Classes will take place in the fall—but how? There’s still no consensus on what next semester will be like. Not even close.
CONAHEC News and Information
In education, it is a commonly held belief that a student’s success in learning comes from a student’s talent and merit; that success can come to anyone provided they persevere above all trials and tribulations. If everyone is going to get a fair start in life, the best place to apply one’s self is in school. This mindset is generally extrapolated into a view of society as a whole, that in a free country one can climb the social ladder simply through achievement regardless of wealth or social class.
La desigualdad de condiciones sociales de los mexicanos es la principal causa para no alcanzar la transición educativa, desde el nivel básico hasta el superior, expuso el doctor en ciencias sociales Emilio Blanco Bosco, en la ponencia Desigualdad de Oportunidades Educativas, que se llevó a cabo en el Centro Tepoztlán Víctor L. Urquidi A.C.
As the coronavirus pandemic continues to wreak havoc, a handful of schools have announced plans to bring students back, but shorten semesters by canceling fall break and ending in-person class time after Thanksgiving.
Other schools, including those in the California State University system, have plans to cancel nearly all in-person classes through the semester.
Here are some reasons colleges have decided to cancel classes or shorten the fall semester:
Before the outbreak of the global coronavirus pandemic, the world was already dealing with a learning crisis, as evidenced by high numbers of Learning Poverty. With the spread of the coronavirus, the education system is facing a new crisis, as more than 160 countries (as of March 24) mandate some form of school closures impacting at least 1.5 billion children and youth. Extended school closures may cause not only loss of learning in the short term, but also further loss in human capital and diminished economic opportunities over the long term.
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The COVID-19 pandemic threatens education progress worldwide through two major shocks:
1. The near-universal closing of schools at all levels and
2.The economic recession sparked by pandemic-control measures
America’s teachers are on the front lines of connecting young people to opportunity, in the form of learning, employment, and emotional and physical health.
But teachers too often are working within structural inequalities that impede many students from achieving their potential. These issues begin with pollution and the stresses of poverty, and extend to economic segregation and inadequate school funding.
In 2017, Scott Galloway anticipated Amazon’s $13.7 billion purchase of Whole Foods a month before it was announced. Last year, he called WeWork on its “seriously loco” $47 billion valuation a month before the company’s IPO imploded. Now, Galloway, a Silicon Valley runaway who teaches marketing at NYU Stern School of Business, believes the pandemic has greased the wheels for big tech’s entrée into higher education. The post-pandemic future, he says, will entail partnerships between the largest tech companies in the world and elite universities. MIT@Google.... more
With a proposal that could shake up the standardized testing industry and also antagonize some faculty, University of California President Janet Napolitano on Monday said undergraduate applicants should not be required to take the SAT or ACT through at least 2024 and maybe forever if the university can not develop a replacement exam.
California State University, the nation’s largest four-year college system, plans to cancel most in-person classes in the fall and instead offer instruction primarily online, Chancellor Timothy White announced Tuesday.
The vast majority of classes across the 23-campus Cal State system will be taught online, White said, with some limited exceptions that allow for in-person activity.