MOOC model may evolve that would have applicability to many other public university systems including here at CUNY.

Tony

 

 

Graduate Center Fitness – Students!

Sent: Monday, January 14, 2013 11:05 AM
To:

Graduate Center Fitness Class Registration

The Graduate Center offers fitness classes facilitated by the Student Affairs office and the Doctoral Students’ Council. Classes include Pilates, Hatha Yoga, and Intermediate Yoga. Classes are free for students, but registration is required before the first class for all classes, see schedule below. Please register early to ensure your space, first come, first served.  Students may register for up to two classes per six week session. When a class is full, students may opt to go on a waiting list. Students who miss more than two classes will have their registration terminated.

Registration for the first half of the spring 2013 semester will begin at 10:00 am on Wednesday, January 16.  Students may register at this site beginning at 10 am on Wednesday, January 16 http://webapps.gc.cuny.edu/workshops/sa/Please note, if you are logging into this registration site for the first time you must create a new account.

Fitness equipment is provided.

Faculty, Staff and Community Members should register at the Student Affairs office, room 7301. Payment is required at time of registration for Faculty, Staff and Community Members and a $10 registration fee is applicable each semester.

 

Pilates

 

Pilates improves core strength and balances the muscles around the joints, improving the way your body functions, looks and feels.

 

Instructor: Jeanette Palmer

 

Pilates Session A, 4p-5:15p (Mondays) $72 Faculty/Staff $90 Community Members

Jan. 28,  Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 25, Mar. 4, Mar. 11

 

Pilates Session B, 4p-5:15p (Tuesdays) $72 Faculty/Staff $90 Community Members

Jan. 29,  Feb. 5, Feb. 19, Feb. 26, Mar. 5, Mar. 12

Instructor: Julia Sabangan

Pilates Session C, 3:30p-4:45:p (Wednesdays) $72 Faculty/Staff $90 Community Members

Jan. 30,  Feb. 6, Feb. 13, Feb. 27, Mar. 6, Mar. 13

 

Hatha Yoga

 

Bodily Postures (asanas), deep relaxation, breath control (pranayama), and mental concentration create a supple and relaxed body, increase vitality and promote radiant health.

 

Instructor: Katie Hartke

Hatha Yoga Session A, 12:00p-1:00p (Mondays) $60 Faculty/Staff $75 Community Members

Jan. 28,  Feb. 4, Feb. 11, Feb. 25, Mar. 4, Mar. 11

Hatha Yoga Session B, 12:00p-1:00p (Wednesdays) $60 Faculty/Staff $75 Community Members

Jan. 30,  Feb. 6, Feb. 13, Feb. 20, Feb. 27, Mar. 6

 

Intermediate Yoga  (Mindful Vinyasa Yoga – Intermediate)

This class is for students who are already familiar with basic yoga poses and sun salutations.  We will continue to explore the mental and physical benefits of moving mindfully and will apply basic alignment principles to a wider variety of poses, including inversions.   Pranayama (breathing exercises) or sitting meditation will integrated into every class.  Come deepen your understanding of yoga and yourself!

 

Instructor: Michelle Morrison

Intermediate Yoga  Session A, 5:30p-6:30p (Tuesdays) $60 Faculty/Staff $75 Community Members

Jan. 29,  Feb. 5, Feb. 19, Feb. 26, Mar. 5, Mar. 12

 

Gifted, Talented and Separated: New York City Public Schools!!

Dear Commons Community,

The New York Times has a featured article this morning examining the policies in the New York City public system regarding admissions into gifted and talented programs.  It paints a picture of academic programs divided primarily by race.   For instance;

“It is just a metal door with three windows, the kind meant to keep the clamor of an elementary school hallway from piercing a classroom’s quiet. Other than paint the color of bubble gum, it is unremarkable.  But the pink door on Room 311 at Public School 163 on the Upper West Side represents a barrier belied by its friendly hue. On one side are 21 fourth graders labeled gifted and talented by New York City’s school system. They are coursing through public school careers stamped accelerated. And they are mostly white.

On the other side, sometimes sitting for reading lessons on the floor of the hallway, are those in the school’s vast majority: They are enrolled in general or special education programs. They are mostly children of color.

“I know what we look like,” Carolyn M. Weinberg, a 28-year veteran of P.S. 163, said of the racial disparities as she stood one day in the third-floor hallway between Room 318, where she and a colleague teach a fourth-grade general education class, and the one where Angelo Monserrate teaches the gifted class, Room 311. “I know what you see,” said Ms. Weinberg.

There are 652 students enrolled at P.S. 163 this year, from prekindergarten through fifth grade. Roughly 63 percent of them are black and Hispanic; whites make up 27 percent; and Asians account for 6 percent. This reflects the flavor of the neighborhood, and roughly matches the New York City school system’s overall demographics.

Yet in P.S. 163’s gifted classes, the racial dynamics of the neighborhood, the school itself and the school system are turned upside down.  Of the 205 children enrolled in the nine gifted classes, 97, or 47 percent, are white; another 31 of the students, or 15 percent, are Asian. And a combined 65 students, or 32 percent, are black and Hispanic. In the 21 other classes that enroll the school’s remaining 447 students, only 80, or 18 percent, are white.”

The article rightfully points out the issue is not unique to P.S. 163 but is endemic to the entire school system.

“James H. Borland, a professor of education at Teachers College, said that looking at the gifted landscape in New York City suggests that one of two things must be true: either black and Hispanic children are less likely to be gifted, or there is something wrong with the way the city selects children for those programs.

“It is well known in the education community that standardized tests advantage children from wealthier families and disadvantage children from poorer families,” Dr. Borland said.

And the city’s efforts to fix the system seem to have only made it worse.

Until recently, each of the city’s 32 school districts could establish the classes as it saw fit and determine its own criteria for admission. They varied, but educators often took a holistic approach; they looked at evaluations from teachers and classroom observations, relying on tests only in part, by comparing the results of students from within a district.

That changed in September 2008, when the Bloomberg administration ushered in admission based only on a cutoff score on two high-stakes tests given in one sitting — the Otis-Lennon School Ability Test, or Olsat, and the Bracken School Readiness Assessment.

The overhaul was meant to standardize the admissions process and make it fairer. But the new tests decreased diversity, with children from the poorest districts offered a smaller share of kindergarten gifted slots after those were introduced, while pupils in the wealthiest districts got more.

For the 2012-13 school year, 4,912 children qualified for gifted programs. The more affluent districts — 2 and 3 in Manhattan, 20 and 22 in Brooklyn, and 25 and 28 in Queens — had the most students qualify: 949 in District 2, which takes in Lower Manhattan and the Upper East Side, and 505 in District 3.

…Farther north, for all of Districts 5 and 6, which are poorer and more heavily black and Hispanic, there are just two programs.  In District 7, in the South Bronx, there is not a single gifted program. The area, dominated by Hispanic and black residents, is among the poorest in the nation, with many people living below the official federal poverty mark.”

No one wants to deny children the right to excel and to reach their potential but when the system sets up qualifying criteria that are prejudicial and simplistic, it is an educational and social travesty.  Hopefully a new mayor will take a close examination of the past decade of school reform in New York City and set policies and programs that benefit ALL children.

Tony

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Largest Structure in the Universe Discovered!

Dear Commons Community,

MSNBC and several other news media are reporting that  astronomers have discovered the largest known structure in the universe, a clump of active galactic cores that stretches 4 billion light-years from end to end. The structure is a large quasar group (LQG), a collection of extremely luminous galactic nuclei powered by supermassive central black holes. This particular group is so large that it challenges modern cosmological theory, researchers said.

“While it is difficult to fathom the scale of this LQG, we can say quite definitely it is the largest structure ever seen in the entire universe,” lead author Roger Clowes, of the University of Central Lancashire in England, said in a statement. “This is hugely exciting, not least because it runs counter to our current understanding of the scale of the universe.”

Quasars are the brightest objects in the universe. For decades, astronomers have known that they tend to assemble in huge groups, some of which are more than 600 million light-years wide.

But the record-breaking quasar group, which Clowes and his team spotted in data gathered by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, is on another scale altogether. The newfound LQC is composed of 73 quasars and spans about 1.6 billion light-years in most directions, though it is 4 billion light-years across at its widest point.

Tony

 

Rick Perry to Governor Andrew Cuomo – You Would Like “to be a Texan”!

Dear Commons Community,

The Daily News is reporting that there’s a Texas style feud brewing between Rick Perry and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo.

Perry, the Texas governor who became something of a laughing stock during his bid for the Republican Party’s presidential nomination last year and is considered to be a possible 2016 Republican presidential contender, took a swipe at Andrew Cuomo during a policy forum on Thursday.

“You could say that the economic climate that has allowed (Texas) to grow and create jobs, he’d dearly love to be able to stand up and say, ‘We did this in New York.’ But he can’t.”

Perry also said Cuomo, “if he were truthful” would admit that he’d want to be a Texan.

“I’m sure that I couldn’t get all 49 other governors to admit that they would want to be Texans,” Perry said, according to The Associated Press.

Cuomo administration officials did not immediately respond to Perry’s jab.

Let the fun begin, we only have just under four years left until the next presidential election.

Tony

 

Eight World War I Photos Found in Undeveloped Film in an Antique Camera!

Dear Commons Community,

A blogger passionate about historic photography techniques serendipitously found some old photos inside a camera that he bought at an antique store.

Last week, Anton Orlov of the Photo Palace blog was cleaning the Jumelle Belllieni stereoscopic camera (picture below) and found the images completely by accident. According to his blog, he opened the film chamber and saw the negatives on a stack of glass plates.

“While viewing the images in their negative form it was difficult to say for sure what was on each of them, but after scanning them it became clear that they dated back to the First World War and were taken somewhere in France,” Orlov wrote.

Interesting stuff for World War I buffs.

Tony

 

Charles Rangel Criticizes President Obama’s Cabinet Selections: Where is the Diversity?

Dear Commons Community,

In an interview on MSNBC yesterday, Representative Charles Rangel was highly critical of President Barack Obama’s cabinet selections.

“It’s as embarrassing as hell,” Rangel said on MSNBC’s “Jansing & Co.” of Obama’s top picks. “We’ve been through all of this with Mitt Romney. And we were very hard on Mitt Romney with the women binder and a variety of things.”

“I kinda think there’s no excuse when it’s the second term. If it’s the first term, you could see people got to know who is around and qualified in order to get this job, number one,” he continued.

“I had thought that it could be the Harvard problem where people just know each other, trust each other. And women and minorities don’t get a chance to rub elbows and their reputations and experience is not known … so in the second term, these people should be just as experienced as anybody, any other American.”

Obama’s picks for Treasury, State and Defense are all white men. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is leaving, as is Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis. A photo of Obama’s inner circle highlighted by The New York Times showed just one woman addressing the president, Valerie Jarrett. The Times reported that about 43 percent of Obama’s appointees have been women, about the same as President Bill Clinton but about 10 percent more than President George W. Bush.

Tony

 

Governor Andrew Cuomo’s State of the State Address: Gun Control and Education!

Dear Commons Community,

Governor Andrew Cuomo delivered his third  State of the State address yesterday.  He was most animated speaking about the need for greater gun control and called on lawmakers to approve an assault weapons ban in the nation.

“Forget the extremists — it’s simple,” Mr. Cuomo said near the end of his 80-minute speech. “No one hunts with an assault rifle. No one needs 10 bullets to kill a deer. End the madness now.”

Mr. Cuomo not only proposed a far more restrictive assault weapons ban than currently exists in New York, but he also proposed a more comprehensive ban on large-capacity magazines. He also proposed to require background checks for private sales of guns, not just at gun shows and stores. And he called for tougher penalties for buying guns illegally or for using them to commit crimes, as well as for uniform licensing standards across the state.

“This is not taking away people’s guns,” he said. “That is not what this is about. It is about ending the unnecessary risk of high-capacity assault rifles.”

For those interested in education issues,  Cuomo referred extensively to the recent New York Education Reform Commission Report and specifically wants to fund initiatives to extend the school day.  For higher education, he called on the need for community colleges to retool their programs for the modern “high-skills” economy.  He specifically mentioned CUNY’s New Community College.  He also commented on the need for incubators and college-business partnerships and mentioned the NYSUNY and NYCUNY grant programs.

Tony

 

 

Maureen Dowd on RGIII and Washington Politics!

Dear Commons Community,

For football fans, this past weekend was the beginning of the National Football League’s playoffs.    On Sunday, the injury to the Washington Redskins phenomenal quarterback, Robert Griffin III (or RGIII) was all the talk because many questioned whether his coach, Mike Shanahan, should have left him in the game after injuring his knee.  New York Times columnist, Maureen Dowd’s take on it, is that Shanahan and the Redskins behaved the same way the rest of Washington behaves that is concerned with only with the short-term and sacrificing the long term:

“Robert Griffin III and Alfred Morris, the stellar Redskins rookies, were such appealing palliatives to our ugly, nihilistic politics and our cascade of lurid sports scandals…But then, on Sunday, the spell snapped when the knee snapped. Coach Mike Shanahan committed malpractice, letting a hobbled young quarterback lurch around “like a pirate with a peg leg,” as The Washington Post’s Sally Jenkins wrote. The autocratic, crusty 60-year-old, who makes $7 million a year, risked the kid’s career and the team’s future trying to win a wild-card playoff game ….

At that moment, the Redskins became like the rest of Washington, and the rest of our self-centered, grasshopper attention-span culture — going for short-term gain and avoiding long-term pain.

Everything they do on Capitol Hill is about getting through the next few months, or next few minutes, or next confrontation. John Boehner, after making a mess of the negotiations with the president, is now talking about raising the debt limit in monthly increments. What’s wrong with weekly, or how about hourly?

Like Congress patching gaping fiscal wounds, the Redskins didn’t seem to fathom that they were damaging the franchise long term. “Trying to win that game, they risked 120 victories over the next 10 years,” the writer David Israel told me. “That’s crazy.”

And so is Washington politics!

Tony