All posts by mariaaroldann

Adapted bowling state tournament

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photo courtesy of Nancy Galligan

On Friday, May 20, two Highland students placed 1st in our State Adapted Bowling Tournament in the Singles Division: Kyra Kracth and Connor O’Meara. Eyna Linn and Minh Dang came in third place.

Adaptive Bowling is a sport that helps children with disabilities, or disadvantages, participate in the sport much easier. There are many different types of equipment to help athletes, like the set up, the physical approach to the foul line, the back swing and the guided release of the ball. For an easier approach, the adaptive bowling devices have been divided into three main categories; wheelchair adaptations, bowling ball adaptations and ball rolling adaptations. Depending on the type, and severity, of the person’s disability, one or more of these devices might be necessary for them to be able to bowl.

To determine which adaptions are appropriate for each student, the following steps should be taken: evaluate each student’s present level of bowling skill for probability of success, assess previous experience, fitness level, motor functioning, attitude toward his/her disability, and willingness to participate.

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photo courtesy of Nancy Galligan

I interviewed Ms. Nell, a teacher at Highland Park that specializes in helping children with disabilities, who is also coach of the Highland adapted bowling team. She told me that they prepare by, “We bowl every week practicing lining up the bowling balls onto the straight arrows.” She also explained how she has encouraging talks with her students, but she prefers to call them her kids. When I asked what was one of the hardest parts for them, Ms. Nell said it was focusing and also keeping the ball straight.

I asked how hard it was for her to coach the kids she simply said, “I’ve been doing this for years so it’s really not hard I enjoy it.” I was also curious about how her experience has been through doing this for multiple years. She replied with, “This has allowed me to see how my kids can grow in many different ways in not only this, but in many different sports.”

I also spoke a bit with the state champion Connor O’Meara he said, “It felt great.” Also, “The last time I won state champion was in 2007.”

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photo courtesy of Nancy Galligan

Are St. Paul students undisciplined?

Recently, on Wednesday, May 4, a St. Paul elementary school teacher was injured by a student in the first grade. The agitated student flung a chair at the teacher, school officials said. There were no students that were injured during this incident at Cherokee Heights Elementary School but, the teacher did need medical attention according to St. Paul Public Schools spokeswoman Toya Stewart Downey. She did not have information on the teacher’s condition on that Wednesday evening.

The Principal of Cherokee Heights, Melisa Rivera, sent out a letter to the parents saying, “I’m writing to let you know about a serious situation that happened in your child’s classroom today. The classroom teacher was injured by a student who became agitated during an activity. The student was quickly removed from the classroom. Thankfully, no students were hurt.”

A police spokesman, Steve Linders, said this incident happened around 2:15 p.m. Wednesday, May 4, and was categorized as an assault. An officer responded but had not filed a report as of Thursday afternoon, Linders said.

Recently, at Creative Arts School, Candice Egan was a substitute and reported an assault to the schools principal. She claims to have asked a 7th grade boy several times to put his cell phone away during class. The boy refused, and when the teacher confiscated his phone the boy reportedly shoved her twice in the chest.

The altercation ended when an aide came into the room and escorted the boy to the Principal’s office. The substitute teacher did not require medical attention.

Students walk out for teacher at Open

Around 60 St. Paul students walked out of class Monday, April 25 to support a teacher known to be an advocate for students of color, who is losing her job for “ineffective” instruction.

Open World Learning Community students carried signs and chanted “equality and justice for all” as they started  off on a two-mile march to Rice Park soon after 10 a.m. Monday, April 15.  Their aim was to reverse their principal’s decision to dismiss the social studies teacher Sarah Dickhausen, or at least to bring attention to the school’s poor way of treating minorities. “The entire time I’ve been here, there has not been a teacher who’s stood up for me like Sarah,” said eighth-grader Ed Diatta, who is African American.

Dickhausen told students Friday that her contract was being terminated for ineffective instruction. Dozens of students soon went to meet with Principal David Gundale, but were left unsatisfied with his explanation as of why her contract was terminated.

With the students preparing to protest, Gundale emailed families Saturday to say he couldn’t discuss the teacher’s employment because of privacy laws. Students would not be disciplined for protesting, he said, but they would receive an unexcused absence, and would not be allowed to return to school Monday or to ride school buses back home.

In the email Dickhausen wrote to families Sunday, in the letter, Dickhausen  brought up concerns about racial tensions at the school to Gundale in December but received no response. Then she found out she had received a inadequate rating on her performance evaluation. “It was clear to me that I had touched on a subject that was off-limits or that was not ready to be dealt with,” she said.

She was first hired in 2013, by SPPS, to teach adults at St. Paul Public Schools’ Hubbs Center. She also taught at Harding for a year but due to financial cuts she was cut from her position and she elected to transfer to OWL.

In the letter she wrote she said, “I blame myself for not being able to find the balance in teaching to my students and being supportive to my students. I am one person and I was taking on more than I could handle, and I see now that it has contributed to the loss of my career in SPPS and the loss of a beloved teacher to many of my students.”

Several students and parents complained Monday of low expectations for OWL’s students of color. Lanaya DeRungs, a mother who has a daughter at the school said, “Blacks feel alone in this school.”

Before the walkout Monday, a school district leader, and facilitators of OWL’s racial equity student group, also met with students to discuss Dickhausen’s dismissal and the environment at the school, a district representative said. Those conversations will continue in the coming weeks, she added.

St. Paul cop sued for millions?

Hamdi Ali Osman is a women who lost the last six years of her freedom and four of them were spent in prison. Now, she has filed a lawsuit alleging that a St. Paul police officer’s lies put her in prison. Osman, 26, is asking for 2 million dollars for each year she spent in custody, including the 2 years she was in pretrial detention, for a total of 12 million dollars in damages.

Osman was only one of 30 other people charged in a major federal sex-trafficking case that allegedly involved juvenile victims and stretched from the Twin Cities to Nashville, Tenn. Last month, a federal appeals court reviewed the handling of the case by police, and then prosecutors dismissed charges against Osman and the others that were arrested.

What the appeals court found was that St. Paul police Sgt. Heather Weyker, “exaggerated or fabricated important aspects” of an alleged victim’s story, and that she lied to a grand jury and later during a detention hearing, according to the finding filed on March 2nd.

Osman, said that in jail she and other inmates spent 23 hours a day locked in their cells. She’d been there for four years and on home arrest for two years.

Osman is from Somalia. She moved to the United States when she was 2 and is a permanent resident like most of the others that were arrested.

Osman grew up in South Minneapolis and, after high school, headed to Nashville in 2008 to live with friends. During this time, she received a call from a juvenile she knew from the Somali community in Minneapolis. This girl said she was coming to stay with Osman in Nashville. Osman told her she couldn’t stay with her, but she would let her stay until her mother came to get her. The girl’s mother went to get her the next day, the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit claims that “Weyker (the officer) knowingly and intentionally manipulated, defrauded, threatened, and pressured” the girl “into fabricating evidence and testimony that her visit to Nashville was solicited by Osman for the purpose of commercial sex. This was demonstrably false, and Weyker knew it.”

The lawsuit continued, stating, “Weyker also attempted to manipulate, threaten, pressure, defraud two other young females who knew Osman, to frame Osman as a ‘Madam,’ but these young women ultimately resisted … and told Weyker the truth: … that they were not … sex-trafficked, that Osman was in no way involved in any commercial sex-trafficking of minors. Weyker ignored this and other exculpatory evidence, and instead continued with her scheme.”

In 2010, Osman said she was working at Jennie-O in Willmar, Minnesota, when a large number of federal agents showed up and told her they had a warrant for her arrest in Tennessee.

“I thought it was a traffic ticket,” said Osman, speaking Thursday in St. Paul with her attorneys by her side — Irlbeck, Jeff Storms and Paul Applebaum. Little did she know it was the beginning of a six year ordeal. St. Paul police began an internal  investigation into Weyker on March 3rd, the day after the court’s finding was filed, and they placed her on paid administrative leave. On March 9th, Weyker returned to work and the department put the internal investigation on hold. The suit continued: “By the end of 2012, at the very latest, St. Paul, its police department, and Weyker’s supervisors were all aware of the of Weyker’s fabricated evidence in a case that made news headline after news headline.”

“Ms. Osman always knew the accusations against her were a lie but … she kept faith in way the criminal justice system functions,” Irlbeck said. “Of course, when you realize that one cop can tell a lie that takes six years of your life away, it starts to make you wonder whether that system really works for you. It took six years, but the system did work for her. And now this is the second half of the system working for her, the civil case.”

Ms. Osman has now returned to Minnesota and is currently living with her family in St.Paul. She’s been getting a custom to having freedom and is now looking for a job.

For more information about this story see: http://www.twincities.com/2016/04/07/st-paul-cop-sued-12-million-sex-trafficking-aquittal/

Appreciate your elders

Your elders are very important, they are people that have many experiences and wisdom, but are also very under appreciated. Often, we look past all the advice and love that not only our grandparents give us, but many elders like maybe your old neighbor, or someone that has helped you through a rough situation. Many times, it takes a death situation, or a near death situation to realize how much you need your elders, or how much you would miss them.

A recent picture that went viral online showed a picture of a grandfather known as “Papaw” that was photographed by his granddaughter eating a burger by himself. She captioned that photo “He made 12 burgers for all six grandkids and I’m the only one who showed. Love him.” This caused a lot of commotion online showing sympathy for Papaw. Many were upset that his grandchildren didn’t show up. Many were upset, but didn’t realize that they may not appreciate their elders either, just in a different manner.

There are many ways to appreciate your elders. One of them can be to express to them how much they mean to you at a unexpected time. By doing this you surprise them and show them you care and were thinking of them. Also, thanking your elders for the little things they do whether it’s the advice they give to you, words of wisdom, their cooking, or for simply being apart of your life. Make your elders feel like they’re needed is also appreciated. Often, older people are not able to do most things that the younger can, so do something with them that you both will enjoy and they can take part in.

Kenny “Papaw” Harmon, know as the sad grandpa, had a cookout in Oklahoma this weekend and it attracted thousands of people from all over the world. Brock (one of Papaw’s grandkids) said, “The most special moment of the day was seeing my grandpa cry.” He also added that he never saw his grandfather cry before, but there were “a couple of people telling their stories that made him tear up. He was really touched.” Brock said the event helped “make people realize that your grandparents aren’t going to be around forever and to call them up and tell them you love them. Whether it’s in whatever way or form your elders should be treated with respect and love they truly deserve.”

Black Live Matter gets Como teacher fired?

Recently there was an incident involving a St. Paul Public school, and the organization Black Lives Matter. What follows is the events connected to that incident.

Black Lives Matter is preparing to shut down Como Park Senior High School unless a teacher is fired for Facebook comments. Organizer Rashad Turner said the group met Friday, March 5, to plan its protest of Theo Olson, a special-education teacher at Como. In one post, Olson suggested Como is “enabling student misconduct” in a misguided attempt to keep students in school and out of the criminal justice system.

The screenshots/evidence on: http://www.twincities.com/2016/03/04/black-lives-matter-wants-to-shut-down-st-paul-school-over-teachers-facebook-posts/

show that Olson (the teacher) said, “Anyone care to explain to me the school-to-prison pipeline my colleagues and I have somehow created, or perpetuated, or not done enough to interrupt?” he wrote. “Because if you can’t prove it, and campaigns you’ve waged to deconstruct adult authority in my building by enabling student misconduct, you seriously owe us real teachers an apology. Actually, an apology won’t cut it.”

In Olson’s second post he talked about iPad and phone devices used for social media and gaming.“There have always been rules for ‘devices,’ and defined levels of misconduct. Since we now have no backup, no functional location to send kids who won’t quit gaming, setting up fights, selling drugs, whoring trains, or cyber bullying, we’re screwed, just designing our own classroom rules,” it continued.

Turner took Olson’s remarks as “sweeping generalizations about black students.” Turner said the teachers comments presented a perfect opportunity for the city’s Black Lives Matter chapter to turn its activism toward St. Paul Public Schools, which has far higher rates of suspensions for black and American Indian students than for their peers.

Olson went on to say that rather than putting students on a path to prison, he sees himself as “a link of the school to opportunity and freedom pipeline.” Olson offered to speak to Turner and explain his views but Turner had no desire to speak to Olson. Turner and his activists will meet with the school district leaders on the following Monday, March 7.

After meeting with the district leaders on Monday, Black Lives Matter St. Paul has called off plans to “shut down” Como Park Senior High, according to Superintendent Valeria Silva. Silva stated that their conversation was “productive and positive.” She also went on to say, “It is clear we share a common vision of high expectations and achievement for all students and ongoing commitment to racial equity,” finally to conclude she said “I am thankful that Mr. Turner has chosen to discontinue any immediate protests planned at Como Park Senior High School.” Turner choose to not comment on Monday, Olson who still will continue to teach at Como has also chosen to not comment on anything.

As of Thursday, March 17, Olson is on a paid administrative leave.

ISIS recruits children for war

The Islamic terror group ISIS has started to now recruit children to add to their ranks. As horrifying as this sounds, it’s true. ISIS is posting horrifying videos, of children they have recruited, shooting weapons, training and  murdering others who rebel against them. ISIS is brainwashing these kids to believe in the ideology of ISIS. Most children that do mange to escape to freedom say it’s like “hell” being there. To get to freedom most kids have to swim over the Orontes river, in the night, undercover, risking their lives. Children are brainwashed, turned into suicide bombers, and are made into soldiers that battle on the front line when walking into battle.

Children that are recruited range in ages 5 to 18. These children follow a very rigorous routine. According to the British website Mirror, they are awakened at 4:30 A.M. for prayer, go back to bed and are awaken again at 8 A.M. for breakfast. At 9 A.M. they are taught  lessons in the Quran and ISIS’ so-called Islamic doctrine. At 12 P.M. they have lunch and from 1 to 5 P.M. they have training including military, and physical drills.

These routines have been confirmed by kids that were able to get to freedom like Raghib Al-Yas Ahmed, age 14, said “They taught us how to slit throats and how to blow ourselves up. We put our hand on their forehead, lift the head up and put the knife on the neck and slaughter (them). 10-year-old Hamada Shihab Ahmed added that “Military training included how to use the machine gun and undisciplined children were punished by leaving them under the sun or lashing them with a hose. ”

This article from CNN further explains what ISIS is trying to do.

“ISIS is integrating children into its project in a way that is more reminiscent of a state than a non-state actor. It’s thinking with the long term in mind. It’s not just bringing children into its ranks and using them immediately on the battlefield. What it’s doing is bringing them in, indoctrinating them, training them, spending a lot of time instilling them with jihadist ideology.” ISIS wants to make sure that they really put their ideology into the minds of these kids to create the next generation of jihadists. ISIS calls these kids the “cubs of the caliphate”.

While there are kids who voluntarily join following in their father’s and brother’s footsteps, there are boys who are taken away from their families and forced to be in the group. ISIS uses propaganda videos, cash, toys, and other means at their disposal to lure children from their families. Their emphasis on youth makes eradicating ISIS much more imperative as children who grow up under their influence may not be able to be reasoned out of an ISIS mode of thinking.

Flint water crisis in Michigan

There has been an uprising from Flint residents about the water that is contaminated. This is a problem that started all the way back in March of 2013 when the Flint City Council agreed to stop buying Detroit water and start a new pipeline with the Karegnondi Water Authority Project. This pipeline would bring Flint water directly from the Flint River. This would save them approximately 18 million dollars over several years.

In April 2013 the pipeline was officially changed. High levels of lead have plagued Flint’s municipal water supply for at least a year, prompting extensive emergency measures to keep residents safe.

The Flint Residents started to notice the water tasted weird and looked unfamiliar, and started to complain that the water did not seem suitable to consume. Studies showed that the lead piping being used, elevated lead levels 10 times higher than they had previously measured.

The governor’s office has said that they have “requested funding to switch the source back to the Great Lakes Water Authority,” in order to combat the lead leaching. They have also “appointed an independent task force to identify possible missteps and areas for improvement.”

It is going to take much more then changing the water source back to the Detroit water source to fix Flint’s problems though. The pipes are very damaged and need to be replaced, but the cost of replacing the pipes city wide could total 1.5 billion dollars.

Flint residents are very concerned for their children, and not having clean water. Residents are very outraged about the fact that they are basically paying for poisoned water, and the health of their children because of their consumption of lead laced water. The effects of drinking lead water is irreversible,and it is easier for children to be affected by the lead.

This whole incident has been a big catastrophe for the town of Flint, making the city go into an emergency state of crisis.

Former Flint resident, Michael Moore’s website: http://michaelmoore.com/10FactsOnFlint/ has a lot to say about the crisis. There is much more then lead in Flint’s water. The number of cases in Flint of Legionnaires Disease has increased tenfold since the switch to the river water. Doctors are finding that a half-dozen other toxins are being found in the blood of Flint residents. This is very frighting to the doctors as there might be other health catastrophes that may soon come to light.

These side effects affect much more then just peoples’ health. The residents of Flint can’t sell their homes because under the current conditions nobody would buy a house in Flint. This also does not take into account the damage to pipes in their homes. Home owners in Flint are now stuck with homes that are not worth anything. That’s a total home value of $2.4 billion down the economic drain.

Ask Maria part 2

Since my last “Ask Maria” article I have received a few questions that I will be answering in this article.

One of the questions I received was about how stressful it is to be in a relationship, and also having to focus on school, and how to maintain a balance.

My advice for this is it’s always going to be tough to keep a relationship while having to focus on school. You have to decide whether your relationship is too stressful; if so, I suggest you give each other time as this will help you think more about what you need, and focus on your other priorities. When you feel more clear headed, you can continue your relationship.

If you constantly feel too stressed, and find this relationship affecting you, I think you should consider to end it completely. Having problems is very normal, but not when it causes you tremendous hurting or stress. You need to consider your happiness. Everyone needs a balance, and I think having this peace of mind would be very good.

Another question I received was about how to get out of a depressing state of thinking.

I think most of the change has to come from the person, but there are many activities you can do that can help. I think one important way to think, is with positive thoughts; try to see the light side of things.

Try new things too, as you never know if you’ll love it. Doing different things is also a way to distract yourself.

Try surrounding yourself with positive people, and people that only want to see you happy.

These are the short answers for some of the questions I received for this edition of “Ask Maria”.

Gun violence

In the United States there have been many cases of violence, specifically gun violence, including mass shootings. Statistics from articles on The Brady Campaign website state that in the United States, just in a year, an average of 108,000 people in America are shot in murders, assaults, suicides/suicide attempts, unintentional shootings, or by police intervention. According to the website Heeding God’s Call, the U.S. has more gun homicides annually, 10,000, than any other country.

The debate over gun control in the U.S. has been stirred up over the recent mass killings. What is gun control? Gun control is the government regulation of the manufacture, sale, and possession of fire arms.

Even with all the shootings in the U.S., many people are against gun control. According to Smartgunlaws.org people claim “that they need guns for protection or for their safety.”

Opponents of gun control laws argue that Americans have the right to bear arms. They say that gun control laws would prevent individuals from defending themselves and their property lawfully. They also support the rights of hunters, sport shooters, and recreational gunmen. One of the most common laws that these groups cite is the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. This 27-word passage has the famous phrase “the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” The argument that gun control opponents make is that the right to own and use weapons is an undeniable personal freedom guaranteed by the Constitution.

Proponents of gun control believe that stronger gun laws can prevent the needless loss of life. Even individuals who support gun rights acknowledge that certain people should not be permitted to own guns. Current gun control laws prevent criminals, mentally ill individuals, and children from owning guns.

Unfortunately, there have been instances where young people and deranged gunmen have obtained weapons and used them to commit mass murders. Also, others argue that there are too many criminals that can still purchase a gun legally and then go and commit crimes.

Even though thee controversy of gun control has become a big issue recently, there will always be a debate regarding the issue of having guns, until they make laws that most people will agree on. This is something that will be very difficult to do however, since everyone will always have an opinion on whether they believe people should or shouldn’t be able to have guns.

I think gun control should be more heavily enforced, as more guns fall into the hands of the wrong people. I feel as though there is no need to carry an armed weapon, and there is just too much violence with guns. I also feel as though people don’t really use guns for protection purposes, instead they simply have them so that they can feel more powerful, and this is not a good reason as to why people should have guns. These are some of the reasons why I think gun control laws should be enforced more.