The Denver Post Reports…
on the local school district that is going to try to make charter schools more diverse.
on the local school district that is going to try to make charter schools more diverse.
The documentary by George Csicsery takes a look at the six high school students that got to represent the USA in the 47th International Mathematical Olympiad. It was a solid look at the US students in the competition, their family members, and teachers.
From the selection of the team, to finding out more about the team members, to the big exam itself, and who won it kept me glued to the TV set to see what happened next. I liked that we did not get a whole lot of showcasing the questions from the exam, l say that would have killed this documentary. It would have also been nice to have seen a look at other countries such as Russia and China, but I did not mind.
The six Americans representing the USA were Alex Zhai, Arnav Tripathy, Ryan Ko, Zach Abel, and Zeb Brady. Arnav was good at playing the piano while another team member was good at creating objects out of paper. Yi Sun though made it all five science Olympiads(biology, chemistry, physics, math, computer science). Each one is a sure die hard math lover going out for gold at the Olympiad.
The competition took place in Ljubljana Slovenia with 90 countries taking apart of it. The competition lasts two days with each day going for 4.5 hours. Each day is three tough math questions which are worth seven points a piece. They showcased the scary questions for one day for a few seconds.
In the end it was China getting first place with USA coming in fifth. Zeb Brady and Arnav Tripathy both won gold medals while the rest won silver.
All the students went onto college with most going to Harvard. Alex though did come back for the next two competitions getting gold both times.
To see the 2006 questions
Day 1 questions: click me
Day 2 questions: click me
Documentary website link with trailer: http://www.hardproblemsmovie.com/
at colleges in three more states and weather colleges and universities in those states have proper a curriculum for people wanting to be a teacher.
For New Mexico when it came to reading only one out eight schools met all five goals which is a passing score. At the bottom were two schools that produced most of teachers, The found admission standards to be weak as well.
When it came to Utah and reading two schools out of nine met five out of five goals which is passing. Four schools met four out five goals though. Only Two schools in the state when it came to math did good. This state has higher admission standards and the best place in the state BYU graduated the most teachers in the state.
When it came to Wyoming it only got to look at the University of Wyoming. They say that the university fails in reading, but does pass in math even though they want to see a change in textbooks used.
on the Gov. Granholm slashing education funding by 212 million bucks.
They also report on a hearing that is probing DPS property spending.
The Boston Globe reports on Harvard that may alter some expansion plans.
The Union Tribune reports on Palomar College going through an expansion.
The AP reports on colleges leaders in Colorado seeking a higher education rescue plan.
on Keystone Exams for high school students getting the approval.