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         Back To School College Issues:     more detail
  1. Style 101: back-to-school fashion guide.: An article from: Ebony
  2. Back to school: David W. Orr says the planet's future rests with a generation of children who need desperately to go outside.(Q+A)(Interview): An article from: OnEarth by George Black, 2005-09-22
  3. Race-blind College Admissions--back to the drawing board: if higher education is to successfully promote diversity enrollment, it will take a combination ... from: Diverse Issues in Higher Education by Adriel A. Hilton, Ted N. Ingram, 2010-01-07

41. TCLA School Report Card College Paths Saunders Collatos
We asked students in the “college Access Program,” many who now attenda fouryear college, to look back on their high school experiences.
http://tcla.gseis.ucla.edu/reportcard/college/paths2.html
About TCLA Calendar College Paths Latest ... Home The Five Principles of College Acccess by Marisa Saunders Critical College Access by Tony Collatos UCLA researchers Marisa Saunders and Tony Collatos outline five principles that have proven effective in providing urban students a pathway to higher education. Go to Critical College Access: Collatos' Five Principles In many instances, these students felt that the school system did not help, but actually got in the way of their going to college. These students were not enrolled in the college-bound track when they entered high school, and some were not even expected to graduate from high school. Yet, 25 were accepted to four-year universities, 17 enrolled in four-year universities, and six enrolled in community colleges in the Fall of 2001. L abor experts agree that a college degree is critical for financial well being. Whereas 32% of White students in California move on to four-year universities, only 23% of African Americans and 12% of Latinos do so. A primary reason for these unequal rates of college-going is that many African American and Latino students attend high schools that lack the conditions necessary to support a college going culturesuch as quality teachers, adequate instructional materials, and a rigorous curriculum. (See Jeannie Oakes' article in the last issue of TCLA.) These conditions must be present for all students to have an opportunity for college success and financial well being. Clearly much work is needed to secure these conditions. But alongside this work, we need to examine how under-represented students (and their parents) can increase the chances of being successful within existing high schools. This column of

42. The Returns Of Going Back To School For Displaced Workers - CHPPP Research Summa
Community college Training and Transition back into the one academic year of communitycollege raises displaced Sixty percent left school before the end of the
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/research/chppp/rs_returns.html
The Returns of Going Back to School for Displaced
Robert LaLonde The recent spate of layoffs and a softening economy have renewed policy interests in the consequences of job loss for workers. A particular group of workers-older workers with three or more years at a current job and relatively high wages-can be especially hard hit from layoffs and job loss. This group, referred to as "displaced workers," experience greater and longer-term effects in lost wages than do younger and less experienced jobholders.
Since the early 1980s, a growing number of community colleges have been providing job retraining under contract with various business, government, and nonprofit organizations. Little research, however, has examined the effectiveness of community college retraining in increasing earnings and productivity of displaced workers For an earlier working paper on this topic, see

43. Currents Back Issues
fans University phone books ready for delivery Beat the winter bug; get a flu shotCollege hosts outstanding high school visitors and their families Some HR
http://www.rochester.edu/pr/Currents/V25/V25index.html
Volume 25 (1997)
  • December 8, 1997
    Peace Corps ranks Rochester eighth
    Engineering launches Israel exchange
    Van Zile Travel ends University contract
    Eastman to house Kurt Weill archives
    House of Bernarda Alba playing at Todd
    NEH grant will fund teacher seminar
    Inside Information
    Office of Research and Project Administration
    University Libraries
  • November 24, 1997
    University designing new phone system About the new phone system Kirschenbaum named Frontier Professor College discusses education, technology David Williams is Allyn Professor Cowen, Wyman get $540,000 urban grant Flexible Spending enrollment begins Provost announces tenure committee Mt. Hope Center receives $600,000 grant
  • November 10, 1997 Feldman receives honorary degree; LeBlanc inaugurated as dean Benefits sponsors open enrollment Nordeens awarded $1 million grant Fairbank Series to host Mario Valdes Please vote for a comfy library chair Eye and brain research gets $4 million University markets Strong Health
  • October 27, 1997 Undercofler named as Eastman director University announces Goergen Awards Nobel goes to alumnus Steven Chu Anthony Academy offers 'Conversations' Poli sci scholars focus of seminar series Computer skills at Multimedia Center Stay in Touch
  • October 13, 1997

44. Edlines Archive
Edlines Presents Black History Exploring AfricanAmerican issues. SCR*TEC schoolBrownell-Talbot college Preparatory school, Omaha, Nebraska.
http://edlines.hprtec.org/archives/
Backissues of Edlines
Volume 1, Number 1 October 30, 1996 Tech Tips: Viruses Edlines Presents: "A World of Reading" Volume 1, Number 2 November 13, 1996 SCR*TEC School: Bethune M.E.G.A. Elementary School, Temple, Texas Tech Tips: Fundamentals of mailing lists Edlines Presents: Creating a Web page from scratch Volume 1, Number 3 November 22, 1996 SCR*TEC School: Lakeview Elementary, Lincoln, Nebraska Tech Tips: An introduction to searching on the Web Edlines Presents: Virtual FlyLab genetic research Volume 1, Number 4 December 6, 1996 SCR*TEC School: L'Ouverture Computer Technology Magnet Elementary, Wichita, Kansas Tech Tips: Getting hits on your Web site Edlines Presents: Ancient Egypt Volume 1, Number 5 December 19, 1996 Tech Tips: Newsgroups Edlines Presents: One Can Make A Difference Volume 1, Number 6 January 6, 1997 SCR*TEC School: Bethel High School, Shawnee, Oklahoma Tech Tips: Selecting an Internet Service Provider Edlines Presents: Mammals of the World Volume 1, Number 7 January 17, 1997 SCR*TEC School: West Junior High, Lawrence, Kansas Tech Tips: Buying a computer: What do all of those numbers mean?

45. Archived: [9/7/00] -- [Annual Back To School Address], [ Washington, DCION ]
to get the message out to every parent that now is not the time to back out of HereI am talking about the transition from high school to college or taking
http://www.ed.gov/Speeches/09-2000/000907.html
A r c h i v e d I n f o r m a t i o n
Speeches and Testimony Contact: Roberta Heine (202) 401-3026
Remarks as prepared for delivery by
U.S. Secretary of Education Richard W. Riley
Annual Back to School Address
"Times of Transition"
National Press Club
Washington, D.C.
September 7, 2000
(Webcast of Speech) A s always, I am pleased to be here at the National Press Club for my Annual Back-to-School Speech. This is the seventh time I have had the opportunity to give this speech, and over the years I have talked about a wide range of issues: family involvement, reading, setting high expectations, improving the teaching profession, and reforming the American high school-to name just a few. I have just returned from a five-day, seven-state tour of schools in rural America. We started in Monroe, Louisiana, and finished 20 stops later in Paducah, Kentucky. What I noticed most about the trip was the weather. Every time I stepped off my Success Express School Bus , the local people who came to greet me announced that the record for heat had just been broken in their community. In each place, the temperature was always between 103 and 112 degrees.

46. Annual Back-to-School Speech By US Secretary Of Education, Rod Paige
in the middle of a threeweek back-to-school of good reading instruction to everyelementary school in the blacks were more likely to attend college than whites
http://www.ed.gov/Speeches/09-2001/010904.html
Related Resource Webcast of Back-to-School Address Speeches and Testimony Contact: Lindsey Kozberg
Remarks as prepared for delivery by
U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige
Back-to-School Address
National Press Club
Washington, D.C.
September 4, 2001
Speaker Frequently Deviates from Prepared Text T hank you. I am happy to be at the National Press Club, and honored to deliver a Back-to-School address that has become a tradition for the Secretary of Education. Back-to-School is a very exciting time for students, parents, educators, and the Secretary of Education. New students gather in new classrooms with new teachers and new supplies. But Back-to-School time holds more in store for our students than sharp pencils and fresh paper. This is a time of promise and anticipation for the school year ahead. There is a lot to learn and much to achieve before the next summer vacation, and students and teachers are eager to get started. I have been visiting schools all across the country the last few days, and the energy is contagious. My guests today are also caught up in Back-to-School fever. They are Linda Butler, a reading specialist who has trained teachers in Washington, D.C., in effective reading instruction as part of a program headed by the National Institute for Child Health and Development, and Mikea Brandon, a fourth grade student at Seaton Elementary School in Washington, D.C., who participated in that reading intervention program. Their energy reminds me of many Back-to-School cycles when I was a superintendent.

47. College Application Essays With EssayEdge
in your current field and the ones that will be needed in law school. back to Top. FromESSAYS THAT WILL GET YOU INTO college, by Amy Burnham, Daniel Kaufman
http://www.epistemelinks.com/Edge/Essays/lo_law.asp

Click Home

Lesson One:

Tackling the Question
Select One: College Business School Law School Medical School ...
Editing and Revising

Lesson One: Law School Essay Question Help
Please select from the following common law school topics: Note: The below essays were not edited by EssayEdge Editors. They appear as they were initially reviewed by admissions officers.
Theme 1: Why I Want to Be a Lawyer
The secret to doing this theme well is to show why you want to be a lawyer. Don't just say it and expect it to stand on its own. Admissions officers want believable details from your life that demonstrate your desire and make it real to them. Says one admissions officer: "Although you do get tired of reading it, it's nearly impossible (and ill-advised!) for an applicant to avoid communicating at some point that: "I want to be a lawyer." It's the ones who say only that that rankle. The ones who support the statement with interesting and believable evidence are the ones who do it best." One secret to avoiding the here-we-go-again reaction is to keep an eye on your first line. Starting with "I've wanted to be a lawyer since." makes admissions officers cringe. Yes, we know it's an easy line to fall back on, but these poor people have read this sentence more times than they can count, and it gets old fast. Instead, start with a story that demonstrates your early call to law. Look, for example, at the first paragraph of this essay:

48. Great Ideas
Invite college students to help with Make voting and election informationavailable in the school library during backto-school nights.
http://www.ala.org/kranich/librariesandelections/ideas.html
Always check local campaign rules before deciding on any plan of action. Every state operates under different election laws. Create a voter information area in your public, school or college/ university library and publicize its availability to the community. Your display might include books, videos, CD-ROMs, flyers, issue guides and resource lists, citizen-group literature, voter registration deadlines and nonpartisan information on candidates. If your library 's policy permits, provide candidate statements and arguments on ballots. Provide ballots and voter guides, partnering with organizations such as the League of Women Voters. Create a voter information area on your library 's Web site. Include links to useful election-related Web sites and publish a user guide pointing out resources relevant to local electoral issues. Be sure to include links for students. Bookmark Web sites of candidates important to your community and publish a list of these sites. Send out a press release about all the useful election information available at your library. Sponsor a debate or forum between a community group leader working on an issue relevant to local or national elections and a leader supporting opposing policies (e.g., a healthcare reform advocate and an insurance company spokesperson). Publicize the event through newsletters, campus newspapers, flyers, local media and your library 's Web site. Host a candidates' debate on key library issues at an upcoming library-related conference or other public meeting.

49. Site Index
Should you go back to school? General college/Training Links; Graduateand Professional school; Financial Aid. Preparing a Job Search
http://safetynet.doleta.gov/text/siteindx.htm
Graphics Version
Site Index
This index is intended to help you jump directly to the information you need. Please note that this is not an all-inclusive list, but merely presents the major headings for each topic. External links (outside of this site) on each page are not listed. Also note that some files at this site are in Adobe Acrobat format; you can download a free reader from Adobe's website
Introduction

50. New Middle School Teacher Guide
planning needs, including welcome letters, bulletin board ideas, and backto-schoolactivities. seem odd, since the list is directing at college teachers and
http://www.middleweb.com/1stDResources.html
[Things change rapidly on the Web. If you find a bad link, let us know!
Sign up for MiddleWeb's weekly e-mails
featuring middle grades news and articles of interest.
Send your e-mail address with the note "subscribe"

(We don't share our lists with anyone!)
Updated August 2002
Help for New Teachers
Discipline and Classroom Management

The First Days of Middle School (for all teachers)

Books for New and Restless Teachers
(In an emergency, go straight to: The First Days of Middle School
First-Year Teaching / Part Two: A MiddleWeb Listserv conversation
We asked veteran teachers on the MiddleWeb List to share three or four pieces of "top advice" to beginners. Don't miss this collection of distilled wisdom!
New Teacher SOS
We turned the tables and asked new middle grades teachers to describe their biggest problems after a few weeks on the job. Veteran teachers at our MiddleWeb Listserv offered suggestions. First-Year Teaching / Part One: A MiddleWeb Listserv conversation If anyone doubts the power of listserv conversation to support teachers and good teaching practice, they only need to read this string. This chat began when Phyllis wrote about her struggles as a first-year teacher. As the conversation progressed, the discussion turned to talk of self-videotaping as a method of improving one's practice. And a spinoff conversation took up the topic of teacher induction and mentoring programs. New teachers are always welcome at the listserv to ask for advice and share experiences.

51. PARAMETERS, US Army War College Quarterly
The senior journal of the U.S. Army, published quarterly by the U.S. Army War college. back issues to 1996 are available.
http://carlisle-www.army.mil/usawc/Parameters/
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

52. BW Online | May 7, 2001 | MBA Programs Are Going Back To School
Then grads would be brought back later for what University of Virginia's Darden GraduateSchool of Business GIS ) Arizona State University's college of Business
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/01_19/b3731083.htm

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... Editorials INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS International Letter From Haiti International Spotlight on Spain International Readers Report International Asian Business ... Marketplace MAY 7, 2001 MANAGEMENT MBA Programs Are Going Back to School A new crop of deans faces pressure to improve the way B-schools prepare grads for a complex workplace Printer-Friendly Version E-Mail This Story Table: What's Next for B-Schools?

53. TRIBAL COLLEGE: JOURNAL OF AMERICAN INDIAN HIGHER EDUCATION Back Issues
and Restoration Lessons from the Boarding school Jon Reyhner A Cross and PhillipShortman RESEARCH Tribal college Faculty The back to the top of the page.
http://www.fdl.cc.mn.us/tcj/tcjlist.html
TRIBAL COLLEGE: JOURNAL OF AMERICAN INDIAN HIGHER EDUCATION
LIST OF TITLES
Back to the top of the page Go to homepage Spring Issue Sampler Subscription Information ... Journal's future issue themes

54. University Of La Verne College Of Law
back Financial Aid The University of La Verne college of eligible students to meetthe cost of law school. Financial aid awarded to college of Law students for
http://law.ulv.edu/student/studentb.html

55. Schools, Education, And Certifications
school Alternative Thinking about going back to school registration to search theundergrad college data base Comprehensive Grad school Directory The Society for
http://humanresources.about.com/cs/schoolcredentials1/
zfp=-1 About Careers Human Resources Search in this topic on About on the Web in Products Web Hosting
Human Resources
with Susan M. Heathfield
Your Guide to one of hundreds of sites Home Articles Forums ... Help zmhp('style="color:#fff"') Subjects BUYER'S GUIDE Before You Buy
Top Picks

Performance Consulting and Improvement
... All articles on this topic
Business Directory
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Stay up-to-date! Subscribe to our newsletter. Advertising Free Credit Report Free Psychics Advertisement Schools, Education, and Certifications Guide picks What education and credentials will serve you best as you embark upon or enhance your Human Resources career? Learn about undergraduate and graduate programs in the field. Arm yourself with the advice and information needed to succeed in school. Find out about Human Resources and other career-oriented certifications such as the SPHR and the PHR. Propel your career success. Careers in Human Resources Thinking about your roles and the trends organizations are experiencing now in Human Resources? Start here for helpful Human Resources careers, jobs, education and certification information. If you are considering a career in Human Resources, this Human Resources Career Planning Center will help you plan and evaluate your options. HR Calendars of Events Looking for a conference, a seminar, or an educationsl event? Take a look at these calendars and events sites that feature regularly-updated links to events of interest to the human resources professional.

56. TeenInk: A Magazine Written By Teens For Teens
Articles written entirely by teens for teens.Category Kids and Teens Teen Life Magazines and Ezines...... back to Top, Today's Poem Silently Falling by arts instructors, journalism teachers,school newspaper advisors interviews, college essays, college reviews, book
http://www.teenink.com/
Welcome!
Teen Ink is a monthly print magazine , website, and a book series all written by teens for teens. We're now in our 14th year!
Interview Tony Hawk or Alicia Keys! Click for details.
Curious? Request a free sample issue Send us your work - have an opinion on something? Write it up and send it in! Visiting schools? Send your reviews - good and bad, of schools you visit. Teens - join the Student Advisory Board!
TEEN INK STORE !!

by Mandi Z.
Question of the Week

Did you or anyone you know pull an April Fool's Day prank?
Yes No Previous poll results
2001-02 Contest Winners

April 3, 2003 Quote:
What we play is life. Louis Armstrong (1900 - 1971) Exclusive! Colin Powell Interview by Teen Ink contest winners by Kelly T. Enter to win $100 or $1000 Your school could win Back to Top Today's Poem Mulberry Picking by Katrina N. Today's Fiction Saturday by Alison W. Today's Review "Home" by Diana G. Today's Nonfiction A Sage Cynic by Lisa H. More Nonfiction ... General Nonfiction Environment Heroes Your Health Teen Ink - PO Box 30, Newton, MA 02461 - (617) 964-6800 - editor@teenink.com Published by The Young Authors Foundation, Inc. - A 501(c)3 nonprofit organization.

57. Computer Advisory Committee
also advises about micro computing policy issues; eg college Govindarajulu, BennettS. LeBow college of Business Francis Harvey, school of Education
http://www.pages.drexel.edu/~cac/
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Minutes Proposals
Official Drexel email Acceptable Use Policy Back to Index Computing Advisory Committee The Computing Advisory Committee advises the Vice President for Information Resources and Technology on computing policy issues with emphasis on the academic program in areas such as: technology in support of curriculum development and instructional delivery, online course development, faculty development, and campus instructional facilities. The Committee also advises about micro computing policy issues; e.g. college new student purchase recommendations each academic year and appropriate use of policies and procedures. Committee members are drawn from across the University to ensure broad representation, and while terms are for one academic year, members may be re-appointed. The Chair is appointed from the membership by the Vice President for Information Resources and Technology. The committee meets on an ad hoc basis at least once per term and meeting minutes are posted on this website. Members for academic year 2002/2003 Mark Greenberg, Dean of Undergraduate Education (Chair)

58. Education Update - Advertising Directory
Youth Change; How Parents Can Save Thousands of Dollars on the Cost of college! YorkPreparatory school; High school Class Rings. back to Category listing.
http://www.educationupdate.com/directories/advertising/

Cover Story
Spotlight On Schools Featured Columnists Letters ... Travel ADVERTISING DIRECTORY Art Programs Astronomy Attention Deficit Disorders Books ... Workshops Art Programs Back to Category listing Astronomy Back to Category listing Books Back to Category listing Business Groups Back to Category listing Camps Back to Category listing Careers Back to Category listing Childrens Activities Back to Category listing Children's Corner Back to Category listing

59. Teachers.Net - TEACHERS.NET GAZETTE - Teachers.Net Gazette Provides News From Te
NOT Teacher Training Academy at Hartnell college from CSU Benefits of Homework Askthe school Psychologist by Dealing with the back Stabbers and Happy Haters
http://teachers.net/gazette/backissues/

TEACHERS.NET GAZETTE
BACK ISSUES Current Issue vol 4 #2 - February 2003 vol 4 #1 - January 2003 vol 3 #12 - December 2002 ... vol 1 #1 - March 2000 Gazette Home Delivery:
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Teachers.Net wants to hear your thoughts about vouchers, homeschooling, gun safety, educational legislation, politics, and more. Every month Teachers.Net provides space for you, our teachers, to express your ideas and feelings about the current state of education in your community or around the world. Visit and bookmark our Letters to the Editor section, and contribute your thoughts each month. Help push the dialog and be a positive force for change! Click for More information Send Us Your Stories and Photographs!...

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60. Enrollment Rises At UH For Spring Semester
11 as people lost jobs or were laid off and chose to go back to school to gain newskills, enrollment changes at the communitycollege level this semester show
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Jan/31/ln/ln15a.html
April 3, 2003 Local News
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TGIF Calendar Photo Gallery ... Columnists Customer Service Help Page Contact Us E-mail News Alerts Subscriber Services ... E-mail this story Posted on: Friday, January 31, 2003 Enrollment rises at UH for spring semester By Beverly Creamer Advertiser Education Writer Spring enrollment figures have jumped again at the University of Hawai'i, going up 5.2 percent at the Manoa campus, 6.9 percent at UH-Hilo, 5.6 percent at UHiWest O'ahu and 2.6 percent overall throughout the 10-campus system in comparison to the spring semester a year ago. Enrollments also rose in the fall semester last year. The increases, after years of dwindling enrollments through the 1990s, continue growth that began in 2001 and parallel Evan Dobelle's tenure as UH president. And while they also indicate fall-out from the events of Sept. 11 as people lost jobs or were laid off and chose to go back to school to gain new skills, enrollment changes at the community-college level this semester show that the economy is picking up. Some community-college campuses lost students this semester, indicating that the economy is strengthening and recovering, because students are leaving school to take jobs, said Karl Kim, interim vice-chancellor for the Manoa campus.

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