Behavior

June 11, 2008

Your A.M. roundup

Today on star-telegram.com:

Faculty at 5 Fort Worth high schools can vote on dress code

Career-tech center construction starting

Student earns Girl Scouts' Gold Award by piecing together patio for band members

By the way, if you don't know about RSS feeds and would like to make it easier to keep up with Extra Credit and your other favorite blogs, click on my name below and let me know. RSS feeds let you get news in a format similar to e-mail, and I can explain how to set it up. It's quick and easy, and pretty neat actually.

-Patrick M. Walker

June 09, 2008

High schools borrow anti-plagiarism tool from colleges

Today on star-telegram.com, John Austin takes a look at the increasing number of public and private schools using anti-plagiarism software to check students' work. Officials say it's good that high schools are doing this because it helps students get used to the idea before they get to college, where the temptation to pull something off the Internet during an all-nighter to meet an early-morning deadline can be too strong to resist. In other words, it's a chance for high schools to nip such behavior in the bud.

Teachers can also use the software to help students understand what needs to be cited and what doesn't -- something that professional writers never get wrong. Really!

-Patrick M. Walker

June 03, 2008

Your A.M. roundup

Longtime Fort Worth youth mentor Margaret Williams is retiring

Program would let students double their degrees

Carroll swim center to get chlorine treatment system

Mother of invention

-Patrick M. Walker

May 28, 2008

Powerful tools for fighting meth

While channel surfing the other night, I caught a piece on PBS about the Montana Meth Project. It's a large-scale, research-based advertising effort aimed at reducing the meth problem, which is all around us.

I wish Texas had thought of this. But since it didn't, we should all use the tools on the Montana Web site and help spread the word about them. (By the way, the effort has already produced impressive results.)

This is just one of several ads that the project has created and had broadcast. You can see them all here.

-Patrick M. Walker

Your A.M. roundup

TCU administrator dies from injuries 11 days after wreck

Schools teach kids music the hard way

School not being closed, Fort Worth superintendent promises

'The capability side of disability'

-Patrick M. Walker

May 21, 2008

'If there's ever a person who deserves a second chance ...'

Tcc_prof_2 Can you spot anything out of the ordinary about this Tarrant County College faculty member? Armando Villarreal III looks pretty much like you'd expect a TCC history instructor to look, doesn't he? But he's different in one major way: He's a convicted felon who has made the most of his second chance. Read his story, and learn about area colleges' policies on hiring ex-convicts, here.

-Patrick M. Walker

May 15, 2008

Your A.M. roundup

Today on star-telegram.com:

Volunteers needed for Special Olympics Summer Games

Dallas substitute teacher charged with being drunk in class

Watch the work

-Patrick M. Walker

May 13, 2008

Your A.M. roundup

Fight Clips of fights between teens become common online See a slide show here







Teach Schools vie for new teachers at Arlington job fair

Maryian Jimenez, left, a teacher from Tamaulipas, Mexico, speaks with Susan Gruber of iTeachTexas, an alternative certification program.




Fort Worth school board candidates arguing over mailer


-Patrick M. Walker

May 11, 2008

A wake-up call for Arlington

You don't want to know how bad the gang problem is in Arlington, writes Mike Norman, the Star-Telegram's editorial director for Arlington and Northeast. But if you live there, you want to do everything you can to make it go away. Read what he has to say here.

-Patrick M. Walker

May 10, 2008

600 students riot at Los Angeles high school

From The Associated Press:

A fight at a troubled South Los Angeles high school escalated into a campuswide brawl involving as many as 600 students before it was quelled by police officers in riot gear.

The melee, which students said was between rival black and Hispanic gangs and started around noon on Friday, forced the authorities to shut down the school, Locke High, and keep students in their classrooms.

After restoring order, they rounded up those involved and separated them, holding Hispanic students in the gymnasium and black students in another room. Four people were arrested, three students for fighting and one non student on suspicion of possessing a knife, said Susan Cox, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles school district.

Several students were injured and treated at the scene, officials said. A music teacher, Reggie Smith, told the Los Angeles Times that it was a chaotic scene and difficult to distinguish between those fighting and those trying to avoid the mayhem.

“The kids were crazy, running from place to place, jumping on other kids,” Smith said. “Some of my kids were crying because they were walking to class with friends and they got jumped.”

Victor Wong, an 18-year-old senior, told the Times that the brawl grew out of a fight two days earlier between two graffiti gangs. He said Hispanic students who were friends of his asked him to participate in a fight planned for Friday that was to pit 10 Hispanic students against 10 black students.

The two groups met as planned at the handball courts, Wong said, but the fight quickly spread throughout the campus. “Security didn’t know where to go,” he said. “They’d concentrate in one spot, and something would happen somewhere else.”

School district police called about 60 officers to the scene, while the Los Angeles Police Department sent about 50 officers and more than a dozen patrol cars.

Ronald White, a 17-year-old senior, said that when the police arrived, some of the students began fighting the officers, who responded with their batons. Another student said he saw the police use pepper spray.

Joseph Sherlock, a senior, said it was his “first actual encounter with a riot.”

About 65 percent of the 2,600 students at Locke are Hispanic, and 35 percent are black. The school has been marred by almost daily fights during much of the academic year.

-Patrick M. Walker

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