Monday, May 25, 2009

Over a Decade Later...

Over a decade after I graduated from Cascade, a number of residential treatment centers/schools have come under a lot of scrutiny. Let's not forget that Cascade also closed down a few years ago, and only now have people started speaking out about its "tactics" and whether they were ethical. The sad thing is that people are still sending their kids to schools like this without real research into the program itself. I'm not saying that some aren't good schools, just that parents need to really look into the type of program being offered. These schools aren't a cure-all, and sometimes end up screwing kids up even more...

Mount Bachelor Academy, near Prineville, Ore.

On April 28, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case that has caused anguish in the world of special education and children's mental health.

The case, Forest Grove v. TA, centers on the question of whether families with a disabled child have a right to seek reimbursement for private-school tuition from the state if the child did not first receive special-education services in public school. The legal question is a narrow one, but the case raises larger, more troublesome issues about student safety and the quality of educational services that families should expect when they place their children in private residential care, because the school involved in the case, Mount Bachelor Academy, near Prineville, Ore., is under state investigation for allegations of abuse reported by students and one employee. (See pictures of being 13 in America.)

A spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Human Services (DHS) declined to discuss the details of the ongoing investigations, which include a second inquiry based on possible licensing violations. But according to 10 students, two separate parents and a part-time employee interviewed by TIME — some of whom are involved in the inquiry — Mount Bachelor Academy regularly uses intensely humiliating tactics as treatment. For instance, in required seminars that the school calls Lifesteps, students say staff members of the residential program have instructed girls, some of whom say they have been victims of rape or sexual abuse, to dress in provocative clothing — fishnet stockings, high heels and miniskirts — and perform lap dances for male students as therapy.

Sharon Bitz, executive director of Mount Bachelor Academy, denies the charges. In an e-mailed statement to TIME, she said the reports of abuse are "inaccurate representations of Mount Bachelor Academy's therapeutic approach for struggling or underachieving teens. Some of the accusations are demonstrably false, while others have been exaggerated for shock effect."

In response to the accusations of sexual humiliation, Bitz told Oregon's Bend Bulletin newspaper in a recent interview that school officials have never instructed students to act in a way that would "sexualize them," and that the students' costumes came from their own dorm rooms and were chosen by the students. "We would never ask a student to give a lap dance," Bitz told the paper.

When the Supreme Court hears arguments in Forest Grove v. TA this month, it will not determine whether Mount Bachelor Academy — or any facility chosen by families — offers appropriate care. The parents of the student, TA (because he was a minor at the time the case was filed, the student is identified by his initials, and his parents have not made their names public), stand to gain only the right to seek reimbursement for the child's stay at Mount Bachelor under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

A ruling for the parents could have serious financial implications for cash-strapped school districts. Federal funding for private special-education placements, including residential and nonresidential programs, totaled $5.3 billion in the fiscal year 1999-2000, the most recent year for which data is available from the Special Education Expenditure Project, a national study begun in 1999 and funded in part by the U.S. Department of Education. In New York City alone, the number of reimbursement claims by parents who have unilaterally placed their kids in private special education rose from 3,023 to 4,068, and the city's spending on private placements went from $53 million in 2005-2006 to $88.9 million in 2007-2008, after the Second Circuit Court ruled in favor of the families in two similar cases in 2005 and 2006.

It is not known how many of the thousands of families who send their children to so-called therapeutic boarding schools each year receive tuition reimbursement via IDEA. The exact number of therapeutic boarding schools operating in the U.S. is also unknown, since no official body tracks them, but some estimates put the figure at 150 to 300. Tuition is far from cheap. Monthly costs at residential facilities are $5,000 and up; Mount Bachelor, which houses up to 125 students, charges $6,400 per month, and in 2008 revenue for the Aspen Education Group, which owns Mount Bachelor and is one of the largest chains of residential facilities for problem students, it topped $132 million.

The proceedings of Forest Grove are being watched with intense concern by school administrators and the teachers union as well as children's advocates. Most advocates argue that families should have access to private schools when public schools cannot provide free and appropriate public education for a disabled child, but most also say that public funds should not be used to pay for residential schools like Mount Bachelor. Such programs, they say, are overly restrictive and unproven, and virtually all their students — who typically have depression, substance use, behavioral problems or ADHD — can be safely treated within the community.

"We feel very strongly that for-profit residential facilities are completely inappropriate for special education. They have been shown to be ineffective and commonly employ practices that do harm," says Alison Barkoff, senior staff attorney at the Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law.

But because the programs are privately run, what happens within their walls is largely a mystery. No one knows whether the programs succeed or fail.

See pictures of a juvenile detention center in Texas.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Bill O'Reilly vs Eminem


In response to Bill O'Reilly's segment regarding Eminem's video for We Made You:

O'Reilly needs to take a chill pill. His desire for the media to ban Eminem's video is just one step closer to a communist society where the government regulates what we can and can't see, even more-so than it already does. Oh snap, isn't that what Hitler did to Germany? Politicians already have avenues of the media market in their pocket. That's why certain media outlets skew stories in a way that shows the better side of one of their "contributors", and why their analysts side with certain politicians so much.

Heil O'Reilly...

What a douchbag.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Brady vs Roethlisberger

Alright, we all know I'm a Steelers fan, and I know there's a lot of debate about who the better QB is, between Tom Brady and Ben Roethlisberger.

As much as I hate Brady, the numbers and the results are there to prove that he's a great QB. However, look at Roethlisberger's stats. They may not be as spectacular, but the results are equally impressive.

Pass Completion %
Brady - 63.0%
Roethlisberger - 62.4%

Yards-Per-Pass
Brady - 7.2
Roethlisberger - 7.9

Touchdowns
Brady - 197
Roethlisberger - 101

Interceptions
Brady - 86
Roethlisberger - 69

QB Rating
Brady - 92.9
Roethlisberger - 89.4

Also, with the TD numbers, keep in mind that Brady has been in the NFL for 9 seasons (drafted in 2000), including the ridiculously impressive 50 TD season, while Roethlisberger has been in the NFL for 5 seasons. There are other factors that have assisted in the success of both of these QB's. Brady has Randy Moss, Roethlisberger has the league's number one defense, for example. With this said, I realize Brady has 3 Super Bowl rings, and Roethlisberger "only" has 2, but does that make Brady a better QB? No. As a rookie, Brady didn't have the impressive 15-regular season win streak as a rookie, the record rookie-QB rating Roethlisberger had (98.1), nor did he have the record rookie-pass completion percentage that Big Ben had (66.4%). Then again, Roethlisberger doesn't have the 21-game win streak that Brady has, the 10-post season game win streak, or anywhere near the 50 TD season he had.

This is where the argument always goes...stats.

Now that the stats are out, here's my opinion. Both QB's are great, and both are destined for the Hall of Fame. Brady and Roethlisberger are two different types of QB's, and have different playing styles. Brady plays with finesse, and Roethlisberger plays with raw talent. With this said, during his rookie season, Roethlisberger took the formerly 6-10 Steelers to an unprecedented 15-1 season. And I realize that this isn't about Matt Cassel, but he took Brady's 16-0 Patriots to 11-5, further proving the overall strength of the Patriots. I believe that this will be an argument that will continue throughout their careers. Showing the strengths of Brady's Patriots, and Roethlisberger's Steelers, I believe that this argument is a total toss-up and only time will tell. As much as I want to say Roethlisberger is the better QB, Brady is a performer day in and day out. I also think that if Big Ben had not had his motorcycle accident and surgery before the 2006 season, his stats would be much better, but then again we'll see how Brady's return goes. And as I said, only time will tell who is the better QB.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

My Toothless Wonder

Angenique lost her first tooth yesterday!

Here I Sit...

Here I sit, bored out of my mind. Another mindless day at work, following an event less duty day. We're in the middle of CART (Cutter Annual Readiness Training). Basically a precursor TACT (Tailored Annual Cutter Training). There's a part of me that wishes we were underway (did I really just say that???), because at least then, there's always something going on.

Anyways, lately I've been doing a lot of thinking and reflecting. Usually that's never a good thing for me.

I've been thinking a lot about my faith, and how I've been questioning my faith more and more. It's led me to bring myself back to the events that led to my salvation, and the incredible feeling that overcame me when God reached down and held my heart for the first time (well, the first time that I would acknowledge).

I've also been reading a book, Gone to the Crazies, by Alison Weaver. It's a memoir about her time before, during, and after her time at The Cascade School. Cascade was the therapeutic (or cultlike, as the book describes it) boarding school that was my home, from January 29, 1997 through February 5, 1999. I had learned about Alison's book merely days ago, bought it, and started reading it yesterday. It has me hooked. Alison does a wonderful job explaining the wonders and horrors of Cascade, especially for those who never experienced it for themselves. For those of us who have, it brings back wave after wave of mixed emotions. It has reminded me of what I had forgotten over the past 10 years, some good and some bad. It has given me a little more substance, and a great example of what I have been aiming for, in my memoir (which is currently in the works).

Well, I better get going. I guess the government isn't really paying me to blog...