Comment on this story Comment When the coronavirus pandemic hit the United States in 2020, some predicted that many schools would embrace online education not just as a short-term remedy to the closing of campuses but as a longer-term strategy to draw in more students. This post looks at what […]
Month: January 2023
What Seattle read in 2022: The Seattle Public Library’s most checked-out books
Curious about which books Seattle’s insatiable readers turned to in 2022? Need a little inspiration for that 2023 book list? The most popular fiction book checked out from The Seattle Public Library from January through November 2022 was “The Sentence,” by Louise Erdrich. It’s a novel about a Minneapolis bookstore […]
Best Online PhD of Nursing (DNP) Degree Programs Ranked for 2023
We rank the best online PhD nursing degree programs. Key Takeaways Earning a DNP online, will enhance your health systems leadership capabilities and help you with career advancement, higher salaries, and marketability. PhD and DNP programs are different. PhDs are clinical doctorate degrees intended for advanced practice nurses, while DNPs […]
Policymakers Should Ring In The New Year With Action To End Teacher Shortages
National Guard soldier Mario Meraz (C) teaches multiplication to third graders during class at … [+] Highland Elementary School in Las Cruces, New Mexico on March 4, 2022. – In late January, amid staffing shortages due to COVID-19, New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham called in National Guard soldiers to […]
School Physical Education Programs Could Play an Important Role in Reducing Kids’ Depression, New Research Suggests
Because physical activity is associated with a significant reduction in depression symptoms, physical education programs in primary and secondary schools can play a key role in improving the mental health of children and adolescents. Online health guidance from Harvard Medical School calls exercise “an all-natural treatment to fight depression” and […]
Book review of Myth America: Historians Take on the Biggest Legends and Lies About Our Past by Kevin Kruse and Julian Zelizer
Remark on this tale Remark There is no escaping the extensive shadow that record has solid over modern American everyday living. Whether Supreme Court docket justices jockeying above the first intent of the Founding Fathers, universities probing how substantially of their wealth derived from slavery, community officers taking away memorials […]