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POLICY REVIEW COMMITTEE MEETINGWednesday, July 17, 2019 SPECIAL BOARD MEETINGFriday, July 12, 2019 REGULAR BOARD BUSINESS MEETINGFriday, June 28,…
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POLICY REVIEW COMMITTEE MEETING Tuesday, December 18, 2018 - REGULAR BOARD BUSINESS MEETING Wednesday, December 12, 2018 - FINANCE & APPROPRIATIONS…
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The latest reading and math scores of 12th-graders nationwide are out today. Here's a closer look.
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Researchers Pam Mueller and Daniel M. Oppenheimer found that students remember more via taking notes longhand rather than on a laptop. It has to do with what happens when you're forced to slow down.
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That frustrated kid at the back of the class? It's not that he doesn't get it — or doesn't care. It could be he just can't see. A new report provides a look at children's vision screening by state.
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The "r" word is gone, but the ways we refer to people with disabilities shape our perceptions and behavior.
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The 2016 teacher of the year in that state decided it was about time the people who write the laws that affect schools actually see the inside of a classroom.
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In some ways, all charters are public schools. But there are debates about how they're managed — and who should run them.
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The early college model known as P-TECH, a six-year program combining high school and an associate degree, has been copied all over the country but is still a hotly contested work in progress.
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Students come from all over the world to study petroleum engineering in southern Ohio and Marietta College. In the past nearly every graduate had a good job. Not any more.
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Colleges already list high sticker prices, but those prices still don't reflect the real cost of undergraduate life. And financial aid isn't effectively bridging the gap.
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A new study looks at everyday skills, and finds that, when it comes to math, the U.S. is below average. And in computer skills, Americans are dreadful.