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21 votes
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Supreme Court weighs mandating public funds for religious schools in Maine
8 votes -
Pseudowork and real work
7 votes -
US libraries report spike in organised attempts to ban books in schools
18 votes -
Why I'm tired of hearing about wokeism
7 votes -
He created The Oregon Trail and he didn’t make a penny
11 votes -
Where the humanities aren't in crisis
3 votes -
‘I think we should throw those books in a fire’: Movement builds on right to target books
17 votes -
Faced with soaring Ds and Fs, schools are ditching the old way of grading
12 votes -
Goodbye, MIT
14 votes -
Improving MIT’s written commitment to freedom of expression
4 votes -
Architect resigns in protest over UCSB mega-dorm
21 votes -
To make social structures more equal, we can’t blind ourselves to genetics
4 votes -
File not found: A generation that grew up with Google is forcing professors to rethink their lesson plans
25 votes -
As women become 60% of all US college students and continue to outpace and outperform men, the WSJ takes a look at how colleges and students feel about it
16 votes -
Bus driver shortages are latest challenge hitting US schools
8 votes -
The cult in a boarding school
3 votes -
Inderkum High School teacher to be fired after allegedly indoctrinating students with "antifa" ideals
6 votes -
Virginia school board to pay $1.3 million in transgender student’s suit
13 votes -
Oklahoma mom of eleven helps rescue ten girls on Afghanistan's robotics team
14 votes -
He taught a Ta-Nehisi Coates essay. Then he was fired.
12 votes -
US to erase student debt for those with severe disabilities
15 votes -
Schools opened, suicide attempts in girls skyrocketed
8 votes -
Walmart to pay 100% of college tuition and books for associates
11 votes -
If you had to teach a class about information literacy, what would your key points be?
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and...
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and a lot of the recommendations it gives feel a little limited/dated, or just out of touch with current internet practices (e.g. trust .edu and .gov sites -- don't trust .com sites; use Britannica Online instead of Wikipedia). It also doesn't really account for things like memes, social media, or really much of the modern internet landscape.
I know we have a lot of very technically literate as well as informationally literate people here, and I'm curious: if you were tasked with creating a class to help people learn information literacy, including how to identify misinformation online, what would some of your key points or focuses be? How would you convey those to your students (whether those students are kids, adults, or both)?
17 votes -
I signed up to write college essays for rich kids. I found cheating is more complicated than I thought.
29 votes -
You are not a visual learner: The biggest myth in education
15 votes -
WeChat deletes Chinese university LGBT accounts in fresh crackdown
16 votes -
California high school stripped of basketball title after tortillas were thrown at opposing Latino players
6 votes -
When this high school valedictorian started giving a speech about being queer, the principal took the mic
11 votes -
2021 United States teacher shortage survey overview
6 votes -
Free Geek Twin Cities: E-Waste and education
5 votes -
In Argentina, cheap government-issued netbooks sparked a musical renaissance
10 votes -
After the worst school year ever, here's what students want most
7 votes -
Namecheap Expert Summit 2021
6 votes -
Masculinity attitudes across rural, suburban, and urban areas in the United States
8 votes -
Choosing a school in a segregated city
9 votes -
Yearbook photos of girls were altered to hide their chests
21 votes -
California will discourage students who are gifted at math
16 votes -
Recommended training courses for graphic arts?
My fiance is an artist who was laid off because he worked for a major employer in the entertainment industry that required him to be in contact with people. So he's been unemployed for a long time...
My fiance is an artist who was laid off because he worked for a major employer in the entertainment industry that required him to be in contact with people.
So he's been unemployed for a long time now, but he has been trying to find work, but there isn't really anything available that uses his particular skills. So we invested in a digital art workstation (basically just bought a monitor with a digitizer built in to use a pen with) so that he could work on becoming an independant artist. But he's so bad at marketing and he spends so much time worrying about fine details that it takes him over a week to finish a single piece, so he hasn't had any success.
So if you combine this with a broken tooth that he hasn't been able to get taken care of because of a lapse in his dental insurance, he's not been in a good place.
I just bought a Mac and was looking for mac-native graphics programs (I sometimes work on marketing, so I need to do photo editing from time to time. Also I used to do photography as a hobby and want to get back into it), when I came across Serif's Affinity Designer Workbook. And I thought to myself that getting my fiance a training course in graphic design would allow him to shift gears into a segment where there is more work. It'll also give him a bit of a kick in the pants to get him moving and feeling better about himself.
I'm sure everyone knows there are millions of online training courses available right now, so I'm hoping someone might have any recommendations. I have some money saved up, so I don't mind paying a little bit extra if it'll result in better results. I'd prefer if it were a class that didn't rely on Adobe Illustrator if possible, but I know that it's the 'standard' and he'll probably have better luck if he has experience in it.
9 votes -
School almost 'eliminates bullying' with break-time ban on games
23 votes -
Am I Doctor Stallman?
15 votes -
Proctoring tools and dragnet investigations rob students of due process
19 votes -
What are you learning right now?
Whether it be for school, work, a hobby, or personal interest, what are you learning right now? How are you learning it and what prompted you to start learning? What are some things that surprised...
Whether it be for school, work, a hobby, or personal interest, what are you learning right now? How are you learning it and what prompted you to start learning? What are some things that surprised you about what you are learning? What advice would you give to someone who just started to learn about it?
17 votes -
Israel lifts outdoor mask mandate and fully reopens schools, leaders stating full reopening of the economy could happen next month
5 votes -
Florida’s new transgender sports ban permits schools to require "routine sports physical examination" of the students' genitals, genetic makeup, and testosterone levels
23 votes -
Relative student ability is remarkably static and predictable from pre-K to college and beyond
17 votes -
In Finland, high-quality free school meals are provided to all children between six and sixteen as a public service – students everywhere deserve the same
8 votes -
Becker College (Worcester, Massachusetts) closing its doors
8 votes -
Pakistan’s first transgender-only madrasa breaks barriers
8 votes