There it went

4 years, come and gone. Heck, that makes 2 years in a row I didn’t notice until after the fact. I’ll take it as a good sign.

Lighten up

Tell me you can watch this and not laugh out loud. I mean, come on - it’s a flying penis!

Letters to the Troops

Jim at Thinking Right collecting letters for the men and women serving aboard the USS Russell. So far he’s received a little over 50 letters. Remember, we’re looking for about 250, so we’ve got a long way to go yet.

Once again, any help you all can give would be greatly appreciated. Please pass the word along to family and friends. Or, if you have a blog, please put up a post abou the project. Letters can be sent to letters@thinking-right.com.

7% of Colorado students enrolled in charter schools

As long as this week is turning into Education Week on exvigilare, I might as well be consistent.

The Denver Post had this editorial yesterday:

For thousands of parents and students, charter schools offer choices within the public education system. To differing degrees, charter schools feature specialized academic programming and some serve students with unique educational needs. Because charter schools are self-governing public schools, nearly all rely heavily on parental and community involvement and support.

Unfortunately, charter schools (full disclosure - we’re charter schoolers) don’t get everything that public schools do. Even though we pay the same taxes as parents of public schoolers, that tax money doesn’t pay for the same quality of facilities.

The fact that charter schools are doing so well is remarkable considering the challenges they face - especially regarding facilities. The average Colorado charter school spends $480 per student from designated per-pupil operating revenues on facilities costs. This is money that would otherwise be going towards teacher salaries, textbooks, and equipment.

Watch out for the little rocks

Know that there are big sins, like some large rocks, and little sins, but countless.

Your soul is like a boat, traveling on the sea of this life. By confessing, you throw easily the large rocks. But watch the little rocks. These are gathered in subtle ways.

(thanks, Marian)

Your Charter School

In an update to yesterday’s post on charter schools, Colorado has a new web tool for families looking for a charter school near to them and that matches their needs. Ben has it covered, as usual.

National Charter Schools Week

It’s National Charter Schools Week, and that means lots of chatter in Washington, D.C., about whether charter schools hurt or improve public education. … The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, which favors the expansion of charter schools, conducted a March poll of 800 registered voters and found a majority of them want more public school options. Interestingly, nearly half of those polled said they are “unsure” about charter schools. After learning from the folks conducting the poll that charter schools are public schools, a majority of the respondents said they had an interest in enrolling their children in one.

It’s remarkable, isn’t it? The more that parents find out about the public schools that their children attend and the alternatives (including charter schools) that are available, parents are increasingly choosing the alternatives. The above quote taken from a US News and World Report story, Sizing up the Charter School Movement, just last week.

Under Arnold Schwarzenegger’s governorship, the number of charter schools in California has increased by more than 50 percent. Nation-wide there are 1.2 million students who attend charter schools. Most of them are in California, Arizona Florida, Michigan, Ohio, and Texas. The majority are minority students and low income. How’s this for a suprise - New Orleans is the city with the highest concentration of charter schools.

From World on the Web:

New Orleans has become a proving ground for charter schools in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. According to the campaign, it has the highest percentage of students in charter schools among U.S. Cities. Most of the city’s students now attend charter schools. Last year, students in New Orleans charter schools out-scored their peers in traditional public schools on a standardized test.

President Bush has championed a proposal called the Pell Grants for Kids Act that would allow families to send their children to nearby public or private schools, giving parents the much looked-for choices to benefit their children. Both John McCain and Barack Obama have indicated a willingness to expand the reach and availability of charter schools (although as with most politicians, I’ll believe it when I see it), so the potential for educational opportunities seems to be growing exponentially.

UPDATE: NY Times article here on New Orleans charter schools is a good read on the subject.

On one level the transformation has already been total. Even without concurrent transformations in the city’s minimal economy and fragmentary social structure, the schools are being administered with a vigor that would have been unrecognizable here before the storm.

If this experiment succeeds, it will have accomplished something rare in the annals of American schools; academic experts cannot recall any campaign this “radical,” in the words of one. An educational superstructure, assembled in large part from outside brains and muscle, has brought itself in to remake a group of students years behind, overwhelmingly impoverished and often from broken homes. By next year, this will be the largest Teach for America district in the nation, administrators say.

All right, all right

Nothing like your friends complaining to make you post something, huh?

Happy Pascha, Christo Anesti! We’ve just celebrated our first Lent/Holy Week/Pascha in the Orthodox church. Too wonderful for words, and many other Orthodox bloggers have written about it better than I would. So, how about a general update?

The symphony has a concert tomorrow night. You should be there.

My office has “restructured,” which means that not only am I doing the job that I’ve built for myself the last 3 years but I’m also doing the job I was doing 3 years ago.  Fun.

I’m one step away from finishing my new computer. Now all I need is a few minutes free time to finish the damn thing and power it up. Sure looks nice so far.

Rosie turned 4 last week. Big party, fun had by all. Criminy, they grow up too fast.

Regular blogging to return next week.

Why do you fast?

A boy once approached his father, ‘Old man, why do you fast?’

The father stood silent, bringing heart and mind together, and then:

‘Beloved boy, I fast to know what it is I lack.

For day by day I sit in abundance, and all is well before me;

I want not, I suffer not, and I lack but that for which I invent a need.

But my heart is empty of true joy, filled, yet overflowing with dry waters.

There is no room left for love. I have no needs, and so my needs are never met, no longings, and so my desires are never fulfilled.

Where all the fruits of the earth could dwell, I have filled the house with dust and clouds;

It is full, so I am content — But it is empty, and so I weep.

‘Thus I fast, beloved, to know the dust in which I dwell.

I take not from that which I might take, for in its absence I am left empty, and what is empty stands ready to be filled.

I turn from what I love, for my love is barren, and by it I curse the earth.

I turn from what I love, that I may purify my loving, and move from curse to blessing.

‘From my abundance I turn to want, as the soldier leaves the comfort of home, of family and love, to know the barrenness of war.

For it is only amongst the fight, in the torture of loss, in the fire of battle, that lies are lost and the blind man clearly sees.

In hunger of body and mind, I see the vanity of food, for I have loved food as food, and have never been fed.

In weary, waking vigil I see the vanity of sleep, for I have embraced sleep as desire, and have never found rest.

In sorrow, with eyes of tears I see the vanity of pleasure, for I have treasured happiness above all, and have never known joy.

‘I fast, beloved child, to crush the wall that is my self;

For I am not who I am, just as these passions are not treasures of gold but of clay.

I fast to die, for it is not the living who are raised, but the dead.

I fast to crucify my desires, for He who was crucified was He who lived, and He who conquered, and He who lives forever.’

– Desert Fathers
(via Desert Calling)

Forgive me

Forgive me

(pinched from Mary-Leah)

Busy week

My work dumped about 140 people from its corporate office in the last week, so the day job has been a little more exciting than normal.

Pascha is next week, so this week is (supposed to be) all about the preparation.

I’m playing the spring musical with one of the local high schools, so all the non-day-job time this week is taken up with that. My first rehearsal with them was tonight. The first performance is at 9:00am tomorrow. Nothing like waiting ’till the last minute, right?

Anywho, I came across this and thought it worth sharing tonight. This may very well be the definition of a Bad Parent.

On Saturday, Joseph Manzanares stormed into the Hollywood Video store where his girlfriend worked, threatened to kill her and knocked over several video displays and even a computer, Commerce City police Sgt. Joe Sandoval said.

Why, you ask?

A couple fighting about which gang their 4-year-old toddler should join caused a public disturbance that resulted in the father’s arrest, Commerce City police said Thursday.

Oh criminy…

The Ladder of Divine Ascent

This past Sunday was the 4th Sunday of Great Lent (also known as Sunday of St John of the Ladder). Benedict Seraphim has a nice write up of it here.

Taken from an OrthodoxOnline class:

St. John of the Ladder is a Saint whose feast is celebrated on the Fourth Sunday of Lent (also March 30.) He lived in the late 6th and early 7th centuries. He was tonsured a monk at the Monastery of St. Catherine at Mt. Sinai. Most of his life was spend completely by himself in continuous prayer at the place where, according to tradition, God had spoken to Moses by the burning bush and later had given to him the Law. During the last years of his life Saint John was the abbot of St. Catherine’s Monastery, where he wrote his famous work The Ladder of Divine Ascent, which caused him to be known as St. John of the Ladder. In this book he teaches how we can become spiritually and morally perfect. Jesus taught in the Sermon on the Mount: You must be perfect - just as your Father in heaven is perfect (Matthew 5:48). This is a command not only for the apostles or for monks, but also for all Christians. How can we become perfect? Put simply it is to live just as Jesus did (1 John 2:6). Christian perfection is growth in love, holiness, and goodness through Jesus Christ.

The Ladder of Divine Ascent

As if on cue

Just the other day I wrote about writing code, now Lifehacker tells you where to start.

Birthdays approaching

Mine and Fluff’s, anyway. I’m thinking about taking her to the opera. The Met has a live broadcast that is carried by some movie theatres - and it’s La Boheme! How cool would this kind of a tradition be?

Giveaway

The popular (and expensive) StarBurn is free today. The new v.10 offers :

* Fully skin-able and theme-able wizards (not only main form as it was in V9);
* Vista-signed executables (StarBurn is “blessed” for Vista/Longhorn now);
* Blu-Ray decrypter wizard (V9 had only DVD decrypter);
* UDF 2.0 / Unicode image mastering wizard (V9 had only ISO9660/Joliet).

Very cool, and easy to use. Find it here, today only.