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Over the past decade, a majority of states have passed new science of reading laws or implemented policies that emphasize phonics in classrooms. Yet the 2024 results of an important national test, released last month, showed that the reading scores of elementary and middle schoolers continued their long downward slide, hitting new lows. The emphasis on phonics in many schools is still relatively new and may need more time to yield results.
DENVER In Zach Kennellys senior civics class, students are building custom chatbots with artificial intelligence. One student is working on a chatbot that better curates movie and television show recommendations based on a viewers recent watch history. Another is creating a chatbot that somewhat ironically helps members of Gen Z like herself practice their communication skills, such as by coming up with conversation starters.
Heres hoping as many as possible read the book and action the ideas getting these learning ideas on the front foot is a tough ask (weirdly) and moving teachers from their obsession about teaching to add an obsession about learning is the aim of the game. This line was written in an email to me from Dr. John Hattie recently where we were talking about my book on memory processing, attention, and learning.
The evolution of species is often framed as a gradual process unfolding over millennia. Yet, sometimes evolution speeds up—not through natural selection but through human intervention. A new study, Evolution under Intensive Industrial Breeding: Skull Size and Shape Comparison Between Historic and Modern Pig Lineages 1 by Ashleigh Haruda and colleagues, reveals how industrial breeding has dramatically reshaped the skulls of domestic pigs within a mere century.
To support improved student outcomes, educators increasingly look to technology. But how do they fuel authentic engagement, using technology as a tool to not only enhance learning but also inspire curiosity and strengthen connections? Recently, EdSurge spoke with Kelly Mitchell, Digital Learning and Teaching Facilitator with Onslow County Schools in North Carolina.
This story was produced by the Associated Press and reprinted with permission. Math is the subject sixth grader Harmoni Knight finds hardest, but that’s changing. In-class tutors and data chats at her middle school in Compton, California, have made a dramatic difference, the 11-year-old said. She proudly pulled up a performance tracker at a tutoring session last week, displaying a column of perfect 100 percent scores on all her weekly quizzes from January.
Call for Proposals: Joukowsky Institute Archaeology and the Ancient World Spring Symposium kskordal Mon, 02/10/2025 - 12:54 Image Call for Proposals: Joukowsky Institute Archaeology and the Ancient World Spring Symposium, 2026 Deadline: March 3, 2025 The Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World (JIAAW) is accepting collaborative proposals for a symposium to be held in the spring semester of 2026.
“Surrounding Kentucky, Select Essays,” is the second volume of my “Surrounding Series.” The first volume is entitled “Surrounding Mammoth Cave,” the Third is “Surrounding The Kentucky River,” and the Fourth is “Surrounding Fort Knox including Southern Indiana.” This volume addresses my inquiries into the Science, Culture and History of various locations in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
“Surrounding Kentucky, Select Essays,” is the second volume of my “Surrounding Series.” The first volume is entitled “Surrounding Mammoth Cave,” the Third is “Surrounding The Kentucky River,” and the Fourth is “Surrounding Fort Knox including Southern Indiana.” This volume addresses my inquiries into the Science, Culture and History of various locations in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.
Project Title:Chinook Justice: A Survivance Journey Rachel Cushman, University of Oregon Rachel Cushman is an enrolled citizen of the Chinook Indian Nation, where she is both an elected and hereditary leader. In 2017, Cushman was elected to the Chinook Tribal Council, but her role as a leader stems from her ancestor, Clatsop Tyee Wasilta. Cushman is an Indigenous knowledge practitioner, activist, educator, and canoe skipper.
More than a century ago, fossilized bones of Australopithecus africanus were unearthed in South Africa’s Sterkfontein Caves, adding to the growing evidence that Africa was home to some of the earliest human relatives. For decades, however, researchers faced a fundamental challenge—determining whether these ancient individuals were male or female.
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 Sienna Nordquist , covers the new article by Gemma Dipoppa, “When Migrants Mobilize against Labor Exploitation: Evidence from the Italian Farmlands” Labor exploitation is the most widespread type of human trafficking in the world.
A poet-anthropologist offers an anti-glossary to contest ways of knowing in social science that objectify people(s) into categories. Emic/Etic is part of the collection Poets Resist, Refuse, and Find a Way Through. Read the introduction to the collection here. For more information on the history and uses of these two terms, see this entry. Emic and Etic – Listen Emic Find me (italicized) in the mouths of strangers knowable thing I sit pretty between text subtext white tongue, dull tooth.
Who Is Perceived as Deserving? How Social Identities Shape Attitudes about Disaster Assistance in the United States By Ashley D. Ross , Texas A&M University at Galveston , Stella M. Rouse , Arizona State University , Isabella Alcaiz , University of Maryland , College Park , Alejandra Marchevsky , California State University, Los Angeles Research has shown that as the size of government assistance programs grow, and the recipients of such programs are increasingly non-white and/or non-citizen
DANVERS, Mass. Its a rainy fall day in New England, but that doesnt stop a group of students at Essex Tech North Shore Agricultural & Technical High School from donning work boots and hard hats and getting to work building a vegetable wash station on campus. This afternoon, they are installing wire mesh and prepping for a concrete pour under the watchful eye of Laborers Local 22 member Chris Moore, their teacher.
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