Education

Open-source textbooks help make education affordable

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Kent DePinto September 02, 2008, 07:24 AM

College kids heading to school are also heading for sticker-shock when they discover the costs of this semester's textbooks. But Rich Baraniuk believes he has a solution: free, collaborative textbooks.
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Home Alone: What parents go through when kids go off to school

By Adaora Udoji and Chelsea Merz September 01, 2008, 10:18 AM

Hundreds of thousands of parents are flooding college campuses, decorating dorm rooms, eating lunch at the student union and driving back to an emptier home-- for the first time. To talk through the mix of emotions that parents are experiencing, and the best way to prepare for this life-changing event, we turn to family psychiatrist Alan Manevitz. And for context we check in with Sandra Markt-Reardon. She’s just driven her last kid off to college.
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Beginnings of Hope: Tulane after Hurricane Katrina

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji August 28, 2008, 06:58 AM

After Hurricane Katrina, colleges in the area, such as Tulane University, were not able to provide higher education, forcing students to look elsewhere for their education for the fall semester of 2005. When Tulane re-opened the following year, the decision of whether to stay at Tulane or transfer to their host school was a huge and major decision, altering lives for many students. New Orleans was still a wreck but most of the freshman students came back to study, determined to be part of their city’s future. The Takeaway talks to Amani Jambhekar, a senior at Tulane University.
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Schools cutting bus service because of fuel costs

By Adaora Udoji and Bruce Reznick August 25, 2008, 06:50 AM

Rising gas prices are forcing school districts to cut back on school bussing of students. For many it means longer rides and longer walks. Still, in the world of heavy traffic, working parents and longer bus routes, the new reality fosters real thought and growing concern about safety.
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In many U.S. classrooms, corporal punishment is still the school bully

By Adaora Udoji and Katherine Lanpher August 21, 2008, 05:44 AM

It turns out that in many parts of the United States, corporal punishment is still standard operating procedure. A joint Human Rights Watch and ACLU report finds that nearly a quarter of a million students were paddled or spanked last year. Adding insult to injury, black students and special education students received a disproportionate share of the punishment. The Takeaway explores what this says about the American school system and the culture that perpetuates these modes of discipline.
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In Post-Katrina New Orleans, an ambitious social and educational experiment

By Corey Takahashi, Jesse Baker, Katherine Lanpher August 14, 2008, 07:37 AM

New Orleans has experienced a boom in charter schools and a renewed sense and mission for public education. It’s a grand experiment, and Paul Tough, an editor for the New York Times magazine, tracks it in this Sunday’s edition. Is this is a model for the nation or is it yet another dream deferred?
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School extracurriculars axed amid economic slump

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Noel King, Jennifer Hsu August 04, 2008, 05:03 PM

As the economy continues its downward spiral, schools across the country are cutting sports, art and music programs. In the Mount Vernon school system, two proposed budgets failed to pass and now students are bearing the brunt. The Takeaway talks to 16-year-old Sean Harris, a rising senior at Mount Vernon High who expected to play varsity basketball this year — until all of his school's sports teams were axed.
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Medicine's generation gap

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji July 24, 2008, 09:48 AM

In 30 years, as Baby Boomers retire, there will be as many people over 80 as there are under 5. And there's another disturbing trend: The number of students entering geriatric medicine is dropping. As America ages, who takes care of the grandparents?
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Business schools take palm reading to a new level

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Chelsea Merz July 23, 2008, 06:42 AM

The future Donald Trumps of the world will soon need the help of a palm reader to ascend the corporate ladder. In an effort to finger cheats, aspiring CEOs will be screened by a high-tech identity device, known as a “palm vein” scan, before taking the Graduate Management Admissions Test (GMAT) as early as this fall.
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Financial illiteracy in America and economic crises

By John Hockenberry, Adaora Udoji, Stephen Dubner July 22, 2008, 06:27 AM

Is the United States a nation with a fundamental misunderstanding of debt, financing and budgeting? "Freakonomics" author Stephen Dubner and a number of economics say it is. Dubner looks at how an absence of financial education hurts us during times of economic instability.
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A look at Charles Darwin's legacy as the theory of evolution turns 150

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji July 01, 2008, 06:45 AM

One hundred and fifty years ago, Charles Darwin's theories of evolution and natural selection were presented at the Linnean Society of London. A year and a half later, Darwin published what is now a monumental work: "The Origin of the Species." The Takeaway looks at Darwin's legacy and the continuing debate surrounding evolution.
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The Takeaway for July 1, 2008

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji July 01, 2008, 06:15 PM

The Takeaway for July 1, 2008.
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Extreme makeover: A new GI Bill for the 21st century

June 24, 2008, 06:57 AM

Last week, the House of Representatives voted in favor of a World War II-style GI Bill for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans. The Senate is expected to vote on it this week. Now that the White House has withdrawn its long-held opposition to the bill, a new generation of veterans could see a doubling of college benefits.
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Forget the bake sales: Byron Garrett is the PTA's first male CEO in 100 years

June 17, 2008, 07:00 AM

Byron Garrett is the first male CEO of the National Parent-Teacher's Association in 100 Years. The 35-year-old black is a former principal — not a parent, though he raised his nephews — and was appointed by the national board with a unanimous vote. Garrett calls The Takeaway from San Diego, where later this week the PTA will be holding its 112th annual national convention.
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The credit crunch and student loans

By John Hockenberry and Adaora Udoji June 02, 2008, 06:13 AM


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The Mix

Join the conversation about Education

  • My "middle-class" answer to the credit crunch in student loans? Send your child to the school that makes the most financial sense. Despite saving for college, we were faced with the daunting $40,000 a year for a private university (and the generous offer of an $1,800 a year FAFSA loan) or sending our son to a terrific public university for less than $17,000 per year (no loan necessary due to savings). I don't think going to an expensive "elite" university is worth the financial burden of years and years of paying off student loans and making the CEOs richer--or spending all your retirement savings. It is not where you go to school, it is what you make of the experience. "

    by CLS PDX, June 03, 12:41AM

    on The credit crunch and student loans

  • I was very happy to read that we have an African-American male as PTA CEO. I wondered who would replace Warlean Gary. I look forward to meeting Mr.Garrett at the EML Conference and hearing him speak. I hope he can help us encourage more parents to become involved with PTA, but minority parents and men especially. "

    by April Walker, June 26, 08:21PM

    on Forget the bake sales: Byron Garrett is the PTA's first male CEO in 100 years

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