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shaylah

Shaylah McQueen beat the odds and became her high school’s Valedictorian and the recipient of the most prestigious scholarships in the country.

Taunts and whispers from her classmates at Hillhouse High School drove her to excel.

During her senior year, she worked as a tutor in addition to being a student and a mother to her little boy.

She worked with the Peabody Museum, New Haven Reads, and the Special Olympics and even founded the Attendance Buddies club at Hillhouse which helps mentor freshman students and encourages better attendance.  The girl is amazing.

Shaylah is one of 1,000 students across the country to win the Gates Millennium Scholarship, which will fund her education at Pennsylvania’s Wilson College. She was chosen from among 24,000 applicants to win the Gates scholarship.

She’ll be able to live with her son in a dormitory that is designated for single parents and their children.

She plans to become an English teacher. “I love to enrich, and I love to empower the youth and everyone else around me,” said Miss McQueen.

source Daily Mail

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Dr. O'Neal

Shaq has graduated with a doctoral degree in education.

He officially received his degree along with 1,100 other students today in Miami, at the James L. King Center.  Shaq actually had to get down on one knee to get his hood and you know it didn’t end there.  Shaq was so happy he picked up the presenter, Dr. David Kopp.   The biggest man on campus was congratulated by cheers.

Shaq walked over and hugged school president; Sister Linda Bevilacqua, walked off the stage and posed for photos in his cap, gown and hood.  On his way back to his seat he walked down the line giving other grads hi-fives like he did during opening games.  The students loved having the honor of having Shaq as a fellow grad.

I hope you’re not think that this is an honorary degree because IT ISN’T AN HONORARY DEGREE; Shaq actually put in the work and earned it with hard work.  The good doctor graduated with an GPA of 3.813 while completing 54 credit hours comprised of 16 courses and six credit hours of self-directed research. He did most of his course work via satellite, video conferencing and Blackboard.com. The title of his doctoral capstone project was “The Duality of Humor and Seriousness in Leadership Styles.’’ Oh so fitting.

He posted on his facebook page……”Call me Dr. O’Neal.”  With that said, you must do so or you may not get a reply.  Once a person has earned the honor, you should address him as such unless he gives you permission to do otherwise.  If not, you’re being totally disrespectful. R.E.S.P.E.C.T  While he’s at it he may need to ask for that raise. Impressive!!

I didn’t hear anything about Shaunie and the kids being in the building, but his proud mom Lucille was definitely there; singing his praises.  “I’m proud because I know he earned that title,” Lucille O’Neal said. “With all the money he’s got, he could have [paid for an honorary degree]. But he didn’t. And now I get to call him Dr. O’Neal.”

Sanjay Sands, who received his masters in business administration on Saturday, was among the many students who tried to snap pictures of O’Neal on their cell phone as the ceremony proceeded. But Sands said he couldn’t “get any good ones,” and will simply leave with the memory he and Shaq once shared the same stage.

“What he did just shows education doesn’t stop,” Sands said. “He’s already been successful and has decided to take his career another step forward. As a millionaire athlete he could probably not do anything, just relax, retire. But he still wants more. I admire that. We all admire that.”

Said Bevilacqua: “We have many notable graduates among our 55,000 alumni, but I would have to say Dr. O’Neal would give new meaning to big man on campus. It’s so important for young students to see that you can achieve great success in a variety of ways in our world. You can achieve tremendous prominence in many things, but what is most important is that we see ourselves as life-long learners. I think Dr. O’Neal is a very powerful example of that.”

After leaving school early in 1992 to enter the NBA Draft, O’Neal went back to Louisiana State University eight years later and earned his bachelor’s degree in general studies, fulfilling a promise to his mother. In 2005, he earned a master’s of business administration through the University of Phoenix’s online degree program.

After leading the Heat to the NBA title in 2006, O’Neal decided it was time to go back to school again and on a tip from the Heat’s foot doctor decided to enroll at Barry in Miami Shores. He spent the past 4 1/2 years — including his final two seasons in the NBA — quietly working toward his doctoral degree in organizational learning and leadership with a specialization in human resource development. He studied before and after games, and between his work on television as an analyst, often staying up to the wee hours of the morning to get work done.

“Everyone thinks this is honorary. But this is not honorary. I put in four and a half hard years staying up late at night, studying, reading, rewriting papers Dr. Kopp marked up,” O’Neal said.

“The work was very rigorous, but very enjoyable. And I’m not done. I think I’m going to try law school next. I’m thinking about it. We’ll see.”

O’Neal’s mother, Lucille O’Neal, a few of his siblings and all of his children sat and stayed through the entire two hour commencement ceremony. O’Neal gave his parents most of the credit for driving him to further his education, pointing out how when he used to get in trouble his mother would make him come up with jobs for every letter in the alphabet.

“’A’ was a basketball player. ’B’ was basketball player. ’C’ was Cop. And ’D’ — even though I didn’t believe it — was Doctor,” O’Neal said. “… I remember my mom coming in and saying ’If you really put your mind to it you probably could be a doctor.’ Thank God for parents like mine.

“Of all the things I’ve done in my life, this probably is my No. 1 accomplishment.”

His mother agreed.

 

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cheating

Due to last years revelation of cheating, students will need to go through more stringent measures in order to take the aptitude tests.  Last year seven people were arrested after it was revealed they were paying a person to take their test for them.  This means they would beat a person who legitimately took the test and scored high, but less than them out of scholarships, and enrollment spots in ivy league schools.  The seven who were caught last year ruined their lives.  SMH So sad. Makes you wonder how many got away with it.

The millions of students who take the SAT or ACT each year will have to submit photos of themselves when they sign up for the college entrance exams, under a host of new security measures announced Tuesday in the aftermath of a major cheating scandal on Long Island.

The two companies that administer the tests, the College Board and ACT Inc., agreed to the precautions under public pressure brought to bear by Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice, who is overseeing the investigation. The measures take effect in the fall.

“I believe these reforms, and many others which are happening behind the scenes, will prevent the kind of cheating that our investigation uncovered and give high schools and colleges the tools they need to identify those who try to cheat,” Rice said.

Rice has charged 20 current or former students from a cluster of well-to-do, high-achieving suburbs on Long Island with participating in a scheme in which teenagers hired other people for as much as $3,500 each to take the exam for them. The five alleged ringers arrested in the case were accused of flashing phony IDs when they showed up for the tests. All 20 have pleaded not guilty.

In one instance, a young man allegedly produced ID and took the test for a teenage girl who had a name that could have been either male or female.

Students have long been required to show identification when they arrive for one of the tests. Under the new rules, they will have to submit head shots of themselves in advance with their test application. A copy of the photo will be printed on the admission ticket mailed to each student, and will also appear on the test site roster.

School administrators are “going to be able to compare the photo and the person who showed up and say that’s either John Doe or that’s not John Doe. They didn’t have the ability to do that before,” the district attorney said.

The photo will also be attached to the student’s scores, which, for the first time, will be sent to his or her high school, so that administrators and guidance counselors can see the pictures. Previously, test results were sent only to the student.

“Millions of college-bound students who take the SAT and ACT each year can have a new confidence that their hard work and preparation will be rewarded and not diminished by cheaters,” Rice said.

Officials from the College Board and ACT Inc. said that any additional costs would be absorbed and not passed on to students. The College Board charges $49 for the SAT; ACT Inc. charges $34 for the basic test, $49.50 if it includes a writing exam.

“We believe these measures support both test integrity and access and equity for all students,” said Kathryn Juric, vice president of the SAT program for the College Board.

During the 2010-11 school year nearly 3 million students worldwide took the SAT; 1.6 million students took the ACT in 2011.

In another key change, students will be required to identify on their application the high school they attend. In the Long Island scandal, the impostors often went to high schools in neighboring communities so they would not be recognized.

Bob Schaeffer, public education director of FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing, a longtime critic of the SAT, said the new procedures would still not prevent cheating if a student submitted an impostor’s photograph.

“The image on the registration form will match up with that of the person taking the exam so long as an equally phony ID is used at the test site,” he said.

But Rice argued that the follow-up report to the student’s high school, with the photograph, should deter most cheating.

“Knowing that’s going to be going back to their high schools, specifically their guidance counselor, that’s the backup check that’s going to prevent it from happening,” Rice said. She also said the photos would be kept in a database should any questions of cheating arise later.

In addition, administrators will check student IDs more frequently at test centers. IDs will be examined when students enter a test site, whenever they re-enter the test room after breaks, and again when the answer sheets are collected.

Students will have to upload the photo of themselves or else mail it in.

Vivian Tam, a 17-year-old senior at the LaGuardia School for the Performing Arts High School in New York, welcomed the changes.

“Some people are getting better grades because they have more money to pay somebody to take the test for them,” she said.

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beyonce

A Rutgers Ph.D. student and professor, named Kevin Allred is teaching a course that is all things Beyoncé.   The class called “Politicizing Beyoncé,” focuses on her musical career as it pertains to the American race, gender, and sexual politics.  Professor Allred compares Beyoncé’s music videos and lyrics with readings from the black feminist writings of Bell Hooks, Alice Walker, and Sojourner Truth.

Besides the obvious, Kevin’s inspiration for “Politicizing Beyoncé” was derived from teaching four semesters of Women’s Studies 101 at Rutgers. It is during that time where there were repeated discussions between his male and female students; where they would discuss the thin line Beyoncé walks as a sex kitten-cum-girl power role model.

The course topics include Beyoncé’s control over her own aesthetic and whether her often half-naked body is empowered or stereotypical. Of course her performances as “Sasha Fierce” won’t be left out. ”  Professor Allred says that some of the in-class discussions sometimes lead to greats like Billie Holiday, Nina Simone, Lady Gaga, Adele and the late Amy Winehouse.

It sounds like a pretty interesting class and it certainly is no snooze fest. I know one thing, Blue has parents with amazing backgrounds that are already making there way to history books.  Let’s not forget that Jay has a class at Georgetown as well. We won’t even mention the inaugural ball.   These two have are creating amazing legacies that Lil Miss Blue will be proud of.

I summarized it a bit, but you can read more of the article by Amber E. Jenkins-Hopkins  It’s a pretty big article.

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Test Results Broken Down by Race: MyFoxMEMPHIS.com

High school principal, Ted Horrell is in damage control after he labeled black students “less smart.” He gave a presentation on the results of the school’s state report card. It breaks down standardized test scores by race and income.  He claims that his intentions were to talk about how the school could close the achievement gap and introduce a new program to help students who are struggling in certain areas.

Instead it backfired and led to a number of complaints by outraged parents and students.  The outrage prompted him to make an apology.   In  Mr. Horrell’s apology, he wrote: ‘I unintentionally offended a number of students on this campus. ‘I apologize to all the students and parents who were offended.  I certainly didn’t say that white students are smarter than black students.

Maybe he didn’t mean to insinuated that black were less smart.  This is clearly another case of school officials in dire need of race sensitivity training.

Source: Daily Mail

 

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There is a children’s anti obesity campaign that uses actual pictures of overweight children to get their point across.   It’s aimed at getting kids in Georgia healthy, but I’m sure they’re hoping it will be received nationally.  The Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta started this ad campaign that is suppose shock parents into getting off their hineys and help their kids to get fit.

At first glance, I felt it was waaaaaaay harsh and mean.  Once I listen to the actual children used in the campaign; I’m bit swayed to understand the campaign’s stance.  I watched Tamika’s video first.  Tamika looked uncomfortable and her mother sounds oblivious to her child’s health.   She has type 2 diabetes.  Unlike type 1 diabetes or juvenile diabetes; type 2 diabetes is brought on by obesity in ADULTS.  No child should have type 2 diabetes.  Even after seeing her video; I still feel that it was a bit harsh.

Then I moved the second and third videos.   The second one was so obvious that the mother’s issue became her child’s issue.  He asked his overweight mother why was he fat.  Well, it was plain to see that he was following in mom’s footsteps.  Totally not his fault. That mess was all his momma’s fault.  He’s eating just like she eats.

Lastly, I watch Jaden’s video.  He says all he does is play video games alone and doesn’t play with friends because all they do is tease him. His situation seems more of a cycle of things that are not so good for him….Sitting around playing video games most certainly leads to snacking.  Not to mention; he sounds clinically depressed because of his weight.  His whole thing seems like a vicious cycle.

In essence, I agree with being tough on the parent.  I’m just not into embarrassing the kid.  Embarrass the mother or father….clearly they are the ones that are culpable.  Well, what do you think?

Tamika

“The Question”

Jaden

 

Source  and Strong4Life

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After years of whispers, New Birth Christian Academy is closing.  What, you thought they would stay afloat after the Eddie Long debacle?  I mean come on…..this is probably where he the manipulation started.   It’s sad, but the school chose it’s fate by standing behind Eddie Long.  To put that one man before innocent children?   Whose gonna want to be affiliate with that mess?  All they had to do was cut all ties with him.   Just show that they gave a d*mn.  Enough said.

The school, which enrolls students in kindergarten through the 12th grade, has been struggling financially for years, officials said.

The academy is affiliated with New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Lithonia and the embattled Bishop Eddie Long, but school officials told Channel 2 that the decision to close is not related to the sexual coercion allegations against him.

The school will not reopen after the holidays, the report said.

In a statement, school officials told Channel 2, “The deficit, along with the declining enrollment over the years, left the New Birth Christian Academy Board of Directors with no other option. The board has made the tough decision to temporarily close the school.”

The letters sent to parents said the academy’s staff will help students with relocation.

Earlier this month, Long announced that he was taking some time off to focus on his family but would remain the senior pastor of the church. His wife, Vanessa, had filed for divorce days earlier.

Four former New Birth members sued Long in September 2010, accusing him of taking them on trips and giving them gifts and jobs to coerce them into sexual relationships. The suit was settled in May.

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I know I’m a bit late, but some may have just learned of this just as I have.  Anywhoz, yes there’s a  course called, “Sociology of Hip Hop: Jay-Z.” You may be surprised that it’s NOT being taught at an HBC.  It’s being offered  at a majority-white, Georgetown University.  Who will be teaching it you ask?  None other than Professor Michael Eric Dyson.

Mr. Dyson’s class will take on topics that are already prevalent in all sociology courses.  The class will focus on capitalism, sexuality, and economic inequality and racial gender identity.   He believes Jay is an icon of American excellence.  He has previously taught classes on Tupac and Marvin Gaye at the University of Pennsylvania.

The classes, which are 75-minutes, twice a week, focus more on African-American culture and business.  It will not cover Jay’s millions in record sales, Grammy Awards, Beyonce, and tours with Kanye West and Eminem.  (So no fellas, there will be techniques on how he landed Bee).  It will however, include midterm and final examinations and required readings  from Jay-Z book, ‘Decoded’.

Bigga’s kids will have a legacy like no other.  Those two have done everything.

BTW, you know this wouldn’t go off right if there weren’t the naysayers waiting to give their two cents.

Kevin Powell: said any discussion of Jay-Z should account for what Powell says are the rapper’s derogatory lyrics toward women and his expressions of excessive materialism.

Kris Marsh: said that while she appreciated Jay-Z’s cultural significance, she was wary of structuring an entire course around him and using his narrative alone to reflect black America. Though hip-hop artists can focus a lens on urban life, she said, ‘sometimes these artists use poetic license’ and blend fact and fiction to an audience that is often suburban and white.  ‘We’re not sure if it’s fiction or real life. It can be almost indistinguishable sometimes in hip-hop,’ she adds.

Stephen Wu of Georgetown: says, as ‘poppycock’ Dyson’s belief that Jay-Z could be compared to Homer or Shakespeare.  ‘It speaks volumes that we engage in the beat of Carter’s pseudo-music while we scrounge to find serious academic offerings on Beethoven and Liszt. We dissect the lyrics of ‘Big Pimpin’,’ but we don’t read Spenser or Sophocles closely,’ Mr Wu wrote.

Source: Daily Mail

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Denzel Washington Receives Honorary Degree

By Deirdre B Pride | Filed in Education

PHILADELPHIA – May 16, 2011 (WPVI) — Denzel Washington confessed to a bit of stage fright in his latest role: Commencement speaker at the University of Pennsylvania.

Addressing about 5,000 graduates at the Ivy League school in Philadelphia on Monday, the Oscar- and Tony-winning actor said the academic ceremony was “a little overwhelming and out of my comfort zone.”And that was his reason for accepting the invitation to speak, he said.

“I had to come exactly because I might make a fool of myself,” said Washington. “I’ve found that nothing in life is worthwhile unless you take risks. Nothing.”

The 56-year-old star of “Malcolm X” and “Philadelphia” delivered a humorous speech with a sobering truth: Failure is inevitable. Yet instead of having something to fall back on, he said, graduates should “fall forward” – learn from their mistakes and keep going.

Thomas Edison had countless failed experiments before succeeding with the light bulb, he said.

“Do you have the guts to fail?” Washington said. “If you don’t fail, you’re not even trying.”

One of his earliest failures was as a pre-med student at Fordham University in New York, he said. He changed to pre-law, then journalism, and was close to flunking out before switching to drama and getting his degree.

Washington described a second failure about 30 years ago at a miserable tryout for a Broadway musical. Then last year, on the same stage as that audition, Washington won a Tony award for his work in “Fences.”

The speech resonated with new grad Adam Shore, a 21-year-old physics major from the Philadelphia suburb of Dresher, Pa.

“No one ever tells a graduating class, `You’re going to fail.’ But it was very important for everyone to hear that,” Shore said. “You can’t go … thinking you’re going to succeed in every way. You have to be realistic.”

Washington also teased the crowd at Franklin Field by alluding to Hollywood gossip, such as alleged arguments with Russell Crowe on the set of “American Gangster” and an encounter with a partially clothed Angelina Jolie in her dressing room. Washington and Jolie co-starred in “The Bone Collector.”

But then he demurred.

“You’re a group of high-minded intellectuals,” he said, tongue-in-cheek. “You’re not interested in that.”

Washington endeared himself to some students by peppering the speech with references to favorite local hangouts. His son Malcolm just finished his sophomore year on campus, and Washington often traveled to see him play on Penn’s basketball team.

“The coach didn’t give him enough playing time,” Washington said, drawing laughs. “We’ll talk about that later.”

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FBI: 8 More Suspicious Letters Found: MyFoxDC.com

They are gonna find out who is doing this and I can not wait until they do.  I’d like to know what his intentions were…….what did he/she  hope to accomplish by doing such a thing.   This is a hateful act.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The FBI now says it is investigating at least 20 suspicious letters with white powder that have been delivered to schools in Washington.

Christopher Combs, who oversees domestic terrorism investigations for the FBI’s Washington field office, tells WRC-TV that more letters could still be found.

Authorities say there are no indications that the letters contained any hazardous material, and there are no reported injuries or illnesses. Combs says they are being taken to a lab where the material inside will be examined.

He says the FBI has an open case related to similar letters in another jurisdiction, though he didn’t say which one. He says none of those letters contained harmful material.

The first letters in D.C. began popping up at schools Thursday.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.

************Update************

WASHINGTON – More than three dozen suspicious but apparently harmless letters addressed to District of Columbia schools appear to have been mailed from the Dallas area and closely resemble letters under investigation by authorities there, the FBI said Friday.

Envelopes containing a white, powdery substance were delivered to 28 D.C. schools on Thursday. One school received two letters. On Friday morning, eight more envelopes were found: four that had been delivered to schools and four more that were collected at a mail facility by U.S. postal inspectors, said Lindsay Godwin, a spokeswoman for the FBI’s Washington Field Office.

No hazardous substances have been found in any of the envelopes, and no one has been injured or become ill after coming into contact with them. They are being analyzed at an FBI laboratory in Quantico, Va.

The letters had the same characteristics as mailings under investigation by the FBI and postal inspectors in Dallas, the FBI said in a news release. James McJunkin, head of the Washington field office, said similar letters have been mailed to schools elsewhere in the U.S. over the last several weeks.

A few of the letters were also sent to D.C. schools last October, the FBI said.

A law enforcement official with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press that the envelopes contained a letter referring to al-Qaida and the FBI and that the white powder had the look and consistency of cornstarch. The official was not authorized to release the information and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The envelopes were addressed to the schools and not to individuals, and the addresses were typed, the FBI said. WRC-TV in Washington obtained an image of one of the letters that had a Dallas postmark. The stamp appeared to be canceled on May 2, the day after the U.S. announced it had killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden.

D.C. schools began reporting the letters around 1 p.m. Thursday. The city has more than 100 public schools and another 52 charter schools with 93 campuses. Mayor Vincent Gray condemned the mailings as “a dastardly act.”

Schools were open on time Friday, and police were working with postal inspectors to make sure mail delivered to the schools was safe, Metropolitan Police Chief Cathy Lanier said.

Responding to the mailings tied up “hundreds of hours of police and law enforcement resources,” the FBI said in a news release. McJunkin said Thursday that sending the letters was a “serious criminal offense” and that authorities had to be vigilant in case one of them contained something hazardous.

Mark Simon, whose daughter is an 11th grader at Washington’s School Without Walls where a suspicious letter was sent, said he wasn’t overly concerned about the school’s safety.

“This is not an unusual thing. This is what we live with, not just in this city but everywhere in the country,” Simon said.

People have been wary of powdery substances in letters since a series of anthrax mailings after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Five people died in October and November 2001 from anthrax inhalation or exposure linked to the letters. The government eventually determined that Bruce Ivins, a researcher who worked at Fort Detrick in Maryland and later committed suicide, was behind the mailings of powdered spores.

Source: AP

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