Sentences with phrase «new articles for»

On this page, you will find site updated pages and new articles for swing traders.
My job was to find such articles, post them in the Family Law Professionals LinkedIn group and email the committee members with the «New Articles for Discussion.»
On this page, you will find site updated pages and new articles for swing traders.
Those elements will appear on messaging app icons when you receive a new message and RSS readers when they list new articles for you to go through.
The website started out as a one - man project by @Draikin (who previously created Segalization and also contributes articles to Panzer Dragoon Legacy), but we're looking into adding more people to the team, starting with @StumblinCamelid who will be contributing new articles for the website in the near future.
New articles for pet owners are added weekly by the experts at VIN and provide our readers with the most current veterinary information available.
From time to time, we'll post new articles for authors and publishers who are promoting their books.
By the time my second article was accepted, I'd already written new articles for various publications related to the field of education and three out of four of them were published.
On this page, you will find site updated pages and new articles for swing traders.
Redeemer Presbyterian Church founder and renowned Bible teacher Tim Keller has posted a new article for The New Yorker that asks the question, «Can evangelicalism survive Donald Trump and Roy Moore?»
In a new article for Foreign Affairs, I discuss the perils of Angola's reliance on declining oil revenues.
Top Fitness expert and Fitness personality Obi Obadike writes new article for a new site called extremefitness.com and the name of the article is called: Are you doing too much cardio?
WHEN WE ARE ABLE TO POST IT AGAIN, WE»LL CREATE A NEW ARTICLE FOR ALL TO SEE.
So writes Alex Hernandez in a new article for Education Next, «Toddlers and Tablets,» about how education apps targeted at preschoolers are taking off.
In a new article for Education Next, Boston College professor Shep Melnick says OCR is on shaky legal ground, since its «Letter» fails to take into account the landmark Rodriguez v. San Antonio Board of Education (1973), which ruled that neither the Constitution nor the Civil Rights Act of 1964 require equal distribution of school resources across school districts.
In a new article for Education Next, Matthew Davis of the University of Pennsylvania and Blake Heller of Harvard University take a close look at Noble Street College Prep in Chicago, where administrators set high expectations for students and see long - term results.
In a new article for Education Next, Susan Payne Carter of the United States Military Academy, Major Kyle Greenberg of the Army's Human Resources Command, and Major Michael S. Walker of the Office of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation within the Office of the Secretary of Defense report that allowing computer use in the classroom, even with strict limitations, significantly reduces students» average final - exam performance.
In a new article for Education Next, David Osborne, director of the project on Reinventing America's Schools at the Progressive Policy Institute, finds Denver's pursuit of this strategy, which has increased school leader autonomy, has produced impressive gains in student achievement, leading to growing public support for the reforms.
In a new article for Education Next, Robin Lake, Trey Cobb, Roohi Sharma, and Alice Opalka of the Center on Reinventing Public Education (CRPE) study the factors holding back charter growth in the Bay Area of San Francisco, where the recent slowdown in charter expansion mirrors the national trend.
In a new article for Education Next, Joanne Jacobs looks at one of these reform efforts from a different angle.
In a new article for Education Next, Joanne Jacobs finds that the move away from bilingual education and towards English immersion, or even dual immersion, has been a response to NCLB and the Common Core.
In a new article for Education Next, author Alan Borsuk explores Kettle Moraine's experience of participating in the PISA - based test, known in the U.S. as the OECD Test for Schools.
In a new article for Education Next, Richard Lee Colvin reports that Anderson's replacement, Chris Cerf, is effecting positive change for students and leaders in a district previously plagued by conflict through his commitment to listen before acting.
But in a new article for Education Next, «Desegregation Since the Coleman Report: Racial composition of schools and student learning,» Steven Rivkin of the University of Illinois at Chicago identifies a key trend masquerading as resegregation: the decreasing enrollment share of white students due to the increasing ethnic diversity of public schools.
In a new article for Education Next, Matthew Steinberg of the Penn Graduate School of Education and Johanna Lacoe of Mathematica Policy Research document the scope of discipline policy reform taking place across states and districts nationwide.
In a new article for Education Next, Arizona Supreme Court Justice Clint Bolick examines over two dozen of Gorsuch's major cases to uncover his key dispositions and clues to his future decisions.
In a new article for Education Next, Diane Schanzenbach, an education professor at Northwestern University, and Stephanie Larson, director of Rose Hall Montessori School in Wilmette, Illinois, weigh the evidence and conclude that postponing a student's entrance into kindergarten does more harm than good both academically and socially and that where there are academic advantages, they are short - lived.
In a new article for Education Next, Ira Nichols - Barrer, Erin Dillon, Kate Place, and Brian Gill report that scores on the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) exam and the Massachusetts Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) exam do equally well at predicting students» success in college, as measured by first - year grades and by the probability that a student needs remediation upon entering college.
But in a new article for Education Next, Sarah A. Cordes of Temple University examines the effects of charter schools on neighboring district school students in New York City and finds that these spillover effects are actually positive: students attending a district school within a half - mile radius of a charter school score better in math and reading and enjoy an increase in their likelihood of advancing to the next grade.
In a new article for Education Next, Paul T. von Hippel of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and Laura Bellows of Duke University find that the answer is usually no.
But in a new article for Education Next, Paul von Hippel and Laura Bellows find that, when ranking programs on value - added, the differences between teacher - preparation programs are typically too small to matter.
In a new article for Education Next, «Mayoral Control in the Windy City,» Alexander Russo takes a close look at Rahm Emanuel's efforts to improve public schools in Chicago.
In a new article for Education Next, Alexandra Logue and Mari Watanabe - Rose of City University of New York and Daniel Douglas of Rutgers University present evidence showing that if students assessed as needing remedial elementary algebra are instead placed directly into a college - level statistics course with additional support, they are more likely to pass their initial college - level quantitative course and, after three semesters, more likely to have completed college - level credits than are students placed in remedial algebra courses.
In a new article for Education Next, James Spillane of Northwestern University and Matthew Shirrell of George Washington University report that even within the limitations of traditional school building design, thoughtful classroom assignments can promote beneficial teacher interactions.
So writes Michael McShane in a new article for Education Next about Skandera's seven years of leadership.
In a new article for Education Next, Derrell Bradford of 50CAN examines the political and social forces limiting opportunities for prospective leaders of these single - site, «mom - and - pops,» and why the future of the movement depends on their success.
But in a new article for Education Next, Chad Aldeman and Kelly Robson of Bellwether Education Partners find that despite the widely held belief that pensions entice teachers to stay on the job, states base the financial health of their pension plans on the opposite assumption: they rely on high rates of teacher turnover in order to balance the books.
But in a new article for Education Next, Michael J. Petrilli and Brandon L. Wright of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute show that «absolute» poverty rates in the United States do not exceed those in most other industrialized nations.
Stanford economist Eric Hanushek notes in a new article for Education Next magazine that the black - white disparity in math and reading scores among 12th - graders today is not only significant but, even more disturbing, not much different from where it was a half - century ago.
In a new article for DBW, 2014 Author Survey: Indie Authors and Others Prefer Traditional Publishing... Slightly, Weinberg very carefully acknowledges that the survey sample is self - selecting:
Please see newer article for an analysis of the 2nd generation Kindle Fire HD.
05/10/12 - My new article for Eye on the Paranormal The Bible a s a Reliable Source on the Workings of the Supernatural.
Here is a sneak peak of our new article for the Cannon Beach Gazette.
Sarah Wiseman Gallery explains the many benefits of purchasing art for your company in a new article for B4 Magazine...

Not exact matches

To my eternal regret, I wrote an article for Fast Company a few years back saying that business books were the new business cards.
But they felt pointless when I had to block out many five - minute chunks in a row for larger tasks (writing, ironing out the angle for a new article, planning for an upcoming call with a source).
For example, if you publish a blog post every Monday, your audience would be upset if, come Monday, a new article wasn't there.
Topics included: early reporting on inaccuracies in the articles of The New York Times's Judith Miller that built support for the invasion of Iraq; the media campaign to destroy UN chief Kofi Annan and undermine confidence in multilateral solutions; revelations by George Bush's biographer that as far back as 1999 then - presidential candidate Bush already spoke of wanting to invade Iraq; the real reason Bush was grounded during his National Guard days — as recounted by the widow of the pilot who replaced him; an article published throughout the world that highlighted the West's lack of resolve to seriously pursue the genocidal fugitive Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, responsible for the largest number of European civilian deaths since World War II; several investigations of allegations by former members concerning the practices of Scientology; corruption in the leadership of the nation's largest police union; a well - connected humanitarian relief organization operating as a cover for unauthorized US covert intervention abroad; detailed evidence that a powerful congressional critic of Bill Clinton and Al Gore for financial irregularities and personal improprieties had his own track record of far more serious transgressions; a look at the practices and values of top Democratic operative and the clients they represent when out of power in Washington; the murky international interests that fueled both George W. Bush's and Hillary Clinton's presidential campaigns; the efficacy of various proposed solutions to the failed war on drugs; the poor - quality televised news program for teens (with lots of advertising) that has quietly seeped into many of America's public schools; an early exploration of deceptive practices by the credit card industry; a study of ecosystem destruction in Irian Jaya, one of the world's last substantial rain forests.
This article is part of our series on New Year's Resolutions for Small Business.
The new service would ask readers to subscribe to the news platform after they read 10 or more articles in a month — or else they would be locked out of viewing additional stories for the remainder of the month.
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