27 January 2006

i heart bolivia


WATER FIGHT: BOLIVIA vs. BECHTEL
Last week brought an end to one of the greatest water battles in history. The people of Bolivia have successfully reclaimed ownership of their water from the Bechtel Corporation. In 1999, Bechtel made an arrangement with the Bolivian government totake ownership of the water supply and charge citizens for its use. Within weeks of the takeover, Bechtel raised water rates by 50% and made it illegal to gather rainwater without a permit. The ensuing citizen revolt forced Bechtel out of the country. Bechtel then sued Bolivia for $50 million for "profit losses."But last week, after four years of legal disputes and public pressure, the case was dropped. "This is the first time that a major corporation like Bechtel has had to back down from a major trade case as the result of global citizen pressure,"said Jim Shultz, executive director of The Democracy Center in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Bechtel's surrender coincides with the election of indigenous populist farm leader, Evo Morales, who has long been a sharp critic of Bechtel and other transnational corporations operating in Bolivia. http://www.organicconsumers.org/Politics/bechtel012006.cfm

25 January 2006

I blame the Christians


Literacy level of U.S. college graduates declines
Educators are stunned by 10-percent drop

By Lois Romano, Washington Post

Literacy experts and educators say they are stunned by the results of a recent adult literacy assessment, which shows that the reading proficiency of college graduates has declined in the past decade, with no obvious explanation. "It's appalling—it's really astounding," said Michael Gorman, president of the American Library Association and a librarian at California State University at Fresno. "Only 31 percent of college graduates can read a complex book and extrapolate from it. That's not saying much for the remainder."

While more Americans are graduating from college, and more than ever are applying for admission, far fewer are leaving higher education with the skills needed to comprehend routine data, such as reading a table about the relationship between blood pressure and physical activity, according to the federal study conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics.

Experts could not definitively explain the drop. "The declining impact of education on our adult population was the biggest surprise for us, and we just don't have a good explanation," said Mark S. Schneider, commissioner of education statistics. "It may be that institutions have not yet figured out how to teach a whole generation of students who learned to read on the computer and who watch more TV. It's a different kind of literacy."

"What's disturbing is that the assessment is not designed to test your understanding of Proust, but to test your ability to read labels," he added.

The test measures how well adults comprehend basic instructions and tasks through reading—such as computing costs per ounce of food items, comparing viewpoints on two editorials and reading prescription labels. Only 41 percent of graduate students tested in 2003 could be classified as "proficient" in prose—reading and understanding information in short texts—down 10 percentage points since 1992. Of college graduates, only 31 percent were classified as proficient—compared with 40 percent in 1992.

Schneider said the results do not separate recent graduates from those who have been out of school several years or more.

The results were based on a sample of more than 19,000 people 16 or older, who were interviewed in their homes. The scores for "intermediate" reading abilities went up for college students, causing educators to question whether most college instruction is offered at the intermediate level because students face reading challenges.

Gorman said that he has been shocked by how few entering freshmen understand how to use a basic library system, or enjoy reading for pleasure. "There is a failure in the core values of education," he said. "They're told to go to college in order to get a better job—and that's OK. But the real task is to produce educated people."

Other experts noted that the slip in scores could be attributed to most state schools not being particularly selective, accepting most high school graduates to bolster enrollment.

In addition, Schneider said schools may not be taking into account a more diverse population, and the language and cultural barriers that come with shifting demographics.

That would account for the dramatic drop in average prose literacy for Hispanics, which slipped by 18 percentage points, he said. "The Hispanic scores were somewhat understandable based on the changing demographics," Schneider said. "Diversity may lead to more difficulties in education."

Dolores Perin, a reading expert at Columbia University Teachers College, said that her work has indicated that the issue may start at the high school level. "There is a tremendous literacy problem among high school graduates that is not talked about," said Perin, who has been sitting in on high school classes as part of a teaching project. "It's a little bit depressing. The colleges are left holding the bag, trying to teach students who have challenges."

On average, adult literacy is virtually unchanged since 1992, with 30 million people struggling with basic reading tasks. While adults made some progress in quantitative literacy, such as the ability to calculate taxes, the study showed that from 1992 to 2003 adults made no improvement in their ability to read newspapers or books, or comprehend basic forms.

One bright spot is that blacks are making significant gains in reading and math and are reaching higher levels of education. For instance, the report showed that the average rate of prose literacy, or reading, among blacks rose six percentage points since 1992. Prose and document reading scores for whites remained the same.

19 January 2006

lest we forget


"I don't think it's right that you take our properties. Over my dead body. I didn't die with Katrina." - Lower 9th Ward resident Caroline Parker.

(unrelated N.O. image from http://baytogulfpeoplespipeline.blogspot.com/)

Check out http://www.blackcommentator.com/167/167_cover_fighting_no_theft.html

14 January 2006

"A beautiful day in San Francisco is the most beautiful day on earth."

--Walter Mosley, Cinnamon Kiss


I used to hate San Francisco. Back in the early '80s, when my sister was in college at Berkeley, I loved coming up to visit her but I only loved Berkeley; San Francisco was too East-Coast and thus uninviting and distant in a way that California never was for me. I had no interest even in visiting, let alone living here. Plus, the most loathsome co-worker/supervisor with whom I ever worked had moved to L.A. from here and was always going on smugly about how much better San Francisco was than L.A., reason enough to hate it.

Never say never. Now I love it and am happy to be here, even though this is not a city for the working class, which means it is a city of temporary residents and rich people. From our mayor's office:

Only 12% of San Franciscans can afford to buy a median priced home which, in January 2005, skyrocketed to $666,740. And only 35% of San Franciscans own their own home. New York City is the only city in the nation with a lower percentage of homeowners than San Francisco. By way of reference, the national median priced home is $187,500.

That's pretty dismal.

I borrowed the image above from my girl; it's her work. I don't have any photographs of San Francisco. I don't think that's the kind of day Mosley, as Easy Rawlins, was invoking with his statement (he went on to say, "The sky is blue and white, Michelangelo at his best, and the air is so crystal clear it makes you feel that you can see more detail than you ever have before."), but beauty is different things to different people. Since reading it a few days ago his words have stayed with me. Is it true of the place I call home? Is it true because it's the place I call home?

Now I gotta go think about Cuba.

13 January 2006

"Given just a little chance, and given a little help, this is going to be a great country."


--Angelina Jolie, on Haiti, and in Haiti, above.

Don't even get me started.

Check out http://www.haitiaction.net/ instead.

12 January 2006

My sista! Can I get some?


I remember when the Queen hit the scene. I was living in ABQ. How exciting her voice was! "Ladies First" still gives me goosebumps. Well, not literally. Sometimes.

On the Cuba tip, I'm going tonight to see Bloqueo about the effects of the U.S. blockade on the country.

Speaking of another place to be, I got this from a friend who's making radical move in her own fabulous life. This gives me hope for someone, at least:

I am finding pockets of glorious change all around me!  After 10 years my Trader
Joe's guy (mind you in his late 50's) is moving to Barcelona with his partner of 18
years. He says he doesn't want to support this government anymore. AND, my neighbor
(also in his 50's) sold his condo and moved to Nicaragua to build a bed and
breakfast in the jungle!
After seeing a supposed-to-be-sympathetic image yesterday of Samuel Alito's wife crying because her nightmare of a sure-to-be-confirmed husband was being treated so mean by the hardly-mean Democrats, I wonder anew at the capacity of this country for decency. As a concerned black lesbian who was at Princeton in 1985 when Alito was applying for his justice department job (wink, wink), I feel particularly, specially connected to him and his way of thinking, though, of course, he doesn't remember. As long as we're going '80s, to paraphrase, should we stay or should we go?

05 January 2006

i can never forgive her for "bringing down the house"


but La' looks absolutely gorgeous here (though I'd love to know how she gracefully stood up in those heels and skirt, but I digress).

Okay, this is probably not what Adrienne had in mind when she called for a post, but it was about the most interesting thing floating around the web today, you know, since the world is at peace and no one is suffering at the hands of the U.S....what else can I say? I'm greatly anticipating going to see Waging a Living tomorrow night. Because one of the subjects is local there's a discussion after the 7:30 screening at the Opera Plaza Cinema, for you local readers.

And I'm all obsessed with the idea of going to Cuba.

2006, I'm hoping, is going to be the year of taking chances.


Labels: ,