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Tag: elementary education

  • Elementary education, artificial intelligence among new RSU degree programs

    Rogers State University’s fall semester began Monday with several new degrees for students to attain.

    RSU now offers bachelor’s degrees in elementary education and artificial intelligence, as well as more options for pursuing emergency teacher certifications. It also added a master’s degree option to its cybersecurity and nursing programs.

    Susan Willis, the university’s vice president for academic affairs, said students who want to teach elementary school have been able to train for this career at RSU for years through its 2+2 partnership with Cameron University. Students earn an associate’s degree in education from RSU and then their bachelor’s from Cameron, all the while staying in Claremore.

    But Willis said the 2+2 model likely prevented students from pursuing an education degree, especially students who rely on scholarships to study.

    “The problem was they had to do the associate’s first, and a lot of scholarships require that they’re enrolled in bachelor’s programs,” Willis said. “None of our athletes could have been an education major because we only had an associate’s. … Honors Program, President’s Leadership Class, some of those scholarships require they’re a bachelor student.”

    Willis said Eileen Richardson and Janet Valencia, the RSU professors who’ve been teaching the associate’s courses, largely developed the curriculum for RSU’s bachelor’s program. She said RSU also plans to add a secondary education degree next year.

    She said the curriculum won’t materially differ from the education curriculum at bigger schools like the University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State University, as RSU has to follow the same accreditation and licensure requirements. But getting the same degree at RSU would likely cost less, Willis said.

    Willis said that when Mark Rasor, RSU’s chief financial officer, was the university’s interim president, he came to her with the idea of equipping RSU to train future educators on its own. She said getting the program approved took a while because it’s been a long time since an Oklahoma college founded an education program.

    “I think it’s very big,” Willis said. “I think there’s a lot of students who would have come to us before, and we couldn’t accommodate them. I think there’s interest, and I think it’s going to help our local schools. … It can really change the trajectory here.”

    The artificial intelligence degree, offered as an option to the existing bachelor’s in information technology degree, is more novel. RSU is the third school in Oklahoma and the first regional school in the state to develop an AI program, said professor Sai Samineni. She will lead the degree program with professors Abhilash Minukuri and Nitindra Chowdary.

    Minukuri developed most of the curriculum with Curtis Sparling, head of the Department of Technology and Justice Studies, after the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education requested RSU look into an AI program.

    Minukuri said the bulk of the AI program is tailored toward students already fluent in programming. They will learn how large language models like ChatGPT function and explore more specialized and powerful systems. Students will also get to build their own artificial intelligences through long-term projects.

    “It’s gonna be a bit challenging,” Minukuri said. “It’s not an easy degree to get in. But every company right now is looking into building some sort of chat bots. They are trying to bring the AI element into a company, even small things, so this degree can help them gain those basic skills.”

    Students who don’t want or need to learn complicated programming may opt to take lower level introduction course and a course on ethics.

    Samineni said it’s unwise for anyone, especially those pursuing a tech career, to turn a blind eye to AI. She said it is no longer a buzzword — as AI technologies become more advanced and commonplace in everyday life, she said, it serves students to at least get a grip on the basic mechanics and ethical implications.

    Before RSU hired Samineni last year, she was building an LLM chat bot for Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in California. She said her job required her to use AI to process sensitive medical data.

    “I speak a lot about AI ethics because I’ve come from a place seeing it, how it will affect a person, like an actual person, in real time,” Samineni said. “You could lose your job. You could do one mistake, one typing mistake, and you can lose your job. You can’t just send people’s X-rays through GPT and stuff like that.”

    Samineni and Minukuri earned their degrees before AI became a widely-used commercial product.

    Minukuri said that while artificial intelligence is always changing, so is technology at large. Minukuri primarily taught game design courses prior to this school year.

    “Every year, I try to bring something new which is in the industry, so they learn what’s out there, so they’ll have that opportunities when they graduate,” Minukuri said. “That’s the same thing we’re gonna do for AI. We’ll try to update it as much as possible, so that we’ll offer the cutting-edge technology every year.”

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  • Arizona Title I Charter School Operator Closing the Education Gap With Incredible 2022-23 Results

    Arizona Title I Charter School Operator Closing the Education Gap With Incredible 2022-23 Results

    AMS Campuses Achieve Remarkable Growth and Excellence, Expanding Nationally in 2024

    The Academies of Math and Science (AMS), the only multi-school charter operator in Arizona serving a student population over 75% eligible for Free and Reduced Lunch (FRL) based on Arizona Department of Education (ADE) data, is making headlines for all the right reasons. ADE just released official letter grades for the 2022-23 school year showcasing AMS’s remarkable progress as 8,500 AMS students achieved tremendous growth after learning loss from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    AMS, a longstanding Arizona Title I charter school network dedicated to educating and supporting underserved students, proudly announces that five AMS campuses have achieved coveted A ratings and five have secured B ratings. According to ADE, an A rating denotes excellence, and a B rating represents high performance. These exceptional results highlight the tremendous effort of AMS students, families, administrators, teachers, and staff who have demonstrated an unwavering commitment to quality education.

    These letter grades emphasize AMS’s dedication to growth and excellence in closing the educational gap, particularly among underserved student populations. According to the report, AMS stands among the highest-performing charter networks in the state offering quality education to a 78% FRL-eligible and 93% minority student population that may not have access to the programs they need otherwise.

    Key highlights from the letter grades release include:

    • AMS is one of only five Arizona charter school networks to achieve exclusively A and B letter grades. Notably, AMS is the sole network serving a high-FRL eligible community (+70%) to attain this distinction. 
    • AMS Peoria Advanced achieved incredible growth, elevating from a C to an A in just one year by earning more than 30 letter-grade points compared to last year. 
    • AMS Camelback grew from a C to a B with an 18-point increase compared to last year. 
    • AMS Flower improved from a B to an A rating due to its passionate community of students and staff.
    • In Tucson, AMS Prince and MASSA maintained their consistent A-ratings, a testament to the dedicated and data-driven approach of the staff at these longstanding schools.

    AMS Chief Academic Officer Nate Lowry is incredibly proud of the leadership teams and staff who achieved this year’s letter grades. Lowry emphasized that these results are a direct reflection of the team’s continuous pursuit of excellence and thanked them for ensuring that students feel seen, safe, and educated every day. 

    Lowry congratulated every member of the AMS family, expressing his pride in working with a network that prioritizes student achievement above all else. Furthermore, AMS recently announced exciting news for the future — AMS is expanding nationally, with plans to open its first location in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 2024. This expansion advances AMS’s commitment to educating underserved student populations and continuing its mission for communities in need nationwide.

    Source: The Academies of Math and Science

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  • Echo Healthcare Releases NEW Division – Echo Education Technology

    Echo Healthcare Releases NEW Division – Echo Education Technology

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 3, 2023

    Echo Healthcare, Inc., a global leader in high-reality simulation and a worldwide leader in immersive spaces and educational software, announced today the launch of a new division within the company. Echo Education Technology will proudly serve all primary, secondary, HOSA, STEM and Career and Technical Education institutions at the elementary, middle and high school levels.

    As healthcare simulation and interactive learning are being introduced rapidly in early education, Echo Healthcare recognized the need to develop a division with dedicated personnel to better serve these customers. The strategy behind the new division is a distinctively different approach to the market than what the industry is seeing from competitors and one that is expected to provide a superior product offering and exceptional customer service. The introduction of Echo Education Technology allows Echo Healthcare to be on the forefront of providing innovative products and services catered to early childhood education, an important market segment to the overall organization.

    “Students today are growing up in technology-rich homes and have a passion for learning with technology early on. They are also identifying career paths and taking college credited courses in middle school and high school. Our products continue to evolve to allow students to engage in the educational content being delivered to them in a hands-on way so the information is retained long-term. At the same time, our products provide educators with a realistic and non-traditional approach to delivering educational content in a way that students will understand it and be excited to learn!” says Kevin King, CEO of Echo Healthcare and Echo Education Technology.

    Echo Education Technology proudly offers medical simulation products to include highly realistic adult, pediatric and infant medical training manikins, EchoMasks and SecondSkin to enhance the realism of existing manikins and simulated patient monitors to be used by health sciences, CTE and STEM programs. Immersive Interactive is a fully interactive system which transforms a single classroom or room into thousands of engaging virtual learning environments, complete with sounds and smells to mimic that real-life environment. The walls are touch-sensor so the students can engage with the content and environment being delivered to them and take interactive quizzes directly from their immersive room.

    About Echo Education Technology

    Echo Healthcare was founded in 2018 by a group of passionate simulation experts whose mission is to improve patient outcomes and save lives through innovation, education and simulation technologies. Echo Education Technology, a division of Echo Healthcare’s, mission is to redefine how teaching is being delivered in classrooms all over the world through innovation, education and technology.  

    Source: Echo Healthcare

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  • South Bronx Classical Charter School II Recognized as 2019 National Blue Ribbon School in First Year of Eligibility

    South Bronx Classical Charter School II Recognized as 2019 National Blue Ribbon School in First Year of Eligibility

    Classical Charter Schools prepares students from the South Bronx to become liberated scholars of impeccable character

    Press Release



    updated: Oct 29, 2019

    ​​South Bronx Classical Charter School II was one of 362 outstanding public and non-public schools recognized as 2019 National Blue Ribbon Schools. The prestigious national program and annual award celebrate school excellence, turnaround stories, and the closing of achievement gaps.

    “I’m thrilled that South Bronx Classical Charter School II won the Blue Ribbon in its first year of eligibility,” said Classical Charter Schools Executive Director Lester Long. “Particularly gratifying is that we are listed as an Exemplary High Performing School, which indicates that our scholars are going beyond simply matching their more advantaged peers, but exceeding them.”

    Particularly gratifying is that we are listed as an Exemplary High Performing School, which indicates that our scholars are going beyond simply matching their more advantaged peers, but exceeding them.

    Lester Long, Executive Director

    Minority students from impoverished families benefit most from New York City’s charter schools, which offer strong academics and the prospect of upward mobility. Over 89% of Classical Charter School’s students live below the poverty line, and 98% are African-American or Hispanic.

    There is a palpable urgency and passion behind Classical’s mission to prepare scholars in the South Bronx to excel in college preparatory high schools. Benjamin Arabia, who sits on Classical’s Board of Trustees, noted, “We’re constantly striving to get better in every way. Our aim is to create replicable systems in all our schools that give our scholars the best opportunity to succeed.”

    South Bronx Classical Charter School II opened in August 2013 and prepares K-8th-grade students in the South Bronx to excel in college-preparatory high schools. Through a rigorous, classical curriculum and highly structured approach, students become liberated scholars and citizens of impeccable character who achieve proficiency in and advanced mastery of New York State Performance Standards. School II Director Leena Gyftopoulos stated, “I’m so proud for our school to be recognized. This honor highlights the hard work and dedication that our entire team has demonstrated over the past six years.”

    Gyftopoulos went on to say, “I attribute this achievement to the tireless work of our teachers, the constant leadership of our administrative team, and the tenacity of our scholars.” Charter schools like Classical provide a local high-quality public-school option to New York City’s students and put students first by leveraging the flexibility and autonomy of their charters to establish schools and create school cultures that are designed to serve the needs of the community.

    The U.S. Department of Education will honor the 312 public and 50 private schools at a formal recognition ceremony in Washington, D.C., this November.

    About Classical Charter Schools

    Classical Charter Schools is an award-winning charter school network founded in 2006 in our nation’s poorest congressional district to address the South Bronx’s stark inequality of access to education. For more information on Classical, visit classicalcharterschools.org.

    Media Contact: Amber Roussel, +1 (713) 530-0106

    Source: Classical Charter Schools

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