Pace Unveils Virtual Classroom

PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y. – Students in Pace University’s education degree program will now be able to practice their teaching skills in front of a classroom of students on a daily basis, while never leaving the Pleasantville campus.

The classroom won’t be filled with actual students, but instead virtual ones through the fully interactive TeachLivE Lab.

“This is a great tool because a student can go practice in front of a classroom and if they don’t do so well they can say to themselves, ‘alright I’ll just try to do better tomorrow’,” said Education Professor Brian Monahan.  “As opposed to the embarrassment of performing poorly in front of a real class and going home crying.”

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Exam success for youngsters in care

The role of the virtual school is to pull together all people involved in the child’s life, such as teachers, carers and social workers, to ensure the young person is progressing and is consistently exceeding their targets.

Ofsted recently judged the education of children being fostered in the city as “outstanding” and said this was largely due to Sunderland Virtual School.

Councillor Paul Stewart, chairman of children, young people and learning scrutiny committee, said: “The committee acknowledges the excellent work that has been and continues to be achieved with looked-after children in the city.

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2011 McGraw Prize in Education Winners Named

Dr. Robert Beichner is an award-winning professor of physics at North Carolina State University and is receiving the Prize for his work at the post-secondary level. He has changed how students learn in the science classroom not only on his home campus, but at the more than 100 institutions of higher education that have adopted SCALE-UP, an approach that uses digital technology combined with innovative teaching approaches centered on hands-on activities and roundtable discussions. He was named an American Council on Education Fellow for the 2010-11 academic year and co-authored the most widely used college physics textbook in the country. Since 2007 he has been the Director of NC State’s STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) Education Initiative, with a mission to study and improve STEM education in North Carolina and around the world.

Dr. Mitchel Resnick, Professor of Learning Research at the MIT Media Lab, develops new technologies and activities to engage children in creative learning experiences, helping them learn to think creatively, reason systematically, and work collaboratively. He is receiving the Prize for his work in pre-K and elementary education. His Lifelong Kindergarten research group developed ideas and technologies underlying the LEGO Mindstorms robotics kits and the Scratch programming environment and online community, used by millions of young people around the world. He also co-founded the Computer Clubhouse project, an international network of more than 100 after-school learning centers where youth from low-income communities learn to express themselves creatively with new technologies.

Julie Young is President and CEO of the nation’s largest and most influential virtual program: Florida Virtual School (FLVS). She is receiving the Prize for her work in secondary education. Young became interested in combining technology and learning while serving as a teacher trainer for a partnership between her district and IBM. Since its inception in 1997 when it enrolled 77 students, the school has evolved both in offerings and number of students. FLVS, a public school free to all Florida students and supported by tax dollars, currently provides online instruction in over 125 courses to more than 130,000 K-12 students. In addition to directing the work of 1,500 employees, Young is a frequent national speaker and sits on numerous boards. She was also recognized by Technology & Learning Magazine as one of the “Top 30 influencers in Ed Tech,” along with Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.

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Weekly News Roundup

Pearson, the world’s largest education company announced this week that it had acquired Connections Education, an online virtual school provider. About 40,000 students in 21 states attend the schools, which are funded by the states and districts and free to parents in places where virtual school counts as a public education.
On Monday, McGraw-Hill announced that it would be splitting into two companies. One would focus on its education division, now second only in size to Pearson, and the other would handle the company’s financial business, including its ownership of Standard & Poors. On Thursday, the company announced it had led the investment in a first round of funding for Unigo, an online resource for college students. The New York-based startup will now power the student review section of the U.S. News & World Report‘s college rankings.

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Ramapo Central faces sex-bias lawsuit involving student

According to documents filed in the suit, Pungitore emailed Suffern Middle School guidance counselor Travis Jackson Jr. in October with concerns that her then-eighth-grade daughter was “upset” because she wasn’t being challenged in her current math class, high school honors algebra.

In the ensuing email exchange detailed in the suit, Pungitore and Jackson discussed the possibility of the student’s placement in an accelerated math class offered by the district through the Florida Virtual School.

At the time, the class included only male students, according to the documents.

At a meeting in November, the student’s parents, her guidance counselor and her teachers discussed the need to challenge the student’s “gifted and accelerated mathematical abilities,” documents state.

The teachers and counselors made recommendations regarding her placement in the program, but the request for the student to join the advanced class was turned down by Barbera.

“Mrs. Barbera did not feel FVS was a viable option for current eighth-grade students scheduled for honors algebra,” Jackson wrote in an email to Pungitore on Dec. 7, documents state.

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IBM Works with City University to Open Computer-Focused School in New York

“Each and every one of us has a role to play in taking an education system that has fallen far behind the times, and moving it into the 21st century,” Bloomberg said. “New York City is stepping up to that challenge and laying the foundation to ensure that every child who graduates high school is ready to start college or a career. By rewarding teachers who make a real difference, bringing technology into our classrooms and creating partnerships with the private sector, we will build upon the improvements we have made over the last eight years and give New York City children the future they deserve.”

The city has begun to pilot a range of innovations in 80 schools – in technology, time spent in the classroom, and instructional delivery. Forty schools will pilot a “virtual school” model that integrates online learning with face-to-face classroom instruction, allowing students to learn at their own pace. Seven schools will pilot innovations in the way schools use time and staffing, implementing new ways to extend the school year and increase time spent in the classroom. And 30 schools will be introducing technology that helps teachers evaluate student progress in real time.

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Waski puts her best foot foward

Paulina Waski, 15, learned this first hand when she enrolled last year in the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis (JKO) School, a national training program for young dancers at the American Ballet Theater in New York. Not only is Paulina committed to learning all of the skills and dance techniques necessary for a career in dance but she is also willing to sacrifice activities typically associated with teenage life in the suburbs.

For example, Paulina doesn’t attend high school with her local friends. Instead, she participates in a virtual school and takes courses online so that she is able to commute back and forth to classes six days a week at the prestigious New York City ballet company.

“She is technically gifted for her age, and has outstanding potential,” said Franco De Vita, principal of the JKO School. “Paulina has a positive attitude at all times with the staff and other students alike. She has a lovely, easy quality of movement, a joy for dancing, and is a natural performer.”

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