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20 votes
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AI was eroding trust in my classroom — so I got rid of typed papers and bought my students notebooks instead
37 votes -
ArXiv is separating from Cornell University, and is hiring a CEO, who will be paid roughly $300,000/year
42 votes -
Survey reveals almost 50% of California teachers may quit teaching soon
44 votes -
The average US college student is illiterate
53 votes -
The film students who can no longer sit through films
24 votes -
Is higher education still valuable?
Hi friends, Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to...
Hi friends,
Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to college?
I’m asking because I am enrolled in a masters program for statistics and have ~2 years left. I’m concerned that by the time I’m finished, the degree won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on. Like many of you, I work in software. Some days I think I should be learning an entirely different skill set in a non tech related field to diversify my value instead of doubling down on a potentially dying field.
I am not really interested in “you should pursue education for the sake of education”. While this is probably true, at the end of the day I need a way to make money to survive and education is the historical way of increasing one’s value in the job market. Furthermore, I can educate myself for far cheaper if education from a university is no longer considered valuable.
Anyone else in the same boat? Am I being dramatic? Would love to hear your thoughts.
33 votes -
A nationwide LGBTQ+ book ban bill for public schools has been introduced in the US House of Representatives
33 votes -
Nine dead after shooter opens fire at Canadian high school
53 votes -
A court in Poland has ruled that schools must use students' preferred names and pronouns even prior to the change of one's legal name/sex
37 votes -
Special preschools are helping the Sámi people in Finland to bring their almost-lost language back from the brink of extinction
11 votes -
Those who can, teach history
8 votes -
Internet of Bugs / Spec Again creator, Carl, is planning a course for developers who want to go solo - looking for feedback from potential participants
12 votes -
I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back.
23 votes -
C'mon, professors, assign the hard reading
32 votes -
Why academic competition >> athletic competition
5 votes -
Norway's approach to getting kids reading has much to teach us this year – from government support, to innovation with libraries themselves
13 votes -
J. David Bamberger, Church’s Chicken tycoon who made land conservation his mission, dies at 97
15 votes -
Texas A&M, under new curriculum limits, warns professor not to teach Plato
44 votes -
Scalable oral exams with an ElevenLabs voice AI agent
16 votes -
A, B, C or D – grades might not say all that much about what students are actually learning
17 votes -
Record numbers of Swedish retirees are enrolling in a university run “by pensioners for pensioners” amid increased loneliness and a growing appetite for learning and in-person interactions
29 votes -
Pedagogy recommendations
21 votes -
Brown University shooting leaves two dead, nine injured as police search for killer
41 votes -
In a city of 58,000, there are almost 1,000 people studying or making a living from video games. How can Skövde in Sweden punch so far above its weight?
12 votes -
Lord Of The Rings author's writing desk up for auction
37 votes -
Why are 38 percent of Stanford students saying they're disabled?
25 votes -
How right-wing superstar Riley Gaines built an anti-trans empire
21 votes -
How a flawed idea is teaching millions of kids to be poor readers
64 votes -
New York school phone ban has made lunch loud again
43 votes -
Scav: The world's largest scavenger hunt
10 votes -
The emerging evidence on AI tutoring
20 votes -
US teacher shot by six-year-old student awarded $10m by jury
34 votes -
Pilot scheme where students eat nutritious breakfasts using donated surplus food builds on the ‘folkhem’ welfare model to boost health and sustainability in Sweden
12 votes -
Anthropic to bring its AI to hundreds of teachers in Iceland with pilot scheme – aim of helping them with lesson planning, classroom materials, and administrative work
7 votes -
'Intentional' explosion at Harvard medical campus under investigation
32 votes -
A review of Alpha School
18 votes -
Coursera to charge partners 15% platform fee starting 2026
14 votes -
Memorization, trivia, and atomic units for creativity
8 votes -
Real talk with Skyline High School’s violence interrupter
14 votes -
How a secret recording of a gender identity lecture upended Texas A&M
28 votes -
Sweden is to implement a nationwide mobile phone ban in all schools in an attempt to improve security and study conditions for students
9 votes -
Free training today to help fight book banning
Tonight at 7 pm Central/8 pm Eastern, there is a free workshop/training to help people learn how to make book résumés for highly targeted books. These would then go on the Unite Against Book Bans...
Tonight at 7 pm Central/8 pm Eastern, there is a free workshop/training to help people learn how to make book résumés for highly targeted books. These would then go on the Unite Against Book Bans website.
Quote from the UABB website on what a Book Resume is:
Book Résumés help teachers, librarians, parents, and community members defend books from censorship. They detail each title’s significance and educational value and are easy to share with administrators, book review committees, elected officials, and board members.
Their goal is to create a process for sourcing these résumés from the community because the ALA cannot keep up with demand (and is drowning with budget cuts).
The registration link for the training is here:
https://givebutter.com/R0SVw921 votes -
Survey results on books that people identify as shaping their life/personality after reading them in high school
50 votes -
An AI social coach is teaching empathy to people with autism
19 votes -
This is the group that's been swatting US universities
34 votes -
Colleges have a new worry: ‘Ghost students’—AI powered fraud rings angling to get millions in financial aid
23 votes -
Danish government has announced it will abolish a 25% sales tax on books, in an effort to combat a "reading crisis"
29 votes -
The crisis of the US university started long before Donald Trump
32 votes -
While Finnish students learn how to discern fact from fiction online, media literacy experts say AI-specific training should be guaranteed going forward
11 votes