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Education policy debates don’t focus enough on students

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Terry Small makes a simple point.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadowSmall, a learning specialist, says the human brain processes information in specific ways. It has a bias, he explains, toward questions. Questions stimulate the mind and linger much longer than statements or lectures do.

As Small says this, Lori Desautels, a Marian University education professor, and Nikki Woodson, Washington Township Schools superintendent, nod their heads and then begin chiming in. They point out equally simple ways to make it easier for people – young, middle-aged and old – to learn new things.

They say, for example, that the brain generally runs in a cycle and can focus on one thing, however interesting, for only a limited period of time. That time can be calculated by using the person’s age and adding the number to it – so an 8-year-old boy’s cycle would be about 10 minutes. The maximum, regardless of age, is 20 minutes.

That clock, though, can be reset with an easy break in routine. Standing up or doing a neck stretch can buy the person another 10, 12, 15 or 20 minutes of focused attention.

Small, Desautels and Woodson are guests on the radio show I host.

As they talk, I can’t help but think how little relationship the small, practical but likely effective suggestions they have for improving education have with the raging arguments we have about education in this state and country.

When we discuss education as a matter of politics and policy, we talk about schools, we talk about scores, we talk about parents and we talk about money. Rarely, do we seem to talk about basic things we could do to make it easier for students to learn.

Partisans on both sides claim they are student-focused and just want what is best for the state’s children.

But one only has to take a look at a few of the charges and counter-charges that swirled after the Associated Press discovered that former state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett’s staff left damaging emails on the computers that current Superintendent Glenda Ritz’s staff now uses. In the skirmishing that followed, Republicans defended Bennett and attacked Ritz while Democrats attacked Bennett and defended Ritz.

There was a lot of talk about Tony and Glenda and how put-upon and misunderstood they both were.

And very little discussion about the state’s students.

One has to wonder what we might be able to accomplish if we took some portion of the time, money and energy that we spend fighting with each other over vouchers or school grades or any number of other hot-button and divisive education issues and devoted it instead to small ways to change students’ experiences for the better.

Nor is this dynamic confined to education. All over the country we see one issue after another – health care, taxes, abortion, guns, etc. – in which the true believers on both sides of the question are more concerned about winning a fight than they are about finding a solution.

In fact, both of our political parties now resist the very idea of taking practical steps toward solving problems – what we used to call pragmatism. Any deviation from ideological purity in pursuit of a practical solution earns one a disparaging moniker – DINO (Democrat In Name Only) or RINO (Republican In Name Only).

Imagine what we might do if we approached our challenges with health care by saying that we want Americans to have health care and we want to keep costs low and asking what’s the best way to achieve both ends? Or, in regard to guns, if we asked how we preserve the rights of gun owners and yet still find a way to have fewer of our citizens killed?

More to the point, how do we get the focus back on solving a problem rather than figuring out a way to stick it to the folks on the other side?

Small, Desautels and Woodson argue persuasively that there’s a lot we can do to improve education that doesn’t have anything to do with ideology. Let the kids stand up every now and then and move around. Figure out what their interests and concerns are and build on that. Ask questions instead of delivering pronouncements.

It seems to me that those lessons could be applied in a lot of other areas.

What do you think?

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 FM Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

The Arts Council announces November Brown Bag Schedule

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artscouncil The Brown Bag Performance Series is a free program offered to the community by the Arts Council of Southwestern Indiana. The series runs from October through April at the Arts Council’s BSF Gallery, located at 318 Main Street in downtown Evansville. The Brown Bag Performance Series is every Wednesday at noon. It is encouraged to bring your lunch and a friend and enjoy the free local performances. Below is the weekly schedule for October.

 

11/6/13 –Rhein Valley Brass: Kicking off the November Brown Bag Series are the Rhein Valley Brass. The Rhein Valley Brass was originally organized by Dr Fredrich Kiechle as Die Oberbayerische Blasskapelle in 1974, the house band of Germania Maennerchor, an Evansville, Indiana German singing society. The group was featured at the State Fair for Traditional Arts Indiana at the invitation of Erin Roth. The group has recorded a live performance at Germania Maennerchor.

11/13/13 – Sean Holleran: A talented local musician and supporter of the arts, Sean Holleran will be playing piano in his second Brown Bag performance for 2013. Sean Holleran is a graduate of the University of Louisville and currently resides in Evansville, Indiana.

 

11/20/13 – Hal Wolford: Enjoy this special holiday performance from local musician, Hal Wolford. Wolford will be playing the piano and will be accompanied by a special friend that will be passing out treats to audience members.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick herman

 

Below is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Monday, October 21, 2013.

 

Shane Graves                    Battery Resulting in Bodily Injury to a Pregnant Woman-Class C Felony

Battery Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury-Class C Felony

 

Jeffrey Horstketter         Theft-Class D Felony

 

Phillip Mertell                  Attempted Obtaining a Controlled Substance by Fraud or Deceit-

Class D Felony

(Habitual Offender Enhancement)

 

Brandon Wilkinson         Possession of Schedule III Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Possession of Schedule II Controlled Substance-Class D Felony

Operating a Vehicle as an Habitual Traffic Violator-Class D Felony

 

 

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org

 

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

 

Healthcare.gov is another Washington Zombie

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Zombie Towns Of Georgia

In a White House speech Monday, President Obama assured the public that his new health-care law is up and running even in the absence of a functioning Web site. He told people they can call an 800 number instead of buying coverage online.

Reporters duly called the number and got busy signals, or when getting through and following the directions, got referred back to healthcare.gov.

This, no doubt, is another “glitch” — the administration’s catchall word for the fact that it is almost impossible to enroll for insurance under ObamaCare. It is a sign of just how bad it is that a new word has been added to describe the dysfunction, which is now occasionally referred to as “glitches and kinks.”
If the Web site ever has to be abandoned entirely, the president and his spinners will surely maintain it was undone by “glitches, kinks, snags, bugs and hiccups.”

Euphemism aside, it must be dawning on the White House that it is presiding over a fiasco that not only threatens the viability of its health-care law, but the president’s central conceit that the mandarins of the administrative state are wise and capable enough to manage a large portion of our national life. They aren’t even wise and capable enough to develop a Web site when given three years and $400 million to do it.

The initial excuse for the failure of healthcare.gov was sheer volume, but only the molten core of the president’s loyalists still mouth this line.

People whose job it is to successfully use the site have barely been able to successfully use the site. It took a CNN reporter a week to create a login and two weeks to proceed with her application. Healthcare.gov is worthy of a Joseph Heller novel.

Consumer Reports tried to give potential users some advice:

First, follow very carefully the needlessly complicated instructions for creating a password that has at least seven characters and at least one uppercase letter, one lowercase letter, one number and one symbol.

Second, as soon as you encounter a problem logging on, start over, since you can’t believe what the error messages tell you.

If you happen to make it through, keep a sharp eye out for an e-mail confirming your account, or you’ll soon be timed out.

Finally, when verifying your identity on the site, you may want to do it from a different browser than the one you registered from.

Got it? The publication’s bottom line: “Stay away from Healthcare.gov for at least another month if you can.”

Going old school isn’t much easier. Megan McArdle of Bloom­berg View talked to a representative at an ObamaCare call center who said you could fill out a paper form — but it would take three weeks for it to be sent to your house and, after you send it back, a couple of more weeks until you are notified of your eligibility for subsidies. The representative wasn’t clear on what happens next.

The Medicare and Medicaid agency running the healthcare.gov project took upon itself the overall tech management of it rather than handing that task off to a contractor. Managing a tech project of this size is not a core competency of government, but then again, neither is taking over the individual insurance market.

ObamaCare already risked creating a so-called adverse selection death spiral, i.e., sick people disproportionately signing up for the exchanges. The Web site increases the chances of it by deterring less motivated consumers from enrolling.

Presumably the administration can get the Web site to work eventually, although it will almost certainly be more difficult than the promise of a “tech surge” suggests.

Once government has fouled up a project like this, it isn’t so easy to untangle. Britain undertook a program to upgrade the information technology of the National Health Service in 2002. Nine years and 6 billion pounds ($9.6 billion) later, the government had to scrap the program entirely.

It must have run into a glitch.

Source: Richard Lowry

Warrick County Medical School Site Revealed

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Medical_District_Master_plan

WARRICK COUNTY, Ind. — Warrick County officials released their drawings to locate an expansion of the Indiana University School of Medicine at a site north of Indiana 66 and just east of Epworth Road.

Officials stated that the location would be on the “Warrick Wellness Trail,” which is already home to Deaconess Gateway, St. Mary’s Epworth Crossing, Orthopedic Associates and several other medical facilities, including office space, senior care and skilled-living facilities.

The IU medical school project, will include Indiana University School of Medicine-Evansville, the University of Evansville, the University of Southern Indiana and Ivy Tech. Multiple health science degree programs will be offered, and four regional hospitals will participate. The drawing and possibly a soon to be released 40,000-square-foot simulation center to be used for training, research with the possibility of a product development center similar to the Nucleus Center at the University of Louisville.

IU’s school of medicine in Evansville is at USI where current students can complete their first two years of medical school before moving on to another campus. The new school will be a full four-year medical school.

“It offers extensive acreage that’s already approved and cleared for development, more than enough infrastructure to support the campus and excellent transportation access for the million residents in the Tri-State area,” Don Williams, president of the Warrick County Commissioners, said in the official news release.

VANDERBURGH COUNTY FELONY CHARGES

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nick hermanBelow is a list of felony cases that were filed by the Vanderburgh County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday, October 18, 2013.

 

Johnny Johann             Battery Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury-Class C Felony

 

Dennis Johnson     Operating a Motor Vehicle After Forfeiture of License for Life-

Class C Felony

 

Quae-Avion Emerson                 Domestic Battery-Class D Felony

 

James Moore                                 Battery by Means of a Deadly Weapon-Class C Felony

Possession of Paraphernalia-Class A Misdemeanor

 

Alan Veselovec                             Burglary-Class C Felony

Theft-Class D Felony

Criminal Mischief-Class A Misdemeanor

For further information on the cases listed above, or any pending case, please contact Kyle Phernetton at 812.435.5688 or via e-mail at KPhernetton@vanderburghgov.org

 

Under Indiana law, all criminal defendants are considered to be innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

 

IS IT TRUE October 22, 2013 Part 2 “Money Problems from Knuckleheaded Practices”

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IS IT TRUE October 22, 2013 Part 2 “Money Problems from Knuckleheaded Practices”

IS IT TRUE that one of the things that is needed to make the financial viability of the downtown convention hotel project work for the taxpayers of Evansville is for the apartments to be built as they have been discussed?…without the property taxes from the apartment building the bonds to build the $5.4 Million parking tower will have to be serviced from other sources?…of course the hotel depends on a parking tower and the parking tower depends on the hotel to cover the costs associated with the $20 Million of bonds that are planned to be issued?…if the apartments are removed from the project for any reason whatsoever we have a cash flow problem on our hands?…we would appreciate if you all keep your eyes and ears open for this seemingly easy backslide and let us know if the stories we are hearing about this situation are correct?

IS IT TRUE that there was a recent notice posted that was published for the purpose of soliciting bank fees on a deposit of taxpayer dollars?…when the two bids came in the bid from German American Bank agreed to charge the taxpayers bank fees of $10,000 and Old National Bank bid to  charge the taxpayers $20,000 bank fees?…that German American Bank apparently won the bid and was all set to accept the General Fund deposits until the County Attorney made it known that there was a problem with this bid?…because of this idiotic practice that states “no bank that does not have a branch within 1 mile of the Civic Center can receive County funds” the taxpayers of this county lost $10,000 of bank fees that could have been used for any number of services?…Old National Bank won the deposit bid by default and the taxpayers lost $10,000 due to the moronic stipulation in the the RFP that was adopted around 2000 to 2008?…if Evansville and Vanderburgh County are ever to catch up to where the world was even 20 years ago they will have to stop living as though we are in the 1800’s?…this episode is as if the taxpayers funded a governing body that adopted a practice requiring them to shred $10,000 and toss it into the river?…what we really wonder is why German American Bank is willing to charge bank fees half the price that Old National offered?…a legacy of being the only bidder may just answer that question?

IS IT TRUE longtime public servant Susan Kirk tells the CCO that Z Tuley put the one mile limit in the RFP because there was a particular bank that she did not want to deal with?…the bank did not have an office within 1 mile of the Civic Center so she added that clause so they wouldn’t be able to submit a bid?… the clause will be removed for future bids and Ms. Kirk thought it had been removed but it wasn’t, thus the people of Evansville have lost this $10,000 to the benefit of Old National Bank?

IS IT TRUE we are expecting an announcement today from Warrick County detailing the location of the site they will submit for the IU Medical School?…in the event that Vanderburgh County loses this opportunity because of dogmatic dedication to only downtown Evansville as a preferred location for this medical school it is time to rearrange the characters in the Civic Center at the soonest possible opportunity?

Marriage debate will be tricky next year for Republicans

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By John Krull
TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

John Krull, publisher, TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS – Indiana House Minority Leader Scott Pelath, D-Michigan City, described the upcoming battle in the state over same-sex marriage with one word.

Commentary button in JPG - no shadowPelath called it a “distraction.” He said Indiana’s leaders need to be focused on creating jobs for Hoosiers.

Indiana Sen. Jim Merritt, R-Indianapolis, was more cautious. While noting that he voted in favor of the proposed state constitutional amendment that would ban same-sex unions, Merritt wouldn’t commit himself to voting for the measure again. He said he was “listening” to his constituents on the issue.

Merritt and Pelath were talking as guests on the radio show I host. Their remarks illustrated how tricky the dynamics on the issue have become.

Nearly a decade ago, Hoosier Republicans (with the support of many Democrats) could proclaim enshrining a ban into the Indiana constitution their top priority. They already had a ban in place in state law, but they wanted to nail the door shut.

It seemed at the time to be a safe political move – at least on the surface. Even then, though, there were signs that a change was going to come.

In those days, I was the executive director of what was then the Indiana Civil Liberties Union – now the ACLU of Indiana, which opposed bans on same-sex unions. In that position, I saw both polling and focus-group studies that showed that the support for a ban was strongest among social conservatives who were middle-aged or older and that opposition to the ban was likely to grow over time.

And that opposition has grown. The most recent poll showed that almost twice as many Hoosiers now oppose putting the ban in the constitution as support it. That poll found that 64 percent of the state’s voters think a constitutional ban would be bad while 34 percent liked the idea. The numbers narrowed, though, when those polled were asked how they’d vote – with 46 percent saying they’d vote against a ban if it were on the ballot and 43 percent saying they would vote for it.

For it to get on the ballot, legislators will have to take the measure up again. The process for amending the Indiana constitution is protracted. It requires the legislature to approve and the governor to approve the measure twice, with an election between the two approvals. Only after the second affirmation by the legislature can the proposed amendment go before the voters.

And, if the legislature doesn’t reaffirm the proposed amendment before yet another election takes place, then the measure dies and the clock starts over.

That means that Indiana lawmakers have to deal with same-sex marriage during this upcoming session, one way or the other.

Lawmakers will have to make that decision under intense spotlights because Indiana likely will be a battleground state on the issue. After a long string of states voted in favor of bans, the states where such measures were the on the ballot most recently have rejected them.

And the U.S. Supreme Court since has struck down the federal same-sex marriage ban, saying that, among other things, it violated the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

If the measure does go onto the ballot this fall, Hoosiers can expect to see presidential campaign year level spending on the issue from both sides of the debate. I know sales people at Indiana radio and TV stations who are salivating at the thought of the advertising revenue that a same-sex marriage fight could generate next year.

That doesn’t end the list of pressures and complications. Republicans, in particular, are under the gun for two reasons.

The first is that two of their major constituencies – the business community and social conservatives – are at odds on the issue. A long list of major employers in the state has come out against the ban while social conservatives have made getting the ban into the constitution their top priority. Either way Republicans go, they’ll alienate some of their friends.

There’s also no way for them to duck the issue. With super majorities in both the House and Senate, Republicans will be the ones held accountable for whatever happens on the issue.

Perhaps that’s why Pelath seemed to enjoy, for the moment, being in the minority.

When I asked the Democratic leader if he took some pleasure in seeing his Republican opponents on the verge of having a huge family quarrel, Pelath said no – but he was laughing when he said it.

Merritt wasn’t laughing.

He said the same-sex marriage issue was going to be “tough.”

Merritt’s got a gift for understatement.

John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism, host of “No Limits” WFYI 90.1 FM Indianapolis and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students.

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WALORSKI, INDIANA LAWMAKERS CALL FOR HEALTH CARE ENROLLMENT NUMBERS

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Here are the Health Care Numbers:

 

 

 

 

Walorski: Elizabeth Guyton 202-225-3915; elizabeth.guyton@mail.house.gov

Brooks: Alex Damron 202-226-5377; alex.damron@mail.house.gov

Bucshon: Nick McGee 202-225-4636; nick.mcgee@mail.house.gov

Coats: Matt Lahr 202-224-5623; matt_lahr@coats.senate.gov

Messer: Liz Hill 202-225-3021; liz.hill@mail.house.gov

Rokita: Zach Zagar 202-225-5037; zach.zagar@mail.house.gov

Stutzman: James Wegmann 202-225-4436; james.wegmann@mail.house.gov

Young: Trevor Foughty 202-226-6856; trevor.foughty@mail.house.gov