MATHCOUNTS Manhattan Extended Rankings 2019.Xlsx

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

MATHCOUNTS Manhattan Extended Rankings 2019.Xlsx MATHCOUNTS Manhattan 2019 Extended Rankings 2019 Individual Rankings: Top 86 (308 students competed, ties only broken to 2019 Top 18 Teams (43 schools determine top 16) competed) Rank Student School Grade Rank School 1. Davis Zong Hunter College High School 7 1. Hunter College High School 2. Andrew Li NEST+m 7 2. NEST+m 3. Rohan Sastry Speyer Legacy School 6 3. Speyer Legacy School 4. Jason Chen Hunter College High School 8 4. NYC Lab Middle School 5. Charles Hua NEST+m 7 5. The Dalton School (competing early) 6. Hao Wang Hunter College High School 8 6. The Anderson School (PS 334) 7. Jake Rosenberg Speyer Legacy School 7 7. East Side Middle School (MS 114) 8. Justin Zhang NYC Lab Middle School 8 8. Collegiate School 9. Ethan Lin NYC Lab Middle School 8 9. Columbia Grammar and Prep MS 10. Jaemin Kim Hunter College High School 7 10. The Allen Stevenson School 11. Ella Joo The Anderson School 8 11. Friends Seminary School 12. Paul Gutkovich NEST+m 8 12. Trinity School 13. Kai Mawhinney The Dalton School 8 13. Battery Park City School (IS 276) 14. Jonathan Waldorf Avenues The World School 8 13. Booker T. Washington (MS 54) 15. Maya Mori Booker T. Washington (MS54) 8 15. George Bruce Library Homeschool 16. Lucas Chen The Dalton School 7 15. TAG Young Scholars 17. April Ren Hunter College High School 8 17. St. Bernard's School 18. Paul Byron George Bruce Library Homeschool 7 18. Avenues: The World School 19. Thomas Breydo Speyer Legacy School 8 19. Brandon Lou Hunter College High School 8 19. Haokai Ma NEST+m 7 19. Julia Miyasaka The Dalton School 7 19. Alex Pan East Side Middle School (MS 114) 8 19. Mason SabellaRosa Columbia Grammar and Prep MS 7 25. Maya Doron-Repa Speyer Legacy School 8 25. Charlie Hammack Speyer Legacy School 7 25. Katie Hwang The Dalton School 8 25. James Leung Hunter College High School 7 25. Anya Levin The Anderson School 7 25. Raam Melvani The Allen Stevenson School 8 25. Ashwin Ranjan The Dalton School 7 25. Brandon Zhang NYC Lab Middle School 6 33. Raymond Allie TAG Young Scholars 8 33. Nancy Bao Hunter College High School 7 33. Sebastian de Luque Battery Park City School 8 33. Cyan Gupta NEST+m 6 33. Michael Jiang The Dalton School 8 33. Julia Kozak NEST+m 8 33. Haeon Lee The Dalton School 7 33. Christopher Lu Collegiate School 6 33. Wilby Opich Speyer Legacy School 8 33. Victor Robila Hunter College High School 7 33. Daniel Wagman The Dalton School 6 44. Michael Korvyakov Speyer Legacy School 8 44. Anis Mustapha-Sabbatini Lycee Francais de New York 8 44. Kathleen Zhang NEST+m 8 47. Samara Baksh The Spence School 8 47. John Kian O'Neill Collegiate School 6 47. Ryan Lee NYC Lab Middle School 8 47. Ben Levy Trinity School 8 47. Dong-Yeop Shin TAG Young Scholars 8 47. Derek Tang St. Bernard's School 7 53. Arjun Bhakoo Collegiate School 8 53. Augustin Chan Avenues The World School 7 53. Farris Farouki Trinity School 8 53. Binah Friedman Speyer Legacy School 7 53. Cecily Gross Hunter College High School 8 53. Aaron Halder The Anderson School 7 53. Duke Hogan-Murphy Trinity School 8 53. Eliza Karim TAG Young Scholars 8 53. Anastasia Lee NYC Lab Middle School 6 MATHCOUNTS Manhattan 2019 Extended Rankings 53. Narayan Topali The Dalton School 7 53. Chloe Zhou AltSchool Union Square 6 64. Daniel Bae St. Bernard's School 8 64. Kosta Dubovskiy NEST+m 8 64. Will Kalish St. Bernard's School 8 64. William Kamfar Trevor Day School 6 64. Daniel Kim NYC Lab Middle School 6 64. William Ostling Collegiate School 8 64. Rhea Pandit Trinity School 8 64. Hannah Wermuth Columbia Grammar and Prep MS 7 64. John Willinge St. Bernard's School 6 73. Victor Bardin Success Academy Harlem West 8 73. Daniel Chong The Anderson School 8 73. Avery Chu The Spence School 6 73. Jake Henschel East Side Middle School (MS 114) 7 73. Shrey Jhalani Collegiate School 8 73. Evan Kentas Avenues The World School 6 73. Nathaniel Marinaccio Collegiate School 8 73. Aman Mirza St. Bernard's School 8 73. Jacob Paltrowitz Booker T. Washington (MS54) 8 73. Oscar Uzdelewicz Manhattan Country School 8 73. Julia Williams Friends Seminary 8 73. Max Yenlee NYC Lab Middle School 8 73. Eugene Yoo Speyer Legacy School 8 73. Henry Zhang St. Bernard's School 7.
Recommended publications
  • Nonpubenrollment2014-15 INST CD 010100115658 010100115665 010100115671 010100115684 010100115685 010100115705 010100115724 01010
    Nonpubenrollment2014-15 INST_CD 010100115658 010100115665 010100115671 010100115684 010100115685 010100115705 010100115724 010100118044 010100208496 010100317828 010100996053 010100996179 010100996428 010100996557 010100997616 010100997791 010100997850 010201805052 010306115761 010306809859 010306999575 010500996017 010601115674 010601216559 010601315801 010601629639 010623115655 010623115753 010623116561 010623806562 010623995677 010802115707 020801659054 021601658896 022001807067 022601136563 030200185471 030200185488 030200227054 030701998080 030701998858 031401996149 031501187966 031502185486 031502995612 031601806564 042400136448 042400139126 042400805651 042901858658 043001658554 Page 1 Nonpubenrollment2014-15 043001658555 043001658557 043001658559 043001658561 043001658933 043001659682 050100169701 050100996140 050100996169 050100999499 050100999591 050301999417 050701999254 051101658562 051101658563 051901425832 051901427119 060201858116 060503658575 060503659689 060601658556 060601659292 060601659293 060601659294 060601659295 060601659296 060601659297 060601659681 060701655117 060701656109 060701659831 060701659832 060800139173 060800808602 061700308038 062601658578 062601658579 062601659163 070600166199 070600166568 070600807659 070901166200 070901855968 070901858020 070901999027 081200185526 081200808719 091101159175 091101858426 091200155496 091200808631 100501997955 Page 2 Nonpubenrollment2014-15 101601996549 101601998246 110200185503 110200808583 110200809373 120501999934 120906999098 121901999609 130200805048 130200809895
    [Show full text]
  • Concurrent Workshops 11:15 – 12:30 Select Your Workshop Choice Here
    Educating Boy 2016 • February 19, 2016 • Regis High Shool Concurrent Workshops 11:15 – 12:30 Select your workshop choice here 1 The Role of the Arts at a Boys' School – Room 301 Sarah Murphy, Head Librarian [email protected] 7 Helping Boys Behave - Auditorium Zack Davis, Nik Vlahos, Heather Fetrow Richard Brownstone, Upper School Dean [email protected] The Browning School Lynnette Arthur, Pre-School Head Teacher Grades PK-12 Subjecs: Arts Packer Collegiate Institute Grades PK-12 Subjects: Other Browning educators in visual art, music, and theater/performing arts discuss the ways that arts education from standpoints of both theory and practice are essential to a well rounded Effective school discipline means teaching students not only to suppress bad behavior but also boys' school experience. This panel presentation will provide concrete examples of using the to understand why they should be good. But many boys live in a world where pressure to arts to effectively connect with boys as well as opportunities for curricular and extracurricular achieve leads to foolish decisions; where being the class clown brings notoriety; where collaboration across departments and divisions. striving to be a Type A personality means straying outside the bounds of decorum. Further, research shows that boys are biologically hardwired to misbehave! So how do we teach them 2 Educating Boys: Best Practices at The Browning School – Room 302 to be good when they can gain from being bad and are predisposed to badness? Perhaps we Susan Levine, Librarian [email protected] must acknowledge the humor or positive goals of some bad behavior and accept that boys Stephen Clement, Sanford Pelz, Susan Kehoe need conflict in order to grow.
    [Show full text]
  • FY2020 Bond Master List
    Schedule of Bonds & Notes Outstanding Pursuant to 2800(2)(a)(4) to FY2020 Build NYC Resource Corporation Rate Type Variable Rate Variable Rate Bond Trustee Date of Bond Description ‐ 1 Project Name Agency Series Issuance Amount Date of Maturity Minimum for Maximum for Company Issuance for Fixed, 2 FY2020 FY2020 for Variable 1005 Intervale Avenue LLC BLD BONY 2018 10/12/2018$ 8,825,000.00 6/1/2048 1 A Very Special Place, Inc. (2013 Adjustable) BLD BONY 2013 2/28/2013$ 4,840,000.00 7/1/2038 2 2.379% 4.050% A Very Special Place, Inc. (2013 Fixed) BLD BONY 2013 3/21/2013$ 6,795,000.00 1/1/2033 1 Albee Retail Development LLC (2014) BLD BONY 2014 10/29/2014$ 20,000,000.00 10/1/2030 2 1.00% 3.00% Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Inc. (f/k/a Com BLD US Bank 2015 9/9/2015$ 175,000,000.00 9/1/2045 1 All Stars Project, Inc. BLD First Republic 2012 11/29/2012$ 10,720,000.00 11/29/2038 1 Alphapointe BLD US Bank 2017 6/16/2017$ 18,850,000.00 6/1/2042 2 1.836% 3.458% AMDA, Inc. BLD US Bank 2015 12/2/2015$ 21,000,000.00 12/1/2025 2 0.000% 3.245% AMDA, Inc. #2 BLD US Bank 2018 11/15/2018$ 34,250,000.00 11/1/2043 1 American Committee for the Weizmann Institute BLD BONY 2015 10/29/2015$ 8,830,000.00 11/1/2034 1 American Dream Charter School BLD BONY 2018A 10/29/2018$ 25,725,000.00 6/15/2052 1 American Dream Charter School BLD BONY 2018B 10/29/2018$ 1,020,000.00 6/15/2025 1 ARK Development LLC BLD Zions Bank 2017 6/14/2017$ 35,000,000.00 6/1/2041 1 Arvene By The Sea & LLC & Benjamin Beechwood Re BLD US Bank 2015 2/11/2015$ 11,100,000.00 11/1/2039 1 Asia Society, The BLD BONY 2015 7/1/2015$ 16,795,000.00 4/1/2045 2 0.090% 5.750% Bais Ruchel High School, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Experimentation in Hunter's TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAM Herbert C
    Experimentation in Hunter's TEACHER EDUCATION PROGRAM Herbert C. Schueler The Teacher Education Program at Hunter College who by 1970 will represent one of every two children is quite different now from what it was a short ten years enrolled in our urban public schools. Volunteers are ago; ten years from now it will be quite different from recruited among the senior students to do their student the way it is now. It is a program, as much as any in teaching in special service, slum schools and to be the country, that keeps abreast of changing conditions prepared for full-time teaching vacancies the very next and needs. semester, in the same schools in which they receive their training. The training itself is intensified consid­ Traditionally, more than half of Hunter's under­ erably beyond the usual, with more than doubled super­ graduates, and an overwhelming majority of its grad­ vision by college and school personnel, increased teach­ uates are future or present teachers in our public ing opportunity, and an orientation to the community schools. No roll call of teachers in any New York served by the school led and organized by a member of school will fail to reveal a sizable contingent of Hunter the College staff. The personnel division of the Board . graduates. Therefore, in a very real sense, the develop­ of Education guarantees placement to the school in ment of public education in our area bears the mark of which the student teacher receives his training, pro­ Hunter's influence. This represents a responsibility vided he passes the usual examinations and is willing and a challenge that makes demands both frightening to accept the appointment.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Supplementary Directory of New Bargaining Agents and Contracts in Institutions of Higher Education, 2013-2019
    NATIONAL CENTER for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions 2020 Supplementary Directory of New Bargaining Agents and Contracts in Institutions of Higher Education, 2013-2019 William A. Herbert Jacob Apkarian Joseph van der Naald November 2020 NATIONAL CENTER • i • 2020 SUPPLEMENTAL DIRECTORY NATIONAL CENTER for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions 2020 Supplementary Directory of New Bargaining Agents and Contracts in Institutions of Higher Education, 2013-2019 William A. Herbert Jacob Apkarian Joseph van der Naald November 2020 NATIONAL CENTER • ii • 2020 SUPPLEMENTAL DIRECTORY The National Center for the Study of Collective agents, and contracts, with a primary focus on Bargaining in Higher Education and the faculty at institutions of higher education. Professions (National Center) is a labor- management research center at Hunter College, In addition, the National Center organizes City University of New York (CUNY) and an national and regional labor-management affiliated policy research center at the Roosevelt conferences, publishes the peer reviewed House Public Policy Institute. The National Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy, Center’s research and activities focus on research articles for other journals, and collective bargaining, labor relations, and labor distributes a monthly newsletter. The newsletter history in higher education and the professions. resumed in 2014, following a 14-year hiatus. Through the newsletter, we have reported on Since its formation, the National Center has representation petition filings, agency and court functioned as a clearinghouse and forum decisions, the results in representation cases, for those engaged in and studying collective and other developments relating to collective bargaining and labor relations.
    [Show full text]
  • Amazon's Document
    REQUEST FOR INFORMATION Project Clancy TALENT A. Big Questions and Big Ideas 1. Population Changes and Key Drivers. a. Population level - Specify the changes in total population in your community and state over the last five years and the major reasons for these changes. Please also identify the majority source of inbound migration. Ne Yok Cit’s populatio ge fo . illio to . illio oe the last fie eas ad is projected to surpass 9 million by 2030.1 New York City continues to attract a dynamic and diverse population of professionals, students, and families of all backgrounds, mainly from Latin America (including the Caribbean, Central America, and South America), China, and Eastern Europe.2 Estiate of Ne York City’s Populatio Year Population 2011 8,244,910 2012 8,336,697 2013 8,405,837 2014 8,491,079 2015 8,550,405 2016 8,537,673 Source: American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates Cumulative Estimates of the Components of Population Change for New York City and Counties Time period: April 1, 2010 - July 1, 2016 Total Natural Net Net Net Geographic Area Population Increase Migration: Migration: Migration: Change (Births-Deaths) Total Domestic International New York City Total 362,540 401,943 -24,467 -524,013 499,546 Bronx 70,612 75,607 -3,358 -103,923 100,565 Brooklyn 124,450 160,580 -32,277 -169,064 136,787 Manhattan 57,861 54,522 7,189 -91,811 99,000 1 New York City Population Projections by Age/Sex & Borough, 2010-2040 2 Place of Birth for the Foreign-Born Population in 2012-2016, American Community Survey PROJECT CLANCY PROPRIETARY AND CONFIDENTIAL 4840-0257-2381.3 1 Queens 102,332 99,703 7,203 -148,045 155,248 Staten Island 7,285 11,531 -3,224 -11,170 7,946 Source: Population Division, U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • NP Distofattend-2014-15
    DISTRICT_CD DISTRICT_NAME NONPUB_INST_CD NONPUB_INST_NAME 91‐223‐NP‐HalfK 91‐224‐NP‐FullK‐691‐225‐NP‐7‐12 Total NonPub 010100 ALBANY 010100115665 BLESSED SACRAMENT SCHOOL 0 112 31 143 010100 ALBANY 010100115671 MATER CHRISTI SCHOOL 0 145 40 185 010100 ALBANY 010100115684 ALL SAINTS' CATHOLIC ACADEMY 0 100 29 129 010100 ALBANY 010100115685 ACAD OF HOLY NAME‐LOWER 049049 010100 ALBANY 010100115724 ACAD OF HOLY NAMES‐UPPER 0 18 226 244 010100 ALBANY 010100118044 BISHOP MAGINN HIGH SCHOOL 0 0 139 139 010100 ALBANY 010100208496 MAIMONIDES HEBREW DAY SCHOOL 0 45 22 67 010100 ALBANY 010100996053 HARRIET TUBMAN DEMOCRATIC 0 0 18 18 010100 ALBANY 010100996179 CASTLE ISLAND BILINGUAL MONT 0 4 0 4 010100 ALBANY 010100996428 ALBANY ACADEMIES (THE) 0 230 572 802 010100 ALBANY 010100997616 FREE SCHOOL 0 25 7 32 010100 Total ALBANY 1812 010201 BERNE KNOX 010201805052 HELDERBERG CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 1 25 8 34 010201 Total 0 34 010306 BETHLEHEM 010306115761 ST THOMAS THE APOSTLE SCHOOL 0 148 48 196 010306 BETHLEHEM 010306809859 MT MORIAH ACADEMY 0 11 20 31 010306 BETHLEHEM 010306999575 BETHLEHEM CHILDRENS SCHOOL 1 12 3 16 010306 Total 0 243 010500 COHOES 010500996017 ALBANY MONTESSORI EDUCATION 0202 010500 Total 0 2 010601 SOUTH COLONIE 010601115674 CHRISTIAN BROTHERS ACADEMY 0 38 407 445 010601 SOUTH COLONIE 010601216559 HEBREW ACAD‐CAPITAL DISTRICT 0 63 15 78 010601 SOUTH COLONIE 010601315801 OUR SAVIOR'S LUTHERAN SCHOOL 9 76 11 96 010601 SOUTH COLONIE 010601629639 AN NUR ISLAMIC SCHOOL 0 92 23 115 010601 Total 0 734 010623 NORTH COLONIE CSD 010623115655
    [Show full text]
  • THE DALTON SCHOOL New York, New York
    THE DALTON SCHOOL New York, New York FIRST PROGRAM ASSISTANT DIRECTOR / DEAN OF FACULTY & CURRICULUM Start Date: July 2021 dalton.org Mission The Dalton School is committed to providing an education of excellence that meets each student’s interests, abilities and needs within a common curricular framework and reflects and promotes an understanding of, and appreciation for, diversity in our community as an integral part of school life. Dalton challenges each student to develop intellectual independence, creativity and curiosity and a sense of responsibility toward others both within the School and in the community at large. Guided by the Dalton Plan, the School prepares students to “Go Forth Unafraid®.” OVERVIEW Founded in 1919 by Helen Parkhurst, The Dalton School is an independent, coeducational K-12 school in New York City. Dalton has actively embraced an innovative and progressive tradition for more than 100 years, offering its 1,300 students a wide array of stimulating and challenging programs guided by the Dalton Plan, Parkhurst’s bold and unique educational model. A rigorous and challenging curriculum combined with a dedicated faculty enable the school to maximize each child’s abilities and potential while encouraging students to contribute their imagination, curiosity, and special interests to the entire Dalton community. The First Program occupies its own fully equipped campus on East 91st Street, several blocks from the Upper School/Middle School building on 89th (although currently, given COVID protocols, the First Program is operating in two facilities). The academic program is centered around experiential, inquiry- based activities so that students acquire skills, deepen their understanding of content, and learn how to think creatively.
    [Show full text]
  • A Nice Place to Lib & Learn
    Jessica, also attended Normal College. ITH THE turn of the century, Today, Miss Eagleson is one of the old- life for women began to be est living Hunter alumnae. W slightly less restrictive. By 1900, Hunter's "Normal Five," the col- At ninety-three, she is a sprightly, dimin- A Nice Place to Lib & Learn lege's first basketball team-dressed in utive woman who has retained a biting bloomers with their hair piled demurely sense of humor and a clear vision of the in buns-had already traveled to Staten past. Miss Eagleson, who never married, Island and Southhampton to play. Hunter College, established as Normal College more than 102 enrolled in Normal College at age 14 in 1894 and took what was then called the In 1906, Miss Annie E. Hickenbottom, a years ago, has always offered bold, educational opportunities classical course, graduating five years warm-hearted, merry and sympathetic later in 1899. woman who wore a pince-nez, was ap- to women.. In fact, it> still a far from normal place. Interviewed in her 79th Street apartment pointed superintendent. Soon after- overlooking the East River, Miss Eagle- wards, her duties were enlarged and she son vividly recalled a New York City became the first dean ,of students-a post she held until her retirement in 1934. By Joan Dim without skyscrapers and pollution. She described Hunter College's first perma- The college was growing and rapidly nent building, which was opened in 1873 gaining status in the community. In 1909, and which burned down in 1936. the faculty marched in full academic re- .ORIA STEINEM and Germaine in the United States to provide a free galia.
    [Show full text]
  • Horace Mann School HY-TEK's MEET MANAGER
    Horace Mann School HY-TEK's MEET MANAGER 7.0 - 7:40 PM 2/25/2020 Page 1 NYSAISAA Championship 2020 - 2/24/2020 to 2/26/2020 NYSAIS Swimming Championship 2020 Results - NYSAIS Swimming Championship Finals Event 1 Girls 200 Yard Medley Relay Team Relay Prelim Time Finals Time A - Final 1 Trinity School A 1:58.56 1:53.88 1) Raboy, Ghelila SR 2) Zhang, Sophia SR 3) Giordano, Ariana SR 4) Eng, Lauren SR 32.19 29.68 27.74 24.27 2 Convent of the Sacred Heart A 1:55.59 1:54.16 1) Main, Morgan SO 2) Basler, Alia SO 3) Ng, Chloe SR 4) Echavarria, Victoria FR 28.24 31.77 29.02 25.13 3 Nightingale-Bamford School A 1:57.66 1:54.46 1) Lachman, Katherine 2) Lanning, Gracyn 3) Skaistis, Talia 4) Duggan, Isabella 30.32 31.62 27.62 24.90 4 Chapin School A 2:02.28 1:56.24 1) Moon, Zoe 2) Moeder, Sarah 3) Kim, Olivia 4) Orange, Marley 29.76 34.34 26.76 25.38 5 The Brearley School-MR A 1:58.77 1:56.65 1) Tan, Chloe 8 2) Skaistis, Delilah 8 3) Shimizu-Bowers, Hana 10 4) Chang, Nicole 8 33.67 31.01 25.78 26.19 6 Hackley Varsity Swimming-MR A 2:02.18 2:01.90 1) Rotenberg, Mary JR 2) Lopez-Ryan, Brooke SO 3) Park, Grace SO 4) Carey, Hannah SO 28.28 35.74 29.17 28.71 7 The Masters School-MR A 2:07.48 2:06.15 1) Furniss, Corinne 2) Furniss, Ella 3) Bascon, Jaden 4) Ioukhnovets, Vasilisa 32.68 36.40 29.80 27.27 --- Ethical Culture Fieldston Scho-MR A 2:03.44 DQ 1) Friedman, Emma FR 2) Wong, Angie FR 3) Kao, Denika JR 4) Franchin, Amelia JR 32.53 33.39 32.49 26.94 B - Final 9 The Spence School A 2:08.73 2:07.11 1) Taylor, Paige 2) Seth, Amalie 3) Clemente-Cong, Lily
    [Show full text]
  • Zachary C. Shirkey
    Zachary C. Shirkey Associate Professor of Political Science Hunter College, CUNY Graduate Center, CUNY [email protected] Education: Columbia University, PhD Political Science (Honors), 2006 University of Michigan, BA Political Science & Economics (High Honors & High Distinction), 1999 Appointments: Hunter College, CUNY 2010 to present Graduate Center, CUNY 2014 to present St. John Fisher College 2006 to 2010 Publications and Research: Books: Savic, Ivan and Zachary C. Shirkey. 2017. Uncertainty, Threat, & International Security: Implications for Southeast Asia. London: Routledge. Joining the Fray: Military Intervention in Civil Wars. 2012. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Is This a Private Fight or Can Anybody Join? The Spread of Interstate War. 2009. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Articles: “The Puzzle of War Duration,” Forthcoming. Polity. “The Empirical Challenges of Studying Long Wars,” Forthcoming. Polity. Lee, Michael and Zachary C. Shirkey. 2017. “Going Beyond the Existing Consensus: The Use of Games in International Relations Education,” PS: Political Science and Politics 50(2): 571–75. “Joining By Number: Military Intervention in Civil Wars,” 2016. Civil Wars 18(4): 417–38. “Uncertainty and War Duration,” 2016. International Studies Review 18(2): 244–67. “When and How Many: The Effects of Third Party Joining on Casualties and Duration in Interstate Wars,” 2012. Journal of Peace Research 49(2): 321–34. 1 Savic, Ivan and Zachary C. Shirkey. 2009. “Trust in the Balance: The Role of Commitment Problems in Shaping External Balancing Behavior,” Journal of Theoretical Politics 21(4): 483–507. Book Chapters: “Military Intervention in Interstate and Civil Wars: A Unified Interpretation,” 2017. In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Empirical International Relations Theory, William R.
    [Show full text]
  • Edtpa: an Assessment That Reduces the Quality of Teacher Education
    Teachers College, Columbia University Working Papers in TESOL & Applied Linguistics, 2014, Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 28-30 The Forum edTPA: An Assessment that Reduces the Quality of Teacher Education Stephanie Chiu Hunter College, City University of New York As one of the first students in my TESOL teacher education program to complete my edTPA submission, I recently shared my experience with a class where the majority of the students were at the beginning of their program. Afterwards, one of my classmates expressed that while my presentation was informative, it was also very depressing. My student teaching seminar this past semester should have been one of the most valuable and insightful experiences of my teacher development program. My class consisted of peers whom I have grown to respect over the course of our program, and a legendary professor who is able to espouse the ideals of teaching and working with emergent bilinguals and their families, while also tackling the realities of teaching in an urban public school. Nonetheless, my peers and I ended the semester describing our edTPA-focused student teaching seminar not as “inspiring” or “practical for our teaching,” but rather as “painful” and “as smooth as possible” considering the circumstances. Pre-service teachers should be taught how to use teaching and learning as opportunities for self-empowerment and advancing social justice. We should be taught how to critically reflect on issues of identity, race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality, as well as question the historical, sociocultural, and political contexts in which education is situated. Our student teaching seminar should be a supportive space to share successes and challenges, to discuss strategies, and to troubleshoot problems.
    [Show full text]