Life News (Education)

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Released: 10-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Purdue to Field Only Student Team in National Air Race
Purdue University

A Purdue University team is headed to the Air Race Classic for the fifth year in a row as the only all-student collegiate entry. The annual event is a summer cross-country race for female pilots. Two years ago, a Purdue team became the first collegiate team to win the race.

Released: 8-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Inmates Teach Business Majors About White-Collar Crime
Susquehanna University

Several inmates from the Allenwood Federal Prison Camp in Montgomery, Pennsylvania will be at Susquehanna University on April 28 to relate their experiences with white-collar crime to Susquehanna University business majors.

Released: 7-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EDT
Cornell-Peace Corps cooperative degree
Cornell University

Cornell University and the U.S. Peace Corps will sign a Memorandum of Cooperation later this month, to mark the establishment of a new option at Cornell -- a three-year master's of professional studies degree in agriculture with a Peace Corps service option.

Released: 2-Apr-1998 12:00 AM EST
Why Aren't There More Female Engineers?
Women in Engineering Programs & Advocates Network (WEPAN)

Forecast: Unpredictable. Is the academic climate at many U.S. engineering schools discouraging women as well as minorities from pursuing careers in the field?

Released: 31-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Using science fiction to teach science - Researchers explore the human brain through Star Trek
Vanderbilt University

Drawing examples from popular culture to explain clinical disorders, two Vanderbilt researchers are using anecdotes from Star Trek movies and episodes to explain the neurological and psychological bases of emotions, perception, aggression, memory and sex.

Released: 28-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Computers in the classroom:Teacher ease affects student attitudes
University of North Texas

A recent University of North Texas study of three public elementary schools in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex indicates that positive teacher attitudes toward information technology result in similar positive attitudes among students.

Released: 27-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Letting Your Child go to Preschool
Purdue University

Sometimes it's difficult to decide who suffers the greater trauma when preschool starts -- the child or the parents. But a Purdue University expert says there are things mom or dad can do to make the adjustment easier for everyone involved

Released: 20-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Expert: Students can Plan to Succeed on Standardized Tests
Purdue University

Doug Christiansen, director of Purdue's Office of Admissions, says taking the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) or the American College Test (ACT) does not have to be a nerve-racking experience. He offers advice for taking standardized tests.

Released: 17-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Debaters From Across U.S. Gather in Rochester for National Tourney
University of Rochester

At the same time top college hoopsters seek the national basketball crown this month, more than 700 of their fellow collegians will battle in a competition that's as intense, demanding, and grueling as anything in the NCAAs. For four days, from March 20 to 23, the forensic version of March Madness comes to the University of Rochester in western New York. Two-person rather than five-man teams will advance through eight preliminary debates and seven elimination rounds in their quest to be named the top college debaters in the country.

Released: 13-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
First In U.S.: Law School Guarantees Admission To Engineering Freshmen
Northwestern University

A new honors program in engineering and law, the only such program in the U.S., is being launched at Northwestern University. The program offers high school seniors conditional acceptance into law school and completion of their undergraduate studies a year early.

Released: 12-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
NSF Director to Address Role of Two-Year Colleges in Preparing Teachers
National Science Foundation (NSF)

National Science Foundation (NSF) director Neal Lane will speak on Saturday, March 14, 1998, at a conference on "The Integral Role of the Two-year College in the Science and Mathematics Preparation of Prospective Teachers."

Released: 7-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Temple University Students Join with Prison Imates to Explore Criminal Justice Issues
Temple University

A small group of Temple University criminal justice majors is exploring issues of crime and justice with prison inmates in a college seminar held at a Philadelphia jail. "The Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program: Exploring Issues of Crime and Justice Behind the Walls" may be the first experience of its kind in the country.

Released: 7-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Sea Grant Website Links Public, Media and Educators With Internet Data on El Nino
National Sea Grant College Program

The University of Southern California Sea Grant program has designed a new Website to help school teachers catch the wave of interest in El NiÃ’o and is sponsoring an on-line educational seminar beginning next week to help promote better understanding of this powerful weather phenomenon.

Released: 5-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Young Students Design New Materials to Improve Products
Northwestern University

Today's teen-agers may be designing the next generation of fishing poles. Or waterproof baseballs.

Released: 4-Mar-1998 12:00 AM EST
Financial Value Of Higher Education Increased In 1990s
University of Michigan

The financial value of a higher education increased in the mid-1990s but the dollar value of a high school diploma or less dropped by 8 percent. The new analysis shows the earnings gap between families headed by college graduates and families headed by high school graduates widened significantly.

Released: 28-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
NSB Offers Recommendations on Future of Federal Role in Graduate Education
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The National Science Board (NSB) urges a reexamination of the federal/university partnership, and offers several recommendations for improvement, in a policy paper released today titled "The Federal Role in Science and Engineering Graduate and Postdoctoral Education."

Released: 27-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Homework does Boost Academic Achievement; but Overemphasizing Grades and Performance May Lead to Cheating
American Psychological Association (APA)

The academic environment's influence on schoolchildren's attitudes about cheating and the value of homework are examined in two studies to be published in the March issue of the American Psychological Association's (APA) Journal of Educational Psychology.

Released: 27-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Gallaudet University Celebrates Milestone for People with Disabilities
Gallaudet University

Gallaudet University (Washington D.C.), the world's only university for deaf and hard-of-hearing students, will celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the student protest that shut down the campus in 1988 and led to significant changes in the way Americans with disabilities are treated. The event called "Deaf President Now" (DPN) will be celebrated with speeches, panel sessions, and events culminating in a student march to Capitol Hill on March 11.

Released: 25-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Computer Graphics Pioneer Reveals Tricks
University of Wisconsin–Madison

The inventor of a piece of software embraced by Hollywood special-effects wizards in over 200 films is sharing his expertise in a new computer graphics course he is teaching at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Released: 25-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Statement By Dr. Neal Lane On U.S. 12th Graders' Math and Science Performance
National Science Foundation (NSF)

The news is not good regarding the performance of U.S. 12th graders in math and science in the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS).

Released: 21-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Fellowship Program for Minorities promotes Diversity in Academic Medicine, Research
Public Communications (PCI)

Each year since 1984, the Fellowship Program in Academic Medicine for Minority Students, sponsored by Bristol-Myers Squibb Company since 1990, gives 35 outstanding students grants to conduct biomedical research. The program provides the fellows with mentors to help them complete medical school and encourage them to pursue careers in academia and medical research.

Released: 21-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
MU Team Gets $6 Million NSF Grant to Help Change the Way Kids Learn Math
University of Missouri

With a $6 million National Science Foundation grant and a group of researchers and educators from the University of Missouri-Columbia, middle- school students across the nation may soon be learning more mathematics and learning it better than before.

Released: 20-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Students Taught to Manage Biases on the Job
Purdue University

A college education is designed to broaden minds and expand critical thinking, but it also should teach us how to better monitor what we say. This is especially true on the job, where a conversation about a popular television show can move very quickly from around the water cooler to a court of law.

Released: 20-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Campus drug and alcohol report released
Cornell University

"Alcohol and Drugs on American College Campuses: Issues of Violence and Harassment," a report published by the Core Institute at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (SIUC), is being mailed this week to college presidents nationwide. The report is based on surveys from 89,874 students at 171 institutions and describes issues of collegiate violence, harassment and campus climate.

Released: 19-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
University of Iowa

University of Iowa faculty members spend an average of 31.4 hours a week on teaching activities. The study marks the first time that the UI faculty has documented all of its teaching activities, including not only regularly scheduled classes, laboratories and seminars but also time spent preparing for classes, evaluating student assignments, holding office hours, advising students, providing individualized instruction, and working on special projects with honors, masters and doctoral students.

Released: 18-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Internet is revolutionizing the way professors in the humanities teach their students
University of Evansville

The Internet is revolutionizing the way professors in the humanities teach their students. Prof. Beavers creator of the Exploring Ancient World Cultures Web site, The Early Church On-Line Encyclopedia and limited-area search engines Argos and Hippias--has developed a new site called "the 4th Tetralogy." The site provides English translations of Plato's Republic, the Phaedrus, the Symposium and the Phaedo.

15-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Sources Of Asian Academic Achievement Found
University of Michigan

Which is the most important factor influencing student performance in mathematics: A good teacher? Innate intelligence? Home environment? Studying hard? They're all important, of course. But differences in how Asians and Americans answer this question help to explain the U.S. disadvantage in math and science achievement.

   
Released: 13-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Communities affect school achievement
Cornell University

How much children learn in school depends in good measure on the attitudes and values of the surrounding community -- and on how much those values are shared by the children themselves -- education experts agreed at a AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science) symposium today (Feb. 16) in Philadelphia.

Released: 11-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Researchers, parents and educators in successful partnership
 Johns Hopkins University

Schools interested in attracting involvement from parents and communities can now join a national network focused on the same goal. The National Network of Partnership Schools has been developed by the Center on School, Family and Community Partnerships at Johns Hopkins University.

Released: 11-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Mentornet Wires Female Engineers and Scientists For Success
Women in Engineering Programs & Advocates Network (WEPAN)

Women still face special roadblocks that discourage many from pursuing careers in engineering and science. A national project, announced Feb. 3, will use the information superhighway to lessen the detours encountered by female college students majoring in engineering and other sciences.

Released: 6-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
University of Wisconsin-Madison Business Students To Manage $10 Million Fixed-Income Fund
University of Wisconsin–Madison

In 1970, students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business were among the first in the country to have the opportunity to manage "real-world" equity portfolios. Now UW-Madison students will be among the first to manage a substantial fixed income fund.

Released: 5-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
Jordanian Princess and Islamic Specialist Teaches at Women's College
Agnes Scott College

It's not every day that a member of a royal family can be found teaching at an American college. But for the first half of February, students at Agnes Scott College will be taught by a Jordanian princess.

Released: 5-Feb-1998 12:00 AM EST
CD-ROM Ag journals for developing countries
Cornell University

Cornell University's Mann Library will digitize the contents of 125 agricultural journals to create The Essential Electronic Agricultural Library, or TEEAL, on CD-ROM, to be distributed to university libraries in developing countries.

Released: 31-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Vanderbilt educator says smaller classes bring major expense, modest gains
Vanderbilt University

A Vanderbilt University education professor who has studied the impact of class size on students' learning says a comprehensive plan to improve skills would be a better investment of the nation's resources.

Released: 30-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Dean On Homework: How Much And How Meaningful?
Purdue University

When it comes to homework, quantity does not always equal quality. Dean of Purdue University's School of Education says for young children, 20 minutes to an hour three to four times a week is just about right for homework. Older students in middle school and high school can profit from meaningful assignments in the one- to two-hour range. But Haring stresses that all homework should be meaningful to the child.

Released: 30-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Care of the Wild: Veterinary Work Isn't Just for the Dogs These Days
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Dogs and cats still dominate the patient list at University of Wisconsin-Madison's School of Veterinary Medicine, but they're sharing more space with a new breed of companion critters, from ailing ferrets to sick lizards.

Released: 29-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
In spite of computers, handwriting instruction is important because of carry-over to composition
University of Washington

Adults may have abandoned the pen for the keyboard, but until first-graders have laptops, it's crucial that children continue to be taught handwriting because of its link to composition. A University ofWashington study of children with writing problems shows that first-graders improved both their handwriting and their composition after being tutored.

Released: 28-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
RFF Researchers Ask "Does Anybody Care About Cleaning Up the Nuclear Weapons Complex?"
Resources for the Future (RFF)

Researchers in Resources for the Future's (RFF) Center for Risk Management have initiated a new project that has as its goal increasing public attention to the issues raised by the contamination and environmental risks left behind from decades of nuclear weapons production in the United States.

Released: 22-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Vanderbilt engineering professor creates, teaches asynchronous online course
Vanderbilt University

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Vanderbilt University Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering John Bourne teaches one of the first known asynchronous online courses in the world that instructs others on how to develop and teach online courses.

Released: 22-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Alliance Project to promote diversity in special education moves to Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt University

Vanderbilt University is the new home of the Alliance Project, an endeavor aimed at increasing the dwindling supply of special education personnel from historically underrepresented ethnic groups. Alliance staff work with historically black colleges and universities and other higher education institutions with 25 percent or higher enrollment of students from historically underrepresented ethnic groups.

Released: 22-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Antarctic storm abbreviates research
Louisiana State University

An Antarctic storm cut short some research, but that's life life on the "ice."

Released: 21-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Instant Reports on Grades, Bills & Course Status
Long Island University Post (LIU Post)

The University's new Student Information System provides course changes, class locations, grades, and details of their bills and financial aid awards 24 hours a day from any computer hooked to the Web (www.liu.edu), and from on-campus kiosks that are being installed in the next few weeks.

Released: 16-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
Making the Simple Difficult is Object of Rube Goldberg Contest
Purdue University

Many of us have very creative ways for turning off an alarm clock, but Purdue University students will be building contraptions to do it for us at the 16th annual Rube Goldberg Machine Contest on Feb. 7. Several teams of Purdue students are building the most complicated and often humorous machines to get the job done.

Released: 16-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
MU Psychologist Finds Increasing Gap between Math Competencies of Americans and Chinese; Intelligence Not a Factor
University of Missouri

Word problem No. 1: Take 372 sixth-graders, 12th-graders and older adults from China and the United States, test them for mathematical ability and solve for the growing Chinese advantage in basic competencies. The answer, says David Geary, professor of psychology at the University of Missouri-Columbia, appears to be cultural changes in both countries including, perhaps, changes in curriculum.

Released: 13-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
From two who've been there; done it: Ann Richards and Patricia Schroeder to lead discussion on women in politics
Brandeis University

Former Texas Gov. Ann W. Richards will join former Congresswoman Patricia S. Schroeder for a panel discussion on women's careers in politics Feb. 2 at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass.

Released: 9-Jan-1998 12:00 AM EST
New History Course to Explore the Space Age
Purdue University

A few universities have started teaching space exploration as history. At Purdue University, often called the "mother of astronauts," a professor of Russian history has developed a course to compare the Soviet and U.S. space programs.

Released: 31-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Study: Full-Day Kindergarten May Ease Stress on Students
Purdue University

Parents who think a half-day kindergarten will be easier for their children than a full day of school may want to think again. Today's kindergarten curriculums are more academic and a Purdue expert found that students were less-stressed in full day programs.

Released: 31-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Public School Teachers Help Create Unique Book Series
North Carolina State University

"Living in Our World," the first and only social studies program for grades 4-7 designed exclusively to meet North Carolina's unique geography-based curriculum, is ready to roll off the presses.

Released: 31-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Smart Software Gives Kids an 'Animated' Guide to the Internet
North Carolina State University

He's a smooth operator, the type of guy who knows his way around. Some new Hollywood hero? No, he's Cosmo the Internet Adviser, wise-cracking animated star of a new interactive software program being developed at North Carolina State University to teach teens and preteens about the inner workings of the Internet.

Released: 30-Dec-1997 12:00 AM EST
Saturday Research Program Turns Teens on to Science
Northwestern University

Even on a Saturday, it's not surprising to find dedicated scientists hunched over microscopes in Northwestern University's Searle Medical Research Building, oblivious to the attractions of Lake Michigan and the Magnificent Mile, both just steps away on Chicago's near north side. What may be surprising are some of the faces behind the microscopes: a dozen or so teenagers, mostly Hispanic and African-American, who, on the remaining days of the week, live a world away in that other Chicago, the Chicago of struggling public schools and limited opportunities.



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