标签:Students 相关文章
A group of past students at the former Corinthian Colleges are taking legal action against the United States Department of Education. In early March, the former students made the claim that the department illegally gained information about how much m
Paula Molina-Acostas concerns for her own safety on her college campus first started to grow over a year ago. Molina-Acosta studies at the University of Maryland, or UMD, in College Park, Maryland. In the fall of 2016, students began seeing the words
Artificial intelligence, or AI, has slowly begun to influence higher education around the world. Now, one new AI tool could change the way university students evaluate their professors. The tool is called Hubert. It is a teacher evaluation tool that
EDUCATION REPORT - Helping Poor Students Go to College By Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Thursday, July 29, 2004 This is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English Education Report. More than twenty years a
Some students get so nervous before a test, they do poorly even if they know the material. Sian Beilock, a psychology professor at the University of Chicago in Illinois, has studied these highly anxious test-takers. SIAN BEILOCK: They start worrying
This is the VOA Special English Education Report. The Intel Science Talent Search is the top science competition for high school students in the United States. The forty finalists were honored in Washington last week. They met with scientists and pol
International Students Learn Filmmaking in Hollywood 国际学生学习好莱坞电影制作 Welcome to American Mosaic from VOA Learning English. Im June Simms. Today on the show we learn about student filmmakers hoping to get into the movie busines
US Hosts Record Number of Foreign Students Almost 900,000 international students are studying in American colleges and universities today. Nearly half of this record number of foreign students are from Asia, mainly China. They are among people from o
Indian students hold protest signs during a rally to stamp out violence against international students and racism in Sydney, Australia, 07 Jun 2009 Tourism executives predict the number of Indian students coming to Australia will fall sharply in 2010
Students Invent Water Purification Disc The lab operates like a kitchen. They add several ingredients. Then they mix, weigh, press and bake them. What's created is called a MadiDrop - a ceramic disc infused with silver. When dropped in water, silver
DAVID GREENE, HOST: People who are serious in their faith often want to send their children to a religious school - Muslim parents, no different. There are now nearly 300 Islamic schools across the United States, and the number is growing. NPR's Tom
MELISSA BLOCK, HOST: The land border crossing between Tijuana, Mexico, and San Ysidro, Calif., is the busiest in the world. As Jonathan Levinson reports, among the crowd are students whose families live in Tijuana and who commute each morning to brin
About 2 thousand secondary students, teachers and their union representatives have marched in Spain's capital, Madrid. The march has coincided with the 3rd day of a week-long general strike by students, who are protesting planned cuts in the public e
Despite the strictest-ever anti-smoking regulations and newly revised advertising laws, a recent report finds out that a large number of young students in the Chinese capital continue to be exposed to tobacco. The report was released by Beijing Cente
EDUCATION REPORT - Foreign High School Students Get a Free Lesson in American Life By Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Thursday, June 23, 2005 I'm Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Education Report. H
EDUCATION REPORT - American Students Get Help With Schoolwork From Far Away By Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Thursday, October 06, 2005 I'm Faith Lapidus with the VOA Special English Education Report. So
EDUCATION REPORT - Drop in Foreign Students in U.S. Slows By Nancy Steinbach Broadcast: Thursday, December 01, 2005 I'm Faith Lapidus with the VOA Special English Education Report. We talked last week
Shirley Mickel, 62, who retired from the federal government, might be lowering her risk of dementia by volunteering at a Washington, DC elementary school twice a week. Retired Americans seeking useful ways to spend their time find that tutoring child
Todd: Norm, you said that you used to teach computers! Norman: Yes! I did at the elementary school back in Canada. Todd: And what was that like? Like how did you actually teach computers. Norman: Actually, I initiated a computer project. We were plac
Why High School Students Need More Than College Prep MICHEL MARTIN, HOST: Switching gears now, it's pretty much a given these days that high school graduates are supposed to go to college. About 7 out of 10 graduates say that's where they're headed.