Saturday, April 30, 2011

Shared Prosperity

I wonder if I know any of the "losers" in this change in the business tax.

http://www.michigan.gov/documents/gov/MBT_Overview_-_Final_179275_7.pdf

My students and I are the losers in the current legislation. I'm just saying. Share prosperity, you know...


And those seniors who don't pay any taxes, they've been dodging this burden too long!*

*holy sarcasm, Batman

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Really? I'm over-payed?

Do you really believe that to fund the State of Michigan and at the same time make budgetary concessions to spur economic growth in our state we need to take it from the education system and public employees in general? And don't start believing statistics that say that as a public employees I'm over-payed. Those statistics try to contrast my wages/earnings (and my 7+ years of schooling, and endless years of retraining) with those of the uncertified/HS Diploma job holders. Compare my job to jobs that require similar levels of ed/training and you will see that the public sector lags behind in wages (-3.3%), and keeps up only because the benefits are better on average (+5.3%). However, public sector professionals are beaten out in total compensation by private sector professionals overall (-0.7%). (Data for calculations source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, March 9, 2011).

So when you say I'm over-payed, check your sources.

All that not withstanding, it's not what any teacher would tell you is the main point. The real problem (in Michigan, at least) is that they are taking money from the children (no joke!) because MI schools are financed based upon the students served and in my area the students go where they want to for school. The parents can "vote with their dollar" because their student, again in my region, is worth approximately $7,000 to a school district's funds. The current MI budget proposal will decrease this by over $700, over 10% of the "student" money is taken away. I don't have to tell you what this implies, but I will tell you that the old adage 'you get what you pay for' comes to my mind.

Don't mind me, though. I'm not really a professional. I'm just a middle school math teacher with a B.S. in general mathematics, provisional teacher certification, a Master's in education, and a bill for $1,400 for a pointless class the State made me take to get my professional certification.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Nice graph, Rep. Paul Ryan

Found on Rep. Paul Ryan's facebook page, a presumed accurate "fiscal prediction" made by the Heritage Foundation:
This is hilarious! So based on the most recent "War on Terrorism" you (the Heritage Foundation) and your mish-mash of "compilations of data" somehow predict that in the next 20 years nothing will change and we won't have learned anything from our history???

Monday, January 25, 2010

Computer/table Workspace

A way to collaborate that is truly remarkable. Wish I had one at my job.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Trig/Pre-Calc on Moodle



Here is a link to our course page on Moodle. This page contains a weekly schedule, with homework assignments, useful links, notes, handouts, etc. You should get a free Moodle account as most teachers in the school only allow access from registered users to their courses. If you just wanna browse the page then you can log in as a guest. No matter what, you need to know the enrollment key. If you don't know the enrollment key, then pay attention next time in class.

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Long Division of Polynomials Help

Text and video:
http://www.mathsisfun.com/algebra/polynomials-division-long.html

Youtube video with an especially helpful example #2 at 3:45 into the video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6_ghhd7kwQ

If you have a "dial-up" connection here is a text page, check out the second example:
http://www.wtamu.edu/academic/anns/mps/math/mathlab/col_algebra/col_alg_tut36_longdiv.htm

Good Luck!

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Our Wikihow is Up and Running!

You must contribute 2 significant edits to our article titled "How to solve polynomials of a higher degree". One edit will help start the article, another to help refine our article or a related wikihow article.

First edit due by Monday 9/29

Second edit after 9/29 is due by Monday 10/6

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You can learn about using Wiki Syntax (used in almost every wiki) to try some advanced editing techniques.