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I followed a link somewhere and came up with a page about corporal punishment in U.S. schools. It seems 21 states have not yet banned corporal punishment, and of those, about 13 use it on more than 1000 students per year.

While that is nothing short of appalling, I found one image even more interesting. It's the map of which states have banned corporal punishment, which punish fewer than 1000 students per year, and which punish more than 1000 per year. Here's the map.

Now, that map made me sit up and take notice, because it looked an awful lot like a memory I had of maps from a few years ago. So I went looking, and I found:

1) Not a single state that went blue in 2004 allows corporal punishment.
2) The states that have been Republican stronghouses for as long as I've been an adult almost all not only allow it, but have more than 1000 cases of such punishment per year.
3) The states that go back and forth between Republican and Democrat in recent years make up the bulk of the states that allow corporal punishment but practise little of it. There are states in this category that fall into all three categories on the corporal punishment map.

Now I want a study of the possible correlation between the state of the education system and the likelihood of states voting a certain way. This has peaked my curiosity.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-08-23 02:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dagoski.livejournal.com
I'd been sort of toying with the idea of politics, but between the Bush administration and living in Philadelphia, I've come to see that voting, while necessary, is not sufficient. The situation in Philadelphia is rotten. Same with the state. Power got entrenched here and threw up institutional blocks to any challenger. Reform is enormously difficult. The end result of so much bad politics is bad governance. In practical terms it means that what should be a vibrant and beautiful city is actually a complete shambles. There's some hope in that we just elected a committed reformer as mayor who'd been sitting long enough in city council to know how rotten things had gotten.

Politics is weird though. I've participated a little by going to city council and county board meetings in the past. Unless specific policies have really hit people where they live, the politics is not so divisive at the local level. But, going up to national, ideology really comes into play and people just get into these ossified positions.

The wife's studying Parasites for her PhD and I just finished a Master's in Library and Information Science. I'm toying with the idea of a PhD in something like Computational Sociology or Systems Science(Sociocybernetics).

(no subject)

Date: 2008-08-27 01:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] starry-midnight.livejournal.com
I never responded to this but I really enjoyed chatting via comment. Just a few comments definitely challenged me to think! It's always nice to have conversations like that :)

All the best to you and your wife and Congratulations on getting your master's! I have a friend who is getting hers in religious studies right now but is seriously contemplating going for a Master's in Library and Information Science like you. I think right now she is seeking information about it and experiences from people who have been there done that.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-08-27 02:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dagoski.livejournal.com
The field is interesting, Library Science that is. If you have a master's in an academic subject already, that really opens up opportunities in higher education. The basic deal is that despite there being a lot of drudge work day to day, you can step back at some point and go "Holy cow! I did something important!"

I'd recommend doing courses on the meat and potatoes side of the field: Collection Development, Cataloging, Technical Services and so on. I'm not so wild about doing Digital Libraries specifically because, at this point in the game, every aspect of library work has a digital element and the courses are increasingly covering that. In order to get qualify for the good Digital Library jobs, you need a pretty serious programming background. And that increasingly means significant knowledge of Java as a technology(not just a programming language). In fact, I'm not even sure I can get some of these jobs and I've been programming professionally since 91.

However, jobs for library degreed people pop up in the darnedest places. The job I'm currently in is basically a librarian position, but it was advertised as a programming position. I've done jack all programming so far while I've done immense amounts of knowledge organization, cataloging and technical writing.

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