Posts Tagged: ‘education’

Canada and the United States share are common problem in schools these days. While girls are excelling like never before, the boys are falling behind. Educators have been tackling this issue for years now, even testing out sex-segregated classrooms to find out whether tailoring teaching to gender is more effective. Male students typically lag in overall grades and reading in particular (a learning gap that emerged in the early ’90s).

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There are some obvious things you can do to help get a good score on your next test. For example, if possible you should get a good night’s sleep before the test. And the best way to improve your score is to study for the test so that you know the answers cold. But sometimes [...]

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Here at HowStuffWorks.com, we value education. Our own mission is to satisfy curiosity and share knowledge with our readers and listeners. It’s not an exaggeration to say that I’ve learned something new every day that I’ve worked here. And as the son of two teachers, I’ve witnessed how educators constantly look for new ways to reach students. One of those ways is through the use of technology.

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Sarah and I get a lot of e-mails from listeners thanking us for making history fun for them again. But what is it that happens in school that makes us dismiss history as mind-numbingly tedious?

Here’s my guess, from my schooling in several states at both public and private schools.

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For more than a decade we have been told that kids need to have computers to improve education, that computer literacy is essential, that every child should have their own laptop (see for example, One Laptop Per Child) and so on. But it may not be true at all. Instead, it looks like computers create a gigantic source of distraction that actually gets in the way of education…

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Imagine taking the idea behind a tablet computer like the iPad and giving it the immense screen real estate of two 14.1-inch LCD screens. This product exists and is called the Kno…

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So it’s extremely difficult to visit Guatemala and not feel the creeping sense that one has led a comparatively entitled life. Being an American I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve arisen at three in the morning to make flour tortillas by hand. Then sold the tortillas door to door. Then headed off to work for the rest of the day in the fields, reaping sugar cane with a machete or picking coffee beans from plants growing on steep mountainsides or plowing unreasonably rocky soil with a hoe. Then bagged whatever harvest had been gotten and carted the bags into town in a bus alongside pigs and chickens, if I didn’t ride on the top — which I could if I had been born Guatemalan — to sell the produce at a market and return home again that night on a similar bus and go to sleep only to do it once more the following morning. And so on, ad infinitum.

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That sounds like fun, doesn’t it? Except I’m not talking about playing video games, I mean programming them. Perhaps that’s slightly less fun, but still I think it’d be neat to design a game. But I had no idea how serious so many colleges and universities were about it until I ran across Don Reisinger’s post on CNET a few minutes ago.

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One of the supposed benefits of electronic books is that it’s supposed to make it possible for students and other people who need access to lots of books — such as doctors and lawyers — to carry around one device that has loads of texts in it. Voila, no more heavy backpacks!

By the way, I say “supposed” because e-books have taken a long time to catch on, and not because I think e-books are crummy. I’d like to have an electronic book reader myself, but it’s just not in the budget. Yet.

For students in California, “supposedly” may be over with before long. Michael B. Farrell’s article for ABC News explains Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s plan to use open-source textbooks for high schoolers next year. The idea is that it’d cut into the state’s $350 million educational book budget.

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Today, we think of philosophy as something reserved for higher education, if then. It has a reputation for being intimidating — or even useless in the “real world.” But, over in the UK at least, there’s a growing trend to teach philosophy to kids as young as five.

A story from the Daily Mail relates the debate going on about whether teaching such deep issues to impressionable children is a good idea. Critics say that the school system is struggling enough, and philosophy shouldn’t take time away from the much more important skills of reading, writing and arithmetic.

However, supporters of introducing philosophy to young children say that it only aids a student’s progress in these other areas. For instance, a 2007 psychological study found that 10-year-olds who had studied philosophy did better in verbal, numerical and spatial ability tests.

The idea is that teachers use the Socratic method, asking the children questions such as whether it’s always wrong to lie.

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