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Charlottesville Hotel Guide » UVA News
Professor picked by UVa to lead architecture school
A University of Florida architecture professor and practicing architect will be the next dean of the University of Virginia’s School of Architecture.

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3 on board cull options for schools

Three Charlottesville School Board members said Thursday that the division should look into either leaving its grade configuration as is or having one middle school instead of both an upper elementary school and middle school.


Deadline for Community Arts Handbook: July 31

Don’t forget to submit your listings for the 2009-10 Community Arts Handbook! The deadline for entries is July 31! For artists, educators, groups and organizations providing arts learning opportunities to K-12 school groups: Piedmont Council of the Arts ( PCA ) is updating the Community Arts Education Handbook, a directory of area arts programs and opportunities offered to school groups during the academic year. The handbook provides K-12 educators with a single resource for arts programs available to their classes. This strengthens the connection between schools and the broader arts community. If you offer any arts learning opportunities for school groups, either scheduled or open-ended programs, we want to include you in the 2009-10 Community Arts Education Handbook!
To get listed, please complete the ARTS ED PROGRAM SURVEY , which will allow you to send us exact information about the programs you offer. Use the link above to submit your program details to PCA by Friday, July 31st. PCA will make arts advocacy presentations for area school leaders throughout the year to promote this resource. At the meetings, we’ll distribute the 2009-10 Community Arts Education Handbook and encourage administrators to make the arts a priority in their schools. We appreciate your involvement and hope to receive your completed survey soon. If you have questions, please email education@charlottesvillearts.org or call the PCA office at 434-971-2787.


$850K earmark: Jeff School needs Senate OK

Jefferson School Community Partnership prez Martin Burks, Vice Mayor Holly Edwards and Congressman Tom Perriello stoke the anticipation for a revitalized Jefferson School.
PHOTO BY LISA PROVENCE

You’ve seen the photo cliche of the giant check being presented to a happy recipient. That shot wasn’t available at a Jefferson School event with Congressman Tom Perriello because the [...]


Charlottesville–Right Now: Eric Strucko Continues His Conversation Of the Happenings With the Albemarle School Board

7.12.10 Eric Strucko, Vice Chair of the Albemarle School Board, continues to update Coy Barefoot on the happenings of the School Board. Topics include the relationship between the Board of Supervisors and the School Board, cuts in the budget and how the county plans [...]
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‘White’ settler power structure digging in

... and yes, this is Arizona, USA I'm talking about: the state that recently passed a law mandating its police to check the immigration status of anyone they judge just might be an undocumented immigrant, and that this week passed one prohibiting the teaching of any "ethnic" (read Mexican-American) studies in state classrooms. Hey, it's starting to sound just like Israel down there... The WaPo's Gene Robinson (an African-American and a strong supporter of civil rights for all Americans) wrote today that the new law was designed as "a weapon against a program in Tucson that teaches Mexican American students about their history and culture." He goes on:
The education bill begins with a bizarre piece of nonsense, making it illegal for public or charter schools to offer courses that "promote the overthrow of the United States government." Then it shifts from weird to offensive, prohibiting classes that "promote resentment toward a race or class of people," that "are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group," and that "advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals." When you try to parse those words, the effect is chilling. Is it permissible, under the new law, to teach basic history? More than half the students in the Tucson Unified School District are Latino, the great majority of them Mexican American. The land that is now Arizona once belonged to Mexico. Might teaching that fact "promote resentment" among students of Mexican descent? What about a class that taught students how activists fought to end discrimination against Latinos in Arizona and other Western states? Would that illegally encourage students to resent the way their parents and grandparents were treated? The legislation has an answer: Mexican American students, it seems, should not be taught to be proud of their heritage.
It really does sound just like Israel's law prohibiting commemoration or study of the Palestinian Nakba (catastrophe). Like the Palestinian citizens of Israel, 'Mexican'-Americans in Arizona and a broad swathe of other southern and western states are the remnants of the populations who were there long before the 'white' (Anglo) settler colonists and ranchers moved in. Here are a couple of interesting aspects of the Arizona situation. First, many institutions and bodies-- even city governments-- from all around the rest of the U.S. reacted to Arizona's anti-'Mexican' measures by rapidly announcing an economic boycott of the state. As Katrina Vanden Heuvel wrote today ,
This week, the Los Angeles City Council voted 13 to 1 to ban most official city travel to Arizona and to avoid future contracts with Arizonan companies. With its resolution, Los Angeles joins San Francisco and Oakland as major cities that have passed similar anti-Arizona resolutions.
That's interesting! Responding to policies you don't like by imposing an economic boycott... H'mm, it could prove catching. BDS against Israel, anyone? Second interesting thing: Here is Rabbi Marvin Hier, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, speaking out against the boycott of Arizona. Yes, that would be the same Simon Wiesenthal Center that's trying to build a so-called 'Museum of Tolerance' atop the gravestones of an ancient Muslim cemetery in Jerusalem. Plenty of other Angelenos take a view different from Hier's however. AP tells us that,
Last month, Cardinal Roger Mahony, head of the Los Angeles Roman Catholic Archdiocese, said the law encourages people to turn on each other in Nazi- and Soviet-style repression. ... References to fascism also came up on Wednesday as the Los Angeles City Council voted to boycott Arizona businesses. Councilman Paul Koretz likened the law — and other Arizona laws such as one that curbs high school ethnic studies programs — to the beginnings of Nazi Germany when Jews were singled out for persecution. "We can't let this advance any further," said Koretz, who said he lost relatives in the Holocaust. "It is absolutely dangerous."
He's absolutely right.


Schools vs. supervisors: Where did it go wrong?


Albemarle County School Board members say schools aren’t getting enough money in fiscal 2011 — and now the school division’s chief decision makers are forming strategies to get what they consider adequate funding for fiscal 2012.