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Iranian Scientist Claims to Have Invented Time Machine

DeloreanAli Razeghi, a scientist from Tehran, claims to have successfully created a time machine. According to The Telegraph, Razeghi's machine is not a time traveling device in the classic sense. That it, it does NOT transport a person into the past or the future. Rather, it predicts the next five to eight years of the user's life. Razeghi claims that his machine's predictions are 98% accurate.

Razeghi told The Telegraph, "My invention easily fits into the size of a personal computer case and can predict details of the next 5-8 years of the life of its users. It will not take you into the future; it will bring the future to you."

There is no word as to when he plans to make his machine available to potential buyers or how much it would cost.

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“Why should there be only one teacher in class? Why not everyone teach and learn?”- Abhijit Sinha 

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The testing culture in schools is absurd and shows little signs of slowing.  Depending on what report you read, students spend anywhere from 10 to 19 school days each year testing. That number...

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With this being the time of year for the story, A Christmas Carol, it's a great opportunity to learn about its author, Charles Dickens. One of the most famous writers of all times, Dickens also wrote Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities, David Copperfield and more. 

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Becoming Aware of Acceleration Options...

As a teacher, do you know your state’s acceleration options for students? If you don’t, you’re not alone. In my experience, in the state of Florida, for instance, few parents and, even teachers, were aware that a law exists to provide acceleration options to advanced students grades k-12 in public schools. The little-known, relatively unadvertised policy, passed in 2012, only seemed known to a few, savvy parents at the school where I worked as a teacher of the gifted.

However, the...

The Global Search for Education:...

Learning that can excite learners to continue their work well beyond the school day sounds like the kind of exercise schools would want to encourage more. Project-based learning has come and gone since the early 20th century. Today, thanks to real world challenges such as the United Nations’ SDG’s, it is...

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