Cheri Yecke (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Cheri Yecke" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
1st place
1st place
low place
low place
2,440th place
1,431st place
low place
low place
1,201st place
770th place
405th place
256th place
low place
low place
4,642nd place
2,575th place
low place
low place
8,518th place
7,193rd place
6,713th place
3,670th place

americanexperiment.org

austringer.net

flascience.org

  • "Dr. Cheri Pierson Yecke, K-12 chancellor for Florida's Department of Education, has apparently hired a company called ReputationDefender to search the Internet for information about her and, on her behalf, challenge items she disputes. Florida Citizens for Science member Dr. Wesley Elsberry recently received an e-mail from the organization asking him to remove or modify a quote he has on his personal website about Yecke. The quote was taken from a Minnesota newspaper that reported Yecke specifically had included a go-ahead to schools in that state to incorporate 'intelligent design' into science benchmarks in 2003. Yecke was the Minnesota Commissioner of Education at that time." Yecke Information Challenged Florida Citizens for Science, June 25, 2007.

heraldtribune.com

highbeam.com

pharyngula.org

questia.com

  • Cain, Andrew (1998-03-31). "Va. schools get new chief". Washington Times. Retrieved 2007-07-13.

scienceblogs.com

sptimes.com

  • Solochek, Jeffrey S. (2007-02-28). "Sorry, Charlie: She's not applying". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved 2007-06-26.
  • Jeb Bush ally Yecke out as state K-12 chancellor Associated Press, December 20, 2007.
  • Matus, Ron (2007-06-26). "Candidate: Story on me is wrong. The education official disputes a newspaper and a blogger". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved 2007-06-26. Back in October 2003, the Princeton Union Eagle wrote that Cheri Yecke, then Minnesota's education commissioner, explained in "advance publicity" for a public hearing that "schools could include the concept of 'intelligent design' in teaching how the world came to be." Big news? Apparently not. The line was buried in the 22nd paragraph. But four years later, Yecke is Florida's K-12 chancellor and a leading candidate to be its next education commissioner. And now she says the newspaper got it wrong. Through an Internet company called reputationdefender, Yecke recently asked a scientist who riffed on the statement to either remove his blog post or modify it.

theledger.com

web.archive.org