Improved technology played a big role in the identification of the two primary suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing.
Law enforcement officials were deluged with digital images and video after asking anyone who was in the area during the event to submit them. Traditionally it would take hundreds of officers countless hours to examine all of that media, but new versions of facial recognition technology have made that task much more manageable.
CNet explains how this tech works: "The software, which can help pick a person out of crowd, looks for differentiating features -- from the shape of a mouth to the ridge on a nose to the distance between a pair of eyes.
3VR in San Francisco has developed software that extracts information from video and then makes it searchable for its clients, which include retailers, banks, security firms and law enforcement."
This week, the National Center on Teaching Quality (NCTQ) released a new report Easy As and What’s Behind Them. In the study the advocacy group moved from our nation’s ongoing discussion of grade inflation at our colleges and universities to a specific look at grade inflation at our teachers’ colleges.
In Easy As, NCTQ’s researchers observed that grade inflation was more prevalent in teachers’ colleges than...

"Prompted by your Global Search for Education series, a survey was designed and responses were obtained from 53 female and 78 male students at the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez campus, with the aim of exploring gender perceptions." -- Hector...
The #techeducator podcast was a tour de force on...

"By Schools for Schools starts from a different set of assumptions. In essence, it builds on the idea that within schools and the communities they serve, there are untapped resources that can be mobilized in order to transform schools from places that do well for many children to...
Bell Ringer Activity
Ever have a day when you wished you could stay in bed? Andrew Iwanicki not only is staying in bed for one day but for THREE months! As part of a NASA program to study how bones and muscles react to long periods of weightlessness in space, they have asked for volunteers to stay in bed for 70 days. NASA has...
A student is asked to create a bookmark that contains higher-order thinking questions. After struggling to create the “perfect” question, she runs out of time and completes only half the assignment. The session ends with the girl in tears, upset over her perceived failure.
On the same day, another student, faced with finding common themes between texts, shuts down with frustration. Rather than cry, he simply refuses to talk or continue the assignment.
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The tallest building in the United States (and the Western Hemisphere) has opened for business. Built at the site of the original World Trade Towers, which were destroyed by terrorists on September 11, 2001, the new One World Trade Center has 104 floors and took eight years to build. Standing 1776 ft. tall, the skyscraper will have a ceremony marking its official opening later in the month.
I am very happy to see this new building standing proudly in the New York skyline!
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A book review by C. M. Rubin
What happens when you create a productive tension between HARD (persistent, challenging, competitive, data-driven, short-term) and SOFT (creative, collaborative, people centered, organic, long-term)?
A groundbreaking new book, Uplifting Leadership, doesn’t just hypothesize that such an uncommon balance can turn failure into success, it offers astonishing global...
"The direct contact with actual physical phenomena was the key to developing science topics in more depth." -- Silvina Gvirtz
I’m on a quest to find the most inspiring school turnaround success stories from around the world.
From Argentina this morning, I am delighted to welcome once again to The Global Search for Education Dr. Silvina Gvirtz (Executive Director of Conectar Igualdad...