Posts tagged hahaha

Posts tagged hahaha
(Source: thecarlosramos, via magiifox)
Oh my god, this is too funny, I was wondering the same thing. I thought he was either trying to be more anime or instead of admitting you’re balding more, deny the reality and draw yourself with MORE HAIR.
(Source: terminallycapricious, via sovennix)
I really would like to see the Eternals back on Doctor Who, if only to have Eleven say that he’d defeated omnipotent beings before and can do so again.
Because reasons.
Flightless Bird, American Mouth—Iron & Wine
The only problem with this song is that it’s from Twilight. But overlooking that point it’s such a niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiice song. *sobs*
Twilight has an amazing soundtrack. You shouldn’t consider that a problem for you liking it. You should pity the poor song.
It does really. The songs and Carter Burwell’s composing. I secretly love it and have it on my computer.
(Source: mercurialcarousel, via levitatingzevran)
A really grand illustration of the tenth Doctor for an old friend. The lighting was a lot of fun to play with, I love the RTD-era console.
This is gorgeous.
wow and oy!
This was written by Marion Brady, veteran teacher, administrator, curriculum designer and author.
By Marion Brady
A longtime friend on the school board of one of the largest school systems in America did something that few public servants are willing to do. He took versions of his state’s high-stakes standardized math and reading tests for 10th graders, and said he’d make his scores public.
By any reasonable measure, my friend is a success. His now-grown kids are well-educated. He has a big house in a good part of town. Paid-for condo in the Caribbean. Influential friends. Lots of frequent flyer miles. Enough time of his own to give serious attention to his school board responsibilities. The margins of his electoral wins and his good relationships with administrators and teachers testify to his openness to dialogue and willingness to listen.
He called me the morning he took the test to say he was sure he hadn’t done well, but had to wait for the results. A couple of days ago, realizing that local school board members don’t seem to be playing much of a role in the current “reform” brouhaha, I asked him what he now thought about the tests he’d taken.
“I won’t beat around the bush,” he wrote in an email. “The math section had 60 questions. I knew the answers to none of them, but managed to guess ten out of the 60 correctly. On the reading test, I got 62% . In our system, that’s a “D”, and would get me a mandatory assignment to a double block of reading instruction.
He continued, “It seems to me something is seriously wrong. I have a bachelor of science degree, two masters degrees, and 15 credit hours toward a doctorate.
“I help oversee an organization with 22,000 employees and a $3 billion operations and capital budget, and am able to make sense of complex data related to those responsibilities.
“I have a wide circle of friends in various professions. Since taking the test, I’ve detailed its contents as best I can to many of them, particularly the math section, which does more than its share of shoving students in our system out of school and on to the street. Not a single one of them said that the math I described was necessary in their profession.
“It might be argued that I’ve been out of school too long, that if I’d actually been in the 10th grade prior to taking the test, the material would have been fresh. But doesn’t that miss the point? A test that can determine a student’s future life chances should surely relate in some practical way to the requirements of life. I can’t see how that could possibly be true of the test I took.”
Here’s the clincher in what he wrote:
“If I’d been required to take those two tests when I was a 10th grader, my life would almost certainly have been very different. I’d have been told I wasn’t ‘college material,’ would probably have believed it, and looked for work appropriate for the level of ability that the test said I had.
“It makes no sense to me that a test with the potential for shaping a student’s entire future has so little apparent relevance to adult, real-world functioning. Who decided the kind of questions and their level of difficulty? Using what criteria? To whom did they have to defend their decisions? As subject-matter specialists, how qualified were they to make general judgments about the needs of this state’s children in a future they can’t possibly predict? Who set the pass-fail “cut score”? How?”
“I can’t escape the conclusion that decisions about the [state test] in particular and standardized tests in general are being made by individuals who lack perspective and aren’t really accountable.”
There you have it. A concise summary of what’s wrong with present corporately driven education change: Decisions are being made by individuals who lack perspective and aren’t really accountable.
Those decisions are shaped not by knowledge or understanding of educating, but by ideology, politics, hubris, greed, ignorance, the conventional wisdom, and various combinations thereof. And then they’re sold to the public by the rich and powerful.
All that without so much as a pilot program to see if their simplistic, worn-out ideas work, and without a single procedure in place that imposes on them what they demand of teachers: accountability.
But maybe there’s hope. As I write, a New York Times story by Michael Winerip makes my day. The stupidity of the current test-based thrust of reform has triggered the first revolt of school principals.
Winerip writes: “As of last night, 658 principals around the state (New York) had signed a letter — 488 of them from Long Island, where the insurrection began — protesting the use of students’ test scores to evaluate teachers’ and principals’ performance.”
One of those school principals, Winerip says, is Bernard Kaplan. Kaplan runs one of the highest-achieving schools in the state, but is required to attend 10 training sessions.
“It’s education by humiliation,” Kaplan said. “I’ve never seen teachers and principals so degraded.”
Carol Burris, named the 2010 Educator of the Year by the School Administrators Association of New York State, has to attend those 10 training sessions.
Katie Zahedi, another principal, said the session she attended was “two days of total nonsense. I have a Ph.D., I’m in a school every day, and some consultant is supposed to be teaching me to do evaluations.”
A fourth principal, Mario Fernandez, called the evaluation process a product of “ludicrous, shallow thinking. They’re expecting a tornado to go through a junkyard and have a brand new Mercedes pop up.”
My school board member-friend concluded his email with this: “I can’t escape the conclusion that those of us who are expected to follow through on decisions that have been made for us are doing something ethically questionable.”
He’s wrong. What they’re being made to do isn’t ethically questionable. It’s ethically unacceptable. Ethically reprehensible. Ethically indefensible.
How many of the approximately 100,000 school principals in the U.S. would join the revolt if their ethical principles trumped their fears of retribution? Why haven’t they been asked?
Worth it to read the whole thing!
Multiple choice tests are bullshit. Nothing is as simple as A, B, C or D.
I have a story to share about standardized testing.
recently I discovered some documents from elementary school showing how, when I was in the third grade, a standardized test concluded that I am affected by a learning disability.
in college, I have been on the Dean’s List/honor roll each term for three consecutive years. I have never scored below a B for an overall course. in subjective evaluations (i.e. essays and short-answer questions which receive the professor’s personal examination), I have never scored below a 94%. I have functional fluency in three languages beside English. these are the achievements of someone whom standardized testing interpreted as “challenged”; according to my test results, I should have little chance of success. while nothing particularly special or outstanding, my academic history would by most standards be considered quite passable. I consider myself academically and intellectually “successful”.
none of this is to brag. it’s to prove a point:
in short, that standardized tests have their heads up their asses. educators in the field, so to speak, should be the ones designing academic testing. tests should not be a matter of fill-in-the-blank and multiple choice and reproducing answers which have been drilled into students by rote.
how many people is our system screwing out of a future by telling them they can’t and won’t succeed based on a one-size-fits-all, poorly calibrated arbitrary assessment?
Woo! You go! Standardised tests suck!!! yeah!
(via chmurny)
This is a collection of the smaller pictures I got and the two Caseys I still have that I drew. I forgot everyone else who got a picture. I want to remember who got my Aradia and Glam!Eridan. I drew no ships.
D??? Strider cat- dang, can’t find a tumblr on it.
Tavros- Mrappleberryblast
Christmas!John/ me sticker now on my computer with Christmas!Baby!Dave and in front of the picture Taylor drew of of Inspector Spacetime back at AWA- twosecondslighter
super cool abstract looking John- Heiress, I think
Johncat- Arizona, who I do not care if they think they can only draw cats.
Thanks everyone and I wonder if requests still work even though we’ve all crawled back to our computers now.
- The Author
- 6th regeneration
- Tardis blue suit jacket
- My friend/future bf guy Cameron
- Brilliant.
I…
I am the…student? No, must pick a new title…um, not the artist. the…BAMF, it’s a full time job.
1st incarnation
Either my black turtleneck, my plaid scarf, or my pleated burbary miniskirt. Oh dear.
I’ve never texted anyone. Still looking for a companionapparently.
Exemplary!
Submitted by: evilpuzzlewriter

Destiny of the Doctors, Intro Video
“The Doctor’s seven past incarnations shall be summoned hither where they shall be my prisoners, to be dealt with as I see fit.”
BWAHAHAHAHAHA! Is there any interpretation by which that doesn’t mean “I’m building me a Doctor harem and I intend to keep them VERY BUSY”? Also the way he says ‘frustrate’ in the sentence before. Yes, Master, we do know you find the Doctor very…frustrating.
Also: “Such charm, such innocence, such naivety…” FIVE/AINLEY BE MORE OTP. I DARE YOU. I DOUBLE DARE YOU.
“Oh look, it’s the nice one~”
Master, you’re killing me.
(Source: kenway-or-the-highway, via ladyromanahasmoved)
[Picture: Background~ a six piece pie style colour split, alternating yellow and black. Foreground~ a picture of a hyena. Top text: “{Learning about the Ottoman Empire in global history}.” Bottom text: “{Listen to the song “Istanbul” }.”]
Submitted by Anonymous
(Not Constantinople)
but hey, look one of this meme is good
Actually I sang it. In class. Twice.
Same case this year with when the Duke of York took New Amsterdam without a fight because the Dutch were fearful of war with Britain.
Even old New York, was once New Amsterdam. WHY’D THEY CHANGE IT, I CAN’T SAY? People just liked it BETTER THAT WAAAAY!!!
You ever dance with the Devil in the pale moonlight?
FUCK GOTHAM GET MONEY.
Favourite Joker.
(via doshijust)