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Scholastic Corporation is an American multinational publishing, education, and media company that publishes and distributes books, comics, and educational materials for schools, teachers, parents, children, and other educational institutions. Products are distributed via retail and online sales and through schools via reading clubs and book fairs.
Weekly Reader was a weekly educational classroom magazine designed for children. It began in 1928 as My Weekly Reader. Editions covered curriculum themes in the younger grade levels and news-based, current events and curriculum themed-issues in older grade levels. The publishing company also created workbooks, literacy centers, and picture ...
Scholasticism. Scholasticism was a medieval school of philosophy that employed a critical organic method of philosophical analysis predicated upon the Aristotelian 10 Categories. Christian scholasticism emerged within the monastic schools that translated scholastic Judeo-Islamic philosophies, and "rediscovered" the collected works of Aristotle.
Scholastic won’t say how many schools have opted “out” or “in” on the diverse category, but a spokesperson said the new grouping of books was created in response to teachers and school ...
Scholastic has reversed a decision to allow school districts running book fairs to exclude books about race and gender after facing widespread criticism. Scholastic backtracks on policy that ...
1525-1292. The New York Times Upfront is a news magazine for high school students, published by Scholastic Inc. in partnership with The New York Times. The magazine and its website feature journalism from the Times, as well as material produced by Upfront ’s editorial staff. Edited with a high school audience in mind, Upfront covers a wide ...
This book includes the following 10 short stories: The Chalk Closet, Home Sweet Home, Don't Wake Mummy, I'm Telling!, The Haunted House Game, Change for the Strange, The Perfect School, For the Birds, Aliens in the Garden and The Thumbprint of Doom. 04. Still More Tales To Give You Goosebumps. January 1997.
READ 180 was founded in 1985 by Ted Hasselbring and members of the Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt University.With a grant from the United States Department of Education’s Office of Special Education, Dr. Hasselbring developed software that used student performance data to individualize and differentiate the path of computerized reading instruction. [2]