[4] The fanaticism of the eastern Arabs now reasserted itself, and higher

education In the Mohammedan countries of the East drew permanently to a
close
[4] The fanaticism of the eastern Arabs now reasserted itself, and higher
education In the Mohammedan countries of the East drew permanently to a
close. A harsh, rigid orthodoxy, fatal to educational progress, now
triumphed. The coming of the Turks only made matters worse, and with their
advent education throughout Arabia and Asia Minor became a thing of the
past. Some day it will be the task of western Europe to hand back schools
and learning to the Mohammedan East. This may be one of the by-products of
the great World War.


03/29/2007 10:33 AM
Education News for Thursday, March 29
School choice - Opinion: The latest report card on school achievement in New Jersey provides further evidence that we need to change our education funding policy. The time is ripe for discussion. We can achieve progress toward


03/29/2007 12:02 PM
1: How To Apply For Differentiated Education Grant…
In order to put in place differentiated education programs and have the resources necessary to address all learning styles, schools can request differentiated education grant money. This article tells you how to write the proposal and


03/29/2007 06:54 PM
ECAR Releases New Study on IT Business Continuity in Higher Education
Responding to a well-documented increase of interest in business continuity and disaster recovery issues among higher education chief information officers (CIOs), ECAR designed the study to inform executives about how institutions


03/29/2007 02:26 PM
A handful of solutions to help close the education gap in the US
More charter schools where low- and middle-income students from families that want sucess for their children can receive an “ultra” education — smaller classes, more hours, longer school year, more opportunities for hands-on,


03/29/2007 11:37 AM
US income gap is really an education gap
In a recent study, a Washington education group reported that one year’s class of dropouts in California will cost the state $38.5 billion in lost wages, taxes and productivity over the lifetime of those students.


03/29/2007 04:45 PM
Education Secretary To Deputy WH Press Secretary: "Put Your Big
Dana Perino first began tearing up as she approached the White House pressroom Tuesday morning, moments after learning from her boss, Tony Snow, that his cancer had returned. “I took a few deep breaths and thought, ‘I’ve got to get

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