Monday, February 26

Renewing the American Neighborhood: A Houston Case Study


I have published a report with Ed Hubbard that looks at the local response to the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. You can download the PDF for free here. We would love to hear your feedback, either here or on the Renewing the American Neighborhood website.

Friday, February 23

Kudos to Amie Diprima Brown, a Teacher That Cares

I saw a friend share this on Facebook and I know it needs a wider audience. I am impressed with this teacher, and I am disappointed in parents that won't take the time to do what she's asking of them. We need more teachers like Mrs. Brown. Since it has been pointed out to me that not everyone has a Facebook account, therefore rendering the "see more" link useless, I have posted the text underneath the Facebook post.



With all of the talk about guns in schools, why it’s happening, and how to solve the issue let me offer a little different perspective. I’ve been teaching since 2003. This marks my 15th year in the classroom. Everybody always talks about how schools have changed, and it’s true, they have. Yes, there’s the “crazy new math” and “bring your own device” changes. However, there are some other changes that I think the general population is not aware of.
Every year for 15 years I have sent home the same assignment on the first day of school. I send a letter home asking parents to tell me about their child in a million words or less. I go on to explain that I want to learn the child’s hopes, dreams, fears, challenges, etc and jokingly ask parents to limit it to less than a million words since we all know we could talk forever about our children. I go on to say I’m not grading these, not looking at handwriting or grammar and don’t care if they send them back with their child, email them, drop them off at the office, etc. These letters have been so beneficial to me as a teacher and getting to know my students on a personal level. I have learned about eating disorders, seizures, jealousy issues between twins, depression, adoption, abuse...just to name a few things. These letters give me a huge head start on getting to truly know my students. I often pull them out when a child has a sudden change in behavior or issue that comes up. Just this week I had 2 students lose their mother unexpectedly. Brother and sister, I taught one last year and one this year. As I have done before, i immediately went to my folders to pull the letters that mom sent for her children. It’s a beautiful gift that I feel I can give students to get a glimpse into how much a parent loved and adored them. As I was putting the folders back in the file cabinet I noticed something. I know that the percentage of parents that complete this assignment each year has gotten lower and lower, but looking at the size of the folders shocked me. That first year I had 98% of the parents send back some type of letter on their child. This year... 22%. That’s a lot of opportunities lost for me to get to know students. Sadly, more parents have access to an electronic device that makes this task even easier and less time consuming.
On another note, this year’s average for homework turned in is riding at 67%. I’m talking a twice monthly 5 sentence summary of what the student is reading in their own time. I remind students daily, I send text messages through Remind, it’s on my website. The only other thing I could do is do it for them. Parents continue to let their child rack up zero after zero. But then again, that average used to be around 98% as well. It was rare for more than 1-2 students to not have their homework 15 years ago. Now, it’s just frustrating.
With all of our other responsibilities in our profession, how are we supposed to get to know students so that we can identify the ones with the mentality and disposition to become a school shooter if parents are checking out of the academic process? How are we supposed to educate children when their parents don’t require, expect and demand their child complete their homework?
Don’t wait until your child is the school shooter to let us know your child is struggling mentally. Don’t wait until your child is ineligible for sports or the day before report cards to check grades and question the teacher on why your child is failing.
Be a parent. Be involved in your child’s life so that you can help them through the issues with friends, the possible suicidal thoughts, and problems academically. I promise you, if parents spent more time with their children and got involved in their lives, we would see drastic improvements in our schools and our society.
As parents, our job is to grow the most amazing humans possible. Its the most important job in the world. The education and emotional stability a parent provides is priceless.

Thursday, February 22

AEI: Reviving Localism in America

I am still processing what all is here, but this looks like this will be great because of many of the names I see, so I wanted to direct your attention to it. Please take a look at American Enterprise Institute's
Reviving Localism in America.

Monday, February 12

Remembering Jeff Bell


America lost a revolutionary giant over the weekend. Many will never have heard the name Jeff Bell, and you will want to fix that this week as there will surely be more written about him. I had a chance back in October 2016 to sit in Jeff Bell's office and chat with him about Jack Kemp and supply-side economics and I even picked his brain about the Trump-Clinton match-up taking place at the time. Mr. Bell was incredibly generous with his time and gave me his cell phone number and email address to reach out to him again if I had more questions or wanted to run ideas by him.

Rest in peace Jeff Bell. And thank you, for everything.

Jeff Bell: in Memoriam
Remembering one of politics' uncommonly good men.