by Sarah Green | May 22, 2015 | News
The World Bank, a United Nations financial institute that works with developing countries, has pledged to spend $5 billion on education funding over the next five years. This is about twice as much as they spent over the last five years. The new program is a...
by Sarah Green | May 19, 2015 | Teacher Issues
Every college graduate right now knows (or should know) that they are being tipped out into a glutted market. But few job markets are worse than early childhood education, according to the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ). In an article published in USA...
by Sarah Green | May 18, 2015 | News
If there is a spot of light in the devastating news out of Nepal since its two major earthquakes in April and May, it is that the first and larger of the quakes struck on a Saturday, when schools and offices in Nepal are almost universally closed. More than 8,000...
by Sarah Green | May 15, 2015 | Student Issues
With the release of the American Bar Association’s statistics on job opportunities for law school graduates, many are asking—Which are the best schools to go to if you actually want to put that degree to use? In a challenging market where recent grads are struggling...
by Sarah Green | May 14, 2015 | Parent Issues, Student Issues, Teacher Issues
Parents are often a teacher’s toughest ‘customers.’ Hardest to please, least likely to show it when they are. It’s easy for that important relationship to get strained and adversarial. Your child’s teacher does so much for your family,...