Sentences with phrase «education reporters at»

Caroline Glenn is the Education Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY.
As an education reporter at The Washington Post, I wanted to spend the 1999 - 2000 school year in a school.
Long's 20 - minute - long talk will be followed by a discussion moderated by Adolfo Guzman - Lopez, education reporter at Southern California Public Radio.
Prior to joining the George Lucas Educational Foundation in 2005, I was an education reporter at the Lawrence, Massachusetts, Eagle - Tribune and a Boston Globe correspondent.
He has worked as an education reporter at the Atlanta Journal - Constitution, Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Louisville Courier - Journal.
Kate McGee, currently an education reporter at WAMU, will cover higher education.The outlet now has five education journalists, making it «the largest and most accomplished education reporting team in Chicago,» according to an announcement from education editor Kate Grossman.
This job announcement for an education reporter at WDRB 41 Louisville Newssignals the departure from the beat and the news business of Toni Konz, a 16 - year veteran.
Jessica Huseman is an education reporter at The Teacher Project, which covers the next generation of America's teachers for Slate.

Not exact matches

«Those with significant student debt are much less likely to own a home at any given age than those who completed their education with little or no student debt,» William Dudley, president of the New York Fed, told reporters on Monday.
Reporters spent two hours Friday sorting through the records made available for inspection by the campaign at the Albany offices shared by groups like the Alliance For Quality Education and Citizen Action.
Linking an extension of rent control to the passage of an education investment tax credit is an undesired package for the Democratic conference, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie told reporters on Monday at the Capitol.
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.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley caught up at with Regent Catherine Fisher Collins.
On Friday, May 2nd, WBFO's Senior Reporter Eileen Buckley will be joined by education reporters from the Buffalo News in questioning the school board candidates as part of a two - hour special on WNED TV that begins at 8 pm.
Independent Democratic Conference leader State Senator Jeff Klein, a frequent guest at pro-charter events, spoke, and told reporters he will push his colleagues in the Senate to pass new legislation on education reform.
WBFO's Focus on Education reporter Eileen Buckley says students from six city schools saw the movie Selma at the Regal Theater on Elmwood Avenue in North Buffalo.
WBFO»S Focus on Education reporter Eileen Buckley attended a session at South Park High School where only about a dozen parents and community members attended.
Cuomo told reporters during an event at Yonkers City Hall that the money wouldn't be tied to the passage of an education tax credit, which some Assembly Democrats — particularly members representing school districts that could greatly benefit from the upstate - only fund — have vehemently opposed.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley spoke with Jamaal Bowman, Principal at the Cornerstone Academy for Social Action in the Bronx, ahead of his Buffalo visit.
Focus on Education reporter Eileen Buckley caught up with Ogilvie at a Buffalo School while appearing at Say Yes Buffalo news conference at a city school.
As WBFO's Focus on Education reporter Eileen Buckley reports, Mayor Byron Brown hosted the screening of «Bully» at the North Park Theater as part of a nationwide screening through the U.S. Conference of Mayors.
WBFO's Focus on Education reporter Eileen Buckley talked to BTF President Phil Rumore about John King's departure at the end of the month.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley says the changes are happening at those persistently struggling city schools.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley says receivership is happening at persistently struggling city schools.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley talked to the principal at West Hertel Academy.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley followed NYSED Commissioner Elia during her stop at West Hertel Academy in Buffalo Thursday.
WBFO's Focus on Education Reporter Eileen Buckley followed Elia during her stop at West Hertel Academy.
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.
Please join Education Week reporter Christina Samuels as she moderates a lively discussion about challenges associated with developing, implementing, and managing special education programs at different levels of the nation's educatioEducation Week reporter Christina Samuels as she moderates a lively discussion about challenges associated with developing, implementing, and managing special education programs at different levels of the nation's educatioeducation programs at different levels of the nation's educationeducation system.
I'm Michele McNeil, a reporter here at Education Week.
But last week, Mr. Ayers, an education professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, broke his silence when a reporter for The Washington Post knocked on his door on Election Day.
Dan Koretz, Reporters Roundtable on High Stakes Testing Bloomberg, 4/26/13 «Dan Koretz, professor and director of the Education Accountability Project at Harvard University, John Merrow, PBS education correspondent, Kevin Riley, Atlanta Journal Constitution editor in chief, and Greg Toppo, USA Today national K - 12 education reporter, discuss the effects and increased pressure of high stakes testing on education, test tampering indictments of 35 educators in Atlanta and renewed discussion about standardized test score irregularities in the District of ColumbiEducation Accountability Project at Harvard University, John Merrow, PBS education correspondent, Kevin Riley, Atlanta Journal Constitution editor in chief, and Greg Toppo, USA Today national K - 12 education reporter, discuss the effects and increased pressure of high stakes testing on education, test tampering indictments of 35 educators in Atlanta and renewed discussion about standardized test score irregularities in the District of Columbieducation correspondent, Kevin Riley, Atlanta Journal Constitution editor in chief, and Greg Toppo, USA Today national K - 12 education reporter, discuss the effects and increased pressure of high stakes testing on education, test tampering indictments of 35 educators in Atlanta and renewed discussion about standardized test score irregularities in the District of Columbieducation reporter, discuss the effects and increased pressure of high stakes testing on education, test tampering indictments of 35 educators in Atlanta and renewed discussion about standardized test score irregularities in the District of Columbieducation, test tampering indictments of 35 educators in Atlanta and renewed discussion about standardized test score irregularities in the District of Columbia.»
• Anya Kamenetz education reporter for NPR and author of «The Test: Why Our Schools Are Obsessed with Standardized Testing — But You Don't Have to Be» • Elaine Weiss national coordinator of the Broader Bolder Approach to Education • Matthew Chingos senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and research director of its Brown Center on Education Policy • Chanelle Hardy senior vice president for policy and executive director of the National Urban League Washingteducation reporter for NPR and author of «The Test: Why Our Schools Are Obsessed with Standardized Testing — But You Don't Have to Be» • Elaine Weiss national coordinator of the Broader Bolder Approach to Education • Matthew Chingos senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and research director of its Brown Center on Education Policy • Chanelle Hardy senior vice president for policy and executive director of the National Urban League WashingtEducation • Matthew Chingos senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and research director of its Brown Center on Education Policy • Chanelle Hardy senior vice president for policy and executive director of the National Urban League WashingtEducation Policy • Chanelle Hardy senior vice president for policy and executive director of the National Urban League Washington Bureau
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 money.
If we look at the NYC DOE budget (which any education reporter worth his or her salt could easily do), they identify additional costs associated with special education.
This is the core advantage to «educational» videos made by the news reporters and producers at NBC Learn, which is the education arm of NBC News: relevance and significance are part of the DNA of every news story — if a story isn't relevant to people's lives, it doesn't make it into the newscast.
June Kronholz is a former Wall Street Journal foreign correspondent, bureau chief, and education reporter, and currently a contributing editor at Educateducation reporter, and currently a contributing editor at EducationEducation Next.
I'm talking about Michael Winerip who, to the best of my knowledge, is the single worst education reporter in America, infamous for biased hatchet jobs on NCLB, Bloomberg and Klein's reforms, and anything else associated with genuine reform (if anyone is aware of someone worse at a major publication, please let me know — maybe I'll start a Reporter Hall of Sreporter in America, infamous for biased hatchet jobs on NCLB, Bloomberg and Klein's reforms, and anything else associated with genuine reform (if anyone is aware of someone worse at a major publication, please let me know — maybe I'll start a Reporter Hall of SReporter Hall of Shame...)
The piece, by the Hechinger Report's Sarah Garland, an exceptionally thoughtful education reporter, traces Zimba's career from Rhodes scholar and David Coleman's business partner to «obscure physics professor at Bennington College» and unlikely standards bearer for the math standards that he had so much to do with creating.
He lived for years in Washington, where he became education reporter for the Washington Post, and in the Boston area, where he gained a doctoral degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and worked with Daniel P. Moynihan, David Riesman, and the writer of thieducation reporter for the Washington Post, and in the Boston area, where he gained a doctoral degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and worked with Daniel P. Moynihan, David Riesman, and the writer of thiEducation and worked with Daniel P. Moynihan, David Riesman, and the writer of this review.
Previously, she served as a reporter at Education Week, the leading national news publication on K - 12 education policy, and as an editorial manager on a winning California State Senate Education Week, the leading national news publication on K - 12 education policy, and as an editorial manager on a winning California State Senate education policy, and as an editorial manager on a winning California State Senate campaign.
Education reporters, even at elite newspapers, rarely provide solid background information about school spending, the kind of contextual information that a much smaller audience gets from articles by scholars such as William Howell, Martin West, Paul Peterson, Rick Hanushek, and others.
Maxwell began working at Education Week in 2006 as a reporter.
Prior to that, he was a reporter at the San Antonio Express - News covering education for nearly five years.
Davis began working at Education Week in 2002 as a federal education reporter after covering Congress and the federal government in Knight Ridder's WashingtoEducation Week in 2002 as a federal education reporter after covering Congress and the federal government in Knight Ridder's Washingtoeducation reporter after covering Congress and the federal government in Knight Ridder's Washington bureau.
Before joining Education Week in 2006, he was for more than 20 years a reporter and editor at The Baltimore Sun and The Evening Sun.
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.
Denisa R. Superville is a reporter at Education Week covering school districts and leadership.
Before coming to Education Week in 2013, she was a reporter for the Arkansas Democrat - Gazette, where she covered K - 12 education at the state and local levels, higher education, as well as healtEducation Week in 2013, she was a reporter for the Arkansas Democrat - Gazette, where she covered K - 12 education at the state and local levels, higher education, as well as healteducation at the state and local levels, higher education, as well as healteducation, as well as health issues.
Interviewing scores of students, teachers, researchers and education officials at all levels of government, participating reporters set out to determine how the money is being spent and whether the changes it sparks are likely to last.
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