Sermon for April 28, 2013

Sermon for April 28, 2013
2 Peter
2 Peter 1:3,4
Ephesians 1:3
“We are not yet who we are supposed to be…”
“He had given you a new nature to escape the corruption in the world…”
John 8:32
“Ignorance is not a recipe for spiritual growth…”
1 Peter 2:2
John 8:34
“Are your concerned about God’s word in your life?”
Isaiah 6:9
2 Timothy 3:7
“…how have I sinned this week?”
“Those who have sinned are slaves to sin…”

I didn’t realize how little time was left in the children’s school year, until I read yesterday’s post by Taron’s teacher; guess I don’t have much time left to find materials to begin schooling the kids over the summer. Yes, you read that right–I’m planning on schooling the kids during summer vacation.

For years, Diana and I have discussed homeschooling the children–Taron, in particular–in an effort to try and give them more, and to reduce instances of negative behavior; a few months ago these talks resurfaced, leading to more in-depth research on “how” to school the children at home. Honestly, making the decision and informing the school district is easy–thanks to a little line in the “Bill of Rights” included in the Commonwealth’s constitution:

“…nor shall any man be compelled to send his child to any school to which he may be conscientiously opposed;”

Granted, this statement is secured under the rights of religious freedom; however, it seems to leave the door wide open for individuals to educate their children in any manner they desire, so long as documentation–in the form of a notice of intent–is supplied to the school district, in order to satisfy the requirements of compulsory attendance. Confused? Okay, I’ll try and explain…

Let’s say I discover that the educational system is failing–imagine that; I can then decide to withdraw my child from the common school on the basis of my beliefs that he is not being provided the care and instruction that he needs. Then what? I have to send him to some private school? No, again–based under the same established right–I do not have to enroll him into one of the established alternates, citing differences in opinion over instruction and social interaction. My child is, however, required to be receiving educational instruction in some form, as required by KRS 159.010:

Except as provided in KRS 159.030, each parent, guardian, or other person residing in the state and having in custody or charge any child who has entered the primary school program or any child between the ages of six (6) and sixteen (16) shall send the child to a regular public day school for the full term that the public school of the district in which the child resides is in session or to the public school that the board of education of the district makes provision for the child to attend. A child’s age is between six (6) and sixteen (16) when the child has reached his sixth birthday and has not passed his sixteenth birthday.

KRS 159.030 provides the exemption for homeschools under the label of “private”:

The board of education of the district in which the child resides shall exempt from the requirement of attendance upon a regular public day school every child of
compulsory school age:

(b) Who is enrolled and in regular attendance in a private, parochial, or church
regular day school. It shall be the duty of each private, parochial, or church
regular day school to notify the local board of education of those students in
attendance at the school…

…it has been argued that a homeschool has not been legally defined as a private school; for this, however the remedy is simple–call your homeschool a private school!–(This is actually recommended by the Kentucky Department of Education–how cool is that?)

See, there really aren’t any requirements for private schools in Kentucky, other than those provided in KRS 159.040, 158.070 and 158.080. In a nut-shell, these statutes state:

159.040 – Schools must keep record of grades and attendance.

158.070/158.080 – Schools should instruct for a minimum of 185 days, or the equivilent of 175 six-hour instructional days–making the requirement a total of 1050 hours of instruction.

158.080 – Schools should use the English language, and teach courses required in 156.445; KRS 156.445 states that materials should be comprehensive and at the student’s grade level. Additionally, 156.445 refers private schools to 156.160.

156.160 – Private schools can elect to use KDE approved materials, or have their own materials “certified”; nowhere does is state that following the KDE or acquiring certification is mandatory. Side-note: Private schools–in the “true” sense of the word–must have their materials certified in order to be accredited. Homeschools, unfortunately, have no means of being accredited.

…back to the homeschool as a private school, thing…

To “enroll” the child and inform the school district the parent simply writes a formal letter–a sample is even provided by the KDE–stating that the child(ren) will be schooled privately for that academic school-year. The purpose of this letter is to comply with the “compulsory attendance law”, where the school district is responsible for making sure that every child in that is attending school. Additionally, the law allows for the district’s “director of pupil personnel” to come and request attendance records. Ah-ha!–a sticky/scary point! Law requires the district to check up on the school! Well, no, not really…

…law requires that the district verifies that the kids are in school; inspection of the school building/environment/materials is not required; attendance records and any other materials that the district may request for review can be shown at any neutral location–something that is recommended by every homeschool organization, and the KDE.

(OPINION) Pulaski Co. student totes loaded firearm to school.

“Should the student be punished since he tried to right his wrong? Should the parents be punished for this?”

…um, yes; yes, yes, yes, yes, YES!

Okay, first, how can someone “forget” that they have a handgun in their pocket? Sure, okay, the article states it was in the pocket of his cargo pants; we can assume that he likely had it in the leg pocket, so there wasn’t a nice tight bulge–but what about the weight of the thing? Wouldn’t walking around with it banging against his leg reminded him of it, before he got to school? Aside from that, why in the hell would he have had a pistol in his pocket to begin with? (…and I’m curious of the type of pistol–not that it makes much difference…)

…should he be punished? Yes, he should. The student–irregardless of whether he “tried to right his wrong” or not–violated school policy as well as state and federal gun legislation. While I am all for saying, “hey, son, you did a good job in bringing the gun forward,” I can’t see where not issuing some form or fashion of punishment would be beneficial; do we want to give this kid the idea that “get out of jail free” cards exist in real life?

Should the parents be punished? Yes; the question is how. Personally, I believe that the parents should have the weapons confiscated and the rights of ownership revoked until a time that the child–and any other children that may be in the home–leaves the home or reaches “legal” age; unfortunately, I do not know of any way that such could occur. There aren’t any applicable laws on the books–that I know of–through which the parents could have these rights revoked.

…so, now the questions should turn to, “Will the student and parents be punished?”

I doubt it. If the student is punished, I see it going only so far as being suspended from school for a short period of time; though expulsion is likely the recommended punishment if the school district followed the letter of their law. If the parents are punished, it would be for some other charge that may surface in relation to the “investigation” being conducted.

Parents question how 11-year-old made it to class with loaded gun. http://www.wkyt.com/home/headlines/Pulaski-student-brings-loaded-gun-to-school-204162361.htm

UPDATE:

Well, I’ll be damned. Charges have been filed, and the school district has “removed” the student. From the Commonwealth Journal:

Bringing a gun to school is a felony charge, noted Wood, but the ultimate penalties remain unclear due to the unusual nature of the offense.

“For an adult, a Class B felony like this would carry up to a five-year sentence,” said Wood [Pulaski County Sheriff], “but for a juvenile, I would not even care to speculate.”
Wood said the boy’s father, with whom he lives, spoke to the sheriff’s department at length yesterday, and once all the facts of the case are ascertained, authorities will determine if additional charges may be placed against anyone else, such as the father.
According to the Commonwealth’s article, the kid had not realized that he had left the gun in his pocket from the night prior. The Commonwealth also shares the following message from assistant school superintendent, Sonya Wilds:

…despite the apparently innocent circumstances under which the gun was brought on school grounds, the school system still treats the situation with “the utmost concern and seriousness” and will pursue “any criminal charges as allowable.”

Also, the boy has been “removed from school” at this time, said Wilds.
“Regardless if it was a mistake, it was a mistake with serious consequences,” she said. “We want parents to be fully informed and have all the facts before rumors get started. Having a gun on school grounds is non-negotiable.”

site updates and stuff…

For the past few hours I’ve been toying around with a few things on the EMA site, and on the WP installation I have running on my home PC. Here’s what I’ve accomplished on both servers/installations:

  • Activated Jetpack’s social integration

Edited the open-graph portion in an attempt to better associate a “default” featured image for Facebook

I discovered with HarrisonEMA that it tried to grab the first image available. Horrible.

Hopefully, I’ve fixed this by editing functions.opengraph.php and adding this below the “blavatar” fallback:

else if ($image == '') { $image = '***IMAGEURL***'; }

…with ***IMAGEURL*** being an actual image URL. It seems to be working…

…I also upped the requirement for image size from 50x50px to 150×150.

  • Deactivated FeedWordpress

I did this, because I found the plugin below:

  • Installed/activated Syndicate Out

…with “Syndicate Out,” I can have the blog automatically push/duplicate the post to alternate WP installations via xmlrpc. Sweet!

This means that I shouldn’t have a delay–or much of one–when it comes to having EMA posts sent to my blog. Additionally, I can have a “back-up” saved on WordPress.com should the EMA site go down. I had been doing something similar on my personal installation–the back-up to wordpress.com thing, that is–via an IFTTT receipe (if RSS then email WordPress); going this route is much simpler…

  • Removed “admin” accounts

Thanks to a tweet I read the other day, I read that there’s been an increase of  “admin” accounts being attacked.

 

…so, pretty active day–online anyway. Next on the agenda:

  • Finish up toying with the “back-up/alternates” for HarrisonEMA.com
    • change style of HarrisonEMA.wordpress.com
    • import previous content from HarrisonEMA.com to HarrisonEMA.wordpress.com
  • ???
  • ???
  • Profit! lol

…oh, and this post will also serve as a test to see if that fix I tried on the featured image works right for my personal blog… the last few that I sent picked up prior images. If it’s still broken, I may just leave it for a while… I’m getting tired of writing “TEST” posts…