Six Days of School, and Then a Day Not of Rest
By ELISSA GOOTMAN
David Levin, co-founder of the KIPP charter school network, spends Sundays with his wife, their 1-year-old son and friends and family.
New Jersey Plan Calls for Bonuses for Effective Teachers and Schools
By WINNIE HU
The proposal is part of an effort to win money through the federal Race to the Top program rewarding educational innovation.
New Coach Keeps Princeton Winning as Usual, but With More Laughs
By KEVIN ARMSTRONG
Chris Bates, Princeton’s first-year lacrosse coach, has allowed for a lighter, looser feeling on the field.
Private School Screening Test Loses Some Clout
By JENNY ANDERSON
A school coalition says that pretest preparation casts doubt on the value of the exam known as the E.R.B.
Marquette Rescinds Offer to Sociologist
By SAM DILLON
Critics say officials at the Roman Catholic university changed their mind about a deanship after reading the works of a lesbian professor who writes about sexuality.
CAIRO JOURNAL
A Campus Where Unlearning Is First
By MICHAEL SLACKMAN
At American University in Cairo, students are taught to analyze and hypothesize, a method at odds with the country’s traditional method of rote learning.
Teenage Insults, Scrawled on Web, Not on Walls
By TAMAR LEWIN
A relatively new social networking site has become a magnet for comments, many of them nasty and sexual.
OUR TOWNS
Changing Times and Money Woes Doom a Military School
By PETER APPLEBOME
Decades ago, there were dozens of military academies in New York State, but one by one they have shut their doors.
Bold Brass and Glass, and the World Inside on Display
By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF
The New School’s new University Center on Fifth Avenue is intended to encourage student interaction, but may be a bit much for some in the Village.
Michigan High School Snags Obama as Speaker
By JACKIE CALMES
President Obama will speak at the Kalamazoo Central High School graduation. The school won a Race to the Top competition.
Stanley I. Greenspan, Developer of ‘Floor Time’ Teaching, Dies at 68
By DAVID CORCORAN
Dr. Greenspan was a psychiatrist who encouraged parents, teachers and therapists to participate in playtime as a gateway to learning for some children.
Education Chief Vies to Expand U.S. Role as Partner on Local Schools
By SAM DILLON and TAMAR LEWIN
Arne Duncan has been called the most assertive secretary of education ever. He is a highly visible proponent of increasing the federal government’s role in how the nation’s schools are run.
State Senate Approves Bill to Increase Charter Schools
By JENNIFER MEDINA
The legislation would also require the schools to enroll more special education students and those still learning English, but its passage by the Assembly in its current form was unlikely.
Early Childhood Programs Expanded
By SAM DILLON
Despite the recession, states continued to expand early childhood programs in the 2008-9 school year.
Despite Push, Success at Charter Schools Is Mixed
By TRIP GABRIEL
Leaders of the school choice movement have come to recognize that raising student achievement for poor urban children is difficult and often expensive.
More Pre-K Pupils Qualify for Gifted Programs
By SHARON OTTERMAN
The minimum score for the most competitive of the programs, which have 300 slots, was achieved by 1,788 students.