Back to School and Back to Normal. Or at Least Close Enough.
As school began this year, we sent reporters to find out how much — or how little — has changed since the pandemic changed everything.
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As school began this year, we sent reporters to find out how much — or how little — has changed since the pandemic changed everything.
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Faced with declining enrollment, smaller schools are harnessing innovative ideas — like course sharing — to attract otherwise reluctant students.
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The concept has been around for a while, but the pandemic reinforced the importance of providing support to families and students to enhance learning.
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In-school tutoring is not a silver bullet. But it may help students and schools reduce some pandemic-related slides in achievement.
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Meeting the Mental Health Challenge in School and at Home
From kindergarten through college, educators are experimenting with ways to ease the stress students are facing — not only from the pandemic, but from life itself.
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To Improve Students’ Mental Health, Schools Take a Team Approach
A program that takes a group approach to social, emotional and academic learning is taking off in U.S. schools, creating fresh bonds after remote learning.
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Sounding Out a Better Way to Teach Reading
Schools are returning to phonics and other evidence-based literacy methods, and already there are signs that the switch is paying off in improved scores.
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One Way to Ease the Teacher Shortage: Pay More, Some Districts Say
Systems throughout the nation don’t have enough teachers — especially in struggling schools. But there are many ways to address the problem.
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With Online Learning, ‘Let’s Take a Breath and See What Worked and Didn’t Work’
The massive expansion of online higher education created a worldwide laboratory to finally assess its value and its future.
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After an academic career spent in near obscurity, he became an internet phenomenon during the pandemic by uploading talks he had given three decades earlier.
By Trip Gabriel
Dorothy Jean Tillman II of Chicago made history as the youngest person to earn a doctoral degree in integrated behavioral health at Arizona State University.
By Alexandra E. Petri
Ginia Bellafante, a New York Times columnist, speaks with students at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine about the $1 billion donation from the philanthropist, Ruth Gottesman.
By Ginia Bellafante, Gabriel Blanco and Christina Kelso
His most famous finding was the “Pygmalion effect,” in which teachers’ high expectations of students can subconsciously make them better students.
By Clay Risen
Sorry, Swifties. The Gen Z slang term — derived from “charisma” — went viral this year after the actor Tom Holland claimed to have none.
By Jennifer Schuessler
The right hardware and software — combined with time to learn — can improve the soundtrack in your videos, podcasts and other creative endeavors.
By J. D. Biersdorfer
Apps that offer short lessons in various subjects can help get the most out of your time whether you’re waiting for a train or a meeting.
By J. D. Biersdorfer
Here’s a short quiz that challenges you to match up five writers with their pen names.
By J. D. Biersdorfer
The cost of studying fine art is another fact that inspired a short-term intensive program led by artists of color that is an apprenticeship of sorts.
By Zachary Small
Teaching fewer words to large language models might help them sound more human.
By Oliver Whang
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