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Latest Education News
New Year, New You: Try This 30-Day Reflective Teacher Challenge
Nonprofit Food for Free is helping the Cambridge, Mass., school system feed students who rely on school cafeteria food for nutrition during the weekend and when school is not in session too, through its backing of the Cambridge Weekend... 01/08/2016 - 11:00am ago
According to researchers from the University of Virginia, expectations for kindergarten are getting more and more challenging.
A new study from The Vision Counsel suggests that the increase of Americans using multiple digital devices a day is causing an increase in patients with eye strain.
According to seventy percent of educators who responded to a survey administered by the Georgia Department of Education, 70 percent of the state’s teachers would not recommend the career to others.
Is targeted feedback the answer to creating effective teacher evaluations?
A new online course geared towards project based learning is available for educators looking for an innovative way to teach.
The Supreme Court will hear today the case of the 10 California teachers who are suing the California Teachers Association for forcing them to pay dues that finance causes they are in opposition to, saying it violates their right to free... 01/11/2016 - 11:11am ago
Across the country, more and more districts are heeding research on adolescent sleep cycles and are delaying school start times for their benefit.
A teacher is not just thinking about ways to change education, he's actually running for office.
New reports show that Apple, formerly beloved in K-12, is falling behind Google and its Chromebook army.
This week in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) news, one middle school STEM class gets a very special assignment.
LifeHacker’s Melanie Pinola says that we can still get our young students interested in STEM- all the while not having to explicitly force it on them.
A brand new show about the classroom is airing. Have you seen it?
During President Obama’s final State of the Union address last night, he addressed several hot-button education issues like the passing of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) and focusing on making computer science a mandatory class in... 01/13/2016 - 10:45am ago
Even though New Jersey Governor Chris Christie had decided that the Common Core standards were not working for students in the state, a committee appointed to review them decided that 84 percent of the standards are good.
A Swedish researcher seeking to document the challenges women face in the science and math subjects conducted a study in which she told teachers in Switzerland, Austria and Germany to grade answers to a physic problem.

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