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Friday, October 23, 2015
Kind Cards
From Upworthy -
Have you heard of Sneaky Cards? The game is turning everyday life into quite an adventure.
There are people out there putting money in vending machines and then quickly walking away. On purpose.
Others are asking strangers to cut in front of them in line.
It's all part of the game.
"Sneaky Cards: Play It Forward" is a new card game that's the ultimate reminder that random daily moments and interactions with strangers can be a lot of fun.
It's the ultimate way to mix up your day and challenge yourself.
Sometimes you interact with people, sometimes you do a nice thing, sometimes you make art.
http://www.upworthy.com/have-you-heard-of-sneaky-cards-the-game-is-turning-everyday-life-into-quite-an-adventure?c=upw1&u=6861cbea6edfdfe5a709ee39ad3c14b64135e61f
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Post Racial or Racist Posts?
From The Root -
Black Students at DC’s American University Post Racist Social Media Messages on Campus to Draw Attention to Campus Race Issues
The students are tired of the racist posts on social media targeting black students.
BY: YESHA CALLAHAN
Posted: Oct. 21 2015 8:50 AM
Racist social media posts on Yik Yak THE DARKENING
Editor’s note: This article contains social media posts that some may find offensive.
Being a black student on a predominantly white campus isn’t always easy. Especially when some of your white classmates repeatedly post racist comments on a popular social media app used by college students.
Such is the case at American University.
Members of a student-led, racial-justice community organization called the Darkening launched #TheRealAU campaign so that students could share their experience with racism on campus, something the organization says the university’s president, Neil Kerwin, has failed to address aside from a memorandum written in April.
Racism on display via American University’s Yik Yak users THE DARKENING
“Recently members of our campus community were subjected in social media to racist, offensive comments that were reprehensible,” Kerwin wrote. “Similar experiences are occurring with disturbing frequency nationwide at other colleges and universities, but they are especially unwelcome at our university, which so actively strives to be diverse and inclusive. ... Like all institutions devoted to learning, we face a great challenge in balancing conditions that make it possible for every member of the community to learn and work in a respectful environment that also supports free academic inquiry and unfettered speech.”
However, black students on campus say that racist messages are being
left on the popular Yik Yak app and that although they’ve complained
to the president about it, nothing has been done. As a result, the students
decided to take action.
On Oct. 8 the students posted screenshots of the racist messages all
around campus in hopes of drawing attention to the ongoing issue.
But eventually the images were taken down by campus security.
Racism on display via American University’s Yik Yak users THE DARKENING
“The American University community has demonstrated that it does
not care enough about the experience of black students here. I should
not have to deal with micro-aggressive students, staff and professors
every day,” said Tatiana Laing, co-founder of the Darkening. “Enough
is enough. Free speech is not the same as hate speech. It shouldn’t be
up to me to train people on structural racism because we lack mandatory
racial education. I need American University to make concrete changes,
and I needed it yesterday.”
The black students on campus want their voices heard. Some may
suggest that they ignore the app because only cowards would use it
to post anonymous messages. But black students on campus shouldn’t
have to be on guard and subjected to cowardly acts of racism—
offline or on social media.
http://www.theroot.com/blogs/the_grapevine/2015/10/black_
students_at_d_c_s_american_university_post_racist_social_
media_messages.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26
Workers?
From The Atlantic -
Earlier this month, McGraw Hill found itself at the center of some rather embarrassing press after a photo showing a page from one of its high-school world-geography textbooks was disseminated on social media. The page features a seemingly innocuous polychromatic map of the United States, broken up into thousands of counties, as part of a lesson on the country’s immigration patterns: Different colors correspond with various ancestral groups, and the color assigned to each county indicates its largest ethnic representation. The page is scarce on words aside from an introductory summary and three text bubbles explaining specific trends—for example, that Mexico accounts for the largest share of U.S. immigrants today.
The recent blunder has to do with one bubble in particular. Pointing to a patch of purple grids extending throughout the country’s Southeast corridor, the one-sentence caption reads:
The Atlantic Slave Trade between the 1500s and 1800s brought millions of workers from Africa to the southern United States to work on agricultural plantations.
The photo that spread through social media was taken by a black Texas student named Coby Burren, who subsequently texted it to his mom, Roni-Dean Burren. “Was real hard workers, wasn’t we,” he wrote. Roni-Dean quickly took to Facebook, lambasting the blunder: the reference to the Africans as workers rather than slaves. A video she later posted has been viewed nearly 2 million times, and her indignation has renewed conversations around the Black Lives Matter movement while attracting coverage by almost every major news outlet. “It talked about the U.S.A. being a country of immigration, but mentioning the slave trade in terms of immigration was just off,” she told The New York Times. “It’s that nuance of language. This is what erasure looks like.”
http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/10/the-history-class-dilemma/411601/
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Monday, October 19, 2015
A Raincoat For Your Handbag
From The Grommet -
https://www.thegrommet.com/handbag-raincoat?utm_campaign=20151019&utm_content=26556&utm_medium=email&utm_source=CC&trk_msg=U3BKEFHVACL4D0PJCD54PFAF3C&trk_contact=6PJ17299EJ5SLGM27119G0AQ7K
https://www.thegrommet.com/handbag-raincoat?utm_campaign=20151019&utm_content=26556&utm_medium=email&utm_source=CC&trk_msg=U3BKEFHVACL4D0PJCD54PFAF3C&trk_contact=6PJ17299EJ5SLGM27119G0AQ7K
Sunday, October 18, 2015
Sign Me Up!
From News 360 -
Scoot, the San Francisco-based electric scooter ride share network, has teamed up with Nissan to create a four-wheeled two-seater enclosed vehicle onto the streets of San Francisco. Starting today, Scoot members have the option to rent one of these adorable little cars to get them anywhere in the 7×7.
http://news360.com/article/317518952
Helping Kids Grow
From USA Today -
"It's the three T's," she says: "Tune in, talk more and take turns."
That's the mantra of the Thirty Million Words initiative, an experimental effort to build young brains with words. The program gets its name from a study published in the 1990s that found children in low-income homes heard 30 million fewer words by age 3 than children in high income homes. They also heard a smaller variety of words and fewer words of encouragement. And those differences in language exposure had an apparent effect: Children from word-poor homes ended up with smaller vocabularies and worse school performance.
~~~~~
"Not having money in your pocket has never made a brain not grow," says Dana Suskind, a University of Chicago surgeon who founded the Thirty Million Words project. But little brains do need words to grow, she says: "In the beginning, the food for the developing brain is language and interaction."
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2015/10/18/baby-talk-brain-programs/73808670/
Still Life Official Trailer 1 (2015) - Eddie Marsan Drama HD
There's an article in the New York Times today, that is about the life and death of a man who died alone. It took months to positively identify him and even longer to find someone who knew him.
It is also speaks to the work of the people trying to piece together this man's life.
I found it intriguing.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/18/nyregion/dying-alone-in-new-york-city.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=photo-spot-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news
This movie is about a man whose job it is to find the next of kin of people who die alone.
It is thought-provoking, too, although Forrest might beg to differ.
It is also speaks to the work of the people trying to piece together this man's life.
I found it intriguing.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/18/nyregion/dying-alone-in-new-york-city.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=photo-spot-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news
This movie is about a man whose job it is to find the next of kin of people who die alone.
It is thought-provoking, too, although Forrest might beg to differ.
Saturday, October 17, 2015
A Warm Welcome
One of my first introductions to people from this part of the world happened at my first principalship. We had a Sikh student who wore the traditional turban, and he was being harassed on the playground. This came to a head (no pun intended) when his turban was pulled off. An absolute no no.
I called the Sikh student in, along with his parents, and dealt with the instigating student in no uncertain terms.
Later, I was invited to a Sikh church service. At this time in my life I didn't want anything to do with anything or anyone related to organized religion. I had been hurt deeply by Christian folks, so I done with them all.
However, the invitations continued, and I continued to put them off. In passing, I mentioned this to Forrest, who in his infinite wisdom brought on in part by being ten years older than me, said I had to go.
And so I did.
First there was the church service, where the women sat on one side and the men the other. This reminded me of the Catholic church I attended as a child, where typically the men and women sat on opposite sides of the church. We took off our shoes at the door and sat with legs crossed on the floor. There was singing and worship in a language I didn't recognized. I remember being taken aback by the joy and peacefulness that filled the place.
This was followed by a presentation in a meeting room, explaining who they are (Sikhs) and how they're different from Muslims, although they were/are being lumped together. This was post-9/11. The presenter was a prominent doctor from UC Davis, and a high ranking member of the church. There were about a dozen visitors, including me. It was totally enlightening and totally engrossing.
Then we were ushered into a hall where there were trays and trays of food on the floor. Again we took off our shoes and made our way to a tray where we were directed to help ourselves from the huge assortment of food laid out before us.
This day, of learning and growing and experiencing new things, was wonderful.
I'm forever grateful that Forrest nudged me into accepting this invite. It was an eye-opening experience, and although I had no idea at the time, but it would be a precursor of things to come, as I've learned to immerse myself in this Arab world I call home.
The article below reminded me of the incredible hospitality I experienced. I thought it was a one-time thing helping to clarify their message of who they are after 9/11, but this hospitable spirit seems to be ingrained in who they are.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/sikh-langar-parliament-of-world-religions_5622c61be4b02f6a900c9e68
I called the Sikh student in, along with his parents, and dealt with the instigating student in no uncertain terms.
Later, I was invited to a Sikh church service. At this time in my life I didn't want anything to do with anything or anyone related to organized religion. I had been hurt deeply by Christian folks, so I done with them all.
However, the invitations continued, and I continued to put them off. In passing, I mentioned this to Forrest, who in his infinite wisdom brought on in part by being ten years older than me, said I had to go.
And so I did.
First there was the church service, where the women sat on one side and the men the other. This reminded me of the Catholic church I attended as a child, where typically the men and women sat on opposite sides of the church. We took off our shoes at the door and sat with legs crossed on the floor. There was singing and worship in a language I didn't recognized. I remember being taken aback by the joy and peacefulness that filled the place.
This was followed by a presentation in a meeting room, explaining who they are (Sikhs) and how they're different from Muslims, although they were/are being lumped together. This was post-9/11. The presenter was a prominent doctor from UC Davis, and a high ranking member of the church. There were about a dozen visitors, including me. It was totally enlightening and totally engrossing.
Then we were ushered into a hall where there were trays and trays of food on the floor. Again we took off our shoes and made our way to a tray where we were directed to help ourselves from the huge assortment of food laid out before us.
This day, of learning and growing and experiencing new things, was wonderful.
I'm forever grateful that Forrest nudged me into accepting this invite. It was an eye-opening experience, and although I had no idea at the time, but it would be a precursor of things to come, as I've learned to immerse myself in this Arab world I call home.
The article below reminded me of the incredible hospitality I experienced. I thought it was a one-time thing helping to clarify their message of who they are after 9/11, but this hospitable spirit seems to be ingrained in who they are.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/sikh-langar-parliament-of-world-religions_5622c61be4b02f6a900c9e68
Friday, October 16, 2015
Giving Back in a Big Way
From The Root -
Former NFL Player Warrick Dunn Celebrates Helping His 145th Single-Parent Family Purchase a Home
The former Tampa Bay Buccaneer is giving back to his community in a major way.
http://www.theroot.com/blogs/the_grapevine/2015/10/former_nfl_player_warrick_dunn_celebrates_helping_his_145th_single_parent.html?wpisrc=newsletter_jcr:content%26
USB for iPad/iPhone
The biggest drawback to an iPad is that it doesn't have a USB Port.
This gadget is a solution to that problem.
This video is cheesy, but I wanted you to see this gizzy. I recently purchased it (Amazon) and it works great. I needed to transfer files from my work PC to my iPad. It works like a regular USB drive in that you can either leave the info on the drive and access it from there, or you can transfer it and erase it from the drive.
This Omars Flash Drive requires a download of this app:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/i-drive/id937054894?mt=8
The link below features other brands.
http://9to5mac.com/2015/03/20/the-best-iphoneipad-usb-flash-drives-with-lightning-connectors/
Happy shopping!
This gadget is a solution to that problem.
This video is cheesy, but I wanted you to see this gizzy. I recently purchased it (Amazon) and it works great. I needed to transfer files from my work PC to my iPad. It works like a regular USB drive in that you can either leave the info on the drive and access it from there, or you can transfer it and erase it from the drive.
This Omars Flash Drive requires a download of this app:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/i-drive/id937054894?mt=8
The link below features other brands.
http://9to5mac.com/2015/03/20/the-best-iphoneipad-usb-flash-drives-with-lightning-connectors/
Happy shopping!
Tuesday, October 13, 2015
Mini-Libraries
As see in The Good -
Artist-Designed Miniature Libraries Make Literacy Open, Free and Beautiful
by DJ Pangburn
Ouch!
Quote - (H/T Ben)
Meanwhile the "respectable" candidate is Fox's own Ben Carson, a man who continues to be living proof that you don't need to have a brain in order to operate on one.
Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/rupert-murdoch-is-deviant-scum-20151013#ixzz3oVWle7EV
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook
Meanwhile the "respectable" candidate is Fox's own Ben Carson, a man who continues to be living proof that you don't need to have a brain in order to operate on one.
Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/rupert-murdoch-is-deviant-scum-20151013#ixzz3oVWle7EV
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook
The White Guy
From The Groit - Click on the link below for a captivating story of this guy.
Side note - I love it when I learn something new, even when it reveals my ignorance.
Did you know there is a statue of these black men whose silent protest spoke volumes during the 1968 Olympics erected at San Jose State University. How could I live in Northern California for over twenty years and not know that?
The white man in that photo
http://griotmag.com/en/white-man-in-that-photo/
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