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Messages - Alternative Facts

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2401
Serious / Senate Scrapts NCLB with Bill Sent to Obama's Desk
« on: December 09, 2015, 01:52:51 PM »
Education Fight to Shit towards States

Quote
The Senate sent a bill to the president’s desk Wednesday that replaces much of the widely disliked No Child Left Behind Act and shifts more power over education to states and school districts.

The bill passed the chamber 85-12 on the heels of its passage in the House last week. After No Child Left Behind established a high watermark for federal involvement in education, the new bill slashes the federal role by historic proportions, experts say. The bill — which the president is scheduled to sign Thursday — would dump the current law’s intense focus on test scores and the well-intentioned but impossible goal of having all students reading and calculating at grade level.

The Every Student Succeeds Act (S.1177) allows states to set their own guidelines for rating schools and improving them, with federal oversight and restrictions. It was a victory for many Republicans and teachers unions, who were allied in their mission to undercut what they viewed as prescriptive, top-down regulation and intrusion into local schools.

The bill would “put education back in the hands of those who understand their needs best: parents, teachers, states and school boards,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Wednesday. “It’s conservative reform designed to help students succeed instead of helping Washington grow.”

Democrats see the bill as a chance to offload some of the aspects of NCLB that are unpopular with constituents, while maintaining their paramount goal of protecting poor and minority students, whose performance often lags their peers and who disproportionately attend the worst schools. The bill requires states to track performance of such students closely and intervene when schools are failing. Because of this, it earned the backing of the president and
overwhelming support from Senate Democrats.

Senate Republicans supported the bill, with the exception of a handful of conservatives including 2016 presidential candidates Rand Paul and Ted Cruz, who don’t think it walks back the federal role in education far enough.

The bill “unfortunately continues to propagate the large and ever-growing role of the federal government in our education system—the same federal government that sold us failed top-down standards like Common Core,” Cruz, who didn't vote, said in a statement Wednesday. “The American people expect the Republican majority to do better.” Fellow
2016 contenders Marco Rubio and Bernie Sanders also didn't cast votes. Paul voted against the bill.

The new bill bans future Education secretaries from pushing a Common Core-like set of academic standards and limits what the department can and can’t regulate. Dozens of waivers from No Child Left Behind granted by the Obama administration would be void starting in August 2016. States would have more than a year to shift to the new system, which would take hold starting in the 2017-18 school year.

But there will also be places for the Obama administration to leave an imprint, thanks to a streamlined regulatory process written into the bill that it will have a year to leverage. For example, the department could place broad parameters on when a group of students would be considered “consistently” low-performing, signaling a need for intervention.

Even before the bill was headed to the president, a swath of education, civil rights and business groups were already lining up ways to shape the law’s implementation. Since the bill returns power to states, advocates plan on waging state-by-state battles over education policy that were previously fought in Washington.

Advocates in D.C. have worked furiously over the last year to preserve strong federal protections in the bill for poor and minority students. But in the coming years, they’ll be “trying to make equity at the heart of education in states,” said Ryan Smith, executive director of The Education Trust-West, the California arm of the Washington-based education advocacy group.

“With all of this wonderful flexibility comes great responsibility” for states, said Cheryl Oldham, vice president at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber is highlighting the need to continue to focus on minorities this week with a conference it is co-hosting with the NAACP on African-American student achievement.

One central issue for the Chamber will be making sure states continue to heavily weigh academic measures of students success — like test scores and graduation rates — when they rate schools. The new law allows states to also use some non-academic measures, such as student engagement, when evaluating schools.

That change in school rating metrics alone was a major legislative victory for teachers unions. Unions pushed all year to ditch No Child Left Behind’s embrace of testing, which they’ve dubbed a “test-and-punish” approach. Lawmakers ultimately settled on keeping a federal requirement that schools test students annually — but they gave states more leeway in how much test results matter. The law will also provide new funding to help states audit and get rid of excessive tests.

“You’ve had 15 years of test, test, test, test, test, test, test,” American Federation of Teachers Randi Weingarten said. “This is a vast improvement over what we have right now.”

And in another win, states will no longer have to evaluate teachers in a way that takes student outcomes — such as test scores — into account, a provision in the Obama administration’s waivers that unions opposed.
Now unions are making preparations of their own for the new law.

The National Education Association is pulling together a task force to begin planning how to educate teachers and organize in states.

The Obama administration, too, has begun positioning itself for an intense new phase — designing regulations to implement the law.

“We’re gearing up,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in an interview Saturday. Getting the law passed now is important to the Obama administration so it has “13 months to think about implementation,” he said. On Tuesday, Duncan was at Maryland’s National Harbor kickstarting outreach about the new law in a speech to educators.
Duncan is set to step down at the end of the year, so the dash to regulate the law will be the work of his successor, John King. And King will be operating in a different environment than Education secretaries did in the past because of the bill’s limit on the secretary’s power.

Senators celebrated the bill’s passage, but the next steps already loom on the horizon. Senate HELP Committee ranking member Patty Murray (D-Wash.) pledged Tuesday to keep close watch on implementation now that the work in Congress is done.

“We can’t just sign the bill and walk away,” Murray said. “We have to follow through and make sure they’re doing what we wanted to do with this law.”

2402
Serious / Re: *Official Sep7agon Presidential Poll*
« on: December 09, 2015, 12:44:24 PM »
Still so many idiots to get rid of.

I fully expect Trump to run as an independent if he doesn't win the GOP nomination
If that does happen, do you think he could poll above a Republican candidate?

Above? No.

He'd likely have the strongest support of any third party candidate in history though.

2403
Serious / Re: Why do we need political correctness?
« on: December 09, 2015, 09:41:41 AM »
Because if anything this age of entitlement has done anything but.

Why do we continue to label one generation as entitled when past generations have been as bad, if not worse?

Another question to pose.

2404
To fix this problem, we clearly need to unban Kinder.

2405
Serious / Re: *Official Sep7agon Presidential Poll*
« on: December 09, 2015, 08:23:19 AM »
Still so many idiots to get rid of.

I fully expect Trump to run as an independent if he doesn't win the GOP nomination

2406
Septagon / Re: Ban the use of the word "meme"
« on: December 07, 2015, 04:41:41 PM »
Ender, like my post.

2407
The Flood / Re: Am I The Only One Who Thinks Vaginas Are Disgusting
« on: December 07, 2015, 11:44:18 AM »
Penises are objectively better.

No one wants your opinion queer

Of course, it needs a nice girth and weight to it.

2408
Serious / Re: The San Bernadino shooters used 30 round magazines.
« on: December 07, 2015, 11:42:37 AM »
In similar news, SCOTUS will not be taking a case regarding an assault weapons ban in Illinois.

2409
The Flood / Re: Am I The Only One Who Thinks Vaginas Are Disgusting
« on: December 07, 2015, 08:43:17 AM »
Penises are objectively better. 

2410
Serious / Re: The San Bernadino shooters used 30 round magazines.
« on: December 06, 2015, 06:38:26 PM »
HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAH THIS FUCKING THREAD

deci you're too funny man. you could star in an irl "the office"

> Not picking the superior Parks and Rec

2411
Serious / Re: The San Bernadino shooters used 30 round magazines.
« on: December 05, 2015, 09:01:56 PM »
Again, gun purchases/registration/etc. should be just as regulated as automobiles.


2412
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 01:37:29 PM »
This mother fucker flat out lies and people still love him.

If there's ever a time that the GOP needs minorities, now is the time.

And the left has the perfect opportunity (assuming Trump wins the nomination) to paint the entire GOP voting base as racist.

2413
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 01:23:08 PM »
I see this is becoming heated >.>

GG, don't make me bring in the hammer.
I've acquired a complete disregard in the rules as making this thread is causing me to remember why I stopped coming to this site.

Differing opinions are lovely.

Maybe take a stroll to Serious or Flood.

2414
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 01:21:56 PM »
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/12/when-trump-gets-the-nomination/418815/

Assuming Trump is the nominee, the GOP stand a very strong risk at losing the White House for a good many years - well past 2020.
The party stands a very good risk of completely dissolving.

Wouldn't go that far, but ye.


2415
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 01:19:15 PM »
I see this is becoming heated >.>

GG, don't make me bring in the hammer.

2416
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 01:15:19 PM »
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/12/when-trump-gets-the-nomination/418815/

Assuming Trump is the nominee, the GOP stand a very strong risk at losing the White House for a good many years - well past 2020.

2417
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 12:48:23 PM »
Dude, they implemented a "FInd a Player" function months ago so you can access the file share of anyone you want.

Which is still vastly subpar to the systems of old.
The File Browser system was mostly filled with shit content.

Opinions.

Ideally, they could have just created a decent UI for multiplayer loading screens where you could click and see other players file shares like every other game, along with enhancing more search options.

Instead, we got...whatever the hell they did. It's 2015 people, can we not design a functional and appealing UI?


2418
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 12:39:39 PM »
Dude, they implemented a "FInd a Player" function months ago so you can access the file share of anyone you want.

Which is still vastly subpar to the systems of old.


2419
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 mega thread
« on: December 04, 2015, 12:38:19 PM »

2420
Is it possible to blow that fuck out of Syria's internet?

No.

2421
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:55:51 AM »
Stranger things have happened.


2422
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:54:05 AM »
To me, Halo 5 actually has the best gameplay mechanics of any Halo game since 3. Like, it plays extremely well.

But

Holy fuck

There is SO LITTLE content in this game, it's ridiculous.


I think the base gameplay is fun.

But the multiplayer is just frustrating, I rarely feel like I've been killed because the other guy was better than me.

Custom games is the one thing this game has left to offer me, and it doesn't even seem to have that, because a certain statement made by the multiplayer lead means we won't be getting social playlists any time soon. Have fun reading that conversation.

I've never seen a better example of someone just copying+pasting the same response over and over again

2423
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:50:48 AM »
Like how can anybody take this man seriously, I don't get it.

Disenfranchised blue collar workers who are, for the most part, less educated will believe anything.
That depends on a lot of things, though.

When I was doing temp work for the city of Fayetteville this summer, most of the other crew members had democrat candidate stickers all over their lockers and stuff. They were all black though.
So what you're saying is we need to turn everyone black?
Umm.. if anything, it means that we need to strip blacks of their voting privileges.

If you're curious, Paul is hovering just above obscurity with 1%

2424
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:13:06 AM »
Like how can anybody take this man seriously, I don't get it.

Disenfranchised blue collar workers who are, for the most part, less educated will believe anything.

2425
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:10:43 AM »
I don't think the shop next door sells enough popcorn for the coming election...

> Not eating the superior kettle corn

2426
Serious / Re: CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:09:06 AM »
Kill me

With the upcoming three weeks of lost campaign time, Trump's win in Iowa is becoming more and more inevitable.

2427
Serious / CNN/ORC Poll: Donald Trump at 36% among Republican Voters
« on: December 04, 2015, 11:02:38 AM »
Full Poll

The actual candidate polling is on Page 10.

Trump rose to 36% in this round, up from 27% in mid October.
Cruz is at 16%, up from 4% in mid October.
Carson is at 14%, down from 22% in mid October.
Rubio is at 12%, up from 8%.
Bush is at 3%, down from 8%

The others are just down and out essentially. For those keeping track, Trump is also leading in this months Quinnipiac poll, and is dominating with 30.8% in RealClearPolitics average of all polling.

2428
The Flood / Re: Everyone in Sep7 now lives together.
« on: December 04, 2015, 08:13:50 AM »
I'd leave.

2429
Gaming / Re: Halo 5 Content Update 2 - Cartographer's Gift
« on: December 04, 2015, 08:11:12 AM »
Forge is extremely pointless without a good variety of custom game options to back it up.


2430
The Flood / Re: what am I known for on this site
« on: December 02, 2015, 07:52:36 PM »
Feet

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