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"academically" Definitions
  1. in a way that is connected with education, especially studying in schools and universities
  2. in a way that involves a lot of reading and studying rather than practical or technical skills

667 Sentences With "academically"

How to use academically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "academically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "academically". Mastering all the usages of "academically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

These conversations have to be non-binary, and in America, we decide by each regulation whether we wanna be a little bit more academically capitalistic or a little bit more academically socialistic.
Not just academically, like with systems thinking or mathematics stuff.
It's since taken on a more ecumenical, academically focused approach.
Detroit schools have long been in decline academically and financially.
Academically speaking, the boundaries of sexology are still somewhat vague.
She does well academically but is miserable outside of school.
Her daughter, Maya, was academically gifted and excelled in college.
"Children not proceeding academically are usually not lazy," she said.
Currently, students arrive at colleges underprepared both academically and psychologically.
As a sophomore, he's less academically shy than he was.
"He was a researcher and academically inclined," Dr. Hart said.
He developed into a bright young man who excelled academically.
These practices can turn academically engaged students into profession-ready graduates.
He was also kicked out of Moscow University after failing academically.
These appear rather more faith-based, and so less academically rigorous.
She began to have stomach spasms and to struggle more academically.
I have so many amazing students who struggle emotionally and academically.
"They have thrived academically, but they have found their own interests."
And it causes students to perform worse academically and struggle socially.
Erie and Pittsburgh school districts also are struggling financially and academically.
I've lived it, thought about it, pondered it academically and philosophically.
She arrived at college feeling depleted, exhausted, and academically burnt out.
Bilingual and well-credentialed academically, he started working for a bank.
Sometimes the best suggestion to them is to ease up academically.
That I flourished academically, but not creatively, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Still, McClelland demanded that the Tigers prioritize staying on track academically.
Feeling secure is critical to them thriving emotionally, academically and socially.
It is on the cusp, academically, to become a great place.
Jupiter retrograde has you thinking about the direction you're headed academically/philosophically.
This was truly a magical place of learning; academically, spiritually, and personally.
Academically, boarders perform even worse than their peers who live at home.
Chao excelled academically and was accepted to Mount Holyoke, a women's college.
Not all high school seniors are academically or emotionally ready for college.
A physics professor was academically punished by his institution to protect students?!
Restoring access to Pell Grants, federal student loans, for academically eligible prisoners.
And academically speaking, happiness is a meaningless term, because it's not measurable.
This is no reflection on their intelligence or ability to perform academically.
And still they have achieved, academically, in the arts and as activists.
Academically weak students were demeaned, and headstrong students were made to kneel.
That may lead to admitting athletes who are academically unprepared, Lopiano said.
"Edward did not excel academically," according to his New York Times obituary.
TOKYO — From a young age, Satomi Hayashi studied hard and excelled academically.
When she came to that college, it was failing financially and academically.
As in District 15, some of the middle schools in District 3 that have long educated the highest share of low-income and academically struggling students will be soon to home to more economically and academically diverse classrooms.
I wish him nothing but the best in the future academically and athletically.
" K: "I'm a nerd, so I kind of approach everything really cerebrally, academically.
As a result of this inattention, Drew's agitation grew while he faltered academically.
Jude is struggling academically at UCLA and in danger of losing his scholarship.
But these statistics often obscure how far rural children are left behind academically.
The schools hit hardest by budget cuts were already struggling academically and financially.
And though he didn't finish college, he pushed his daughter to shine academically.
"Overcoming pitfalls is a daily habit for individuals who struggle academically," Corley says.
Pell Grant students are often less academically prepared for college than their peers.
I excelled academically, behaved well in class and participated in numerous extracurricular activities.
The biggest reason they cited was that their kids are falling behind academically.
Growing up in an immigrant household, was there added pressure to shine academically?
A student may be in an "A" school, but still be behind academically.
She was doing well academically, had made friends and was voted class treasurer.
Even when the scholars are citing theorists, the show is never academically dry.
Research suggests that academically marginal undergraduates struggle the most in fully online classes.
Sometimes, well, the majority of the times, we fall between the cracks academically.
Students who get in through the gaokao do "very, very well academically", she adds.
Academically, he is using them to understand the mechanics of person-to-person interaction.
It turns out that young women are excelling academically at higher and higher rates.
Academically, Penn is known as a competitive pressure-cooker; sorority recruitment is no exception.
"When she came to that college, it was failing financially and academically," Sanders said.
"It's not that I thought you couldn't handle it academically," she recently told me.
She challenged herself academically with honors and Advanced Placement courses, the school district said.
When it comes down to it, teachers aren't just there to help students academically.
Elite athletes are exemplars of hard work and talent, just like academically gifted students.
"Maria would do something academically that just blew us away," he told USA Today.
Parents who cannot afford the sessions fear their children will be left behind academically.
In the Philippines, Mr. Soberano tells them, school is stricter and more academically challenging.
Ms. Franklin's 2000-year old son, Noey Alvarez Jr., worried about falling behind academically.
Several studies have shown that children do better academically and socially under inclusive education.
Again, the claim that admission aims at better academically qualified applicants is not true.
These students tend to emerge from weaker high schools and are less academically prepared.
What sorts of strengths do they seem to have in common, personally and academically?
"There wouldn't be a difference, because girls are generally empowered to achieve academically," she said.
Naturally the surveillance aspect makes for potential creepiness, but academically speaking, the work is fascinating.
With only a bachelor's degree in geology, Reed is not academically trained to study meteorites.
" Natalie, a school swimmer, "is doing well academically and has a nice, large social network.
The tech tycoon was famously born into a poor family and did not succeed academically.
This, she suggests, may be because universal programmes are higher-quality and more rigorous academically.
Socially and academically, we are always tied to the grid in one way or another.
The real question is, 'Could you do better academically if you had better quality sleep?
Happiness may arguably seem immeasurable and Buettner admits that academically speaking, it's a meaningless term.
You'd expect Bridge's students to do better academically than public school students, and they do.
She did well academically but was pregnant by the time she graduated from high school.
Vocational training in useful jobs would be available for those who are not academically inclined.
In a 2013 speech, he said there's a drug dealer for each academically gifted Dreamer.
Wheaton is both "pervasively Christ-centered" and "academically rigorous," Ryken, the school's president, told me.
"Football keeps a lot of these kids out of trouble, on track academically," he says.
"The recipient must rank academically in the top third of their class," Mr. O'Rourke said.
And musicologists — academically trained experts who sometimes consult in copyright cases — are in greater demand.
Educational support for students who struggle academically, once paid for by parents, is now free.
"Almost everything Ohio State does — academically, athletically, or otherwise — they compare to Michigan," he said.
One is a high-achieving junior, the sort who runs, sings and does well academically.
In an intensely competitive family, Jo was more academically successful than his flamboyant elder brother.
The goal is to keep them academically eligible so they can produce on the field.
Williams and Hagger-Johnson used national test scores taken at age 11 to rank students academically.
When students are young, academically brilliant and getting great grades, they should know that's an option.
There are real reasons why players struggle academically, and they have nothing to do with money.
Excelling academically sometimes attracted negative attention from his peers, something Jidenna said his students also experienced.
Kwasi's family felt the same way, he said, adding that they expected him to excel academically.
The underlying focus is that helping students to succeed academically in an encouraging environment is necessary.
It may be academically interesting to debate the bailout, but it is ultimately beside the point.
Yes, she has problems in that area personally, academically (she did transfer, after all) and professionally.
The association claims that it has provided HBCUs with unspecified "financial assistance" to help them academically.
Classes are challenging but there is very little competitiveness and lots of support for students academically.
It is noble for a school to take in academically at-risk students, but also perilous.
She hated high school because she was "different," always using crutches, but she did well academically.
Comfortable in his own skin, Adam blossomed — both emotionally and academically, said his father, Casey Kellogg.
Either they were not prepared academically, were too immature or were simply not suited for it.
We want to be sure that knowledgeable people are looking at something that is academically correct.
He compares the experience of showing dogs to that of parents watching their kids succeed academically.
The NEC director doesn't have to be an academically prestigious economist; Larry Summers was an exception.
He was well-known in his high school for being academically successful and accomplished, he said.
These frequent changes between schools of strikingly varying quality trouble military children both socially and academically.
Although she wanted to apply to Harvard Law, she admitted she wasn't at her best academically.
"I remember being concerned about him -- not academically," Fiske said in the piece, which appeared Wednesday.
A Wake Forest spokeswoman said the school only admits students which it believes will succeed academically.
As the victim of this sexual assault, my life has been ruined socially, psychologically, academically, and financially.
Funny, kind, and compassionate, she continued to do well academically and at other activities in high school.
Now, I'm only academically familiar with live porn cams, but isn't this practically their entire business model?
Ryan is at the higher end of the scale academically in terms of the prisoners I teach.
Moore excelled academically, and won a Rhodes Scholarship as a senior at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
"This was a strong group of students that went, they excelled academically," Forrest told the Boston Globe.
" The study also found that "a staggering 81% of children struggle academically due to conflict-related stress.
Those things can be understood academically, but you actually have to experience those changes to understand them.
Academically, 10% of the students at her daughter's school are proficient in reading and 4% in math.
I love intellectuals who are not formed academically, but formed by their own desire to learn things.
One reason is that junior high schools in the countryside are far weaker academically than urban ones.
But one hypothesis is that watching their children succeed academically motivates parents to further their own education.
I remember those years as emotionally and socially fraught, but also as academically stimulating and world-expanding.
He left Notre Dame after one season when he was ruled academically ineligible for the 2015 season.
"We're highly qualified academically and we've done many research studies over the years," Carroll told Business Insider.
The seed was sown, however, and he was confident that he had the ability to achieve academically.
The students are in the bottom 25 percent of their classes academically and are often chronically absent.
Its charge is to balance leniency with pragmatism: Can an athlete survive at this academically rigorous school?
"We could be here all night talking about people who helped me academically — professors, tutors," Speidel said.
There was one—a hundred-­dollar check from a sponsoring bank—for the academically top-ranked boy.
Now the player was academically eligible and would be riling up the crowd during the state tournament.
He made a glancing reference to studies that suggest dual-language immersion students outperform their peers academically.
Kean makes these claims academically, arguing in the careful — even downright glacial — positing of a responsible historian.
Academically, multiple reports in top scientific journals clearly show that better nutrition leads to better school performance.
Carson's mother had only a third-grade education and couldn't read but pushed him to excel academically.
Until 2004, J.H.S. 145 occupied the whole building, with more than 1,1453 students, and it struggled academically.
He made a glancing reference to studies that suggest dual-language immersion students outperform their peers academically.
He said he was angered to think academically deserving students may have lost a spot to cheaters.
Academically trained in Germany (Stuttgart, Berlin, and Munich), her early drawings are far more than skillful studies.
A teacher suggested that the newspaper did not believe that black and Hispanic children could be academically successful.
All question Theresa May's tough line on immigration and her plans to create more academically selective state schools.
He didn&apost drink or do drugs, to my knowledge … he was academically proactive, making all A&aposs.
"I wanted to show it to them and prove it to them I am good academically," he said.
Other than coming from a privileged background, Spencer seemed everything Regnery wasn't: academically successful, publicity-hungry, and youthful.
He was delayed joining the rest of the freshman class while he qualified academically, according to multiple reports.
Academically successful students from all walks of life would suddenly begin to consider the possibility of attending Harvard.
Those who denounce affirmative action say it disadvantages minority groups that perform well academically, such as Asian-Americans.
I've sent my children to New York City public elementary and middle schools that are not academically selective.
"They trend positively academically throughout that system," David Lewis, the director of the university's charter school office, said.
It also directly affects a child's ability to succeed academically and enter the workforce at their full potential.
Without a doubt, Head Start students enter kindergarten academically ahead of their peers who did not attend preschool.
Rehaif had been a student at the Florida Institute of Technology but was academically dismissed in January 2015.
"Having grown up academically in the United States, I have somewhat of an American mind-set," he said.
He does them painstakingly academically, or more freely, or à la Picasso, or in the manner of Ingres.
"They are really incredible people in so many different ways — academically, and every other way," the president said.
Conquering the Freshman Fear of Failure Students, especially poor ones, arrive at college feeling overwhelmed academically and socially.
The list consists of applicants who are borderline academically, the plaintiffs say, but whom Harvard wants to admit.
She had trouble concentrating, and was academically dismissed from college in 1998 after she was hospitalized several times.
Many of the schools have struggled academically, and families have been abandoning them for higher-performing charter schools.
Acakoro fosters a positive, team-spirited culture, and a holistic approach that ensures the students also develop academically.
But charter schools that serve mostly low-income children of color in large cities tend to excel academically.
The Huskies have lost seven of eight since point guard Quade Green was ruled academically ineligible Jan. 6.
It is taxpayers who are financing the expensive and often academically inferior education that for-profit colleges provide.
To qualify, students must excel academically and demonstrate financial need for the upcoming 2018-2019 academic school year.
" She added, "There are few with as wide a range of experience and as academically qualified as Jon.
Some research suggests that lower-achieving students do better academically when they attend classes with higher-achieving peers.
Since I was a kid, I've been academically inclined and optimistic, so people assume I love high school.
It's not just that the Tulsa preschoolers were ahead of their peers academically when they got to kindergarten.
" In Manhood Development, he added, "we're talking about how to elevate their game academically through the lens of brotherhood.
It really was a snowball effect: the rape affected me socially and psychologically, which in turn affected me academically.
U.S.C. has dropped five of eight since the starting guards Jordan Adams and Brianna Barrett were ruled academically ineligible.
But they have had a lot of success in their few years on earth - academically, athletically, professionally and relationally.
They are outstanding people, they are really incredible people in so many different ways, academically, and every other way.
Previously a joke circulated that its acronym stood for "It's The End" – the last resort for the academically weak.
Within six months, Drew's outbursts and fear of the restroom had largely subsided and he continued to progress academically.
So, over the last decade, since I've begun writing about comics academically, it's become more stable of an academia.
My research seeks to understand why some groups of children are more likely to struggle academically in U.S. schools.
Those who read the profiles showed greater commitment to learning and performed better academically compared to those who didn't.
My parents were devastated: They couldn't understand what had happened to their "gifted" child who had always excelled academically.
In addition, she described struggling academically and socially and spoke of an inability to have healthy relationships with men.
"At first, you had to be academically qualified, but that changed dramatically about two years in," Ms. Taylor said.
To my surprise, I fared well academically, but I never entirely got over the feeling of being an impostor.
It served him well academically, as he skipped a grade in middle school and went to college at 16.
Many groups that struggle academically — boys, African-Americans, Latinos, special-education students like Alanna — are among the biggest beneficiaries.
It is both stone cold academically astute and symbolically intriguing, revealing the sprightly potential inherent in all revolutionary hopes.
But this assumption is outdated, especially as colleges enroll a greater number of academically talented students from poor families.
The report also rejects the notion that men receive more professorships because they work harder or do better academically.
He said that how well a student performed academically while at Yale would not factor into a disciplinary decision.
If you're an academically advanced, low-income, high school senior, you can apply for the QuestBridge National Match Scholarship.
Cummings, who was told in high school that he would not succeed academically, defied expectations from an early age.
Still, the results are sizable enough to conclude that students who were not selected for vouchers fared better academically.
They have great uncertainty about their career prospects and feel pressure to excel academically or risk losing job opportunities.
Let's be honest: There are many big-time sports colleges where athletes are given a pass academically — and nobody cares.
Meanwhile, girls who can't get tampons or pads sometimes miss school during their periods, putting them academically behind their peers.
Hennessy presided over Stanford as it became more academically competitive with Ivy League schools such as Harvard and Yale universities.
Pursuing a strategy of admitting fewer applicants, he built a more selective admissions process and an academically stronger student body.
She volunteered for the classes with the most-challenged students, those who struggled academically or had trouble in their backgrounds.
You can be sure many schools that have a good reputation or are considered academically advanced will impose new charges.
Whitney excelled both academically and athletically at Bates College; he graduated cum laude after playing football as the starting fullback.
She's stronger academically, is less shy than before and has been honored for her work to help people understand bullying.
Food is inherently social and research has shown that when you share meals, you perform better academically, socially and emotionally.
All of the opportunities that a person could ever look for academically are here for them at Dorsey High School.
Last year, Bryant was ruled academically ineligible to play at Notre Dame and was suspended by ND coach Brian Kelly.
The Sanders brothers both attended James Madison High School, a large, academically rigorous institution that also counts New York Sen.
When she refused, Whalen called her a "goody two shoes" and then began ignoring her academically, according to the lawsuit.
Try to avoid the predictable and familiar, the market-approved or academically sanctioned, or what other curators have already done.
Without federal investment, inequities will only grow, and many school districts will inevitably be left behind both financially and academically.
By allowing such vast disparities between public schools — racially, socioeconomically and academically — this city has made integration the hardest choice.
Carpenter grew up going to Montessori schools, and in effect she skipped the eighth grade because she was academically advanced.
It helps me understand intimately (and not just academically) why so many people spend so much time with fighting games.
The underlying technology for bots are like NLP, machine learning, these are things that have been around academically for decades.
In order to do that, it has been admitting more and more students who are not academically prepared for college.
"Public universities can be strong academically, even if they don't have hundreds of years and a major budget," he said.
The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) is normally one of the most cautious, academically oriented parts of the White House.
In 2012, Fab Melo, then the No. 1-seeded Orange's starting center, was declared academically ineligible just before the tournament.
And even students who meet the standards for guaranteed tuition at the schools that offer it have to qualify academically.
For advanced learners, online classes are a terrific option, but academically challenged students need a classroom with a teacher's support.
Students who live in the west typically perform better academically, and household incomes there are up to twice as high.
In the four years after the alleged assault, Dr. Blasey said she struggled academically and was unable to forge friendships.
As I really prepared myself academically, I wanted to have the opportunity in the long-term to progress and upgrade.
To ensure that no one fell behind academically, the university's provost and assistant provost joined the Mountaineers on the road.
Even after finding housing, the Education Trust-New York found that formerly homeless children continue to struggle academically for years.
Historically, black students as a group have tended to underperform academically—to get lower grades than their SAT scores predict.
Many students in VICE's survey reported struggling academically, their grades and scholarly pursuits lagging behind as they struggle to cope.
He could have spent more to help students become academically ready for college, which is the biggest barrier to graduation.
Others allowed substitutions, so a more academically gifted student would take the test in the name of the defendant's child.
Still, educators and policymakers remain deeply concerned about the number of American children who remain far behind their classmates academically.
There are currently nine specialized public high schools in New York City, designed to educate academically and artistically gifted students.
Academically, he is pioneering a field called human-robot interaction — part engineering, part AI, part social psychology and cognitive science.
The takeaway seems to be that just because children are doing well academically doesn't mean they will abstain from substance abuse.
During summer classes at Heads Up, I felt challenged academically for the first time ever and really started to love school.
Did you excel academically your whole life, only to feel like the world shift beneath your feet once you entered adulthood?
When she had her first child, she vowed not to push him to move any faster academically than he wanted to.
They sought online writing tutors and had him test into MENSA so he could attend summer programs for academically accelerated children.
Esa Ahmad, playing his first game of the season after becoming academically eligible, chipped in 23 points in a reserve role.
After graduating from high school, Rogers went to Michigan State but did not academically qualify to play during his first year.
Each athlete earns one point per semester for being academically eligible and another point each semester if they stay in school.
Joe Fitzpatrick, a senior at the school, also called him a "good, quiet kid" who did well academically, the AP reported.
One friend of his, he says, suffered academically because he spent too much time playing games about football rather than studying.
"If it doesn't, then the issue is academically interesting but practically not of much value," he told Reuters Health by email.
Thread has taken 415 academically underperforming students in Baltimore schools and built an extended family around them, with about 1,000 volunteers.
I hadn't attended school since the seventh grade, and getting up to speed academically after all that time away was daunting.
These light-touch interventions aren't panaceas, but they may keep a great many students out of trouble and doing better academically.
The schools are intended to serve the needs of students who excel academically and artistically, according to the Department of Education.
" But "learning to adapt, both academically as well as socially, in a foreign land, in a very different community was challenging.
His family struggled with poverty and drug addiction, but he excelled academically and went on to attend Bowdoin College, in Maine.
It's part of a growing recognition that students who are academically equipped for college may be unprepared for life off campus.
It makes Tec de Monterrey, one of the highest-ranking universities academically in Latin America, something more of a Stanford, then.
I travel independently, use assistive technology to complete my work just as efficiently as my peers, and excel academically and socially.
Universities should also give students time to mix academically, so they can interact with a variety of disciplines, thinkers and makers.
The initiative set a goal of adding 85033,000 academically successful students with significant financial needs at around 270 schools by 2025.
Case in point: all the research documenting lack of female participation in the classroom — even as girls tend to shine academically.
How the controversy began The state of Arkansas took over Little Rock schools in 2015 because some schools had been struggling academically.
Rather, most of these early learning institutions served academically talented students whose parents could afford to have their child pursue secondary education.
Exhibitions can last for months, even years, so art's arrangement is far too important to be left solely to academically-minded curators.
"The more academically selective you are the more socially selective you become", says Andreas Schleicher, the head of education at the OECD.
Janga is the youngest champion on record, plus, there was more dabbing at this event than maybe any academically minded competition ever.
Compared to other college graduates, America's teachers are, academically, about average, and about a third of teachers change careers within five years.
It is our hope that we can continue to work with all families to help their students improve both behaviorally and academically.
But toddlers with vision impairment often have few or no options to do so, leaving them behind their peers academically and socially.
There, despite being supremely gifted, he proved too miserable to perform well academically, later failing his baccalaureate exam on the first try.
Had she not been so academically oriented, her own knowledge, insights, and efforts might have taken her more directly toward her goal.
Although she was in a male-dominant environment, Ginsburg excelled academically and was the first woman to join the Harvard Law Review.
" Sempsrott, who was not involved in Eden's treatment or the case study, noted that it was "done in an academically rigorous way.
Some colleges buck the trend and are working effectively to give academically qualified low-income students the equal educational opportunity they deserve.
He is the Founder of Life of Purpose Treatment, an academically focused comprehensive continuum of care offering treatment for substance use disorders.
I threw myself into achieving academically throughout school and into college, and then as I took a job at Boston Consulting Group.
"The reality is you might have to reach out academically and financially outside what you're capable of to achieve it," he says.
A recent evaluation of Baltimore's community schools concluded that the schools whose students did best academically were those in the program longest.
I never thought about this before, but If I suspected any of my own students were academically dishonest, I would report them.
The organization works with public high school students who are struggling academically and facing major difficulties including poverty, homelessness and family breakdowns.
And top officials at S.M.U. ignored their own professors, who recommended that Frazier not be admitted to S.M.U., an academically tough university.
There also is a risk for fewer second chances for students who struggle academically, perhaps for reasons unrelated to their own abilities.
He was also kicked out of Moscow University after failing academically, having stopped attending classes that he considered a waste of time.
"Academically, athletically and socially, we all became literally almost like brothers," Mr. Urgo said in an interview with The Times in July.
But I don't think it's impossible to do extremely well academically while challenging one's self and enjoying and developing one's self socially.
Academically-trained but also mystically-inclined, af Klint is now considered the first European to make the abstract paintings of early Modernism.
One year after Ms. Contreras requested it, the school drafted a formal education plan that was supposed to help Ms. Fourstar academically.
But he said it had not done such a good job at admitting students who had managed to excel academically despite poverty.
But a teacher named Jennifer Jilot helped him, and he raised his grades enough to be academically eligible by his junior year.
Establishing this common ground might seem minor, but it may keep a great many students out of trouble and doing better academically.
This is Union's not-so-secret sauce: Start out with an academically solid foundation, then look for ways to keep getting better.
Paltrow Neumann&aposs vision was a school that&aposs academically rigorous without the stuffiness and cutthroat competitiveness of an exclusive private school.
"Our focus remains on ensuring that our students have the best possible educational experience ― both academically and athletically," Zlotziver told the outlet.
I'd been a bad student in high school and now, in engineering school, felt (and was) academically outgunned, way behind the curve.
And to find my way socially and academically, I became rich in white culture, while it, in turn, seemed to enrich me.
TAIPEI, Taiwan — At the academically prestigious Jingmei Girls' Senior High School in Taipei, the tug-of-war team is busy winning international medals.
They are really incredible people in so many different ways, academically and every other way, and I had a very, very interesting morning.
Further, New York students who fall behind academically, such that they can't complete 30 credits over a one-year period, lose their funding.
But local governments have little incentive to spend more money, since any student who does well academically is certain to leave the countryside.
"Those who moderated drug use over the period of the study were able to recover and perform better academically," Meda added by email.
An authoritative approach generally correlated with better performance and self-image, for both gifted kids and a control group of academically average children.
And after seeing our success, the district allowed us to replicate our innovative methods by "restarting" one of their most academically challenged schools.
College can be a confusing experience for first-generation kids, both in terms of learning how to succeed academically and "fitting in" socially.
Incredibly, it also cannot dictate the standards or benchmarks by which these accrediting organizations judge whether a school is financially or academically sound.
To be sure, §936 shows that desperate times call for desperate measures even when it comes to engaging in academically vetoed tax policy.
Patricia Hunt, who teaches government at a high school in Arlington, Virginia, say her students were already learning how to evaluate sources academically.
In fact, for the most academically talented black students, a significant negative relationship exists between degree completion and attending a less selective college.
Meanwhile, per the indictment, USC accepted academically lackluster influencer Olivia Jade Giannulli after her parents allegedly gave $500,000 to admissions-fixer William Singer.
In-state tuition is offered to residents at a discount, and some states offer significant grant support to academically-talented students as well.
Social pressure doesn't favor education either, especially for the young boys who are expected to support their families financially instead of excelling academically.
I worked hard academically, became an editor of a school publication, and took tutoring lessons all to prevent the catastrophe of being rejected.
The job of the faculty deans is to support students academically and personally, and to set the tone for the house's social activities.
Parents are rightly worried about their students sliding academically, and having their kid's time consumed by video games or other empty calorie entertainment.
But devoting so much time to the basketball and track teams hurt his grades, making him academically ineligible to remain on the team.
Trauma theory seemed to make the work more academically relevant so I went on to get my PhD from the University of Kansas.
But when his district had two "e-learning" days this year because of snow, he noticed that some disadvantaged students fell behind academically.
Mr. Santos, 30, who is the founder and chief executive of Homepolish, an interior design start-up, went to the academically oriented Iolani.
However, most campuses don't have a safe haven (academically) for a student who identifies outside the most represented group on campus, white students.
By all accounts Mr. Macron was precocious: an accomplished pianist who excelled academically and starred in the school play, which Ms. Trogneux directed.
Founded in 1855 as the first interracial and coeducational college in the South, Berea only admits academically promising students with limited economic resources.
But as a wind-down, it sure seems to me, academically and theoretically speaking, weed has a lot going for it over booze.
Nowadays, I try to be academically thorough, so even if I'm 99% sure I know something, I'm still going to look it up.
Sometimes students worry that committing to activities outside of classes gets in the way of doing well academically, but often it's the opposite.
"We push them academically, help them out socially, and are a resource for them in all the other areas of their lives," Cannon said.
"Oftentimes our work supervisors are the same people who grade us academically, which means that retaliation can take an academic form," Sandalow-Ash explained.
He was gifted academically, graduating from high school at 22016 and going on to attend the University of Pennsylvania, where he majored in English.
But they also defend their decision to divert him from high school to adult ed, claiming that he wasn't academically prepared for ninth grade.
The commercially owned social web is a far cry from the vision of academically minded knowledge exchange envisaged by the World Wide Web's inventor.
I played Lemmings to death on my school's computer, and became academically obsessed with actual lemmings, writing a third grade report on the critters.
On the upside, "students who take a gap year tend to be more academically focused," said Danny Ruderman, a college counselor in Los Angeles.
Administrators sometimes responded by considering English-proficiency requirements, or by emphasizing extracurricular criteria, which allowed them to reject some academically strong Asian-American applicants.
Students who receive two meals at school, such as breakfast and lunch, may perform better academically than those who receive just one or none.
Colleges that have high graduation rates tend to be more selective and tend to have students who are more affluent and more academically prepared.
The films revolved around high school students Gabriella and Troy, an academically gifted girl and an athlete, who get roles in the school's musical.
Ford has said that the attack derailed her, socially and academically, for years; Kavanaugh has denied that he was involved in any such incident.
And not surprisingly, children are "more likely to behave, perform well academically, and make academic gains" when they have opportunities to learn and engage.
But while I have always done well academically, I didn't come out of college knowing exactly what I wanted to do with my life.
He was ready academically and athletically, but it was simply too far from home for someone who was born and raised in the Midwest.
They know that I've studied Gitmo academically and have written about it journalistically, and yet "Games at Gitmo" always provokes question, assumption, or judgment.
White students who attend more integrated schools are not hurt academically, and may benefit from exposure to classmates who better represent the nation's diversity.
In my experience, the "acting white" charge was reserved for black kids, academically successful or otherwise, who didn't fit in with the main crowd.
To the Editor: As a high school student studying French, I can clearly see the benefits that it provides me both personally and academically.
Janet Pinkston, who is white, was bused to duPont Manual High School, which performed better academically than the school she otherwise would have attended.
Aspire aims to give students information about higher education, the application process and financial aid, and prepare them academically for the transition to college.
In Trump's view, elitists are always highly academically trained and always more concerned with protecting certain classes over meeting the needs of working people.
She said she travels independently, uses assistive technologies to complete her work as efficiently as others who can see, and excels academically and socially.
"Students who use vouchers to attend private schools have fared worse academically compared to their closely matched peers attending public schools," the researchers found.
Her experience at preschool, interacting with other children and attending class, has helped her grow socially and academically, her family and medical professionals testified.
By the seventh or eighth generation, his children were so gifted that they could goof off yet still excel academically and date pretty girls.
The recent restructuring of the school system splits it into two distinct parts in an effort to improve the academically and financially struggling system.
Inside 80WSE Gallery, New York University's 2018 MFA graduates assembled a thesis show of work that runs the gamut from academically inscrutable to emotionally resonant.
The Price of Admission reported that his father Charlie donated $2.5 million to Harvard right before his academically unremarkable progeny scored a coveted spot there.
Even the prettiest, coolest, sparkliest people who look like Brandy [Melville] models and are on the swim and lacrosse teams are also really good academically.
"This discovery is the only academically verified specimen to exist at only 16 to 18 weeks of gestation," University of Cambridge said in a statement.
And more immediately, it can mean that teenagers are not performing at their best, whether academically, in sports or behind the wheel of a car.
It's true that access programs take some academically talented children from poor and working-poor families to selective colleges, but that pipeline remains frustratingly narrow.
St Paul's, a grand, academically selective school in west London, sent 25.4 pupils overseas in 2003, almost all to America, up from 2200 in 2000.
Strictly speaking, Stanford University in California is not part of the Ivy League of top U.S. colleges, but is viewed as academically on a par.
It's mostly academically scorned and mostly popularly adored, and, depending on who you read, it's either the savior of modern feminism or its death knell.
Donald Trump may not understand this dynamic academically, but it was a hallmark of his campaign and has become a hallmark of his pre-presidency.
As parents put more pressure on students to succeed academically (and students put more pressure on themselves), anxiety and depression have skyrocketed in recent years.
It is academically well-documented that this type of gambling is poised to explode with local and strategic economic impacts negatively affecting the U.S. economy.
Over the years, officials at the local, state, and federal level have proposed solutions to help military kids adjust to new schools and succeed academically.
He was a brilliant, academically trained draftsman whose central subject would always be the human body — depicted with a visceral combination of disinterest and tenderness.
This is especially true for low-income single moms, whose academically successful kids are disproportionately more likely to receive full rides to the best schools.
Meanwhile, recent studies of newer statewide voucher systems in Louisiana and Ohio found that students who used vouchers actually fell behind academically, particularly in math.
The college has been setting up programs to help them adjust culturally, if not academically, while also offering them chances to develop outside the classroom.
This also helps explain why so few women are opting to major in STEM subjects in college, even though they are academically prepared for them.
Increasingly, liberal students who were academically talented said, Hey, this is a professional career I can really see myself being in, and conservative students didn't.
So it was something of a surprise when, this past February, an academically inclined online publication appeared, full of erudite arguments in favor of Trump.
Laughing, he said that he was the least academically prepared, but that he thought admissions officers were impressed by his State Department scholarship to Morocco.
Compared to those living in more stable homes, children who experience residential instability underperform academically, develop weaker vocabulary skills, and engage in more problem behaviors.
Media Nets aren't growthy, but they're cash annuities, and we apply an academically consistent 6x EV/EBITDA multiple on ESPN, given our bearish sports view.
On the other hand, thinking about attention deficit problems at a very young age can help those children who are really struggling academically and socially.
For students who aren't academically gifted, they are left with schools that aren't properly funded, or they are thrust into the workforce with little pay.
While we are extremely proud of our rich athletic tradition at Mater Dei, we hold our students to a higher standard both academically and personally.
My parents' motivation was that they didn't want anything to distract me from my schoolwork — it was mostly about making sure I was doing well academically.
One bright spot was the season debut of freshman forward Kezie Okpala, who was cleared academically and registered six points in 28 minutes off the bench.
A study by the Second Military Medical University of Shanghai found that such children did worse than average academically and were more likely to be depressed.
Well, it's one thing to understand it academically, or to generally care about it because you view yourself as a good person who's concerned with justice.
Originally, the plan had been to move while keeping Kayvon enrolled at Dorsey, but Shawnta had long harbored worries that Kayvon wasn't being challenged enough academically.
Some parents worry that their children could veer off track academically and never recover, but higher education experts argue that the opposite appears to be true.
"We go to numerous A.A.U. tournaments, some of the other academically geared camps around the country, scouting out talent," Brown said as he watched players scrimmage.
"What a slap in the face for people who are waitlisted, or people who are academically smart but can't afford college," wrote one Instagram user, @tyleranny.
The thing that made us most proud was the fact that Brock had to be accepted academically before he could be considered for an athletic scholarship.
Specifically, one company, made up of a whole lot of academically-minded engineers, lined the roads on which a lot of secured content would drive down.
Dr. Blasey told senators that the experience "dramatically altered my life for a long time," and during her college years, she struggled academically because of it.
However, these volunteers are often not compensated academically for their work via course credit or authorship while they performing jobs that hourly workers get paid for.
Northwestern University's Nicole Stephens found that first-generation college students — much like black students — struggle to keep up academically with students who have college-educated parents.
Though she finished high school a semester early, she claims not to have been particularly academically gifted, not doing well in "touchy-feely" classes like philosophy.
A large body of scholarship shows that nonwhite and poor children perform better academically at integrated schools, and go on to have higher incomes as adults.
That I was not only academically inclined but physically promising pleased him, and both aspects of the self were to be cultivated, that was obviously true.
"It really showed a window into the way I would think she would approach challenges and questions academically — with great consideration, depth and fairness," she said.
Even though the 6-year-old missed so much school he never fell behind academically, St. Helen Catholic School Principal Patrick Gannon told CNN affiliate WJW.
Things like can you pay full tuition, or what high school did you go to, and have that high school's other alumni entering been academically successful?
Each week, the girls commit about 10 to 11 hours to the program, whose various elements work in tandem to support them physically, academically and emotionally.
"Studies show that students who feel at home on campus are the students that thrive both socially and academically," Borst said in a statement released by LHU.
Meiduo says there were many students at her previous school in Tibet who were good enough academically to qualify for neidiban education, but decided not to apply.
Mr. Vought is a graduate of Wheaton College, which bills itself as "an explicitly Christian, academically rigorous, fully residential liberal arts college and graduate school" in Illinois.
This will enable students to not only succeed academically, but also to grow the self-assurance they will need to achieve their goals and navigate life's challenges.
A study conducted at the Eastern Ontario Research Institute found that people who exercised twice a week for 10 weeks felt more competent socially, academically and athletically.
The NCAA noted UNC had taken steps to correct the system that led to the allegations, including more centralized management of a program to academically support athletes.
High school can be academically grueling, psychologically stressful, and emotionally draining, and moving on from that life phase is worth celebrating, too — for teens and their families.
He was stressed about the tournament, choosing a college and raising his standardized test score so he could qualify academically to compete at a Division I program.
A study conducted at the Eastern Ontario Research Institute found that people who exercised twice a week for 10 weeks felt more competent socially, academically, and athletically.
It replaces the No Child Left Behind law from 2002, which created controversial standardized testing requirements mean to ensure students were academically proficient and hold teachers accountable.
The Air Force goes even further: It has a residential prep school where academically marginal students whom it wants to admit can do a year of remediation.
She met with the principal and persuaded him to give her a list of ninth-grade students who were academically struggling and facing challenges outside of school.
Despite Trump's frequent criticism of the Fed and its chairman, Jerome Powell, the candidates named on Tuesday fit better with the relatively impartial and academically inclined norm.
She graduated from Cold Spring Harbor High school in 1974, where she performed well academically and played a number of sports, including field hockey, tennis and basketball.
Read about how personal story editing helped 40 college freshman at Duke University who were struggling academically, then think about how you can use the techniques yourself.
And while urban children have thrived academically in recent decades, that has not been the case for their rural cousins, especially those who have been left behind.
Student Opinion Have you ever felt self-conscious or even embarrassed because you performed better than other people academically, in a sports competition or in anything else?
And there are many other schools that screen students academically, like Eleanor Roosevelt High School in Manhattan, where just 16 percent of students are black or Hispanic.
Many of them enter college academically behind their wealthier peers, who got better K-through-12 educations, and schools do too little to help them catch up.
" Location: South Hadley, MassachusettsEnrollment: 2,327Tuition and fees 2017-2018: $47,20173Description: "This academically prestigious women's college meets 100 percent of the demonstrated financial need of all admitted students.
Leaders in high-performing systems recruit academically capable students into teacher education who also possess a passion for teaching and an ability to connect with young people.
The shorthanded Bulldogs are without freshman forward Abdul Ado (academically ineligible this semester) and sophomore guard Xavian Stapleton, who is recovering from an offseason ACL injury. 3.
Trump noted that children who are involved in sports have higher self-esteem, are better at working with others and are more likely to perform well academically.
For instance, a less academically rigorous survey by YouGov found that 43% of Londoners believe app-based ride sharing is a genuine alternative to owning a car.
Sophia is struggling academically, and wants that edge; Jamie, an arrogant rich kid who lives on his family's yacht, seems more motivated by a thrill he hasn't tried.
From the beginning, my ultimate goal has been to provide the best environment for Elwood students' growth physically, mentally and academically, and I remain focused on that purpose.
"The curriculum presented in Year 2 reflects the increased ability of the children, both academically and socially," Helen Haslem, Head of Lower School, says on the school's website.
At one point, during my junior year, four of the six members of the Varsity crew couldn't play, either because they were academically ineligible or had been arrested.
There are also magnet schools, which are designed around a theme, like STEM – science, technology, engineering and math – and may attract more academically gifted students via an application.
One study of non-medical use by college students found rates of up to 25 percent, with abuse concentrated among students with lower grades at academically competitive universities.
By asking about criminal convictions on their applications, the schools discourage applicants who are capable of performing academically at college and who present no danger to campus safety.
Unlike their academically trained counterparts, these artists, often employing found or castoff materials, tend to work primarily for themselves, unconcerned with the canon or the latest critical positions.
Editorial Colleges that ask about criminal convictions on their applications frighten away untold numbers of students who could succeed academically and who present no risk to campus safety.
" U.M.B.C. had prepared him well, not just academically but also, he said, by making him feel that he was "part of something more than just your individual attainment.
A recent survey by Learning Heroes found that 90 percent of parents think their kids are on track academically, while the actual number is less than 40 percent.
In this letter, students should express what makes them specifically excited for a school or program and how they plan to contribute to the school academically and socially.
Student Athlete tries somewhat successfully to lay out why college players get a particularly bad deal financially, academically, and physically in the face of such an uncertain future.
This situation should be more manageable academically because many schools are still operating, even if virtually, so there will be less trauma and the disruption may be shorter.
Using the 14 characteristics of fascism enumerated by Dr. Lawrence Britt, who academically compared numerous fascist regimes, we see that the Trump administration ticks all 14 boxes: 1.
" Nicholas had improved academically and athletically since starting high school, Mr. Hite said, and his mentors in Florida "felt like the best was still to come for him.
"The curriculum presented in Year 2 reflects the increased ability of the children, both academically and socially," Helen Haslem, Head of Lower School, says on the school's site.
Fifty years on, retention rates of black college students continue to be significantly lower than their white counterparts, especially in academically selective predominantly white institutions of higher learning.
It's been almost 231 years since I took the test and can't quite remember the test itself, but I came from a pretty academically strong junior high school.
" She said Rasmusen has also written that gay men "are promiscuous and unable to avoid abusing students" and that black students are "generally inferior academically to white students.
"I feel I'm damaged emotionally, financially, academically," said Peyman, 23, who was supposed to begin a degree in electrical engineering at the University of California at San Diego.
Discuss what supports and props your student has relied on for doing well academically, managing socially and generally staying healthy and happy in the first years of college.
Whenever one of the academically impressive and persistently anxious girls in my practice tells me about staying up until 2 in the morning studying, I see an opening.
But the youth need education to be academically and technically ready to explore the boundaries of knowledge and technology for their own benefit and that of their countries.
A strong body of research, beginning in the 1960s with the now-famous Coleman Report, suggests that low-income students do better academically when exposed to middle-class ones.
Much of the political and media coverage of this group has focused on the academically gifted, but, in terms of distance traveled, DACA's biggest success stories involve moderate achievers.
Academically, Andy DelVesco was what one might expect of a student at UCLA: Nearly straight As in high school, National Honor Society, state spelling bee award and the like.
The school's mission statement, available online, says clearly that the school's goal is to develop kids academically and athletically so they can earn college scholarships to continue their educations.
"During my second and third year, I missed several classes and three quarters," she said, adding that she remained on track academically with the help of professors and advisors.
Despite being an academically advanced student, she says she dropped out of school and joined Nxivm, Raniere's secret society in Albany, New York, with the support of her parents.
A top-rated recruit, Stanley could have gone almost anywhere in the country to play college football, but he focused on academically-challenging schools like Notre Dame and Stanford.
But while black and Hispanic students make up 68 percent of the city's public school students, they are just 11 percent of the students at these academically rigorous schools.
The students improved academically for the simple reason that they were able to concentrate on what was being taught, without their attention being swept away by conflicts and anxieties.
But if she had not lived a middle-class life and been academically trained, would her paintings now be slotted as "outsider art" rather than classic early Modern abstraction?
Things you were academically obliged to learn, which you never realized would be of use, come full circle, as you are inspired to draw from new sources of inspiration.
"Transfers" considers the plight of students who, however intelligent, may not be "ready academically or socially," as Ms. Thurber puts it, for the education they've been taught to want.
Article of the Day Article: Ending the Curse of Remedial Math Before Reading Have you or a friend ever had trouble academically and somehow managed to turn it around?
Instead, in October, the department proposed effectively closing one of them, Public School 241, the STEM Institute of Manhattan, which has been struggling academically and shedding students for years.
"Before the Fall" answers this question equivocally — but it comes closest with the art of a Jewish painter who, it goes without saying, could not treat that question academically.
The book's publisher, run by an evangelical Christian and self-described Republican patriot, argues it is academically sound and is being targeted by those advancing a liberal political agenda.
Castle was dyslexic, and struggled academically until he began studying industrial design as an undergraduate at the University of Kansas, later earning an MFA in sculpture there in 22014.
He had no disciplinary issues while in the juvenile detention center and continued to thrive academically, though he reported previously attempting suicide and having repeated nightmares about his parents' deaths.
When I was at Moody Bible Institute, the intellectual culture there was very intense and academically rigorous, even though we were studying the Bible from a literalist point of view.
That might upset the more academically-minded film snobs of the world but will likely please fans who have a meltdown every time their favorite franchise gets a negative rating.
The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), a triennial test run by the OECD, a club mostly of rich countries, suggests that Japanese students are among the top performers academically.
So-called bathroom bills will make an already vulnerable group even less secure, which has been shown to lead to students missing classes, underperforming academically and dropping out of school.
In many cases, Greenberg said, his clients end up being happy both socially and academically at the schools they start at, and don't follow through on plans to transfer up.
That presented new challenges, though, in terms of housing and classrooms; most of all, the administrators were concerned with the number of academically high-achieving applicants from low-income families.
Some cadets come in more athletically or academically gifted than their peers, but, according to a new study, those qualities aren't the ones that best predict who will successfully graduate.
In junior high, Donald was recognized as an academically gifted student so his parents enrolled him at St. Augustine, an all-male, all-black Catholic high school in New Orleans.
Mismatch actually harms academically talented black students Another way to test the effects of mismatch is to assess how highly qualified black students fare when they attend less rigorous colleges.
At U.C.L.A., he coached his team to the title game, only to have the N.C.A.A. toss out the tournament run because Brown had played two players who were academically ineligible.
Kristich told the NCAA that Bergman made sure Acha was academically eligible to play by enrolling him in two independent-study courses so he could later transfer to Coastal Carolina.
Academically, Speidel carries a 3.40 grade point average in an individually-designed major in the College of Education and Social Services, with a double minor in behavior change and coaching.
Homeless students tend to struggle academically: In the 216-21 school year, just 12 percent of students living in shelters passed the state math exam, and 15 percent passed English.
She was precisely the sort of person who would reach our campus, take full advantage of the resources she'd been lacking throughout her life, and contribute both socially and academically.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads LONDON — The National Gallery's fascinating exhibition Michelangelo and Sebastiano is an academically rigorous survey examining the 25-year relationship between the two Renaissance artists.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Earlier this year, nearly 26,000 students found themselves academically stranded when 30 college campuses under the control of Dream Center Education Holdings suddenly closed.
He barely broke even in his eight years there, but he was credited with doing a lot at an academically rigorous institution with no trace of a football factory image.
Mr. Hathaway was more interested in sports in those years, but Mr. Cummings pushed him to excel academically, telling him there was more at stake than his own school record.
The performance of black and Hispanic students could also improve, as researchers have found that those students benefit academically from attending schools with children of other races and ethnic groups.
Students who struggled academically in their public school are now bridging the gap in reading and math in these alternative schools, performing on par with those from higher income brackets.
The school offers plenty of playtime, but also has a strong focus on getting its students, many of whom are learning English for the first time, academically ready for kindergarten.
In its ruling, the court detailed statistics that showed African-American and Hispanic students, as well as poor students and those learning the English language, lagging behind their peers academically.
She studied English and voice at Berea College, a tuition-free school in Appalachia for the academically talented but economically strapped, and has a master's degree from Harvard Divinity School.
I endured many of the same pressures to succeed academically as my ethnic peers, the same conflicts about what media and popular culture it was appropriate for me to consume.
Knowing that being academically prepared, being accepted to schools, and having the desire to attend college still wasn't enough to ensure our students got the education that they deserved was maddening.
The exhibition methodically and academically does what it says on the tin: offer compelling instances of collaboration and reveal the twists and turns of a 21824-year friendship and artistic relationship.
Once accepted, she played basketball and pushed herself academically, which, with the hour-long commute each way, took its toll: "I got zero sleep, but it was worth it," she says.
Kids on the show get to line up for lunch based on their academic ranking, and the food supply isn't equal to the demand, so the academically weakest students may starve.
So, I turned to my real-life friend Henry J. Meyer, an academically published physicist with a Masters degree in the subject, who's currently working on his PhD in electrical engineering.
Children born to teen mothers are more likely to struggle academically, to be subjected to abuse, to be involved in crime and to experience developmental delays and depression, the authors write.
" Ironically, CCHS' mission statement reads ... "At Covington Catholic, our primary purpose is to embrace the gospel message of Jesus Christ in order to educate young men spiritually, academically, physically, and socially.
The goal is two-fold: to fully prepare students for life after high school and demonstrate to military parents that their children are not being shortchanged academically by their continued service.
These families have less time and fewer resources to spend educating their children, who, as a result, are less likely to be academically successful and more likely to exhibit behavioral issues.
As a child growing up in Brooklyn and Queens, Uwemedimo excelled academically, graduated from high school at age 15 and won a scholarship to cover her undergraduate and medical school tuition.
The student Universities expect an influx of new talent once residency visas for students are extended from one to five years -- and for academically "exceptional" students, as long as 28.9 years.
She became the first in her family to go to college, but even as she excelled academically and professionally, she was at a loss when the check engine light came on.
At the same time, new leaders in higher education opened up their institutions' aristocratic gates, shedding a portion of academically mediocre bluebloods in favor of scrappier kids with impressive test scores.
Having a positive attitude has been thought to affect how much a child learns and achieves academically, and researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine think they now know why.
Lee Fiora, a middle-class Midwesterner, feels out of step with her more privileged peers and academically at sea in her freshman year at Ault, a prep school in New England.
The Wildlife Conservation school was started in 2007 by the Urban Assembly, a nonprofit organization that runs 21 small schools across the city, serving primarily low-income and academically struggling students.
" It reported, "Former Michigan football standout Jim Harbaugh said the University of Michigan admits academically borderline students and then keeps them eligible for sports by steering them into specific academic areas.
Hogg had spent her teen-age years at a boarding school deemed suitable for the less academically inclined daughters of the affluent and titled, and she had not gone to college.
And if that child is left in a situation where he or she is unsafe, or failing academically, or at risk of dropping out of school altogether, then something must change.
It could be a bit rough and it was tough to get work done at school...Nothing too crazy ever happened but it wasn't, so to speak, an "academically nourishing" environment.
"The model minority myth frames Asian boys as being kind of nerdy, caring too much about doing well, so that may cause them to become less academically attached," Ms. Hsin said.
It's got the hungry stoners, like Action Bronson on F*CK, THAT'S DELICIOUS; the innovators, like BONG APPÉTIT's Abdullah Saeed; and the curious and academically inclined reporters, like WEEDIQUETTE's Krishna Andavolu.
Dog Behavior Expert: Owners Often Ignore Signs of Potential Danger Dr. Richard Polsky, an academically trained expert on animal behavior and dog bites, told PEOPLE that owners often overlook potential warning signs.
I was the girl that had a tightly-knit circle of friends, partied frequently, had a brother, became an established singer/songwriter in college, succeeded academically, and slept with whomever she wanted.
Fauxmosexuality may finally be on its way out, but now, rather than (rightfully) excoriating Katy Perry for faking it, we're chastising queer artists for not being believably, consistently, or academically queer enough.
It was young people like Evans — unlike the average student who receives the scholarship, she grew up poor and while academically motivated, not a valedictorian — that the award was designed to assist.
Too many academically talented children who come from families where household income hovers at the American median of $59,000 or below are shut out of college or shunted away from selective universities.
Instead, she learns to keep her head down and work hard, and she uses this strategy to excel academically and get degrees from Princeton and Harvard in electrical engineering, law, and business.
Read More: Canada Is Looking to Airbnb to Help Fix Its Housing Crisis "New York, in some sense, is sort of a good case academically" because of its relative wealth, Wachsmuth said.
And although it will not be academically selective, the fees will have the effect of excluding pupils from the most deprived backgrounds, who are often the costliest for the state to teach.
When I was going through the process of writing about this academically, I think back then, in 2007, a lot of my professors were asking me why any of it was relevant.
Ferrante's academically-minded mothers can often be found fleeing their grasping young children; guilty and yet exuberant, they demand lives entirely their own—only to return when the appeal of independence wanes.
"Our group has found that these improvements not only show up academically but are significant enough that we see changes in their brains with increased physical activity," Rofey said in an email.
The Owls have consistently ranked among the nation's top programs in Graham's 256 seasons, despite the challenge of finding players who can cut it academically at Rice, a private school in Houston.
Of course he was, and is: That he doesn't always achieve the same level of inspiration, or that he doesn't dovetail neatly with more cloistered, academically acceptable poetic models, hardly discredits him.
He said that there were so many academically struggling athletes that tutors were overwhelmed, and that the players had to be put in classes separate from the rest of the student body.
The "Back and Boiler" income share agreements allow students to fund a year or two of their education after they have declared a major and have proven they are keeping up academically.
Shum was key to Microsoft's efforts to take the cutting-edge work it was doing through its more academically-minded subsidiary Microsoft Research and translate it into actual products Microsoft can sell.
More academically, left philosophers and intellectuals like Erik Olin Wright, Peter Frase, Carole Pateman, Antonio Negri, and Michael Hardt and in particular Philippe Van Parijs have written in favor of the idea.
Or maybe they're responding to some questions with one partner and others with another partner… Even the term "cheating" is used academically and "infidelity" and all these words that are fairly loaded.
For more on education, watch our documentary 'Last Chance High' There's some evidence much of the improvements New Orleans schools saw came from simply getting rid of students who were academically underperforming.
I've wanted to put 45-Down into a crossword for ages, because it's something not much used academically, but that I think we can all relate to (it's pretty hard to do!).
The N.C.A.A. wants to take back their reputation that they really are academically focused first, putting the student ahead of the athlete, and this is an issue where they can do that.
Low-income black and Hispanic students are more susceptible to losing ground academically during summer breaks, and libraries help to lessen the pitfalls from the hiatus from reading and writing, Chalkbeat reports.
He ended up at a high school several miles from his home, where he said he suffered academically because he often felt isolated as the lone black student in his honors classes.
She contrasts the performance of these students with academically talented ones, such as those who take MIT's rigorous online courses, pass proctored exams and gain admittance to an on-campus master's program.
Mr. Clarida, a Columbia University economist, is a scholar in monetary policy whose expertise would complement the background of the Fed chairman, Jerome H. Powell, who is not an academically trained economist.
To Jennifer Funkhauser, a French teacher at Harding and a hands-on participant in the meal program, making sure the students are well fed is paramount to their ability to succeed academically.
A white student who is in the middle of the pack academically, but has legacy status, has a higher chance of getting in than a typical Asian applicant in the top tenth.
While students have the right to bring speakers of all kinds to campus, the university itself must be responsible and academically honest when giving such events a show of approval through cosponsorship.
Taking a "clear stand" represents a practice mostly pursued by academically educated trade union secretaries with an Antifa socialisation who are ultimately, given their self-understanding, not even able to act otherwise.
Inspired by the 28500 National Commission on Consumer Finance, the task force is intended to examine the whole of consumer finance law academically, something that hasn't been done since the 6900 commission.
Despite my previous flibbertigibbet approach to school, I was bound and determined to change my ways and excel academically—a goal that was perhaps fueled by the astronomical costs of my tuition.
If you are the only minority faculty in the department and no one else has sounded the bell about the student's action, is speaking out going to call you into question academically?
The difference lies in what colleges do with students once they admit them, as evidenced by data that shows stark differences in graduation rates for academically similar students across socioeconomic and racial groups.
This young woman explained that if she dares question the liberal groupthink of her high school teachers, whether in a written essay or a classroom discussion, she is penalized academically in some way.
"As a physician, I can make that argument and I can look at it academically and make the argument against the CDC, if they really want to engage me on it," he said.
The college has made a point of recruiting players who have flamed out at major-college programs, failed to qualify for Division I academically or otherwise had trouble capitalizing on their football talent.
Related: Escaping Into Prison: The Battle Over Immigrant Mothers and Children Detained by the US The children taken to Mexico had more problems with depression and struggled in school, both academically and socially.
But she also tracks the biographies of those early illustrators with a scholar's thoroughness and zest for detail, and while this approach is academically laudable, lay readers are likely to find themselves bored.
Anyway, at the training facility where I live pretty much full time, a couple of parents were talking about having to take their sons out of racing, because they weren't cutting it academically.
The Brearley School on Manhattan's Upper East Side, which is among the most academically rigorous institutions in the city, announced on Monday that all applicants who consider themselves female are welcome to apply.
If students were allowed one or two excused days a month for a "mental health day," they would not only improve their wellbeing but also have more of a chance of thriving academically.
While some students can get what they need academically in three years, Dr. Goldrick-Rab said, packing in all those credits can take away from the time they can spend on other things.
Meanwhile, even some supporters of school choice programs remain skeptical of increased federal involvement, which could come with regulations on which students are accepted by private schools, and how students are assessed academically.
A first-generation college student from St. Louis, she struggled academically when she was at Mizzou and said that having more resources for first generation students at the time would have done wonders.
She did not know that though Asians were consistently the highest academically performing group among Harvard applicants, they earned admission at a rate lower than any other racial group between 21978 and 19703.
I think my high school has definitely prepared me academically for college yet I still feel unprepared because there is really no one teaching you how to handle and experience the college process.
Studies have repeatedly show n that children who are raised with involved fathers are less likely to struggle academically, repeat a grade, get expelled or suspended from school, and get pregnant as teenage girls.
Studies, surveys and psychologists have found this extreme anxiety stems from pressures to perform academically, uncertain financial futures, impending climate change, publicized mass shootings and pressure to craft a perfect image on social media.
"My mum was a proper Tiger Mum," he says explaining the term: a strict mum who pushes her children to succeed academically, based on the Amy Chua memoir Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.
My father, with the encouragement of a grade-school teacher, was academically ambitious, and he turned into a pipe-smoking, NPR-listening professor, a political scientist who chaired the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
" The MAS program was a success, U.S. District Court Judge Wallace Tashima noted, writing that "one would expect that officials responsible for public education in Arizona would continue, not terminate, an academically successful program.
When researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital studied "superagers " — elderly people who function at extremely high levels academically, physically and professionally — they found that they challenged themselves mentally and physically more often than their peers.
Moses had no way of knowing that the idea of the pure artist — one who'd not been academically trained, but simply followed her own muse — had seized the imagination of the artistic avant-garde.
Jenna Lanz, a second-year medical student and co-president of the Players, said Columbia was barely on her radar screen when she was applying to medical schools, because it was a stretch academically.
His contract also outlines additional compensation, which is standard among college coaches, if the team performs well academically, and includes bonuses for winning the regular-season championship and performing well in the N.C.A.A. tournament.
A large body of research shows that nonwhite and low-income students who attend integrated schools perform better academically, and also see long-term benefits such as higher incomes and lower rates of incarceration.
And Mr. Cummings "jumped on the opportunity" to participate in the alliance's College Access and Success Program, which helps parents boost their children academically while providing support for them to pursue higher education themselves.
"She wanted to call attention in whatever way she could — both academically through scholarship, but certainly through humor — to support women's rights," said Dr. Jean Emans, chief of adolescent medicine at Boston Children's Hospital.
Many middle-class parents have become anxious about sending children to the local public high school out of fear that they will lag behind their peers at schools that are expensive or academically selective.
Isaiah Stewart added 15 points for the Huskies (13-15 overall, 3-12 Pacific-12 Conference), who improved to 2-11 since point guard Quade Green, a transfer from Kentucky, was declared academically ineligible.
Many students present symptoms of anxiety related to financing their education or struggling academically, concerns that are better handled by creating an open line of dialogue with the bursar's office or academic enrichment programs.
In Newport, R.I., close to the Naval War College, NAPS was founded in 21969 as a place where enlisted men with officer potential could get up to speed academically before entering the Naval Academy.
One of the largest indicators of a child's success academically is whether or not they meet a third grade reading level by the third grade, but children are never encouraged to want to learn.
A 2017 survey by the American College Health Association found that 42 percent of students, for example, reported suffering anxiety and depression so severe that it at times hurt their ability to function academically.
Dr. Richard Polsky, an academically trained expert on animal behavior and dog bites, says it is unlikely recent changes in their lives contributed to the canines' homicidal aggression last Thursday — despite what authorities have said.
Also, many of us are children of immigrants who came to this country with the expectation that their children were going excel professionally and academically, while following cultural traditions in a country that vilifies them.
Many experts call student loan programs a favorable aspect of the U.S. higher education system since they allow students to go as far as they can academically, all the way through a world-class doctorate.
"The danger is, if you don't get these things right, that children are really being hampered in their learning and it's undermining their efforts to progress academically," says professor Peter Barrett who led the study.
Born to immigrants working in the tech world, I spent most of my adolescence living in a sea of suburbs, and from an early age felt pressure to succeed academically and set my ambitions high.
" Academically, he floundered, but he sometimes won the lead in the school's theater productions, which led to his hanging out with a girl named Lisa Hanawalt, now the production designer and a producer on "BoJack.
They tend to be the best prepared academically and most able to pay, said Thomas G. Mortenson, senior scholar at the Pell Institute for the Study of Opportunity in Higher Education, who tracks this data.
The "acting white" theory — the idea that African-American kids underachieve academically because they and their peers associate being smart with acting white, and because they're afraid they'll be shunned — was born in the 1980s.
According to a 2014 survey of 20,000 Chinese primary school students and their parents in four provinces, almost two-thirds of the boys surveyed performed poorly academically, compared with less than one-third of girls.
For example, in the United States National Longitudinal Lesbian Family Study, teenagers of lesbian mothers were reported to do better socially and academically than other teenagers, and had fewer problems with rule-breaking and aggression.
Yes, there are organizations like the North South Foundation, which started in the late 1980s to help kids succeed academically in the U.S. In the early 1990s, they started hosting academic competitions like spelling bees.
Analyzing her background, administrators there identified her as "academically at risk" and required her to enroll in a seven-week summer session, where she was introduced to the college's tutoring, advising and financial literacy programs.
A white student who is near the bottom of the pack academically, but has legacy status, has roughly the same chance of getting in than a typical Asian applicant in the top tenth (see chart).
This is from the Greek for "place," TOPOS, which was sort of academically appropriate in my case because I could not place CERES, the Roman goddess of agriculture at 38A, for the life of me.
Likewise, children of teen parents are more likely to experience low birth weight and infant mortality, more likely to be unprepared for school and to struggle academically, and more likely to become teen parents themselves.
Even when boys are really bringing it academically, I know they do not operate with the same sense of they've gotta be gorgeous, and they've gotta be really kind and giving to people around them.
Although we're more likely to lean toward scientific rational while Saturn is in Aquarius, there will still be an interesting dynamic between scientific communities and spiritual folks as Aquarius is both academically and religiously-oriented.
My observation is that most of the printed letters are from either politically, professionally or academically connected people whose expertise in the field seems to qualify them to have their opinions shared with the readership.
Many of the accusations in the case focused on Jan Boxill, an academic adviser to the women's basketball team, who was said to have improperly helped players academically and steered them to the bogus courses.
However, she alleges, Mater Dei staffers would often minimize the degree to which Jojuan was struggling academically, and even went so far as to tell her that benching him would be tantamount to a forfeit.
Huckabee, who eventually endorsed Trump in 2016 and for whom his daughter, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, is now the deputy White House press secretary, said funding for the arts should be preserved to help students achieve academically.
Illinois announced early in the game that three returning starters - cornerback Nate Hobbs, safety Bennett Williams and tight end Lou Dorsey - had been suspended indefinitely while three other returning starters were either injured or academically ineligible.
During this same period in their lives, the academically gifted students proved nearly twice as likely to use cannabis persistently and 50% more likely to use it occasionally compared with their peers with lower test scores.
Another interesting finding from this study: students who go to bed earlier and wake up earlier do better academically than those who stay up late, even if those night owls are spending that time doing homework.
While "colonialism" is not a term many nonindigenous persons typically use even in climate activism, it is the academically rigorous term for describing a significant part of the political relationship between the U.S. and indigenous peoples.
US organization is not old enough to have graduation rates, it says its scholars are thriving academically, noting that 94 percent return to college after their first year, while the national average is just 72 percent.
A 1935 pencil study for a Recife garden is an academically correct perspectival view of leafy trees lined up along a large pool, with nothing particularly Brazilian in sight except a distant stand of palm trees.
These videos don't just dispense useful tips and tricks for getting the most out of study time; they also provide a community for studious, academically minded teens who feel isolated and in a minority at school.
Not everyone should be college-bound and bear the cost of student debt; more emphasis should be placed on vocational training: carpentry, plumbing, electrical work and the like, for those who are not as academically inclined.
David J. Kroll, chairman of the pharmaceutical sciences department from 2008 to 2011, said the program was so academically challenging that about 25 percent of its 120 students left the program each year during his tenure.
I knew academically and I'd observed slightly how much hate had been directed at her from the right, especially in the 1990s, and then I'd been part of the criticism leveled at her from the left.
The conservative response to supposed liberal bias and indoctrination within the academy wasn't the creation of more viewpoint-neutral and academically free universities, but the funneling of resources to explicitly conservative universities like Liberty and Hillsdale.
But, according to Harvard, a large majority of its 40,000-plus applicants are academically qualified, and applicants with perfect grade point averages or standardized test scores far exceed the number of seats in its entering class.
I had a pretty severe learning disability, dyslexia, struggled academically, and the only reason Santa Clara University would have ever accepted me was because I was a left-handed first baseman who could hit fairly well.
Lucia rebels and distances herself from friends, Beto struggles academically, Emilio exhibits spurts of anger, and Val, not even 13 years old, turns to religion and demonstrates symptoms of anxiety and a heightened fear of abandonment. 
And a study of a large program in Ohio — conducted by the Thomas B. Fordham Institute — found that students who used vouchers to attend private schools fared worse academically compared with their peers attending public school.
The understanding that high-achieving students turn to drugs like Adderall and Ritalin to get ahead academically is so well-documented that the stereotype has made its way onto TV shows like Riverdale and Pretty Little Liars.
We figured out that we could monetize this if we really wanted to, so we had our friends reach out to certain people who were struggling academically and two points or so off from a certain grade.
She's also a notable philanthropist, having contributed more than $100 million to provide education to academically gifted girls from disadvantaged backgrounds, and is continually discussed as a potential presidential candidate, though she said that's not for her.
When I take this version of the PARCC test in a few weeks, I will put in my full effort, but all the while knowing that the results will not be showing who I really am academically.
We know that by age 3, children living in economically challenged neighborhoods are exposed to 30 million fewer words than their affluent peers, which sets them back academically and makes the road ahead that much more challenging.
"We're looking to compete against similar institutions, like-minded universities," Athletic Director Brad Bates said, referring to other academically respected private universities with competitive football teams — the colleges against which the Eagles are often competing for prospects.
Offended students wrote a letter calling for her resignation for use of the word and for seeming to suggest that some minority students who were dropping out were simply academically unfit rather than the victims of discrimination.
Flood, who was fired in 2015, was suspended for three games and fined $50,000 that season after the university found he had improperly contacted a professor in an effort to help a star player remain academically eligible.
Like many of his academically trained peers, his compositions are obstacle courses, often driven by a conceptual conceit — but they also feel more directly affecting, more melodic, more subtly bound to tradition than most improvised music today.
"There is research that shows that kids who work a reasonable amount do better academically, because it helps them structure their time and is a good non-academic way to connect with people on campus," she explains.
As mentioned, Delphia's model requires that there's a certain volume of users on the platform participating before it can work as designed by the data scientists on the team, who have published academically regarding the company's model.
On summary sheets, Asian-American applicants were much more likely than other races to be described as "standard strong," meaning lacking special qualities that would warrant admission, even though they were more academically qualified, the plaintiffs said.
Later, the term "outsider art" became more common in the United Kingdom and the United States; it was applied to an array of visionaries on the margins of mainstream society who were not academically trained, "professional" artists.
Despite all of this, I did quite well academically at school and eventually returned to college to get an English literature degree, followed by a journalism MA. I now make a living doing a job that I love.
Tony Scott's 1964 album Music for Zen Meditation is widely considered to be the first new age recording, and even more academically minded composers like Stockhausen, John Cage, and Pauline Oliveros have made music inspired by meditation practices.
I was given the opportunity to go to Berkeley because of my family's financial situation, but their financial situation was the exact reason they decided I'd be better off somewhere else, if not academically then at least psychologically.
In 2014, with a very large gift, I established Cooperman College Scholars, a program which identifies academically talented, highly motivated students of Strong character in Essex County (including Newark), New Jersey, who are traditionally underrepresented in higher education.
Another very effective approach is to recruit academically strong high school students, offer them scholarships for tuition and immerse them in a comprehensive, cohesive teacher preparation program that carefully integrates supervised field work throughout the four-year program.
The discovery that ancient viruses are probably why people light up some cannabis to unwind is a byproduct of Hughes and his colleagues' research, which constitutes the first full map of the cannabis genome to be published academically.
With his mother urging him on, he had left his hometown, San Diego, and traveled by bus two hours daily to attend La Jolla Country Day, a private school where he excelled academically and on the football team.
The 12 Scottish dancers perform with skill (the Joyce stage is surely inconveniently tight for them) but with overly bright facial expressions — a characteristic of British dancers when coping with academically pure-dance works — that suggest secret anxiety.
Durbin, the minority whip, has regularly highlighted the life stories of young people who came to the country illegally as children and have excelled academically and professionally, earning the trust of colleagues, as well as those facing deportation.
We can teach them the benefits of an education and how they are more likely to succeed academically in school using the Forever GI Bill which Congress passed this summer and doesn't have a time limit for use.
Students tell us about the pressure they feel to perform academically while keeping up with extracurricular activities, volunteer commitments and other obligations while also cultivating meaningful experiences, fostering friendships and managing to get enough sleep in the process.
According to Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa –  the authors of "Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses," students majoring in the liberal arts and sciences saw bigger increases in "critical thinking, complex reasoning, and writing skills" than other majors.
The more modern, and more academically influential, argument for democracy is that voters make judgments about how incumbents perform, and those judgments are broadly accurate and work as a shortcut for getting them the kinds of leaders they want.
Stanford University's Center for Research on Education Outcomes, considered the gold standard of measurement by charter school supporters across the country, found that students in the company's schools grew less academically than students in the neighboring traditional public schools.
School records released under public records requests showed that Mr. Mateen, who was born in Queens and grew up in Florida, was frequently in trouble as a child, and struggled to keep pace academically, especially in the early grades.
But because the demographics of P.S. 199 are starkly different from those of P.S. 191, which struggles academically, the debate has shined a spotlight on the problem of segregation in the city's schools and the difficulty of addressing it.
A review of 115 studies comparing the intelligence of people with and without siblings found that only children scored higher on IQ tests and did better academically than people growing up with many siblings or with an older sibling.
But once they were put in the position of knowing that we were just like them or better than them academically, once they saw that, I think they had no other choice but to deal with us as people.
Founded in the 19th century to provide free education to impoverished Appalachian mountain people, it today schools some 1,600 academically high-achieving students from the lowest rung of the income ladder (the median household income is $29,433) for free.
North Carolina is under N.C.A.A. investigation for a long-running scandal in which, according to a report commissioned by the university, numerous football and men's basketball players were steered toward fraudulent "paper classes" that helped keep them academically eligible.
"This is a kid who did well academically, who did well athletically and also did well from a community standpoint," said Christine Zanellato, who coached her as part of the volleyball team at Fairfax High School for three years.
The plan was hatched with high hopes and missionary zeal: For the first time in its history, the United States would come together to create consistent, rigorous education standards and stop letting so many school children fall behind academically.
Add to this the fact that many children raised in adversity, by the time they get to middle or high school, are significantly behind their peers academically and disproportionately likely to have a history of confrontations with school administrators.
It is now widely believed that no such distinctions should prevail, especially since the work of some formerly marginalized self-taught artists can seem more appealing in spirit if not technical sophistication than artworks made by academically trained artists.
The film is more immediately tied to Citizen Lab research, especially where I could tie in their very rigorous academically structured research into some of these things all around the world, where there's lots of conjecture and anecdotal evidence.
It's even studied academically now—researchers have looked at its relationship with feminism, disability, the LGBTQ world, and much more, which is a far cry from when it was dismissed as a subculture for weirdos not worth the time of day.
So instead of looking for these great big effects that reproduce the later stages of the syndrome, which was an important first step academically, maybe what we ought to be doing is is looking for the needle in the haystack.
Not to mention I had a very busy father and my mother was not that helpful with my homework, so I was left to my own devices to sink or swim both academically and in many other areas of my life.
In his conversations with Gordon Caplan, Singer explained that the "front door" to get into college was to do well academically and score high on standardized tests, and the "back door" was to endow a building or make a massive donation.
"Being deliberately isolated and laughed at cruelly every single day can be devastating socially and academically, because the target must both endure the present and constantly dread the future," Englander wrote in the book "Bullying and Cyberbulling," released this month.
In 2018, they found that less than half of people believe public education's main goal should be to prepare students academically, instead 82 percent wanted more job and career skills classes, even if it meant less time for traditional academic subjects.
Saujani thinks part of the reason women fall behind men in the workforce in terms of wages and promotions, despite outperforming them academically in school, stems from the importance our culture places on girls needing to act or appear perfect.
"We wanted to give opportunities to female garment workers who are academically promising, but could not manage to study further due to poverty and the need to the earn an income," said Mowmita Basak, co-ordinator for the Pathways program.
When the fact is they often don't have the have the same opportunities academically, that they come from disadvantaged backgrounds, that they are being pushed through the high school system and being used as bargaining chips because of their athletic ability.
"We go beyond producing academically competent students (which is part of our culture) and also bring up socially responsible and culturally sensitive individuals who are truly world citizens," one of the academies, Light International School (LIS), said on its website.
They put the social scene before academics, avoiding rigorous majors and courses, according to "Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses," a 2011 book by Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa that shows just how little students actually learn in college.
There are millions of students who have gone to college, who are not academically prepared for it, who have taken on debt, who have then dropped out with the debt load, and the wage premium for those students is absolutely zero.
Meanwhile, white boys, at 17 percent, were the most likely to say they would be "embarrassed or keep to self" or report that they "did not know" how they would handle the news that they were doing very well academically.
As the district has failed academically, board officials and employees have faced criminal charges — including a board member who stole a principal's A.T.M. card and withdrew $500 and a high school teacher who is accused of stealing $140,000 worth of computers.
Although it might not seem like much, he said, "the effects of that one hour is something they will be feeling as 22017-year-old adults," adding that students would feel less anxious and less depressed and perform better academically.
The "corporate-athletics complex," as he calls it, corrupts universities, skirts federal tax laws, bullies the IRS, relies heavily on private donors, and sets players up to fail after their sports careers are over by pushing them into academically vapid curriculums.
Affirmative action helps make sure that Harvard students aren't just golden-haired Georgetown Prep students or the likes of Jared Kushner, whose father reportedly donated $2.5 million to the school to help win admission for his less than academically stellar son.
Numerous academically trained, "professional" artists have been looking hard at outsider art; the British contemporary-art star Grayson Perry, for example, has found inspiration in the work of the legendary American outsider, Henry Darger, a visionary storyteller, draftsman and collagist.

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