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Tag: Ridgewood Real estate
>Fatal Motor Vehicle Accident In Front of The Valley Hospital?
>The Fly has received numerous reports of a fatal motor vehicle accident that took place in front of The Valley Hospital on Friday morning. Reportedly, two Valley employees were involved; one was killed.
Members of the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office Fatal Accident Investigation Team and the Bergen County Sheriff’s Office Bureau of Criminal Identification were observed at the scene taking measurements and photographs.
There has been no newspaper account of the incident thus far. Does anyone have further details? Is The Valley attempting to keep this incident under wraps so residents don’t bring it up at future hearings related to the hospital’s building expansion plans?
Concerned math parents attacked by outsider Michael Paul Goldenberg
>”Yesterday, I was falsely accused of paranoia here by amateur psychologist and professional know-nothing Greg Goodknight. Of course, in the wake of the travesty of democracy we have witnessed in Ridgewood, NJ this week thanks to the clandestine efforts of a tiny group of activists, some of whom don’t even live in New Jersey, let alone in Ridgewood. By making anonymous calls and sending anonymous e- mails, this little group of brown shirts undid the legitimate hiring of a top-notch superintendent because he’d written favorably and intelligently about constructivism and was perceived to support the legitimately selected K-5 math program in Ridgewood, INVESTIGATIONS IN NUMBER, DATA, and SPACE. From what I’ve read, the personal attacks on his integrity and that of his wife were the usual vicious “parents with pitchforks” lies that have been the stock in trade of followers of the leadership of Mathematically Correct and NYC-HOLD. I’m sure those who hold with the beliefs of those groups are congratulating themselves for their “math warrior” victory. The rest of Ridgewood is wondering how fewer than 100 people could cost the town the $20,000 already spent on a job search to land Martin Brooks and the additional money that must now be spent to find a new superintendent.I had a cordial e-mail from Dr. Brooks this morning and I’m confident that had these unprincipled assassins not been allowed to operate with impunity in Ridgewood, the town would have gotten an outstanding leader for its public schools. The effect of what this band of jackals has done is likely to be very chilling as the town tries to find a person of equal ability in the wake of the unjustified personal attacks on Dr. Brooks and his wife.This is the Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, Newt Gingrich, Karl Rove, and George W. Bush legacy. The good news is that I believe this incident will gain enough local and national attention that perhaps “paranoids” like me will be less easily ignored by people in a position to do something before it’s completely impossible for anyone calling her or himself a progressive educator or liberal to seek work in public schools. More importantly, those who have yet to take these hate groups seriously will perhaps now be galvanized into principled and serious opposition to this sort of hijacking of our schools and our democracy.”
User Profile for: mikegol_@_MICH.EDU
UserID:
2957
Name:
Michael Paul Goldenberg
Email:
[email protected]
Registered:
12/3/04
Occupation:
Lecturer in Mathematics Education, University of Michigan-Flint
Location:
Ann Arbor, MI
Total Posts:
4,841
>the fly investigates Reform math (vs) Non reform math
>Which math do you want your child to do? Which math do you want to pay for with your soon to be increasing local taxes?
Reform math
This is a fifth-grade math question from “Investigations,” which deals with number sense and getting students to look at different strategies to solve a problem. The teacher would guide students to think of “sensible” ways to approach this multiplication problem:
Choose any two of these as a first step to complete 14 x 9 =
A. Start by solving 10 x 9 =
B. Start by solving 7 x 9 =
C. Start by solving 14 x 10 =
Students are asked to break the question into numbers that are easier to multiply. For instance, they could solve 10 x 9 = 90, and 4 x 9 = 36. Then they would add both sums together: 90 + 36 = 126. (Alternatively, they could start with 7 x 9 and then multiply the answer by 2, or start with 14 x 10 and then subtract 14.)
Not Reform math
This is a fifth-grade math problem from a Singapore Math textbook:
Solve: 492 x 98 =
The Singapore curriculum introduces multiplication problems in the second grade. The materials teach different strategies for doing these problems, such as memorizing multiplication tables and breaking problems down into smaller numbers. By fifth grade, the materials would assume students have mastered these skills, and would be able to multiply complex numbers.
Examples courtesy of the July 12th, 2007 Seattle Times article: New Math Stirs Passions Among Bellevue Parents, Teachers at https://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003785645_mathwars12e.html
>Village now building IT infrastructure to support WIFI and downtown CCTV cameras
>
Dylan Hansen, the Village’s IT Network Administrator, publicly revealed during last evening’s Village Council Work Session that he is currently building out a technology platform that will support Village-wide WIFI and the use of CCTV cameras in the Central Business District. Hansen also reviewed several of his completed projects, including implementation of increased network security, improved spam filtering, and installation of on-site data servers.
Councilwoman Kim Ringler-Shagin praised Hansen for his efforts, but harshly chastised him for mentioning the possible use of CCTV cameras since she and other Council members have not yet discussed the merits of such an undertaking. Deputy Mayor Betty G. Wiest also thanked Hansen for his efforts in bringing the Village into the 21st Century from a technological standpoint.
Hansen has been employed by the Village since November of 2005. This was his first formal presentation in front of Council members.
>New street lights coming to Ridgewood Avenue
>Village Council members last night approved conceptual plans for the installation of approximately 50 new street lights on Ridgewood Avenue, between Maple Avenue and Broad Street. It is anticipated that installation will begin by summer’s end; the project could take until winter to complete.
New, uniform lamp posts (green colored) and globes (with opaque glass) will replace the variety of posts & globes already in place. Total project costs have been estimated at $100K, with work to be performed by an as yet to be named private contractor in conjunction with PSE&G crews. Councilwoman Kim Ringler-Shagin has requested that all removed lamp posts be saved for sentimental purposes (even though they contain lead paint).
>Village Council may consider implementing fees for selected services
>Village CFO Dorothy Stikna last night provided Village Council members with a list of possible opportunities to establish revenue streams and/or reduce expenses associated with certain Village provided services. Stikna’s list included:
1)Charging for emergency ambulance transportation
2)Establishing a “voluntary” charge for curbside removal of yard waste
3)Increasing waste water disposal fees for non-residential customers
4)Outsourcing lawn maintenance and landscape services at all VOR owned properties
5)Seeking opportunities reduce expenses at the VOR Central Garage
6)Making changes in the Solid Waste Removal process
7)Examining expenses associated with Fire Prevention services
>Stage II Water Restrictions Now In Effect
>Despite yesterday’s drenching rain storm, Village Manager James M. Ten Hoeve announced that Stage II water restrictions are now in effect for all communities serviced by Ridgewood Water.
Stage II conditions permit watering of lawns only on an odd/even basis; no sprinkler use is allowed on Mondays. However, use of hand held hoses will be permitted at any time.
Police departments in the four communities impacted (Ridgewood, Glen Rock, Midland Park, and Wyckoff) are being asked to enforce the Stage II watering policy through the issuance of summonses when necessary.
>Fireworks over the fireworks ,the fly has heard from …..
>….several sources that have voiced strong words to the fly claiming that the fireworks were rushed in the rain due to pressure form the police department which had gambled that the weather would hold up and was unprepared and unable to support a rain date.
>a Reader questions out door dining rules
>We love the out door dining in town but sometimes I feel like I am walking into someones dinner.
A reader asks how much of the sidewalk are restaurants allowed to take (from the public) for outdoor dining? Fratelli Trattoria on E. Ridgewood between Oak and Walnut has three rows of tables, leaving only about 24 inches of clearance to pass between their tables and a tree.
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>Ridgewood Pool Project – POOL CHATS
>The Common Ground Report
>Before the Math Professors letters get misrepresented as some kind of incendiary hate speech I wanted to republish the following letters so you can make up your own mind.
Subject: Re: Common Ground Report
Dear Ridgewood Neighbor,
A number of people have attempted to claim that the Common Grounds
document means that we regard programs like TERC’s Investigations as acceptable. Nothing could be further from the truth. It got to the point that the two mathematicians among the authors, Wilfried Schmid and I, were forced to provide a joint clarifying statement, and I append it below.
Just to be entirely clear, I can’t speak for Wilfried beyond what we say
jointly in our statement below, however my personal view is that TERC is
the second most mathematically illiterate and damaging program I have ever
seen. The first, MathLand, was one of the main reasons I got involved in
issues of mathematics education, but Investigations is so little better
than that horror that it is scarsely possible to discern the difference
between the results for the students subjected to these programs.
Here is the joint statement that I mentioned above:
The following is a joint statement from
Wilfried Schmid
Professor of Mathematics
Harvard University
and
R. James Milgram
Professor of Mathematics
Stanford University
It has been suggested that our views on K-12 mathematics education have undergone a recent change. Not at all — we have consistently maintained that mathematics education must strive for a proper balance between mathematical reasoning, problem solving, and computational facility.
Mathematical reasoning requires not only accurate definitions, but also examples of precise reasoning with these definitions. In our view, all of the NSF funded curricula fall short of giving students the essential tools to reason accurately.
Basic number skills continue to be vitally important. Beyond the everyday use of arithmetic, these skills provide a crucial foundation for the higher level mathematics essential for today’s and tomorrow’s workplace. The NSF funded curricula generally encourage overuse of calculators, do not give students sufficient support to achieve automatic recall of basic number facts, do not teach algorithms properly, and pay insufficient attention to the arithmetic of fractions. We regard the K-5 program “Investigations in Number, Data, and Space” (TERC) as especially deficient.
R. James Milgram
Wilfried Schmid
>Ridgewood lifts ban on signs of hospital critics
>SAVE THE WHALES!
From Saturday’s Record
Ridgewood lifts ban on signs of hospital critics
Saturday, July 7, 2007
By BOB GROVES
STAFF WRITER
Citing the right to free speech, Ridgewood officials have reversed a ban on lawn signs that say “Stop The Valley Hospital Expansion.”
Residents who had posted the yellow signs on their front lawns had received letters from the village ordering them to remove the signs. They were told the signs violated a village zoning ordinance.
But Anthony Merlino, Ridgewood’s construction official and zoning officer, said he changed his mind after he received “many sincere inquiries” and consulted with the village attorney.
“The village will not take any action to have the signs removed,” he wrote in a letter to residents.
A spokeswoman for the hospital declined to comment on Friday.
Many neighbors of The Valley Hospital have protested its proposed $750-million plans to add a one-story parking deck on Linwood Avenue, and to tear down two older buildings and replace them with three new structures up to 80 feet tall. The hospital campus is surrounded by homes and a middle school.
Residents who received notices to remove their signs were only further frustrated with the village. While Valley has presented its plans to town officials several times, opponents were told they must wait until September to argue their case against hospital expansion.
“I’m very upset about the letters,” said Patricia Ciliberti, who lives near the hospital. “They were attacking my free speech. I’m from the protest generation. I’m still upset.”
Despite being told to remove her sign, she never took it down.
Valley was “a small community hospital” when she bought her home in 1991, she said. “I don’t want them to get any bigger,” she said.
Jim Blinn, who lives directly across from the hospital, said he was relieved his sign could stay.
“I thought they had overstepped their bounds,” Blinn said. “I was taken aback. I thought it was intrusive.
“We left our sign up the entire time, to make other members of the village aware of this massive, mind-boggling project,” he said.
The “Stop Valley” signs are protected under non-commercial speech because they address a public issue, said Matthew Rogers, the village attorney. The same laws protect political campaign signs and placards promoting issues such as a local effort to remind residents to “Drive 25,” Rogers said.
“The courts, and a litany of case law on regulating signs in residential areas, have found that non-commercial speech is more protected than commercial speech, [such as] signs talking about a carwash going on,” Rogers said.
The “Stop Valley” signs can remain in place only if they meet certain criteria set by the village, Merlino said. They must not be larger than 18 inches by 24 inches in size, and they are limited to one sign per property, to prevent “visual clutter” in residential neighborhoods, he said.
The signs may not be placed on village property, or in public rights of way, including sidewalks or curb areas, and they must not obstruct the vision of pedestrians or drivers, Merlino said.
Otherwise, “we have to allow them if they’re on private property, and they’re for a cause, like ‘Save the Whales,’ ” he said.
>Indie Ridgewood Film ; Squrrel Hunting (comedy)
>
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