A year previously, a group of us — Chester Finn, Jay Greene, Marci Kanstoroom, and I — decided the country needed
a new education journal, one free of all connections to institutions with a vested interest in the status quo.
Not exact matches
This attitude has also been held among scientists until recently, when the creationist pressures on public
education and policy became so threatening that some scientists founded a
new journal, Creation / Evolution, a «Committee of Correspondence» and a Creation / Evolution News letter, aimed at defending evolutionary science and dismantling creationist arguments.
Dr. Borowitz is professor of
education and Jewish religious thought at Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion,
New York, and editor of Sh» ma, a
journal of Jewish responsibility.
Only 6 % of NICU babies are discharged exclusively breastfed, yet a
new study in the International
Journal of Nursing Studies reveals that when NICU nurses have better work environments and higher
education levels, and their units are adequately staffed, more babies are discharged on breastmilk.
According to the Fall / Winter 2011 issue of Renewal: A
Journal for Waldorf
Education, published quarterly by AWSNA (the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America), «There is a drastic shortage of trained Waldorf teachers — class teachers, as well as early childhood / kindergarten... This shortage exists in North America and around the world, including in English - speaking countries such as Australia,
New Zealand, Great Britain, and Ireland.
In an opinion piece for the Wall Street
Journal, Daniel Henninger discusses the future state of
New York
education, specifically charter schools:
Media outlets continue to differentiate between British East Asian students and East Asian students in the UK
education system, portraying the former in a negative, undesirable light, a
new study in the
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies reveals.
Access to state - supported early childhood programs significantly reduces the likelihood that children will be placed in special
education in the third grade, academically benefiting students and resulting in considerable cost savings to school districts, according to
new research published today in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, a peer - reviewed
journal of the American Educational Research Association.
In 2004, he signed on with KCP Technologies, the developer of The Geometer's Sketchpad, where his work involves writing grant applications and curricula, as well as «everything from doing professional development, to writing
journal articles, to thinking about updates to Sketchpad, to dealing with the Board of
Education in
New York,» he says.
«Descriptive phrases for how often food should be eaten helps preschoolers better understand healthy eating: Successful preschool nutrition
education programs should simplify information into developmentally appropriate concepts, according to a new study published in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavio
education programs should simplify information into developmentally appropriate concepts, according to a
new study published in the
Journal of Nutrition
Education and Behavio
Education and Behavior.»
The largest urban health systems, which serve as safety nets for large patient populations with lower socioeconomic status and greater likelihood to speak English as a second language, do worse on government patient satisfaction scores than smaller, non-urban hospitals likely to serve white customers with higher
education levels, according to a
new study by Mount Sinai researchers published this month in the
Journal of Hospital Medicine.
In a perspective in this week's
New England
Journal of Medicine, Daniel Alford, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and assistant dean of Continuing Medical
Education and director of the Safe and Competent Opioid Prescribing Education (SCOPE of Pain) program at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), recommends that prescriber education is the best approach to addressing the prescription opioid - misuse epidemic, allowing for individualized care on the basis of a patient's needs after a careful benefit - risk as
Education and director of the Safe and Competent Opioid Prescribing
Education (SCOPE of Pain) program at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), recommends that prescriber education is the best approach to addressing the prescription opioid - misuse epidemic, allowing for individualized care on the basis of a patient's needs after a careful benefit - risk as
Education (SCOPE of Pain) program at Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM), recommends that prescriber
education is the best approach to addressing the prescription opioid - misuse epidemic, allowing for individualized care on the basis of a patient's needs after a careful benefit - risk as
education is the best approach to addressing the prescription opioid - misuse epidemic, allowing for individualized care on the basis of a patient's needs after a careful benefit - risk assessment.
The
new study, published recently in the
journal Educational Policy, is part of an emerging body of research examining the role that language reclassification plays in a student's
education.
«Dining hall intervention helped college students choose healthier options: Encouraging fruit, vegetable, and water intake led to smarter choices among students, according to a
new study published in the
Journal of Nutrition
Education and Behavior.»
A
new study published in the National Communication Association's
journal, Communication
Education, evaluates how different types of messaging impact student retention of classroom material.
State higher
education performance funding is falling short of its intended goals of raising student retention and degree completion rates at community colleges, according to
new research published today in Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, a peer - reviewed
journal of the American Educational Research Association.
Many programs miss the opportunity to model proper safety measures, according to a
new study published in the
Journal of Nutrition
Education and Behavior
Schools are failing to offer sufficient opportunities for students from diverse backgrounds to engage in science - based learning outside of the classroom, and should be doing more to open up participation, according to
new research published in the International
Journal of Science
Education.
A
new study by French and UK researchers published in a leading
journal this week suggests that should no cure be found for dementia, then the biggest impact on reducing rates of this progressive brain destroying disease is likely to come from eliminating diabetes and depression and boosting
education, as well as encouraging people to eat more fruit and vegetables.
A
new study published in the
journal Health
Education and Behavior in 2015 found that visible foods are much more likely to be eaten.
New York About Blog Find Psychiatry & Mental Health Continuing Medical
Education (CME), Psychiatry & Mental Health medical
journal articles, MEDLINE, Psychiatry & Mental Health medical news, thought leader perspectives, Psychiatry & Mental Health conference coverage and comprehensive drug information on Medscape, a free resource for physicians.
New York About Blog Find Psychiatry & Mental Health Continuing Medical
Education (CME), Psychiatry & Mental Health medical
journal articles, MEDLINE, Psychiatry & Mental Health medical news, thought leader perspectives, Psychiatry & Mental Health conference coverage and comprehensive drug information on Medscape, a free resource for physicians.
New York About Blog Find Neurology Continuing Medical
Education (CME), Neurology medical
journal articles, MEDLINE, Neurology medical news, thought leader perspectives, Neurology conference coverage and comprehensive drug information on Medscape, a free resource for physicians.
Find The Wall Street
Journal's national news coverage on politics, government, economy, health care,
education, courts, crime and
New York.
Way back in the 20th century when a collaborative - spirited administrator would come across a helpful article in an
education journal about some
new methodology or pedagogy, he or she would share it with the faculty — if possible.
The DeGrasse judgment is the result of a decade - long political and legal struggle (described by
New York Daily Newsreporter Joe Williams in this
journal earlier this year: «The Legal Cash Machine,»
Education Next, Summer 2005).
National Poll Finds Waning Support for Charter Schools (The Atlanta
Journal Constitution) Charter Schools Take a Hit in Nationwide Poll (EdSource) Public Support for Charter Schools Plummets, Poll Finds (
Education Week) Enthusiasm for Charter School Formation Takes Hit, New Poll Finds (The Christian Science Monitor) New Poll Shows Sharp Decline in Support for Public Charter Schools Over Past Year (The 74) National Support for Charter Schools Has Dropped Sharply in Last Year (Chalkbeat) People Think Teachers Are Underpaid — Until You Tell Them How Much Teachers Earn (Time) Marty West co-authors the annual EducationNext survey of American public opinion on timely education issues such charter schools, higher education, and the impact of the current administration, amon
Education Week) Enthusiasm for Charter School Formation Takes Hit,
New Poll Finds (The Christian Science Monitor)
New Poll Shows Sharp Decline in Support for Public Charter Schools Over Past Year (The 74) National Support for Charter Schools Has Dropped Sharply in Last Year (Chalkbeat) People Think Teachers Are Underpaid — Until You Tell Them How Much Teachers Earn (Time) Marty West co-authors the annual EducationNext survey of American public opinion on timely
education issues such charter schools, higher education, and the impact of the current administration, amon
education issues such charter schools, higher
education, and the impact of the current administration, amon
education, and the impact of the current administration, among others.
While you may be
new to teaching ~ you can still research and study all the latest research on gifted
education by reading Gifted Quarterly and other academic
journals.
According to research from
New Zealand and Australian academics, published in the Asia - Pacific
Journal of Teacher
Education, a staffroom not only functions as a physical space, but also a social, cultural and emotional space for its occupants (Hunter, Rossi, Tinning, Flanagan & Macdonald, 2011).
A
new report from researchers at James Cook University, published in the Australian
Journal of
Education, looks at the processes employed by schools to support these children during a parental deployment, including the work conducted by Defence School Transition Aides (DSTA).
Mind, Brain, and
Education, a new journal released this week, is the first focused exclusively on the emerging field relating biology and cognitive science with e
Education, a
new journal released this week, is the first focused exclusively on the emerging field relating biology and cognitive science with
educationeducation.
Thomas J. Kane and Cecilia Rouse, «Comment on W. Norton Grubb, «The Varied Economic Returns to Postsecondary
Education:
New Evidence from the Class of 1972»»
Journal of Human Resources (1995) Vol.
The
new research, published Sept. 6 in the online
journal Education Policy Analysis Archives, makes the case that students learn more when their teachers are licensed — a requirement that in most states means they have had formal training in both how and what to teach.
His articles have appeared in The
New York Times, The Wall Street
Journal,
Education Next, The Public Interest, and The American Political Science Review, among other publications.
Right now a CEO or university president might skim an
education editorial or op - ed while flipping through the Wall Street
Journal or
New York Times.
On Top of the News States Fail to Raise Bar in Reading, Math Tests Wall Street
Journal 8/11/11 Behind the Headline Few States Set World - Class Standards
Education Next Summer 2008 A
new NCES report finds that, while some states have raised their standards for proficiency in math and reading, most states still fall -LSB-...]
Meanwhile, Bruno della Chiesa continues to work in the neuroscientific field as a guest editor for the Mind, Brain, and
Education journal, and has embarked on new endeavors which deal, among other things, with future international perspectives in math and science education as related to civics (in his capacity as Head of International Studies, ZNL Ulm University,
Education journal, and has embarked on
new endeavors which deal, among other things, with future international perspectives in math and science
education as related to civics (in his capacity as Head of International Studies, ZNL Ulm University,
education as related to civics (in his capacity as Head of International Studies, ZNL Ulm University, Germany).
Robert's articles and op - ed columns on
education have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, the New York Daily News, Education Next, and many other publ
education have appeared in the Wall Street
Journal, the Atlantic, the
New York Daily News,
Education Next, and many other publ
Education Next, and many other publications.
Mureşan, M., Flueraş, J. (2010) J., Towards a
New Paradigm of
Education in he 21st Century Society, The International
Journal of Learning, 16, Issue 8, http://ijl.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.30/prod.2343
Steven Brill's Class Warfare must be the most prominently reviewed book on
education in decades: a lengthy front - page review by Sara Mosle in the
New York Times Book Review, a lead review by Joel Klein in the Wall Street
Journal, a critical follow - up piece on Brill on the news pages of the Times by Michael Winerip.
Fay, who launched The Conies in a
new Walking to School
Journal trialled successfully across a number of Birmingham primary schools this year, aims to make the characters as much of a role model in safety
education as the Green Cross Code man and Tufty the Squirrel were in their day.
A graduate of Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service and Law Center, King serves on the Chicago Park District Board of Commissioners, teaches at Northwestern University and has published in the
New York Times,
Journal of Negro
Education, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun Times, and Huffington Post.
An expert in K - 12 digital learning, Elisabeth is a Pahara - Aspen
Education Fellow, a lifelong Ashoka fellow, and has been featured in The Wall Street
Journal and The
New York Times.
That's one conclusion suggested by a
new analysis of online civic engagement among young people, conducted by a trio of Harvard Graduate School of
Education researchers and published this month in the International
Journal of Communication...
A highly structured bureaucracy controls teacher certification and training, says C. Emily Feistritzer, president of the National Center for
Education Information (NCEI) in Washington D.C. «Anyone who wants to make more
new teachers available can begin by dismantling this elaborate system, which locks out potentially highly qualified teachers while accrediting many who don't belong in the classroom,» Feistritzer says in a story, («The Truth Behind the «Teacher Shortage»»), originally published by the Wall Street
Journal in January.
On Top of the News Peterson, Howell and West: Teachers Unions Have a Popularity Problem Wall Street
Journal 6/4/12 Behind the Headline The Public Weighs in on School Reform
Education Next Fall 2011 A
new public opinion survey finds that the percentage of people taking a negative view of teacher unions is growing, -LSB-...]
High School Graduation Rate Moves Up The Wall Street
Journal, January 15, 2013 «America's high school graduation rate, which stagnated for the last three decades of the 20th century, is now climbing, according to a
new, comprehensive look at the key
education gauge by Harvard University economist [Professor] Richard Murnane.»
This is the focus of a
new report [published in the Australian Journal of Education] from researchers at the University of New England, which looks at different types of potential bias in grading including gender, race and physical attractivene
new report [published in the Australian
Journal of
Education] from researchers at the University of
New England, which looks at different types of potential bias in grading including gender, race and physical attractivene
New England, which looks at different types of potential bias in grading including gender, race and physical attractiveness.
His work has been has been featured in top
journals, including the American Sociological Review, Current Anthropology, and the Harvard Educational Review as well as in the
New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Wall Street
Journal, TIME magazine, U.S. News & World Report, and Chronicle of Higher
Education.
New research published in the Cambridge
Journal of
Education suggests this approach may be hindering those in the lower attainment groups because their self - confidence is likely to suffer.