Ali 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.

When you think back to the best manager, boss, or leader you have ever had, what are the traits or characteristics you remember? As a principal, there were several things I liked to do to make sure that my teachers felt supported. It is important that our teachers feel like they are valued, a part of a community, and what they are doing matters.
These are listed of ideas, in no particular order, because...

As early childhood professionals, we each have a philosophy on teaching, classroom management, family engagement, and curriculum, to name only a few. Starting today, we must make sure that if our philosophies don’t already include play, we begin developing that vital...

C.M. Rubin’s Global Education Report
Nuclear weapons have been used twice in warfare: in the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. As the threat of nuclear warfare drew closer last year, it was announced that Beatrice Fihn and her advocacy group, The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), had won the...
I recently saw this story on the news and thought what an amazing young man!
Perhaps, you may find it of interest to use with your students as an Interactive Notebook Activity using the News.
If you’ve been in education for any length of time, you know you can count on one thing: things are going to change. The latest, greatest educational reform-whether if it comes from the federal, state or local level (or all of them) will surely impact your school and classroom. Reform, plainly speaking, is the nature of education. And if you’re going to survive for any amount of time in this profession, you must learn to ride these waves.
Just in the last decade, education has...

“What struck me most was the absurdity, that everyone agrees these weapons should never be used, but we need nuclear weapons so they won’t be used?” — Beatrice Fihn
What can we learn about innovation from those who seek to abolish nuclear weapons?
The Tribeca Disruptive Innovation Awards (TDIA) has named Nobel...

“We should be changing the goals of education to focus on deeper learning: Relevance of what is taught, to build motivation, and personalization of the What and How; Versatility, to create ‘Renaissance humans’, which brings robustness to face whatever life throws at us; Transfer, insuring that what we learn in...