Good for those who took the trouble to investigate the 'invention' aspect of it .. it does seems from the article linked in yours, it wasn't an invention, as such .. always good to see more detail ..
Maher's point has some validity, too, yet on that it felt to me like Maher sorta chose to ignore Cuban's (think it was) info that Irving had shown his effort to a number of other teachers before one teacher decided it could be a bomb (that was new info for me), so it's fair to say the last one could have overreacted. too .. on that, i've read that Irving was put in a room alone with his 'bomb' .. haven't read the 'bomb' was ever taken away from all the children, or out of the school ..
back to Irving, yes, seems maybe he has been a bit of a naughty boy. and his sister, maybe, too .. then again, it's possible that he, and/or she, doesn't even understand exactly what the word fraud means .. or even what the word invention means exactly .. lol, his effort certainly was different .. is it possible he believed his rearranging (if that's all it was) was in fact an 'invention'?
and yep, he could have chatted to the teacher more, but, we really don't know how much he did, and he did tell them it was a clock ..
the one i still admire butt, Richard Dawkins got his as deserved, he could have handled it much better, for one by simply not using the word fraud .. by saying something like, 'did Irving really create his own clock?' .. if he really felt he had to twitter with a foghorn for 'nothing but the truth' .. it was disappointing to see Dawkins go on as he did .. lol .. anyway, IF it was an April Fool of a different month it was misguided .. if not, that would be good to know ..
i think this article males a decent point, too.
I’m a teacher. I’m tired of fear driving everything in education
BY Janelle BenceSeptember 17, 2015 at 9:43 PM EDT
Ahmed Mohamed, a Texas Muslim teen arrested after taking his homemade clock to school, poses with his sister at their house in Irving, Texas. Photo by Bilgin S. Sasmaz/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Editor’s note: An Irving, Texas, teenager gained national attention this week after being arrested for bringing a homemade clock to school. The incident sparked a social media campaign, #IStandWithAhmed .. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/14-year-old-arrested-homemade-clock-mistaken-bomb-prompts-istandwithahmed-twitter/ ,prompting figures like President Barack Obama and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to pledge support to the high school freshman, Ahmed Mohamed. The incident hit home for one parent, who is also a teacher in a nearby high school. Janelle Bence shared her thoughts with us on teaching in an atmosphere of fear.
As an educator and as a mother of a son attending public school, my initial response to what happened to Ahmed Mohamed is anger and disappointment. In case you haven’t heard, Ahmed is the 14-year-old freshman at Irving ISD’s MacArthur High School who was arrested for bring in a ‘suspicious device,’ which was actually a clock he had created to show his engineering teacher. His English teacher was afraid it was a fake bomb.
I am so tired of fear driving everything in education.
Fear: We’re frightened our diverse kids are getting inconsistent instruction.
Response: Here’s a standardized test to which we must direct most of our resources so every learner can pass.
Fear: Our students are in danger of being cyber-bullied and cyber-stalked.
Response: Let’s implement filters for the Internet completely inconsistent with anything they would encounter anywhere else, thereby leaving them without the skills to self-monitor and become a responsible digital citizen.
Fear: Someone will threaten the safety of our school by building a fake bomb.
Response: Arrest a student gifted in engineering for doing something challenging and honestly telling several authorities it was a clock.
Don’t get me wrong. I want my students to be safe.
This incident hits very close to home. I work in a district just down the road from Irving ISD. My son attends a school in my district. Two of my older siblings graduated from MacArthur High School, and that would have been my alma mater had I not attended private school instead. All of this to point out that safety, and safety in this particular context, is very near and dear to my heart.
I want my students to feel like they can attend school without being threatened. I want them to know that school is a place where learning can happen and where they can feel comfortable and secure.
I understand the fear of possible security breaches, but Ahmed explained to them it was a clock. When asked what it was by the English teacher, he said it was a clock. When he was asked by the police, he said it was a clock.
I wasn’t there. I do not presume to know every detail surrounding the event. But I do know this: Part of building a safe environment where people feel like they can take risks — which is necessary for any real learning to occur — is building trust. And when students are being interrogated without representation, when authorities are not believing what their students are telling them without any cause to be suspicious, when students are finally excited to share one of their creations only to be arrested as a result, I know that trust is not happening. I know that Ahmed no longer feels safe and secure. I know there won’t be much learning happening for him in that context. I also know the same is probably true for other students on that campus.
Amazingly, this event happened the day before teachers around the country celebrate Constitution Day, a day declared by the United States Senate in 2004 to commemorate the adoption of the Constitution.
Now, I reflect, what does it mean to be “more perfect”? It conjures liberty and peace and compassion but at the center, before all of that, there should be safety. What does it mean to be a “union”? To be inclusive, resisting the urge to exclude or marginalize others.
When a school makes choices that divide a community and is not willing to admit wrongdoing or the need to revisit practices, certain community members are left feeling excluded.
There’s no union in that. There’s no strength in that. There’s no perfection in that.
Perhaps, Ahmed’s story is an ideal counterpoint to Constitution Day. It’s a poignant reminder that on this day just as any, we must not allow fear to guide our decisions. We must remain vigilant and continue to advocate for the ideals our nation sought on Sept. 17, 1787:
…to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity.
Janelle Bence teachers' loungeJanelle Bence is a ninth grade English facilitator at New Tech High at Coppell. She is dedicated to designing authentic learning opportunities where her learners gain literacy skills and develop global competencies. Her passion is helping her learners find their voices to make a difference in this ever-changing world.