EDNEWS2
Advertisement
 

Albuquerque Tribune

(Page 1 of 4)   
« Prev
  
1
  2  3  4  Next »

 Articles by this Author

Franny Dever knows Everyday Math has its critics. In 2000, more than 200 mathematicians and scientists, from Nobel laureates to Field Medal winners, took out an advertisement in The Washington Post to decry the program and others like it born of the math reform movement of the late 1980s.
Arthur Brokop, a young substitute teacher, shut the windowless door of the first-grade classroom he'd been called in to oversee
Appointees of Gov. Bill Richardson have severed their ties with two New Mexico universities after some lawmakers raised concerns about potential conflicts of interest.
It was a short climb up the career ladder for Linda Sink, a former principal who has been named interim superintendent for Albuquerque Public Schools.
A University of New Mexico fraternity has lost its national charter for two years following allegations of alcohol use and an incident involving a shotgun.
Even as the state moves to adopt a promising new model for its juvenile justice system, the American Civil Liberties Union of New Mexico filed a lawsuit today to force reforms in the system, which the ACLU says is violent and unsafe.
A young lab technician mixed two liquids — and presto — he created what looked like a long piece of Jell-O.
A state task force is proposing a new funding formula for New Mexico's public school districts that could boost education spending by a third.
A map to addictive behavior could be hidden inside the cryptic network of the human genome and a UNM researcher is determined to find it.
A state District Court judge in Albuquerque today ordered an open hearing in the ethics case for Elsy Fierro, the Albuquerque Public Schools administrator involved in the controversial grade change for a Rio Grande High student
The kids of Working Classroom are thinking big this year as they mark the Day of the Dead.
A legislative audit shows Albuquerque Public Schools owes $2.6 million to the state and questions why teachers had so many days away from their classrooms.
Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Richardson plans to unveil an education plan that would give college students access to $3.6 billion in exchange for public service.
A school board member has called for "drastic measures for drastic times" to help the neediest children in Albuquerque.
Sexual misconduct allegations against five male educators in Albuquerque have had a chilling effect on men in the teaching ranks.
No popular authors found.
No popular articles found.