This blog on Texas education contains posts on accountability, testing, K-12 education, postsecondary educational attainment, dropouts, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, environmental issues, Ethnic Studies at state and national levels. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in the College of Education at the University of Texas at Austin.
Friday, July 31, 2020
Ethnic Studies Web Series Teaching African American and Mexican American Studies in Texas Schools, August 3-7 2020
Editorial: Leave politics out of reopening Texas schools. Listen to the science.
Thursday, July 30, 2020
Latinx residents fear the toll coronavirus is taking on their lives and community, by Daniella Diaz, CNN 7.13.2020
This is so deeply concerning. So much of our family is in South Texas and they're recounting daily the horrors of this experience just in their own network and communities. The hospitals are beyond capacity.
A dear friend just shared with me that his cousin passed away and his uncle is brain dead, kept alive by a respirator. It's horrible. Lives forever changed.
Latinx residents fear the toll coronavirus is taking on their lives and community
"It Cost Me Everything": In Texas, COVID-19 Takes a Devastating Toll on Hispanic Residents by Perla Trevizo
Not only are Hispanics catching coronavirus at higher rates in Texas’ largest county, they also suffer some of the worst outcomes.
by Perla Trevizo, ProPublica, and Mike Hixenbaugh, NBC News
ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.
This article is co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom that informs and engages with Texans. Sign up for The Brief weekly to get up to speed on their essential coverage of Texas issues. It was also produced in partnership with NBC News.
CONTINUE READING HERE.
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Chernobyl, Covid-19 and Trump’s debt to the truth by Jay Elwes
I like to think that even in an ostensibly"post-truth" world, Trump's decline in the polls is precisely because of his "debt to the truth." The parallels to Chernobyl and the crisis of legitimacy that it spawned, offer a striking comparison to the COVID pandemic we're all experiencing right now.
The Chernobyl catastrophe occurred when Mikhail Gorbachev was in power, and as mentioned below, is largely regarded as pivotal to the ultimate collapse of the Soviet Union. The comparison reaches its limit, however, when considering that there are things our leadership can do, including issuing mask mandates in public, reissuing new stay-at-home orders, delay re-opening schools, and taking serious measures to not contaminate prisoners as described in my earlier post by David Bacon who covered a recent demonstration at San Quentin which is experiencing unconscionably high infection rates.
I nevertheless hope that we are all witnessing the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency, as this article leads one to hope. We definitely have a fighting chance.
Chernobyl, Covid-19 and Trump’s debt to the truth
The Reality Check: SAN QUENTIN VIGIL SAYS INCARCERATION HAS BECOME A DEATH SENTENCE by David Bacon
According to the CDCR, the concentration of confirmed cases at San Quentin is 621.9 per 1000. By comparison, for California (a hot spot state) as a whole, the confirmed case rate is 11.1 per 1000. (source:
Thanks, David Bacon, for your many years of social justice journalism.
San Quentin State Prison, San Rafael, CA
Capital & Main, 7/27/20
The coronavirus infection spread rapidly through San Quentin. According to the California
Less than half of the prison's current 3,524 population had been tested in the two weeks
The vigil organizers include the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and the Stop
The day following the vigil a twelfth prisoner, Troy Ashmus, died of the coronavirus
According to the CDCR, the state prison system now has 7,672 confirmed cases, of which
Laura Mondragon, wife of a prisoner, told the vigil participants that Newsom had to act
While the names of some of the San Quentin prisoners who have died are public, others are not.
The vigil called on Governor Gavin Newsom to release prisoners from San Quentin, and some
Austin Tam. an activist from Buenavista United Methodist Church in Alameda.
Pastor Allison Tanner leads participants in a prayer ritual outside the San Quentin gates.
A line of participants stretches out alongside a banner on Sir Francis Drake Blvd.
A vigil participant
A vigil participant
Danny Thongsy, a former prisoner, faced deportation to Laos by Immigration and Customs
Participants pray for the prisoners who have died.
Dr. Art Chen, a doctor at Asian Health Services in Oakland, tells vigil participants, "There is no
Laura Mondragon is the wife of a prisoner, and talked about the trauma of not knowing what
Lillian Galedo, director (ret) of Filipino Advocates for Justice, holds a sign and the banner.
Saabir Lockett, special projects coordinator at East Bay Alliance for a Sustainable Economy,
Dr. Sue Chan, a founder of Asian Health Services, came to support her son, a San Quentin prisoner.
To see a full set of images of the protest, click here: https://www.flickr.com/photos/56646659@N05/albums/72157715250290036