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Books with title Rotten to the

  • Rotten to the

    Joseph P. Farrell, Gary Lawrence, Catherine Austin Fitts

    Paperback (Process, Aug. 9, 2016)
    Joseph P. Farrell, well known for his widely-discussed investigations on contemporary banks and ruling structures, co-writes this fascinating book regarding contemporary schooling with long-time New York state instructor Gary Lawrence.Say Farrell and Lawrence:Standardized Testing in America has a troubled history. Its agenda has long remained veiled behind "expert opinions" and "latest studies." The future of American education stands in a tradition of social engineering, data mining, pseudo-psychology, and dumbing down classroom strategies.Common Core promises great advances though its true benefits are monetary ones for software companies and partner politicians. It it is our contention that the goal of Common Core, or rather, of its assessment process, is nothing less than a massive addition to the power of the surveillance state, to the privileged corporations destined to manage it, to the further drastic curtailment of our civil liberties, and to the eventual inhibition of any individual creativity, genius, responsibility, and any general or popular intellectual culture resulting from them.Our argument is different than that leveled by many critics against the Common Core standards, for our focus is thus not upon pedagogy, or content but rather upon its assessment process and its implicit consequences for parents, students, and the teaching profession.Our goal is to stimulate not only discussion of Common Core's radical agenda for the consolidation of the surveillance state, but for its ultimate rejection.
  • Rotten to the Core

    Sheila Connolly

    eBook (Berkley, May 20, 2009)
    Second in the series that readers can sink their teeth into. Orchard owner Meg Corey must clear her name of murder after the discovery of a pesticide-poisoned body in her springhouse. Includes recipes.
  • Rotten to the

    Joseph P. Farrell, Gary Lawrence, Catherine Austin Fitts

    eBook (Process, July 18, 2016)
    Joseph P. Farrell, well known for his widely-discussed investigations on contemporary banks and ruling structures, co-writes this fascinating book regarding contemporary schooling with long-time New York state instructor Gary Lawrence.Say Farrell and Lawrence:Standardized Testing in America has a troubled history. Its agenda has long remained veiled behind "expert opinions" and "latest studies." The future of American education stands in a tradition of social engineering, data mining, pseudo-psychology, and dumbing down classroom strategies.Common Core promises great advances though its true benefits are monetary ones for software companies and partner politicians. It it is our contention that the goal of Common Core, or rather, of its assessment process, is nothing less than a massive addition to the power of the surveillance state, to the privileged corporations destined to manage it, to the further drastic curtailment of our civil liberties, and to the eventual inhibition of any individual creativity, genius, responsibility, and any general or popular intellectual culture resulting from them.Our argument is different than that leveled by many critics against the Common Core standards, for our focus is thus not upon pedagogy, or content but rather upon its assessment process and its implicit consequences for parents, students, and the teaching profession.Our goal is to stimulate not only discussion of Common Core's radical agenda for the consolidation of the surveillance state, but for its ultimate rejection.
  • Rotten to the Core

    Sheila Connolly

    Mass Market Paperback (Berkley, July 7, 2009)
    Second in the series that readers can sink their teeth into. Orchard owner Meg Corey must clear her name of murder after the discovery of a pesticide-poisoned body in her springhouse. Includes recipes.
  • The Rotten Romans

    Martin Deary, Terry; Brown

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 2007)
    Brand new book!
  • Rotten to the Core

    Sheila Connolly, Robin Miles

    MP3 CD (Audible Studios on Brilliance Audio, June 14, 2016)
    Spring has come to Meg Corey's apple orchard—and it's quickly becoming a killer season. Just as she's getting the hang of managing the two-hundred-year-old orchard she's inherited, the dead body of a local organic farming activist is found in her springhouse. And the only thing that's sprung is a murder accusation—against her...The young man's body was found with traces of pesticide poisoning. Strange for someone opposed to all things chemical. And why did someone plant his body on Meg's land—when Meg hadn't even met him? Now Meg needs to pick her actions wisely and get rid of the seed of suspicion that's been planted before the orchard—and her future—is spoiled for good.
  • The Rotten Romans

    Terry Deary, Martin Brown

    Paperback (Gardners Books, Sept. 30, 2004)
    Follows life for folks in Roman Britain from Nero to Boudicca and includes a look at gory games, rotten recipes, and loads of frightening facts.
  • Rotten to the Core

    Sheila Connolly

    Paperback (Wheeler Publishing, Jan. 20, 2010)
    Spring has come to Meg Corey's apple orchard - and it's quickly becoming a killer season. Just as she's getting the hang of managing the two-hundred-year-old orchard she's inherited, the dead body of a local organic farming enthusiast is found in her springhouse. The young man's body had traces of pesticide poisoning -- strange for someone opposed to all things chemical. And why did someone plant his body on Meg's land when she hadn't even met him?
  • The Rotten Book

    Mary Rodgers, Steven Kellogg

    Paperback (HarperCollins Publishers, Oct. 15, 1985)
    None
  • The Rotten Book

    Mary Rodgers, Steven Kellogg

    Hardcover (Harper & Row, March 15, 1969)
    When he hears his parents talking about a boy so rotten he will some day end up in jail, Simon imagines all the things he thinks might make a boy that rotten.
  • The Rotten Romans

    Terry Deary, Martin Brown

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, March 1, 1997)
    Introduces lesser-known facts about daily life in ancient Rome, such as what the Britons used to make their hair spiky and why rich Romans needed vomitoriums
    T
  • The Rotten Romans

    Terry Deary

    Paperback (Scholastic, July 5, 2007)
    None