domingo, 17 de julio de 2011

Education Review


Founders of a proposed Mandarin-immersion charter school meeting in a South Orange, N.J., home. From left, Jutta Gassner-Snyder, Nancy Chu, Tom Piskula and Tiffany Boyd Hodgson.
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Founders of a proposed Mandarin-immersion charter school meeting in a South Orange, N.J., home. From left, Jutta Gassner-Snyder, Nancy Chu, Tom Piskula and Tiffany Boyd Hodgson.
Charters, normally thought of as a way to help poor areas, are being proposed in places that have good schools.

Law School Economics: Ka-Ching!

Despite fewer high-paying jobs, students continue to pour into law school. And the schools keep charging higher tuition and admitting more students.

School Officials and Union Agree on Pilot Program for Teacher Evaluations

Teachers in 33 schools will be rated as either ineffective, developing, effective or highly effective, rather than simply satisfactory or unsatisfactory.

California to Require Gay History in Schools

California will become the first state to require public schools to include the works of gays and lesbians in social science instruction and in textbooks.
Tom Vander Ark, the former executive director of education for the Gates Foundation, says a weak economy hurt efforts by City Prep Academies to start schools in New York and New Jersey.

Tom Vander Ark’s New York-Area Charter Schools Falter

A former top official with the Gates Foundation found that opening innovative schools in the New York area was harder than he had anticipated.
Gov. Pat Quinn signed into law a sweeping education-reform bill that among other things will allow for longer school days.

Supporters of Education Bill Seek to Replace Money Lost in Budget-Cutting Process

Education advocates say they hope that money cut from the state budget will be restored by the federal Race to the Top program.

Schools Chiefs See a Path to Proposing Their Own Accountability Systems

Some state education chiefs say that if Congress does not overhaul No Child Left Behind by the fall, they may be allowed to propose their own accountability systems as an alternative.

Top Science Fair Honors Go to American Girls

Three girls from the United States won the top prizes in a global science fair started by Google for their projects on ovarian cancer, grilled chicken and indoor air quality.
ON EDUCATION
Matthew Sprowal and his mother, Katherine. He left a charter school for a traditional public school, where he is flourishing.

Message From a Charter School: Thrive or Transfer

A mother said a school concluded in 12 days that her son did not meet standards, raising a question about whether charter schools cherry-pick students.
DOCTORS INC.

New for Aspiring Doctors, the People Skills Test

A new admission process at medical schools involves a series of encounters meant to examine aspiring doctors’ ability to communicate and work in teams.
Randi Weingarten of the American Federation of Teachers says the debate “has been hijacked by a group of self-styled reformers.”

Union Chief Faults School Reform From ‘On High’

The president of the American Federation of Teachers called for education reform that emanates from teachers and their communities, rather than from “those who blame teachers for everything.”


Cold Cherry Soup


RECIPES FOR HEALTH

Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
Many versions of cold cherry soup originated in Hungary and Poland, where cooks would use sour cherries and a lot of sugar. Traditional cherry soups also are made with sour cream and heavy cream, and sometimes they are thickened with flour. I like this lighter version, which is made with drained yogurt instead of cream.

Recipes for Health

Martha Rose Shulman presents food that is vibrant and light, full of nutrients but by no means ascetic, fun to cook and to eat.
5 cups water
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup red wine
1/4 teaspoon salt
Grated zest of 1/2 lemon
1 1/2 pounds sweet, dark cherries
1. Pit the cherries, and place the pitted cherries in a bowl and the pits in a large soup pot. Add the water to the pot, and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer five minutes. With a skimmer, remove the pits from the water. Add the sugar, red wine, salt and lemon zest, and bring back to a boil over medium-high heat. Boil five minutes, then add the cherries. Bring to a simmer, turn the heat to low, cover and simmer five minutes. Remove from the heat.
2. Place the yogurt in a large bowl and slowly whisk in a cup of the liquid from the soup once it is no longer simmering. Whisk until the mixture is smooth. Slowly add the rest of the soup, and whisk or stir until smooth. Allow to cool, stirring from time to time, then refrigerate until cold. Before serving, you will have to stir or whisk again, as the liquid and yogurt will separate. Still, the soup is easily homogenized.
3. Serve in bowls or in glass tumblers. If you wish, garnish with additional halved, pitted fresh cherries.
Yield: Serves six to eight.
Advance preparation: The soup will keep for two or three days in the refrigerator. (I found myself snacking on the leftovers -- very refreshing on a hot summer day.)
Nutritional information per serving (six servings): 178 calories; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 0 grams monounsaturated fat; 3 milligrams cholesterol; 37 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 116 milligrams sodium; 4 grams protein
Nutritional information per serving (eight servings): 134 calories; 0 grams saturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 0 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 milligrams cholesterol; 28 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 87 milligrams sodium; 3 grams protein
Martha Rose Shulman is the author of “The Very Best of Recipes for Health.”

An Alarming New Stimulant, Legal in Many States


Michael Stravato for The New York Times
So-called bath salts are labeled “not for human consumption,” which helps them skirt a law that would make them illegal.
Dr. Jeffrey J. Narmi could not believe what he was seeing this spring in the emergency room at Schuylkill Medical Center in Pottsville, Pa.: people arriving so agitated, violent and psychotic that a small army of medical workers was needed to hold them down.
They had taken new stimulant drugs that people are calling “bath salts,” and sometimes even large doses of sedatives failed to quiet them.
“There were some who were admitted overnight for treatment and subsequently admitted to the psych floor upstairs,” Dr. Narmi said. “These people were completely disconnected from reality and in a very bad place.”
Similar reports are emerging from hospitals around the country, as doctors scramble to figure out the best treatment for people high on bath salts. The drugs started turning up regularly in the United States last year and have proliferated in recent months, alarming doctors, who say they have unusually dangerous and long-lasting effects.
Though they come in powder and crystal form like traditional bath salts — hence their name — they differ in one crucial way: they are used as recreational drugs. People typically snort, inject or smoke them.
Poison control centers around the country received 3,470 calls about bath salts from January through June, according to the American Association of Poison Control Centers, up from 303 in all of 2010.
“Some of these folks aren’t right for a long time,” said Karen E. Simone, director of theNorthern New England Poison Center. “If you gave me a list of drugs that I wouldn’t want to touch, this would be at the top.”
At least 28 states have banned bath salts, which are typically sold for $25 to $50 per 50-milligram packet at convenience stores and head shops under names like Aura, Ivory Wave, Loco-Motion and Vanilla Sky. Most of the bans are in the South and the Midwest, where the drugs have grown quickly in popularity. But states like Maine, New Jersey and New York have also outlawed them after seeing evidence that their use was spreading.
The cases are jarring and similar to those involving PCP in the 1970s. Some of the recent incidents include a man in Indiana who climbed a roadside flagpole and jumped into traffic, a man in Pennsylvania who broke into a monastery and stabbed a priest, and a woman in West Virginia who scratched herself “to pieces” over several days because she thought there was something under her skin.
“She looked like she had been dragged through a briar bush for several miles,” said Dr. Owen M. Lander, an emergency room doctor at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, W.Va.
Bath salts contain manmade chemicals like mephedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone, or MDPV, also known as substituted cathinones. Both drugs are related to khat, an organic stimulant found in Arab and East African countries that is illegal in the United States.
They are similar to so-called synthetic marijuana, which has also caused a surge inmedical emergencies and been banned in a number of states. In March, the Drug Enforcement Administration used emergency powers to temporarily ban five chemicals used in synthetic marijuana, which is sold in the same types of shops as bath salts.
Shortly afterward, Senator Bob Casey, Democrat of Pennsylvania, asked the agency to enact a similar ban on the chemicals in bath salts. It has not done so, although Gary Boggs, a special agent at D.E.A. headquarters in Washington, said the agency had started looking into whether to make MDPV and mephedrone controlled Schedule I drugs like heroin and ecstasy.
Mr. Casey said in a recent interview that he was frustrated by the lack of a temporary ban. “There has to be some authority that is not being exercised,” he said. “I’m not fully convinced they can’t take action in a way that’s commensurate with the action taken at the state level.”
Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York, introduced federal legislation in February to classify bath salts as controlled Schedule I substances, but it remains in committee. Meanwhile, the drugs remain widely available on the Internet, and experts say the state bans can be thwarted by chemists who need change only one molecule in salts to make them legal again.
And while some states with bans have seen fewer episodes involving bath salts, others where they remain fully legal, like Arizona, are starting to see a surge of cases.
Dr. Frank LoVecchio, an emergency room doctor at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center in Phoenix, said he had to administer general anesthesia in recent weeks to bath salt users so agitated that they did not respond to large doses of sedatives.
Dr. Justin Strittmatter, an emergency room doctor at the Gulf Coast Medical Center in Panama City, Fla., said he had treated one man whose temperature had shot up to 107.5 degrees after snorting bath salts. “You could fry an egg on his forehead,” Dr. Strittmatter said.
Other doctors described dangerously elevated blood pressure and heart rates and people so agitated that their muscles started to break down, releasing chemicals that led to kidney failure.
Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center, said some doctors had turned to powerful antipsychotics to calm users after sedatives failed. “If you take the worst attributes of meth, coke, PCP, LSD and ecstasy and put them together,” he said, “that’s what we’re seeing sometimes.”
Dr. Ryan added, “Some people who used it back in November or December, their family members say they’re still experiencing noticeable paranoid tendencies that they did not have prior.”
Before hitting this country, bath salts swept Britain, which banned them in April 2010. Experts say much of the supply is coming from China and India, where chemical manufacturers have less government oversight.
They are labeled “not for human consumption,” which helps them skirt the federal Analog Act, under which any substance “substantially similar” to a banned drug is deemed illegal if it is intended for consumption.
Last month, the drug agency made its first arrests involving bath salts under the Analog Act through a special task force in New York. Undercover agents bought bath salts from stores in Manhattan and Brooklyn, where clerks discussed how to ingest them and boasted that they would not show up on a drug test.
“We were sending out a message that if you’re going to sell these bath salts, it’s a violation and we will be looking at you,” said John P. Gilbride, special agent in charge of the New York field division of the D.E.A.
The authorities in Alton, Ill., are looking at the Analog Act as they prepare to file criminal charges in the death of a woman who overdosed on bath salts bought at a liquor store in April.
“We think we can prove that these folks were selling it across the counter for the purposes of humans getting high,” said Chief David Hayes of the Alton police.
Chief Hayes and other law enforcement officials said they had been shocked by how quickly bath salts turned into a major problem. “I have never seen a drug that took off as fast as this one,” Chief Hayes said. Others said some people on the drugs could not be subdued with pepper spray or even Tasers.
Chief Joseph H. Murton of the Pottsville police said the number of bath salt cases had dropped significantly since the city banned the drugs last month. But before the ban, he said, the episodes were overwhelming the police and two local hospitals.
“We had two instances in particular where they were acting out in a very violent manner and they were Tasered and it had no effect,” he said. “One was only a small female, but it took four officers to hold her down, along with two orderlies. That’s how out of control she was.”

Granja...


En este día...


ON THIS DAY

On This Day: July 17

On July 17, 1975, an Apollo spaceship docked with a Soyuz spacecraft in orbit in the first superpower linkup of its kind.
On July 17, 1899, James Cagney, the Academy-Award winning American film actor, was born. Following his death on March 30, 1986, his obituary appeared in The Times.

On This Date

1821Spain ceded Florida to the United States.
1898Spanish troops in Santiago, Cuba, surrendered to U.S. forces during the Spanish-American War.
1917With the country at war with Germany, the British royal family changed its name from the German Saxe-Coburg Gotha to Windsor.
1918Russia's Czar Nicholas II, his wife and their five children were executed by the Bolsheviks.
1945President Harry S. Truman, Soviet leader Josef Stalin and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill began meeting at Potsdam in the final Allied summit of World War II.
1948Southern Democrats opposed to the party's position on civil rights met in Birmingham, Ala., to endorse South Carolina Gov. Strom Thurmond for president.
1955Disneyland opened in Anaheim, Calif.
1961Baseball Hall of Famer Ty Cobb died at age 74.
1967Jazz saxophonist and composer John Coltrane died at age 40.
1981A pair of walkways above the lobby of the Kansas City Hyatt Regency Hotel collapsed during a dance, killing 114 people.
1996TWA Flight 800, a Boeing 747 bound for Paris, exploded and crashed off Long Island, N.Y., shortly after leaving John F. Kennedy International Airport. All 230 people aboard were killed.
2000Bashar Assad succeeded his late father, Hafez Assad, becoming Syria's 16th head of state.
2009Former CBS anchorman Walter Cronkite died at age 92.

Current Birthdays

Angela Merkel, Chancellor of Germany
German Chancellor Angela Merkel turns 57 years old today.
AP Photo/Ferdinand Ostrop
Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, Wife of Britain’s Prince Charles
Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall, turns 64 years old today.
AP Photo/Chris Jackson
1917Phyllis Diller, Comedian, turns 94
1935Diahann Carroll, Actress, singer, turns 76
1935Donald Sutherland, Actor, turns 76
1942Spencer Davis, Rock singer, musician, turns 69
1942Connie Hawkins, Basketball Hall of Famer, turns 69
1949Terry "Geezer" Butler, Rock musician (Black Sabbath), turns 62
1951Lucie Arnaz, Actress, turns 60
1952David Hasselhoff, Actor ("Baywatch," "Knight Rider"), turns 59
1956Bryan Trottier, Hockey Hall of Famer, turns 55
1960Mark Burnett, TV producer ("Survivor," "The Apprentice"), turns 51

Historic Birthdays

73William Gargan 7/17/1905 - 2/16/1979
American motion-picture and television actor
71Georges Lemaitre 7/17/1894 - 6/20/1966
Belgian astronomer and cosmologist
80Erle Stanley Gardner 7/17/1889 - 3/11/1970
American mystery novelist and lawyer
81S. Y. Agnon 7/17/1888 - 2/17/1970
Israeli novelist and short-story writer
86Ernest Rhys 7/17/1859 - 5/25/1946
English editor
90Sir Erskine Holland 7/17/1835 - 5/24/1926
English legal scholar
84John Jacob Astor 7/17/1763 - 3/29/1848
German-born American founder of the Astor dynasty
70Elbridge Gerry 7/17/1744 - 11/23/1814
American Revolutionary leader and U.S. vice president (1813-14)
47Alexander Baumgarten 7/17/1714 - 5/26/1762
German philosopher and educator