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Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” August 29, 2020

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Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” August 29, 2020

The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

HOT JOBS IN EVANSVILLE

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Office Assistant/Scheduler
Swat Pest Management – Evansville, IN
$12 – $14 an hour
Swat Pest Management, a top 100 leader in the pest control industry, is always looking for qualified and dedicated individuals to join our growing team.
Easily apply
Aug 26
Administrative Assistant
AHA Now Counseling – Evansville, IN
$12.00 – $12.75 an hour
Counseling seeks a bright, eager, and professional Front Office Assistant for a part-time position in our office. Two-years previous office experience required;
Easily apply
Aug 24
DSS Medical Office Assistant
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   471 reviews  – Newburgh, IN
We are looking for compassionate, caring people to join our talented staff of health care professionals as we continue to grow to be the preferred, regional…
Aug 27
Receptionist
Heritage Woods of Newburgh – Newburgh, IN
Position provides reception, administrative, and secretarial support for the office. In addition to typing, filing, scheduling, performs duties such as…
Easily apply
Aug 26
Office Assistant – Internal Medicine
St. Vincent, IN 3.7/5 rating   5,281 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Vincent Evansville – Bellemeade Internal Medicine. Vincent operates 24 hospitals in addition to a comprehensive network of affiliated joint ventures, medical…
Aug 27
Office Assistant
Matrix Transport Service LLC – Evansville, IN
We are looking for an Office Assistant to be responsible for handling clerical tasks in our office. You will be handling incoming phone calls and other…
Easily apply
Aug 24
Part Time Receptionist/Administrative Support
Ivy Tech Community College 4.1/5 rating   922 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Part Time Hourly, Part Time Hourly – Temporary. Academic Advising/Academic Support, Administrative/Professional, Student Affairs/Student Services, Other.
Aug 26
Executive Administrative Assistant
McBride Real Estate Group – Evansville, IN
$12 an hour
This person relishes the opportunity to build, implement, and manage multiple systems with minimal supervision. Oversight of contracts through closing.
Easily apply
Aug 26
FRONT DESK ASSOCIATE
Hokanson Companies, Inc. – Evansville, IN
Is hiring two part-time Front Desk Associates for an educational facility located in downtown Evansville, IN. Ability to recognize issues and report information…
Easily apply
Aug 26
Administrative Finance Assistant
Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library 3.7/5 rating   3 reviews  – Evansville, IN
$13.24 – $19.86 an hour
I know that to a library user I am the library, whether I am on the job, riding a bus, or checking out at the grocery store. 200 SE Martin Luther King Jr.
Easily apply
Aug 21
Bookkeeper / Office Manager
Hobby Lobby 3.7/5 rating   4,195 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Responsive employer
Hobby Lobby is currently looking to fill a Bookkeeper position in our Evansville, IN store. The Bookkeeper will maintain the order in the office, conduct…
Easily apply
Aug 26
Medical Office Assistant
Deaconess Health System 3.7/5 rating   471 reviews  – Evansville, IN
We are looking for compassionate, caring people to join our talented staff of health care professionals as we continue to grow to be the preferred, regional…
Aug 27
Front Desk General Manager
Howard Johnson 3.6/5 rating   7,106 reviews  – Evansville, IN
Worked with Wyndham hotels before. Check In and check out. Sending out invoices for direct billing. High school or equivalent (Required).
Easily apply
Aug 23
Financial Assistant
TU.PMP LLC – United States
Responsive employer
$2,000 a month
Remote work available
We are looking for a Finance Assistant to support our day-to-day transactions, including expenses and payroll. Track and reconcile bank statements.
Easily apply
Aug 21
Volunteer Executive Assistant (none paid position)
Global Black Gay Men Connect – United States
Remote work available
Regular duties include the following: Grants – Assist in researching and identifying grant opportunities that are aligned with the organizations mission and…
Easily apply
Aug 19
Must Have 20 Years Exp. – Administrative-Project Management-Proofing
Company Confidential – United States
$15 – $20 an hour
Remote work available
Please send a detailed email stating why you feel that you are the right candidate for this position. We have a team member who started off at five hours per…
Easily apply
Aug 21

ADOPT A PET

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Garfield is a male orange tabby. He is 6 years old, and lives peacefully with a multitude of other cats. He’s a handsome dude who is really laid-back! His adoption fee is $60 and he is neutered & ready to go home today. Inquire about adoption at www.vhslifesaver.org/adopt! *picture is the one with the funny name*

HEALTH DEPARTMENT UPDATES STATEWIDE COVID-19 CASE COUNTS

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St. Vincent Hit and Run

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  The Evansville Police Department’s Hit and Run Unit is asking for the public’s help in locating the people and vehicle identified in these pictures. 

  This stems from a hit and run motor vehicle accident that occurred in the parking lot of St. Vincent Hospital sometime on August 24. The driver of this vehicle struck the victim’s vehicle and left the scene without reporting the accident. 

  If anyone has information on this case they are asked to contact the Hit and Run Unit at 812-436-7942.

St. Vincent Gunshot Victim

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   Around 9:00 p.m. on August 27, the Evansville Police Department was called to St. Vincent Hospital about a male who had been shot in the face. 

  When officers arrived they spoke to the victim’s mother who told them she picked the victim up in the 800 block of Madison Avenue after he had called her to tell her that he had been shot. After picking him up, his mother then rushed him to the hospital. 

 The victim was conscious and alert when detectives attempted to speak with him, but refused to give many details about what happened. 

 Meanwhile, officers were able to locate a vehicle in the 800 block of Madison that was registered to the victim. This vehicle had bullet holes in it as well as a broken driver’s side window. Upon further investigation, blood was located in the vehicle as well. 

  The victim is expected to survive his injuries. 

  Anyone with information about this incident is asked to contact the Evansville Police Department’s Detective Office at 812-436-7987 or 812-436-7979

AG Curtis Hill: Full 11-Member U.S. Court of Appeals Should Uphold Indiana Law Requiring Parental Notice When Minors Seek Abortions

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Attorney General Curtis Hill this week asked the full 11-member U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals to reconsider and uphold Indiana’s requirement that parents be notified when their minor children seek abortions.

Indiana’s law provides that such notification be made unless a judge finds it would not be in the best interests of a minor seeking an abortion, such as if she resides with abusive family members.

The notification requirements apply specifically to minor children already deemed by a court to be sufficiently mature to make their own decisions regarding abortion, thereby exempting them from laws requiring they have parents’ outright consent to undergo the procedure.

Planned Parenthood has argued that minor children exempted from parental consent requirements are logically entitled to obtain abortions without their parents being notified. Indiana has maintained that merely notifying parents of planned abortions is distinct from obtaining their consent for the procedures.

In 2019, a three-judge panel of the Seventh Circuit upheld a preliminary injunction against the enforcement of Indiana’s parental notice law. Following that decision, the court denied, by a vote of 6-5, Attorney General Hill’s petition for a hearing by the full 11-member court. Two judges who voted against en banc rehearing wrote that they voted as they did because only the Supreme Court could provide clarity in the constitutional standards applicable to abortion regulations.

In late June, however, the U.S. Supreme Court decided June Medical Services L.L.C. v. Russo, addressing the constitutional law of abortion. And on July 2, the High Court sent Indiana’s parental notice case back to the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals for further consideration in light of the June Medical decision.

In this week’s filings, Attorney General Hill asks once again that the full 11-member U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals consider the Indiana parental notice requirement.

“We previously fell one vote short of receiving a hearing by the full court,” Attorney General Hill said. “The answers provided in the June Medical case should provide further impetus for such a hearing.”

States have a clear interest in protecting the rights of parents and the well-being of minors, Attorney General Hill said.

“Even when courts permit minors to obtain abortions without parental consent, those same parents still have rights and responsibilities for the care and upbringing of their daughters,” Attorney General Hill said. “As they love and care for their children, parents need to know what they have experienced. An abortion is a procedure that could have severe implications for future medical treatment. It is also a procedure that could bear on a child’s emotional needs and future mental health.”

 

Virtual Charter Schools See Spike In Interest As Families Grapple With The Pandemic’s Disruption

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Virtual Charter Schools See Spike In Interest As Families Grapple With The Pandemic’s Disruption

New data suggests virtual charter schools are seeing a sharp uptick in interest and enrollment across the country.

K12, the country’s largest operator of virtual schools, says enrollment has jumped from 123,000 students last year to 170,000 this year, and that number could still grow. Connections Academy, the country’s second-largest virtual school network, doesn’t have national enrollment numbers yet but says applications have jumped 61%.

For both companies, those figures include charter schools and virtual schools run on behalf of school districts.

Those numbers are in line with spikes reported in Oklahoma, where enrollment in virtual charter schools increased from 19,000 to 33,000 students this year, as well as in Michigan, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Utah. Together, they’re the clearest evidence yet that the virtual charter school model is appealing to new families at a moment of upheaval and uncertainty for school districts across the country.

“Parents are looking for stability,” said Jeanna Pignatiello, the chief academic officer for K12. “Going to an organization that has been supporting this type of learning for 20 years provides them with some comfort.”

The full scale of the enrollment increase won’t be clear for months. School hasn’t started yet in some parts of the country, the virtual schools are still enrolling students, and parents in schools of all types may reassess their options as this year unfolds. But if the growth is substantial, it will both put an increased financial strain on school districts that lose students and indicate a reversal of fortunes for the virtual charters, which have faced growing skepticism for their disappointing test scores and graduation rates.

In the 2017-18 school year, the most recent year with national data available, 300,000 students were enrolled in full-time virtual public schools. Most attended virtual charter schools, and about half were in a school run by the companies K12 or Connections Academy, an arm of Pearson. It’s a tiny fraction of the 50 million students in American public schools, but the virtual number will almost certainly be higher this year.

That’s because of parents like Ashley Moyer of Fort Wayne, Indiana. She found herself considering her options after being disappointed by the remote instruction offered this spring by her 12-year-old son’s school, which she said featured few assignments that were graded only for completion. “He really didn’t get the same education he would have got had they continued to be in the classroom,” she said.

She decided to give the school another shot when it reopened a few weeks ago. But on the two or three days each week her son is scheduled to learn from home, Moyer said the instruction still failed to challenge her son, and she worries the district may eventually go fully online. Her plan now is to switch him into a K12-run school in the state.

“If he’s going to be forced to be at home and do e-learning, I want him actually learning,” she said.

But the virtual charter school model is far from proven. National research, as well as studies in Georgia, Indiana, and Ohio, have shown that students in virtual charter schools make substantially less progress on state math and reading tests than demographically similar students in non-virtual public schools. A study looking specifically at K12 and Connections Academy schools found the same.

“All the evidence is very, very clear when we talk about outcomes,” said Gary Miron, an education researcher at Western Michigan University who has studied virtual charter schools. “These schools are failing miserably.” (Virtual schools have long disputed the studies’ findings, arguing that they don’t fully account for the unique student population the schools serve.)

Specific virtual charter schools have also been embroiled in enrollment scandals — in multiple instances, collecting public money for students even after they were no longer attending the virtual school. Even some pro-charter groups have called for tighter regulation of virtual charters, or even prohibiting charter schools from being run virtually.

“Some virtual charter schools have poor performance records. That hasn’t changed,” said Nina Rees, the president of the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, which in 2016 released a report critical of virtual charter schools’ academic performance.

Perhaps as a result of the increased scrutiny, enrollment growth in virtual schools leveled off between 2016 and 2017, and policymakers in some states have put restrictions on their funding and growth.

But all bets are off thanks to the pandemic, which has upended the year ahead and increased interest among policymakers and parents in fully virtual schooling.

“If there’s ever a moment in time where we have to set our differences aside on how education is delivered, this is it,” Rees said.

Indeed, it’s not clear to what extent the prior research on virtual charter school effectiveness still applies. With many schools of all types shifting to remote instruction this fall, the alternative to a virtual charter school this year will often be a virtual district school, complicating comparisons.

“I don’t know who is going to do better this year, and I’m afraid that both sides are going to do poorly,” said Miron.

The virtual charter schools are making their case to parents with ads encouraging families to consider a virtual option.

“New to the virtual school? K12 has powered online learning for 20 years,” reads one Facebook ad. “Enroll today and gain the confidence in knowing that they’re learning safely at home,” says another.

K12 declined to say whether the company had increased its marketing budget for this coming school year. A spokesperson for Connections Academy said its advertising budget for this year did not increase as a result of the pandemic.

Virtual school companies wield substantial political influence, but they’ve also faced setbacks and opposition from some public school groups as they’ve tried to grow. Earlier this month, the North Carolina board of education rejected an effort by two virtual schools to increase their enrollment limit, citing concerns that it would hurt school district finances.

“We as a board are responsible for all of the students across the state,” said board member Jill Camnitz. “I want to be sure that, in order to provide some options for some students who don’t have them right now, that we make sure we don’t send negative ripples all the way across the state.”

“There are thousands of parents of students out there just looking for an option in the midst of an emergency,” countered Dan Forest, North Carolina’s lieutenant governor, who opposed the decision.

Critics fear that virtual schools’ performance issues will persist. Virtual charter schools tend to have particularly large student-to-teacher ratios, and school leaders have reported struggling to keep students engaged.

Allison Bazin, a spokesperson for Connections Academy, said its schools are prepared to meet their students’ needs. “Schools have hired new teachers and are providing rigorous start-of-school training and ongoing professional development in online teaching. Pearson has invested in providing schools with benchmark assessment tools that will allow them to identify learning gaps and put appropriate supports in place right away,” she said.

Connections Academy schools usually have class sizes of 30 to 50 students, Bazin said.

K12 says it’s hired new teachers and may hire more. “Most importantly, we’re focused on ensuring families have an outstanding academic experience,” K12 CEO Nathaniel Davis said on a recent earnings call with investors.

“Are we going to lose some whenever schools open back up? Absolutely,” he said. “But will we lose them all? I don’t think so.”

FOOTNOTE: Sarah Darville contributed to reporting.

Volunteer USI Honors Award Recipients At Virtual Recognition Event

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Members of Volunteer USI, the University of Southern Indiana’s volunteer organization, celebrated another successful year and honored three award recipients during their annual Volunteer Recognition Event, held virtually on Wednesday, August 26.

The Student Volunteer of the Year award recognizes a student who has performed outstanding volunteer service to USI and/or the community through the Volunteer USI program. The Mentor of the Year award recognizes a USI faculty, staff, alumni or community member who has mentored a current USI student to enhance their development in their overall academic field. The Volunteer of the Year award recognizes a USI faculty, staff, alumni or community member who has performed outstanding volunteer service to USI and/or the community through the Volunteer USI Program.

Student Volunteer of the Year

Erika Uebelhor, a junior studying political science and psychology with a minor in pre-law from Ferdinand, Indiana, was recognized as the 2020 Student Volunteer of the Year. Uebehlor volunteers for multiple USI student organizations, most notably the Student Ambassadors Organization (SAO) for which she has donated over 100 hours to help facilitate positive visit experiences for prospective students and their guests. Erika also serves on the SAO’s executive board as secretary and has received two Ambassador awards for her many volunteer hours with SAO.

“Erika makes everything she touches better than it was before,” says Erika’s nominator. “While I recognized very quickly that Erika was going to leave her mark from the moment she stepped foot on campus, how much she has done for USI in just two years is truly phenomenal.”

Mentor of the Year

Shenae Rowe, Food and Nutrition Director for the Warrick County School Corporation was recognized as the 2020 Mentor of the Year. Rowe serves as a preceptor for current students to obtain service hours for their nutrition practicums, as well as for USI graduates in their dietetics distance internships. She is an annual guest speaker on school foodservice and nutrition in USI’s Community Nutrition Course, and an advocate for public policy regarding school nutrition guidelines. Rowe also volunteers for the Southwest Indiana Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Association and the School Nutrition Association.

“School food service is a challenging and demanding field, and Shenae is very skilled at effectively communicating to students the value of the field and the positive impact they can have on children’s health and well-being,” writes Rowe’s nominator. “Her positive outlook and passion for nutrition and dietetics help change mindsets and stereotypes that often accompany this field of nutrition.”

Volunteer of the Year

Donna Nelson, a long-time supporter of USI Athletics and devoted USI volunteer for many years, was recognized as the 2020 Volunteer of the Year. Nelson serves as a board member for the USI Varsity Club and volunteers her time for numerous USI Athletics events, including basketball, baseball, softball, volleyball, cross country and other Varsity Club events. She always has a bright smile and a listening ear for all USI visitors and athletic event attendees. Donna arrives early and stays late when needed, going above and beyond for USI and giving her time to any and all events she can.

“Donna has a heart of gold,” writes Nelson’s nominator. “Whether it is sitting in the cold at a cross country meet or in the heat at a baseball game, Donna is there with a smile on her face. She is so friendly to all campus visitors, and we are so fortunate to have her as a member of our USI Athletics family.”

Established in 1996, Volunteer USI is a University-wide program to recruit, place and recognize volunteers who give their services and talents to benefit USI and the surrounding communities. Volunteers contributed a total of 44,716 hours throughout the 2019-2020 fiscal year, and the program has recorded a total of more than 2.1 million volunteer hours since its inception.