Trending Articles

article thumbnail

As ‘bot’ students continue to flood in, community colleges struggle to respond

The Hechinger Report

This story was first published by Voice of San Diego and is reprinted with permission. Community colleges have been dealing with an unprecedented phenomenon: fake students bent on stealing financial aid funds. While it has caused chaos at many colleges, some Southwestern College faculty feel their leaders havent done enough to curb the crisis. When the spring semester began, Southwestern College professor Elizabeth Smith felt good.

Library 117
article thumbnail

How To Play The ‘Count To Ten’ Team-Building Game

TeachThought

Understanding how to play the 'count to 10' team-building game is about rules, timing, and sequence. Engaged students pick it up quickly.

Teaching 258
educators

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Building Trust: Five Research-Backed Strategies for Meaningful Relationships

A Principal's Reflections

" Trust isn't built through grand gesturesit's earned in the quiet moments where consistency, honesty, and empathy align." Writers block is real, especially if you have been blogging for as long as I have (15 years). Going back and reflecting on past posts through my podcast has enabled me to explore new angles on, in my mind, very important topics and concepts.

Research 366
article thumbnail

Retrieval in Action: Creative Strategies from Real Teachers

Cult of Pedagogy

Listen to the interview ( transcript ): Sponsored by Zearn and EVERFI This page contains Bookshop.org links. When you make a purchase through these links, Cult of Pedagogy gets a small percentage of the sale at no extra cost to you. What’s the difference between Amazon and Bookshop.org? If there is one learning strategy I’ve probably talked the most about on this platform, it’s retrieval practice.

article thumbnail

Yeast in the Trees: How a Tiny Organism Traces the Footsteps of Ancient Humans

Anthropology.net

The Forgotten Migrant When thinking about humanity’s migrations across continents, yeast is probably the last traveler that comes to mind. Yet new research led by Jacqueline Peña and her colleagues at the University of Georgia has revealed that wild strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae —the same species that leavens bread and ferments wine—carry silent records of ancient human journeys.

article thumbnail

Gen Z Is Growing Up in Education Upheaval. How Are Teens Doing?

ED Surge

Gen Z is in an awkward phase. Parsing education data into snack-sized servings. The oldest of the cohort born from 1997 to 2012 are in their mid- to late 20s and taking heat for chafing against workplace culture in ways that come off as entitled (sound familiar, millennials?). The youngest Zoomers, as theyre also known, are around 13 years old and still have years left in public school systems dealing with frequent upheavals due to federal-level uncertainty , politicization of essential servic

article thumbnail

The Week That Was in 234

Moler's Musing

This week was about layering, connecting, and getting students to own the contentnot just memorize it. Every protocol, every sequence was designed to move students from basic retrieval to deeper understanding without overwhelming them. Nothing fancy. Nothing over the top. Just intentional teaching. Monday – Abolitionist Reformers Thick Slide Tuesday/Wednesday – Superlatives Thursday – Abolitionists/Women’s Suffrage Reading and AI Evaluation Friday – Reform Movements

More Trending

article thumbnail

Teaching Strategies For Maslow’s Hierarchy Of Needs

TeachThought

Teaching Strategies For Maslow’s Hierarchy Of Needs by TeachThought Staff Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, developed by psychologist Abraham Maslow in […] Source

Teaching 202
article thumbnail

Painting Through Change: How Aboriginal Artists Reimagined Animal Life in a Shifting Holocene Landscape

Anthropology.net

At first glance, the animal figures painted on rock shelters in the northeast Kimberley look deceptively simple—thin outlines of kangaroos, some barely adorned, others stylized into abstract form. For decades, they were thought to be remnants of an earlier, Ice Age aesthetic, part of a vast visual tradition called the Irregular Infill Animal Period (IIAP).

article thumbnail

One District’s Approach to Successful AI Integration

ED Surge

Schools across the country are racing to integrate artificial intelligence into classrooms, but the real challenge isnt just adopting the technology its making sure it works for all students. Will AI be a tool for innovation or yet another factor widening educational gaps? As districts explore AIs potential, they must also confront critical questions about equity, algorithmic bias and access.

K-12 59
article thumbnail

Should We Vote in Authoritarian Elections?

Political Science Now

In the APSA Public Scholarship Program, graduate students in political science produce summaries of new research in the American Political Science Review. This piece, written by Ewa Nizalowska, covers the new article by Turkuler Isiksel and Thomas B. Pepinsky, “Voting in Authoritarian Elections.” Elections are often taken as a defining feature of democratic regimes.

article thumbnail

Ceasefire From the Earth and Sky

Sapiens

The Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) along the border of North and South Korea is the site of the longest ceasefire in the world. In this region, the effects of a never-ending war linger in the skies and beneath the earth. In existence for more than 70 years, the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) is the site of the longest ceasefire in the world. What can this region teach us about the long, intendedand unintendedconsequences of this form of a truce?

article thumbnail

The Foundational 4 Cs of Critical Thinking in K-12 Education

TeachThought

The 4 Cs of Critical Thinking: Critical Thinking, Communication. Collaboration, and Creativity.

article thumbnail

Hunter-Gatherers at the Edge of the Ice: Tracing the Ahrensburgian in Scotland’s Far Northwest

Anthropology.net

When the last Ice Age released its grip on northern Europe, vast landscapes emerged from the ice. Among them was a rugged, newly exposed frontier—the British Isles. While the southern lowlands began to host reindeer hunters and mobile foragers, the highlands and islands of Scotland remained largely uncharted in the archaeological record. Until now.

article thumbnail

OPINION: Arts education must move beyond traditional models and embrace practical skills and hands-on learning

The Hechinger Report

Arts graduates, both undergraduate and postgraduate, are highly educated yet often unprepared for careers beyond academia. Traditional arts education frequently leaves them struggling to enter commercial sectors like galleries, auction houses and publishing. Art history students in particular face growing difficulty in securing employment outside academic circles.

article thumbnail

Meet the 2025 Scholars of the APSA Ralph Bunche Summer Institute Program

Political Science Now

APSA is pleased to announce the 2025 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) Class. This year, 14 undergraduate students will participate in the annual, intensive five-week program hosted by Duke University. The 2025 institute is being held May 25 June 26, 2025, under the direction of Dr. Paula D. McClain. This is the 39th year of the program. RBSI is designed to introduce aspiring political scientists to the world of doctoral study.Named in honor of the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize winner, former APSA

article thumbnail

Thoughts on a theory for using AI in history education

C3 Teachers

Im thinking about a theory for using AI in history education. By theory, I mean what I expect to be true based on general ideas and principles, but something that has not been proven in practice. ( Of course, theory may be proven in practice at which point it becomes something more ). I decided to talk to my AI companion, CHAT GPT about this (a friend indeed) ( Im speaking here to ChatGPTo1 pro mode – edited ) I would like your assistance in developing some ideas (and principles) that may

article thumbnail

How One District Built Coherent Systems for Digital Equity

Digital Promise

Wichita Public Schools demonstrates whats possible when vision, strategy, and systems align to support digital equity

article thumbnail

Echoes of Movement: How the Grammar of Indigenous Languages Maps the Peopling of the Americas

Anthropology.net

By the time Europeans arrived in the Americas, thousands of distinct Indigenous languages had already shaped the way people described landscapes, kinship, time, and the cosmos. These languages, many of which still survive today, are more than means of communication—they are archaeological strata encoded in speech. A new study in Scientific Reports 1 argues that their grammar preserves a faint but measurable imprint of the first humans to populate the continent.

article thumbnail

AI: risky business

Living Geography

Tim Price Walker has produced a nice piece on LinkedIn exploring the use of AI in Geography. The core strengths of geographythe ability to analyse, connect, and synthesise information across places and spacesare more essential than ever. These foundational skills empower us to engage with a changing world, and, importantly, they remain our anchor as new dimensions of reality emerge.

article thumbnail

CORE praised in The Atlantic article

CORE Econ

Were proud to see the CORE Econ project mentioned by Harvard University Professor Danielle Allen in an article for The Atlantic: America and its universities need a new social contract. Danielle commended our efforts to make the teaching of economics more relevant to present day economic realities and the concerns of students: “An example of a valuable initiative is University College Londons CORE Econ project.

Civics 52
article thumbnail

Things That Shaped Me: The Conference That Woke Me Up

Moler's Musing

In 2018, I went to a summer Education and Technology Conference put on by Cincinnati Public Schools. I was excited. It was my first real conference. A well-known educator and author was the keynote. I signed up for my sessions. I filled my notes with new ideas. I sat there ready to learn. But somewhere in the middle of it all, a different thought started creeping in: “Why am I not up there?

article thumbnail

For Example: How to Use Examples in Political Science

Political Science Now

For Example: How to Use Examples in Political Science By John S. Dryzek , University of Canberra. There is a large literature on the use of cases, hardly anything on examples. They are different: cases get analyzed, examples get deployed. Examples can perform clarifying, didactic, persuasive, universalizing, critical, and cogitative functions. These six functions all have their own logic, and a set of guidelines for how to perform each of them well is developed.

article thumbnail

“We Have Always Been Here”: How DNA and Oral Tradition Aligned to Tell the Picuris Pueblo’s Deep Past

Anthropology.net

Science at the Request of the People The sweeping desert of north-central New Mexico carries centuries of memory in its sandstone, canyons, and wind. In this landscape stands Picuris Pueblo—a small, sovereign tribal nation whose history has long been narrated in stories passed down through generations. These stories speak of migration, of belonging, of origins tied to Chaco Canyon, one of the great ceremonial and cultural centers of the ancient Puebloan world.

article thumbnail

GA Blog: Creative Fieldwork

Living Geography

It's been nice to see little elements of the importance of the everyday making their way into other resources and blogs. Creative Fieldwork 2 was produced by the Field Studies Council in partnership with the Geographical Association and Newcastle University. The book can be purchased from the GA Shop. I have a copy. The book contains a range of creative fieldwork approaches, which engage students with questions that they think are important and worthwhile, often in their local area where they li

52
article thumbnail

The Evolving Landscape of CTE

ED Surge

Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs are evolving, becoming more deeply integrated into mainstream high school curricula. Alongside this transition is an expanded perspective on career exploration, and a stronger emphasis on student agency and well-being. In this first episode of a new series, The Idea Spark podcast, host Carl Hooker speaks with Elyse Monahan, a former CTE educator and current National Product Sales Specialist at Pearson.

article thumbnail

New Tools for Building Social Studies Skills and Assigning and Grading Updates

TCI

Please accept statistics, marketing cookies to watch this video. For Spring 2025, were excited to introduce new features based on your feedback. These updates will help you teach key social studies skills, streamline assigning and grading, and improve administrative tasks. Sign in to your TCI teacher account to explore these features. Building Social Studies Skills New Economics Library: Economics concepts can be complex, but you can support student understanding of these concepts with the tools

article thumbnail

How VC3 Is Advancing Video Coaching for Teacher Learning (via ET Magazine)

Edthena

In the news In a recent article from ET Magazine , Edthena’s VC3 platform was highlighted as the next evolution in video coaching, designed to elevate teacher learning through deeper collaboration and smart, time-saving tools. According to the article, drawing on more than a decade of innovation, VC3 combines asynchronous video-based coaching with new layers of AI-driven insight.

article thumbnail

Faces from the Deep Past: How Europe's Skulls Record 30,000 Years of Upheaval

Anthropology.net

The Bone Archive of Human History If genes are blueprints, skulls are blueprints weathered by time. Across millennia, Europe’s crania have silently recorded the toll of famine, climate, warfare, and migration. A new study 1 by Pavel Grasgruber of Masaryk University traces the sweeping changes in male cranial morphology from the Upper Paleolithic to the cusp of the Bronze Age, offering a rare skeletal counterpoint to the genetic narratives that often dominate prehistoric discourse.

article thumbnail

Ocean - with David Attenborough

Living Geography

A trailer has been released for the new film Ocean. OCEAN WITH DAVID ATTENBOROUGH takes viewers on a breathtaking journey showing there is nowhere more vital for our survival, more full of life, wonder, or surprise, than theocean. The celebrated broadcaster and filmmaker reveals how his lifetime has coincided with the great age of ocean discovery. Through spectacular sequences featuring coral reefs, kelp forests and the open ocean, Attenborough shares why a healthy ocean keeps the entire planet

52
article thumbnail

Corruption and Co-Optation in Autocracy: Evidence from Russia

Political Science Now

Corruption and Co-Optation in Autocracy: Evidence from Russia By David Szakonyi , George Washington University. Do corrupt officials govern differently in elected office? This article develops a theoretical framework and analyzes new data from financial disclosures to estimate the governing costs of corruption. First, I uncover substantial hidden wealth held by roughly one quarter of the legislators in the Russian Duma; these kompromat deputies are vulnerable to damaging information being used

article thumbnail

Dynamic Learning: Mindmaps

ShortCutsTV

The next in our popular Dynamic Learning series of Study Skills films is Mindmapping, a note-taking technique originally popularised by Tony Buzan in the 1970s.

article thumbnail

Fray-I: Teaching Students to Question AI Like a Historian

Moler's Musing

The first time a student told me, This sounds smart, but I dont think its right, in response to an AI-generated answerI knew we were onto something. That moment sparked Fray-I a thinking routine Ive been developing to help students analyze AI responses, not just accept them. Its still a work in progress, but its already changing how my students interact with both history and technology.

article thumbnail

Flooding Interview on WEKU’s Radio Show, “Eastern Standard”

Life and Landscapes

Here is a link to WEKU’s “Eastern Standard” Radio Show on the flooding in Eastern Kentucky. I was pleased to participate and reflect on my travels in the area. “Good morning Reggie – Here’s a link to the segment. The link to your blog appears on the site’s homepage. [link] Thank you! Tom Martin – Producer, Editor, Host Eastern Standard” #lifeandlandscapes #reggievanstockum The Life and Landscapes Blog Site is at: www.vanstockum.blog/lookin Al

52
article thumbnail

Fischer Farms

Living Geography

As I drive to Norwich from where I live I pass a large complex to the right, up on the hill as I approach Easton, on the western edge of the city. It has become more visible in the last few months as due to ongoing work to dual the A47 as it approaches the city, thousands of trees have been felled. Not everyone's happy about that as you can imagine.

article thumbnail

APSA 2025 Fund for Latino Scholarship- Applications Due June 15th

Political Science Now

The FundforLatinoScholarship encourages and supports the recruitment, retention, and promotion of political science students and scholars who study and research Latina/o politics (especially students and tenure track junior faculty). Applications are due June 15, 2025. Thefundwill award grants to initiatives that: Provide professional opportunities and financial assistance to undergraduate and graduate students and scholars who study and research on political science topics related to Latina/o p

article thumbnail

Collections 6 | PowerPoint Presentations

ShortCutsTV

The next set in the Collections series covers both Sociology and Psychology and covers a mix of PowerPoint Presentations, some of which Ive lifted for the Web but most of which Ive created.