The fact is, Rob Sgobbo is 25 and has only been working as a professional journalist for 4 months and his first paid gig being at one of the toughest papers in the nation. Just a little over a year ago he was working tirelessly as a special education teacher in the South Bronx through Teach for America. If he was ‘lazy’ or ‘unethical’ as your blog post and some of your commenters suggest, he would have not chosen to be a teacher in a NY public school nor a journalist whose emphasis was education. I can not tell you why he did this. What I can tell you is how sad that someone whose history paints nothing but a picture of a talented young man with a passion for education reform has now been forever tarnished by a list of defaming search links all because of one mistake. Links that lead to sites like yours, who are adept at placing his name in urls and in their meta tags in order to capitalize on a young man’s mistake as their readers play judge and jury.As the other commenter noted above, we all make mistakes, just most of us do not have them splashed across the web.
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Great post, and good comments so far too. Following up on Harold’s comment… definitely could be tough to get all the evolutions/revolutions one is seeking *at the same time* you blow up the org charts. That is a lot to ask for all at once. My take — though I’m very open to being convinced otherwise — is that the org changes are a later phase, they rationally follow and will in some cases quite naturally “fall out of” successfully implenting learning 2.0, enterprise 2.0, updating the leadership framework. Many people won’t “get” the need for, or agree to, the org changes until *after* these big changes take place. And org changes is an area where *irrational* barriers can easily arise, so best to make the changes there obvious and natural. On the flip-side, it could be easier to implement these things with the ultimate org/dept. changes made first. But I just am thinking that is a lot of change to ask for all at once.Thoughts?
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I'm 41 years old and didn't get "officially" diagnosed with ADD until I was 25. We aaywls suspected it though. I've been on Ritalin ever since. It really has made a difference for me. Do I think there are people on meds who don't need it, yes. Do I think kids that need it don't get it - yes. Do I think there is the whole gammit of good and bad, good and abuse, need and not need, absolutely. But for those of us who it truly will help - it is life altering! My life would have been totally different had I been diagnosed younger and had medication. I definitely would not have done the ADD College crash & burn. I applaud you for doing what your child and you need. You are giving her the ability to succeed and embrace the positives of ADHD instead of just fighting its negatives and getting nothing but frustrated and it eating away at her self-esteem. Bravo SRM Mommy Bravo!!!!!
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