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Exclusive: Obama’s Defense Secretary Says Trump ‘Hurting His Chances’ of Nobel Prize

“The test of whether you’re really going to achieve peace is whether you abide by the rule of law,” Leon Panetta told Newsweek.
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Weather tracker: Tornado outbreak shatters North Dakota’s yearly record

Rare atmospheric setup creates perfect conditions for storm formation amid wettest September in decades

The yearly tornado record in North Dakota was shattered in just a few hours as the state experienced an extraordinary weather event. More than 20 tornadoes tore through South Dakota and North Dakota, with the storm system stretching across a 200-mile area, according to the National Weather Service.

Since 1995, the annual average for the state was 29 tornadoes, with the peak season occurring in June and July. However, last weekend’s intense outbreak pushed the total to a staggering 73, surpassing the previous record of 61, set in 1999.

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Donald Trump’s helicopter diverted to Luton airport

Emergency services were seen at Luton following the landing.
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I’m a principal at a high school that doesn’t push college. Our model was a hard sell to parents — but it paid off.

Joseph Samuelson
Joseph Samuelson, the principal of Upton High School, wants his students to be prepared for any path they take after graduation.

  • Joseph Samuelson is the principal at Upton High School in Wyoming.
  • The school uses a personalized learning model and doesn’t push college as the only goal.
  • Samuelson said the structure empowers his students to excel in whichever path they choose.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Joseph Samuelson, the principal at Upton High School in Wyoming. It has been edited for length and clarity.

I would never want to go back to a traditional teaching model.

I remember going to a school board meeting about eight years ago, and the community was up in arms about Upton High School’s decision to switch to personalized learning. I was the local middle school’s social studies teacher at the time, and when the high school overhauled its learning model, mistakes were made. Parents weren’t given enough heads-up on what personalized learning meant, teachers didn’t have proper training, and it led to both staff and students leaving the school.

It took time to get over those initial humps, but I watched as teachers started to individualize their curriculum and shift away from what many parents thought personalized learning was: an online platform where kids learn from virtual programs, instead of teachers.

As more staff at the high school started to shift away from the standard lecture and grading system structure in favor of open periods where students — not teachers — could choose how they wanted to practice what they learned, I saw how students benefited from the personalized structure. They are more motivated and excited about their schoolwork and have developed personal agency through being able to direct their own educational paths.

I remember seeing that shift during one class. I was busy taking care of something else for the first 10 minutes, and I hadn’t addressed my students yet, but they all took the initiative to start working on their own projects. I started to see that learner agency and self-sufficiency kicked in, and I really liked that.

Joseph Samuelson with students
Samuelson saw how students thrived under the personalized learning model.

Our students have had to accept through this model that the only option they have is to learn, and while failing is okay, quitting is not. There’s no substitute for hard work, and we pride ourselves on instilling that work ethic in our students.

Beyond personalized learning, our high school doesn’t promote college as the main path students should take. Our vision is to prepare students for college, career, or the military — we don’t push any path over the other. Our only job is to ensure our students have the tools to excel in whichever path they choose, and we do all that we can to make that happen.

Getting rid of invisible walls that block students from their best path

I’ve seen firsthand how giving our students pathways to multiple routes — not just college — after graduation has changed their trajectories. I had one student who never liked school, and he didn’t excel in the traditional model. It got to a point where his parents weren’t sure he would even make it to graduation.

Our personalized structure completely changed the game for him. When he said that college wasn’t his goal and that he wanted to pursue his hunting passion, we worked to make that a reality. Our guidance counselor arranged a hunting guide apprenticeship for him, and we allowed him to take time off from school. We were able to turn things around for him, and a kid who wouldn’t even pick up a book at the start of his high school experience is now reading about agriculture and hunting for fun.

I stand firmly behind our personalized learning model, and I think it would benefit kids across the country. But everything is slower in the world of education, and change is hard. We’ve had representatives from other schools visit us, and many of them have said that they’re interested in switching over, but it’s too much work to implement in their own districts.

Joseph Samuelson
Students at Upton High School have agency to decide what path is best for them, even if that path isn’t college.

Students are also increasingly realizing that they don’t have to go to college to be successful. Before we switched to personalized learning, most kids would graduate from high school and go to the University of Wyoming — that was the default. But I would see some of those kids go to the university, skip class, and ultimately fail because college was never the right fit for them.

That’s starting to change. We’re seeing more kids pick two-year schools over the standard four-year college experience. At the same time, we want to make sure every student has the preparation for college if that’s their goal; about 40% of our students had a college credit last year, and I prefer to have students take their first college class with us so they are prepared to navigate tough professors, learn time management, and get college-level feedback.

We don’t let our students shut down when things get tough — we give them advice and the resources to help them persevere.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Doctor who called Erin Patterson ‘crazy bitch’ after treating her penalised for speaking about case

Health regulator places conditions on Dr Christopher Webster’s registration over comments made after mushroom lunch murder trial

An Australian doctor who treated triple murderer Erin Patterson and her victims after the deadly mushroom lunch has been slapped with conditions by the health regulator after speaking out about the case.

Dr Christopher Webster, a GP in the Victorian town of Leongatha, south-east of Melbourne, was a witness in Patterson’s trial earlier this year.

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North Korea’s Copycat US Drone Takes Flight As Kim Jong Un Watches On

Kim said drone and AI technology was a top priority, amid reports Pyongyang aims to ship its war drones to Washington’s adversaries, including Iran.
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Ex-US Navy Base Revived in China’s Backyard

The Freeport Zone will also house a major munitions plant.
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Trump says Putin ‘really let me down’ amid stalled peace efforts

The US president said he had thought the war with Ukraine, which he previously claimed he could end in one day, would be ‘the easiest’ to settle.
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Governments to publish framework to deal with legacy of Troubles

Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn and Tánaiste Simon Harris will unveil the framework on Friday
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‘There’s no point condemning threats if we continue using abusive language’, Minister says

As the Dáil returns amid recent threats to politicians, a Government minister has said “there is no point in condemning this abuse if we continue to use abusive language”