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  • God knows where the wild creatures belong

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Introductions of new species or restoration efforts can be construed as quite presumptuous.
  • Mastering the Problem of Environmental Quality: an interview with Dr. S. Fred Singer

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Dr. S. Fred Singer, president of the Science and Environmental Policy Project, has achieved great renown for pioneering research in atmospheric and space physics.
  • An atmospheric valentine for you

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    With Valentine’s Day fast approaching, we thought we’d stop and smell the carbon dioxide-enhanced roses. What fate does forsythia face? Dare we hope for daffodils? Will the wisteria whither?
  • Bush nominates Norton, Whitman to cabinet posts

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    According to many New Era Environmentalists, the partnership of Carol Browner at EPA and Bruce Babbitt at the Interior Department has been a long nightmare for rural Americans, advocates of sound science, and market-based environmental policies.
  • California’s energy crisis: Not an accident

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    California’s electricity supply drama continues. In Sacramento, Governor Gray Davis ceremoniously turned on the State Christmas Tree’s lights early in December . . . and moments later switched them off.
  • Debate rages over future of Green Party

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Ralph Nader's Green Party arrived on the scene last summer with a big bang. Many people feel it left with a whimper when the dust settled on the strangest of all national elections.
  • ACLU challenges anti-protester rules

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    From a tea party in Boston Harbor to Vietnam War marches, protesting against government is firmly rooted in the American psyche.
  • Court Rejects Cleveland Vouchers

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    While the Ohio state legislature may have intended $2,250 vouchers to serve as a lifeline for low-income parents desperate to get their children out of the dysfunctional Cleveland public schools, a federal appeals court sees the program differently.
  • U.S. Students Trounced in Int’l Science Match

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    The continuing lackluster performance of U.S.
  • Improving Science Education

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    After the results of the Third International Math and Science Study were released in 1998, raising concerns about the declining performance of U.S.
  • How Dropout Rates Hit the Radar Screen in California

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    In June 1998, the California Department of Education issued a press release claiming California's dropout rate had fallen to 3.3 percent, a figure printed in more than 35 California daily newspapers.
  • Ballot Errors Linked to Illiteracy

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Although Jesse Jackson claims racism is behind the disproportionate disqualification of black votes in Florida in the recent national elections, the fact that illiteracy levels are disproportionately higher in Florida's black-majority congressional
  • Skills at Literacy Level 1

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Usually Can Perform Usually Cannot Perform Sign name Determine eligibility from a table of employee benefits Identify a country in a short article Locate intersection on a street map Locate one piece of information in a sports
  • Advantage Schools’ Effective Approach

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Advantage Schools, a for-profit charter school company based in Boston, believes it has a working model for the future of American urban education.
  • Nobel Goes International

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Nobel Learning Communities Inc., the largest operator of private schools in the United States, recently formed a strategic partnership with South Ocean Development Corporation, the largest operator of private schools in China.
  • “Whole Language” Faulted for U.S. Reading Woes

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    First you learn to read, then you read to learn. But if you don't learn to read effectively, how can you ever read to learn effectively?
  • How Do Children Read?

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Let's begin by picturing a child reading a book silently to herself. She's just sitting there, fairly motionless, staring at a book. Occasionally, she turns a page. Sometimes she laughs quietly to herself for no apparent reason.
  • SRN Just the Facts: Education Statistics

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    On average, the U.S. spends $6,168 per student in public schools, according to the latest official data from the U.S. Department of Education, which are for the school year 1997-98. Even those data involve the use of a preliminary estimate of $285.
  • Where Does the Money Go? (Hint: Not to teachers)

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    In the fall of 1997, there were 46,127,194 students in K-12 public schools in the U.S., with 5,258,671 teachers and instructional staff employed to serve them: one staff member for every 8.8 students.
  • Bush Picks Paige for Education Secretary

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    President George W.
  • New York City Hosts Important School Choice Conference

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    On December 13, noted proponents of school choice--and a few opponents--met at the Millennium Hotel on 44th Street in Manhattan to discuss and debate the merits of school choice.
  • School Choice Debated at New York City Conference

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Opponents and proponents of school choice debated their differing positions at the December 13 school choice conference in New York City, cosponsored by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.
  • Americans Still Don’t Understand School Choice

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    Last November's defeat of school choice initiatives in California and Michigan suggests the choice movement has lessons to learn about pursuing change through state legislatures versus ballot initiatives, according to speakers at a Heritage Foundation
  • What Makes a Good School?

    Published February 1, 2001
    Opinion -
    "Do you know how hard it was to find a good school system? We won't be able to afford the lifestyle our neighbors live, but at least we won't have to worry about the schools. Why should it be this hard to find good schools?

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