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Building on what has been learned over the past decade about the impacts of violence on learning, here are three groundbreaking online tools that can help students to learn more effectively and help programs to improve their practices.
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A new report from AlphaPlus suggests that with the help of cloud computing, the future of cyberspace for adult literacy will see a proliferation of new and easily accessible literacy tools such as smartphone applications to help read signs and turn text into voice.
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In Renaissance Italy, imitation was widely regarded as a crucial education tool, challenging students to learn by copying elements of a pre-existing work. Today, such an exercise would be condemned as plagiarism.
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Immigrants landing in Calgary are confused by the dominance of English in that city, and express puzzlement that they don't hear much French spoken on the street or in buses. They wonder, under those circumstances, why Canada calls itself bilingual.
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James Cummins, who holds the Canada Research Chair in Language Learning and Literacy says: “Education is a part of society that gets a lot of money spent on it, so there needs to be support for all kinds of education research, even if it contradicts conventional thinking.”
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New research shows that bilingualism assists the brain in its ability to focus and can stave off the negative effects of Alzheimer's disease in old age.
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With a high school dropout rate in some of Canada's low-income communities higher than 70 per cent, Pathways to Education Canada is encouraging valedictorians to use their graduation speeches to help spread the word that all students deserve the support and opportunities needed to graduate.
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