Life News (Education)

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Released: 2-Oct-1998 12:00 AM EDT
How Computers Are Used Matters More Than How Often
Educational Testing Service (ETS)

An unprecedented study released today by Educational Testing Service links computer use to higher student test scores. The key is how students use the computers, not how often, the analysis shows.

Released: 1-Oct-1998 12:00 AM EDT
CD-ROM Gives a Real-World View of Statistics
Ohio State University

Ohio State professors have developed a CD-ROM that encourages students to think critically about statistics in everyday life. The Electronic Encyclopedia of Statistics Examples and Exercise will supplement the new edition of a popular statistics textbook.

30-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
New Interdisciplinary Program in Bioinformatics
Boston University

Boston University has been selected to participate in a $40.5 million National Science Foundation (NSF) initiative to develop programs that will better prepare students for the wide variety of emerging careers in the rapidly evolving fields of science and engineering.

30-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Integrative Innovation in Graduate Education
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The National Science Foundation (NSF) today announced the awarding of $40.5 million over five years to 17 doctorate-granting institutions to promote integrative graduate education and research training.

Released: 25-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Financial Education Program Pays off $5000
Cornell University

Survey shows that a $10 investment to enroll in MONEY 2000, a Cornell Cooperative Extension financial education program, reaped an average $5,000 gain in net worth for participants one year later. Just six months in the program , more than half the participants were already paying bills on time, reducing their credit use, saving money, using a budget and reducing what they owed.

   
Released: 24-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Wells College Reduces Tuition by 30%
Wells College

Wells College has joined other institutional leaders who are responding to public concern about the affordability of higher education.

Released: 24-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Awards Cite Undergraduate College Plans
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The National Science Foundation (NSF) made a down payment on the nation's future this week, announcing ten new Awards for the Integration of Research and Education to undergraduate schools located nationwide.

Released: 23-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Grant to Temple University for Science Education
Temple University

A $1.2 million grant has been awarded to Temple University by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute to enhance its undergraduate program in the biological sciences and--working with two Philadelphia high schools--introduce qualified pre-college students to basic research in the life sciences.

Released: 23-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Web Site Offers Breast Cancer Information
Cornell University

Developed by the Cornell University Program on Breast Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors in New York State, a newly enhanced site addresses the roles that pesticides, diet, lifestyle and genetics may play in breast cancer risk, and offers strategies on what women and others, including policy makers, can do to reduce the risk of breast cancer.

Released: 22-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
UCSD Awarded $1.4 Million Grant from Hughes Institute; Funds to Train More Disadvantaged Science Students
University of California San Diego

Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) has announced that UCSD is one of 58 universities to receive major funding from the institute to help revitalize undergraduate science education.

Released: 22-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Evaluation of Teaching on Student Learning
University of Connecticut

University of Connecticut educational leadership professor has developed guidelines that will change the way teachers are being evaluated in Connecticut and Louisiana. Teachers in both states will be evaluated on improving aspects of teaching that strengthen or enhance students' learning in some way.

Released: 19-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Smith to launch universal internship program
Smith College

Smith College to launch unprecedented 'universal' internship program, enabling every student to afford at least one significant early career experience.

Released: 16-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Grant to Upgrade MSU Science Education, Technology
Michigan State University

Thanks to a grant of $1.6 million, Michigan State University undergraduate students will have the opportunity to spend their college careers learning first-hand the art of science in the laboratories where the work is being done.

Released: 16-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
HHMI Grant Boosts Life Sciences Education
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

A comprehensive University of Illinois program geared for the education of undergraduate students in the life sciences and fostering community outreach has received a $1.6 million grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Released: 15-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Engineering Students from Smith to Dartmouth
Smith College

A new joint venture of Smith College and Dartmouth College's Thayer School of Engineering promises to put more women in the engineering pipeline.

Released: 11-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Bring Reading to Life
Purdue University

Teachers Encouraging a Love for Literature, a Purdue University program, includes teachers, librarians, authors, illustrators and academics who hope to create a generation of readers by putting the people who create children's books into the classroom.

Released: 11-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
President Honors Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring
National Science Foundation (NSF)

President Clinton at a ceremony in the White House announced ten individuals and eight institutions as recipients of the 1998 Presidential Awards for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring, a three-year-old award administered and funded through the National Science Foundation.

Released: 10-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Answers to Most Child-Rearing Questions
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

While kids are struggling with subjects such as math or history this fall, some of their parents may be wishing they just knew more about being a parent. Answers are close at hand through the National Parent Information Network.

Released: 10-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Kids Who Don't Get Along Also Less Likely to Learn
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

"Works and plays well with others," that seemingly minor item on many a kindergarten report card, may be much more important to a child's academic success than many parents realize, a University of Illinois professor of educational psychology says.

Released: 10-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
White House Honors Professor for Mentoring
Mount Holyoke College

On September 10, Mount Holyoke College professor of chemistry Sheila E. Browne will receive a Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring at the White House from President Clinton.

Released: 9-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Leading Economic Indicators Now Available to College Students
Conference Board

The Conference Board's Business Cycle Indicators database -- which includes the Leading Economic Indicators that are among the most widely-watched barometers of future economic trends -- is now available to students using two prominent undergraduate economic textbooks.

Released: 4-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Program Gets Rid of Teachers' Pests
Purdue University

An award-winning program to curb schools of crawling critters makes the health and safety of students its primary goal. School Integrated Pest Management makes everone an "exterminator" and reduces the need for pesticide sprays.

Released: 2-Sep-1998 12:00 AM EDT
University of Minnesota Tip Sheet 9-2-98
University of Minnesota

1.Are school uniforms a good idea? 2.Concussions and high school athletes. 3. Block scheduling. 4. Parents and the morning rush. 5. Head lice

Released: 29-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Vassar named "College of the Year"
Vassar College

Vassar College has been named College of the Year by the editors of the 1999 edition of "The Best College for You," a co-publication of TIME Magazine and The Princeton Review.

Released: 26-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Student-Produced CD-ROM Helps Readers enter "A Doll's House"
 Johns Hopkins University

A CD-ROM produced by students at Johns Hopkins University will help learners better explore Ibsen's "A Doll's House," with side-by-side video clips of different actors interpreting the key characters, scripts, commentaries and background material.

Released: 26-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
College Requires Students to Showcase Work on Personal Web Pages
Coe College

This fall, Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, will require all incoming students to create and maintain a personal Web page--an "electronic portfolio" which will serve as an intellectual archive of students' undergraduate achievements.

Released: 21-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Remote-Control Lab Makes Experiments Fun
University of Illinois Chicago

A unique instructional laboratory allows students anywhere in the world to experiment with real circuit elements--not simulations--through a web-based application. Its developer says he was motivated in part by students' being turned off by experiences with faulty equipment.

Released: 20-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
First U.S. President to Guide Student Behavior
Hamilton College

In addition to receiving a copy of the student handbook to guide their behavior on campus, first-year students at Hamilton College will receive 110 "Rules of Civility," written by George Washington when he was 14.

Released: 18-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
ASU Undergraduates Make Plea for Scientific Literacy in Science Editorial
Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Following a year of research and conversations with legislators and policy makers, nine students added their voices to the scientific literacy debate, addressing the global science community with an editorial in SCIENCE. "This is the first time undergraduates have ever authored an editorial there," said Jane Maienschein, the group's co-author.

Released: 18-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Back-to-School Experts
 Johns Hopkins University

When is early academic intervention not too late? Can a parent ever be too involved in their child's education? How are talented students identified, and how do you best keep them academically engaged? The Johns Hopkins University education faculty has K-12 back-to-school tips.

Released: 18-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
University of Iowa

IOWA CITY, Iowa -- More than 2,000 new students are expected to take "virtual" tours of the University of Iowa while learning how to navigate the World Wide Web, set up their own websites, and use other communications technology this fall in a new, interactive orientation course.

Released: 14-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Even Veteran Students Can Feel Stress as School Resumes
Purdue University

The start of a new school year can be a time of eager anticipation or high anxiety for an elementary school student. "Young children can worry about getting lost in their school building, about their parents being available during the school day, or whether there will be someone who wants to play with them at recess," explains Douglas Powell, head of the Department of Child Development and Family Studies at Purdue University.

Released: 13-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
College Students Head Back to School
Old Dominion University

Many students across the country, including some 3,000 students enrolled at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., are part of a growing number taking courses through distance learning, either via satellite, the Internet or through online courses.

Released: 12-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Reading, Writing, Arithmetic: And Map Reading
Albion College

Liberal arts students at Albion College in Michigan can add a new "liberal art" to the traditional reading, writing and arithmetic this fall: geographic information systems, or GIS.

Released: 11-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Instant Messaging Helps Campus Recruit Students Online
Missouri University of Science and Technology

Recruiters at the University of Missouri-Rolla are using instant messaging chat programs such as ICQ and America Online's Instant Messenger to recruit students over the Internet.

Released: 8-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
"Network marketing" Brought to Education
Millsaps College

Network marketing is one of the hottest ways for small home businesses to expand their customer base exponentially. Now this concept has been brought to education, with an innovative program in Mississippi providing resources for public school teachers.

Released: 7-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Parents: Set the Tone for Successful School Year
Purdue University

The final few weeks of summer break are the ideal time for parents to help their children prepare for the upcoming school year, according to the dean of Purdue's School of Education. "Parents can guide activities now that will make the classroom more enjoyable and a richer learning experience this fall," says Marilyn Haring, who also is a professor of counseling and development.

Released: 6-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Lessons From Higher Education Cast Doubt on Vouchers
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Advocates for school vouchers increasingly point to the system of direct student aid in higher education as proof of the benefits that vouchers can bring in K-12 education. But the student-aid system is "not as successful as they would like to think, or want us to believe," says a professor of higher education at the University of Illinois.

Released: 5-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Teachers Coach Budding Composers on Internet
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

A budding high school composer sent "The Complete Squirrel" over the Internet to his University of Illinois student-mentor. The pair was brought together earlier this year to participate in Network for Technology, Composing and Music Mentoring, or NETCOMM, a pilot program designed to promote the teaching and learning of technology-based music composition.

Released: 1-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Hospital Mentoring Program for Inner-City Students
Cedars-Sinai

Started after the 1992 Los Angeles riots, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center's Youth Employment and Development Mentoring Program has provided unique "earn while you learn" opportunities for inner-city juniors, seniors. Integrates mentoring, education, paid employment.

Released: 1-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Statement of Peter Likins, President, University of Arizona
University of Arizona

Statement of Peter Likins, President, University of Arizona Regarding Dr. Marguerite Kay: "I have decided to accept the recommendations of The University of Arizona Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure (CAFT) and end the employment and affiliation of Dr. Marguerite Kay with The University of Arizona."

Released: 1-Aug-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Response to Poor Achievement in Math & Science Education
National Science Foundation (NSF)

Responding to the U.S. twelfth grade student performance on the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS), the NSB made four recommendations for accomplishing this goal in a statement released this week titled "Failing Our Children: Implications for the Third International Mathematics and Science Study."

Released: 31-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Wanted: Family and Consumer Science Teachers
Purdue University

What used to be called "home economics" is becoming a dynamic career field for secondary school teachers. The curriculum, now known as family and consumer sciences, is taught at both the middle- and high-school level, and there are jobs aplenty for new college graduates nationwide.

Released: 30-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Mentoring Curriculum Shares Lessons from Award-Winning UW program
University of Washington

To help bridge the widening gap between industry's demand for a diverse, well-trained work force and the available labor supply, the University of Washington's nationally recognized Women in Science & Engineering Center has developed the first comprehensive curriculum for mentoring training in science and engineering.

Released: 29-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Class Helps Student Athletes Make Transition To Post-Sports Life
Ohio State University

An Ohio State University class for student athletes who are "retiring" from athletics has shown promise in helping these athletes make the transition from sports to a new career.

Released: 24-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Computers Bring Ocean Depths to Classrooms
Mississippi State University

Most K-12 students will never see the ocean floor where the Titantic sank. But with educational resources developed by Mississippi State University, they can "see" that and other ocean depths in 3-D real-time images.

Released: 17-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Even Freshmen Should Be Thinking about Life after College
Vanderbilt University

Preparing for a career should begin as early as one's freshman year of college, says the director of Vanderbilt University's Career Center. Internships, campus activities, networking/mentoring, learning and researching and self-assessment tests are key factors in building a resume, says Linda Bird, who has been directing the university's career center for 10 years.

Released: 16-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
ETS Teams Up With Peterson's on Web-Based Services
Educational Testing Service (ETS)

Educational Testing Service and Peterson's, both leaders in their worldwide market sectors, have launched their first joint venture.

   
Released: 15-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
College Cafeterias of Old Bowing to Themed Specialty Food Areas
Vanderbilt University

The best college food services are a far cry from the cafeteria-style dining halls of old. The best ones are tuned into themed specialty food areas, presentation with pizzazz and plenty of variety.

Released: 11-Jul-1998 12:00 AM EDT
New Forensic Identification Program
West Virginia University - Eberly College of Arts and Sciences

WVU's new forensic identification program continues to make favorable `impression,' gets $5 million boost to upgrade engineering and computer science virtual reality laboratories and to bring the lab facilities on par with FBI crime center labs.



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