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What We're Talking About Saturday, February 4, 2012

A Class of 51

The Fordham Institute recently released their assessment of state science standards with a handy color-coded map—and California was the only state to receive a solid "A," along with the District of Columbia. On Pharyngula, PZ Myers wonders how his state will ever get into college with a lowly "C." He writes, "The Institute does a fairly thorough breakdown, so there are some bright spots: Minnesota is doing a good job in the life sciences, but where we got dinged hard was on the physical sciences, which are 'illogically organized' and contain factual errors." But at least Minnesota wasn't one of the twenty-seven states to get a "D" or an "F." Greg Laden repaints the Institute's map with only two colors, making a "Pass/Fail" version of the assessment. At first glance the blocks of red and blue look electoral, but much of the South is blue with passing grades, while Oregon and half of New England are red for failure. Obviously, the quality of education depends on complexities far exceeding geographical and political alignment. Greg Laden writes, "It is an interesting report to browse through, and you can get your PDF copy of it here for free! Also, have a look at this overview from the NCSE. How did your state do?"

Your state's report card

pharyngulaFebruary 2, 2012

"Minimal is OK, as far as I'm concerned; it think it's more important to get across a solid conceptual understanding. Of course, given that some teachers do a very poor job of getting those concepts across, more specific guidelines might be useful.

"What's really awful about our C, though, is that that's the same grade Texas got. Oh, the ignominy!

"I think we got robbed, though. The detailed breakdown says that a major problem is inconsistency: some bits of the Texas standards are stellar, others are terrible; different grade levels get variable quality of coverage. Texas gets slammed for life science standards that are 'woefully imbalanced, with poorly developed material in the early grades and strong, sometimes excellent, content in the upper levels.'"

The State of State Science Standards

greg laden's blogJanuary 31, 2012

"The vast majority of American public school students are not proficient in the level of science learning expected for their age group. The Thomas B. Fordham Institute has issued "The State of Science Standards 2012" as part of an effort to assess the causes of this dismal state of affairs. Here's a map summarizing their results.

"Notice that some of the battleground states for the 'Evolution-Creationism Controversy' have reasonable ratings. Notice also the vast regions of D and F states. In fact, in order to convey the meaning of it all, I've created a new version of the map that signifies all states with D and F rankings with one color, and all states with C or better grades with a different color (The 'Pass/Fail' version of the test!)"

Video

Alleged global cooling is really noise caused by sporadic weather patterns on Greg Laden's Blog.

Video

Dolphins stir up nets of sand to catch a fish dinner on Life Lines.

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Salamanders (and caterpillars) curl up and roll out of harm's way on Pharyngula.
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In Conversation

“Typically, when mental health service cuts of this magnitude are enacted, money isn't really saved -- costs just shift, Honberg told me. Costs and care are shifted to correctional systems, homeless agencies, hospital emergency departments and police.”

Cuts to mental health funding leaving the most vulnerable behind

the pump handle

Channel Surfing

Life Science

Pharyngula

Friday Cephalopod: Feasibility trial successful

Next step: lasers mounted on squid mantles. You puny humans are so screwed. (Also on FtB)...

Pharyngula

One Carnival of Evolution, coming right up

I've been naughty and neglecting to announce these things, so let's start correcting that: here's the 44th Carnival...

Page 3.14

Fresh Meat, Fresh Data

Posted to the homepage on January 20, 2012 On Aetiology, Tara C. Smith shares the results of her...

The Life Science Channel RSS Feed

Physical Science

Starts With A Bang

Saturn's Super Storm Staggers Skywatchers!

"More days to come / New places to go I've got to leave / It's time for a...

Uncertain Principles

Course Report: A Brief History of Timekeeping 03

It's been a little while since I wrote up what I've been doing in my "Brief History of...

Uncertain Principles

How to Teach Relativity to Your Dog: Photoshop Contest

It's now officially February, and the release date for How to Teach Relativity to Your Dog is only...

The Physical Science Channel RSS Feed

Environment

Class M

Calling it like it is

Two examples of why blogs are better than mainstream news coverage, when it comes to confronting reality and...

Class M

Tea Party shenanigans

As if you needed another reason to lament the state of American politics: Across the country, activists with...

Greg Laden's Blog

Minnesotan Republicans Disrupt Attempts to Save Civilization From Itself

State Legislator Ellen Anderson is an energy expert, who authored seven energy related bills one of which became...

The Environment Channel RSS Feed

Humanities & Soc. Sciences

Uncertain Principles

Critical Pronunciation Poll

I'm using Dava Sobel's Longitude this week in my timekeeping class. The villain of the piece, as it...

Aardvarchaeology

Recent Archaeomags

Lots of interesting feature stories lately.

EvolutionBlog

Another Round on Adam and Eve

Since my little break has turned out to be longer than I anticipated, I fear that my blog...

The Social Sciences Channel RSS Feed

Education

Pharyngula

Making excuses

The editor of Life, Shu-Kun Lin, has published a rationalization for his shoddy journal. Life (ISSN 2075-1729,...

erv

Shit grad students say

Yeah, this is so me...

USA Science and Engineering Festival: The Blog

PopSci Returns as Valued Festival Media Partner!

Popular Science, one of the leading sources of news in technology, science, gadgets, space, green tech and more, is returning as a key Media Partner with the Festival!

The Education Channel RSS Feed

Politics

Aardvarchaeology

Roy Zimmerman: You're Getting Sleepy

I don't really need to have my anti-Conservative flame fanned. I listen to Zimmerman for his razor wit and his musicianship.

EvolutionBlog

That School Prayer Banner in Cranston

By now I'm sure we are all familiar with the Jessica Ahlquist case in Cranston, RI. The New...

erv

Tennessee senator not concerned about dead babies, women, or men. If they were HIV+, they werent 'regular' anyway.

HIV/AIDS scientifically is a homo disease, rite? From a homo having sex with a monkey?

The Politics Channel RSS Feed

Medicine & Health

Respectful Insolence

Microsoft, Merck, and Bill Gates: Eugenicists?

Since I wrote about a man who is arguably the biggest seller of quackery on the Internet, namely...

Dean's Corner

New Anthrax Scare in Pakistan

Color-enhanced scanning electron micrograph shows splenic tissue from a monkey with inhalational anthrax; featured are rod-shaped bacilli...

Pharyngula

Big Charity

It must be tough running a charity. You've got a cause you care deeply about, and you're...

The Medicine & Health Channel RSS Feed

Brain & Behavior

Dean's Corner

Beauty and Brains Tease

Sources: PetaPixel and Photo Vatika (Sony India) No, I'm not the first to discovery this extraordinary brain...

Respectful Insolence

Placebo effects are "proof" that God exists?

A couple of weeks ago, I made the observation that there seems to have been a--shall we say?--realignment...

Dean's Corner

Ritalin's Fallacy

Diffusion MRI Tractography in the brain white matter. Some drugs work well because they are designed to...

The Brain & Behavior Channel RSS Feed

Technology

Uncertain Principles

Lap Desk?

It's apparently a good day for asking questions of the readership, so here's another one: as SteelyKid has...

Starts With A Bang

Weekend Diversion: The Best (and Easiest) Charity Ever!

"You cannot hope to build a better world without improving individuals. We all must work for our own...

Greg Laden's Blog

Google's New Privacy Policy Unveiled

From Google: We're getting rid of over 60 different privacy policies across Google and replacing them with one...

The Technology Channel RSS Feed

Information Science

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Around the Web: Libraries, leadership and change

Ever since I attended the Harvard Leadership Institute for Academic Librarians last summer, I've been watching for interesting...

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Around the Web: What ownership means for digital media, The power of introverts and more

What 'Ownership' Means for Digital Media (Hint: Not Much) The Power of Introverts: A Manifesto for Quiet Brilliance...

Uncertain Principles

The Arxiv Is Not a Journal

There's been a lot written recently about academic publishing, in the kerfuffle over the "Research Works Act"-- John's...

The Information Science Channel RSS Feed

Jobs

Pharyngula

Looking for a postdoc?

Here's an opportunity: you could work with Reed Cartwright at Arizona State University!...

Confessions of a Science Librarian

Digital Assets Librarian, York University Libraries

A terrific new opportunity at my institution. I'm not in the reporting department or on the search committee,...

Dean's Corner

Strange Résumé: Teleprompter, Surgeon, Guillotine Operator, Stand Up Comedian All In One

Building a résumé that gets an employer's attention is serious business. Most employers need to be convinced...

The Jobs Channel RSS Feed
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