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Showing posts with label Education in the News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education in the News. Show all posts

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The U.S. has been falling behind other nations in educational rankings. The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA),conducts a worldwide study of scholastic performance of 15-year-olds in mathematics, science, and reading. Testing began in 2000 and has been repeated every three years. The purpose is to improve educational policies and outcomes in member nations of OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.) 470,000 15-years-old students representing 65 nations and territories participated in PISA 2009. An additional 50,000 students representing 9 nations were tested in 2010. Testing has not yet occurred for 2012.


See this short article with a vivid chart: http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/datablog/2010/dec/07/world-education-rankings-maths-science-reading

Read the Wikipedia description: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Programme_for_International_Student_Assessment

Read the Educational Trust Analysis: http://www.edtrust.org/dc/press-room/press-release/ed-trust-analysis-of-2009-pisa-results-united-states-is-average-in-perfo

Do you agree that we are being shortsighted by not improving education for ALL our students?


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Teachers in three cities in the United Kingdom are banning BFFs (best friendsforever) reports Harry Hawkins of The Sun. It sounds like something outof a sci-fi novel. 

Psychologist Gaynor Sbuttoni, who doesn’t appear to supportthe measure, explains the attempts to ban best friends are being done in theinterest of the children.

"They are doing it becausethey want to save the child the pain of splitting up from their best friend.But it is natural for some children to want a best friend. If they break up,they have to feel the pain because they're learning to deal with it,"clarifies Sbuttoni.


If best friends are banned can chocolate be far behind? What else will people who "know better" take away?

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What kind of people will our children become? That is afrequently voiced concern of those of us who parent and teach. The digitalnetworks our teens and tweens use every day are new to us, and we sometimesworry if they spend too much time on Twitter and Facebook. Will this socialnetworking submersion affect them adversely? A new World Vision 30-Hour Faminestudy has found that these sites may aid teenswith developing empathetic skills.

According to their published description, “World Vision is aChristian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children,families, and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential bytackling the causes of poverty and injustice.”
The30-Hour Famine event began inCalgary, Alberta, in 1971, where 14 teenagers fasted to raise money for WorldVision’s hunger program. Their purpose was to experience hunger for a limitedperiod of time, and to use this self-denial as a means to raise funds toprovide food for those who are continually hungry. In 1995, David L. Wylie, a nondenominational youth leader in Georgia,wanted the youth he worked with to care about all people, worldwide. Much likethe Tennessee principal who wanted her students to have a greater vision of theworld began what became The Paper Clip Project; Wylie activated group membersby fasting. Teens find sponsors to support them in their fast, just likerunners for charity.  

After the February 24-25, 2012 Famine, World Vision polledparticipants. Fifty-five per cent of students said they became more aware ofthe needs of others through Facebook and Twitter, up from 44% in 2011. Ninety-oneper cent of the respondents agree that it is important to volunteer locally.

The next scheduled famine is April 27-28, 2012. 

How can teachers involve students in helping others?



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Susan Cain is speaking up for introverts and against thepractices of brainstorming and group projects in the classroom and theworkplace. She backs up her opinion with plenty of statistics, but as usual,there are statistics on the other side of the argument.

If you are an introvert, you’ll be happy to read thisarticle, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/15/opinion/sunday/the-rise-of-the-new-groupthink.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all,and her new book, Quiet: The Power ofIntroverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking.

I agree that students need to learn to work on assignmentsfor extended periods of time. I agree that some people are most creative whenthey are alone. Cain quotes William Wordsworth, who described himself as “Amind for ever/ Voyaging through strange seas of Thought, alone.”

My personal experience is that many of my creative ideascome through contact with others. I love the activities of brainstorming (myfavorite exercise) and mind mapping in a small group. When the notes arecompiled I set to work on my own, but I always rely on trusted others forfeedback.

Teachers want to be sensitive to the learning needs of theirstudents. Some are introverts (%), and more are extroverts (%.) But if Cain’sdata findings are true, we must organize the school day with quiet, thoughtfultime and collaborative opportunities.

Is this something you can do in your classroom?



Taking a cue from successful microfinancing programs offeredto people in developing nations, nonprofits have begun to make presentationsrequesting charitable dollars. The “new” in this news is that schools havetaken up the practice.

The idea is to invite school families – and the public – to attenda $5 soup supper. All the money in the stewpot will be awarded to someone atthe end of the evening. Teachers, and perhaps students, make short presentationsabout how they would use the money, such as for a teaching aid, a student trip,an investigative project, or whatever. Guests then vote on who gets the pot.

Read what Linton Weeks and Sam Sanders have to say in “Overthe Bowls of Soup, Donors Find Recipe for Change.”


or listen to the 4-minute broadcast.



Toby Young is on a rant. He states that “dumbing down ofstate education has made Britain more unequal than 25 years ago.”  

The latest frenzy began with tweets from a teacherencouraging a student to be content with lower grades and be happy instead ofdriven to pass the test. Maybe there’s more to that story.

Other evidence of dumbing down came from high-performingstate schools accused of discriminatory admissions policies. The accused “comprehensiveschools” are by definition inclusive, but there must be an admission process in place. 

In Young’s words good comprehensive schools, “Thanks to their reputations for academicexcellence, they were attracting more than their fair share of above-averagepupils, thereby relegating the surrounding schools to secondary modern status.  In the eyes of the progressive elite thatcontrols our educational establishment, the best is the enemy of the good.Mediocrity for all is preferable to excellence for some.”

Is making the curriculum more accessible, i.e., teaching the “new unit in the Edexcel GCSE Englishsyllabus called English Today Theme Two(Talent Television), in which pupils are expected to study the home page of'Britain’s Got Talent' and a 2009 cover of 'Heat' magazine,” preferable for anyor all students? What happened to Shakespeare?

Read the full article in TheTelegraph.


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One of the greatest challenges teachers face isdifferentiating instruction - providing individualized learning experiences asneeded for their students. Help is on the way.

Building on a model used by private tutoring services,software companies are designing apps to evaluate student’s learning needs andoffer suggestions for experiences and practice in developing skills. Case inpoint - New York City's School of One: The pilot program at Dr. Sun Yat SenMiddle School in Chinatown offered a five-week summer math program to incomingseventh graders. Students moved at their own pace through objectives forseventh grade math using a mix of whole class and personal instruction, softwareprograms and online study. Data on student progress was charted daily and usedto determine the next day’s instruction. San Diego is heavily invested in usingtechnology for differentiated instruction. Let’s hope they give us a good modelto follow.

Read about other approaches to individualization throughtechnology at:  

"Digital Tools Expand Options for Personalized Learning" By Kathleen Kennedy Manzo
Digital tools for defining and targeting students' strengthsand weaknesses could help build a kind of individualized education plan forevery student.




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Are students maturing without adequate social skills? Apparentlysocial scientists and psychologists have had enough time to research behaviorsof young people using social media to determine that the face (or that would belack of face) of social contact is changing in our world.

Students who grow up with social media tools and participatein continuous digital multi-tasking are missing important social skills. Thinkabout it - you can’t learn to “read” a person’s expression if all you see arewacko photos on Facebook and short text messages and Tweets.

Are the components that make us human changing? StanfordUniversity surveyed over 3,000 American girls, ages 8-12, and found that thosewho spent the most time using digital devices had the most difficulty withsocial interaction.

So what would a society be like if people communicateddigitally, rather than face-to-face? I see a YA trilogy in the making.




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Mandarin language classes are on the rise. It’s no wondersince 1.3 billion people reside in the People’s Republic of China. Mandarin isthe dominant language and it is helping to unify the country and change theface of China.  

Research has proven that it is best to learn a second languagefrom childhood. This is even more true for Mandarin because the ear needs toperceive the four tones that distinguish the meanings of many words.

Learning Mandarin is a challenge that our students can meetif we support them be offering courses in elementary school. Their economicfuture may depend on it.

See one teacher’s approach:

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Start the summertime chant: “No more pencils, no more books,no more teachers’ dirty looks.”

Apple has announced plans for reinventing the textbook. iBooks2 haspartnered with textbook publishers to sell interactive texts for use on theiPad. With 20,000 educational apps in existence vocabulary flash cards will behistory. Students will be able to determine for themselves how to study usingthe many apps available. Let’s hope that highlighting text will help it stickin their minds in time for the test.




There was a time when teachers held the keys. They decidedwhich textbooks they would use in their classrooms, what they would teach andhow they would teach it. Then publishers got behind the wheel with achievement testingand texts written by the self-same test-writing companies, soon after theyloaded up the van with programmed texts, and teachers only need to be able toread aloud. We worried about who was driving the educational system.

Now young entrepreneurs have a very different view of Americaneducation from the average teacher or man-on-the -street. Prerna Gupta, CEO ofKhush, producer of music apps thinks that we overvalue higher education in theU.S. because we do such a poor job of educating students under age 18.

Some Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are advising students toleave school and start their own businesses. For the tech-savvy, brilliantyoung person, that is probably the best option. It is not so different from thepath a young ballerina takes. Graduate from high school while emphasizing skilland excellence en pointe. Don’t worry about algebra or history. Practice yourskill under the tutelage of a master, reach as high a level as you can, then,at 35, try college or look for a second career.  A successful entrepreneur can become educatedon his or her own time.

Technology is disruptive and we are in a state of flux. Guptastates,
We are in a time of convergence: teachers are incorporatingtechnology from their everyday lives to increase student engagement, while visionaryadministrators are using the momentum of grassroots digital learning movementsto move our institutions forward. Hopefully education will catch up before theSingularity arrives.

Read her article and take a look at some uses of apps in theclassroom:
Who’sdriving in your classroom? Tell the truth


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A non-profit corporation, The Mind Trust  is focusing on three primary areas to improvelearning in Indianapolis. The idea is to create “Opportunity Schools” whichwould have greater oversight in their own domains. By reducing the size of the school district's central office, individual qualifying schools will receive funds that wouldhave been used by the administration. The school leadership can then spendmoney to improve the education of the students in their building. This ispublic school with an entrepreneurial structure.
At the heart of the initiative is:
  • A great teacher in every classroom.
  • A great leader in every school.
  • An environment that fosters excellence and multiplies success.

“Decades of failure demonstrate that it’s not the people who areat fault, it’s the system. Most IPS schools don’t have the conditions thatresearch shows schools need to succeed. This plan creates those conditions,”said David Harris, Founder and CEO of The Mind Trust.
My ongoing concern in the rhetoric of saving education is savingthe "system" instead of providing better opportunities for the students. I think Indianapolis is moving in the right direction by offeringmore freedom to the talented teachers and administrators they employ.
What do you think? Would this plan work at your school?

Social Media will be a hot topic in education this year. There is no escaping the ubiquitous use of Twitter, MySpace, Facebook and every other electronic link students can find. What will schools do with this?

Teachers are making great headway in connecting formerly disengaged students to classroom topics through social media. This area needs to be developed with all classrooms in middle and high school. Teachers need to model, and students need to participate in positive educational application of social media.

On the negative side, some teachers are abusing the practice and making sexual advances on students. State legislatures and school boards react by trying to shut down all social media. We revert to punishing the whole class with silent lunch because two people interrupted a lesson with their chatter.

This NY Times article cites some of the current issues:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/18/business/media/rules-to-limit-how-teachers-and-students-interact-online.html?_r=2

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It seems to me that all teachers need to be aware of two important distinctions. One is the line between public and private information and contacts. Overall, student-teacher connections should be public. The few private connections should be professional in nature. The second distinction is adult vs. child. All students through high school graduation are children in relation to their teachers. It is our mission to nurture and encourage them as learners. We fail them when we cease to see them as children needing our protection and care.

What do you think?


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The Ford Foundation and the American Federation of Teachers have funded astudy we’ll hear more about in 2012. A research group studied the behavior andclassroom practice of 1,001 teachers in grades 3-12 to determine what ishappening with curriculum in U.S. public schools.

Overall, teachersbelieve that math and language arts dominate their lesson plans. Students haveless exposure to the arts, foreign language, social studies and science,especially in the elementary years.

Half of theteachers surveyed said that when students receive remedial aid in math andlanguage arts, it occurs in time taken from other subjects.

Overwhelmingly, 93%of teachers believe that the reason for the curriculum shift is state-sponsoredtests.

Do you see thingsthe same way as those teachers in the survey? What could we do differentlywithin our communities to ensure that students are prepared for learning toread and performing math assignments when they come to school? How importantare the “soft subjects” that are being eliminated from elementary school?

Read the entirearticle:



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Our fifty state laboratories are at work trying to improveeducation. This week Iowa Governor, Terry Branstad, initiated a plan to improveeducational achievement. The document is written in plain English sanseducational jargon. It emphasizes children, their achievement andwell-being.

One noteworthy feature is the no-pass system for third graderswho cannot read on grade level. It is clearly spelled-out and offers freetutoring and retesting (thereby passing to fourth grade) at any time.

The plan underscores bringing top college students into theteaching program and retaining them through opportunities to take on increasedresponsibilities and to earn higher salaries.

Read the plan and let me know what you think. I think Iowais leading the way in respecting professional teachers and providing a healthy environmentfor learning.

A summary article:

Here’s the entire report:

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If there is one comment I can remember from new teachers in the many schools where I have taught it is, “The College of Education did not prepare me to teach.”

Arizona State University initiated a program ten years ago that is working to dispel that feeling and make new teachers feel at home in all things school. The university now requires one full year of student teaching before graduation.

Student teachers study at local campuses while experiencing all aspects of teaching. They are involved in classroom instruction, team planning, mentoring and parent-teacher conferences throughout the year. The results, says Mari Koerner, dean of ASU’s Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, is a well-prepared, confident professional.


Do you think this is a worthwhile system? Is this the solution for teacher education?

This column by Will Richardson is worth the time and consideration of all teachers, school administrators and parents. What learning environment do we want for our students? Who will benefit from the changes we make? 





In his response to a recent Wall Street Journal article touting rote online learning as the wave of education’s future, Powerful Learning Practice co-founder Will Richardson calls to action every educator who believes that great teaching is not only relevant but essential in the Digital Age.
Will’s comments (first published at his blog and then at Edutopia) match the spirit of our Voices from the Learning Revolution group blog, which shares the work and ideas of educators committed to creating a robust vision of teaching and learning in the 21st century. So we’re publishing them again in this space.

“My Teacher Is an App”

So I hope no one minds if I continue to try to document the ways in which “education” is being reframed in this country at the peril, I think, of losing everything that is best about schools and teachers and classrooms.
If you’re not up to speed with these reframing efforts, the above titled article in the Wall Street Journal this morning should do the trick. The canary is singing in full throat. And let’s not make any bones about it: the Journal has a vested interest in making the type of online learning it describes successful as it owns a large stake in many of the vendors trying to occupy the space.
The author would like us to believe that education is being “radically rethought” by the online and “blended” options that are available to students. But let’s be clear; the only things being rethought here are the delivery models of a traditional education and, most importantly, the financial models to sustain it and make lots of money for outside businesses who see technology and access as a way to not only line their pockets with taxpayer money but also bust the unions that stand in their way.
It’s a disheartening and disturbing vision of what an education might become:
Tipping back his chair, he studied a computer screen listing the lessons he was supposed to complete that week for his public high school — a high school conducted entirely online. Noah clicked on his global-studies course. A lengthy article on resource shortages popped up. He gave it a quick scan and clicked ahead to the quiz, flipping between the article and multiple-choice questions until he got restless and wandered into the kitchen for a snack.
And this vision is exploding:
In just the past few months, Virginia has authorized 13 new online schools. Florida began requiring all public-high-school students to take at least one class online, partly to prepare them for college cybercourses. Idaho soon will require two. In Georgia, a new app lets high-school students take full course loads on their iPhones and BlackBerrys. Thirty states now let students take all of their courses online.
It means the elimination of schools and teachers:
Although some states and local districts run their own online schools, many hire for-profit corporations such as K12 Inc. of Herndon, VA, and Connections Academy in Baltimore, a unit of education services and technology company Pearson PLC. The companies hire teachers, provide curriculum, monitor student performance — and lobby to expand online public education.
And the selling point is not just cost but personalization, which I’ve written about here before.
Advocates say that online schooling can save states money, offer curricula customized to each student and give parents more choice in education.
But this isn’t different. Notice the ways in which the “success” of online schools is being judged.
In California, Rocketship Education, a chain of charter hybrid schools that serves mostly poor and minority kids, has produced state test scores on par with some of the state’s wealthiest schools. Rocketship students spend up to half of each school day in computer labs playing math and literacy games that adjust to their ability level.
At Southwest Learning Centers, a small chain of charter schools in Albuquerque, NM, standardized test scores routinely outpace state and local averages, according to data provided by the schools. Students complete most lessons online but come into class for teacher support and hands-on challenges, such as collaborating to design and build a weight-bearing bridge. The high school recently received a statewide award for its students’ strong scores on the ACT college admissions test.
And don’t miss the point. It’s all about how we define learning. Listen to this one parent quoted in the article.
“I don’t think learning has to happen at school, in a classroom with 30 other kids and a teacher …corralling all children into learning the same thing at the same pace,” she says. “We should rethink the environment we set up for education.”
It’s an easy way for us to minimize the role of the teacher in a child’s education:
The amount of teacher interaction varies. At online-only schools, instructors answer questions by email, phone or the occasional video conference; students will often meet classmates and teachers on optional field trips and during state exams. Southwest Learning Centers requires just 14 hours a week of classroom time and lets students set their own schedules, deciding when — or whether — to come in on any given day. And in Miami, students at iPrep Academy work in free-flowing “classrooms” with no doors or dividing walls but plenty of beanbag chairs and couches. Teachers give short lectures and offer one-on-one help, but most learning is self-directed and online.
“If it seems strange, that’s because it is strange,” says Alberto Carvalho, superintendent of the Miami schools. But he sees no point in forcing the iPod generation to adapt to a classroom model that has changed little in 300 years.
Cut teachers, save money.
The growth of cybereducation is likely to affect school staffing, which accounts for about 80 percent of school budgets. A teacher in a traditional high school might handle 150 students. An online teacher can supervise more than 250, since he or she doesn’t have to write lesson plans and most grading is done by computer.
In Idaho, Alan Dunn, superintendent of the Sugar-Salem School District, says that he may cut entire departments and outsource their courses to online providers. “It’s not ideal,” he says. “But Idaho is in a budget crisis, and this is a creative solution.”
Other states see potential savings as well. In Georgia, state and local taxpayers spend $7,650 a year to educate the average student in a traditional public school. They spend nearly 60 percent less — $3,200 a year — to educate a student in the statewide online Georgia Cyber Academy, saving state and local tax dollars. Florida saves $1,500 a year on every student enrolled online full time.
Make war with the unions.
Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who co-founded the Foundation for Excellence in Education, which promotes online schools nationwide, says learning will be “digitized” with or without cooperation from the unions. “I’m happy to go to war over this,” he says.
And make, potentially, lots of money.
Last year News Corp. bought a 90 percent stake in Wireless Generation, an education-technology company that sells hand-held computers to teachers to help monitor student performance.
And there, in a nutshell, is the future. (And to be really scared, read the comments on the article.)
<rant>
Look, not for nothing, but if we don’t start writing and advocating for a very different vision of learning in real classrooms, one that is focused not just on doing the things we’ve been doing better but in ways that are truly reinvented, one that prepares kids to be innovators and designers and entrepreneurs and, most importantly, learners, we will quickly find ourselves competing at scale with cheaper, easier alternatives that won’t serve our kids as well.
No doubt this will be hard. And I wonder if we can pull it off. But here’s the other thing. It’s not so much about tools and technologies as it is about that learning thing. To be honest, I think we’ve all got to stop cranking out blog posts and Tweets that tout new tools and the “10 Best Ways…” and instead begin to make the case in our blogs and in person that technology or not, this is about what is best for our kids.
That in this moment, 20th Century rules will not work for 21st Century schools. That direct instruction and standardization will make us less competitive, not more. That those strategies will make our kids less able to create a living for themselves in the worlds they will live in. That as difficult as it may be for some to come to terms with, this moment requires a whole scale “radical rethink” in much different terms from the one Jeb Bush wants, the same type of rethink that newspapers and media and businesses and others are undergoing.
And it’s time to raise our game, write comments and op-ed pieces and journal articles and books, have conversations with parents (or at least give them some reading to do), speak up at conferences and board meetings and elsewhere, not about the wonders of technology but about the changed landscape of literacies and skills and dispositions that the current system, online or off, is not able to provide to our kids in its current iteration. That schools can be places of wonder and exploration and inquiry and creation, not just force fed curriculum, 75 percent of which our kids will forget within months of consuming it. That learning and reform as they are currently being defined are both nothing of the sort.
<rant>
“My Teacher is an App.” Really? If that’s fine with you, stay silent. If not, I don’t think it’s ever been clearer where the lines are being drawn.
You are the lead learner in your community. Not Jeb Bush. Not Rupert Murdoch. Not Pearson. You.
Lead.
– Will Richardson


Teachers have always written curriculum. That’s how we got started. Of late, we have left the writing of curriculum to textbook companies. Minnesota high school teachers have put a new twist on this. They saved their school district mega dollars, and students’ math scores on exit exams have improved.

Three teachers spent 100 hours each during summer break writing statistics curriculum to meet their state standards. The resulting textbook is available online. The beauty of the online text is that it can be updated continuously. “That's the cool thing about it,” Michael Engelhaupt, one of the developers said. “The book is kind of a living document.”

Could your students benefit from your efforts in this direction?

For more information read these articles:


Fareed Zakaria has a thought-provoking article in the November 14, 2011 issue of Time. He begins by stating the problem: American education is declining while schools around the world are improving. The U.S. now ranks 26th in the world.

His remedy is not complex: study with highly competent professionals and work harder. Finnish students attend classes taught by teachers who represent 10% of the applicants to teacher training programs. In the U.S. teachers represent the bottom third of their college class. Zakaria notes that by the time South Korean students graduate from high school they will have spent the equivalent of two more years in school than American students.

What are we worried about? No one needs to understand physics to make beds and wait tables. As the U.S. becomes a service economy the Finns and South Koreans can visit Disney World and we can maximize their dream vacation while they’re here.

Whatcha think Mickey and Minnie? 

Zakaria's Facebook page and Wikipedia share this description:
Fareed Rafiq Zakaria is an Indian-American journalist and author. From 2000, he was a columnist for Newsweek and editor of Newsweek International. In 2010 he became Editor-At-Large of Time magazine. He is also the host of CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS, and a frequent commentator and author about issues related to international relations, trade and American foreign policy.


An enterprising college freshman has made a good day’s wage taking the SAT for disinterested high school students. Six students from Great Neck, NY, are charged with cheating on the SAT - paying a college student to take the test for them. More arrests are likely as the investigation widens to other high schools.

The arrests have me wondering:

I wonder where these high school students earned $1,500-2,500 to pay the test-taker. Most gifts for high schoolers are gift cards. Did these students ask grandma for cash instead? Did they have jobs that supplied the income? Did their parents knowingly give the money?

I wonder what these students thought they would do when they entered their first choice college on a falsified record. Apparently they did not expect rigorous requirements, or maybe they planned to pay someone else to take their exams and write their papers for the next four years.



What do you think?