If you see this you’re legally obligated to reblog and tag with the book you’re currently reading

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@wably-student
If you see this you’re legally obligated to reblog and tag with the book you’re currently reading
Which notorious English class short story fucked you up the most?
* I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream
*The King in Yellow
* The Lottery
* The Masque of the Red Death
* The Monkey’s Paw
* The Most Dangerous Game
* The Nameless City
* The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
* There Will Come Soft Rains
*The Yellow Wallpaper
* The Veldt
* “you think those were fucked up? What about [X]!”
Which notorious English class short story fucked you up the most?
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream
The King in Yellow
The Lottery
The Masque of the Red Death
The Monkey’s Paw
The Most Dangerous Game
The Nameless City
The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas
There Will Come Soft Rains
The Yellow Wallpaper
The Veldt
“you think those were fucked up? What about [X]!”
Okay I have things I should be seeing to but I couldn't help myself. In case you, like me, have not read all of these stories and would like to be amongst the lucky 10,000 today:
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison
The King in Yellow by Robert W Chambers*
The Lottery by Shirley Jackson**
The Masque of the Red Death by Edgar Allan Poe
The Monkey's Paw by W.W. Jacobs
The Most Dangerous Game by Richard O'Connell
The Nameless City by HP Lovecraft
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas by Ursula K LeGuin
There Will Come Soft Rains by Ray Bradbury
The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
The Veldt by Ray Bradbury
Honorable Mention from the comments/reblogs:
All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury
*note: this is actually a collection of short stories and clocks in at about 72k words
**Originally published in the New Yorker in 1948; interestingly, the New Yorker still has this story archived on their website BEHIND A PAYWALL. CAN YOU IMAGINE.
The veldt and it's not close.
Btw if you like these kinds of stories you should absolutely read Zenna Henderson. Most of her work is this kind of stuff, and her books have sadly been out of print for decades. If you've ever seen Escape To Witch Mountain, it's VERY reminiscent of some of her stories.
If you can find an old copy of her anthologies, I cannot recommend them highly enough
Passed both core praxis and social studies back to back in December. Been mainly reading since then! I will post the updates soon!
Taking general core combo of Praxis today 🫡
There are no cameras watching. You shouln’t be reading a book to say you’ve read that book and pat yourself on the back over having read it. Read to learn, to enjoy, to find pleasure, to grow and fall in love with the process of grwoing. Not just to pretend that you are, or convince yourself you enjoy something you don´t as a way to prove your intelect to an imaginary audience. Drop the mask. Do it because you (yes, you, not the idealised version you wish to be) genuenly want to do it.
Hi! I didn’t make it into a masters in History program, so in September I will be starting a teacher certification program! I have been tutoring this summer and continuing to do so during the school year! Happy to be back!
I think a key moment that early career researchers need to learn is to shake off the fear of looking stupid when you're giving a presentation and actually explain the background
I am guilty of this myself so don't take this as me scoffing from a high horse because I'm very much not but I see a lot of our undergraduates, masters students, and even the new phd students who assume the audience knows the context
and I'm not even talking about the science context, I'm talking explain what you're doing!!
if you're talking about how you've coded scripts to do the complex mapping then explain all the parts and how to use it
or if you've done selection cuts on a dataset explain how you came to those cuts, whether it theory driven or empirical
explain your terminology on your slides, even if it's a note at the side because I bet even if this is just a talk to your own research group there's gonna be at least one person who's missed the definition and doesn't wanna speak up!
peace and love and do good science
I have to send out reminders for this since this is an issue for a conference I'm helping organize. We love hearing what early career people are doing! But please explain the jargon! It really helps clarify ideas for your own sake, too.
I got this exact same note from 2 of my profs
Idk how many people know about this but Harvard offers a bunch of free courses every semester & they are genuinely so cool & such a good resource!
I was today years old. That is disgusting.
No Child Left Behind is one of the worst things to ever be incentivized in schools. It was signed into law when I was 14. Reading Rainbow was my show as a kid. LeVar Burton played a big part in why I became an avid reader to date. The joy of it. It's an adventure around the globe and through different time periods without stepping on a plane or time machine.
Children parrot behavior. In grade school, I always wanted to read the same amount of books as my teachers (50 books) and managed to double that each year. Before No Child Left Behind, book fairs and Scholastic catalogs were a serious matter like your grandma's Fingerhut catalogs. Libraries were (and still are) a wonderland.
Reading comprehension and proficiency in schools has been declining for decades. A crisis. The joy of books isn't pushed anymore and I'm always saddened by it. It's one of the reasons why I post my book reviews and recommendations on here, as well as posts from others to encourage reading and (novel) writing. Kids will parrot your behavior while the education system sadly fails to return as that example.
For those of us who aren't from the states, what - apart from apparently a shitty law - is that?
A law passed by Bush that cut funding to public schools whose students didn't improve every year on a set of standardized tests- meaning not that each student was supposed to improve during their time in school, but that this year's first graders had to do better on the tests than last year's first graders, and next year's had to do better still. Obviously this was really difficult over the short term and completely impossible over the long term.
This concentrated schools and other education programs entirely on those tests, especially schools with students who were already struggling, at the cost of art and music programs, home economics and shop type programs, and any in depth exploration of pretty much anything that wasn't on the test, which were pretty narrowly focused. Reading Rainbow was a relaxed encouragement to be imaginative and curious. It didn't teach kids the answers to questions on the test. So it didn't make the cut.
The program also incentivized schools to cut their losses on struggling students, expelling or encouraging them to drop out to bring the test averages up instead of being able to spend the effort to actually help them.
No Child Left Behind was an absolute disaster for education, poorly hidden behind an insidious name. The real goal of it was not just to defund education (in order to reallocate those funds to appease Republican lobbyists), but to stop teaching critical thinking. Not only did struggling students get left behind, but by prioritizing students who did well on standardized tests, the focus shifted entirely to teaching students memorization without understanding context, and how to guess their best on a test in order to pass. The focus became passing tests, not actual learning. In the process, students were taught that they don't need to understand the material, they just need to know how to follow directions and give the answers deemed correct by the school boards. They were deprived of agency in their own educations.
This widened the gap between public and private school educations significantly, because students in public schools learned mostly how to regurgitate information, while students in private schools learned how to understand it, analyze it, think critically about it, and apply it - in short, if you could afford to go to private school, you still got to have agency over your education. And sure, many public school teachers were dedicated and still taught their students more than the curriculum demanded, but they were under a lot of pressure and scrutiny and their hands were often tied. Many of them couldn't sustain the effort it took (and how little they got paid) and changed careers. Meanwhile basic necessarily skills disappeared when arts and non-academic budgets were slashed into oblivion - you used to be able to learn how to sew, mend, cook, budget, do woodworking, fix a car (hell, build one), paint, draw, do pottery, and so much more in elective classes. What's mostly remained is performing arts programs, which struggle to continue existing, but since you can charge admission to performances they've had a better chance than shop class and home ec.
You have no idea what it's like to have watched all that happen under the Bush administration and now see the second emerging generation of young people who were deprived of the education they deserve and don't understand critical thought or media analysis. Those of us who are old enough to remember the Bush era are frustrated, but not at all surprised to see how reductive and binary fandom discourse is, or that critical media analysis has diminished significantly and turned into fandom discourse instead (ie. that being a child during the "what you feel is more valid than facts" Bush administration has led to the second emerging generation of people who struggle to separate their personal feelings about a piece of media from the idea that fiction is social commentary, who struggle to understand nuance and are more concerned about judging others for their even slightly divergent political views than about what makes for effective activism, or that fandom has become a way for people to judge and condemn others).
You have no idea how terrifying it is to have watched No Child Left Behind unfold in your early 20s and have thought "this is going to lead to generations of kids who will be ripe for manipulation by propaganda" and to now watch how hard it is to get Gen Z and Alpha to understand the ways they're being manipulated by fascists. Believe me when I say the very real purpose of forcing education to focus on tests instead of knowledge was to create generations of people whose brains are trained at an early age to accept information unquestioningly. That's what I see when people reblog screenshots without sources and base their political opinions on tumblr funnymen.
No Child Left Behind was devastating. We knew it then and we see it now.
Its even worse now that they stopped teaching phonics while prioritizing "sight words"
Theyre literally teaching kids to recognize words they want them to know while preventing them from ever learning how to read, which means you can't learn new words, you can't sound it out and ask someone what it means - the kids can't fucking read. Gen alpha can't fucking read. They can only read "approved sight words"
The best description I've ever seen of No Child Left Behind is that it is "a masterpiece of Orwellian language that says that no child shall advance faster than the slowest."
As a children's librarian, some kids have no idea how to "sound out" words. Which is going to be REALLY FUCKING ROUGH trying to figure out how to pronounce names! Reading a book about Yasmin and Sanjay and José and Min, and they just skip the names entirely.
Skip Google for Research
As Google has worked to overtake the internet, its search algorithm has not just gotten worse. It has been designed to prioritize advertisers and popular pages often times excluding pages and content that better matches your search terms
As a writer in need of information for my stories, I find this unacceptable. As a proponent of availability of information so the populace can actually educate itself, it is unforgivable.
Below is a concise list of useful research sites compiled by Edward Clark over on Facebook. I was familiar with some, but not all of these.
⁂
Google is so powerful that it “hides” other search systems from us. We just don’t know the existence of most of them. Meanwhile, there are still a huge number of excellent searchers in the world who specialize in books, science, other smart information. Keep a list of sites you never heard of.
www.refseek.com - Academic Resource Search. More than a billion sources: encyclopedia, monographies, magazines.
www.worldcat.org - a search for the contents of 20 thousand worldwide libraries. Find out where lies the nearest rare book you need.
https://link.springer.com - access to more than 10 million scientific documents: books, articles, research protocols.
www.bioline.org.br is a library of scientific bioscience journals published in developing countries.
http://repec.org - volunteers from 102 countries have collected almost 4 million publications on economics and related science.
www.science.gov is an American state search engine on 2200+ scientific sites. More than 200 million articles are indexed.
www.pdfdrive.com is the largest website for free download of books in PDF format. Claiming over 225 million names.
www.base-search.net is one of the most powerful researches on academic studies texts. More than 100 million scientific documents, 70% of them are free
Reminder that libraries are literally foe this purpose. If you go to a public library with a research question you will make their day.
𝔢𝔰𝔭𝔯𝔢𝔰𝔰𝔬 𝔰𝔴𝔦𝔯𝔩
Not sure if anyone cares but felt like posting anyway:
So I got rejected from grad school within only about 4 days of my full application being submitted. It only said that I was “denied admission” as a way to reject me with literally one sentence. I was going for history as I would love to work on more research and bridge more gapsbthat I find in some content areas. I am partially considering trying again for an online program in history or library sciences.
I also started considering today, maybe going for an alternate route in teaching. I am unsure however as I am slightly hesitant, altough I have tutored before and loved doing it, as well as educating others means a lot to me, it is disheartening to know how horrible this country treats teachers. I am unsure of my plan for how I want to move forward. I am currently just a part time retail sales associate, however I was a student assistant for my department in college, as well as a tutor online for a few years.
Life is always a questioning experience and never-ending twisted and broken pathway led astray in a forest. For now, I suppose I will continue on my way until a path becomes clear again.
About ten years ago I decided that the next step I needed to take in my life was to accept and explore what it meant to be a failure and to have failed. This infuriated almost everybody in my life and clearly terrified a lot of people. People do not want you to accept failure. They dont want you to like... Sit with and think about it and pick it up and turn it arpund in your hands and really examine it. They want you to keep throwing yourself against the impossible walls until your body explodes! They do not want you to say "alright then, I've failed. What does that mean for me? Im still here. What does the life of someone who has failed look like?"
This makes people very angry and panicky.
My mental health improved in ways it had not in the previous DECADE once I stopped. And. Sat. With failure. And thought about what my failure ... Was. And looked at the structures that produced it and examined them critically.
It is so taboo to fail and admit it openly and talk about it. It is so taboo to talk about or think about failure in an accepting way rather than hiding it shamefully until you experience a degree of success in some area which allows you to present the past failure as "a stepping stone" to your current situation. Fuck that. We are put in positions of guaranteed failure by society every day and then punished and shamed for it. Lets fucking talk about failure
Omg! I had the exact same experience! Once I accepted it instead of fighting I felt much more calm and relaxed! No matter what we do we r bound to fail at least in some areas of life… so it’s absolutely absurd how as a society we only celebrate huge success and shame failure! Yes I’m a failure! What’s next! I’m still here… I gotta figure my life out somehow! Also what we consider failure on our part, some people would die to be there! A lot of times people who are gifted and smart later on in life can’t keep up with the expectations anymore because guess what I can’t get a job at Google! So even our failed state is not too bad in the big picture! Like everything else I think the first step is to sit with this uncomfortable feeling that yes… I’ve failed! Some actions of mine were cringe and so childish that led me to this point! Now what! How can I live and not feel like shooting myself in the eye everyday! Without accepting the failure life progressively get more shitty!
At least that’s my experience!
god forbid 5000 year old girls do anything
holy shit bronze age pro sheep bone gamer girl
this is hilarious but also im gonna cry like this teenage gamer died and they buried her with her high score. no one took back the pot or divided it up because no one would play against her again. her family and friends buried her with her wins. im crying
Amid ‘DEI’ purge, Pentagon removes webpage on Iwo Jima flag-raiser
Ira Hayes was an Akimel O'odham Native American WW2 veteran most infamous for being one of the U.S. Marines pictured raising the American flag over Iwa Jima. After the war, Hayes suffered from symptoms of what we'd now call PTSD which transpired severe bout of alcoholism. He died just ten years after the war's conclusion, having partially frozen to death in the Arizona desert after a heavy night of drinking.
His story serves as a tragic example of both the serious mental and psychological suffering that many combat war veterans are afflicted with post service as well as the chronic plight and neglect experienced by many within Native American tribal communities.
There is the history that sensitive White people don't want you to learn about for fear that such stories may celebrate our diverse and problematic history.