Page 342 of 394
1 340 341 342 343 344 394

EEUU: Ratifican programa de acción afirmativa en Universidad Texas

América del Norte / Estados Unidos / 26 de junio de 2016 / Por: Noticas Terra 

La Corte Suprema de Estados Unidos ratificó un programa de Acción Afirmativa en la Universidad de Texas, decisión que dio cierta tranquilidad a la minoría de instituciones de enseñanza superior del país que aún consideran en sus admisiones la raza de los aspirantes a alumnos.

Sin embargo, es improbable que el fallo del jueves resulte en una ampliación de prácticas más precisas que tengan en cuenta la raza, que han caído en desgracia en las últimas dos décadas debido a cambios en la opinión pública, decisiones judiciales previas y prohibiciones estatales a instituciones públicas, dijeron expertos en asuntos jurídicos y educativos.

La Acción Afirmativa es una política gubernamental de discriminación positiva en Estados Unidos para garantizar la igualdad de oportunidades a todos sin distinción de raza, sexo, edad, religión u orientación sexual.

En su decisión mayoritaria de 4-3, la corte sostuvo que Texas mostró que su política estrictamente diseñada de considerar la raza para llenar una cuarta parte de sus clases de primer año fue necesaria porque un «enfoque estrictamente no racial» fracasó en redundar en suficiente diversidad estudiantil».

Los magistrados de la mayoría también destacaron que las autoridades de educación superior deben garantizar que sus medidas de acción afirmativa están basadas en evidencias firmes de que son necesarias y eficaces. También dijeron que las medidas deben ser reevaluadas periódicamente para determinar si continúan siendo válidas.

«Creo que esta es una luz amarilla, una luz amarilla de ‘siga’ que dice que se puede proceder aquí, pero que se debe proceder con cautela porque estos son temas complejos que necesitan un pensamiento, revisión y deliberación intensos», dijo Arthur Coleman, cofundador de la firma consultora en educación Education Counsel.

Sólo una cuarta parte de las escuelas de educación superior de la nación en las que los estudios duran cuatro años consideran la raza y etnicidad cuando evalúan las solicitudes de ingreso, según un sondeo de The College Board, una organización sin fines de lucro que aplica el examen estandarizado de admisión universitaria SAT y el de colocación avanzada AP.

De las escuelas privadas altamente selectivas, 62% considera la raza y la etnicidad entre sus criterios de evaluación en comparación con 21% de las universidades públicas más selectivas.

La vasta mayoría de las universidades con programas conscientes de la raza —como las ocho de la Ivy League y las academias de servicio de la nación— afirman que la raza del estudiante no es importante en sus deliberaciones como el promedio de puntos, ensayos personales, carga de cursos en la secundaria y puntajes en pruebas estandarizadas, según estadísticas del The College Board.

Fuente: https://noticias.terra.com.ar/mundo/eeuu/ratifican-programa-de-accion-afirmativa-en-universidad-texas,184c31398bd28e501656e899e6191a04h4ub103w.html

Foto: http://uniradioserver.com/media/news_thumbs/201606/20160624104907_67.jpg

Comparte este contenido:

Niño en EE.UU. mata al hermano jugando con el arma de su mamá

América del norte / Estados Unidos / 26 de junio de 2016 / Por: Telesur.net
La madre fue detenida por «poner en peligro el bienestar de los niños».

Un niño de seis años de edad mató a su hermano de cuatro de forma accidental en Nueva Jersey (noreste de Estados Unidos), mientras jugaba con la pistola de su mamá.

Autoridades del condado de Essex informaron que los niños estaban jugando en casa cuando se produjo el tiroteo en la mañana del sábado.

La víctima fue trasladada al hospital el sábado al mediodía, tras recibir un disparo en la cabeza. La muerte del niño fue declarada a las 04:26 pm hora local del mismo día.

Por el hecho fue detenida la madre de los niños, Itiyanah Spruill, de 22 años de edad, por la acusación de poner en peligro el bienestar de los niños. Se fijó la fianza en 310 mil dólares y está en espera de la lectura de los cargos.

El control de armas en Estados Unidos es un eje fundamental de la campaña electoral por la presidencia tras el tiroteo masivo en un club gay de Orlando.

En Estados Unidos hay más armas que habitantes, según datos del Congreso y al menos 30 personas son heridas por armas de fuego cada día. El derecho a portar armas de fuego está consagrado en la Segunda enmienda de la Constitución, que es parte de la Carta de Derechos aprobada el 15 de diciembre de 1791.

Fuente: http://www.telesurtv.net/news/Nino-en-EE.UU.-mata-al-hermano-jugando-con-el-arma-de-su-mama-20160626-0003.html

Comparte este contenido:

EEUU: 12,000 Inmates to Receive Pell Grants to Take College Classes

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Danielle Douglas-Gabriel,/ Fuente: The Washington Post

Resumen:  Nada menos que 12.000 reclusos podrán utilizar subsidios federales Pell para financiar clases de la universidad el próximo mes, a pesar de una prohibición del Congreso de 22 años en la prestación de ayuda financiera a los presos.

As many as 12,000 prison inmates will be able to use federal Pell grants to finance college classes next month, despite a 22-year congressional ban on providing financial aid to prisoners.

The Obama administration selected 67 colleges and universities Thursday for the Second Chance Pell Pilot Program, an experiment to help prisoners earn an associate’s or bachelor’s degree while incarcerated. The schools will work with more than 100 federal and state penitentiaries to enroll inmates who qualify for Pell, a form of federal aid that covers tuition, books and fees for college students with financial need. Prisoners must be eligible for release within five years of enrolling in coursework.

Congress prohibited inmates from accessing Pell grants in 1994, arguing that it was unfair for prisoners to receive a share of already limited financial aid dollars. Critics of the ban said it was a rash decision because educating people behind bars reduces the chances of them committing more crimes upon release.

Although the ban remains firmly in place, the Obama administration is using its authority to create limited experiments in the deployment of federal student aid. Other recent experiments include extending Pell grants to high school students enrolled in college course and people participating in computer coding bootcamps.

“We all agree that crime must have consequences, but the men and women who have done their time and paid their debt deserve the opportunity to break with the past and forge new lives in their homes, workplaces ad communities,” Education Secretary John B. King Jr. said on a call with reporters Thursday. “This belief in second chances is fundamental to who we are as Americans.”

King said the administration will provide approximately $30 million in Pell grants to inmates in 27 states. He said the funding is less than 0.1 percent of the overall $30 billion Pell program, and the pilot won’t affect funding to eligible Pell recipients who are not incarcerated.

A majority of the schools invited to participate in the pilot are public community colleges and four-year universities, including Anne Arundel Community College, University of Baltimore and Rappahannock Community College. Most will offer classroom-based instruction at corrections facilities. Others will offer online education, or a hybrid of classroom and online instruction. Participating schools can begin offering courses as early as July 1. Roughly 37 percent of the schools will offer prison-based education for the first time.

For participants like Goucher College, the pilot simply builds on an existing effort to educate the incarcerated. The private liberal arts school outside Baltimore runs a program with private funding at a Maryland state prison complex in Jessup. Education Department officials estimate that 100 inmates will be able to receive grants to obtain bachelor’s degrees through Goucher. The school enrolls 60 to 100 prisoners at a time.

A year ago, then Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Attorney General Loretta Lynch visited the Goucher program to announce the pilot program.

On Thursday, Lynch said, in a statement, “Access to high quality education is vital to ensuring that justice-involved individuals have an opportunity to reclaim their lives and restore their futures. This program will help give deserving incarcerated individuals the skills to live lives of purpose and contribute to society upon their release.”

A study by the Rand Corporation found that inmates who participated in educational programs in jail were 43 percent less likely to return to prison within three years than those who did not. Researchers also estimated that for every dollar poured into correctional education programs, four to five dollars are saved on three-year re-incarceration costs.

“Helping incarcerated men and women to gain new knowledge, skills and credentials increases their chances of living successful lives, saves public dollars and makes our communities and our country safer and stronger,” King said.

The Second Chance Pell Pilot is a part of a broader set of policies the Obama administration has proposed to reform the incarceration system, including improving education in juvenile justice facilities and helping colleges to remove barriers to education for people with criminal records.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37657-12000-inmates-to-receive-pell-grants-to-take-college-classes

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021596-prisoner-students-062516.jpg

Comparte este contenido:

EEUU: What summertime means for black children

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Keffrelyn Brown y Anthony L. Brown / Fuente: theconversation.com

ResumenLa llegada del verano genera entusiasmo. Pero también podría traer retos para los padres y los educadores. Muchos estudiantes experimentan una pérdida en el aprendizaje de matemáticas durante los meses de verano, conocidos comúnmente como «summer slide.«

The arrival of summer generates excitement. But it could also bring challenges for both parents and educators. Many students experience a loss in math learning during the summer months known commonly as “summer slide.”

Students from middle-class families may not be as affected as they have access to more resources to make up for the learning loss. However, those from lower-income backgrounds could experience significant losses, particularly in math and reading.

Researchers point to the summer slide as a contributing factor in the persistent academic achievement gap between students from lower-income backgrounds and their middle-class peers.

But, does race also conflate with class, when it comes to summer slide? What does summertime mean for black children and the parents and caregivers who care for them?

We are education researchers who are black and parents to two black children – one in elementary school and another in preschool. If the U.S. imagination constructs summer as a time for swimming, free play, baseball and lazy days on the beach, it has never played out this way in our home.

We feel the weight of summer – both for its limitations and its possibilities. To us, the summer is less a time to focus solely on fun and more of what we call the “summer soar.”

Summer goals for black parents

The term “summer soar” is not taken from research or policy studies. We use it to reflect the triple burden that some parents of color – in our case, black parents – could endure during the summer months.

For these parents, summertime provides time to accomplish three goals: (1) reinforce what was learned in the previous year, (2) get a head start on the upcoming year and, most importantly, (3) supplement valuable yet missing curriculum knowledge generally not offered in traditional schools that reflects students’ racial and cultural identities.

Let’s look at what we mean by missing curriculum knowledge.

We offer an example of this in a study we conducted with a researcher at Sacramento State College, Julian Vasquez-Heilig. The study examined how culture and race were addressed in the most recently adopted 11th grade U.S. history Texas state standards.

Findings highlighted that topics in the social studies standards did not fully address the contributions of people of color in the U.S. In the case of black people, much of the focus centered only on cultural contributions and not on the other ways black people contributed to the U.S. narrative.

Added to this was the tendency to give partial attention to the legacy of racism. This history of U.S. racism was not discussed as foundational to the development and maintenance of the country.

Black students’ mis-education

This is not unique to Texas nor found in the area of social studies alone. Education researchers have long acknowledged how official K-12 school curriculum and approaches to teaching fail to affirm black students’ cultural identities. They also reinforce the belief that black people have not made any contributions to the U.S. society.

As far back as the turn of the 20th century, notable scholars including W.E.B. Du Bois, Carter G. Woodson and Anna Julia Cooper addressed the problems and limitations of schooling for African-Americans.

As a result, black students run the risk of experiencing what historian Carter G. Woodson called “mis-education.” Mis-education is a process where school knowledge helps to foster a sense of contempt or disregard for one’s own histories and experiences, regardless of the level of education attained.

So, for us as parents and educators, the “summer soar» is not just about further developing our son’s academics. It is also about fostering a consciousness to help ward off the subtle effects of mis-education – a concern shared by many black families.

Why it is uniquely burdensome

We recognize that black parents are not the only ones worried about their children’s academic achievement and social development. Families, in general, are critical about the overreliance on standardized testing that makes school less a place for meaningful engagement.

Yet what makes the “summer slide” and as a consequence the “summer soar” experience of black parents uniquely burdensome is the context in which it occurs.

Along with the curriculum and teaching problems black children encounter in schools around race and culture, there is a legacy of positioning black males and black children in troubling, dehumanizing ways.

For example, scholars note that black children, specifically black boys, are often viewed as mature and “adult-like.” Their behaviors and experiences are not seen as part of the normal arc of childhood development. Scholars find that in this “adultification” process, black children are not given the allowance of childhood innocence.

These “deficit-oriented” perspectives are found not only in academic literature, but also in public policy, popular media and everyday conversations. A contemporary reflection of this is found in the call for the popular #BlackLivesMatter movement.

Being black in the summer

To be clear: We don’t feel we are approaching the “summer slide” or our “summer soar” from a place of unfounded anxiety or as parents too focused on their child’s education.

Black people have been and continue to be dealt with in schools and society in deeply problematic ways. Just consider the growing number of black families that are choosing to homeschool their children.

In a study that examined the perspectives of 74 African-American homeschoolers in the U.S., researchers Ama Mazama and Garvey Lundy found that the second most important reason that black parents chose to homeschool, right behind concerns with quality of education, was to protect against the racism found in traditional school settings.

Being black in the summer (or anytime really) is not easy. The challenge black families face is navigating an educational context that requires excelling in mainstream school settings, while buffering against the very same education systems that deny one’s humanity.

This summer, like all summers for us, is filled with ambitious goals. We want to help our rising second grader memorize multiplication facts, advance his reading level and improve his writing. But we also want to introduce him to poetry and literature by black authors, teach him about ancient African civilizations and expose him to the concepts of fairness and justice as key to the black struggle in the U.S.

Our task is not easy. But it is our reality – one that we share with countless others – that goes unrecognized in the popular discussions around “summer slide” and the idyllic dream of a lazy summer.

Fuente de la noticia: http://theconversation.com/what-summertime-means-for-black-children-60152?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Using%20bacteria%20to%20clean%20up%20oil%20spills&utm_content=Using%20bacteria%20to%20clean%20up%20oil%20spills+CID_6962ba4afb74d53eae0c4c57865f53ca&utm_source=campaign_monitor_us&utm_term=What%20summertime%20means%20for%20black%20children

Fuente de la imagen: https://62e528761d0685343e1c-f3d1b99a743ffa4142d9d7f1978d9686.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/files/127588/width926/image-20160621-12995-c6qikt.jpg

Comparte este contenido:

EEUU: First Lady Trip to Africa to Highlight Educational Obstacles Girls Face

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Editor / Fuente: voanews.com

ResumenLa primera dama de EEU, Michelle Obama, tiene previsto viajar el domingo a África para abogar por la educación de las niñas.

U.S. first lady Michelle Obama is scheduled to travel on Sunday to Africa to advocate for girl’s education.

Obama will highlight one of her core initiatives, Let Girls Learn. Sasha and Malia, President Obama and first lady’s daughters, and the girls’ grandmother, Marian Robinson, will also be joining the trip with stops in Liberia, Morocco and Spain.

“We believe very strongly that education and the empowerment of young people is going to be critical to a region that has known so much turmoil, particularly given the enormous youth population in those countries,” White House Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said on Friday.

The first stop is Liberia, where the first lady will attend a meeting with the first elected woman head of state in Africa, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Obama then will visit the Peace Corps training facility in Kakata, Liberia, to speak with women participating at the Girls Leading Our World Program. They will also meet with Peace Corps volunteers and trainees.

The first lady will speak to adolescent girls at Unification Town, also in Liberia, about the obstacles they faced in order to acquire education. Actor Freida Pinto will join Obama and is schedule to moderate the meeting.
“The conversation will highlight both educational barriers girls face as Liberia moves beyond the Ebola epidemic, and the U.S. government’s efforts to continue to address those barriers and provide adolescent girls with equitable access to safe and quality education,” said Tina Tchen, Chief of Staff to the first lady.

Let Girls Learn is a global initiative launched by the president and first lady in 2015. The program addresses the obstacles that keep more than 62 million girls around the world out of school such as forced marriage, poverty, and violence.

White House staff said on Friday that 250 million girls live in poverty, and one out of three girls in developing countries are married by the age of 18. One in nine by 15.

In Morocco, Obama and daughters will be joined by actor Meryl Streep on June 28 and 29 for another conversation to help girls go to school. The country has about 85 percent of girls enrolled in school, but the number drops to 14 percent for high school.

The six-day trip ends in Spain, White house staff said.

Spain is a longtime U.S. ally and has dealt with “significant” economic challenges in recent years.

“The first lady, by going to these three countries, is able to visit three important regions to the United States, and is able to speak not just to government [officials] but to speak to people and to make clear that …a key part of our leadership is what we can do to lift up the lives of young people, particularly girls,” Rhodes said.

The White House said CNN films is covering trip costs for both actors. During the visit, CNN will be filming a documentary in Liberia and Morocco.

Michelle Obama will be using social media to document the trip. She recently joined Snapchat. She is also on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook. Obama will be writing about the travels in a daily diary at HelloGiggles.com.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.voanews.com/content/first-lady-trip-to-africa-to-highlight-educational-obstacles-girls-face/3391976.html

Fuente de la imagen: http://gdb.voanews.com/53C66F1F-C0E1-4FFD-8832-D0E5C52402E0_mw1024_s_n.jpg

Comparte este contenido:

EEUU: New Data Shows Blood Lead Levels Spiked in Children in Flint, Michigan

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Brady Dennis / Fuente: The Washington Post

ResumenLa malograda decisión, hace dos años, para cambiar las fuentes de agua potable en Flint, Mich., dio lugar a un aumento repentino en el número de niños pequeños con niveles de plomo en la sangre, según los datos publicados hoy por los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades .

The ill-fated decision two years ago to switch drinking-water sources in Flint, Mich., resulted in a sudden spike in the number of young children with elevated blood lead levels, according to data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Public health officials have long known that the city’s water crisis left nearly 9,000 children 6 and younger exposed to lead, a toxic contaminant that can cause permanent learning disabilities, behavioral problems and, at higher levels, a number of diseases. But to better understand the impact Flint’s tainted water had on the city’s most vulnerable population, CDC officials looked at lead tests before, during and after the switch.

Researchers found that Flint children had a 50 percent higher chance of having elevated blood lead levels after the switch in 2014. After the city switched back to Detroit water in late 2015, the percentage of children with elevated blood lead results «returned to levels seen before the water switch took place,» the agency said.

«This crisis was entirely preventable, and a startling reminder of the critical need to eliminate all sources of lead from our children’s environment,» Patrick Breysse, director of the CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, said in a statement Friday.

The lead problems in Flint’s water began after the city switched to the Flint River for its water supply beginning in April 2014, as part of a cost-cutting move. State regulators failed to ensure that anti-corrosion chemicals were added to the water, which became contaminated when lead leached into it from aging underground pipes. The city eventually switched back to Detroit water in October 2015.

While there is no level of lead in the blood that is considered safe, CDC considers anything greater than five micrograms per deciliter as a «level of concern.» Public health officials continue to recommend that all children under age 6 living in Flint have their blood tested for lead.

Friday’s study had some limitations. For example, researchers were not able to account for exposure to lead-based paint or other potential environmental sources that could have exposed children to the toxic substance. In addition, researchers lacked information about the precise amount of lead-tainted water consumed by individual children, which limited their analysis to evaluating changes in the results of blood tests over time as the city’s water source changed.

The CDC’s work builds on initial findings from local pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha, who played a major role in bringing Flint’s lead crisis to the public spotlight. In August 2015, she was startled by what she found when looking back over the lead tests of 1,750 children taken at a local hospital.

“We found that when we compared lead levels before and after the [water] switch, the percentage of kids with lead poisoning doubled after the switch,” she told The Washington Post in an interview earlier this year. “In some neighborhoods, it tripled. And it all correlated with where water lead levels were the highest.”

Hanna-Attisha and several colleagues released the results at a news conference in September 2015, but the backlash was swift. State officials questioned the findings and accused Hanna-Attisha of causing unnecessary hysteria. The state later agreed that her figures were accurate.

The episode, Hanna-Attisha said, has caused a “community-wide trauma” in a city ravaged by crime, poverty and widespread unemployment.

“Our families are already riddled with every possible stress,” she said. “Every obstacle to a kid’s success, we already had. . . . And then they gave a population lead poisoning.”

In April, researchers from Virginia Tech said Flint’s water system is in far better shape since the city switched its water source in the fall and began adding chemicals to control the corrosion of aging pipes. But they made it clear that the threat of lead contamination remains.

This week, the federal government lifted a recommendation that pregnant women, nursing mothers and children under 6 in Flint drink only bottled water.

The advice was based on tests of filters that have been distributed for months for free by the state of Michigan. The Environmental Protection Agency has been testing water from the filters and has said they remove or reduce lead well below the federal action level of 15 parts per billion.

President Obama drank filtered water several times during a visit last month to Flint.

«It confirms what we know scientifically that if you use a filter … then Flint water at this point is drinkable,» he said. «That does not negate the need to replace some of those pipes, because ultimately we want a system where you don’t have to put a filter on it.»

Federal officials said they have provided millions of gallons of bottled water to the state of Michigan, along with more than 50,000 water filters. Government aid has included expanding medical services to thousands of Medicaid-eligible pregnant women and children.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37648-new-data-shows-blood-lead-levels-spiked-in-children-in-flint-michigan

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021593-lead-test-062516.jpg

Comparte este contenido:

Utilizan Google Glass para ayudar a niños con autismo a reconocer emociones

25 Junio 2016/Fuente: Wwwhat’s new

Un equipo de investigación de la  Universidad de Stanford lleva más de un año desarrollando un sistema que se vale de las Google Glass par ayudar a los niños con autismo a desarrollar habilidades sociales.

Gracias a software de reconocimiento facial que se ejecuta en Google Glass, los niños pueden identificar las expresiones faciales de las personas que los rodean.

google glass

En las primeras pruebas piloto que desarrolló la Universidad, el software funcionaba como una especie de asistente. Se les iba enseñando a los niños a relacionar los diferentes emociones (podía escoger en una lista de 7 emociones) con imágenes especificas. Después, se fueron integrando audio y efectos para ayudar al reconocimiento.

Pero en la última fase la propuesta es ver cómo funciona este sistema en el mundo real, así que los niños recibirán diferentes sesiones de 20 minutos mientras interactuaban con su familia.

Cuando la cámara detecte una emoción, el software mostraba la palabra o el icono correspondiente. Además, se registrar un serie de datos para ayudar a entender cómo los niños se comportan frente a otras personas y medir sus progresos.

Todos estos datos pueden consultarse en una aplicación, junto con las imágenes y un sistema de colores que ayudan que los niños puedan relacionarlos con las emociones.

La idea es que este producto pueda estar en el mercado en unos pocos años, por lo pronto podremos seguir este proyecto desde la página que ha creado Stanford.

Imagen: https://www.google.co.ve/search?q=google+glass&client=ubuntu&hs=dPi&channel=fs&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiCk7es4MTNAhXFVyYKHeJLAjIQ_AUICCgB&biw=1366&bih=673

Comparte este contenido:
Page 342 of 394
1 340 341 342 343 344 394