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Sunday, March 26, 2017

Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 3/26/17


Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 3/26/17
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STANDARDIZED TESTING BILL OF RIGHTS




Seattle Schools Community Forum: What's Next for Seattle Schools?
Seattle Schools Community Forum: What's Next for Seattle Schools? : What's Next for Seattle Schools? I'll ask that question because apparently, the district isn't going to ask you. I bring this up after reading thru the presentation for last week's Work Session with one section about SMART goals and the other about the budget. Here's the title for the SMART goals: Selection of the 2017-18 Board G
Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection?
Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection? : Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection? It requires an educational program reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriate in light of the child’s circumstances. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. In light of the current administration’s push for school choice in the form of vouchers and charter schools, and
An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson | Daniel Katz, Ph.D.
An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson | Daniel Katz, Ph.D. : An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson It is nearing the end of March, which means that my social media feeds and the blogs that I read are full of materials pertaining to the Opt Out movement. Contrary to years of efforts by testing advocates to portray Opt Out as wholly of phenomenon of privileged parents, I know that the efforts I
Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation | US news | The Guardian
Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation | US news | The Guardian : Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation President’s targets include conservatives, Democrats and a possible veiled jab at Paul Ryan as Republican hand-wringing over repeal-and-replace failure continues Donald Trump sought on Sunday to spread blame for the fail
Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2
Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2 : Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2 Please join Internet radio host Dr. James Avington Miller Jr. for the second part of the War Report's examination of our teachers, our teacher unions, and the charter school war. Dr. Miller will present the War Report perspective on the never good, always bad and ugly unions
Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline | The Jose Vilson
Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline | The Jose Vilson : Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline A few weeks ago, I was supposed to attend the premiere of Time: The Kalief Browder Story , the documentary about a young man wrongly arrested and held captive for years in Rikers Island. The story uncovers the excesses and atrocities of the prison industrial complex in the world’s
Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers
Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers : Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers Get the Scoop on Vitti at Education Matters - http://jaxkidsmatter.blogspot.com/ Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers :
The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits - The Washington Post
The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits - The Washington Post : The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has toured four schools since she joined President Trump’s Cabinet in early February, and there’s a curious pattern to the visits. These are the schools she visited: Feb. 10 — Jefferson Middle School Academy
Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now. | Fred Klonsky
Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now. | Fred Klonsky : Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now. Illinois State Senator Andy Manar thinks there are too many special education students.
The American Charter School Nightmare Continues: Gülen Scandal Updat- CSMonitor.com
Could the Trump administration send Fethullah Gülen back to Turkey? - CSMonitor.com : Could the Trump administration send Fethullah Gülen back to Turkey? Turkey accuses the cleric of being the author of last summer’s failed coup. Whether or not the Trump administration sides with Turkey or European skeptics could shape the course of the war against ISIS . MARCH 25, 2017 — Fethullah Gülen leads a
BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? | BustED Pencils
BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? | BustED Pencils : BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? It’s not a shortage! It’s not a human capital issue! It’s a mass EXODUS ! Change the narrative. 30 years of war against teachers and the casualties are now insurmountable. THAT IS NOT A SHORTAGE! It’s a warning that public schools are close to being pr
Weekend Diane Ravitch's blog | A site to discuss better education for all
Diane Ravitch's blog | A site to discuss better education for all : Weekend Diane Ravitch's blog A site to discuss better education for all The Daily Signal Salutes Defunding of After-School Programs by dianeravitch / 31min The Daily Signal is published by the uber-conservative Heritage Foundation. I am on their mailing list. In yesterday’s report, it congratulated Trump for proposing to eliminat
Rainy Sunday. | Fred Klonsky
Rainy Sunday. | Fred Klonsky : Rainy Sunday. Julia, a child with autism, joins the cast of Sesame Street. Sen. Bernie Sanders cast the GOP as “out of touch” with the public on health care Friday, citing opposition to the Obamacare repeal and replace efforts at a series of contentious town halls as a driving factor behind Republicans’ inability to push through the American Health Care Act. “I thin
Standardized Testing Bill Of Rights
Test Better : STANDARDIZED TESTING BILL OF RIGHTS Proposed STANDARDIZED TESTING BILL OF RIGHTS Parents Have A Right To Opt Out of Standardized Testing . Current STANDARDIZED TESTING BILL OF RIGHTS High-quality tests that accurately assess student learning and help teachers understand how to improve instruction are an essential part of an excellent education. But too many students are spending too
CURMUDGUCATION: ICYMI: Babymoon Edition + Catch up with CURMUDGUCATION
CURMUDGUCATION: ICYMI: Babymoon Edition (3/26) : ICYMI: Babymoon Edition (3/26) My wife and I are in DC, contemplating the cherry blossoms and coming creative disruption of our lives by two currently-fetal offspring. But I've still collected some reading for you, set to auto-post at the usual Sunday AM time. Read, enjoy and share. In the Name of Love A little push back from a Christian about "Chr
The Parent Bill Of Rights For Education – Exceptional Delaware 2017
The Parent Bill Of Rights For Education – Exceptional Delaware 2017 : The Parent Bill Of Rights For Education Since the Center for American Progress, Delaware Governor Jack Markell, and the President of the National PTA want to get 10,000 signatures on their Testing Bill of Rights within the next month, I think it is only fair parents who opt their children out of high-stakes assessments do the s

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Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 3/25/17
Special Nite Cap: Catch Up on Today's Post 3/25/17 Featured Post Supreme Court Ruling On Special Ed Contradicts Gorsuch; DeVos Education Department Lacks Key Posts : NPR Ed : NPR Ed Notes Online: School Scope: War in the 

Top Posts This Week



Seattle Schools Community Forum: What's Next for Seattle Schools?

Seattle Schools Community Forum: What's Next for Seattle Schools?:

What's Next for Seattle Schools?


I'll ask that question because apparently, the district isn't going to ask you.

I bring this up after reading thru the presentation for last week's Work Session with one section about SMART goals and the other about the budget.  Here's the title for the SMART goals:



Selection of the 2017-18 Board Governance Priorities & Superintendent SMART Goals ... for next year.

Our goals help the Board and staff: 

a) Focus on: a few, high-priority and high-impact goals. Note: Over the last few years we have gone from 12 > 9 > 7 > 5 goals 

b) Aligned to the Board-adopted 2013-18 Strategic Plan. Note: Our goals are now fully aligned to our strategic plan.
First, that's great that the Board and senior staff finally realized that having too many goals dilutes the focus and the work. Also great is that their goals are aligned to the strategic plan.

However, despite the rubric that staff uses to judge the implementation and output of these goals, I'm not quite sure I have ever seen how/when they know they have achieved them.  Is complete implementation the goal or outcomes (to some degree) or both? 

So their three big goals over the last three years were:
  • MTSS
  • EOG - Eliminate the Opportunity Gap
  • Community Engagement

As a result: we are a high performing district outperforming our peers and each year we increase the number of positive outlier schools – leading the way state-wide in eliminating opportunity gaps.
This is also good news but I note that Seattle Schools Community Forum: What's Next for Seattle Schools?:


Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection?

Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection?:

Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection?


It requires an educational program reasonably calculated to enable a child to make progress appropriate in light of the child’s circumstances.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.
In light of the current administration’s push for school choice in the form of vouchers and charter schools, and the selection of Betsy DeVos to be education secretary, there is concern about the future of public schools and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). How will students who require different learning approaches fit in a world of school privatization?
The Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District ruling gives us hope that students with disabilities must be challenged in their educational program, but it also left many unanswered questions. One I will focus on today.
Why did the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (NAPCS) and the National Center for Special Education in Charter Schools (NCSECS) file an amicus brief for Endrew F. v. Douglas County School District? Such legal documents are filed by non-litigants with compelling interest in the case. The briefs advise the court. They Endrew F. and Charter Schools: What’s the Connection?:


An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson | Daniel Katz, Ph.D.

An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson | Daniel Katz, Ph.D.:

An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson 


 It is nearing the end of March, which means that my social media feeds and the blogs that I read are full of materials pertaining to the Opt Out movement.  Contrary to years of efforts by testing advocates to portray Opt Out as wholly of phenomenon of privileged parents, I know that the efforts I witness represent the work of parents facing bullying and misinformation from administrators trying to keep their test participation levels above 95%.  It is also represents the work of brave teachers risking sanction and professional consequences for speaking out against damaging policies that distort curricula and classroom choices.  Further, it represents the work of urban education activists who have seen over and over again how annual test data is abused by politicians and policymakers and is used to rank teachers on flawed measures of their performance and to close schools instead of to help and nurture them.

The reasons to support opting out are legion.  Peter Greene provides an excellent breakdown of eight compelling reasons in this post.  Katie Lapham clearly articulates how test refusal is a form of people power that says “no” to a variety of practices that actively harm schools and children.  Last year, Bronx Principal Jamaal Bowman made an impassioned case for why he supports parents’ rights to refuse the state exams, asking why if the city’s most elite private schools refuse to give exams like these why do we just accept them as necessary for schools full of children in poverty?  New York State Allies for Public Education published this informative response to general misinformation and obfuscation on testing policy put into the state “information toolkit” for administrators.  I urge you to read these pieces carefully and thoughtfully and to seek out others on the subject if you are not already deeply informed on the issues regarding testing.
From where I sit, there are two fundamental reasons why parents should consider opting their children out of the annual examinations.  First, they are a failed policy.  Annual, high stakes, standardized examinations were ushered in as part of the No Child Left Behind legislation under President Bush with a promise that with an ongoing set of achievement data that could be compared against An Opt Out Lament – and a Deeper Lesson | Daniel Katz, Ph.D.:

Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation | US news | The Guardian

Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation | US news | The Guardian:

Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation
President’s targets include conservatives, Democrats and a possible veiled jab at Paul Ryan as Republican hand-wringing over repeal-and-replace failure continues


Donald Trump sought on Sunday to spread blame for the failure of his first attempt at passing major legislation, the replacement of Barack Obama’s signature healthcare law.

As internecine squabbling continued in the Republican party, the president’s targets included conservatives in Congress, Democrats and, possibly, House speaker Paul Ryan.
On Twitter on Sunday morning, Trump wrote: “Democrats are smiling in DC that the Freedom Caucus, with the help of Club for Growth and Heritage, have saved Planned Parenthood & O[bama]care.”
He was referring to the advocacy group Club for Growth, as well as the Heritage Foundation thinktank and likely its advocacy offshoot Heritage Action for America, all conservative groups with influence on the members of the Freedom Caucus.
That hard-right House group’s withdrawal of support along with some Republican moderates caused Ryan and Trump to pull the health bill before a vote on Friday.
Provocatively, Trump lumped such groups together with congressional Democrats and mentioned Planned Parenthood, a federally funded provider of women’s healthcare services that is a lightning rod for anti-abortion groups.
Debate also continued about whether Trump or members of his administration had orchestrated an unusual attack on Ryan on Saturday, despite professions of unity from both the White House and the House speaker’s camp. Trump and Ryan spoke by phone for an hour on Saturday.
In the morning, the president used Twitter to tell the public to watch a show on Fox News at 9pm, Judge Jeanine.
The former judge, prosecutor, district attorney and Republican political candidate from New York Jeanine Ferris Pirro then opened her show by saying: “Paul Ryan needs to step down as speaker of the House … He failed to deliver the votes.”

Trump’s senior adviser, Steve Bannon, is a former publisher of the hard-right website Breitbart, which has been harshly critical of Ryan.
Mick Mulvaney, formerly a member of the Freedom Caucus and now Trump’s director of the Office of Management and Budget, denied any move against the speaker.
“Never once have I seen him blame Paul Ryan,” Mulvaney said on NBC’s Meet the Press. “The people who are to blame are the people who would not vote yes.”
Mulvaney was one of the leading officials lobbying House Republicans to pass the bill, which was pulled less than an hour before lawmakers were due to vote.
“We haven’t been able to change Washington in the first 65 days,” Mulvaney said. “I know the Freedom Caucus. I helped found it. I never thought it would come to Trump blames everyone but himself for failure of GOP healthcare legislation | US news | The Guardian:

Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2

Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2:

Teachers, Teachers Unions, and the Charter School War Part 2

No automatic alt text available.

Please join Internet radio host Dr. James Avington Miller Jr. for the second part of the War Report's examination of our teachers, our teacher unions, and the charter school war. Dr. Miller will present the War Report perspective on the never good, always bad and ugly unions and charter schools getting in bed with each other . Dr. Miller will start the show by summing up just why charters and unions don't mix .

Dr. Miller will argue why charters and unions don't mix well. He will remind everyone of the origins of charters in the resistance to school integration, the legacy of segregation, and racism and segregation today. He will expertly construct an analysis of segregation yesterday,tomorrow, and segregation forever.

Thie first show was birthed from commentary on the following question:

What is the difference between unions promoting new charter schools and unions unionizing existing charter schools?

Here is the podcast from part 1 - https://bbsradio.com/podcast/war-report-public-education-march-19-2017

Please think about your own ideas on this issue and call in Sunday and help us explore and reveal this issue . We encourage your participation in this critical discussion.

Knowledge is power !

RESISTANCE MATTERS
RESISTANCE IS NOT FUTILE
RESISTANCE IS THE HIGHEST FORM OF EXPRESSION OF DEMOCRACY
RESISTANCE IS SURVIVAL
Please click on the website below to listen live:
http://bbsradio.com/thewarreport
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Station 1 888-627-6008 toll free


Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline | The Jose Vilson

Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline | The Jose Vilson:

Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline

Related image

A few weeks ago, I was supposed to attend the premiere of Time: The Kalief Browder Story, the documentary about a young man wrongly arrested and held captive for years in Rikers Island. The story uncovers the excesses and atrocities of the prison industrial complex in the world’s empire city all through a young man whose post-traumatic stress disorder ended with him taking his life. The Jay-Z / Weinstein Company-produced documentary would have been a delight to watch.
Then school happened.
As a teacher and parent, I get to see first hand the effects that schooling has on our youth. The constrictions and mandates placed on our children and the ideals we give up in the name of security all form the alloy that keeps the school-to-prison pipeline intact. We keep losing our most vulnerable youth when we’re not responsive to their needs and concerns. Surely, institutional racism and oppression are hard to bear for one adult at a time. But now, more than ever, is the time to have the conversation about our agency as adults in this school-to-prison pipeline, and how we re-enact jail to and for our kids.
So I had a bad day at school and didn’t attend the premiere.
Luckily, the good folks at Spike arranged for me to speak with the filmmakers about this harrowing film. When I interviewed the director of Time, Jenner Furst, I needed to know about Browder’s path, his school, and what we could do better as adults. This is intertwined with preferred methods of schooling because, in many instances, we’re driving schools to be institutions that slide kids right into prison. Curricula, pedagogy, and wayward research are some of the drivers for this momentum.
I’d say more, but please do read this interview with Jenner Furst. Thank you and let’s continue the conversation.Kalief Browder and the School-To-Prison Pipeline | The Jose Vilson:
 Image result for Time: The Kalief Browder Story

Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers

Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers:

Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers
Get the Scoop on Vitti at Education Matters - http://jaxkidsmatter.blogspot.com/


Education Matters: Detroit and Jacksonville by the numbers:



The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits - The Washington Post

The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits - The Washington Post:

The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits


Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has toured four schools since she joined President Trump’s Cabinet in early February, and there’s a curious pattern to the visits.
These are the schools she visited:
Feb. 10 — Jefferson Middle School Academy, a traditional public school in Washington
March 3 — St. Andrew Catholic School, a parochial school in Orlando, where she toured with Trump
March 23 — Carderock Springs Elementary School, a traditional public school in Bethesda
March 24 — Valencia College, a community college in Kissimmee, Fla.
That’s two visits in the D.C. area — where she was met with protests — and two in Florida. Is that random?
The Education Department did not respond to a query about why these schools were selected.
But consider this:
Her office at the Education Department is in Washington.
In central Florida, the site of the other two schools she visited, the Michigan billionaire and her husband, Dick DeVos, own at least one home at Windsor, a private sporting club community on what the development’s website says is “a lush barrier island between the Indian River and the Atlantic Ocean.” This is where the extended DeVos family holds meetings of what it calls the The convenient pattern of Education Secretary DeVos’s school visits - The Washington Post:

Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now. | Fred Klonsky

Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now. | Fred Klonsky:

Urgent. Senator Manar has filed his bill eliminating designated sped funding. Manar thinks there are too many special education students. Act now.

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Illinois State Senator Andy Manar thinks there are too many special education students.
Fred,
Sen. Manar has finally filed the Amendment to Senate Bill 1, AND House Bill 2808 may be voted on in Committee on Tuesday. Could you post at least the beginning parts of the following so people CAN ACT (file Witness Slip on HB 2808 per the following directions) on what we have been telling them for months?
Thanks, Bev Johns
———————–
Amendment 1 to Senate Bill1 has now been introduced by State Senator Andy Manar. (Without any evidence whatsoever, Sen. Manar told all the Members of the Rauner Commission that there was “drastic over-identification” for special education in Illinois.)
On pages 239 to 242 the Amendment contains the exact same language as House Bill 2808 TO ELIMINATE DIRECT AND DEDICATED FUNDING FOR SPECIAL EDUCATION TEACHERS (to eliminate Special Education Personnel Reimbursement).
If because of what it does to special education, or  because it is extreme local control of K-12 education, or because it would provide NO new funding for special education co-ops, you oppose the bill, you can fill out a Witness Slip on-line (see below).
If you are in Springfield, you can attend the hearing:
Appropriations-Elementary & Secondary Education Committee Hearing Mar 28, 2017, 2:00PM Capitol Building Room 114, Springfield, IL 
To do a Witness Slip opposed to HB 2808:


The American Charter School Nightmare Continues: Gülen Scandal Update- CSMonitor.com

Could the Trump administration send Fethullah Gülen back to Turkey? - CSMonitor.com:

Could the Trump administration send Fethullah Gülen back to Turkey?

Turkey accuses the cleric of being the author of last summer’s failed coup. Whether or not the Trump administration sides with Turkey or European skeptics could shape the course of the war against ISIS.

Image result for big education ape Gülen


MARCH 25, 2017 Fethullah Gülen leads a reclusive existence in his Pennsylvania compound. Much may hinge on whether or not he remains there.
An extradition request for the cleric, filed by Turkey’s government in September, remains under review, as Turkish impatience grows over the fate of a man that some call a Turkish Osama bin Laden — but whom skeptics describe as little more than a scapegoat for Turkey's power-hungry president.
This weekend, Mr. Gülen is emerging at the center of US controversy, after ex-CIA director James Woolsey told the Wall Street Journal he had been present at a September meeting between top Turkish officials and President Trump’s former national security advisor, Michael Flynn, in which the two sides discussed ways to deliver Gülen into Turkish custody.
"You might call it brainstorming. But it was brainstorming about a very serious matter that would pretty clearly be a violation of law,” Mr. Woolsey told the newspaper, while cautioning that “a specific plan to undertake a felonious act” was never formulated in his presence.
“It was suspicious, it was concerning, and I felt I needed to say something to somebody, but was it a clear plot that they were going to seize him? No,” he later told CNN.
A spokesman for Flynn, who was paid over $500,000 to lobby for Turkish interests during his time as an advisor to President Trump, has denied the claim. 
"The claim made by Mr. Woolsey that General Flynn, or anyone else in attendance, discussed physical removal of Mr. Gulen from the United States during a meeting with Turkish officials in New York is false,” said Flynn's spokesman, Price Floyd, in a statement.
Woolsey’s accusation underscores the remarkable importance of Gülen, who rejects any allegations of involvement with the July coup attempt. And it animates questions about how US-Turkey relations might shift under the Trump administration, at a time when Turkey’s war against Syrian Kurds is complicating the United States’ own proxy-led campaign against ISIS.
Many US military leaders see the Kurdish peshmerga fighters as the best suited to defeat ISIS, perhaps in part because the peshmerga hope to establish a Kurdish homeland that could encompass territory currently controlled by ISIS. But that territory in northern Syria also adjoins Turkey, which opposes the idea and considers the YPG, the main group of Kurdish fighters, just another wing of a separatist terrorist group operating within Turkey.
Trump has praised the peshmerga. But as the US-led coalition sets its sights on the ISIS capital of Raqqa, the administration is reviewing whether to approve a detailed Obama-era blueprint for backing the Syrian Kurds in that fight, as Foreign Policy reported on March 3. 
Little has emerged about the new administration’s approach in the three weeks since. As the clock ticks, Turkey has sent forces to fight ISIS in towns west of Raqqa, in an apparent bid to wage its own campaign to capture the city. And it has Could the Trump administration send Fethullah Gülen back to Turkey? - CSMonitor.com:
 Image result for big education ape Gülen
Image result for big education ape Gülen

BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? | BustED Pencils

BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? | BustED Pencils:

BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone?





It’s not a shortage! It’s not a human capital issue! It’s a mass EXODUS!
Change the narrative. 30 years of war against teachers and the casualties are now insurmountable.
THAT IS NOT A SHORTAGE! It’s a warning that public schools are close to being privatized and our most vulnerable children will be thrown to a market that doesn’t give a $#@! about them.
GET REAL! It’s a WAR and we’re losing.


 BustED Pencils Trending News: Where Have All the Teachers Gone? | BustED Pencils:



Image result for Where Have All the Teachers Gone