No Runs, No Hits, Many Errors

Few were surprised recently when the University of California at San Diego reported a significant decline over the past five years in the writing and math skills of its admitted students (Chronicle of Higher Education, November 13th online).  What is startling, however, are the things these students claim to know that simply aren’t true.  Here’s a sampling:

— 42% believe that Shohei Ohtani was the Emperor of Japan during World War II.

— 62% “seriously doubt” that Finland exists.

— 81% claim that the consumption of tofu chicken tenders by pregnant women is the major cause of transgender identification among preteens. 

— 54% insist that numbers aren’t real, because you can’t grab onto them in the same way that you can squeeze a chicken tender with your fingers.

— 28% believe that mass shootings would be eliminated if it were illegal for people to get together in groups. 

— 92% maintain that French fries grow in the wild in Brittany and Normandy.

— 73% believe that the film “Birth of a Nation” was about the first Caesarean section performed in the United States on the wife of a plantation owner.

— 38% are sure that “World War II” was the second season of “World War I,” a popular fantasy series streamed on Hulu.

— 94% claim that punctuation and grammar rules were created by elementary school teachers to make kids feel stupid.  

— 61% believe that 7 of the original Thirteen Colonies began as NFL franchises. 

— 81% believe that the Virgin Mary wed Joseph in order to become eligible for Medicaid and SNAP benefits.

Let the remediation begin.   

 

 

 

 

“Just Twenties, Fifties, and Hundreds Please….”

“Shakedown” is just one of the words being used to describe the decision by Northwestern University to pay the Trump administration $75 million to settle a discrimination investigation and restore frozen federal funding to the school.  

That characterization gained credibility on Sunday, when a surveillance camera captured Northwestern’s provost placing a duffle bag containing $100,000 in cash into a day locker at Chicago’s Union Station (255 South Central Street).  Later that afternoon, Secretary of Education Linda McMahon visited the same locker and retrieved the bag.  

As she was leaving the station, McMahon was approached by reporters.  She explained that “there is nothing illegal going on here, so don’t get your panties in a bunch.  Northwestern owes us $75 million, and this is simply the first installment.  Sorry to run, but I’ve got a few more pick-ups to make before heading back to DC to attend Pete Hegseth’s End of Sobriety Celebration at the Kennedy Center tonight.  You didn’t hear it from me, but don’t be surprised tomorrow morning if there’s a smoking hole in the map where Venezuela used to be.  That boy is on FIRE!”