Small people

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Rave, meet Bath

Posted by on 14 Mar 2007 | Tagged as: Small people

Courtesy of ParentHacks (which is a pretty fun site):

Toss a couple of glow sticks in the tub, and turn off the lights. Voila, a multicolored glow-in-the-dark bath!

What a blast. And glowsticks are only about $0.99 now so it’s cheap fun for little kids.

But gee, you think the guy who thought that up ever partook of recreational pharmaceuticals?

M in her red sweatshirt

Posted by on 23 Feb 2007 | Tagged as: Small people

(For Michael!)

It’s a bit blurry, as I was trying to take pictures of a fast-moving Kingergarten Dragon Parade (for Chinese New Year) today.

It was, as promised, “very noisy!”

Fraser Institute schools report

Posted by on 12 Feb 2007 | Tagged as: Small people

This may be the only time I ever say something nice about the Fraser Institute, but this report they’ve done with nifty summaries of each Ontario school’s test results from the past five years is much more useful than anything else I’ve seen. Except for the final rating out of 10, it’s just straight reporting — none of their usual data-mangling. And you can easily ignore the rating and just look at the test scores, so whatever their bias may be isn’t critical to the report’s usefulness. (If you consider test scores useful — a big if.)

The ranking stuff isn’t especially helpful (it’s clear to my eye that parental years of education is the best predictor of school test results, and anyway, does it have to be a competition?), and they don’t seem to have compensated in any way for ESL populations — but putting five years of data together to make the trends evident was a great idea.

Which reminds me –

The grade 3s at M’s school didn’t do all that well on the standardized testing last year.

Consequence: the grade 3 teachers were moved to teaching other grades. Higher grades, apparently.

Then, the NEW grade 3 teachers (who had nothing to do with last year’s tests) were sent for remedial how-to-teach-to-the-test training, as punishment for their predecessor’s failings. Also, the current grade 3s are getting remedial help, even though the kids that didn’t do well are now in grade *4*.

I roll my eyes.

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