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Calif. districts offer incentives to attract new teachers
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Calif. districts offer incentives to attract new teachers# Education - 教育学
c*d
1
【 以下文字转载自 JobHunting 讨论区 】
发信人: careerbuild (careerbuild), 信区: JobHunting
标 题: 石油公司和制药公司,哪个待遇更好??????
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Apr 6 17:52:40 2010, 美东)
大石油公司和大制药公司相比,哪个待遇更好?
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X*Q
3
春风吹绿雨悠悠,
田里翻耕踩泥鳅,
农家二亩三分地,
土豆小米食无忧。
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j*b
4
作者:劳柯 [平静幸福]

平时田琳不会起这么早。昨天晚上睡觉以前她特意把闹钟订在七点,闹钟响了以后,她
又躺了一会才起来。等她洗漱好,才把萧雨叫醒。萧雨迷迷糊糊地看着田琳,过了好一
会才明白自己已经来到美国。她感觉到自己的喉咙干干的,有点疼。
田琳说:“我去做早饭。喉咙是不是很干?把这杯说喝了,每天早上起来喝杯冷水对胃
好。”说着,田琳递给萧雨一杯水。萧雨接过水说:“谢谢琳姐,在家的时候,我妈也
这样说。”喝过水以后,萧雨感觉到舒服了很多。
萧雨发现自己的鼻子湿湿的,就用手摸了一下。就听田琳说:“你鼻子出血了!”萧雨
看了一下手,发现都是血。田琳接着说:“快去用冷水冲一下鼻子,不用担心,一会就
好了。凡是到这里的人刚开始的时候都会流鼻血。”萧雨就捂着自己鼻子跑到厕所里用
冷水冲。田琳就去厨房里做早饭。
过了一会,就听田琳在厨房里问:“萧雨,鼻子还出血吗?”萧雨说:“不出了,我正
刷牙呢。几点了?”田琳说:“快七点半了吧,不用急。从我们这儿走到你们系只要五
分钟就可以了。”田琳说着,把一张冻得硬硬的饼放到了滚烫的油锅里,房子里一下子
充满了油的香味。等萧雨穿戴好走出卧室的时候,饭桌上
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m*a
5
☆─────────────────────────────────────☆
davidcu (David) 于 (Thu May 10 21:33:26 2007) 提到:
生活就要简单一些最好,考虑的事情太多,顾及的东西太多,人也就越不容易快乐。
☆─────────────────────────────────────☆
xniteman (The Idealist) 于 (Thu May 10 22:26:37 2007) 提到:
思考和顾及有什么必然联系?
无责任的思考我认为很快乐,比如我自己看书很快乐,需要考试我就不快乐。

☆─────────────────────────────────────☆
Flyingsnail (飞行的蜗牛) 于 (Thu May 10 23:28:04 2007) 提到:
自己快乐了,别人不快乐了
☆─────────────────────────────────────☆
redwolfling (小红狼) 于 (Fri May 11 02:23:51 2007) 提到:
白日做梦我很快乐
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s*1
6
学machine learning需要先修统系计的课吗?
秋天打算上一门machine learning的课,本人以前修过probability theory 和
stochastic process. 请问是否还要修其他统计系计的课? 能请哪位推荐一下吗?
谢谢!
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a*g
7
With more state money available to reduce class sizes, school districts in
California are using incentives such as bonuses and housing subsidies to
recruit teachers. Schools have hired 7,700 teachers over the past two years
who have only temporary permits, waivers or intern credentials, data show.
BY DIANA LAMBERT
[email protected]
/* */
A growing teacher shortage has California school districts offering
subsidized housing and signing bonuses in an effort to woo potential
recruits.
The hiring frenzy is a reversal from the recession years that left 32,000
California educators unemployed and college students too discouraged to
enroll in teaching programs.
Larry Ferlazzo, center, conducts class with the help of student teacher
Matt Smith, third from left, during a history class for English learners at
Luther Burbank High School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016. Luther
Burbank pairs student teachers with veteran teachers. Larry Ferlazzo works
with a student during a history class for English learners at Luther Burbank
High School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016. Larry Ferlazzo, center
, conducts class with the help of student teacher Matt Smith, third from
left, during a history class for English learners at Luther Burbank High
School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016. Luther Burbank pairs student
teachers with veteran teachers. Larry Ferlazzo works with a student during
a history class for English learners at Luther Burbank High School in
Sacramento on Tuesday, Jan. 26, 2016.
1 of 2
Larry Ferlazzo works with a student during a history class for English
learners at Luther Burbank High School in Sacramento on Tuesday, Jan. 26,
2016. Randall Benton [email protected]
/* */
Additional state tax revenue has enabled schools to reduce class sizes and
restore programs that were eliminated during the economic downturn. That has
led to sudden demand for teachers that the college pipeline is struggling
to meet.
“With fewer fully credentialed teachers available to take over classrooms,
the number of teachers hired on substandard permits and credentials has
nearly doubled,” said Linda Darling-Hammond, president of the Learning
Policy Institute and co-author of a report on the teacher shortage released
this month.
California has hired 7,700 teachers with temporary permits, waivers or on
intern credentials over the past two years. A third of all new credentials
issued in 2014-15 fit into this category, according to the report titled “
Addressing California’s Emerging Teacher Shortage.”
Special education, math and science teachers are especially hard to find,
with an increasing number working without full credentials, according to the
report. California districts were able to find less than half of the fully
qualified special-education teachers they needed in 2014-15.
In response, California school district officials have gotten creative. In
the Bay Area, where middle-class workers face high costs of living, some
districts are building subsidized housing for teachers. The largest
districts in the Sacramento region have developed aggressive marketing
campaigns and sent recruiters to out-of-state job fairs and professional
conferences.
In the North Sacramento area, the Twin Rivers Unified School District offers
signing bonuses of up to $5,000, said Bill McGuire, the district’s deputy
superintendent. The district of 31,000 students started the school year with
38 unfilled teaching positions.
Folsom Cordova Unified also offers signing bonuses, but only for
particularly competitive and hard-to-fill positions such as speech and
language pathologists, and psychologists, said Daniel Thigpen, district
spokesman.
Some school districts are trying to get ahead of the competition by hiring
early in the year. Sacramento City Unified and Natomas Unified are offering
“open contracts” to Sacramento State teaching students preparing to
graduate, said Stephanie Biagetti, teaching credential chair at the
university. Such contracts guarantee graduates a job but not a particular
school or grade level, avoiding conflicts with teachers that have seniority
rights.
Districts are recruiting with a fervor that hasn’t been seen before,
Biagetti said. Some districts have asked the university to host recruitment
events at their district headquarters before the annual Sacramento State
Education Expo recruitment held each spring.
Last year, more than 50 of the university’s graduates had contracts by the
time they graduated, Biagetti said.
The California State University system, which educates half the state’s
teachers, is trying to help meet the demand by doing a little recruiting of
its own. Five campuses, including California State University, Sacramento,
will be part of a pilot program this fall that will identify students who
might make good teachers.
“It is a way to recruit students within our universities who may never have
thought of teaching as a profession,” Biagetti said. “We want to identify
those students as freshmen and sophomores, and move them through the
pipeline as efficiently as possible.”
Enrollment at Sacramento State’s teaching college is on the upswing from
its all-time low of 370 candidates for credentials in 2013-14, less than
half of what the university had seven years before. University officials
couldn’t provide more recent information about the number of students
graduating with a credential.
“We expect the trend to continue given the economy and media coverage on
the teacher shortage over the past year,” Biagetti said.
Many students were discouraged from entering the teaching profession during
the recession, as California slashed funding for education. Districts laid
off staff members, and younger teachers often suffered most under rules that
prioritized educators with seniority.
The field still has a reputation for being demanding and paying relatively
low salaries despite the improved hiring picture.
“Teachers are so needed and they are so important, and they are paid
nothing and they work so hard for their children and, hopefully, somewhere
along the line people will realize that,” said Chantal Harper, 46, who is
completing her bachelor’s degree and plans to start her credential program
next school year.
Only a third of teachers who leave the profession each year are retirees,
according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office. Many others leave because
they are dissatisfied with their jobs. Once hired, teachers need strong
training, support and mentoring programs to keep them in the profession,
education experts told the Senate Education Committee at a hearing last week.
Matt Smith, 45, said he receives solid mentoring as a student teacher at
Luther Burbank High School in Sacramento.
“I’m really kind of buoyed with confidence, especially with the experience
I’ve gained in the program,” he said.
The Burbank program rotates student teachers through different classrooms to
expose them to different subjects, including special education. Each Friday
, student teachers meet with administrators for a weekly seminar and to
visit classrooms in a session modeled after medical rounds. On a recent
Thursday, Smith worked alongside veteran teacher Larry Ferlazzo in his class
for English-language learners.
During the recession, teachers were lucky to land any position they could;
now, they can be pickier when choosing their employers. Harper said she will
seek schools that care about teachers and students.
She remembers watching her mother struggle when she worked as a teacher in
an unsupportive school district, which “made me realize how important it is
to have people around that support you.”
Smith, who will complete his teaching credential program this summer, said
he is looking for a school where he feels he can have the biggest impact. He
also said he will look at pay and the proximity of the school to his West
Sacramento home.
“No matter what we are doing, the goal is to educate students,” Smith said
. “So, really, you just want an environment where you can make the biggest
difference possible in the most supportive environment possible.”
Diana Lambert: 916-321-1090, @dianalambert
Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/education/article57396608.html#storylink=cpy
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K*N
8
一些网上的东西:
许多音乐家被非议是从他们的生活中来寻找创作素材,而Tom Waits则是其中的例外,
他主张应该从歌曲中去创作生命。当其他的洛城歌手正在赞颂沙滩、海洋和大麻的极乐
的同时,Tom却为低级的餐馆、肮脏的汽车旅馆和廉价的烈酒等景象吟出喘息的颂歌。
在他1973年的处女作Closing Time中,Tom的民谣根基是吉他编曲,以及如"Martha"等
伤感的情歌中显著地呈现出他力求大众化与商业化的企图。然而在"The Heart Of
Saturday Night"中弹子房的比喻与节奏被转移到一个酒鬼的身上时,那种小心纤细的
剪辑,使Tom浪漫情怀走出男欢女爱的儿女情长,更勇敢而杰出的在钢琴的即兴中舒展
开来。这一年(1974)的夏天,Tom Waits和Bruce Springsteen俩就像在东西两岸设下擂
台,展开竞赛。看谁能先以爵士的、沙哑的嗓音,对低阶层都会的浪漫情境所做的赞美
诗,来赢得较多的听众。
然而,这场竞赛很快就宣告终止。Springsteen咆哮没多久就走出他那摇滚的经典Born
To Run,而Tom则在现场演唱录音专辑Nig-hthawks At
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c*7
9
哈哈,好田园啊:)

【在 X**Q 的大作中提到】
: 春风吹绿雨悠悠,
: 田里翻耕踩泥鳅,
: 农家二亩三分地,
: 土豆小米食无忧。

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z*a
10
Probability theory and stochastic process is enough background for a
introductory machine learning course.

【在 s********1 的大作中提到】
: 学machine learning需要先修统系计的课吗?
: 秋天打算上一门machine learning的课,本人以前修过probability theory 和
: stochastic process. 请问是否还要修其他统计系计的课? 能请哪位推荐一下吗?
: 谢谢!

avatar
a*t
11
范兄再世。。。

【在 X**Q 的大作中提到】
: 春风吹绿雨悠悠,
: 田里翻耕踩泥鳅,
: 农家二亩三分地,
: 土豆小米食无忧。

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l*d
12
赞~~
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N*f
13
清新可喜,泥土飘香。

【在 X**Q 的大作中提到】
: 春风吹绿雨悠悠,
: 田里翻耕踩泥鳅,
: 农家二亩三分地,
: 土豆小米食无忧。

avatar
d*o
14
为啥不赞额的?

【在 l*****d 的大作中提到】
: 赞~~
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