Author: Reporter

How To Design Truly Interactive Learning If you’ve worked in L&D for more than five minutes, you’ve probably heard this request: “Can we make it more interactive?” Which sounds great in theory. Until you realize what people usually mean is: Add a few click-to-reveals. Throw in some hotspots. Maybe a drag-and-drop if we’re feeling ambitious. End with a quiz and call it a day. And just like that—interactive learning achieved! Except… not really. Because if we’re being honest (and let’s be honest), a lot of what we label as “interactive” in eLearning is really just reactive. Click. Reveal. Next. That’s…

Read More

More than a cen­tu­ry after women’s suf­frage in the Unit­ed States, it’s not enough to bone up on the plat­forms of female pri­ma­ry can­di­dates (though that’s an excel­lent start). A Twit­ter user and self-described Old Crone named Robyn urged her fel­low Amer­i­cans to take a good long gan­der at a list of nine free­doms that women in the Unit­ed States were not uni­ver­sal­ly grant­ed in 1971, the year Helen Red­dy released the soon-to-be anthem, “I Am Woman,” above. Even those of us who remem­ber singing along as chil­dren may expe­ri­ence some shock that these facts check out on Snopes. CREDIT CARDS: Pri­or…

Read More

Iowa lawmakers created the center last year. Joe Hendrickson/Getty Images The Center for Intellectual Freedom at the University of Iowa hosted an opening event last December—but only invited Republicans, The Gazette in Cedar Rapids reported Sunday.  The independent center was created last year by an act of the Iowa Legislature to “educate students by means of free, open, and rigorous intellectual inquiry to seek the truth,” among other goals. Lawmakers also appropriated $1 million to help pay for some of the costs of opening the center, including an interim director, temporary faculty and lecturers, administrative support, a market study, and…

Read More

Get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for The 74 Newsletter For a small school district, recruiting and retaining educators is a never-ending challenge, especially when competing against large districts with broader revenue bases and better salaries. It’s simple economics — when pay increases, the talent follows. This feeling of frustration is one that leaders at New York’s Clyde-Savannah Central School District know well. Situated between Rochester and Syracuse, this rural district of 750 students is often seen as a stepping stone by educators. Many new teachers get a few years under their belt, then take…

Read More

Behavioral health programs may be especially compatible with earn-and-learn strategies as the federal government and some individual states adopt stricter, measured-value accountability frameworks. Photo illustration by Inside Higher Ed | SDI Productions/E+/Getty Images The country’s only nonprofit accredited university dedicated to apprenticeship degrees is opening a health-care college, it announced Thursday. Reach University, which launched in 2020, has thus far been focused on education, helping incumbent workers in K–12 schools earn degrees to become teachers while they continue to work full-time, typically as paraeducators. Just as Reach’s debt-free teacher apprenticeship model is designed to address a critical shortage of educators,…

Read More

Key points: While nearly every industry is racing to integrate artificial intelligence, most schools are still teaching high school math the way it’s been done for decades–rooted in instructional material that is abstract, disconnected, and detached from the world students actually live in. It’s no wonder that so many students decide early on that math “isn’t for them.” The way we’ve structured math instruction makes it hard for them to see why it matters. Our standards were built for a university pipeline, not for the realities of a dynamic economy that values creativity, problem-solving, and the ability to ask the…

Read More

Listen to the article 6 min This audio is auto-generated. Please let us know if you have feedback. A West Virginia law signed April 1 lets school districts design academic calendars around instructional hours rather than days, giving them flexibility to move to a four-day school week.  On the other hand, in Louisiana, lawmakers are contemplating a bill that would mandate a five-day school week for districts, with exceptions for those with the highest performance level and those operating on a four-day schedule before the end of last year.  And in Texas’ Liberty Hill Independent School District, the board of…

Read More

Public trust in higher education rebounded slightly in the last year but remains at historic lows. And presidents know it: According to Inside Higher Ed’s 2026 Survey of College and University Presidents with Hanover Research, just 16 percent of leaders think higher ed has been at least moderately effective in responding to declining public trust—a modest increase from last year’s 8 percent. Just 2 percent of presidents say higher ed has been highly effective at addressing this issue. In a parallel finding, 2 percent of presidents believe that higher ed has been highly effective in addressing the widening education divide in the U.S. electorate,…

Read More

No art enthu­si­ast’s vis­it to the Unit­ed King­dom would be com­plete with­out days at the British Muse­um, the Tate, the V&A and the Nation­al Gallery. The fact that all those respect­ed insti­tu­tions are in Lon­don con­sti­tutes a plau­si­ble excuse nev­er to stray out­side the cap­i­tal. But that cap­i­tal is sur­round­ed, lest we for­get, by not just a whole coun­try, but a whole Unit­ed King­dom’s worth of coun­tries. Each region of Eng­land has its own muse­ums and gal­leries worth vis­it­ing, and so do Scot­land, Wales, and North­ern Ire­land. But why just vis­it muse­ums and gal­leries? Uni­ver­si­ties, libraries, town halls, hos­pi­tals, homes:…

Read More