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$1.6 Billion Redevelopment Planned at London's South Bank Sector


Canary-Wharf-london.jpg Quatari Diar and Canary Wharf Group Plc, whose London history dates to the 1500s, are joint-venturing a $1.6 billion (one billion British pounds) redevelopment of London's South Bank area where the noted Shell Center Tower will continue to be the centerpiece of the 880,000-square-foot undertaking. Completion is tentatively scheduled for 2019.

The project is expected to include 800,000 square feet of office, 80,000 square feet of retail and 790 residences. The developers contracted with Royal Dutch Shell in July 2011 to redevelop the Shell Center site. They each spent 150 million pounds to take the 5.25-acre site on a 999-year lease.  Shell remains the site's owner.  One British pound equals $1.61 U.S.



Macquarie Betting on Mexico With $1.15 Billion Stake

Macquarie Group of Sydney, Australia, one of the world's biggest commercial real estate investment organizations, has launched a $1.15 billion real estate investment trust on the Mexican stock exchange. Shares were priced at 25 pesos ($1.96).  Macquarie Mexico Real Estate Management said the offering raised MXN14.72 billion. One peso equals 7.8 cents U.S.

Macquarie said the REIT, known in Mexico as a Fibra, expects net proceeds of MXN13.57 billion if over-allotments are exercised. The trust will use the money to acquire its initial portfolio of 244 industrial properties spread over 21 cities in 15 Mexican states. The properties had an average occupancy rate of 91% at the end of September.

The properties are being acquired from real estate firms GE Capital Real Estate Mexico and Corporate Properties of the Americas.

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The Gathering: Ireland Puts Out The Welcome Mat


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The Temple Bar - established in 1840 - is a classic Dublin watering hole. (Courtesy The Travel Corporation USA)
Ireland is a feast for the senses.

The sight of winding country roads lined by thatched cottages, with generations of "the ancestors" buried in the back. The sounds of the local pub on "Traditional Music Night," when happy singing and laughter echo into the night. The aroma of the ubiquitous peat soil, which warms many an Irish hearth in those cottages. The overwhelming presence of a history burdened by sadness, but also buoyed by creative and literary genius. The feel of the damp, cold stones in the ancient Roman towers of the Wicklow Mountains. And the fragrant aroma of thick wet grass...everywhere.

Ireland is a country of myth, of heroes and kings and saints, of bagpipes and step-dancing and story-telling and friendly faces.

This year, the country is staging "The Gathering," a year-long festival of Irish culture, history, and folklore, with special events taking place from the storied Cliffs of Moher in the West to the literary alleys of Dublin in the East, from Cork by the Celtic Sea in the South to Aran Island in the windswept North.  

A company called Brendan Vacations, located in Los Angeles and with an office in Ireland, is offering unique "The Gathering" tours, with special features such as lunch in a private home with a local expert on W.B. Yeats, or a Bodhrán (Irish Drum) lesson in one of Ireland's oldest pubs.

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Ireland's filled with magnificent castles like Ballynahinch. (Courtesy The Travel Corporation USA)
In the capital city of Dublin, you'll visit Trinity College, where you'll stop into the Gothic library to see the magnificent Book of Kells, an ancient religious manuscript that's hand-painted. You'll stop at St.  Stephen's Green, where it seems all of Dublin comes to play on nice days. You'll browse the shops of Grafton Street, where you'll find everything from clan kilts to antique books to cashmere sweaters to Waterford Crystal.

You'll ponder Ireland's tumultuous history as you stand before the Customs House and the statues of famous Irishmen such as Daniel O'Connell and Charles Parnell (along with a statue of a mythical Irish "every-woman" named Molly McGuire). You'll pause at one of the bridges going over the River Liffey, and take in the 360-degree street-life swirling around you. And you'll probably stop at the Guinness factory, home of Ireland's most popular export.    

During the Gathering, the country will be staging hundreds of special events and festivals. 

Not far from Cork, in the south, there'll be plenty of celebrating going on at Blarney Castle, where visitors will be assisted in leaning over backward and kissing the Blarney Stone. 

In the rural west, where some people still speak Gaelic, there'll be story-telling and limerick events in the town of Limerick, and the echoes of the ancient past will be re-awakened at Bunratty Castle. 

In the beautiful Wicklow Mountains, you'll travel on winding, high-country roads in and out of mountains bathed in fog one minute and sunshine the next. In County Clare on the west coast, you'll stand atop the Cliffs of Moher, reddish-brown walls looking down on the Atlantic from 700 feet above.

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The Cliffs of Moher is a place of ethereal beauty. (Courtesy The Travel Corporation USA)
In a year filled with special events, the most special one - of course - is St. Patrick's Day. The Irish will celebrate the day Saint Patrick chased the snakes out of Eire with marching bands, spirited dancers, bagpipers, colorful floats, and just plain old fun - "craic."

One of the best places to celebrate St. Patty's Day is at that most Irish of institutions - the pub. It's a place to catch up on gossip; to argue about whether Oscar Wilde was a better writer than James Joyce; to enjoy "Traditional Music Nights"; or to just sit back with a couple of "mates" and savor a "pint Stout" (Guinness) and a pack of "crisps" (potato chips).

During the Gathering, you'll probably make a lot of new friends here. And you can toast them with a hearty Slainte! - "To your health!"

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Saving Money for College

Read, listen and learn English with this story. Double-click on any word to find the definition in the Merriam-Webster Learner’s Dictionary.
Saving Money for College
Friends and family greet students in the graduating class of 2012 at Princeton University following commencement ceremonies in Princeton, New Jersey, on June 5. More than 1,200 undergraduates were awarded degrees.
This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.
How much does a college education cost? In the United States, the College Board releases yearly reports on prices at colleges and universities. The group bases its findings on “published” tuition and fees, meaning the prices officially listed by the school. Students might pay less — for instance, if they receive scholarships.
Nationally, tuition and fees at public four-year colleges and universities rose more than 8 percent during the academic year that just ended. The increase was seven percent if you exclude California. California has about ten percent of the nation’s full-time students in public four-year colleges.
In-state tuition and fees averaged more than eight thousand dollars nationally. The average total charge — which includes housing and meals — was seventeen thousand dollars. The total charge for students from out of state was thirty thousand dollars.
Tuition and fees increased four and a half percent at private nonprofit four-year schools. That was still higher than the inflation rate. The average was twenty-eight thousand five hundred dollars.
For-profit schools charged an estimated fourteen thousand dollars in tuition and fees. That was up 3.2 percent from the year before.
One way for parents in the United States to start saving for college when their child is still very young is called a 529 plan. The plans are named for the part of the federal tax law that created them in nineteen ninety-six. All fifty states and the District of Columbia offer them.
Private investment companies operate most of these plans, and each state has its own rules. Many plans are open to families from other states.
Five twenty-nine plans offer different investment choices. Families must decide how aggressively they want to put money into stocks, bonds or other investments that can rise or fall in value. There are limits on how much families can put into 529 plans.
Another choice is called a prepaid tuition plan. Parents can pay for an education at a public college or university in their state while their child is still growing up. But what if the child decides to go to school out of state, or not at all?  The money can go to educate another family member, or the parents can withdraw it and pay taxes on the gains.
There are other ways to save for college while also saving on taxes. One way is to put money for a child into what is called a custodial account until the child becomes an adult.

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Hispanic Ph.D.S Jump As Fastest-Growing Minority Gains

OBAMAMarialena Rivera learned a lesson growing up in San Antonio, Texas, when her family struggled to make ends meet before her parents went to college.
“As soon as my parents got their degrees, everything changed for us,” said Rivera, 27, who’s seeking her Ph.D. in education policy at the University of California, Berkeley. “They got better jobs. We moved into a gated community. We had a pool in our backyard.”
Rivera’s studies come as the number of Hispanics with doctorates jumped 161 percent from 1990 to 2010, almost double the non-Hispanic rate of 90 percent, according to U.S. Census data. People of Latin American or Spanish ancestry have emerged as a powerful voting bloc, courted by President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney on job-creation and economic issues.
“The growth that we’re seeing in Hispanic doctoral degrees is largely a product of the growth in the Hispanic population generally in the last 20 years, and to a lesser degree reflects some improvements in the economic situation and opportunities,” said John Moder, senior vice president and chief operating officer at the San Antonio-based Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities.
Nationwide, the Hispanic population more than doubled to 50.5 million in 2010 from 22.4 million in 1990, according to Census data. Hispanics comprised 16 percent of the U.S. population in 2010, America’s largest and fastest-growing ethnic group because of high immigration and birth rates, according to an August 2011 report by the Washington-based Pew Hispanic Center.

Student Growth

Since 2000, Latinos and Asians have driven the growth among young adults going to college, said Richard Fry, senior research associate specializing in education trends at the Pew center. Hispanics with a college degree increased to 13 percent in 2010 from 10 percent in 2000, according to Pew.
“There’s growing evidence that more young Hispanics are eligible for college because more are finishing high school,” Fry said.
Hispanics tend to be concentrated in states hit hardest by the housing meltdown, including California, Nevada and Florida.
“For some young adults, they’d rather work than go to college but they can’t find work because of the recession,” Fry said. “The dropout rates have declined because jobs are not available.”
Latino students credit teachers and advisers with steering them toward higher education by helping them find fellowships and scholarships.

Research Career

“When I went to college, I did not even know that I could have much of a research career,” said Felix Perez, 27, who is in his fifth year of doctoral studies at the University of California, Los Angeles.
As an undergraduate at California State University, Fresno, a professor helped Perez get a fellowship with funding that allowed him to focus on research.
“For Hispanics, that’s where they need help the most, is to be exposed to the field,” Perez said in a telephone interview.
U.S. immigration exploded from 1880 to 1920 as the industrial revolution drew about 20 million foreigners seeking manufacturing jobs and economic advancement. After the 1960s, the bulk of immigrants shifted from Europe to Latin America and Asia, with Hispanics composing the largest group. In 2010, Mexican-Americans made up 63 percent of the U.S. Hispanic population, according to Pew.

Second Generation

Second-generation Hispanic-Americans are more likely than their immigrant parents to have college degrees, higher-paying jobs, and be homeowners, according to a 2010 report by the Center for American Progress in Washington.
While white students seeking Ph.D.s at Berkeley outnumber Hispanics almost 7 to 1, their numbers are going in opposite directions. There were 385 Latino students pursuing doctoral degrees in the fall of 2011, a 46 percent increase in 20 years, according to Berkeley data. White doctoral students fell 25 percent to 2,529 in the same period.
“You have a combination of population growth and an increase in the pool of students available to consider getting a Ph.D.,” Lisa Garcia Bedolla, chairwoman of the Center for Latino Policy Research at Berkeley, said by telephone.

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KlabLab Rocks Science Education With Upcoming Debut Album ‘One Night in Cell City’

KlabLab Rocks Science Education With Upcoming Debut Album 'One Night in Cell CityPLEASANTON, CA, Jul 24, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) — KlabLab, the company leading the education revolution one song at a time, today announced the upcoming release of its first album, “One Night in Cell City,” debuting on iTunes Aug. 21. The seven-song album features educational songs related to astronomy, geology, biology and physics. The first single, “Newton’s Laws,” covering Sir Isaac Newton’s three laws of motion, is available on iTunes now for 99 cents. Learning about the solar system, cellular structure or the scientific method can be fun and easy when singing along to KlabLab’s original rock, pop and hip-hop tracks.
“Setting complex concepts to music makes it easier for students to grasp and remember them, but educational music often sounds outdated and cheesy,” said Doug Allen, KlabLab co-founder and “One Night in Cell City” producer. “At KlabLab, we’ve seen the power of incorporating musical styles that kids really enjoy with lyrics that help them learn. ‘One Night in Cell City’ is educational, but it’s also cool music that’s fun to listen to. These songs sound like music you hear on the radio — they’re catchy enough that kids, parents and teachers can all enjoy learning while they sing along.”
“One Night in Cell City” was produced by Allen, a professional musician and producer who’s a former member of Nural and has produced albums for bands including The Relay Company and Normal Like You. Allen wrote the album with KlabLab co-founder Dave Haberman, a musician and educator. KlabLab launched in April, with Allen and Haberman conducting a Sound of Knowledge tour in California schools. During the seven-week tour, the KlabLab team visited 86 classrooms in 10 schools, where they collaborated with 32 teachers and more than 3,000 students to create educational songs about the content they were studying.
“One Night in Cell City” will include the following science-themed tracks:
1. Cell City – cellular structure and function 2. Solar System – planets in Earth’s system 3. Taxonomy – identifying groups of organisms 4. The Scientific Method – steps in the scientific method
5. Newton’s Laws – Newton’s three laws of motion 6. Eclipses – planetary movement 7. Slow Drifting – Earth’s tectonic plates
KlabLab’s first album focuses on concepts commonly covered in 5th-8th grade science classes. Plans for future albums include collections of songs about mathematics, social studies and English. The KlabLab team is currently planning a national school performance tour for fall 2012. Please contact Joe O’Loughlin — joe@klablab.com — for more information or to schedule a stop in your district.
“One Night in Cell City” will be available on iTunes Aug. 21 for an estimated price of $7. “Newton’s Laws” is available now for 99 cents at http://bit.ly/MZiqaD .
About KlabLab KlabLab is leading an education revolution one song at a time. Through collaborative learning and a powerful mashup of educational content and contemporary music, classroom experience and online engagement, KlabLab creates a new way to inspire today’s hyper-connected, super social students. KlabLab engages students to actively learn, create new educational content, share it with their peers and get rewarded for their efforts. The angel-funded startup is located in Pleasanton, Calif. and on the Web at http://www.klablab.com

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Audit assails US education department’s monitoring of federal spending on charter schools


U.S. Department of Education'sLOS ANGELES –  An audit of the U.S. Department of Education’s division overseeing hundreds of millions of dollars in charter school funding has criticized the office for failing to properly monitor how states spend the money.

The report released in late September by the department’s Office of the Inspector General also singled out state education departments in California, Florida and Arizona for lax monitoring of what charter schools do with the funds and whether their expenditures comply with federal regulations.
The education department’s Office of Innovation and Improvement spent $940 million from 2008 to 2011 on charter schools, which are autonomously operated public schools. Most of the money is funneled through state education departments, although some is given directly to charter schools.
The funds are administered through competitive grants aimed at helping launch new charters and replicate successful charter models.
The inspector general said the innovation office has not given proper guidance to states on monitoring the use of the money and does not have policies to ensure that states corrected deficiencies when they were found.
Additionally, the audit, which was conducted by San Francisco-based education research company WestEd, found that the office did not review expenditures to ensure they met with federal disbursement requirements.
The office has agreed to beef up its procedures to track federal funds and ensure states are adequately overseeing charter schools, the report said.
WestEd also examined state charter oversight policies in California, Arizona and Florida, which collectively received $275 million in federal funds for charter schools from 2008 to 2011.
Among the findings:
— In California, which has received nearly $182 million in federal charter grants from 2008 to 2011, auditors found “significant weaknesses” in charter oversight, such as school reviewers being unqualified to conduct on-site school visits. One reviewer felt “awkward” conducting site visits because of a lack of knowledge and experience, the report said.
— In Florida, state officials had no records of which schools received federal grant money nor which schools received on-site monitoring and audits. Florida received $67.6 million.
— In Arizona, which received about $26 million, reviewers lacked a monitoring checklist and thus collected inconsistent data when they visited schools.
The office has agreed to beef up its procedures to track federal funds and ensure states are adequately monitoring charter schools.
California Department of Education spokeswoman Tina Jung said officials in Sacramento had just received the report and were reviewing it, but she acknowledged that the department had been aware of oversight deficiencies.
“Even before this review, we recognized the need to build our monitoring capacity, and that effort has already begun,” she said.

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HIGHER EDUCATION WINS BIG IN CALIFORNIA

HIGHER EDUCATION WINS BIG IN CALIFORNIAFor California college students, confetti doesn’t mean much. It’s another kind of paper — cool, green cash — that makes significant a pair of victories in Tuesday night’s election.
The first is Proposition 30, the Jerry Brown-touted tax measure that rescues the community college, CSU and UC systems from crippling “trigger cuts” to funding levels.
Early returns — from mostly rural, conservative areas — had Prop 30 losing until just after 11 p.m., when votes shifted to the affirmative, never to look back.
Returns from late-reporting counties — you know who you are, Los Angeles — continued to grow Prop 30′s margin into the evening, which stood at 53.0 percent to 47.0 percent at 1:20 a.m. with nearly three-quarters of California votes tallied.
Prop. 30 will bring a tax hike for the wealthy over seven years and a quarter-cent sales taxes increase for four years in order to fund schools. It also calls for students enrolled for the Fall 2012 semester to receive a $249 refund in fees.
Endorsed by former President Bill Clinton, the proposition would establish a guarantee for public safety funding and stop another $6 billion in cuts to our schools this year.
Had Prop 30 failed, it could have left schools with huge budget gaps to fill, increased fees for UC and CSU schools, and perhaps incite more student protests over school fees.
San Francisco voters also agreed to foot a bigger bill for budget-strapped City College by overwhelmingly passing (72 percent) Proposition A, a parcel tax to fund the troubled, beloved and really important San Francisco institution.
Each parcel of precious real estate in San Francisco will be taxed another $79 for eight years to raise $14 million to help fund the largest community college in the United States.

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Helpful Tips On How To Get Good Grades In College Going off to college is something that meany people work hard to achieve


. But the hard work isn't over just because you are accepted into college. The hard work is just beginning and it is a whole different atmosphere than high school. There is fun to be had at college but there is work to be done first and you need to get your priorities set. This article can help you get your priorities in order for a successful college experience. Make sure to start looking at colleges fairly early in your high school career. A good time to visit potential schools is during school vacation of your junior year of high school. Then, during the summer before your senior year, you can revisit any schools you liked to get a second look. Make sure you take care of yourself when you are away at school, get plenty of rest, drink plenty of water, and try to eat three meals a day. This will keep your sharp as a tack and ready to tackle even the hardest term paper that your professor throws at you. When it comes to final exams, plan out the studying schedule weeks in advance so that you are not overwhelmed on that particular week. Studying in advance will help you to soak up the material better, so that you are not trying to cram months of information on a few consecutive nights. If you are not staying in dorms, consider carpooling with other students. You should be able to find others that are staying in the same area as you. You will likely not be able to carpool every day of the week with the same people, but even a few days will help build relationships. As has already been stated earlier, getting your priorities in order is essential to being successful in college. There is a time for everything, including socializing and fun but your academics and studying must come first. use the tips from the above article to get your priorities in an order that works best for you.

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Fast Ways On How To Achieve Success In College Do you want to make the most of your college experience and find yourself a better person with a nice career?


 Don't you want to know as much as possible when entering such an important time in your life? Of course you do, so consider the following helpful information when setting sail for college. Set yourself up for success in college by taking your habits and ideas into consideration. For example, think about whether you are a morning person or an afternoon person. If you aren't a morning person, don't even think about signing up for an early class. Schedule courses later in the day so you won't be tempted to skip. Take a good physical education course. College often keeps people tied to the desk. Physical education will help to keep you healthy. It will help to ensure that you maintain your physical health. While mental fitness is important, so is physical. Keeping them both fit will ensure that you maintain a well-rounded lifestyle. Learn to prioritize your classes in regards to study time. Not all of your classes will be intensive for you. Those classes that you excel in, are often easy for you and do not require as much study time. Be smart and use that study time for other classes that do require more of your attention; however, always refocus your efforts should challenges arise in the easy class. Resist the urge to skip a class simply because a professor's syllabus allows for an absence. These absences should be saved for when absolutely necessary, and if you use one for fun early in the term you may be regretting it if you are ill or otherwise unable to attend but must get to campus to save your grade. College isn't easy, but it's supposed to be a time in which you figure yourself out and find your path. This takes much preparation, and you have to approach this experience with a prepared plan of action. Keep the helpful advice you've just read in mind as you get started.

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Must Have Information About Your College Years At college, the pressure is on like nothing you have experienced thus far!


Must Have Information About Your College Years At college, the pressure is on like nothing you have experienced thus far! Try to keep it all in perspective and keep your focus on graduation. Your success in college is dependent on your dedication and persistence and a willingness to go the whole nine yards. The following article has some good advice to help you get there. Eat well. You may have heard of the 'freshman fifteen', or the 15 pounds that many college freshmen gain when their moms are not watching their diets! Remember that good food makes you feel alert and energetic, and the wrong foods will make you tired and hinder your performance. Eat right! When studying for final exams, study with a partner. Making a date to study with a classmate will make it more likely for you to study hard. Furthermore, you can both motivate each other. Studying with a buddy will keep you on track and is the most effective method for achieving good grades. Understand that the dining card you have been given for your meal plan will run out quickly during the semester. Therefore, you should not pig out when you see that you have a lot of money on it. Conserve that money, as you do not want to have to tap into your own funds. You should be respectful of your room mate's wishes. You need to learn how to work with him or her so that it makes your time easier. Sit down when you first get to school and find out what you both expect out of a room mate so you can both be happy. College is too important not to give it your all, no matter what you face throughout your collegiate career. Hopefully, this article has given you some very useful advice that will help make college life easier for you and getting to that all important graduation day with confidence a little less challenging.

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Make Your College Experience A Good One There is no doubt that the process of earning a college degree is a daunting prospect for many.


Make Your College Experience A Good One There is no doubt that the process of earning a college degree is a daunting prospect for many. However, by conducting a bit of research on the subject, it is possible to demystify things to a significant degree and make wise decisions about your future. Keep reading for some terrific advice about the right steps to take. Practice remembering important details. The most effective way to remember is to first choose to remember, then create a picture in your mind of what you need to remember. Form an association in your mind between things you already know and the new information you need to remember. Repeat the process to make the memory permanent. Take advantage of your university bookstore. Students often can get great discounts on many things, particularly laptops and software if they use their student i.d.'s when purchasing their product. It is also a great place to pick up some items that will show off your school spirit, plus you know mom and dad would love a sweatshirt. If you feel lonely, say so. There are many professionals and other students who are more than happy to spend time with you. Going to college can be a tough thing, and if you ever need to talk to someone about your feelings, don't be afraid to use campus services, or just your roommates, to say how you feel. Try to wash your hands at least one every three hours when you are on campus. There is usually a lot of bacteria on campus and in the dorms, as it is always best to play things safe. This will help you reduce the germs on your body and stay clean as often as possible. Charting your course in the higher education landscape can be difficult. Fortunately, with a bit of good, solid information, it is possible to craft a plan that will provide you with the background you need to achieve your professional goals. The tips above provide the foundation you need to get the process started.

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Make Your College Experience A Good One There is no doubt that the process of earning a college degree is a daunting prospect for many.


 However, by conducting a bit of research on the subject, it is possible to demystify things to a significant degree and make wise decisions about your future. Keep reading for some terrific advice about the right steps to take. Practice remembering important details. The most effective way to remember is to first choose to remember, then create a picture in your mind of what you need to remember. Form an association in your mind between things you already know and the new information you need to remember. Repeat the process to make the memory permanent. Take advantage of your university bookstore. Students often can get great discounts on many things, particularly laptops and software if they use their student i.d.'s when purchasing their product. It is also a great place to pick up some items that will show off your school spirit, plus you know mom and dad would love a sweatshirt. If you feel lonely, say so. There are many professionals and other students who are more than happy to spend time with you. Going to college can be a tough thing, and if you ever need to talk to someone about your feelings, don't be afraid to use campus services, or just your roommates, to say how you feel. Try to wash your hands at least one every three hours when you are on campus. There is usually a lot of bacteria on campus and in the dorms, as it is always best to play things safe. This will help you reduce the germs on your body and stay clean as often as possible. Charting your course in the higher education landscape can be difficult. Fortunately, with a bit of good, solid information, it is possible to craft a plan that will provide you with the background you need to achieve your professional goals. The tips above provide the foundation you need to get the process started.

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Study: Lack of Motivation Has Impact on Testing Accuracy


The need for objective measures of student achievement to assess the effectiveness of schools has crossed over from K-12 academic institutions into the realm of higher education. The number of college students being asked to take skills tests is growing with the results having an increasing impact on educational policy.

However, the results of the exams infrequently have any impact on the students themselves, and a new paper from the Educational Testing Service looks at whether that has a bearing on the relevance of the exam results. In other words, if the students don’t care about the outcomes of the exams, does that mean that the exams don’t serve as an accurate reflection of their knowledge?

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‘Won’t Back Down’ Film Renews Parent Trigger Debates


So-called Parent Trigger Laws, which under certain circumstances allow parents to ‘take over’ a failing public school and determine its new path, are about to get more attention due to the nationwide opening of Won’t Back Down, a story of a parent whose daughter is continuously failed by the school system teaming with a teacher to bring change to their public school.

At the moment the story told in the movie is fiction in at least one important way. There hasn’t yet been a successful attempt by parents to take over a public school — but there might be soon. There is an ongoing attempt by a group of parents to make use of California’s parent trigger law to take control of an elementary school, and just like in the movie, the full might of the local education establishment has now arrayed against them.

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Standardized Tests for Kindergartners Wave of the Future


An increasing number of schools are now beginning to administer standardized tests to students as early as kindergarten, Reuters reports.

And the trend shows no sign of reversing. A new exam meant to make sure that kids are on track to succeed in college or a career upon graduation from high school is on the way as well.

At least Paul Weeks, who in his capacity as the president of ACT Inc knows a thing or two about standardized tests, realizes that the idea of testing kindergarteners for career readiness might sound odd at the time when most aspire to be superheroes, since the exams the company is rolling out are unlikely to detect incipient x-ray vision skills. Yet, Weeks is very serious that the exam, which is meant to be administered yearly between the ages of 8 and 18 will serve as a good predictor of post-high school success, and which seeks to identify development in skills vital to that success such as critical thinking.

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Teachers Unions Go on PR Offensive in Runup to Election


Fearing that the recent Chicago teachers strike might have eroded union support across the country, labor organizations are ponying up for an extensive publicity campaign to improve their image. The Washington Times is reporting that an umbrella group for many of the nation’s teachers unions, the American Federation of Teachers, will be holding community events in cities all over the U.S in the waning weeks of the 2012 election season.

Some speculate that this new push is an indication that far from being chastened by the events in Chicago, the unions are going on the offensive.

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Fewer than Half of 2012 High Schools Grads Ready for College

The SAT Report of College and Career Readiness, released by The College Board, the company that administers the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) used by colleges to assess student knowledge and potential, finds that less than 45% of current high school graduates have the skills necessary to succeed at college-level work. The information, drawn from the SAT results of students who graduated high school in 2012, shows that 43% of the students met the standards that correlate to a high likelihood of college success set out by the SAT College & Career Readiness Benchmark.

Research has shown that those who meet the benchmark are more likely to not only attend college but maintain a high grade point average, more likely to stay in school after the first year and more likely to graduate on time.

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Obama, Romney Spar Over Teachers Unions


In the frantic final campaigning days of the 2012 election season, the two Presidential candidates have been trading barbs over their relationship – or lack thereof – with teachers unions around the country.

While the Chicago teachers strike was going on, Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney accused President Barack Obama of allowing teachers unions to dictate policy to the detriment of their students. Romney pointed out that Obama went so far as to send his most visible proxy – Vice President Joe Biden – to speak about the Administration’s support for the union at their annual convention. In reply, President Obama has said that Romney’s comments during the strike amounted to “teacher-bashing.”

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Teachers Waffle, Unsure on Using Video Games in Class


Education insiders can be considered gaming skeptics, and now The Hechinger Report has made an attempt to understand why. Many futurists in education have touted the potential of video game technology to transform the way students learn — most recently during NBC’s Education Nation summit — yet there is still doubt that the gamification of eduction will have a positive impact on student achievement.

Mostly, the skepticism is fueled by a lack of solid data. Research that backs up the rosy projections is still thin, and even the argument that games can increase student engagement don’t sound convincing. Engagement is difficult to define, much less measure, and there’s still nothing that links increased engagement with improved academic outcomes.

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OECD Report Brings Good News to the US on College Graduates


A report release by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development — especially one dealing with education — usually leads to hand-wringing in the U.S. due to the typically middling rankings compared to other developed countries. The latest Education at a Glance report, however, will serve as an exception.

According to the data compiled by OECD, while college graduation rates around the world have continued to rise and many developed countries now have 30% of their population receive a college-equivalent diploma, the U.S, with more than 40%, remains one of the highest producers of college graduates in the world.

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Charter Schools a Priority for PA Legislature This Month

The Pennsylvania Legislature has convened for a short session before the election — and charter school reform is heading up the agenda.

The Patriot News is reporting that Governor Tom Corbett is hoping that now is the time for the bill that would give the state more power in the regulation of charter schools. Right before the legislature adjourned its summer session in June, it came “within a sentence” of putting a version of the bill on Corbett’s desk.

Although Corbett is making charters a priority — he said last week that reforming the way charter schools in the state are regulated will aid all education stake holders in PA — it will not be the only issue before lawmakers this session.

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Swindled UK Schools Struggle to Recover from Ed Tech Scam

BBC News has reported that Clydesdale Bank has announced that as a gesture of goodwill, it will forgive the debts of 27 schools around Britain accrued as part of a massive school technology lease scam. According to the BBC’s news program Panorama, as many as 169 schools might have been swindled by the program, and as many as 10 head teachers have resigned as a result.

Two firms, LTM and DTS, convinced the schools to sign deals that would provide them with office equipment like computers and copiers at as much as ten times the price that could be obtained elsewhere. Under the deal structure, the schools were left to pay off these expenses even in the cases where the equipment wasn’t delivered or was delivered damaged.

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For Kids and Schools, Lunches Depend on Big Money

Collin Altic, a 14-year-old freshman from Willard High School in Willard, Missouri, recently found himself the victim of a new policy aimed at reducing the amount of money lost annually in school lunch charges. When Altic attempted to pay for his lunch earlier this week, he was told that he’d have to return his tray because his school lunch account didn’t have enough of a balance to cover the purchase.

Administrators explained that the new policy, which is in place only in the district’s high school, forbids any charges that puts the account into a negative balance. With 4,000 kids the overages were taking a real bite out of the school budget. Last year, Willard School District had to eat more than $20,000 in debit lunch payments that were never made up.

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Schools Make Accommodations for Overweight Students

With one in three children in the U.S. now classified as overweight or obese, there’s an increasing focus on helping overweight kids navigate challenging environments — in particular, the school hallways and classrooms. One person working on this goal is Dr. Yolanda Hancock, a former elementary school teacher, whose patients need guidance on how to navigate the unique challenges that come from being an overweight student.

Kavitha Cardoza, writing about Hancock for NPR, explains that her patient list includes children are 12 and younger who have the body mass index as high as 47. On the day Cardoza visits her office, Hancock is examining a 13-year-old boy who weighs nearly 260 lbs and whose appearance indicates that he is pre-diebetic.

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Tuition Fee Increase Means UK Students Eyeing US Colleges


A loss for UK universities might be a gain for schools abroad, The Daily Telegraph reports. According to Graeme Paton, universities from outside the UK — including many Ivy League colleges in the US — are launching efforts to recruit students from England who are feeling disillusioned by the higher education system in the country due to the controversy over the rising tuition fees.

Last year, colleges and universities in the US played host to nearly 9,000 British undergraduates — and there are some who are predicting that this number will rise steeply in coming years due to the narrowing of the gap in the expense of attending school at home and abroad. For evidence, they are looking at the number of kids taking US college entrance exams like the SAT and the ACT has gone up by 30% over the past several years, with companies administering the exam expanding the number of the centers around the country to accommodate growing demand.

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Parents Quiet About New York City Contraception Pilot


The New York Times is reporting that, contrary to expectations, a year-old New York City pilot program that distributed contraceptives like morning-after pills to high school students for free has encountered very little vocal opposition from parents. The program, which originally operated at 14 schools before one of the campuses dropped out, sought to emulate the approach used by privately-operated school-based health clinics which have been serving students in NYC for the past several years.

Although the health clinics have proved successful, they only provide access to about a quarter of the city’s students. The city-run program was supposed to fill this gap, with the schools chosen to participate specifically selected because their students don’t have nearby medical providers and run a higher risk than average for teen pregnancy and acquiring sexually transmitted infections.
Parents were given a chance to opt their children out of the program by returning a signed form to the school. They could also select the kind of reproductive health services their children could and could not receive. According to the data provided by the Department of Education, only about one or two percent of parents actually returned the forms.

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21 New Specialty Schools To Open in Bronx

21 new schools are to replace closed or phased out schools in the Bronx, which cater to very specific areas of interest and vocational aspiration.

 

There are 12 district and 9 charter schools opening in the Bronx this fall, with each offering a different structure and specialty emphasis. They offer a clean slate for incoming students with several schools in the borough closing or phasing out. The degree of difference between them is stark as they cater to very specific interests and career aspirations. For example, three career and technical schools have closed in the Bronx, and the gap is being filled by the new School for Tourism and Hospitality opening on the Jane Addams campus. According to principal David Martin, students will be able earn front desk supervisor certifications from the American Hotel and Lodging Institute.

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Teacher Evaluation Compromise a Win for New York’s Cuomo

The compromise proposal, authored and backed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo and passed by the legislature, will publish assessment scores but keep teacher names private.

The passage of a compromise bill to deal with the public release of teacher evaluation information marks a victory for the Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo. The proposal, which the governor said was a “take it or leave it proposition,” will make evaluation scores available publicly, but will not associate them with teachers’ names, except in cases when the parents wish to find out the scores of their kids’ current teachers.

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Bloomberg Blamed for Low Rates of Parental Engagement in NYC


The Wall Street Journal is reporting that recent data released by the New York City Department of Education shows that the level of parental involvement with the school system has fallen to a new low this year. The information is giving ammunition to critics of both the Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Chancellor Dennis Walcott for fostering a culture at the Department of Education that is “unresponsive to families.”

All indications seem to be that the efforts by Walcott to increase parental engagement haven’t paid off, as the participation in phone calls, attendance at parent-teacher conferences and school-hosted workshops during the 2011-2012 academic year was substantially lower than the year before. In some cases, parents and guardians of students were 50% less likely to interact with teachers over the course of the year than they were during 2008-2009. In the instance of parent-coordinator workshops, the attendance fell from over 450,000 to less than 270,000 between 2009-10 and 2010-11.

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NYCLU Criticizes Quality of Sex Education in New York State

A recent report by the New York Civil Liberties Union has criticized the quality of the sexual education curriculum used by districts all over the state of New York. Some of the curriculum materials — which the group characterized as “inaccurate, incomplete and biased” — didn’t cover topics such as condom use and safe sex, [...]
A recent report by the New York Civil Liberties Union has criticized the quality of the sexual education curriculum used by districts all over the state of New York. Some of the curriculum materials — which the group characterized as “inaccurate, incomplete and biased” — didn’t cover topics such as condom use and safe sex, and fewer than half provided information on sexual orientation.

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Recess Goes Bye-Bye in Syracuse, NY Elementary Schools

If Syracuse, NY’s education leaders have reviewed the latest research about the usefulness of recess, the new schedules designed for their elementary schools give no hints of it. Starting this year, master schedules for the city’s elementary schools will use every minute of the school day, aside from the half-hour set aside for lunch, for [...]
If Syracuse, NY’s education leaders have reviewed the latest research about the usefulness of recess, the new schedules designed for their elementary schools give no hints of it.

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NY, Minn. Finalize Lists of Underperforming Schools

One of the requirements for the No Child Left Behind Act waiver granted to Minnesota was that the state develop a process to identify and label underachieving schools to subject them to corrective actions. The guidelines developed by the state, which identify roughly 213 schools as not meeting performance requirements in some manner, are much [...]
One of the requirements for the No Child Left Behind Act waiver granted to Minnesota was that the state develop a process to identify and label underachieving schools to subject them to corrective actions. The guidelines developed by the state, which identify roughly 213 schools as not meeting performance requirements in some manner, are much less stringent than those that would be applied under NCLB, which would have made more than 1,000 of the state schools subject to financial and administrative sanctions.

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Cuomo’s New York Accountability ‘Solution’ Feared Unworkable

Governor Cuomo’s celebration of implementing teacher accountability looks premature as nearly 500 districts are still unable to agree terms with the unions.
In February, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo famously claimed the title of ‘student lobbyist’ and heralded his breakthrough in holding the state’s teachers to standards of accountability.

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Latest NYC Numbers Show Teacher Tenure Not Automatic Anymore

Only 55% of NYC teachers who were in their third probationary year were approved for tenure this year compared to 89% who were approved in 2007.
When New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg first came into office, he promised that, as a service to the city’s students, he would work to end teacher “tenure as we know it.” If the numbers released by the Education Department this year are any indication, Bloomberg is well on his way to fulfilling his promise. Compared to 2007, when nearly 89% of all teachers who completed the three-year probationary period received tenure, this year saw nearly half of eligible teachers denied tenure.

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NYC Strikes Tutoring Mandate After NCLB Waiver Approval

Principals in underperforming schools will no longer be required to spend school funds on tutoring services for their students.
As a result of the No Child Left Behind waiver received by New York State earlier this year, public schools that fail to meet performance targets set by the law will no longer have to provide tutoring services to their students. Still, principals who choose to continue offering it may do so — at least until the end of this school year.

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NYC to Integrate Special Ed Students into Regular Classrooms

New York City’s pilot for special education inclusion has moved the district to apply the program to a majority of the schools in the city.
The two-year pilot program experimenting with changes to the way special needs students are educated in New York City is set to conclude — and soon, nearly all the schools in the New York City public school system will begin adopting inclusion changes into their own academic program. The aim of the changes is to allow special needs students to integrate more fully into the regular student body. District officials are attempting to move away from the more traditional method of special ed instruction with segregated classes, and the city’s chief academic officer,Shael Polakow-Suransky, sums up the old programs that focus on “self-containment” as an academic death sentence.

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Principals Ask to be Given a Louder Voice in School Reform

A Washington Post editorial says that the reform movement doesn’t listen enough to teachers and principals who spend the most time in schools and classrooms.
Is the primary motivation behind the school reform movement financial? asks Carol Burris in an editorial for the Washington Post. A recent commercial released by former Washington D.C’s chancellor of public schools Michelle Rhee, claims that public schools trying to compete in the new academic marketplace is akin to a couch potato trying to stack up against Olympic athletes. Now Burris, the principal of the South Side High School in Rockville Center, New York, along with Harry Leonadartos, who is the principal of Clarkstown High School North in Rockland County, are asking if the derision often heaped on traditional public schools by eduction reform advocates is a good way to motivate them to improve.

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Union Contract Locks NYC Teachers Out of STEM Master Corps

The contract provision that forbids merit pay means New York City teachers can’t apply for the $20k Federal bonus offered to outstanding STEM teachers.
Bonuses of $20,000 offered by the Obama Administration as an incentive for “master teachers” in mathematics, science and technology have been put out of reach for teachers in one of the nation’s largest school districts. Teachers employed by the New York City school district may not apply to receive the federally-funded money because the terms of the contract their union signed with the city prohibits any kind of financial bonuses for outstanding achievements in the classroom.

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7,000 NYC Students Barred from Graduation by DOE Mistake

Students were mistakenly told that they failed a state exam and couldn’t graduate from their elementary or middle schools, instead attending summer school.

 
 Elementary and middle schoolers from all over New York City were blocked from attending their school graduations because a snafu at the NYC Department of Education had them marked as failing their end-of-year state exams. According to the New York Post, the Department realized its mistake after the exam results were released last week, but it was too late for most of the nearly 7,000 student affected since their graduation ceremonies had already taken place.

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