Friday, October 17, 2008

How to Hustle and Win: A Survival Guide for the Ghetto



Speakin’ of makin’ moves, I also push the Hustle and Win book here in Northern California – SF and mostly Oakland to be exact (and even got folks in Stockon pushin’ it). Just to let y’all know, it’s available at Marcus Books in SF and Oakland as well as Verse in Downtown Oakland. Of course, it’s available from me. Just to let folks know who support the book, the brother Supreme is dropping a documentary with this Hustle and Win book – I’m definitely contributing my two cents because I’ve seen the impact it has with the young people I work with on the daily.

Here’s what Supreme’s gotta say:

Want to be in a documentary?
Get featured in the upcoming How to Hustle and Win DVD!

It's gonna be big. The first 3,000 copies of the book sold in less than 3 months. That's WITHOUT Borders and Barnes and Noble, but they'll be on board soon as well. Not to mention that How to Hustle and Win is going international. We'll be printing overseas and shipping to Europe, Canada, and possibly Africa! Envision the big picture.

We've already got DVD distributors waiting to get their hands on the DVD and mixtape. The mixtape CD for the book is nearly done, so its a bit late to submit music for THAT project (thanks to all who did), BUT we've got lots of open space on the upcoming documentary.

The How to Hustle and Win DVD will present the content of the book visually, luring in the supporters who would've never otherwise picked up a book to read. But the DVD is gonna be a mind-blowin experience in and of itself.

Many of the segments will be featured on local cable stations (if you have the connects in YOUR area, let us know), while others may be too much for TV. In between the segments, we'll have brief reader testimonials. If you want your feedback featured on the DVD, here's all you have to do:
1.) Record a short clip of you talking about the book. Doesn't matter where. Doesn't matter how you say it. Anything goes.
2.) Send us a Myspace message, asking for our email address.
3.) Either email it to us, or if the file is too large, use sendspace to send it to us.

If we like it, we'll edit it and include in the final product. If not, we may still feature it on the website (MAJOR update coming soon) or YouTube.

Aspiring musicians, if you've got a song based on the content of the book (like my profile song for example), send it our way as well. We may be able to use it in the DVD's soundtrack. We'll give full credit and hopefully increase your exposure.

Finally, for all you hustlers out there without a hustle. How to Hustle and Win remains a lucrative source of income. We wholesale to ANYONE. You won't have a hard time pushing this product. How to Hustle and Win is literary crack. It sells itself.

Peace
Supreme Understanding,
CEO, Supreme Design, LLC.
For more information, please check out: www.HustleAndWin.com or myspace.com/hustlewin

Thursday, October 16, 2008

Ise Lyfe

Yo, the Yamster has been makin’ moves, right now I’m workin’ as Outreach Coordinator with spoken word emcee theatre – all around artist, period, Ise Lyfe. So if you’re interested in booking him, let me know and I can shoot you more information to book him at your local college, university or organization.

Email me at sincerejustice at gmail dot com for more information.





myspace.com/iselyfe
iselyfenation.com

I'm on a Date again and again and again...




The only reason I drop into Whole Foods is to grab some dates – it doesn’t matter whether they’re deglet noor or medjool, I’ll rock ‘em either way. The other day, Garth at Whole Foods hooked me up gave me a “sample” – a small box of dates. I need a date tree –hahah just like my Pops needs a banana tree. Oh yeah, I love rockin’ the dates with seeds, spittin’ em out like wack emcees.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Watts Up with Racism among the Chinese community?


Watts Up with Racism among the Chinese community?


After finishing Dr. John Henrik Clarke’s book on Christopher Columbus and the Afrikan Holocaust, I’ve been hookin’ it up with 1421: The Year China Discovered America by Gavin Menzies. As y’know my field of interests lie in not the black or white, but the variation of grey CONNECTIONS/RELATIONSHIPS that exist between cultures. So hold up….

Purple Yamster Storytime Exclusive: As a kid, I would often watch public television specifically Channel 28 KCET; there was a special on the Watts Towers. Damn, the Towers intrigued me, tall metal structures that reach the sky, so I told me Pops that I wanted to visit the Towers. He told me, “Nah, we can’t go there, we’ll get robbed [by black people].” In the Chinese language, there is a term used for all non-Chinese peoples, but specifically for black people, it’s called “black ghost. ” So growing up, I had this and still see this type of racism play out between my physical family and relatives.

So back to connections and relationships, I was building with a so called Afrikan sister the other day and she told me at her Chinese Holistic Medicine institute, other Afrikan sisters have been having issues from the Chinese staff saying that they are giving them a hard time being intimidating and what not. Anyways, long story short, being that I’m solution oriented, I can’t wait to check this book out: Race and Racism in the Chinas: Chinese Racial Attitudes toward Africans and African-Americans by M. Dujon Johnson, so I can figure what's up, know what's the root of these conflicts.


http://science.jrank.org/pages/10955/Race-Racism-in-Asia-Race-Racism-in-China.html

Friday, October 10, 2008

Conferences and Asian Political Prisoners



So during the past weeks, I’ve been going to conferences left and right: Critical Resistance 10: Strategizing to Abolish the Prison Industrial Complex (for me, it was just learning more about this wicked system), ESPINOS (Escuelas Si! Pintas No! – similar work, but specifically for so called at risk youth) and Words Beats Life Conference, which was an array of Hip Hop non-profits, youth agencies, etc. that came together to collaborate via Hip Hop and social change.

First of all, if you don’t know about the Watts Prophets, you need check for this brother, who did the keynote, Amde Hamilton of the Watts Prophets at www.wattsprophets.com.

Secondly, one of the workshops I attended at CR10 was on Asian Political Prisoners. Around the time I picked up Live from Death Row by Mumia Abu Jamal was the same time I picked up Prison Writings: My Life is a Sun Dance by Leonard Peltier – I’ve always wondered about Asian and Pacific Islander Political Prisoners if they existed and if so, it what capacity. Will we be on the next Hip Hop song like Mumia is? (See KRS ONE) Often, voices from Asian Political Prisoners like Eddy Zheng, who was tried as an adult for committing a home invasion robbery and kidnapping are the voices I do not hear about period.

http://www.eddyzheng.com/
http://eddyzheng.blogspot.com/

So check this out Eddy and the Asian Prisoner Support Committee put together this book: Other: an Asian & Pacific Islander Prisoners’ Anthology – it’s well written, organized and visually stunning. Contributions go to support prisoners’.

http://www.myspace.com/asianprisoners

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

High Powered Tonics for the Purple YamsterFamily

So ever since, I read up on my brother C'BS article on the Original Man's tonics, I've been hittin' 'em every a day. (See here: http://originalthoughtmag.com/mag/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=178&Itemid=178)

Aside from my exercise routine daily, I make sure I take a hit of Ginseng, Shou Wu Chih and Baji Chiew. The only thing I do different is I rock the Ginseng in a powder form with Goji Berries. (At your local Chinese emporium, you can actually ask them to grind the ginseng up for you) The science behind that is I don't waste any part of the ginseng because 1) ginseng is expensive and 2) the Purple Yamster is plain resourceful, using every square inch.

Yo, the Purple Yamster recommends you rock all three tonics because the energy level is just off the charts. There's something about the chemistry with those three together. Also, I'm going to drop some science on this other tonic within the week, so be on the look out.

My recommendation is to hit your local Chinatown for the tonics, ginseng and goji berries. Usually, in California, costs for the 'Chih are around $2-3/a bottle and the 'Chiew runs about $6 for a small bottle and $12-14/a large bottle. Definitely go support your Original People in a Chinatown near you. On the real, Chinatown is the place where I get most of my grocery shopping needs done because I can't afford Whole Foods and plus, I get to interact with my Original Family.

For more information check out:

http://altmedicine.about.com/od/completeazindex/a/goji.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shou_Wu_Chih

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfberry

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Thinking about Fast Food?

Think again: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4IGtDPG4UfI

Friday, September 19, 2008

Google via text message AND more..

Yesterday, my man Khalil made Knowledge Born that you can Google via text message.
Google text definitely gets the Purple Yamster seal of approval for usefulness.

Try it out.

Text a search inquiry to 46645 and see what happens.

Check this out as well:

Monday, September 15, 2008

can ya ear me?


Peace,

So the Purple Yamster had to go to the otologist this past friday because the left ear was just stank and shit, i hardly could hear - all clogged up, that's what exactly it was. talking to the otologist, he asked me if i used q tips and i told him yes. he made knowledge born that the same manufacturer of q tips also makes liquid for ear infections. not that you can't use cotton swabs - you can use them - just for the outer portion of the ear and just in case y'all didn't know the ear naturally cleans itself - say what?! yeah, peep this joint: FindArticles - Now ear this
Vegetarian Times, Sept, 1998, by Martha Schindler

during my brief appointment with the doc, he basically vacuumed my ear and had a tool like this: http://flickr.com/photos/67964595@N00/103582814/ (arkworld also breaks down her experience with the tool in her asian household) scraping all the gold nuggets stuck inside my ear mine. i was mad disappointed because i felt like i could have had that same treatment at home minus the vaccum and the $100 payment. anyways, after my visit, my ole dad was speaking about how in vietnam (yes, there is a chinese presence in vietnam) at the barbers shop, the barbers would, for an extra fee would clean out ya ears.

when i got back to the rest, i had to investigate; i made some observations and came to the conclusion that even the manufacturer of cotton swabs ain't really tootin' its horn for ear waxage control, but for the many the other uses ...everything but ears...see for yourself below:








on a more positive note, the yamster needs to collab with these folks: http://purpleyamcafe.com/ - which came first the purple yamster or the purple yam cafe? the world will never know, it's like the amount of licks it takes to get to the center of the tootsie pop. :)

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Purple Yamster Recipe # 1: Three Phase Process with Eggplants, Tomatoes, and Grains


Purple Yamster Recipe # 1

Part of my whole get down as a Purple Yamster means I’m mad thrifty and creative with what I got – I utilized the resources I have to the best of my ability into bringing a new world of flavors into existence. Seeing that there was an eggplant more wrinkly than my grandma laying around the house, I decided to rock Phase One: an eggplant dish AND Phase Two: a tomatoey dish adding that with some brown rice on top of a tortilla to create Phase Three: Taste Time.

What You Need:

Minced Garlic

Peanut Oil

Salt

Pepper

Olive Oil

Curry Powder

1 Eggplant

2 Red/ Orange Bell Peppers

Brown Rice

Tortilla

2 Tomatoes

A Squirt of Sriracha Hot Sauce (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sriracha)

Spoonful Peanut Butter

Basil

Phase One: Simple Eggplant with Bell Peppers

Ingredients

1 Eggplant

Minced Garlic

Peanut Oil

Salt

Pepper

Olive Oil

Curry Powder

Soy Sauce

Red/ Orange Bell Peppers

1. Wash and chop up eggplant and bell peppers. Throw some rice in the rice cooker.

2. Place in bowl – Marinate with olive oil, soy sauce, salt and pepper. Make sure you fold the eggplants around making sure they cover every square inch. Soak for 15 minutes or so. (Purple Yamster Insight: The reasoning behind that eggplants take a minute to soak up flavors and plus, I ain’t want to dry ass eggplants)

3. Warm up the pan, add peanut oil and minced garlic for brief second – let it brown a bit.

4. Add eggplant and grab a top and place it on top of the pan to speed the cooking process and soften up the eggplant. Let sit on low flame for 15 minutes or until you’ve reached the tenderness you desired.

5. Once you’re almost satisfied with eggplant’s tenderness, add bell peppers, let them sit for a few more minutes. (PY Insight: I purposely leave the

6. Turn off stove and let it sit to cook. Also, add curry on top and fold in. (PY Insight: Part of the reason, I fold it in is because I understand that curry burns very easily)

7. Clean that dirty pan off and get ready for Phase Two of this dish.

Phase Two: Tomato Mild Peanut Sauce

Ingredients

Tomatoes

Peanut Oil

Minced Garlic

Sriracha Hot Sauce (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sriracha)

Peanut Butter

Basil

  1. Chop up tomatoes, garlic.
  2. Warm up pan, pour a tiny bit of peanut oil and garlic, let it simmer and brown the garlic just a bit.
  3. Place tomatoes in the pan and let it make that shhhhh sound on a low flame.
  4. Add Sriracha Sauce and stir it up like Bob Marley a bit mixing up the tomotoes with the Sriracha Sauce. (PY Insight: I know the sauce has got some preservatives, y’know the way the Purple Yamster gets down is to use and utilize (use it well) what I got)
  5. Let it simmer for a bit more.
  6. Add peanut butter and fold it in. (PY Insight: I usually utilize miso and nutritional yeast, but I want to remix things up and throw in the peanut butter)
  7. Pour into bowl and add finely chopped basil into the tomatoey heaven.

Phase Three: Serving Instructions

  1. Grab a bowl add phase one and two as well as brown rice together.
  2. Add more or less of the Phase Two depending on the consistency you desire. Personally, the consistency of a pasty like texture – not too saucy is the way I serve it.
  3. Heat them tortillas of choice (on a pan, over a flame, etc. – just heat ‘em)
  4. Add Phase One + Phase Two to make Phase Three onto the tortilla.
  5. Enjoy AND Get your munch on.

Let me know if y’all got some suggestions for names or better ingredients/cooking methods for the recipe as I’m always open to ideas. Shoutouts to my roommate, G, who works at People's Grocery for hookin’ it up with the produce for making this dish possible. If you don’t know about PG, check them out here: http://www.peoplesgrocery.org/

Thursday, September 4, 2008

More Than Just Fiyawata

More than Just Fiyawata

Written by Brother Sincere Justice 

“We’re entrepreneurs because we work closer and closer to having our own industries to flourish and we like to teach that.” – Ambessa 

Fiyawata is a unique blend of Hip Hop, residing in Oakland, California consists of Ambessa the Articulate and Zakiya Harris. Fiyawata, coined by Ambessa means a “balance of extremes” whose main message behind their music is “spiritual elevation and justice in every sense of the word.” Ambessa, originally from Brooklyn, New York and Zakiya, originally from East Oakland, met each other in the East Coast of the United States, only to move back to Oakland, CA in 2000. Recently, they released a mixtape entitled, “This is a Journey Into Sound, Vol.1,” which featured the likes of Kirby Dominant and DJ True Justice. In August 2008, they will be droppin’ a full length album named, “This is a Journey Into Sound.” To call them Hip Hop would be limit them, yet Hip Hop is the foundation in which they create their music in, although, their sound is clearly influenced by soul, rock, dub, ambient and other eclectic influences. 

Fiyawata is a labor of love in every sense of the word. They’ve been on the grind for 8 years, going on 9 years now and part of their secret of their recipe is that they’ve got love for the music like no other. Zakiya explains, “At the end of the day, it really is the love for the music that keeps us together” and Ambessa further explains that his love for the music is the simply fuel of “a dope beat and satisfaction.” It sounds simple, huh, but the plot thickens. Actually, Zakiya was attending law school and dropped to pursue her dreams as a musician. Zakiya says this all the time making it known plainly that “I didn’t choose music, music chose me” as she had carried various 9-5s, yet always found herself gravitating back towards music. In fact, the love really does keep their music together, as Ambessa and Zakiya are raising the young queen, Alissade together. 

Like many musicians in the Bay Area community, Ambessa and Zakiya found themselves working within various arts education programs in the non profit world, even explaining how Oakland is home to an overabundance of Hip Hop Non Profit Organizations. Zakiya critically explains how many of these same non profit agencies like many youth-oriented record labels are there to help youth make music and entrepreneurs, yet actually perpetuate the same kind of illusions of making it in the music industry by “keep[ing] the game twisted for young folks.” Many of these labels hold their hands by taking and “hooking them up” with distribution, guest appearances by well known artists, rather than having the youth really learn the process of being successful in the music industry. As Zakiya realistically states that, “no one will do it for you”  as an independent artist and youth have to hustle for success.     

In the Summer of 2006, Zakiya helped organize Grind and Glory, which was a basically a Bay Area American Idol emcee competition that garnered much success and recognition. Tired of working with non profit organizations and recognizing that they were the talent behind the many non profit organizations they worked for in addition to having the entrepreneurial passion necessary to try something different, they decided they had to take a different path. Stepping it up further, Ambessa and Zakiya wrote their first grant to the city of San Francisco and received $100,000 under Destined Nation Media, their events marketing and record label agency to create Grind For the Green, a four part eco music festival for youth and produced by Bay Area youth. Basically, G4G is a youth oriented music festival that works to hone and further develop the skills of youth via networking opportunities, musical performance, beat production, entrepreneurial skills and possibly even be  selected to get their chance to perform in the 1st Bay Area Solar Powered Music Concert alongside a nationally known musical artist.  Recently, at San Francisco State University, during their music conference segment of G4G, they featured Hip Hop emcee, Talib Kweli as their keynote speaker.
 
When Original Thought Magazine, asked Fiyawata about their definition and vision of community, Ambessa replied “self sustainability.” Ambessa and Zakiya are living examples of success raised in the hood, yet rose above their conditions and circumstances through countless hours of hard work and dedication. As Zakiya expresses the frustration of having your music, business and personal life collide, sometimes, “it’s so much about business and there is not enough [time] for intimacy” for themselves and their young daughter, 2 year old Alissade. Their daughter represents the a microcosm of the communities they work with as clearly explain, “it’s not about so much what you say, but your actions as all eyes are focusd on you.” Zakiya further remarks that “I can’t teach royalty, if I’m not royalty,” which is important to raising her daughter and raising their community up. In their vision of the community, Ambessa remarked how “ultimately what we fight for and struggle for in these neighborhoods is self governance because this is the Hood, this is where resources don’t come, because these are the redline districts where governments don’t send money to; this is the talent, the labor force – the critical mass that makes it around the world, [making] industries successful.” The movement has only begun. In the coming years, Ambessa and Zakiya hope to take their movement globally by reaching out to “humanitarian struggles” all over the world, especially Africa. Clearly, there is no doubt that Destined Nation Media, Fiyawata, and Grind for the Green are all about taking care of their family, their community and ultimately the world.  

For more information on Fiyawata, Grind for the Green they can be reached at 
destinednationmedia@gmail.com  or myspace.com/fiyawatacrew.

 grindandglorythemovie.com
grindforthegreen.com
fiyawataonline.com

Originally from OriginalThoughtMag.com July 2008 - register NOW to peep more articles like this! 

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Acrylamide and the 10 Worst Foods

Peace,

Growing up in a Chinese household, my Old Earth (Mom) would always tell me to avoid fried food, but of course, I’d always ignore her and eat it anyways because salt, sugar, fat translated to yummy AND also would mean I’d have to drink some type of herbal tea to balance on the “fire” element within my body. Within the science of Chinese medicine/health, there is five elements – wood, fire, earth, metal, and water. In fact, the five elements are a good part of Chinese culture, even my Chinese name had to be drawn up, thought about and see if it fit the balance of the five elements. Sounds mathematical? That’s because it is.

Here’s an excerpt taken from The Taoist Secrets of Long Life and Good Health: A Complete Programme to Rejuvenate Mind, Body and Spirit By Charles Chan

Fried Food

In Spring 2002, Swedish Scientists discovered acrylamide, a carcinogenic substance, which made headlines. Several other European countries also corroborated Sweden’s discovery. Acrylamide forms from raw ingredients during traditional cooking methods such as frying or baking, the longer the cooking at high temperatures, the more acrylamide will be formed. Acrylamide causes cancer in test animals, which strongly suggests that acrylamide can also cause cancer in humans. Eating fried food is a double jeopardy to your health. It is wise to avoid eating high-fat food anyways and now you have got yet another compelling reason to pass on the fatty potato chips and other ‘goodies’.

More info on Acrylamide here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylamide

Oh yeah, check out this White Girl talking about the 10 Wrong, I mean WORST Foods to eat:

(Thanks, Freedom.)

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

"His language was Mathematics"

Peace,

Part of the reason why I decided to officially launch this blog this month is because in the beginning of August, Nigeria and Ghana hold an annual yam festival as yams are a common food amongst African countries. Although, it ain't early in the month, Purple Yamster was still born, a few weeks late cause PY was chillin' in the womb. All that to say, everything has a type of logic or mathematics behind it, whether you know it or not. Yesterday, I had peeped this article on mathematics - there's a stunning visual (below) explaining behind everyday objects in our city environments.

Algebra - it's everywhere

Monday, August 25, 2008

Algebra.

The very word can twist the stomachs of otherwise well-adjusted adults, dredging up memories of nonsensical X's and Y's and a lifelong loathing of math.

For many, the math course was the educational equivalent of castor oil, forced down the throats of teenagers who questioned when they would ever encounter that train leaving Boston at 60 mph.

In July, the state Board of Education decided every eighth-grader must have a healthy dose of algebra - a decision critics attacked as failing to recognize the lack of qualified math teachers and the high failure rate for the middle school students already taking it.

Supporters, however, argued algebra improves critical thinking, is the gateway to college and puts all kids, regardless of income or ethnicity, on the path to a good career.

Lost in the debate was, well, algebra.

"I doubt if the politicians promoting this have any idea what they're promoting," said Keith Devlin, Stanford University researcher and mathematics professor, as well as the "Math Guy" on National Public Radio. "Few people know what algebra is."

Algebra, says Devlin, is a language, a very precise language written in symbols, and it's everywhere: in nearly all electronic devices, every statistic and each Internet search engine - and, indeed, in every train leaving Boston.

"You can store information using it. You can communicate information using it," Devlin said. "Google has made billions capitalizing on algebra."

Yet our schools don't always do a very good job teaching it, Devlin said. Instead of showing students the possibilities and beauty algebra offers, they ultimately steer frustrated and bored students away from math and the 21st century careers that use it - the opposite of the intended result.

'We're turning kids off'

"Most of us who become mathematicians do so not because of our education but in spite of it," Devlin said. "We're turning kids off a subject that is useful and incredibly interesting and beautiful if taught correctly."

Too often, algebra is taught as a set of rules and procedures - the equivalent of teaching a foreign language through vocabulary lists and repetitive conjugation of verbs, the students never understanding they could use the information to order a meal in Madrid or make a friend in China.

In short, the teacher matters. A lot. Just ask Alameda artist Alana Dill.

"I first took algebra in eighth grade from a bilious, creepy teacher who called all the girls 'hon' and all the boys 'son,' " said Dill, 46, in an e-mail. "He talked like Foghorn Leghorn. I learned nothing."

Devlin would like to see "mathematicians in residence" - in the tradition of artists in residence - at middle schools and high schools. They could visit schools, he suggested, and show students the cool side of math - like how an iPod uses algebra to play music.

"At any age, we will take the drudgery as long as we see a reason to do it," Devlin said.

Algebra, by the dictionary's definition, is essentially abstract arithmetic, letters and symbols representing relationships between groups, sets, matrices or fields. It's a way to find a piece to a puzzle using the pieces you already have in place.

It comes in very handy for engineers, financial analysts and sociologists, not to mention World of Warcraft video game players, some of whom use algebraic formulas to decide which weapon is more effective under certain circumstances - perhaps another hook to lure unsuspecting teens into seeing the useful side of algebra.

"It takes the arithmetic you've learned and lets you answer questions, not just 5 + 4 = what. It lets you (change the unknown) to 5 + what = 20," said Brett Wingeier, a biomedical engineer working on brain implants to treat epilepsy.

While that example is simple enough, algebra requires a mental leap from the solid ground of arithmetic into a shifting world of shapes and symbols.

Among the first folks to use algebraic ideas were the Babylonians, who created math puzzles - a 1600 B.C. sudoku, if you will.

Those ancient civilizations did algebra because it was fun.

Former UC Santa Cruz mathematician Paul Lockhart believes today's schools have killed the fun part.

"In fact, if I had to design a mechanism for the express purpose of destroying a child's natural curiosity and love of pattern-making, I couldn't possibly do as good a job as is currently being done," he wrote in a 2002 essay that traveled the digital world. "I simply wouldn't have the imagination to come up with the kind of senseless, soul-crushing ideas that constitute contemporary mathematics education."

In schools, math is something students are supposed to be afraid of, something that's supposed to be hard, Lockhart said in a telephone interview from the East Coast, where he now teaches at a private school in Brooklyn.

From art to artillery

Algebra is actually an art, a beautiful leap of the imagination that schools have turned into a field artillery manual, the mathematician said.

Lockhart favors self-discovery in math, letting students explore the hows and the whys themselves, unraveling problems like a fun puzzle rather than learning and solving equations for no apparent reason.

But his vision doesn't always translate well to the high-stakes realm of standardized testing, which quite literally requires students to solve for X on the eighth-grade exam. That can create a conundrum for time-strapped teachers who must teach the straightforward math skills needed for the state's multiple-choice test.

"I believe everybody can learn algebra," said San Francisco schools Superintendent Carlos Garcia. "I'm just not sure everyone can teach algebra so that the kids understand it and make it fun."

Garcia has some experience with this. While he personally didn't like algebra as a kid, he aggressively enrolled eighth-graders in algebra when he was the superintendent in Clark County, Nevada. He acknowledges that many students failed it, but they were failing basic math anyway.

A local decision

But he disagreed with California's mandate, saying it should be a local decision based on resources, including the number of qualified teachers.

The Santa Cruz-based Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning slapped a strongly worded warning label on the state's new algebra requirement, saying the state doesn't have nearly enough qualified teachers to do the job.

"Scant attention has been paid to this critical issue, and California's approach to math instruction still doesn't add up," according to the center's July report on the issue.

About a third of those teaching Algebra I in state middle schools do not have a credential in math, the center found.

That will get worse with the new requirement, said state Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell.

"My fear is it's going to turn kids off and contribute to the dropout rate," warned O'Connell, who recently estimated that it will cost $3.1 billion to train and recruit teachers while boosting student proficiency in pre-algebra and arithmetic before the requirement goes into effect in 2011.

Many teachers say the middle-schoolers won't be ready, either. Understanding algebra requires not only a solid foundation of arithmetic (fractions, division and decimals, for example), but also the maturity to focus on abstract concepts.

"Our plea is, 'Algebra when ready,' " said Hank Kepner president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. "We would not want to put an age level on it."

Recently retired high school algebra teacher David Goldman called the state board's decision "farcical."

"Some kids are not ready for algebra in the eighth grade," said Goldman, who taught at Redwood High School in Larkspur. "We've seen over the years if you try to accelerate that, it just doesn't work. ... At Redwood we saw a lot of kids that came in and then had to repeat it again in the ninth grade."

Teach it over two years

He supports possibly starting algebra in eighth grade, but slowing it down to a two-year course for some.

Last year, 42 percent of the 250,000 eighth-graders - about half the class - who took algebra scored as proficient or above on the state test.

Business leader Jim Lanich, who applauds the state board's decision, said schools should get students up to speed in the academic standards at each grade level.

Algebra is eighth-grade math, said Lanich, president of California Business for Education Excellence. It's the job of teachers and state schools to get them there - without spending $3.1 billion on top of the $50 billion the state already spends on its schools.

"The kids are leaving fourth grade now that will be required systemwide to take the eighth-grade Algebra 1 test," he said. "We have three years to get them to grade level."

Laptop computer. The computer is just an implementation in electrical circuits of a special form of algebra (called Boolean algebra) invented in the 19th century. Ordinary algebra is used to design and manufacture computers, and is at the heart of how to program them.

Cell phone. A cell phone is a particular kind of computer. An important feature of cell phones is that your phone receives all the signals sent to every cell phone in the region, but only responds to signals sent to your phone. This is achieved by using signal coding systems built on algebra.

Parking cop. Today's parking enforcement officers may carry equipment connecting them directly to a central vehicle database that registers your parking fine before you get back to the car and see the ticket on the windshield. Without algebra, such a system could not exist.

Hybrid car. Modern cars often come equipped with GPS, a highly sophisticated system that is designed using enormous amounts of mathematics that builds on algebra.

Delivery truck. Large retail chains use mathematical methods to determine the routing and scheduling of their delivery trucks; algebra is fundamental to those methods.

Stoplight. These days, stoplights are centrally controlled by computers, so there is even algebra involved in turning the light from red to green.

IPod. This is a math device in your hand. The iPod stores music using sophisticated mathematics built on algebra. And the iPod shuffle mechanism uses regular school algebra to order your songs randomly.

"Stand firm in your refusal to remain conscious during algebra. In real life, I assure you, there is no such thing as algebra." Fran Lebowitz

"Algebra ... the intensive study of the last three letters of the alphabet."

Source unknown

"The fact is that there is nothing as dreamy and poetic, nothing as radical, subversive and psychedelic, as mathematics." Paul Lockhart, mathematician

"I don't know anybody who uses algebra. But I'm not hanging out with architects and engineers." Carlos Garcia, San Francisco Unified School District superintendent

"Algebra was my three best years of high school." State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell, joking

"Algebra is the gateway to critical thinking, pivotal for success in science, engineering and technology." Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger in a July letter to state school board President Theodore Mitchell

In school "I was more interested in solving the mystery of the Maidenform bra than I was in alge-bra, but the teachers got through to me." Chandler White, 62, insurance claims adjuster, San Francisco

"Algebra definitely set me on a path to study the humanities . ... Literature and philosophy hold many complex concepts that lead to better critical thinking." John Koetzner, 53, community college instructor, Healdsburg

"At the risk of perpetuating the stereotype of librarians ... I'd be glad to state, on the record, that algebra is uniquely useless in life, and that the only good number is a call number." Nadine Walas, 39, librarian, Pacific Heights

"I am 77 years old, a retired priest of the Episcopal Church. I nearly died trying to do algebra in 1946."

Robert Warren Cromey, San Francisco

"What is always to be hoped is that the instructor will reach the kids' natural curiosity. Math is actually fun, and it is easy."

Camden McConnell, 66, senior structural engineer, Oakland

Solve for X

Here are some sample questions from the state's Algebra I standardized test:

1 Two airplanes left the same airport traveling in opposite directions. If one airplane averages 400 miles per hour and the other airplane averages 250 miles per hour, in how many hours will the distance between the two planes be 1,625 miles?

A. 2.5

B. 4

C. 5

D. 10.8

2 What is the solution for this equation?

|2x-3| = 5

A. x = -4 or x = 4

B. x = -4 or x = 3

C. x = -1 or x = 4

D. x = -1 or x = 3

3 What are the solutions for the quadratic equation x² + 6x = 16?

A. -2, -8

B. -2, 8

C. 2, -8

D. 2,8

4 Which quadratic function, when graphed, has x-intercepts of 4 and -3?

A. y=(x-3)(x+4)

B. y=(x+3)(2x-8)

C. y=(3x-1)(4x+1)

D. y=(3x+1)(8x-2)

Answers: 1-A; 2-C; 3-C; 4-B

Source: California Department of Education

Once upon a time ... For more than 4,000 years, people have been using algebra to understand time and the heavens, and to build civilizations. Ever-more-complex technology is the result.

ca. 2000 B.C.

Ancient Babylonians first use algebra in building and astronomy. They construct an accurate calendar and are able to predict eclipses of the sun and moon. They discover what later becomes known as the Pythagorean theorem, and apparently form a knotted rope into a 3,4,5 right triangle to measure out right angles when constructing buildings.

800 B.C.-A.D. 200

The Greeks, Indians and Chinese all independently develop elementary algebra, apparently viewing it more as an intellectual pursuit than something with practical application. Like the Babylonians, however, they do use it in building and astronomy.

A.D. 200-700

The Indians develop the subject further, along with the decimal number system we use today.

1202

Leonardo of Pisa writes a book, "Liber abaci," describing how the algebraic methods developed in India can be used in business, commerce and trade, for buying and selling, distributing profits, exchanging currencies and the like.

ca. 1600

Galileo and others show how to use algebra to understand the world we live in. This is the birth of modern science, and soon thereafter of technology.

It all starts with the basics

From then on, there is a steadily increasing use of algebra - or, more precisely, the sophisticated systems that build on it (calculus, scheduling, inventory control, network theory) to design technologies and create greater efficiencies in business and commerce.

For almost all the applications from the 17th century onward, the mathematics used is more advanced than algebra. But the work builds directly on the algebra learned in school - and, to an outsider, even looks much the same as school algebra, with x's and y's, equations and the like.

Just as the child who learns to pick out "Three Blind Mice" on a piano with one finger can build on that to become a great pianist, so too a child who learns algebra can go on and master more complicated, algebra-based math to do all kinds of cool things. In both cases, it's just a matter of learning how to do more complicated versions of the same thing.

Everyone has to start as a beginner. School algebra is the "Three Blind Mice" of modern science and technology and of many business techniques.

In real life Experts in science, computers, sports - even marijuana - use algebra in everyday work

Brett Wingeier, San Francisco, 34

Biomedical engineer working on brain implants for epilepsy

Uses algebra and geometry to calculate the size of the hole to put in a skull to accommodate an electrode.

Patrick Paulitz, Orangevale, 43

Computer programmer

Converts blocks to megabytes, calculates percent increase or decrease in disk space usage.

Chris Conrad, El Cerrito, 55

Court-qualified cannabis expert

Calculates area, mass, bulk, weights, yields and dosages and compares against police findings.

Marcia Benjamin, San Leandro, 51

Swim coach

Calculates a swimmer's lap pace to swim, for example, a 200-meter freestyle race in 2:28.

Jim Hahn, San Jose, 47

Corporate trainer, quilter

Resizes quilt patterns.

E-mail Jill Tucker at jtucker@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/08/25/MNJU126FNT.DTL





Sunday, August 24, 2008

the Birth of the Purple Yamster


Origin

It all started one day, Moms brought home these grayish, yellowish, dry and yes, ugly yams. Like an alchemist, she would turn hideous into beauty steaming them to delightful perfection. After peeling its soft and somber skin, I sunk my teeth into purple yam heaven. Ever since, Purple Yams has been one of my favorite vegetables. In fact, Purple Yams have now taken on a greater significance – the birth of the Purple Yamster representing the dynamic, creative, original, intriguing, positive, healthy, artistic, sustainable, proactive as well as the ever changing, evolving, and growing definition of “I Yam what I Yam.”

What is a Purple Yamster?

purple yamster n. - 1) one who practices and advocates eating closer to the origin

2) one who drops original poetics via voice, music, brush, pen or other tool of a cultural worker

3) one who bridges the red and blue together to form a unit anew; the mad synthesizer scientist

4) an original author on innovative thinker and doer who are pushing the limits of their craft

5) anything that garners the response of “that’s Purple Yamster fresh”

Vision

  • To document the journey of being vegetarian/raw food as well as share experiences of nostalgia as well as the brand new
  • Utilize blog to generate articles related to that of Original People in particular in the Chinese Diaspora as well as Original People worldwide (e.g. Chinese psychology, Chinese presence in Mexico, etc.)
  • Showcase interviews of extraordinary and innovative cultural workers
  • Give shine to the interesting and intriguing in the every day life of Purple Yamsters local and worldwide – say word!