12/09/06 Cruise Continued ~ Pirating Bananas DIS Geekorama Part 2 Part 9

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lbgraves said:
OMG! Is that what that was about? I turned on the TV right before the guy had a heart attack. :blush:

Yes the man's P**** piercing was stuck on her IUD...
 
elaineteresa said:
yoohooo Andy - you forgot all that chatter about what's the word? sports - yeh, the stuff with the balls and all. ;)

oh yeh and Kids!!!

How can you guys forget the spanx talk! :rotfl:
 
tynkerbell said:
You know Caroline, I'm a little nervous about DH as well. He knows we're meeting people from the internet but he has no idea just how huge this group is. And he's a pretty quiet guy so he may be in for a shock. :scared:

It sounds like we need to have a meeting of the "Quiet Guys Who May Not Take the DISBoard Shock Very Well" Club.

"Hi, My name is Andy and I am here because....wo, who are all of those people in the green shirts...I'm outa here!" :scared:
 

tynkerbell said:
DH and I watch Heroes. We DVR it though and we're 2 episodes behind. Last one we watched was the one that ended with the cheerleader waking up to see her body cut open for an autopsy. Weird show.

I saw the one where it started with her on the table sliced open. UGH! :(
 
MommyMinnie said:
It's all about standardized tests. The teachers want more classroom time so the kids will pass the tests, the schools will rate higher and get more money, and impress more people. So, PE, which has no lobbyists to stick up for it falls by the wayside.

I'm sure John already posted this but the school that Sophia goes to gets recess after lunch and PE twice a week. The school system also just received the highest rating by the state based on testing. So schools can do both they just have to work at it!
 
Jhalkias said:
Laptop battery is almost dead . . .

And as they said, time for bed.

John1
(DIS banana poet laureate)

One down....many more to go if I am ever going to catch up here. :teeth:
 
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klineyqueen said:
We just did a radon test in our house. The national avg. in the house is 1.3. The outdoor avg is 0.3. anything above a 4 and you need to take action. Ours came back....9.7 - - we need to take action. We already hae the pipe from our basement to the outside (it goes out the roof) there. We put it in when we built the house. At the time we didn't need it running. Now we have to see what we need to do to get that going. What a PITB! My dad just had to do that at his house...now it is our turn!

That doesn't sound good. :( Sorry to hear it.
 
tynkerbell said:
Yeah, this show really surprised me. I was expecting it to be more X-Men-like but it's turned out to be really twisted and morbid. I'm curious as to how it's all going to play out but not exactly in a hurry to really watch it, ya know?

I am losing interest in that & 6 degrees. There is just too much going on to follow the story. I like the 9 though.
 
klineyqueen said:
I like the minor pirates too!!! My motto - Any booty is good booty!

I still like the minor pirate:s too. Booty be booty!
 
pyramid2000 said:
whistleblower.gif
Attention! Lisa needs to relearn the word NO!! ;)

Yes I do. Today was overload with all the prizes. It got to be too much & Kathryn realized that about the same time I did. We got up, locked the door, and left.
 
Jhalkias said:
Do any of you guys read the "Onion"?

www.theonion.com

I have a feeling once Karen finds it, we all will . . .

anyway . . .

This one is for Becka . . .

WASHINGTON, DC—Calling current levels of funding "unconscionably excessive," thousands of schoolchildren descended on the nation's capital Monday to demand drastic cuts in math and science funding for public schools.

John1

:sad2: :sad2: :sad2: :sad2: :sad2: :sad2:
 
pyramid2000 said:
The reason I was thinking for driving to the port ourselves was because I don't know how well they run their shuttle or how it works to be dropped off by a shuttle. Anyone know??

The shuttle is nice but you are at the mercy of their schedule. This time we are driving so we can be there early.
 
MrsMork said:
:lmao: Now we have DIS parents having to communicate about the children through this thread! True addiction!! ;) :lmao: :rotfl2: :rotfl:

They may as well get use to it. I remember a live thread a couple years ago where Lampskies and another DISer caught up with what their DDs were doing on the ship by posting to the thread. :rotfl2:
 
lillygator said:
I have to show you guys, this is the house across the street from us.


Unbelievable price. Too much $$ for not much house! But it is an amazing area and great neighbors to boot! :)

http://www.floridamoves.com/property/propertydetails.aspx?show=1&qstext=avenue+c&ncm=0&sort1=ListPrice&rpp=10&sort1ord=D&page=1&propertyguid=c24f2a16-a2e6-4bb7-ae0f-445e47a762b4

Excuse me while I pick my chin up off the floor. Just the asking amount was enough to send me into shock. I thought FL real estate was not that high. If you live across the street from a $1 million+ house then we are going to be your extremely poor tablemates!
 
GoofyforGoofy said:
Yeas, but I witnessed signs of withdrawal...

She came home from the church meeting last night and when I told her she missed the big 40,000 mark, she said "I don't care...I'm busy!" I just about fell on the floor....I almost said..."but Master, you..you...have failed me..."


:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:
 
Well here is a math news article that is actually true.

Study: Expectations matter when it comes to math


WASHINGTON (AP) -- Telling women they can't do well in math may turn out be a self-fulfilling statement.

In tests in Canada, women who were told that men and women do math equally well did much better than those who were told there is a genetic difference in math ability.

And women who heard there were differences caused by environment -- such as math teachers giving more attention to boys -- outperformed those who were simply reminded they were females.

The women who did better in the tests got nearly twice as many right answers as those in the other groups, explained Steven J. Heine, a psychology professor at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver.

Expectations, it turns out, really do make a difference.

"The findings suggest that people tend to accept genetic explanations as if they're more powerful or irrevocable, which can lead to self-fulfilling prophecies," said Heine.

The math study is the latest since Harvard University's president ignited controversy last year by suggesting that innate gender differences may partly explain why fewer women than men reach top university science jobs. The comment eventually cost him his job.

Heine and doctoral student Ilan Dar-Nimrod wanted to see how people are affected by stereotypes about themselves. They divided more than 220 women into four groups and administered math and reading comprehension tests between 2003 and 2006. Their results are reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

"Our study doesn't explore whether innate sex differences exist," said Dar-Nimrod. "Instead, we investigated how the perceived source of stereotypes can influence women's math performance."

The women were given a math test, then asked to read an essay, and then given a second math exam.

In two groups the women averaged between five and 10 correct answers out of 25 math questions. In the other two they averaged between 15 and 20 correct.

The women in the lower-scoring groups read essays that either contended that there is a genetic difference between men and women in math ability, or discussed the images of women in art -- a reading which did not discuss math but was designed to remind them of being female.

Those two groups not only fell short of the other women, but their performance declined between the two math tests, meaning they scored lower after reading the essays than before.

It's a process psychologists call a stereotype threat, Heine explained. "If a member of a group for which there is a negative stereotype is in a position to test the stereotype, they are likely to choke under the pressure."

So reminding them of the stereotype affects them.

On the other hand, reading essays that contend there is no natural difference between men and women in math skills lets them go ahead and answer the questions without any added pressure.

And that was also the case with those reading essays arguing that any differences aren't their fault, but exist because of conditions such as teachers giving boys preferential treatment in the early years of learning math.

That, explained Heine, "may allow a woman to say, 'This stereotype doesn't apply to me."'

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
 
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