If you think math is fun, you should meet Erika Noffsinger, a Yuba College math professor. She’s taught algebra, calculus and trigonometry for 30 years and can’t imagine doing anything else.
Teachers are finding creative ways to make math more engaging by tying it to real-world scenarios, games, and hands-on projects. From treasure hunts using coordinate grids to blended learning stations ...
"As I stood up to examine him, he offered a unique observation." ...
Math is hard. For many students, keeping up with a classroom that moves too fast — or too slow — is exhausting. Traditional ...
OpenAI says it has already put GPT-5.5’s coding skills to use internally. The LLM helped optimize the software that manages ...
I thought the problem was me. That I was looking for something that didn't exist. That I needed to lower my expectations, ...
MajorClarity by Edmentum will be the first career exploration platform to integrate Lexile and Quantile measures nationally, helping students align reading and math growth to real-world goals in ...
Isolating the first spark of life on Earth is a matter of biology, geology, and chemistry—but it's also an amazing math ...
To relieve kids from the pressure of standardized tests, elementary teacher Madeline Loring incorporates fun and ...
Thousands of students gathered in Savannah on Friday for the Big Tide Summit, an event designed to connect young people with ...
Jermaine Dawson stepped into his new role leading Baltimore City Public Schools this week with a blunt message: Students come ...
A look at the hashtag #PascoMath displays a rich and varied portrait of the many ways students are learning math in Pasco ...