15 States Flunk School Science

How does your state measure up?

Last month the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a nonprofit education-research group in Washington, D. C., gave letter grades to public school science standards and curricula in 49 of the 50 U.S. states*. Here’s how they stacked up. (You can read the full report here.)

A: California, New Mexico, Indiana, Virginia, South Carolina, New York, Massachusetts
B: Arizona, Colorado, Minnesota, Illinois, Louisiana, Tennessee, Ohio, West Virginia, New Jersey, Maryland, North Carolina, Georgia
C: Washington, Utah, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island
D: Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota, Arkansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Maine
F: Alaska, Hawaii, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Wisconsin, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, New Hampshire

* They skipped Iowa because it doesn’t publish school science standards.

MuseBlog RPG*, version 2006.1

*Role-playing game. To keep it interesting, the administrators are laying down a few rules and restrictions:

*Role-playing game. To keep it interesting, the administrators are laying down a few rules and restrictions. Characters may include

  • the Muses (from Muse magazine or ancient Greek mythology);
  • people or animals featured in the magazine (for example, tenrecs);
  • Muse editors and other staff members;
  • famous real people, living or dead; and
  • fictional characters first created before the year 1900.

Within the above restrictions, the choice of locations and adventures is up to you. This may require a little research, but we’re sure you can handle it. Fair enough?

Poem for December 30

In case you missed it, Nancy Kangas (inventor of Ble and NOTscape, among many other Musish delights) left this on the poetry thread:

In case you missed it, Nancy Kangas (inventor of Ble and NOTscape, among many other Musish delights) left this on the poetry thread:

December 30th
when the library’s still open
when the mail still comes
when it’s not really a holiday
but feels like one.

December 30th
when there’s still no school
when you have a few free days left
when the creeping crush of undone work
swells up slow but surely.

Robert’s Secret Identity

Though they’d much rather spend all their time approving posts and chilling with MuseBloggers, Robert and Rosanne do have “day jobs.” As a news editor at Science, Robert has just spent the past month or so masterminding the magazine’s annual Breakthrough of the Year section. Anyone curious about Herr Administrator’s alter ego can read the section online, see a video, or listen to a podcast featuring an interview with the man himself. Bill Nye, watch out!