Saturday, June 15, 2013

Ed Notes Online: Zombies in Central Park Plus Some Carpentry

Ed Notes Online: Zombies in Central Park Plus Some Carpentry:

Zombies in Central Park Plus Some Carpentry

The Zombies, our favorite group -- we went to London twice to see them, plus numerous viewings here in NYC  -- are doing a 6PM free -- yes free -- concert in Central Park today and we are heading in for a (not-free) 4PM session with lead singer Collin Blunstone (who looks at us as stalkers) and Ron Argent.

A fact you need to know from Wikki: Their 1968 album, Odessey and Oracle, comprising twelve songs by the group's principal songwriters, Argent and Chris White, is ranked number 100 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

She's Not There is one of my fave songs which haunted me in 1964 when I was in love and she wasn't there.

Popout

Norm the carpenter

I've been working on building a base for a rubber maid shed I bought and it's taken some time -- I work a half hour and rest for 2 hours -- and oh that mud.

But here is something more fun with people who actually know what they are doing.

I am heading off with my screw gun and hammer to the Rockaway Theatre Company's Sandy-damaged theater in Fort Tilden to help put the plywood down on the stage which we worked on last Saturday. I spent part of last 

Paul Krugman Inadvertantly Lays Waste to Obama Ed Policy

Education, then, is no longer the answer to rising inequality, if it ever was (which I doubt). .. Paul Krugman, June 14, NY Times
Until recently, the conventional wisdom about the effects of technology on workers was, in a way, comforting. Clearly, many workers weren’t sharing fully — or, in many cases, at all — in the benefits of rising productivity; instead, the bulk of the gains were going to a minority of the work force. But this, the story went, was because modern technology was raising the demand for highly educated workers while reducing the demand for less educated workers. And the solution was more education..... today highly educated workers are as likely as less educated workers to find themselves displaced and devalued, and pushing for more education may create as many problems as it solves.  


Leonie Haimson Skinny Awards This Tuesday, June 19, Honors Arthur Goldstein and Gary Rubinstein

Money raised goes to the great work Leonie has been doing.

See why NYC Educator is going. My Secret Identity


Fifth Annual "Skinny" award dinner
Leonie Haimson and Diane Ravitch
Patrick Sullivan
Monica Major and Emily Horowitz
invite you to
the Fifth annual Skinny Awards
When: Tuesday, June 18 at 6:00 PM
 Where: Fagiolini on 40th
120 E. 40 St.  (betw. Lexington and 3rd Ave.)
New York, NY 10016
A fundraiser for Class Size Matters
 Please join us where we will honor two exceptional teacher bloggers:
 Arthur Goldstein
Author of the NYC Educator blog and ESL teacher at Francis Lewis High School in Queens
 Gary Rubinstein
Blogger at Teach for Usand math teacher at Stuyvesant HS in lower Manhattan
A rare opportunity to enjoy a four course dinner with wine and celebrate two people who give us the real "skinny" on NYC schools
Tickets:  $250 - Defender of Public Education
$150 - Patron
$75 – Supporter
Or send a check to: Class Size Matters, 124 Waverly Pl.
 NY NY 10011; your contribution is tax-deductible.