-
9 votes
-
Seven years of spaced repetition software in the classroom
6 votes -
Parents with disabilities face extra hurdles with kids' remote schooling
8 votes -
A year of spaced repetition software in the classroom
8 votes -
Companies often want to keep loyal employees when their jobs change or go away. Here are some effective ways to move people onto a new career path.
4 votes -
Preparing the workforce for current unfilled jobs
5 votes -
America will sacrifice anything for the college experience
8 votes -
“I feel that the future I’ve been working towards my whole life is gone now” — What United States college students have to say about the coronavirus
15 votes -
Stephen Krashen on Second Language Acquisition (SLA), reading and research
5 votes -
Here’s what one week of online school is like for my seven- and five-year-old kids, explained in a comic
17 votes -
The battle over dyslexia: It was once a widely accepted way of explaining why some children struggled to read and write. But some experts have begun to question the existence of dyslexia itself.
19 votes -
The Bully's Pulpit - On the elementary structure of domination
3 votes -
Are illegal strikes justified?
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state...
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state employees from striking and GEO's contract with UofM (signed in April) has a clause that prohibits work stoppages.
Are strikes performed in violation of the law (state or otherwise) or a contract justified? Why or why not?
22 votes -
GWU investigating whether White professor invented her Black identity
7 votes -
US universities seek ways to protect students and faculty from being prosecuted by Chinese authorities
7 votes -
How men’s rights groups helped rewrite regulations on campus rape
6 votes -
National trends in grade inflation, American colleges and universities
15 votes -
The kids are alt-right: Teachers know the warning signs when students are radicalized by online hate movements. They just don’t know how to stop it — or if it’s a power struggle they can ever win
29 votes -
US Justice Department says Yale discriminates against Asian, white applicants
10 votes -
Losing the education lottery
4 votes -
Why can’t we just hold classes outdoors instead?
11 votes -
How do unschoolers turn out?
11 votes -
ICE announces modifications to international student policies amid coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
US pediatricians call for in-person school this fall
12 votes -
Higher ed: Enough already
17 votes -
The death of expertise
9 votes -
Colleges face student lawsuits seeking refunds after coronavirus closures
12 votes -
Why I’m learning more with distance learning than I do in school
8 votes -
Prison inmates in Western Australia made 100 school desks in less than two weeks to donate to families for children homeschooling during the coronavirus pandemic
5 votes -
Michigan Governor Whitmer announces plan for free college tuition for front-line workers battling coronavirus
13 votes -
Many schools are already closed until the end of the year. So what happens to all those missed classes?
11 votes -
A very detailed Corona curriculum for your kids
5 votes -
Singapore: Most workplaces to close, schools will move to full home-based learning from next week
4 votes -
PSA for parents/guardians of school-age kids: Many distance/online learning tools are currently available for free through your child's teacher
For anyone who's caring for school-age children, I want to let you know that nearly every single online education platform/tool is currently offering up their normally premium paid services for...
For anyone who's caring for school-age children, I want to let you know that nearly every single online education platform/tool is currently offering up their normally premium paid services for free on account of school closures. While some will offer these directly to parents/students, most of them require a teacher to sign up and then have the student account exist underneath them.
If there is a resource that you or your children would like to access, please email your child's teacher and ask if they'll sign up for it. It'll likely take only two minutes on their end (and they'll be happy to do it! trust me!), but it'll open up a ton of resources for you and your child.
7 votes -
Small colleges were already on the brink. Now, coronavirus threatens their existence.
4 votes -
Joe Biden adopts part of a tuition-free public college proposal as a nod to US progressives
10 votes -
NYC schools will close Monday
6 votes -
Momentum builds for NYC teacher ‘sickout’ mutiny over de Blasio’s refusal to close schools
5 votes -
What if the court saw other rights as generously as gun rights?
12 votes -
How the working-class life is killing Americans, in charts
26 votes -
What is Finland's Phenomenon-based Learning (PhenoBL) approach? This approach breaks down subject-based compartmentalisation of knowledge
7 votes -
Clearing up the confusion around Prop 13 on the 2020 ballot
7 votes -
‘Mr. Bob,’ 88-year-old crossing guard, saves two children’s lives before sacrificing his own
12 votes -
At the Green Free School in Copenhagen, you're more likely to find pupils repairing a bicycle or doing urban farming than sitting in front of a blackboard
8 votes -
Connecticut school board reinstates mascot Native Americans called demeaning
4 votes -
Why Finland's schools outperform most others across the developed world
15 votes -
What I learned about life at a company that deals in dead bodies
5 votes -
How Finland starts its fight against fake news in schools – country on frontline of information war teaches everyone from pupils to politicians how to spot slippery information
7 votes -
Too many of America’s smartest waste their talents
11 votes -
Demoted and placed on probation
5 votes