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Looking Back at "The Levees"

In the latest issue of The Journal of Education Controversy, Margaret Crocco and Maureen Grolnick, who led development of TC's "Teaching The Levees" curriculum -- a 100-page teaching tool that explored civic issues raised by Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath -- reflect back on their work, the extraordinary tragedy that produced it, and the ongoing need for Americans to re-examine what it means to live in a democracy.  Published: 7/29/2008

Inside Higher Ed Focuses on Glazer-Raymo's Book on Challenges Women Face in Academia

Inside Higher Ed Focuses on Glazer-Raymo's Book on Challenges Women Face in Academia

A new book of essays edited by TC faculty member Judith Glazer-Raymo on the continuing challenges that face women in higher education is the focus of a story in Inside Higher Ed.  Published: 7/17/2008

Tom Rock Weighs in on Socio-Economic Status as an Admissions Consideration

Tom Rock Weighs in on Socio-Economic Status as an Admissions Consideration

In an article in Inside Higher Education on the issue of expanding the definition of "diversity" in graduate admissions decision to include socio-economic status, Tom Rock, TC's Interim Executive Director of Enrollment Services, said he suspects that the criterion is not widely used in programs in most academic disciplines.  Published: 7/10/2008

TC Alumna Discusses the Power of Teaching on CNBC

TC Alumna Discusses the Power of Teaching on CNBC

TC alumna Melissa Pelletier Boyd, who has taught at York Preparatory High School in New York City, appeared on CNBC's "The Big Idea with Donny Deutsch" in June to dicuss the power of teaching.  Published: 6/23/2008

Perfecting the Art of Frugal Living in NYC

Perfecting the Art of Frugal Living in NYC

The recent news-making study by TC's Joan Jerffri of aging artists in NYC and their successful strategies for remaining active is now the focus of a segment on NPR's All Things Considered. The artists, all older than 62, have spent their careers learning how to live well and cheaply.  Published: 6/17/2008

Virtual schools see strong growth, calls for more oversight

Virtual schools see strong growth, calls for more oversight

TC Professor Luis Huerta was quoted in a recent Christian Science Monitor story on "virtual schools" -- homeschooling conducted via the Internet.  Published: 6/3/2008

Virtual schools see strong growth, calls for more oversight

Virtual Schools keep growing, but there's little research assessing the quality of these programs, which some experts, like TC's Luis Huerta, say don't have enough official oversight.  Published: 6/3/2008

Fifth-Graders Read Own Works to Preschoolers

Some kids at Pulaski Street Elementary School are writing their own books, and then reading them to younger kids.   Published: 5/9/2008 1:17:00 PM

Student Tests and Teacher Grades

Student Tests and Teacher Grades

TC Trustee John Merrow, writing in The Wall Street Journal, argues that student performance data does, indeed, tell us a great deal about the quality of teaching.  Published: 5/9/2008

Students in Online Courses

Educators consider how to foster meaningful interaction among students in online courses  Published: 5/8/2008 8:47:00 PM

Religiosity, Education, and Civic Belonging: Muslim Youth in New York

Eight out of 10 Muslim high school students surveyed in New York City say their schools are "pretty cool," and 85 percent say they feel safe in them, according to a study by Louis Cristillo, an education professor at Teachers College, Columbia University.  Published: 5/7/2008 8:57:00 PM

California Parents Eager for Ruling on Home Schooling

Parents of an estimated 166,000 children in California are awaiting a state appellate court ruling on whether they have a constitutional right to home-school their children without a teaching credential. Professor Luis Huerta comments.  Published: 4/20/2008

Education Week Spotlight's Levin's Cost-Benefit Analysis Center

Education Week Spotlight's Levin's Cost-Benefit Analysis Center

In the early 1970s, Henry Levin -- now Professor of Economics and Education at TC -- did a major report for a Senate sub-committee on the costs to the U.S. of inadequate education. Over the past 30 years, he's elevated that kind of work to an art form, most recently founding the Center for Benefit Cost Studies of Education. See the story in the current issue of Education Week.  Published: 4/9/2008

Program Teaches Power of the Pen

  Published: 3/27/2008

Adopts New Emergency Notification Procedure

In response to violent acts on college campuses over the past few years, Columbia's Teachers College has introduced a new alert system meant to notify students in case of a security crisis.   Published: 3/26/2008

Levees: A Classroom Narrative

Levees: A Classroom Narrative

Dan Nichols, a teacher at the Heritage School in New York City, organized a media project to challenge his students to be engaged citizens.  Published: 3/11/2008

Tackling Racial Segregation One Policy at a Time: Why School Desegregation Only Went So Far

The 50th anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court ruling Brown v. Board of Education caused many in the United States to contemplate the value of public policies that flowed from that decision, especially the desegregation of public schools. Over the last half century, we have received mixed messages about whether such efforts were worth the trouble. TC professor Amy Stuart Wells and her colleagues explore the issue in this TC Record article.  Published: 3/11/2008

Luis Huerta Discusses Regulation of Home Schooling in California

Luis Huerta Discusses Regulation of Home Schooling in California

TC faculty member Luis Huerta recently appeared on "Which Way, LA?", a radio program on KCRW-NPR in Los Angeles, to comment on a state appellate court ruling that, for the first time, could subject the practice of home schooling in California to state regulation.  Published: 3/7/2008

Making schools seem smaller

Learning communities to let students focus on areas of interest   Published: 3/3/2008

In Kappan article, Rebell details the history of the educational adequacy movement

In Kappan article, Rebell details the history of the educational adequacy movement

In the current issue of Phi Delta Kappan, Michael Rebell describes the evolution of the nation's educational adequacy movement, placing it historical context and assessing its accomplishments and gains.  Published: 2/14/2008

The Designer Baby ... Genetic Breakthrough?

The Designer Baby ... Genetic Breakthrough?

TC's Jeanne Brooks-Gunn was a recent guest on the "Morning Show with Mike and Judy" to discuss why creating "designer babies" using DNA is causing controversy, and the impact it can have on the children.  Published: 2/13/2008

Spread respect for the rights of people with disabilities

Spread respect for the rights of people with disabilities

Valerie Karr, a PhD candidate at Teachers College, Columbia University, studies international perspectives on the rights of persons with disabilities. Click here to read an opinion piece she recently published in Newsday on terrorists' use of mentally disabled women as suicide bombers.  Published: 2/11/2008

Managing is a generational challenge

According to a recent study on cross-generational issues in organizations by Jill Waymire Paine of Teachers College, Columbia University, there is a fundamental theory of generations that argues that events, as opposed to parental values or genetic traits, shape the personalities of various age groups.   Published: 2/9/2008

Henig Speaks Out on Research, Policymaking and the Press

Henig Speaks Out on Research, Policymaking and the Press

On February 4th, the Washington Post's Jay Mathews devoted his education column to TC faculty member Jeffrey Henig's new book, Spin Cycle: How Research Is Used in Policy Debates, The Case of Charter Schools, which uses the national charter school controversy to spotlight how complex education issues get played out in the press and other public venues.  Published: 2/8/2008

Community Colleges Want More to Graduate

As elite universities debate Congress over how much of their multi-billion-dollar endowments to spend, a new report argues that higher education's heavy-lifters, community colleges, need both more money and better results.   Published: 1/31/2008

Community College of Philadelphia's Tagliareni Elected President of NLN

Elaine Tagliareni, RN, EdD, is the first community college professor to be elected president of the National League for Nursing. (Courtesy of the Community College of Philadelphia)   Published: 1/28/2008