PBS高端访谈:枪击案之后的小学校园是如何正常运营下去的?
GWEN IFILL: Now a unique look at school safety issues through the eyes of young people. Today, we're launching a new feature from our network of Student Reporting Labs, middle and high school journalism programs around the country. It explores how th
PBS高端访谈:今天的美国缺乏宗教信仰,并不仅限于千禧世代
GWEN IFILL: Now to surprising new findings about our changing religious landscape, and how and if we believe. Jeffrey Brown has our conversation. JEFFREY BROWN: The U.S. remains an overwhelmingly Christian country. That hasn't changed, but a new surv
PBS高端访谈:教师挖掘脑科学以促进学习
JUDY WOODRUFF: Next: neuroscience and education. Thousands of teachers around the country are learning about an alternative teaching program that aims to use scientific discoveries about the brain to improve the way children learn in the classroom. S
PBS高端访谈:现在的新教师面临着艰巨的工作和高离职率
GWEN IFILL: It's likely that everyone watching has spent time in a classroom, either as a student or a teacher. At 3.1 million, school teachers make up one of the largest portions of the American work force. And because teacher turnover is very high,
PBS高端访谈:让女孩子走进电脑游戏编程
GWEN IFILL: Now: giving girls access to a more level playing field in an area formerly dominated by boys, making video games. Special correspondent Sandra Hughes has the story. SANDRA HUGHES: It's no secret that video gaming is aimed at a male audien
PBS高端访谈:比尔盖茨夫妇就共同核心州立标准展开讨论
GWEN IFILL: They have spent $35 billion so far tackling malaria and AIDS and Ebola abroad. But here at home, their laser focus has been on education reform, which has catapulted them into the middle of a 2016 political debate. I sat down today in Sea
PBS高端访谈:奥巴马的新考试计划对美国学生意味着什么?
WILLIAM BRANGHAM: President Obama and the federal Department of Education are calling on states to cut back on standardized tests in schools. U.S. school kids from pre-K through 12th grade, on average, take eight standardized tests every year. That's
PBS高端访谈:青少年认为在使用电子产品时可以兼顾其他事
JUDY WOODRUFF: Most of us are spending more time with screens than ever before, from TV and computers, to the smartphones we carry in our pockets. A new report on media use by teens and tweens shows that may be even more true for children. The survey
PBS高端访谈:爱因斯坦的相对论是怎样改变了世界?
JUDY WOODRUFF: But, first, this week marks the 100th anniversary of the publication of Albert Einstein's greatest work, a series of papers laying out the general theory of relativity. Gwen has a look at how it changed our understanding of the cosmos
PBS高端访谈:美国教育共同核心标准的第一轮测试
GWEN IFILL: Congress is on the verge of finally approving a rewrite of the education law known as No Child Left Behind. The Senate is expected to pass it easily tomorrow. The House did so last week, and the president is expected to sign it. It will g
PBS高端访谈:哈佛报告指出:应减少关注学生取得的成就
JUDY WOODRUFF: But, first, many high school seniors have finished college applications. And now they're waiting to find out whether taking advanced courses, prepping for entrance exams and agonizing over essays will all pay off. A new report from the
PBS高端访谈:什么办法可以使得低收入家庭的孩子申请大学?
JUDY WOODRUFF: Now a NewsHour Essay. This month, many high school seniors have either just learned, or are anxiously waiting to hear, what colleges they might have gotten into. Education advocate Keith Frome has worked with students across the countr
PBS高端访谈:当下的青少年女孩在社交媒体上遭受性骚扰
GWEN IFILL: In the eight years since Apple unveiled its first smartphone, an entire generation of young users has spring up who never knew a world without a device in hand. That's the starting point for the latest addition to the NewsHour Bookshelf,
PBS高端访谈:为什么说数字化教育是一把双刃剑?
GWEN IFILL: But, first, school districts across the country are going high-tech, incorporating educational apps and digital programs into the classroom. But fears about the privacy and security of students' personal information are on the rise. Speci
PBS高端访谈:需要大学奖学金? 有一个app可以帮你!
JUDY WOODRUFF: It's hard to overstate just how expensive college can be, more than $40,000 a year for a private school, over $34,000 for an out-of-state public school. Many students do qualify for greater financial aid, but a start-up has come up wit