Education

The Union: The Way Buying Things Should Be

By Emeli Warren|2018-10-25T10:25:08-04:00April 9th, 2013|

At Azusa Pacific University, class projects in the business department encourage students to team up with existing companies to promote networking and field experience. But Mitch Ahlenius and Benjamin Juhlin never did things like everyone else. Rather than teaming up with a “real” company, they thought they would create one themselves. The idea for what would eventually be called The Union Co. started out as [...]

Teachers Worry About Making the Grade

By Victoria Elliott|2018-10-25T16:03:50-04:00April 2nd, 2013|

South Carolina teachers are uneasy about a new grading system being introduced in public schools. The A–F letter grades are familiar, but the educators won’t be giving out the marks—they’ll be receiving them. As a push to further improve the public school system in South Carolina, State Superintendent of Education Mick Zais has developed this new way of evaluating teachers. The program is [...]

Head Start: The Answer, but Also the Question

By Catherine Martin|2018-10-25T10:21:38-04:00March 26th, 2013|

During his 2013 State of the Union address, among the many plans he laid out for improving America, Obama managed to frame a very controversial topic in very neutral, accessible terms: He declared that his administration would “make high-quality preschool available to every single child in America.” Sounds pretty great, right? Almost everyone would have a hard time arguing with rhetoric like that. Even [...]

Students Get Hands-On Science Experience with Inquiry

By Emeli Warren|2018-10-25T10:46:14-04:00March 19th, 2013|

It’s been almost twelve years since I went to science camp, but I still vividly remember my experiences. I had never been that engaged in my science classes, as I was more interested in reading and writing, but the week I spent in the outdoors with my fellow elementary students was one of my favorites. Why? you might ask. I was allowed to [...]

Training Our Brains

By Victoria Elliott|2018-10-25T10:43:32-04:00March 12th, 2013|

There’s a new trend in learning aids, and this one may be able to raise your IQ. “Brain training” facilities claim they can improve both IQ and cognitive skills through a regimen of games aimed at promoting brain elasticity and fluid intelligence. Though there are many companies specializing in brain training, the most notable is LearningRx, the only brick-and-mortar brain trainer, numbering 83 [...]

Controversial Laws for Underperforming Schools

By Lori Becker|2018-10-19T15:37:47-04:00February 5th, 2013|

Won’t Back Down is a 2012 drama starring Maggie Gyllenhaal as a single mom to a dyslexic daughter, Viola Davis as a teacher at a failing inner-city elementary school and Holly Hunter as a teacher’s union representative. In the movie, Gyllenhaal’s and Davis’s characters use a fail-safe law to take over the underperforming school. The film plays out in typical Hollywood fashion with plucky [...]

New Online Resource for High School Students

By Eileen Neary|2018-10-19T15:41:41-04:00January 29th, 2013|

High schools are always changing. During my time in high school, I was a member of the unlucky class required to take standardized testing junior year, and then again senior year when the state decided to change the grade level being tested. Washington State students, however, aren’t just presented with the inconvenience of extra testing, but with the added pressure of another course. [...]

Why Students Should Not Write Off STEM Education

By Rose Pleuler|2018-10-19T15:32:22-04:00January 22nd, 2013|

As a person a little scared to so much as add without the help of a calculator, I understand why STEM has a menacing reputation among high school students. The STEM skills—that is, science, technology, engineering and math—are often considered complicated and unnecessary lessons to students who don’t want to be scientists, technicians, engineers or mathematicians. Many students assume they’re better off avoiding [...]

Computer-Based Testing Model May Improve Writing Proficiency in Students

By Gabby Balza|2018-10-19T15:30:22-04:00January 15th, 2013|

With answers becoming so accessible that students can find them with just a click of the mouse, it’s understandable that some may worry that technology is becoming more of a hindrance and less of an improvement to education. For students who saved their summer reading until the last minute, finding detailed book summaries has become relatively easy. With the variety of online games [...]

A Step Back in Desegregation

By Gabby Balza|2018-10-19T15:35:33-04:00January 8th, 2013|

As a Latina riding on the school bus to my predominately white elementary school, I remember the way we would all peer out the windows with our faces half hidden when the bus from the northern part of town passed by us. “That’s the school with all the black people,” someone would say, and we’d turn to her and wonder how she could [...]

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