When asked that question by New York
Times education reporter Laura Pappano on stage at the SXSWedu education technology conference in Austin Wednesday, Coursera co-founder Andrew Ng gave the diplomatic reply:
Mr. Bruni was struck over the weekend by
Times education reporter Motoko Rich's story on the nationwide scramble to find credentialed teachers and the precipitous drop in college students seeking teaching degrees:
St. Cloud
Times education reporter Marta Jewson for bringing the study to my attention.)
The union didn't decide to strip Sanchez of his endorsement immediately, but rather — according to a Friday morning web - chat with LA
Times education reporter Howard Blume — re-interview the candidates.
On Thursday night at Madison West High School, Cap
Times education reporter Amber C. Walker and Simpson Street Free Press editor Taylor Kilgore hosted a forum for the upcoming School Board election, asking questions about budgets, charter schools and recruiting teachers of color.
Javier C. Hernández,
a Times education reporter, assesses Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's record on education.
«They've started to teach students about feelings as explicitly as they teach math and reading,» writes Seattle
Times education reporter John Higgins.
As a long -
time education reporter, who has been to many run - of - the - mill and crummy schools, this was a dream assignment for me, allowing me to go to really wonderful schools.
A part of Hechinger's Liz Willen dies
every time an education reporter falls into jargonese.
Alan Borsuk, a senior fellow at Marquette Law School and long -
time education reporter, reviewed several sets of studies.
New York
Times education reporters Kate Taylor and Motoko Rich published a story this week on the burgeoning Opt Out Movement.
Not exact matches
In December, the
Education Writers Association's Educated
Reporter blog gave its «Water Cooler Award (for one of the most talked - about stories of the year)» to my article in the New York
Times Magazine about character, «What If the Secret to Success Is Failure?»
She was already quite vocal in local media, and her passion for
education under dire circumstances was captured in two documentaries made by New York
Times reporters.
Mr. Duncan, who spoke with
reporters after an appearance at a New York
Times education event, said he was a fan of Democratic nominee Bill de Blasio's early - childhood proposal.
In this week's Press Pass conversation WBFO's senior
reporter Eileen Buckley and Buffalo News Education Reporter Jay Rey discuss the legacy of the school and time line for selecting a r
reporter Eileen Buckley and Buffalo News
Education Reporter Jay Rey discuss the legacy of the school and time line for selecting a r
Reporter Jay Rey discuss the legacy of the school and
time line for selecting a receiver.
Linda Cook earned bachelor degrees in English and elementary
education from Monmouth (Illinois) College, She's a
reporter and film critic at the Quad - City
Times, and reviews films for NBC affiliate KWQC.
She's a Chicago charter schoolteacher, a mother, and the founder of a faith - based nonprofit; she's also been an award - winning blogger for
Education Week, and a
reporter for People,
Time, and a pair of major daily papers.
It's hard to get past the New York
Times's animus toward anything «private» or profit - seeking in the realm of K - 12
education, particularly when investigative
reporter Stephanie Saul applies her own biased and acidic pen to the topic.
The report, written by two former Los Angeles
Times reporters, Jack McCurdy and William Trombley, asserts that while higher - education officials have at times overstated the magnitude of budget cuts, students are generally paying more and getting less for their m
Times reporters, Jack McCurdy and William Trombley, asserts that while higher -
education officials have at
times overstated the magnitude of budget cuts, students are generally paying more and getting less for their m
times overstated the magnitude of budget cuts, students are generally paying more and getting less for their money.
Education Week's
reporter was told that «the numbers of students with disabilities or limited English proficiency fell during that
time.
Stories in the New York
Times, Los Angeles
Times, Washington Post, and many other newspapers, most written not by
education reporters but by Washington - based political and legislative correspondents, reported Gates's assertions in an unquestioning, almost awestruck tone that made one thing clear: if high schools are bad enough for Bill Gates to declare them a disaster, then it must be so.
At the same
time, the digital world has opened up new audiences well beyond
Education Week's traditional core readership of administrators and policy leaders and enabled the newspaper and its
reporters to connect with readers online and through social media.
In the Sept. 14, 2011 edition of The New York
Times,
education reporter Paul Tough writes an intriguing article, «What if the Secret to Success is Failure?».
Interviews by researchers and by
Education Week
reporter Liana Loewus reveal a troubling reason principals are not telling subpar teachers they need to get better: It takes too much
time.
But the network is fast approaching the size of
Education Week, which has close to 40 full -
time reporters and editors, according to managing editor Kathleen Manzo.
Claudia Rowe, an investigative
reporter and
education writer with the Seattle
Times.
* Chattanooga
Times Free Press
education reporter Kendi Rainwater is heading to graduate school.
By Manny Otiko Earlier this spring, New York
Times national
education reporter Dana Goldstein reported on an increasingly hot topic in
education: parent fundraising.
But there's still more than enough
time for
education reporters and editors to grab hold of the story.
As an
education reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer in 1996, Dale Mezzacappa had a hard
time keeping her cool with a union lawyer after a -LSB-...]
The piece was produced by tech writer Conor Dougherty rather than one of the
Times»
education reporters.
«Over the past year the
Times's principal
education reporter has devoted 34 % of the total word count for her
education stories, including four of her seven longest articles, to unrelentingly negative coverage of Success,» Moskowitz wrote.
Harvard's Joshua Benton, a former
education reporter now at the Nieman Lab, wanted the data visualization to allow users to compare multiple districts rather than just look at them one at a
time.
National
Education Association President Dennis Van Roekel told editors and
reporters at The Washington
Times that Mr. Walker, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and other Republican politicians who have moved to rein in the bargaining power of teachers, firefighters and other public employees instead will galvanize working men and women nationwide.
Hillary Clinton's criticisms of charter schools are drawing concern from Democratic donors focused on
education reform that she is too beholden to union money, New York
Times reporter Maggie Haberman said on CNN Sunday.
At the end of April, Washington Post
education reporter Valerie Strauss wrote in her Answer Sheet blog that the Harley Avenue Primary School in the town of Elwood, N.Y. recently canceled its annual Kindergarten play so they could dedicate more
time to making certain the children are prepared for «college and career.»
But no matter what the outcome, this represents a very important step in the growing debate over
education policy in California,» Dan Schnur, director of the USC Dornsife / Los Angeles
Times Poll, told
reporters.
News organizations often spend
time covering the outcomes of classroom reform efforts, but it's rare for
reporters to have both the
time and the unfettered access they need to follow big
education initiatives from the beginning.
School grades: Florida
Times - Union
education reporter Khristopher J. Brooks provides insight on Duval County's school grades during WJTC interview.
Panelist Claudia Rowe, an
education reporter for the Seattle
Times, said the response from teachers when schools in her school district began using restorative justice hasn't been so positive.
If the Opt Out story is only now growing of interest to the national
education reporters of The New York
Times because now national and state level unions, having seen where a significant portion of parental sentiment is heading, have begun to help amplify the message, that is fair, although perhaps short sighted depending upon your perspective.
When the Great Public Schools Now Initiative, the $ 490 million blueprint to turn half of Los Angeles» public school system into charter schools, was first leaked to Los Angeles
Times reporter Howard Blume, it triggered an uproar among the city's
education community.
The Washington Post picked up on the story, with
education reporter Valerie Strauss classifying Perry as a «scorched - earth» reformer at the
time.
Earlier this spring, New York
Times national
education reporter Dana Goldstein reported on an increasingly hot topic in
education: parent fundraising.
None of this should be surprising to any reformer or even to any
reporter who has spent enough
time covering the fight over reforming American public
education.
The all - star recommenders include the New York
Times» Erica Green, Baltimore Sun
reporter Liz Bowie, USA Today's Greg Toppo, freelance writer and author Amanda Ripley, veteran
education reporter John Merrow, and Voice of San Diego's Mario Koran.
Until the NY
Times and other papers decides to invest in
reporters with the proper
education and background, the public will continue to be ill informed.
«The 2011 budget builds on the government's plan to eliminate the deficit and at the same
time protect
education and health care,» Duncan told
reporters.
Cover a range of areas (e.g., news, sports, business,
education, healthcare, lifestyle, travel) as a full -
time general assignment
reporter for a local daily.