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Contested election races for Cleveland City Council are to be celebrated
Updated 5:33 AM;
By Editorial Board | cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer
For only the second time in decades, all of the members of Cleveland City Council might face election challenges this fall, and unless you happen to be one of the 17 incumbents, this is a good development.
Our political system relies on competitive election races to generate spirited debates of issues and to give voters a choice. Yet, in Cleveland, a one-party city with a troublesome tradition of allowing departing council members to name their successors, competition is often the exception.
WKSU
For education majors, student teaching is the capstone, the time when they step into the classroom and immerse themselves in their subjects and their students.
Only, last year, many didn’t. COVID-19 upended how student teachers were assigned, how they taught, and how they were evaluated. And it accelerated a change already underway: the use of technology.
“We have certainly had to pivot, often, and in ways that a year-and-a-half ago we would have never imagined,” said Roxanne Sorrick, head of teacher education at Hiram College.
That was mirrored throughout the state.
The Ohio Department of Education requires about 100 hours of fieldwork before student teaching as part of the licensure process.
WKSU
Education majors at colleges and universities throughout Northeast Ohio have been schooled on just how much the COVID-19 pandemic has changed education.
For education majors, student teaching is the capstone, the time when they step into the classroom and immerse themselves in their subjects and their students. Only last year … many didn’t. For our education project, Learning Curve, we report on efforts by professors, mentor teachers, college administrators, and the student teachers themselves to overcome the limits of the pandemic and to learn to teach.
COVID-19 upended how student teachers were assigned, how they taught, and how they were evaluated. And it accelerated a change already underway: the use of technology.
Ohio awards $69.8 million for STEMM scholarships; Which colleges got the most money
Updated 10:30 AM;
Today 10:30 AM
The website for the Ohio Department of Higher Education. The department announced more than $69 million in awards for the Choose Ohio First program on Monday.
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CLEVELAND, Ohio Ohio announced $69.8 million over the next five years as part of its Choose Ohio First scholarship program, designed to support more students going into STEMM fields, or science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine.
These funds go to individual institutions, which then distribute them to students in eligible programs. Students apply for Choose Ohio First scholarships through their college or university. The fields where students are eligible vary by university, and scholarships can include support services like partnering with a faculty mentor. The programs that award these funds also look to recruit underrepresented populations into STEMM fields.