29th Dec2011

U.S., Los Angeles Schools in Civil Rights Pact

by iSpit

A federal investigation into whether Los Angeles students are denied educational opportunities has prompted the school system to overhaul its approach to teaching immigrant and black students, federal and city officials said Tuesday.

The investigation was part of a probe by the U.S. Department of Education into whether 76 public school districts nationwide comply with civil rights law.

 

Among the findings, the department concluded that the Los Angeles Unified School District was classifying students as proficient in English though they couldn’t speak the language, federal officials told The Wall Street Journal. “Those students had been languishing in limbo,” said Russlynn Ali, the U.S. Department of Education assistant secretary for civil rights.

 

The investigation also found that black students have limited access to technology and library resources. In addition, black students “were subject to unfair discipline,” Ms. Ali said, and had higher suspension and expulsion rates than other students.

Under its pact with the Education Department, Los Angeles agreed to boost college preparatory services for minority students and improve English training for students whose first language isn’t English, according to a copy of the agreement.

 

The agreement also includes extra training for teachers, and outreach to parents whose children are learning English. In addition, it calls for a greater effort to identify black students who are eligible for the district’s special programs for talented and gifted students.

 

Los Angeles has a long and proud history as a magnet for immigrants,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan at a press conference. But, he said, “we still have a long way to go before we see that [minority students] are consistently getting what they need.”

 

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and schools Superintendent John Deasy hailed the cooperative approach to creating the plan, but noted that no extra funding would be provided to implement it. Mr. Deasy said the district is engaged in a “profound struggle with funding.”

 

Like many of America’s school districts, Los Angeles has been forced to severely cut its budget, end programs and lay off teachers as state political leaders are deadlocked in a budget battle that will likely bring more cuts to education next year.

More than 200,000 of the district’s 671,648 students are classified as “English language learners,” meaning they need help learning English. The district has more than 60,000 black students.

28th Dec2011

Becoming Barack (Full Movie)

by iSpit

I’m not sure how much of this is true… but its entertaining. So I guess Barack is black…again?

An Intimate Portrait of a Young Man Destined to Make History, Including a Never-Before-Seen “Lost” Interview

 Becoming Barack: Evolution of a Leader traces the early path of a man destined to make history and to be a catalyst for global change.

This exciting new documentary features footage from three of the earliest known recorded interviews with Obama:  a1986 WMAQ-Chicago news story about Obama’s earliest success as a community activist; a 1991clip from a news interview while he was a student at Harvard Law School; and a 15-minute “lostinterview done in 1993 by an aspiring African-American documentary producer in Chicago, which never aired.

In the third interview Obama was just 32-years-old, two years out of law school, a professor teaching constitutional law at University of Chicago, a fervent community organizer and a newlywed who had not yet contemplated running for public office.  “… I might think about it, but that time is certainly in the future,” says Obama in an excerpt from the found interview.

Becoming Barack also features rare personal photos; interviews with family and a range of Chicago-area leaders in business and in grassroots community organizing who knew Obama intimately during his formulative years, sharing personal memories and anecdotes; and historic photos and video footage of “Obama’s Chicago” in the mid ’80’s through early ’90s.

Becoming Barack reveals an unseen perspective of our new president at a time when he was finding his way—forming the ideals and principles that would guild him on an historic path.  Even at this early time in his life, a vision of hope shines brightly … a desire to make his country a better place for all people.

28th Dec2011

HTC Android Phones Are Being Banned From The US Next Year

by iSpit

Whoa. Apple just won a big court victory against HTC that could force HTC to stop selling its Android phones in the United States. The United States International Trade Commission ruled that HTC was infringing on an Apple patent that effects HTC Android devices running Android 1.6 to 2.2.

The devices that may be banned from being sold in the US is basically a who’s who list of Android phones: Droid Incredible, Evo 4G, T-Mobile G2, Nexus One and a bunch of older Android devices. The patent that the courts ruled HTC was infringing on (#5,946,647) is potentially a big one. According to Fortune, who took a deep look at the specific patent, it works like this:

When an iPhone receives a message that contains a phone number or an address — e-mail, Web or street — those bits of data are automatically highlighted, underlined and turned into clickable links.

Click on the phone number, and the iPhone asks if you want to dial it. Click on the Web address, and it opens in Safari. Click on the street address, and Maps will display it.

That’s huge, not only because it’s an important feature in smartphones but because it could mean Apple could go on to attack other Android phone makers because it’s the OS that’s infringing the patent, not the hardware. However, if HTC Android phones removed that feature (unlikely) or implement it in a different way (which we expect HTC to do), they could keep on selling. And that’s pretty much what HTC expects to do, HTC, which has responded to this decision with rainbow colored unicorn tears, reached out to us with this statement:

This decision is a win for HTC and we are gratified that the commission affirmed the judge’s determination on the ‘721 and ‘983 patents, and reversed its decision on the ‘263 patent and partially on the ‘647 patent. We are very pleased with the determination and we respect it. However, the ‘647 patent is a small UI experience and HTC will completely remove it from all of our phones soon.

Yes, the patent in question is a fixable problem but I’d hardly categorize the court‘s decision as a win for HTC. If HTC doesn’t fix this issue however, the ban on HTC Android phones in the US is set to take into effect on April 19, 2012. That’s not winning.

There are still some real moves left for HTC to make to avoid the import ban (a Presidential veto is an option) but this is sure setting up for a major stateside war (thermonuclear, even) between Apple and Android phone makers much like with what’s happening with Apple and Samsung Tablets in Europe and Australia.

28th Dec2011

Ghostwridah – The Michael Jordan Theory (EP)

by iSpit
We all know Michael Jordan symbolizes victory

This is a look at the parallels of a journey while building a dynasty through the eyes of one who is chasing the top spot of this music ish. 

GhostWridah is planning to accomplish this and much more, and this is a tribute to one whom provided a blueprint for excellence, as well as a message to those who still might not believe. 

Anyone who knows GhostWridah knows he is a Jordan aficionado, so Poe Boy Music Group, alongside The L.Y.F.E. Music would like to introduce: 

28th Dec2011

ATF/D.C. Police Impersonate Rap Label & Arrest 70 in Year Long Gun/Drug Sting

by iSpit

You n*ggas are stupid…

Over $7.2 million in drugs and 161 weapons were confiscated after a year long investigation by the Washington D.C. Police and the Bureau the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which operated as fictional rap label.

According to Washington D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier, D.C. police and ATF agents acted as undercover officers and “music industry insiders” during the year-long sting.

The police created the “Manic Enterprisess” studio in Northeast Washington, for fictional rap artist Richie Valdez in November of 2010.

Agents then told the underground world and black market that they were seeking to purchase weapons and drugs.

Over the course of the year, agents confiscated 161 firearms (including a rocket launcher), 29 assault weapons, 80 pounds of methamphetamine, 21 pounds of cocaine, 1.25 gallons of PCP, 24 pounds of marijuana, heroin and Ecstasy.

“If these drugs and guns had made it to our streets, the impact would have been devastating to community,” Police Chief Lanier told AllHipHop.com in a press release on Monday.

“This was an extremely dangerous operation. These suspects had bragged about other violent crimes they had committed and had no qualms about killing police officers, guards and other innocent people,” Chief Lanier continued. “All the law enforcement members involved in this operation are to be commended for their bravery.”

In addition to the seizures of drugs and weapons, police said many of the 70 suspects detained bragged about other crimes and reportedly stated they would kill police officers or other innocent people if necessary.

Undercover officers arrested one group of assailants in a preemptive attempt to stymie a robbery of the studio.

The depth of the investigation went one step further, when officers ventured to Atlanta with suspects claiming to be associated with the Mexican Drug Cartel “La Familia”.

The Mexican cartel members unknowingly introduced agents to the source that was supplying guns from Georgia.

“These investigations have proven very effective in targeting criminals and keeping drugs and guns off our community’s streets,” said US Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. “The US Attorney’s Office is committed to working with our law enforcement partners and the citizens of the District of Columbia to bringing those who traffic in narcotics and firearms to justice.”

The recording studio was located at a rowhouse in Northeast Washington and was equipt with hidden audio and video equipment.

“It was just about two years ago to the day that we stood here with Chief Lanier and talked about our commitment to the safety of the citizens in the District of Columbia,” said ATF Assistant Special Agent in Charge Rich Marianos. “Today’s event shows that the men and women of ATF kept their word, and continue their work in making the citizens of DC safer.”

28th Dec2011

I Am Not A Rapper Presents: ___ Podcast – Season 1,Episode 6 – #TheWonderYearPodcast (2011 Finale)

by iSpit
Play

**BREAKING NEWS!!!**… Another Wednesday, Another Podcast, GET YOUR HEADPHONES, LOCK YOUR DOORS!!

We had the unusual suspects again (which might actually turn out to be the name of this podcast in 2012…stay tuned): Spit x Kevin Golden x DJ Nastee Naj  Mr. Blair  x Queen MKS

Sponsor: GoToMyPC allows easy to access your computer via you iPhone Try it Free for 30 Days! Click GoToMyPC to begin

First, Aliens attacked us in the beginning of the podcast… they came back after the first break…but eventually they left

Topics Discussed: Missing Shonnie  |  “…and we’re back..”  |  Uncle Luke Movie + We advocate Luke for Mayor |  Memorable Moments From 2011  |  QueensMKS - Grinds My Gears  |  $1 Dutches  |  Sams from Lean On Me Buying 200 Pds of Weed  |  Tyler Perry Buys American Airlines  |  Sam Hurd’s bricks of NFL cocaine  |  Ike Turner’s Autobiography | Milk Carton children  |  The War in Iraq…Over?  | Ghetto Names  | Win A date with Kevin or Najee

YOU CAN STILL EMAIL YOUR #FML STORIES (OR SHONNIE SIGHTINGS) TO IAMNOTARAPPER@GMAIL.COM

This weeks musical interludes provided by:

1.) Face Off – Once

2.) Skizzy Mars - Shangri-La

3.) Chase And Status feat. Delilah – Time (RIOT-87-Remix)

4.) Ghostwridah - United Center Intro (Feat Nehemie)

28th Dec2011

The Gazette No.10 By Phillip Lee Jr (Comic)

by iSpit

By Phillip Lee Jr

28th Dec2011

So Everybody Got An iPhone For Christmas huh?

by iSpit

Apple and Google activated a record breaking number of mobile devices this Christmas, according to Flurry analytics, which delivers mobile analytics to developers. Flurry has 140,000 apps running its software, and believes it can track every new Android or iOS device activated.

Between December 1 and 20, 1.5 million Android and iOS devices were activated daily on average. On Christmas day, a record breaking 6.8 million devices were activated, a 353% increase over the rest of the month. It’s also much better than 2010, when 2.8 million devices were activated

27th Dec2011

Ralph Lauren – The Oprah Interview (Full Video)

by iSpit

Oprah Interviews Ralph Lauren from The Nobility on Vimeo.

27th Dec2011

Hank McCoy – The Diabolical (69 Songs Produced By Hank McCoy)

by iSpit

Up & coming Philly producer Hank McCoy releases an @OfficiallyIce-esque folder of every song (almost) he has ever produced. Hank is responsible for some of your favorite current Philly bangers as well as @HankMcCoyBeats" href="http://iamnotarapperispit.com/2011/03/10/20684" target="_blank">These @ChillMoody x @HankMcCoyBeats – #AndTheyStillLoveUsBack (Valentine’s Mixtape)" href="http://iamnotarapperispit.com/2011/02/14/19002" target="_blank">songs @ChillMoody x @BoogiemanDela x @AntwandavisEST x @HankMccoyBeats – Seek & dESTroy" href="http://iamnotarapperispit.com/2011/01/21/18355" target="_blank">we’ve @ChillMoody Feat @LostCauze – #HMmtbtCaRroi (Prod. @HankMcCoyBeats)" href="http://iamnotarapperispit.com/2011/03/07/20606" target="_blank">posted.

Follow Hank –> @HankMcCoybeats

Hank McCoy – The Diabolocial (69 Songs Produced By Hank McCoy)

THIS THURSDAY –>

27th Dec2011

Antwan Davis – Break It Down Remix Feat RediRoc, Boogieman Dela & Chic Raw (Music Video)

by iSpit


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

P3Movement artist “Antwan Davis” teamed up with ApeGang RediRoc, Chic Raw and P3 artist Boogieman Dela for Break it down Remix Produced by Wesmanchild. Video Directed by Marcus X (@MrMarcusX) this will be a bonus song off his upcoming CD “Established” coming soon!

Break It Down Rmx (Explicit)

@AntwanDavisEST
@RediRoc215
@ChicRaw
@BoogiemanDela
@Wesmanchild
www.AntwanDavis.com

27th Dec2011

President Obama Signs NDAA Detention Rules Martial Law Bill

by iSpit

O_O

Attorney General Eric Holder confirmed speculation Wednesday that President Barack Obama would issue a signing statement when he makes the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and its controversial detention provisions law.

“We made really substantial progress in moving from something that was really unacceptable to the administration to something with which we still have problems,” Holder said in response to a question from the Wall Street Journal’s Evan Perez. “But I think through these procedures, with these regulations we will be crafting, we can minimize the problems that will actually affect us in an operational way.”

Holder said the language of the NDAA had been moved in a “substantial way” from some of the original language which led the president to issue a veto threat.

“So we are in a better place, I think the regulations, procedures that will help, and we’ll also have a signing statement from the president” which will help clarify how they view the law, Holder said

27th Dec2011

WTF?: Andre Nickatina – Call The Dealer (Music Video)

by iSpit


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

I normally wouldnt do this but uh… this sh*t is wack

…like really wack…

but its funny wack…

I mean

…kinda

I just cant see me enjoying that advocation of cocaine sniffing for sex… There are too many other ways to get sex.

27th Dec2011

International Test Scores, Irrelevant Policies

by iSpit

Perhaps no research finding has influenced education policy more, or been subject to greater misinterpretation, than our ranking on international mathematics and science tests.

Previous critiques of international comparisons have focused largely on flaws in sampling and the limitations of test scores as a measure of the quality of a nation‘s education system. These problems are still relevant. Equally important, however, are the conclusions drawn from the comparisons, even assuming their technical validity.

 

For decades, our rhetoric and education policies have been based on the premise that the ranking of U.S. students on international tests will lead to a decline in our nation‘s economic competitiveness and a shortage of American scientists and engineers.

 

It is ironic, then, that given the rhetoric and policies surrounding international test-score comparisons-much of it unsupported by evidence-little attention is paid to two of the most powerful findings of these comparisons: the strong negative effects on student performance of both family poverty and concentrations of poverty in schools.
Instead, we draw conclusions from the international studies that are not supported either by the findings of these studies or by research more generally.

 

“First, our rhetoric has assumed that test-score rankings are linked to a country’s economic competitiveness, yet the data for industrialized countries consistently show this assumption to be unwarranted. For example, the World Economic Forum’s 2010-2011 global-competitiveness report ranks the United States fourth, exceeded only by Switzerland, Sweden, and Singapore. Many of the countries that ranked high on test scores rank lower than the United States on competitiveness-for example, South Korea, No. 22, and Finland, No. 7.

 

Although we cannot predict future economic trends, we do know that test-score rankings are a poor basis upon which to understand these trends or to know what to do about them. The reason is clear: Other variables, such as outsourcing to gain access to lower-wage employees, the climate and incentives for innovation, tax rates, health-care and retirement costs, the extent of government subsidies or partnerships, protectionism, intellectual-property enforcement, natural resources, and exchange rates overwhelm mathematics and science scores in predicting economic competitiveness.
Second, we assume that U.S. students‘ performance on math and science tests is reflected in a shortage of scientists, engineers, and mathematicians. The data, however, give a quite-different picture.

 

The fact is the United States has both a large pool of students with the academic credentials needed to enter science and engineering fields and an ample supply-and sometimes an oversupply (for example, of chemistry Ph.D.s)-to meet labor-market demand. That is the case even though slippage occurs between the number of graduates in science and engineering and the number who work in these fields, often because some graduates choose, for example, careers in finance, investment banking, management, or entrepreneurial activity. When companies claim that they need to hire from other countries because they cannot find qualified U.S. graduates, it is more likely that they cannot find them at the wages they would prefer to pay and find it cheaper to outsource. That is not the fault of our international test-score ranking or the training of U.S. scientists and engineers.

 

Moreover, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projections show large variations in job opportunities among science and engineering fields. For example, employment in computer-software engineering; biological science; and biomedical, civil, and environmental engineering is expected to grow faster than the average for all occupations, while growth in computer programming; chemical and materials science; and electrical, mechanical, and marine engineering is expected to be slow.

 

Although mathematics and physics are expected to have faster-than-average growth, the size of the market for those who seek basic-research positions is quite small.
Of the 30 occupations in the United States with the fastest rate of growth, only nine are in science and engineering fields, and 16 of the 30 do not require a college degree, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics projections. More important, of the 30 occupations expected to provide the largest numerical growth in jobs, only two (both in computer fields) are in science and engineering, and 23 do not require a college degree.

 

If we consider only occupations requiring a college degree or above, 15 of the top 30 fastest-growing occupations are in science and engineering; however, only eight (six in computer fields) of the 30 occupations expected to provide the largest numerical growth in jobs are in science and engineering.

 

At the same time that our rhetoric has linked test scores, economic competitiveness, and shortages of scientists and engineers, our education policies have been dominated by test-based accountability, apparently with the expectation that accountability requirements would close the achievement gap, raise our ranking on international comparisons, and lead to a stronger economy and an increased supply of scientists and engineers. The assumption that accountability requirements are a solution to our education problems is as incongruous as our rhetoric about the economy and scientists and engineers.

 

Bob Dahm Research accumulated over the years, analyzed in a 2011 National Research Council report, shows that accountability policies have not resulted in meaningful improvements in student learning and, in many instances, have created perverse incentives that weaken it. Yet, we continue to mandate accountability requirements that are not used-and in some cases are specifically discouraged-by the very countries whose test scores we most admire, including Finland and Japan.

 

At the same time, we have ignored the strongest evidence emerging from the international tests: the adverse effects of poverty and concentrations of poverty in schools on student performance in all countries.

 

Although countries can exacerbate or mitigate the impact of poverty through their social, fiscal, and education policies, and although some students do overcome the odds, the fact is the gap between high-poverty and more-affluent students remains a fundamental problem in virtually every country.

 

The 2009 Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, findings for member-countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development show that, on average, close to 60 percent of the difference in reading performance between schools is accounted for by the socioeconomic status of the students attending the schools. In the United States, socioeconomic status accounts for close to 80 percent of the difference.

 

That gap is reflected throughout the students‘ lives. It is specifically the low-income populations and regions that are underrepresented in mathematics, science, and engineering fields, and in professions generally-and it is these populations that are at the most severe disadvantage in competing for jobs in a global economy. This is part of a much broader set of problems faced by high-poverty populations. We have one of the largest divides between rich and poor in the industrialized world. One-fifth of our children live in poverty; millions of these children are concentrated in high-poverty schools-a setting that greatly compounds the problems of poverty.

 

Our policy deliberations work at the fringes of these realities, with remedies that are not focused on the basic problem of poverty. The problem will not be addressed by implementing tougher accountability requirements. Nor will it be addressed by rhetoric about mathematics and science scores, economic competitiveness, and generic shortages of scientists and engineers.

 

Poverty, not international test-score comparisons, is the most critical problem to be addressed by our public policies. Unfortunately, our recent political polarization over budgetary priorities does not leave much room for optimism.
 
Iris C. Rotberg is a research professor of education policy at George Washington University’s Graduate School of Education and Human Development, in Washington. She is also the editor of Balancing Change and Tradition in Global Education Reform (Rowman & Littlefield Education, second edition, 2010), which describes education reforms in 16 countries.
27th Dec2011

Everybody Pirates: RIAA, Homeland Security Caught Downloading Torrents

by iSpit

Since the release of a website that monitors nearly 20 percent of all public BitTorrent downloaders, even more pro-SOPA figures have been found downloading copyrighted material.

Earlier this week, it was found that employees of major copyright holders Sony, Universal, and Fox were all found to have illegally downloaded content through the BitTorrent network.

Today, two prominent figures in the online piracy fight were also found to be seemingly undoing all of their employers’ hard work in the fight against online piracy

Perhaps it just goes to prove that everybody pirates?

The Recording Industry of America (RIAA) is one of the most powerful lobbying groups in Hollywood, working on behalf of the record industry. It’s also one of the main proponents behind SOPA, the controversial anti-piracy act currently working its way through Congress.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) does what it says on the tin. Part of its remit is to seize domain names controlled or managed by the U.S. government or U.S.-based firms to crack down on online piracy.

It would therefore be highly ironic should one find that employees of both the RIAA and the Dept. of Homeland Security should be found to be illegally downloading copyrighted material through peer-to-peer networks.

But the RIAA in particular will be feeling the heat when its workers arrive at the office on Monday morning.

According to TorrentFreak, entire series episodes have been downloaded from BitTorrent sites, as well as software, and even gangster-rap music by the music industry representative body.

Last week, one Russian website, YouHaveDownloaded, opened its doors as it claimed to track around 20 percent of all public torrent downloads. You can check your IP address — as well as others — against the database to see if you or prominent others are found illegally downloading copyrighted material.

From an search-engine optimisation (SEO) perspective, Stephen Chapman discussed how users who wish to remain anonymous — and potentially out of the public eye of this site — can do so when downloading content from the web.

Considering it’s the RIAA who wants to disconnect pirates from the web, I suppose it shows that almost everyone is at risk from SOPA should the bill go through — even one of the key outfits pushing for the bill.

Though over 200,000 people work for the Dept. for Homeland Security, it is no surprise that at least someone within the government department is downloading content illegally.

But one person alone can shame the collective entity, and any ‘breach’ like this would be vital ammunition for anti-SOPA advocates.

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