Home >> A News >> News

Search form

Latest Education News
National Center for Science Education Blogger Stephanie Keep knows her hominins from her hominids and her Australopithecus from her Ardipithecus. This blog post will help you teach your students the same.
School districts across the country are working to set policies and guidelines for educators using digital-learning tools in the classroom. In response, the U.S. Department of Education and the Consortium for School Networking have created... 03/13/2015 - 8:56am ago
Despite nationwide opt outs from students, an estimated 2 million students have completed the Common Core-aligned PARCC exams in classrooms across the country.
At a recent conference at SXSWEdu titled, "You go (far), girl! Inspiring Girls in STEM", Jackie Bastardi and Adele Falco of Curious on Hudson shared four key ways to get girls excited about STEM.
A study of five school districts finds that the benefits of a digital classroom are more substantial when supplemented with the necessary instruction.
According to a new survey of schools, 36 percent of U.S. school lunchrooms serve locally grown foods to its students. Big agriculture states, however, weren't among the biggest Farm-to-School participants.
J.W. Harris, an eighth-grader at Schroeder Middle School in Grand Forks, North Dakota, has dyslexia, and struggled in class until he began using Texthelp's Read and Write for Google, a program for the Chrome browser.
iStoryBooks offers classics most early graders will love and even runs in audio mode. This app could supplement your classroom library.
The Global Teacher Award was given out this weekend and President Bill Clinton presented the honor to a deserving Maine educator.
At the recent SXSWEdu conference, four experts share what the classroom of the future could look like.
Cat got your tongue? Here are things teachers think but can’t say to their students’ parents. Improvement is possible with communication.
In a series of letters between to U.S. principals, Carol Burris and Jayne Ellspermann talk about Common Core State Standards in their schools.
Activists who gathered at SXSW feel that narrowing the gender gap in STEM for young girls should be a high priority.
Recent data from the National Association for the Education of Homeless Children and Youth found that over 1.25 million public school students were homeless. This raises questions about how districts are supporting their students.
Print publications for K-12 are shrinking more than ever as more schools go digital.
Become a publisher and help your students learn real-world skills and refine their writing chops through a self-publishing project.
This week in STEM Education, we see the University of Arizona, Biogen Idec, the Boston Red Sox, GlobalFoundries and Ohio school districts donating their money and time to promoting science, technology, engineering and math.
If you start small with maker projects in the classroom, you can still engage your students. Consider using the tools you already own.
President Barack Obama recently said that although the nation's schools are improving, he is seeking more federal funding for education in order to continue this worthwhile trend.
According to data from the U.S. Department of Education, racial gaps among high school graduation rates are narrowing, and minority students' graduation rates have increased.

Pages