ECP Education Career and technical education state plans approved in 15 states.

Approval of nine additional career and technical education (CTE) state plans

Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming

also

Hawaii

  • Implements new criteria for size, scope, and quality for its CTE programs.
  • Develops data dashboards to display outcomes of systemic, systematic, and equity successes, improvements, and ongoing challenges, gaps, and disparities that exist across its CTE programs.
  • Uses targeted funds for design and integration of continuums of work-based learning, counseling and advising, and transferable skills for its CTE programs.

Illinois

  • Introduces its program to prepare educators holding a teaching license in another content area to teach CTE that includes externships in industry and co-teaching and mentoring opportunities with an experienced CTE teacher.
  • Expands its continuous improvement efforts through survey data administered to grades K-12 to include CTE-specific items in grades 5-12.
  • Initiates collaborative efforts to provide students with greater exposure to aspects of industry through contextualized learning with hands-on activities and work-based learning by convening secondary schools, post-secondary institutions, and employers to share region-specific needs and opportunities.

Maine 

  • Offers structured, yet flexible, training programs through the Maine Apprenticeship Program, designed to meet the specific needs of employers through on‐the‐job learning and related classroom instruction.
  • Provides eligible high school students with opportunities to receive dual credits toward a high school diploma and an associate‐ or baccalaureate‐level degree, through enrollment and successful completion of college‐level courses through its Aspirations Program.
  • Offers secondary CTE students the opportunity to earn up to 25 college credits while attending high school through its Early College Program, resulting in the opportunity for students to complete their associate degree within 12 months after high school graduation.

Maryland

  • Expands work-based learning opportunities for CTE students through its Apprenticeship Maryland initiative.
  • Increases opportunities for CTE students to earn both a high school diploma and no-cost associate degree upon high school graduation through its Pathways in Technology Early College High Schools (P-TECH) initiative.
  • Focuses on the recruitment of CTE teachers, especially in in-demand, hard-to-fill career areas, through its Teacher Academy of Maryland.

Massachusetts

  • Links employers and schools for work-based learning experiences and career development activities through its Connecting Activities initiative – including a special focus on STEM employers.
  • Expands access to an array of engaging academic and career programs of study in strong and growing industries and occupations through its High-Quality College and Career Pathways Initiative (HQCCP).
  • Requires internship or capstone experiences through its Innovation Pathways structure that connects student learning to an in-demand industry sector within its regional and state economy.

New Hampshire

  • Promotes CTE teacher recruitment by developing an alternative credentialing program for new teachers.
  • Collaborates with its community college system to offer a three-year CTE teacher preparation program through its educational intern’s certification program — at no cost to the educator.
  • Uses employment information to determine the continued alignment of CTE programs to in-demand occupations and employment sectors.

DOJ takes aim at law that shields tech companies from lawsuits over material their users post

DOJ takes aim at law that shields tech companies from lawsuits over material their users post

Published Wed, Jun 17 20201:00 PM EDTUpdated 18 min ago
Lauren Feiner@lauren_feiner
Ylan Mui@ylanmui

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/17/doj-takes-aim-at-section-230-tech-liability-shield.html

The Department of Justice is taking aim at tech’s liability shield with a new set of legislative proposals released on Wednesday.

The proposed reforms are the latest action aiming to weaken legal protection established through Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, a 1990s-era law. The statute protects online platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter and Google’s YouTube, from being held liable for content their users post on their sites, and also allows them to moderate content in good faith.

The DOJ’s proposed reforms, which would have to be passed by Congress to go into effect, would limit the broad protections Section 230 typically provides to the tech industry.

Platforms could lose immunity if they facilitate or solicit federal criminal activity, like trafficking illicit drugs. It would also create carve-outs for child exploitation, terrorism and cyberstalking, holding tech companies accountable for taking action on such content.

The proposal also would make clear that Section 230 protections cannot be used to dispute antitrust claims, a significant statement as the Justice Department is reportedly preparing an antitrust suit against Google for as soon as this summer. Facebook has also disclosed an antitrust investigation by the Federal Trade Commission.

“Changing significantly … the balance of responsibilities and provisions about liability in Section 230 would, in our view, mean less speech of all kinds appearing online,” said Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice president of global affairs and communications, in a call with reporters on Wednesday afternoon.

It’s unclear how much support the proposals will gain in Congress. Both Republicans and Democrats have argued that Section 230, which was initially envisioned as a way to protect upstart tech companies from a deluge of lawsuits, now appears outdated as it protects powerful companies worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

But while Democratic concerns have focused more on holding companies accountable for keeping users safe, Republicans have also placed emphasis on alleged censorship of conservative voices. Tech companies have repeatedly denied that they censor political speech, but instances where they have removed posts in error have fueled such criticism.

— CNBC’s Mary Catherine Wellons, Lauren Hirsch and Salvador Rodriguez contributed to this report.

BIDEN 1986 SHARE THE HELL OUT OF THIS

BIDEN SPEAKING TO RETHUGLICANS

WHAT IS YOUR TIMELINE ON THIS?

Shultz played a major role in shaping the foreign policy of the Ronald Reagan administration.

“I hate to hear the secretary of state refusing to act on a morally abhorrent point.”

George Shultz – Hoover InstitutionWho pays for think tanks

The Koch brothers foundations support Cato (where David Koch is on the board), Heritage, AEI, Manhattan and the Woodrow Wilson Center. The DeVos family, whose fortune derives from Amway, fund through various foundations AEI, Heritage and Cato.

Ex-Secretary of State George Shultz‘s grandson, 26, is revealed as Theranos whistleblower who exposed flaws in Elizabeth Holmes’ blood-testing machines… and opened a family rift
Tyler Shultz, 26, was once at Theranos, where his grandpa George Shultz is on the board
In 2013, he says, he found that it was discarding errors in its machine tests
So the machines allegedly appeared more functional than they were
After his complaints to management went nowhere he blew the whistle
That resulted in his granddad getting caught between him and Holmes
Theranos’s value went from $9billion to $800million; Holmes’ from $4.5billion to nothing
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3944392/Theranos-whistleblower-revealed-George-Shultz-s-grandson-Tyler-exposed-flaws-Elizabeth-Holmes-technology.html