domingo, 15 de mayo de 2011

education


Education News
Eze Schupfer at Junior Kumon in Battery Park City.
James Estrin/The New York Times
Eze Schupfer at Junior Kumon in Battery Park City.
Enrichment programs like Kumon are gaining from, and generating, parental anxiety about what kind of preparation children need — and whether parents themselves have what it takes to provide it.
Burlyce Sherrell Logan, 73, at the University of North Texas. She will graduate Saturday.

A College Degree, 55 Years and an Era in the Making

In 1956, Burlyce Sherrell Logan was one of the first black students at the University of North Texas. She dropped out amid the turmoil of the civil rights era on campus, but returned decades later.

Student Is Allowed to Attend Prom in Connecticut

A Connecticut headmaster has reversed course, giving the green light to James Tate, who was suspended for breaking school rules by the manner in which he asked a fellow student to be his date.

Teacher Reviews Will Put More Focus on State Tests

State education officials in New York plan to enact new evaluation regulations that permit up to 40 percent of the annual reviews to be based on students’ scores on standardized exams.
Erin Olson, an English teacher in Sioux Rapids, Iowa, uses Twitter-like technology to enhance classroom discussion.

Speaking Up in Class, Silently, Using Social Media

A small but growing cadre of educators is trying to exploit Twitter-like technology to enhance classroom discussion.

Improving the Science of Teaching Science

A study explores improving classroom instruction, using research-backed methods for testing students’ understanding as well as how science is taught.

Secret Archive of Ulster Troubles Faces Subpoena

Authorities in the United Kingdom are seeking oral history accounts at Boston College that were made on the condition they be released only after the speakers’ deaths.

Father Sues Elite Washington School, Saying Psychologist Had Affair With His Wife

The father of a kindergartner at Sidwell Friends School in Washington filed a lawsuit claiming that the school’s psychologist had an affair with his wife while treating his daughter.

Nine City High Schools to Stay Open, With Private Management

The schools will be in a federal program in which nonprofit agencies try to manage them better than the city did.

University System Perk Becomes Pension Liability

A supplemental cash benefit for university employees, with a guaranteed return of 7.5 or 8.5 percent, now represents a $1.3 billion obligation.

Push for Higher Education Plan Comes to Shove for a University Chancellor

Interest in the actions of the university system regents has reached an unusual level as distrust and acrimony have spread through the higher education community in recent months.

Trespass at School. Post Prom Invitation. Get Barred From Event. Become Famous.

This week’s topic in Modern Love 101 is clearly James Tate, the high school senior who has become the world’s most famous would-be promgoer.

Coal Curriculum Called Unfit for 4th Graders

Advocacy groups object to materials for schoolchildren that were financed by the American Coal Foundation.
APP SMART
A math tutorial on Princeton Review's SAT Score Quest app for the iPad.

Tutorials and Exercises to Help Students Prepare for the SAT

Traditional test preparation services have refined their mobile software to compete with start-ups, resulting in improved apps for students.
Alan Abeshaus, left, and Mitchell Kurlander, outside court on Wednesday.

Sports-Gear Firm Accused of Bilking Schools

Circle System Group wrung millions of dollars from more than 100 schools, most of them in New Jersey, federal prosecutors charged.
Samantha Sherwood became a teacher through a program that puts top college graduates into poor schools.

New to Teaching, Idealistic, at Risk for Layoff

Many of the teachers who would be laid off under the mayor’s budget are idealists who had been beckoned to some of the most challenging classrooms.
A student arriving at a portable classroom at Public School 19 in Corona, Queens. Sixteen years after they were installed, the portable rooms hold about double the number of pupils they were meant to.

In Queens Neighborhood, Schools Are Bursting

Portable classrooms and long bathroom lines are two consequences of intractable crowding in Corona schools.
Gasem Rashwan, left, and Loqman Mohamed, Libyan students in Denver, say their country's troubles threaten their education.

Chaos at Home Stalls Tuition Aid for Libyan Students in U.S.

With $30 billion of its assets frozen, Libya has stopped financing its American scholarship program, putting students at risk of deportation.

Penn Gets $225 Million for Its School of Medicine

The gift from Raymond and Ruth Perelman, two prominent Philadelphia philanthropists, is the largest in the university’s history.
GOTHAM EAST Musbah Dilsebo Ormago, left, and Nicholas Scoulios at New York University's campus in Abu Dhabi.

N.Y.U. in the U.A.E.

An office tower is the dorm, a field trip foreign travel, and classmates speak 43 languages. Extracurriculars: Horseback riding, anyone?
UPHEAVAL International SOS evacuating Temple University students from Japan. Turmoil in Egypt, top, and disaster in Japan.

Study Abroad in Hot Spots

In today’s perilous world, students are still signing up. But what happens when your program is suspended?
HOUSE OF GOD The new eco-friendly residence for Jesuits at Fairfield University in Connecticut is centrally located in the hopes of increasing the priests' visibility on campus.

Teach, Pray, Live

As Jesuits’ numbers dwindle, a building at Fairfield University aims to lift the spirits.
Top row: Ann Althouse, Glenn Reynolds and Eugene Volokh. Bottom row: Gary S. Becker, N. Gregory Mankiw and Juan Cole.

Big Blog on Campus

When professors rant about public policy, at least they read up on the subject (if they didn’t write the book on it). Here are seven reasons to log on.
CONTINUING ED | CAREERS

Top 10 List: Where the Jobs Are

Retooling for the nation’s fastest-growing fields, be you a G.E.D., B.S., M.A., Ph.D. or M.D.

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