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1voteGrade change Students abroad, it turns out, are not outperforming Americans
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1voteDavid Pogue reviews the $100 laptop.
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1voteThat advance and others have allowed the nonprofit project, One Laptop Per Child, to win over many skeptics over the last two and a half years. Five countries — Argentina, Brazil, Libya, Nigeria and Thailand — have made tentative commitments to put the computers into the hands of millions of students, with production in Taiwan expected to begin by mid-2007
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1voteOne Laptop Per Child, an ambitious project to bring computing to the developing world’s children, has considerable momentum. Years of work by engineers and scientists have paid off in a pioneering low-cost machine that is light, rugged and surprisingly versatile. The early reviews have been glowing, and mass production is set to start next month.
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2voteIn the shifting universe of global academia, English is becoming as commonplace as creeping ivy and mortarboards. In the last five years, the world’s top business schools and universities have been pushing to make English the teaching tongue in a calculated strategy to raise revenues by attracting more international students and as a way to respond to globalization.
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1voteCan China create schools that foster openness, flexibility and innovation? And what happens to China if it does?
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1voteEuropean conference on education, diversity, and excellence
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1voteIBO
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