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View Article  Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book; Anti-bullying Workshop in Ames in January (GLBT)
Iowa School Board Overturns Committee Recommendation, Bans Book (GLBT)

The North Scott Press

by Bill Tubbs
  
The United Methodist Church defrocked the Rev. Irene Elizabeth Stroud on a 7-6 vote for being honest about her sexual orientation....The church's decision appears to be, at best, an effort to achieve unity by sacrificing reality and truth.

[That] very week, the networks, who flooded the airwaves all fall with half-truths disguised as political ads, rejected as "too controversial" a 30-second commercial of the United Church of Christ which showed a bouncer standing guard outside a church and choosing whom to allow into services. Among those rejected are people of color and a same-sex couple.

Just when you think all the issues are national, the school board of the Pleasant Valley [Iowa] School District sent shudders through academia with a 4-3 vote to overturn a committee's recommendation that it is OK to continue using the book, "The Misfits" by James Howe, in an elementary classroom. Parents protested when they learned that Linda Goetz, a sixth-grade teacher at Bridgeview Elementary in LeClaire, was reading the book aloud in an effort to curb name-calling. Their objection? One of the characters is gay.

(click here to read the entire story)



Iowa Department of Education Hosts Conference on Bullying and Harassment


"Bullying in Our  Schools: Power and Empowerment"


The GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force is one of several sponsors of this conference which will take  place on Thursday, January 27, 2005, at the Scheman Conference Center  in Ames.

This conference is designed to help school teams (including youth and community) create plans to prevent bullying and harassment  against all students, including those that are gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT).  

Sessions will help team members learn what works, how to effectively intervene when bullying happens, and how to recognize the many forms that bullying can take.  A special strand is being offered for middle school and high school youth team members, in addition to a strand to address bullying/harassment against diverse  populations (GLBT students, students of color, students with  disabilities, religious minorities).

Click here for more information and to register your team

Brad Clark
Project Director,
GLBT Youth in Iowa Schools Task Force
PO Box 1797
Des Moines, IA  50306-1797

Contact Brad here:
Send an e-mail

Click here for more contact info:
www.iowasafeschools.org


Join your fellow Iowans in the fight to take back the media for ordinary citizens.  Click here to join RapidResponse - Iowa.


View Article  Iowa Universities Seek Additional Funding
State Universities Seek Additional Funding


Continuing with today's theme of educational funding, the Board of Regents is requesting additional funds for next year.


DES MOINES — Hampered by cuts in state aid over the past three years, Iowa's three public universities will ask lawmakers for an additional $40 million next year to offer new programs, boost faculty salaries and rebuild staff lost during budget cuts.

The request from the Iowa Board of Regents asks for $40 million a year over the next four years. In exchange, the universities together would have to find $20 million in annual savings in their own budgets.


We're going to have to make some hard choices here - we cannot continue to raise tuition year after year and shut out lower income students - or force them into vast amounts of debt.

Education is one of the best investments in our future we can make.  By continuing to shortchange our schools, we're shortchanging our chance at a decent future.
View Article  John Drury: The Hypocrisy of the Mason City Globe Gazette

The Hypocrisy of the Mason City Globe Gazette


by John Drury

The following is an editorial published in the Mason City Globe Gazette on December 5, 2004. I found it hypocritical of the Globe to all of a sudden have an interest in education after completely ignoring the subject in the recent election and blindly endorsing the entire incumbent Republican ticket. And of course, I had to respond and that follows as well. -John Drury


Iowa must find a way to raise teachers' pay

Young Iowans who hear all the talk about the state's commitment to education may wonder if they're hearing things correctly.

That's because the words and deeds don't match, and haven't for too long. Indeed, Iowans long have prided ourselves on offering high-quality education and have committed ourselves to keeping that quality high.

But dwindling state funding has cast an ever-growing shadow over the public education system. We've heard too many reports of programs being cut or eliminated, not to mention school closings.

Thankfully, parents and concerned residents have accepted the challenge to keep some programs alive and part of a well-rounded education through fund-raisers and other activities.

But here's a problem that waffle dinners and bake sales can't touch. Iowa's teacher pay has slipped four spots since last year and now ranks 38th nationally.

A survey by the National Education Association showed Iowa teachers averaged $39,432 last year — more than $7,000 below the national average of $46,726. Our teachers drawing that kind of salary had an average of 15 years of service.

Iowa also dropped two places, to 38th, in the amount of per-pupil spending. That averaged $7,098 last year, 1.8 percent more than the previous year but not enough to keep pace with many other states.

It goes to show that talk's cheap — we talk about a commitment to quality education, but our state leaders don't back it up like they should.

Now, some will point to the 4 percent increase in school funding approved in the last legislative session. But most education groups wanted 6 percent, and will continue to work for that.

That's because by the time that 4 percent is divided among rising health insurance, utility and transportation costs, just to name a few areas, the funds remaining for teacher salaries may be negligible, according to Mason City Superintendent Keith Sersland.

It's time for the Legislature to put an end to the talk and start finding ways to pump up the education funding. We need to attract and keep the brightest minds and stop the raiding of our best educators by nearby states such as Illinois, Wisconsin and Minnesota.

Many argue that Iowa's quality of life should be a factor in drawing good educators, and it is for those of us who hold the Hawkeye state near and dear. But other states offer a quality lifestyle as well, and more money to enjoy it.

No one says it's going to be easy to find the money to make this all happen. Demand for more cash runs up and down the legislative to-do list, from economic development to social services, and each area has valid arguments.

But to make improvements in those other areas, it seems logical that we have to start by educating our young people in the best way possible, and we need quality teachers to do that. To keep those quality teachers, we must pay them well.

To let Iowa's rank in teacher pay keep slipping is embarrassing and inexcusable. Education has long been an Iowa point of pride, and it's a point the Legislature must address as soon as the gavel falls on the next session.

Agree? Disagree? Send your letter to the editor to the Editor's Mailbag at news@globegazette. com or by regular mail to Editor's Mailbag, Globe Gazette, P.O. Box 271, Mason City, IA 50402-0271.


December 5, 2004

Editor's Mailbag
Globe Gazette
P.O. Box 271
Mason City, IA 50402

Dear Editor:

I find the Globe Gazette’s December 5, 2004 “Iowa must find a way to raise teachers’ pay” editorial very interesting.

In the editorial you mention an updated report released by the National Education Association showing that Iowa has dropped four points to 38th in the nation when it comes to teacher pay and dropped two points to 38th in the nation in per pupil spending. A preliminary report showing similar numbers was released last spring. On teacher pay, you point out that we are more than $7,000 below the national average. On per pupil spending, we had a 1.8 percent increase over last year, but we are not keeping up with the pace of other states.

You point out that the “words and deeds ‘of the current legislature’ don’t match, and haven’t for too long.” You correctly criticize the current legislature by saying that “talk is cheap, we talk about a commitment to quality education, but our state leaders don’t back it up like they should.” You are correct in saying that this is “embarrassing and inexcusable.” You are also correct in stating that the solution is for “the legislature to put an end to the talk and start finding ways to pump up the education funding.”

My questions are simple. If the answer to this problem is a shift in priorities of the Iowa legislature, why didn’t you take this strong position before the recent election, and why did you blindly endorse the slate of incumbent legislators that have allowed this to happen?

If you truly cared about the education of Iowa’s children, you would show some responsibility in your reporting. Quite frankly, your pretending to care attitude is also embarrassing and inexcusable.

Signed,
John Drury


View Article  John Drury: Rural Iowa is Gambling on Education
Rural Iowa is Gambling on Education
by John Drury

While campaigning across Senate District 6 this past year, I had many discussions about rural economic development. Iowa’s Senate District 6 includes Worth, Winnebago, Hancock, Franklin, and Cerro Gordo County, excluding Mason City.
It’s a rural district with Clear Lake being its largest city.

Another topic often discussed was public education. Iowa is known for its great education system. For years, that has been the case. Iowa has consistently been at the top when it comes to education. In fact, we have beaten the odds, Iowa’s personal income level is way below average and typically income level relates to test scores. However, in Iowa, we have low wages, but our test scores have been high. We have beaten those odds because we have properly funded our education system, and because of our commitment to strong rural communities.

The Iowa quarter was released this year and on the back it says “Foundation in Education.” Ironically, in a recent survey sent to 2,300 Iowa K-12 teachers, a whopping 75% said their class sizes have increased, only 24% said their materials are up to date and accurate, 62% spent more than $200 a year of their own money on classroom supplies, and 59% report that professional development resources at their schools were cut.

It would appear as though our strong foundation is crumbling. I talked to parents, teachers, school administrators, and students across district 6 who were all concerned that the Iowa legislature is shortchanging our education system.

There is a common theme of my conversations on economic development. People can’t seem to figure out why we don’t seem to get much development north of Highway 20. Our population is on the decline and many have suggested that this is purposefully being legislated. The legislature has said no to any real local control on large-scale hog confinements, they have not promoted the family farmer, they refuse to discuss raising the minimum wage, and they have no strategy for economic development. All of these have worked against any real growth in our area. Mason City likes to boast about its retail expansion west. Sure, you can get a cheap TV, but does that bring good paying jobs and attract people to live in our communities? It’s doubtful.

Both Worth County and Franklin County have each approved a referendum in support of bringing casino gambling to their county. The opponents of gambling are rightfully concerned about the social ills and the effect that a casino will have on already existing and struggling businesses. Any disposable income will be sucked into the casino and main street businesses will dry up and blow away, they say. The executive director of the Worth County Development Authority has said we need a casino to fund our schools. Proponents argue that the state has left them with nothing else to spark growth and create jobs.

The sad truth is, they are both right. The social ills of gambling are real and the potential effects of casinos on struggling businesses shouldn’t be ignored. And the legislature has obviously decided that we are no longer going to properly fund our schools and that as long as we put the right words on the back of a quarter, that ought to be good enough.

We are in pretty sad shape when we are willing to gamble on our families and struggling main streets just to fund a basic service like education.

I’ve said all along that if Iowa is going to have casino gambling, there’s no reason why north Iowa shouldn’t have one. But I am concerned that north Iowa is looking to a casino to solve all of our problems. If we are to have a casino, then it should be because there is a demand for recreation, not because we want our children to have the latest textbooks.

We need real solutions to economic development that celebrate Iowa and its people and ones that will grow our economy and our communities from the ground up. For the state legislature to not have a long term strategy to grow rural areas of the state is unacceptable. Our future should be an investment, not a risk.


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Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


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*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


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*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


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FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media