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Are charter schools becoming the wave of the future?

by Steve Kastenbaum

(CNN)—More students are attending class at charter schools across the U.S. than ever before, and the number is expected to continue growing in the coming years.

The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools recently released a report saying that more than 2 million children are enrolled in public charter schools this year. The nonprofit resource for charter schools said that more than 500 charter schools opened their doors across the country in the 2011-12 school year.

Last Updated on Friday, 28 December 2012 08:59

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My View: Should everyone go to college?

by Mike Rose
For New Pittsburgh Courier

(CNN)—College changed my life, so when I think about the question of who should go to college, I can't help but consider it through my own experience. And what I've learned from teaching over the past 40 years leads me to think that my experience is not all that unusual.

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FROM SCRUBBING FLOORS TO THE IVY LEAGUE—Ashley Dawn Loggins celebrates graduation from high school on June 8. Loggins, 18, was abandoned last year and left homeless. But the staff at Burns High School in North Carolina chipped in and gave her a hand. And she worked as school janitor between her studies to make ends meet. She wanted to go to college. So Ashley Dawn applied to 5 colleges and was accepted to each, including her dream school—Harvard College.

Last Updated on Friday, 28 December 2012 08:59

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Five buzzwords you’re likely to hear in education this school year

by Donna Krache

(CNN)—Education, like any other profession, has a language all its own. We’ve compiled a short list of some of the words and phrases you are likely to come across this academic year. It’s by no means all-inclusive, and some of these terms are not new, but it gives you a sense of some of education’s priorities as we start a new school year.

Last Updated on Friday, 28 December 2012 08:59

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My View: Kindergarten redshirting different for each child

by Donna McClintock
For New Pittsburgh Courier

(CNN)—I often read materials that approach a subject as if there were only one solution. Such is the case of “redshirting” children for kindergarten, which is the practice of holding a child back from school until he turns six. There is certainly a best answer for each child, and parents and educators must determine what that answer is by considering his individual needs and development and not by blindly following a trend.

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Last Updated on Friday, 28 December 2012 08:59

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Obama wins by a landslide in kids' online election

NEW YORK (AP)—It's a landslide for President Barack Obama—at least among people too young to vote.

Nickelodeon's Linda Ellerbee said Monday that the president captured 65 percent of the vote to beat Republican Mitt Romney in the network's "Kids Pick the President" vote. More than 520,000 people cast online ballots through the children's network's website over one week earlier this month.

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KIDS PICK THE PREZ—President Barack Obama waves to members of the media as he walks across the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on Oct. 19. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, file)

Since it began in 1988, the kids have presaged the adults' vote all but once, when more youngsters voted for John Kerry over George W. Bush in 2004.

Obama answered questions submitted by Nickelodeon viewers for a special earlier this month. Romney didn't participate.

Last Updated on Monday, 03 December 2012 20:13

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