A Richardson ISD elementary math and PE teacher have paired up help kids hone their math and basketball skills.
In revamping its approach to math, Illinois joins a growing group of states that are passing legislation, unveiling new requirements, or issuing revised guidance designed to counteract yearslong ...
At Fort Hays State University, Stacey Smith is looking to technology to ease the burden on educators. “Faculty today are overwhelmed. Students want more support, and budgets are tight. And not ...
Philomath and Blodgett students in grades K-5 will transition to a new math curriculum this fall following formal adoption ...
Students at an elementary school in Hollandale, Miss.Credit... Supported by By Nicholas Kristof Photographs by Lynsey Addario Mr. Kristof is an Opinion Columnist who reported from Alabama and ...
For our first Hallway Voices after winter break, we learned why students sometimes resist learning math and how one teacher helps them. We talked with Taylor Kloehn, a Little Chute native who returned ...
Walk into many school district offices today, and you’re likely to hear a troubling narrative: They don’t have enough effective math teachers to support their students. New research from the ...
When Mike Kenny was a fifth-grade teacher in Essex Junction, he learned early in his career that the traditional way to teach math, which includes repetitive practice of math problems, did not work ...
We’ve often thought that 3D printers make excellent school projects. No matter what a student’s interests are: art, software, electronics, robotics, chemistry, or physics, there’s something for ...
New NY math guidelines tell teachers to stop testing kids on problem-solving speed to curb ‘anxiety’
The New York State Education Department is pushing new math guidelines, including a recommendation that teachers stop giving timed quizzes — because it stresses students out. The new guidelines also ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results