“A New Leader in the Push for Diversity of Thought on Campus”
“Professor Debra Mashek is leaving a tenured job at Harvey Mudd College to lead Heterodox Academy.”
Read: A New Leader in the Push for Diversity of Thought on Campus
“Professor Debra Mashek is leaving a tenured job at Harvey Mudd College to lead Heterodox Academy.”
Read: A New Leader in the Push for Diversity of Thought on Campus
“Professor Debra Mashek is leaving a tenured job at Harvey Mudd College to lead Heterodox Academy.”
Read: A New Leader in the Push for Diversity of Thought on Campus
“Amanda Reyes was auditioning for her umpteenth acting role in New York City recently when the casting director asked her to “be more ghetto.” It was nothing new.”
Read: What Does a Diverse Hollywood Look Like? This Brooklyn Film School
“Ashok Goel needed help. In his regular courses at Georgia Tech, the computer science professor had at most a few dozen students. But his online class had 400 students — students based all over the world; students who viewed his class videos at different times; students with questions.”
“Ashok Goel needed help. In his regular courses at Georgia Tech, the computer science professor had at most a few dozen students. But his online class had 400 students — students based all over the world; students who viewed his class videos at different times; students with questions.”
“Diversity isn’t just a hallmark of big cities anymore. The U.S. as a whole is rapidly becoming a majority-minority country, starting with our youngest citizens: Last summer, the U.S. Census Bureau published a report on the changing demographics of the country and found that, as of 2014, 50.”
“New York City’s specialized public high schools—Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Technical, the Bronx High School of Science and the rest—are the most coveted and competitive schools in the country’s most segregated school system.”
Read: NYC’s Elite Public Schools Have A Diversity Problem. Is Test Prep The Answer?
“On a recent, chilly Sunday morning, children ranging in age from 4 to 6 waited with their parents in the cafeteria of a Brooklyn school. Each wore a name tag.”
Read: To Be Young, ‘Gifted’ And Black, It Helps To Have A Black Teacher
“The first “teaching machine” was invented nearly a century ago by Sydney Pressey, a psychologist at Ohio University, out of spare typewriter parts. The device was simple, presenting the user with a multiple-choice question and a set of answers.”
“Eighteen students file into a brightly lit classroom. Arrayed around its perimeter are 18 computers. The students take their seats, log in to their machines, and silently begin working.”