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| Education Research in Professional Journals Newsletter for 2025-10-08 ( 8 items ) |
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CUNY-Graduate School of Public Health: Policing in a Pandemic - Harlem Residents Speak Out on Safety, Bias, and Mistrust (10)
NEW YORK, Oct. 7 (TNSjou) -- The City University of New York's Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy issued the following news release:
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Policing in a pandemic: Harlem residents speak out on safety, bias, and mistrust
A new study by Center for Innovation in Mental Health (CIMH) researchers Professor Victoria Khanh Ngo and Dr. Thinh Toan Vu, in collaboration with Harlem Health Initiative Director Deborah Levine, Distinguished Professor Luisa N. Borrell, Professor Pedro Mateu- more PR
Dartmouth College: Safer Solvent for Organic Chemistry Labs (10)
HANOVER, New Hampshire, Oct. 8 -- Dartmouth College issued the following news:
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Safer Solvent for Organic Chemistry Labs
When the EPA banned a carcinogenic solvent, Dartmouth chemists found greener alternatives for undergraduate labs--and showed other schools how to make the switch.
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The solvent dichloromethane, or DCM, is commonly used to strip paint and cut grease. It's also what generations of chemistry students have used to dissolve pain reliever tablets in a lab exercise designed more PR
Faculty share creative, alternative approaches to assessment in new CTI case studies (10)
ITHACA, New York, Oct. 7 -- Cornell University posted the following news:
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Faculty share creative, alternative approaches to assessment in new CTI case studies
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When you think about taking a big test, the words that typically come to mind are "cramming," "high-stakes," "prelims" and "all-nighter." For students, the words seem to conjure stress by default.
But what if that wasn't the case? What if words like "creative" or "alternative" applied to assessments instead?
Beginning in Fa more PR
Foundation for Economic Education Issues Commentary: Case Over a Case (10)
DETROIT, Michigan, Oct. 8 -- The Foundation for Economic Education issued the following commentary on Oct. 7, 2025:
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A Case over a Case
Can the government just take your plane?
By Katrina Gulliver
A case has been slowly making its way to the Supreme Court hinging on one question: Can the government take this guy's plane?
The story began in 2012, when Ken Jouppi, a pilot in Alaska, was taking a passenger from the city of Fairbanks to the town of Beaver (population: 48). Pilots like Ken more PR
From Pedals to Performance: How OSU student brings global perspective to human performance (10)
STILLWATER, Oklahoma, Oct. 7 -- Oklahoma State University posted the following news:
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From Pedals to Performance: How OSU student brings global perspective to human performance
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Media Contact: Sydney Trainor | Communications and Media Relations Specialist | 405-744-9782 | sydney.trainor@okstate.edu
When Tom Booth was learning to ride a bike as a child in England, he imagined a career in competitive cycling.
It turns out, his actual career path was not quite as easy as riding a bike more PR
Surgical Deaths Reviewed by Western Australian Audit of Surgical Mortality Continue to Increase (10)
MELBOURNE, Australia, Oct. 7 (TNSrep) -- The Royal Australasian College of Surgeons issued the following news release:
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Surgical deaths reviewed by the Western Australian Audit of Surgical Mortality continue to increase
The latest report released by the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons' (RACS) Western Australian Audit of Surgical Mortality (WAASM) has found that the upward trend in surgical deaths observed since 2020 has continued.
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WAASM Clinical Director, Dr James Aitken, note more PR
University of Warwick Business School: Always Look on the Bright Side of Life (10)
COVENTRY, England, Oct. 7 (TNSjou) -- The University of Warwick Business School issued the following news:
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Always look on the bright side of life
A groundbreaking 14-year study tracking 25,000 adults has concluded that hope is a critical factor in predicting a longer, healthier, and more prosperous life
"Unlike optimism, which is the belief that things will get better, hope is the belief that one's efforts, which include investments in human capital, will make things better," said Caro more PR
Vanderbilt Peabody College scholar leads $3.3 million NIH study on bi-directional relationship of working memory and mathematics learning (10)
NASHVILLE, Tennessee, Oct. 7 -- Vanderbilt University posted the following news:
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Vanderbilt Peabody College scholar leads $3.3 million NIH study on bi-directional relationship of working memory and mathematics learning
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By Jenna Somers
About a quarter to a third of students with mathematics learning disabilities do not show adequate improvement after receiving skills-based math interventions. A new study will test the effects of combining a mathematics intervention and working memor more PR
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