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Web Conference: Apollo Space – Nov. 10

Participants of this free, one-day online conference join in interactive discussions on the Apollo program and its historical impact. Teachers are invited to explore ways to teach the use of primary source materials. All sessions will be archived and available for future replay.

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Feature: Roller Coaster Physics

When Elizabeth Smallwood’s 11th and 12th graders climb onto the rollercoaster at Six Flags theme park near Buffalo, N.Y., it won’t be just for the thrill. They’ll be concentrating on how gravity affects acceleration, monitoring their own queaziness and trying to assess any temporary effects on the brain.

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Lesson: Green Roof Design

Students work in small teams to design a heat- and water-conserving “green roof” of plant material for an urban apartment building. This is a multimedia project for grades 9-12, involving Web and library research, hand drawings, creation of exhibit boards with text, photos and data graphics, and a final presentation of findings.

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Students Get Practice in Architecture

An advanced drafting class at Chico High School in California has been turned into something resembling an architectural office. Seated behind computers equipped with the latest architectural software, the teens set to work designing homes, out-buildings and even a police training center — all projects that will soon be constructed based on their own plans and designs.

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College Enrollment at Record High

Amid a surge in community college attendance, almost 40 percent of the nation’s 18- to 24-year-olds in 2008 were enrolled in college, a record number, according to the Pew Research Center. The percentage of high school dropouts, meanwhile, has been declining.

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Forensic Science Catches On

Increasingly sophisticated forensics lessons—typically focused on crime-solving techniques—have become entrenched over the past decade in many high schools and even some middle schools as electives or sections of core science classes.

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A Third of States Found to Lower Standards

A federal study shows that nearly a third of the states lowered academic proficiency standards in recent years. While the step helps schools stay ahead of sanctions under the No Child Left Behind law, it’s likely to fuel debate on whether uniform national standards are needed.

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‘Platooning’ Starts in Lower Grades

There has also been a noticeable increase in the number of elementary schools across the nation that have adopted some form of departmentalization in response to pressure for higher test scores.

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LA Schools Boost Parent Power

Los Angeles parents will be able to initiate major reforms at low-performing individual schools, rather than waiting for the school district to make changes. This new parental power has emerged as part of a school-control resolution that allows groups inside and outside the Los Angeles Unified School District to take over campuses.

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