PUB: Tapestry of Bronze Odes to Olympians Spring 2013 Contest

Tapestry of Bronze

Odes to Olympians

Spring 2013 Contest

DEADLINE 30th April 2013 Tuesday  

ENTRY FEE Free

PRIZE $ 50


The Tapestry of Bronze is sponsoring a series of international poetry contests to celebrate Greek and Roman mythology and the Olympian gods. The subject of the current contest is Hephaestus (also known as Vulcan), the God of the Forge. The deadline is April 30, 2013.

All poems remain the property of the authors. However, the Tapestry of Bronze reserves the right to post winning poems and those receiving Honorable Mention on the Tapestry of Bronze website. E-mail your poem (no more than 30 lines) to the following address: tapestryofbronze@yahoo.com
 

Do NOT e-mail any ATTACHMENTS! Paste the poem into the e-mail instead. Don’t get fancy with your formatting – pretty pictures and peculiar fonts are distracting and may irritate the judges. Please limit your creativity to your poem.
 

MAKE SURE your poem is about Hephaestus / Vulcan.

Please include your real name, and your alias if you have one. Make sure we can respond to your e-mail.

If you are an adult (18 or over), simply indicate that you’re an adult!

If you are under 18 please include the month and year of your birth. If you are under 13, then we need the permission of your parent or guardian. So, when you send us your poem, please also include their e-mail address too. (If your age is 13 to 17 you may get parental permission but we don’t need it.)

Entries will be evaluated by the owners of the Tapestry of Bronze and additional experts at their discretion. No cost to enter, but each contestant can only enter once, so take time to make your poem your best!

The first prize winner in each age group will receive $50 (US).


http://www.tapestryofbronze.com/index.html
http://www.tapestryofbronze.com/OdeForm.html

 

PUB: Call for Papers: Tout Moun – Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies > Repeating Islands

Call for Papers: Tout Moun –

Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies

Tout Moun: Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies calls for contributions to a special issue of the journal, titled “Cultural Practice and Policy.” The deadline for contributions is April 30, 2013.

Tout Moun: Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies is a peer-reviewed, open-access, academic journal based within the Department of Literary, Cultural and Communication Studies at the University of the West Indies-St. Augustine in Trinidad and Tobago. The aim of the journal is to foster and showcase cutting-edge research in Cultural Studies produced in and about the region.

Contributions may include scholarly articles, review articles, shorter polemic essays and book reviews, as well as creative writing and contributions that explore alternative media. The articles should not exceed 8,000 words (excluding bibliography). The recommended length of shorter essays is 3,000-5,000 words and book reviews 1,500-2,500 words.

All submissions should be sent by email to Maarit Forde at maarit.uwi@gmail.com by April 30, 2013.

[Many thanks to Peter Jordens for bringing this item to our attention.]

For full submission guidelines, see http://sta.uwi.edu/media/documents/secure1/Tout%20Moun%20CFP%20Jan%202013.pdf

 

PUB: Call for Papers: Tout Moun – Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies > Repeating Islands

Call for Papers: Tout Moun – Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies

toutmoun_header_850

Tout Moun: Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies calls for contributions to a special issue of the journal, titled “Cultural Practice and Policy.” The deadline for contributions is April 30, 2013.

Tout Moun: Caribbean Journal of Cultural Studies is a peer-reviewed, open-access, academic journal based within the Department of Literary, Cultural and Communication Studies at the University of the West Indies-St. Augustine in Trinidad and Tobago. The aim of the journal is to foster and showcase cutting-edge research in Cultural Studies produced in and about the region.

Contributions may include scholarly articles, review articles, shorter polemic essays and book reviews, as well as creative writing and contributions that explore alternative media. The articles should not exceed 8,000 words (excluding bibliography). The recommended length of shorter essays is 3,000-5,000 words and book reviews 1,500-2,500 words.

All submissions should be sent by email to Maarit Forde at maarit.uwi@gmail.com by April 30, 2013.

[Many thanks to Peter Jordens for bringing this item to our attention.]

For full submission guidelines, see http://sta.uwi.edu/media/documents/secure1/Tout%20Moun%20CFP%20Jan%202013.pdf

INCARCERATION: Incarceration rate for African-Americans now six times the national average > RT USA

Incarceration rate for

African-Americans now

six times the national average

Published time: February 20, 2013 


Job seekers take a break outside after speaking with recruiters during career fair sponsored by the Chicago Urban League and State Representative La Shawn K. Ford at Malcolm X College (Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP)

The incarceration rate for American-Americans is so high that young black men without a high school diploma are more likely to go to jail than to find a job, thereby causing the breakup of families and instilling further poverty upon them.

“Prison has become the new poverty trap,” Bruce Western, a Harvard sociologist, told the New York Times. “It has become a routine event for poor African-American men and their families, creating an enduring disadvantage at the very bottom of American society.”

While few would argue against locking up murderers and rapists, many social scientists have begun to discuss the problem of imprisoning too many people – especially when those people face long sentences for nonviolent crimes. The US has the highest incarceration rate in the world, locking up about 500 people for every 100,000 residents, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

The incarceration rate for African-Americans is about 3,074 per 100,000 residents, which is more than six times as high as the national average. Black men in their 20s and early 30s without a high school diploma are particularly vulnerable: with an incarceration rate of 40 percent, they are more likely to end up behind bars than in the workforce, Pew Charitable Trusts reports.

“The collateral costs of locking up 2.3 million people are piling higher and higher,” said Adam Gelb, director of the Public Safety Performance Project of the Pew Center on the States. “Corrections is the second fastest growing state budget category, and state leaders from both parties are now finding that there are research –based strategies for low-risk offenders that can reduce crime at far less cost than prison.”

But while the cost of keeping prisoners might be high for government, the cost is even higher for African-Americans – especially to poverty-stricken families who lose a relative to the penal system. The Times interviewed parents Carl Harris and Charlene Hamilton, whose daughters grew up without a father. Mr. Harris, a crack dealer who received a 20-year prison sentence at the age of 24, was forced to abandon his family when he was locked up.

Unable to help out with the accumulating bills that come with raising children, Hamilton and her daughters ended up homeless on several occasions. Struggling to pay the rent and cover the costs of food, Hamilton also fought to pay for the out-of-state visits to see her daughters’ father.

“Basically, I was locked up with him,” she told the Times. “My mind was locked up. My life was locked up. Our daughters grew up without a father.”

And the couple’s story is not unique: 25 percent of African-Americans who grew up in the past three decades have had at least one parent locked up during their childhood, according to Project Muse. Police have more meticulously cracked down on crime and courts have imposed harsher sentences since 1980, causing the number of Americans – especially blacks – in state and federal prisons to quintuple.

And some believe that certain crimes shouldn’t merit sentences as harsh as the US imposes. Police never caught Mr. Harris dealing drugs, but arrested him for assaulting two people at a crack den. The man is now facing a 20-year sentence for charges including assault, in which he “broke someone’s arm and cut another one in the leg”, as well as a charge of ‘armed burglary’ at the crack den.

“The cops knew I was selling but couldn’t prove it, so they made up the burglary charge instead,” Mr. Harris told the Times.

The high incarceration rate of African-Americans has a detrimental effect on the black community. Epidemiologists have linked high incarceration rates to an increase in sexually transmitted diseases and teenage pregnancy, since the majority of those incarcerated are men, leaving a prevalence of females and greater occurrences of unprotected sex.

“A man will have three mistresses, and they’ll each put up with it because there are no other men around,” Hamilton said. Epidemiologists believe the AIDS rate among African-Americans would be lower if the incarceration rate dropped. 

A high incarceration rate also affects children growing up without parents, brothers or sisters. Children are more likely to grow up impoverished, uneducated and emotionally strained. They are also more likely to become aggressive or depressed and could eventually end up in prison themselves.

“Education, income, housing, health – incarceration affects everyone and everything in the nation’s low-income neighborhoods,” Megan Comfort, a sociologist at RTI International, told the Times.

Since the incarceration rate is highest for African-Americans, it makes it more difficult for blacks to rise out of poverty, receive higher levels of education, and escape a life of crime. Young African-Americans are more often imprisoned than employed.

“The social deprivation and draining of capital from these communities may well be the greatest contribution our state makes to income inequality,” Dr. Donald Braman, a George Washington University Law School anthropologist, told the Times. “There is no social institution I can think of that comes close to matching it.”

While mass incarceration might temporarily reduce crime, in the long run, more Americans end up impoverished and more likely to commit a crime themselves.

via rt.com

 

HEALTH: Girl, 19, makes deworming tablet > National - monitor-co-ug

Girl, 19, makes

deworming tablet

Ms Nalukwago demonstrates how the deworming tablets are made. PHOTO BY AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA. 

By AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA & FREDERIC MUSISI

Posted  Sunday, February 24  2013 

 

Innovation. The ‘medicine’, made of dried pawpaw seeds, sugar and cassava flour or banana flour.

“My dream is to become a veterinary doctor but I am also an emerging innovator,” says Christine Nalukwago, the girl behind the research which might lead to the discovery of locally-made de-worming tablets.

Nalukwago, 19, currently a Senior Six student at Kitante Hill School, says she hatched the idea of coming up with a solution to parasitic worms in children while staying with her grandmother.

“My grandmother used to give us dried pawpaw seeds to chew when we were still young but we didn’t know the use. But one day, she told us that they expel worms from our bodies,” she says.

Nalukwago says she became inquisitive after her grandma’s revelation and when she joined secondary school where she has access to laboratories, she chose to carry her research forward.

“At first, the results were not good but I kept on trying,” says Nalukwago, who offers Physics, Chemistry, Agriculture and sub-Math as a subject combination.

How it is done

Nalukwago says some of the substances she mixes to develop the ‘drug’ includes; dried pawpaw seeds, sugar and cassava flour or banana flour.
 

“I mix them in equal quantity and leave them in a clean open place to concentrate. Sometimes the whole process takes a week when there is enough sunshine or two weeks when there is little sunshine,” Nalukwago explains.

She says after final tests in the laboratory, she tried the drug on a worm and it died instantly.

“I believe my drug is effective and I invite the National Drug Authority to come and test its efficacy,” she said.

Studies both in Uganda and Kenya have shown that children are more infested with worms such as soil-transmitted helminthes such as hookworms.

These worms normally make the children malnourished. The commonly used drug to treat worms is mabendazole.

Nalukwago showcased her innovation recently during the regional Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics competition at Gayaza High School where 10 schools from East Africa participated.

Nalukwago’s innovation became the second top science innovative project after a rooftop water harvesting system which was designed by Miriam Nsekenziza and Precise Nyabami of FAWE Girls School -Kigali.

Athwana High School came third place after detailed research on e-waste management. Each of the winners received a cash prize.

Rose Izizinga, the head teacher Kitante Hill School, describes the innovation as a major breakthrough as the institution strives to reclaim its place among the top schools in the country.

“Some people thought making Kitante a free Universal Secondary Education school was the worst decision made but here we are. More is yet to come and I simply encourage my young learners to dream more and do more,” Izizinga says.

Sarah Matovu, one of the judges, says they arrived at the three top projects basing on how practical they are, their originality and the manner in which the students presented them.

“We were looking at how they were presenting the projects and whether they got any assistance from their teachers.”

What experts say

Prof. Charles Kwesiga, the executive director of Uganda Industrial Research Institute, lauded Nalukwago’s inventions and brilliance in science but noted that, her tablets needed critical laboratory examination and empirical examination of the components that were used in coming up with the tablets.

“They are tablets and I cannot rule that out, but they must be first tested, the ingredients and then a scientific explanation arrived at. When approved by our team of laboratory experts and a process through which they work underlined, then they can be medically and scientifically approved for usage.”

According to Martha Muhwezi, the programme manager at Forum for African Women Educationists (FAWE) secretariat, the competition, the first of its kind in the region, is intended to help female learners relate what they learn in class and its applicability in daily life thus building linkage between curriculum topics and needs of the communities.

“There have been many science competitions in the past but this one is unique in the sense that we look at science in a holistic way including technology, engineering and research,” she said.

“Our key goal is to identify outstanding students in innovation and creativity that can solve societal challenges,” Muhwezi adds. 

She said the competition will be an annual event using financial support from Intel Corporation -an American technology company, and the world’s largest semiconductor chip maker, based on revenue.

FAWE is a pan-African NGO working in 32 African countries to empower girls and women through gender-responsive education. Many bright but underprivileged girls have received FAWE scholarships and majority of the beneficiaries are those with a science background.

 

 

HEALTH: Girl, 19, makes deworming tablet > National - monitor-co-ug

Girl, 19, makes deworming tablet

Ms Nalukwago demonstrates how the deworming tablets are made.

Ms Nalukwago demonstrates how the deworming tablets are made. PHOTO BY AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA. 

By AL-MAHDI SSENKABIRWA & FREDERIC MUSISI

Posted  Sunday, February 24  2013 at  02:00

In Summary

Innovation. The ‘medicine’, made of dried pawpaw seeds, sugar and cassava flour or banana flour.

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“My dream is to become a veterinary doctor but I am also an emerging innovator,” says Christine Nalukwago, the girl behind the research which might lead to the discovery of locally-made de-worming tablets.
Nalukwago, 19, currently a Senior Six student at Kitante Hill School, says she hatched the idea of coming up with a solution to parasitic worms in children while staying with her grandmother.

“My grandmother used to give us dried pawpaw seeds to chew when we were still young but we didn’t know the use. But one day, she told us that they expel worms from our bodies,” she says.

Nalukwago says she became inquisitive after her grandma’s revelation and when she joined secondary school where she has access to laboratories, she chose to carry her research forward.

“At first, the results were not good but I kept on trying,” says Nalukwago, who offers Physics, Chemistry, Agriculture and sub-Math as a subject combination.

How it is done
Nalukwago says some of the substances she mixes to develop the ‘drug’ includes; dried pawpaw seeds, sugar and cassava flour or banana flour.
“I mix them in equal quantity and leave them in a clean open place to concentrate. Sometimes the whole process takes a week when there is enough sunshine or two weeks when there is little sunshine,” Nalukwago explains.
She says after final tests in the laboratory, she tried the drug on a worm and it died instantly.

“I believe my drug is effective and I invite the National Drug Authority to come and test its efficacy,” she said.
Studies both in Uganda and Kenya have shown that children are more infested with worms such as soil-transmitted helminthes such as hookworms.
These worms normally make the children malnourished. The commonly used drug to treat worms is mabendazole.

Nalukwago showcased her innovation recently during the regional Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics competition at Gayaza High School where 10 schools from East Africa participated.

Nalukwago’s innovation became the second top science innovative project after a rooftop water harvesting system which was designed by Miriam Nsekenziza and Precise Nyabami of FAWE Girls School -Kigali.

Athwana High School came third place after detailed research on e-waste management. Each of the winners received a cash prize.
Rose Izizinga, the head teacher Kitante Hill School, describes the innovation as a major breakthrough as the institution strives to reclaim its place among the top schools in the country.

“Some people thought making Kitante a free Universal Secondary Education school was the worst decision made but here we are. More is yet to come and I simply encourage my young learners to dream more and do more,” Izizinga says.
Sarah Matovu, one of the judges, says they arrived at the three top projects basing on how practical they are, their originality and the manner in which the students presented them.

“We were looking at how they were presenting the projects and whether they got any assistance from their teachers.”

What experts say
Prof. Charles Kwesiga, the executive director of Uganda Industrial Research Institute, lauded Nalukwago’s inventions and brilliance in science but noted that, her tablets needed critical laboratory examination and empirical examination of the components that were used in coming up with the tablets.

“They are tablets and I cannot rule that out, but they must be first tested, the ingredients and then a scientific explanation arrived at. When approved by our team of laboratory experts and a process through which they work underlined, then they can be medically and scientifically approved for usage.”

According to Martha Muhwezi, the programme manager at Forum for African Women Educationists (FAWE) secretariat, the competition, the first of its kind in the region, is intended to help female learners relate what they learn in class and its applicability in daily life thus building linkage between curriculum topics and needs of the communities.

“There have been many science competitions in the past but this one is unique in the sense that we look at science in a holistic way including technology, engineering and research,” she said.

VIDEO: This is Signified, Jacqui Alexander > Feminist Memory

Video: This is Signified,

Jacqui Alexander

Browsing the interwebs, I came across this great project called This is Signified – which is a web-based documentary project aiming to increase queer visibility, link up networks, and share some activist wisdom from inspiring people. Cue their video profiles of inspiring activists/academics/makers.  Here’s an episode featuring Jacqui Alexander, the author of Pedagogies of Crossing: Meditations on Feminism, Sexual Politics, Memory and the Sacred and co-editor of Colonial Legacies, Democratic Futures with Chandra Talpade Mohanty.

Part I.

 

Part II.

 

 

EDUCATION: Professor: Why Teach For America can’t recruit in my classroom

Professor:

Why Teach For America

can’t recruit in my classroom

 

 Teach For America is an organization that recruits new college graduates, gives them five weeks of training in a summer institute and then places them in some of America’s neediest schools, with only a two-year commitment.

When it started more than 20 years it only accepted Ivy League students as recruits but has since expanded to include many other schools. Its founder, Wendy Kopp, envisioned the TFA mission as creating a network of alumni who, as they assume important roles in society, can advocate for public education.

Here is a piece by a college professor who does not welcome Teach For America in his classroom to recruit. It was written by Mark Naison, a professor of African American Studies and History at Fordham University and director of Fordham’s Urban Studies Program. He is the author of three books and over 100 articles on African American History, urban history, and the history of sports. This piece was written last year and versions have appeared on several websites. I am running it because I think it is powerful.

 

By Mark Naison

Every spring, without fail, a Teach For America recruiter approaches me and asks if they can come to my classes and recruit students for TFA, and every year, without fail, I give them the same answer.

“Sorry.”

Until Teach For America becomes committed to training lifetime educators and raises the length of service to five years rather than two, I will not allow TFA to recruit in my classes.  The idea of sending talented students into schools in impoverished areas, and then after two years encouraging them to pursue careers in finance, law, and business in the hope that they will then advocate for educational equity really rubs me the wrong way.

It was not always thus.  Ten years ago, when a Teach For America recruiter first approached me,  I was enthusiastic about the idea of recruiting my most idealistic and talented students for work in poor schools.  I allowed TFA representative to make presentations in my classes, filled with urban studies and African American studies majors.  Several of my best students applied, all of whom wanted to become teachers, and most of whom came from the kind of high-poverty neighborhoods  where TFA proposed to send its recruits.

Not one of them was accepted!

Enraged, I did a little research and found that Teach For America had accepted only four of the nearly 100 Fordham students who applied.  I become even angrier when I read in The New York Times that TFA had accepted 44 of 100 applicants from Yale that year.  Something was really wrong if an organization which wanted to serve low-income communities rejected nearly every applicant from Fordham, students who came from those very communities, and accepted nearly half of the applicants from an Ivy League school where very few of the students, even students of color, come from working-class or poor families.

Since then, the percentage of Fordham students accepted into Teach For America has marginally increased, but the organization has done little to win my confidence that it is seriously committed to recruiting people willing to make a lifetime commitment to teaching and administering schools in high-poverty areas.

Never, in its recruiting literature, has Teach For America described teaching as the most valuable professional choice that an idealistic, socially conscious person can make.  Nor do they encourage the brightest students to make teaching their permanent career; indeed, the organization goes out of its way to make joining TFA seem a like a great pathway to success in other, higher-paying professions.

Several years ago, a TFA recruiter plastered the Fordham campus with flyers that said “Learn how joining TFA can help you gain admission to Stanford Business School.”  The message of that flyer was: “use teaching in high-poverty areas as a stepping stone to a career in business.”  It was not only disrespectful to every person who chooses to commit their life to the teaching profession, it effectively advocated using students in high-poverty areas as guinea pigs for an experiment in “resume-padding” for ambitious young people.

In saying these things, let me make it clear that my quarrel is not with the many talented young people who join Teach For America, some of whom decide to remain in the communities they work in and become lifetime educators.  It is with the leaders of the organization, which enjoys favor from the Obama administration, captains of industry, members of Congress, the media, and the foundation world.  TFA alumni have used this access to move rapidly into positions as heads of local school systems, executives in charter school companies, and educational analysts in management consulting firms.

The organization’s facile circumvention of the grinding, difficult, but profoundly empowering work of teaching and administering schools has created the illusion that there are quick fixes, not only for failing schools but for deeply entrenched patterns of poverty and inequality.  No organization has been more complicit than TFA in the demonization of teachers and teachers’ unions, and no organization has provided more “shock troops” for education reform strategies which emphasize privatization and high-stakes standardized testing.  Michelle Rhee, a TFA alum, is the poster child for such policies, but she is hardly alone.

Her counterparts can be found in New Orleans (where they led the movement toward a system dominated by charter schools), in New York (where they play an important role in the Bloomberg education bureaucracy) and in many other cities.

Finally, the elusive goal of educational equity—how well has it fared in the years Teach For America has been operating?  Not only has there been little progress in the last 15 years in narrowing the test score gap by race and class, but income inequality has become greater than at any other time in modern American history. TFA’s main accomplishment has been to marginally increase the number of talented people entering the teaching profession, but only a small fraction of those remain in the schools where they were originally sent.

But the most objectionable aspect of Teach For America — other than its contempt for lifetime educators — is its willingness to create another pathway to wealth and power for those already privileged in the rapidly expanding educational-industrial complex, which already offers numerous careers for the ambitious and well-connected.  An organization which began by promoting idealism and educational equity has become, to all too many of its recruits, a vehicle for profiting from the misery of America’s poor.

 

 

VIDEO: Daara J Family – Celebrate video revives the days after independence > Africanhiphop-com

Daara J Family

– Celebrate video revives

the days after independence

Brand new video to ‘Celebrate’, one of the most catchy tunes off Daara J Family’s 2010 album ‘School of life’. Like the twist-inspired composition, the video is a throwback to the stylish dances of our parents’ generation.

More than just a nod to the renewed interest in everything fifties to seventies-stylish west African, we see a staged photo shoot, models walking around in short wax dresses that would impress on a modern catwalk and even Daara J Fam look like they never have before. The video must have also drawn inspiration from ‘Le jour d’apres’, Baloji’s take on ‘Independence cha cha’ which saw the rapper time traveling to a musical club back in the younger days of his (grand)parents:

 

Senegal-based director Lionel Mandeix has more interesting videos to his name including ‘Lu Tax‘ by Cheikh Lo, Duggy Tee’s ‘Teey la teey‘ and the collabo between Awadi, M1 (Dead Prez) and Bouba Kirikou.