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Showing posts from October, 2019

GPAT 2020: Application Form Link Available Now, Check dates, eligibility, fees, merit list etc.

GPAT 2020 Registration has started. The candidates can now register and fill in the application form. For more details, check out the updates section. NTA conducts the Graduate Pharmacy Aptitude Test (GPAT 2020). Previously, it was conducted by the All India Council for Technical Education. After qualifying in this exam, one will be able to […] The post GPAT 2020: Application Form Link Available Now, Check dates, eligibility, fees, merit list etc. appeared first on Next in Career . from Next in Career https://ift.tt/2J650QV via IFTTT

Calling All Online Instructors: There’s a Secret Bonus Level!

Don’t I Know You from Somewhere? This whole thing started when I played two video games, one after the other, that I imagine almost no one plays in sequence. My partner and I enjoy open-world games that incorporate a number of mini-games and puzzles to discover along the way. Lego Star Wars [i] was released in 2005. We played it at my cousin’s holiday party, and we were hooked. Back in 2005, I was teaching as a remote faculty member in a mega-university’s College of Liberal Arts & Sciences. My online courses were designed according to the “read and reply twice” design format, then in vogue among instructional designers. The interactions that I had with my learners were largely formulaic, and I was really good at them. [ii] I responded to my students’ discussion posts and activity submissions within hours of deadlines, and I did my best to move conversations forward by asking learners to make connections and begin new avenues of inquiry. By 2007, I had won Senior Faculty statu

5 places to learn about creepy robots this Halloween

Robotics is pretty awesome–our eSchool News Robotics Guide has reinforced that concept for anyone who wasn’t totally convinced. But sometimes, robotics and robots can also be a liiiiittle scary. To close out robotics month and celebrate Halloween (because you’re never too old to celebrate Halloween), we’re taking a fun look at times when robotics or robots gave us a scare–or gave us some food for thought. Some of these videos are probably a bit alarmist, and most of their “scary robots take over the world” predictions will come to fruition. Nonetheless, it’s fun to look at where robots started and where, guided by programmers and professionals whose interest in robotics began at an early age, they’re headed. 1. This video, the Top 10 Scariest AI Robot Moments , tackles Alexa, humanoid robots, self-driving cars, and more. 2. At CES 2019 , this narrator encountered products that “might make you fear the artificial future we’re facing right around the corner.” AI has come a long way

Indonesia turns to a technology legend to help universities

Indonesia has reshuffled its higher education and research portfolios, conscripting a political odd couple to recreate universities as engine rooms for its economic advent. In a reversal of a 2014 restructure, Indonesian president Joko Widodo has separated the higher education directorate from the ministry of research and technology. The two had been merged to foster an entrepreneurial spirit in universities -- an experiment that faltered because of Indonesia’s “overlapping bureaucratic systems,” with the two arms financed and regulated separately. The joint agency, Ristekdikti, underpinned the president’s goal of fulfilling the country’s vaunted economic potential by boosting human capital and cultivating the tech sector. He now hopes to achieve this aim through two of the more interesting appointments to his 38-person cabinet, unveiled Oct. 23. One is 53-year-old bureaucrat Bambang Brodjonegoro, who has been named minister of research and technology. An Illinois-trained economi

American University students protest mistreatment of black student

American University students are once again speaking out about the racial climate on the campus. They point to a recent incident as yet another example of a pattern of hostility toward black students by administrators at the Washington institution and among the larger student body. A multiracial group of about 120 students protested outside the student center Monday to call attention to what they described as the racist treatment of a black student who was suspended from American late last month after being accused of allegedly assault ing another student. According to the student newspaper, The Eagle , the suspended student was forcibly removed from her university-owned apartment by at least six officers from the university police department during what was supposed to be a wellness check . The removal of Gianna Wheeler, a junior, was videotaped and shared widely on social media. She can be seen struggling and shouting i n the 30-second video as the police officers carry her

Clark dismisses graduate student who complained about possible gender discrimination and research misconduct

Clark University officially kicked a graduate student out of her program last week, saying she had failed to find a new adviser within an initial, 30-day limit. But the student, Abby Nissenbaum, says the real story is that her department blackballed her after she complained about her first adviser’s research methods and behavior. The university denies that. But Nissenbaum said Wednesday, "This whole thing is weird and in total violation of prescribed policies." Nissenbaum’s case has attracted attention on social media, where she’s shared details about it. The primary concern among followers, including many faculty members, is that a student who is possibly a whistle-blower has not been afforded any special protections during the complaint process. What happened? Nissenbaum, who is interested in sexual violence interventions, started her graduate studies in Clark’s social psychology program in 2017. As sometimes happens, tensions soon emerged between her and her advise

New data on the 36 million Americans who left college without a credential

College leaders and policy makers are paying more attention to the millions of adults in the U.S. who attended college but didn’t earn a credential. Yet many questions remain about this population -- not just how to better recruit and serve them, but who they are. A newly released report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center helps fill in some of the blanks. The nonprofit group used data from institutions that collectively account for 97 percent of the nation’s postsecondary enrollments. It was able to track individual students across institutional boundaries, including when they left college and if they later enrolled at another institution. The result is an unusually extensive view of the “educational trajectories” of the 36 million Americans the center identified who left college without receiving a degree or certificate. Several experts said the findings have wide implications for colleges, systems and federal and state policy makers. As of December 2018,

"College Ready"

Blog:  Confessions of a Community College Dean I was as struck as everyone else by the juxtaposition of two stories at Inside Higher Ed on Wednesday. One of them described a potential lawsuit against the University of California for using the SAT and ACT, on the grounds that the tests are discriminatory. The other used ACT results to claim that high school students are less college ready than they used to be; the usual hand-wringing followed in the comments. Admittedly, the headlines didn’t say it all. For instance, in the second story, this line jumped off the screen for me: “Students who took the recommended high school core curriculum stayed steady in their readiness in English and math.” If that’s correct, then the point of the story is access to curriculum, rather than student performance. But that’s an aside. “College ready” as a designation carries a lot of baggage. It assumes that every college has the same expectations. It also assumes, as Michelle Asha Cooper ha

Morehouse Ends Furlough Plan

Morehouse College has ended a plan to require faculty to be furloughed one day a month, The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported. The college acted after faculty members voted to abandon a planned walkout for Wednesday. Morehouse also agreed to end a plan to cut contributions to 403(b) retirement plans. Morehouse officials said increased contributions from donors would pay for the added expenses. Ad keywords:  institutionalfinance Is this diversity newsletter?:  Hide by line?:  Disable left side advertisement?:  Is this Career Advice newsletter?:  Trending:  College:  Morehouse College from Inside Higher Ed https://ift.tt/2Jzjr0o via IFTTT

Head Start for Campus Childcare

Improving funding so that federal Head Start programs can partner with colleges could be the answer to the childcare needs of student parents, who numbered 3.8 million in the 2015-16 academic year, according to a study released Wednesday from the Institute for Women's Policy Research . Head Start programs provide early childhood education as well as parental support in the form of assistance in reaching self-sufficiency goals. Nearly half of college student parents with children under 6 meet the income requirements to be eligible for Head Start, according to the study. As the number of on-campus childcare centers at colleges declines, the report says that Head Start programs could fill in the gap and help student parents achieve a degree and thus greater economic security. The institute found 82 partnerships nationally between Head Start and colleges. Most serve student parents. Researchers found that the partnerships allow student parents to enroll in college, give students

We should teach about racism as an idea that's expressed through behaviors rather than as the immutable essence of someone's character (opinion)

This past summer, President Trump tweeted that four elected representatives, all women of color, should “go back” to where they came from. Despite their American citizenship, the President stated that they should “go back and help fix” the “places from which they came,” even as they came from the United States. And while some news outlets called out the president as a racist, most chose not to explicitly label the comments as such, instead saying that the tweet was “widely denounced as racist.” Once again, we were asked to consider, in hundreds of headlines and essays, “Is the president being a racist?” It’s the same debate we often have whenever anyone of note does something or says something that demonstrates a racist idea. In this case, the president was using a well-worn and long-standing American racist idea: that people of color are not or cannot be American in the same way as white people and so should return to their “own country.” Despite this, however, the president and