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  Nuclear Engineering, the new interest
Posted by: admin - 20-08-2008, 06:20 AM - Forum: Education News - No Replies

"Nuclear Help Desperately Wanted" could be the sign in front of dozens of engineering colleges across the country. With worldwide interest in nuclear energy and technology skyrocketing, engineers with a nuclear background are feeling very popular these days. It's welcome news for a field that has been long stifled by negative public opinion. The challenge the discipline faces is how to meet this new demand after years of shrinking interest.

Due in part to the accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania and the disaster at Chernobyl in Ukraine, the nuclear energy sector has been in decline for 30 years. Enrollment at undergraduate and graduate programs has dwindled, and some nuclear engineering programs have merged with other disciplines or shut down altogether. The ones that did survive shifted their focus to more lucrative fields within nuclear research, such as radiation detection or medical physics. According to the American Nuclear Society, 65 nuclear engineering programs existed in the country in 1980; now there is less than half that.

But in recent months, nuclear has re-emerged as a much ballyhooed energy source, and the entire community is scrambling to stave off what could be a massive shortage of qualified workers if the demand for nuclear power does take off. With an aging workforce, including many workers who are near retirement, the ANS estimates that 700 nuclear engineers need to graduate per year to support the potential demand. The organization currently expects only 249 new engineers to be available each year.

Students appear to be eager to fill the gap. Even without recruiting, some university departments are seeing as much growth as they can handle: There are more than three times as many nuclear engineering students now as there were just five years ago. "Today's students don't have the same fear of nuclear power that their parents did," says Mark Pierson, a professor at Virginia Tech.

Not only are the existing programs growing near capacity, but departments that shuttered years ago are finding new life. Virginia Tech, which closed its nuclear engineering program in the early 1980s, launched a nuclear graduate certification program, headed by Pierson, last fall. New Mexico State University, the University of Virginia, and the Colorado School of Mines have made similar moves. full story - here

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  Pushy parents can act as agents
Posted by: Newsroom - 19-08-2008, 03:09 PM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

Parents can now act as agents to handle their children's university applications - and then turn up for the interviews too.

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  College chiefs urge new debate on drinking age
Posted by: Newsroom - 19-08-2008, 02:40 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

College presidents from about 100 of the nation's best-known universities, including Duke, Dartmouth and Ohio State, are calling on lawmakers to consider lowering the drinking age from 21 to 18, saying current laws actually encourage dangerous binge drinking on campus. [Image: cnn_education?i=qnfAIe]</img>
[Image: cnn_education?i=96zUbK]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=2coXVK]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=Jl2DLk]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=FpUMpk]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=zS5VBK]</img>
[Image: 368459624]

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  No quick exit from GCSE challenge
Posted by: Newsroom - 19-08-2008, 02:40 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

Even if GCSE results this week raise schools above the 30% threshold, they can remain in the National Challenge programme.

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  Teacher concerns over school CCTV
Posted by: Newsroom - 18-08-2008, 02:28 PM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

Many teachers say they are concerned about "hidden" surveillance cameras located in their schools.

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  'Bravest' students do not cheat
Posted by: Newsroom - 18-08-2008, 02:19 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

The most courageous students are least likely to cheat in class, US researchers say.

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  Sats marking contract is scrapped
Posted by: Newsroom - 15-08-2008, 05:03 PM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

The contract between exams authority the QCA and troubled marking firm ETS is ended by "mutual consent".

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  A-level results show big divide
Posted by: Newsroom - 15-08-2008, 03:12 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

Exam boards have given a regional breakdown of A-level results for England for the first time, showing big differences.

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  A Homeschooling Win in California
Posted by: Newsroom - 14-08-2008, 11:09 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

In a stunning reversal of its own ruling, a California court says it's O.K. for uncredentialed parents to homeschool their kids. But regulatory questions remain[Image: cnn_education?i=3PQSYH]</img>
[Image: cnn_education?i=GmfF2K]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=fplcdK]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=uzn9Mk]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=WXdozk]</img> [Image: cnn_education?i=Q2hG4K]</img>
[Image: 364255280]

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  A-level pass rate and A grades up
Posted by: Newsroom - 14-08-2008, 11:09 AM - Forum: News Feeds - No Replies

A-level results show another rise in the pass rate and in top grades plus wide variations between regions and countries.

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