Saturday, December 26, 2015

Throwback look: seniors lead way to nation’s top-tier teams

The old guys are back in charge in college basketball this season.


After recent years with the focus locked on one-and-done talent, it’s the seniors — guys like No. 1 Michigan State’s Denzel Valentine, No. 3 Oklahoma’s Buddy Hield and No. 5 Virginia’s Malcolm Brogdon — leading some of the nation’s best teams.

It’s created a throwback look to when upperclassmen stuck around elite programs instead of bolting early for the NBA, not to mention did more than just handle the dirty work behind some headline-grabbing youngsters.

Coaches are loving the dynamic.

“You’d always rather have experienced leadership than not, of course,” Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said.

“Always, the message goes out when it goes from player to player as opposed to coach to player, it’s more effective.”

In this week’s Top 25, six top-10 teams and 14 teams in the poll have seniors as leading scorers — and in some cases there’s more than one in a leading role.

Compare that to last year’s final AP Top 25 of the season, when three top-10 teams and eight ranked squads had seniors as leading scorers. And this week’s totals are higher than for any of the final AP polls dating to at least the 2007-08 season, according to STATS.

The best example of that senior success has been Michigan State’s Valentine, who has grown from a complimentary scorer for a Final Four team to a candidate for national player of the year.

The 6-foot-5 guard, who will miss the next 2-3 weeks due to minor knee surgery announced Monday, is averaging 18.5 points, 8.3 rebounds and 7.1 assists. He’s also had two triple-doubles this year, including a 29-point, 12-rebound, 12-assist performance to hand No. 2 Kansas its only loss.

“I can get a lot better,” Valentine said earlier this month. “I need to work on my defense. And, I need to make the most of every possession.”

This senior-led formula has worked well for coach Tom Izzo before. His 2000 national championship team had strong leadership with seniors Mateen Cleaves and Morris Peterson, while touted freshman Jason Richardson took a supporting role.

“I like the one-and-dones because they’re pretty talented,” Izzo said. “(Seniors), they bring a lot to your team. They really do.

“I won a championship with a couple of redshirt seniors. That’s very important, because you’ve always got someone to go to. And we go to ‘Zel a lot.”

The signs were there to start the year that seniors were poised for a big impact. Three — Hield, No. 11 Iowa State’s Georges Niang and Gonzaga’s Kyle Wiltjer — were named to the five-man AP preseason all-America team, the most in five seasons.

Hield, a 6-4 guard, entered the week ninth nationally in scoring at 23.5 points per game, up about a half-dozen from last year.

Niang, a 6-8 forward, entered the week averaging 18.7 points and is one of three seniors averaging in double figures for the Cyclones — an experienced group together so long that new coach Steve Prohm has largely stuck with former coach Fred Hoiberg’s playbook.

Wiltjer, a 6-10 forward who spent a year at Kentucky, guided the Zags to the NCAA Elite Eight last year and entered the week averaging 20.6 points.

Then throw in guys like Brogdon, who has earned the nickname “Uncle Malcolm” from Virginia teammates. Or No. 7 North Carolina’s returning all-Atlantic Coast Conference senior duo of Marcus Paige and Brice Johnson — who are the top two scoring options for the preseason No. 1 Tar Heels.

Eighth-ranked Arizona added a No. 1 scorer in Boston College transfer Ryan Anderson, No. 9 Butler’s offense is at its best when high-scoring guard Kellen Dunham is hot and No. 13 Miami’s seniors have already led the Hurricanes on an impressive three-game romp through last month’s Puerto Rico Tipoff.

“When you look at our league this year, Kansas is a much older team, Iowa State’s a much older team, we’re a much older team,” Kruger said of the Big 12. “That’s kind of rare in teams that are ranked in the top 10 or top 15.”
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AP Sports Writer Cliff Brunt in Norman, Oklahoma; Jimmy Golen in Boston; Hank Kurz in Charlottesville, Virginia; Larry Lage in East Lansing, Michigan; and Luke Meredith in Ames, Iowa; contributed to this report.
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Follow Aaron Beard on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/aaronbeardap and the AP’s college basketball site at http://collegebasketball.ap.org
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SRN News » Sports

Friday, December 18, 2015

BlackBerry quarterly revenues top expectations; shares rally


By Euan Rocha and Alastair Sharp

TORONTO (Reuters) – BlackBerry Ltd reported a smaller-than-expected fiscal third-quarter loss on Friday and its first quarter-to-quarter revenue gain in over two years, indicating turnaround efforts may be gaining traction.

The better-than-expected results, driven by higher hardware and software revenues, sent BlackBerry shares up 5 percent in early trading in New York and Toronto.

“I’m pleased with our progress and the growth in Q3,” said Chief Executive Officer John Chen, on a conference call. “Our results demonstrate that we’re executing on the turnaround.”

In the quarter ended Nov. 28, the Waterloo, Ontario-based company reported a loss of $ 89 million, or 17 cents a share. That compared with a year ago loss of $ 148 million, or 28 cents a share.

Excluding a noncash credit tied to a change in the value of debentures, restructuring charges and other one-time items, the company posted a loss of $ 15 million, or 3 cents a share.

Quarterly revenue fell 31 percent to $ 548 million from a year earlier, but rose 12 percent from the prior quarter, after nine consecutive quarters of declines.

Analysts, on average, expected BlackBerry to post a loss of 14 cents a share on revenue of $ 489 million.
Software revenue, a metric being closely watched by analysts as BlackBerry pivots to focus on that segment, more than doubled to $ 162 million from a year earlier.

“BlackBerry hit a software number that investors have been looking for them to hit for quite some time,” said Morningstar analyst Brian Colello.

Year-to-date software revenue is about $ 362 million, within striking range of the company’s forecast target of $ 500 million for the current fiscal year ending Feb. 29, 2016.

Revenue from smartphone sales also rose for the first time in four quarters to $ 214 million from $ 201 million in the second quarter.

It sold 700,000 devices in the latest quarter down from about 800,000 in the prior period, but average selling prices (ASPs) on devices jumped to $ 315 from $ 240.

The ASP increase came after BlackBerry recently rolled out the Priv, its first device powered by Alphabet Inc’s Google Android operating system. BlackBerry said it sees its hardware arm possibly returning to breakeven operating profit in the current quarter.

Significantly, gains in software revenue more than offset a decline in BlackBerry’s legacy system access fees this quarter. BlackBerry said it expects the trend to continue, helping it beat both top-line and bottom-line Wall Street expectations in the ongoing quarter.

BlackBerry stock was up 63 cents to $ 8.43 in New York and 96 Canadian cents to C$ 11.85 in Toronto.

(Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
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SRN News » Science

Austrian university strips Nobel Prize winner of honors

VIENNA (AP) — An Austrian university has posthumously stripped Nobel Prize-winning scientist Konrad Lorenz of his honorary doctorate due to his fervent embrace of Nazism.

The University of Salzburg cites Lorenz’s 1938 application for membership in Hitler’s Nazi party in its decision made public Thursday.

Lorenz describes himself as “always a National Socialist.”. He says his work “stands to serve National Socialist thought.”

The university says Lorenz spread “basic elements of the racist ideology of National Socialism” in his work.
The late Austrian zoologist, ethologist, and ornithologist was one of three winners of the 1973 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

He is known for his study of instinctive behavior in animals.

Lorenz only acknowledged being a member of the Nazi party after his membership application turned up long after World War II.

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Sudan refugee ordained as Episcopal deacon in Utah

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A man who was one of thousands of children in Sudan forced to flee or be inducted into the army during the country’s civil war was ordained recently as a deacon by the Episcopal Diocese of Utah.

For Gabriel Garang Atem, 36, the achievement marked another step on a long road where his faith has sustained him as he navigated the dangers of a war in Sudan, famine and life in refugee camps.
As an orphan in 1987, he and thousands of other young children were forced to flee Sudan on foot to Ethiopia.

Thousands of the children, mostly boys, lost their lives as they faced attacks from rebels and wild animals, drowned in rivers, or succumbed to malnourishment, dehydration and exposure to the elements.

“It was not safe for us because there was no way you can protect yourself. You do not have weapons. You are not grown up enough so that you can defend yourself. It wasn’t really a good life for us,” Atem said.
His unwavering faith in God, Atem said, helped him as he and the other boys faced the possibility that they may not survive.

“It wasn’t I worried about what will I eat tomorrow. It was ‘Will I wake up tomorrow?'” he said. “‘Am I going to be able to make it to walk thousands of miles? Am I going to make it to get water? I’m thirsty and I need water. Am I going to get it?'”

He maintained his hope and strength by telling himself that he would be a better person one day if he stayed alive. Now that he’s become a deacon and is on a path to the faith’s priesthood, Atem said that day has come.

He said he was called by God to become an Episcopal priest. He can apply for that opportunity now that he’s been made a deacon.

“When God called me, I accept the call because since I was a little boy, I knew I wasn’t going to live on my own without the help of God through people,” he said.

Atem said he’s one of only a handful of Lost Boys of Sudan who have gone on to become ordained ministers in the U.S.

Atem was resettled from Kenya to Virginia in 2001. He moved to Utah about a decade ago.
He soon earned a high school diploma, went to college and began serving as a lay pastor, leading worship services in the Dinka language.

Atem has since returned to Africa to visit family, and he married a woman there in 2006. By 2009, he was a United States citizen and was able to bring his wife to the U.S. They now live in Salt Lake City with twin boys.

Atem told the Deseret News (http://bit.ly/21PQT4X) that the Episcopal Diocese and Utah have warmly embraced the Sudanese community and refugees.

“We feel welcome,” he said. “Being a stranger in the house of God is really a blessing. With the help of the diocese, they see us as their brothers and sisters in Christ.”
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Information from: Deseret News, http://www.deseretnews.com
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SRN News » Religious News

Sunday, December 6, 2015

VTech hack exposes ID theft risk in connecting kids to Internet


By Jim Finkle and Jeremy Wagstaff

BOSTON/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Parents who gave their child a Kidizoom smartwatch or a VTech InnoTab tablet may have exposed them to identity theft after Hong Kong-based VTech said hackers stole the personal information of more than 6 million children.

The breach underscores how digital products aimed at kids often have far weaker security than other computer products, and may pose a threat to a booming industry. Shipments of toys that connect to the Internet will rise 200 percent over the next five years, according to estimates by UK-based Juniper Research.

It’s not clear what the motive was for the VTech breach nor whether it has resulted in any identity theft so far. Still, it’s a warning for people who don’t understand how much data and sensitive information is in a child’s toy.

“The last thing you would ever imagine is that a toy manufacturer would lose your child’s identity,” said Liam O’Murchu, a Symantec Corp <SYMC.O> researcher known for his work dissecting complex malware produced by nation states. “This shows that it’s harder and harder to do things safely online,” he said.
In VTech’s case, buyers of the company’s cameras, watches and tablets are encouraged to provide names, addresses and birth dates when signing up for accounts where they can download updates, games, books and other content.

VTech said the hackers compromised its Learning Lodge app store, which provides content for children’s tablets, and its Kid Connect mobile app service that lets parents communicate with those tablets.

Toys that gather data on the user, like VTech’s line of cameras, watches and tablets and their associated websites, will grow by 58 percent annually, according to Juniper.

That category includes dolls like Mattel Inc’s <MAT.O> recently introduced Hello Barbie, which connects to home wireless networks and communicates with servers to enable conversations by uploading audio and getting responses from the cloud.

Mobile security firm Bluebox and independent security researcher Andrew Hay on Friday disclosed that they had jointly uncovered multiple vulnerabilities in iOS and Android apps that work with the device, as well as its cloud servers operated by technology partner ToyTalk.

Among their findings, they claimed that the app could be hacked to reveal passwords, could be tricked into connecting to hostile networks controlled by hackers and that the servers were vulnerable to some types of attacks.

Mattel spokesman Michelle Chidoni said that the toymaker and Hello Barbie technology partner ToyTalk have taken steps to ensure the products meets security and safety standards.

ToyTalk said in a statement that it had already fixed many of this issues raised.

It’s too soon to say if the breach will hurt VTech’s sales. Still, its stock fell 2.6 percent this week as it hired forensic experts, responded to government investigations on three continents and temporarily shut down more than a dozen websites, including a messaging service and kids’ app store.

Mark Stanislav, a researcher at the security firm Rapid 7 Inc <RPD.O>, whose wife is expecting their first child in a few weeks, began looking into problems with children’s products after hearing about security flaws in baby monitors, and he subsequently found such problems in products from eight baby monitor vendors.
After disclosing the flaws to the companies earlier this year, he said most have been fixed. He told Reuters he has since found problems in websites that connect other types of devices to kids, including one from a major manufacturer. He will go public with those findings next month after giving manufacturers time to fix the problems.

Identity thieves use compromised data to pose as their victims, get loans or credit cards or apply for services such as utilities. Other types of criminals assume stolen identities to evade capture by police.

CLEAN SLATES

Children offer credit slates to fraudsters that can be exploited for years without the victim’s knowledge, said Tom Kellermann, chief cybersecurity officer with Trend Micro Inc <4704.T>.

“Kids have a longer life in front of them and they have completely clean credit, which makes them more valuable,” Kellermann said.

A child’s name, birth date, email address and Social Security number are worth $ 30 to $ 40 on some underground markets, more than the $ 20 value of most adult profiles, he said.

Research by Carnegie Mellon University in 2011 found that more than 10 percent of a sample of stolen children’s social security numbers had some sort of fraudulent activity associated with them, a proportion 51 times higher than adults’.

A child might not find out that their identity had been stolen until they are in their late teens, said Michelle Dennedy, Cisco Systems Inc’s <CSCO.O> chief privacy officer who founded an identity-theft site for parents, theidentityproject.com.

“It’s a pain when you are an adult, but for a child it can have so much more harm,” said Dennedy. “Somebody might fail a background check for first job, or get arrested because a child molester stole their identity.”

Still, Vtech has some frustrated customers, even though cyber experts said the stolen VTech data has yet to turn up on forums where such information is sold.

“My concern is: Myself and other unlucky parents out there buying these products during the holidays and have no warning that they may not be able to use these products now or in the future,” said Sarah Brace, a Canadian who commented on VTech’s Facebook pages.

And it may attract U.S regulatory scrutiny. U,S. rules enforced by the Federal Trade Commission limit how personal information collected online from children under age 13 is treated. That information can include photos, videos and chat logs, just the sort of data that appears to have been collected by VTech, said Phyllis Marcus, a former FTC official now at the law firm Hunton & Williams LLP.

The FTC declined to confirm or deny any probe of VTech. Authorities in Hong Kong, the United Kingdom and the U.S. states of Connecticut and Illinois have said they are looking into the breach.

(Reporting by Jim Finkle and Jeremy Wagstaff. Additional reporting by Diane Bartz in Washington and Subrat Patnaik in Bangalore. Editing by Jonathan Weber and John Pickering)
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SRN News » Science

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Facebook’s CEO and wife to give 99 percent of shares to their new foundation

By Yasmeen Abutaleb

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Mark Zuckerberg will put 99 percent of his Facebook Inc <FB.O> shares, currently worth about $ 45 billion, into a new philanthropy project focusing on human potential and equality, he and his wife said Tuesday in a letter to their newborn daughter.

The plan, which was posted on the Facebook founder and chief executive officer’s page, attracted more than 570,000 “likes,” including from singer Shakira, former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and Melinda Gates, wife of Microsoft founder Bill Gates. The Gates and other high-profile billionaires such as Warren Buffett have set up foundations of their own to dedicate their massive fortunes to philanthropic endeavors.

Zuckerberg, 31, who will control the new initiative jointly with his wife, Priscilla Chan, while remaining in charge of the world’s largest online social network, said he would sell or give up to $ 1 billion in shares in each of the next three years.

Zuckerberg will keep a controlling stake in Facebook, valued at $ 303 billion as of Tuesday’s close, for what the company called the “foreseeable future.” According to Facebook’s most recent proxy statement, Zuckerberg owned 4 million Class A shares and 422.3 million Class B shares, which have 10 times the voting power of A shares. Combined he held 54 percent of the voting power of the company’s shares.
Zuckerberg said he plans to remain CEO of Facebook for “many, many years to come.”

Zuckerberg’s new project, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, is not his first in the world of philanthropy. When he was 26, he signed the Giving Pledge, which invites the world’s wealthiest individuals and families to commit to giving more than half of their wealth to philanthropy or charitable causes over their lifetime or in their will.

“Mark and Priscilla are breaking the mold with this breathtaking commitment,” Buffett said on Facebook. “A combination of brains, passion and resources on this scale will change the lives of millions. On behalf of future generations, I thank them.”

Melinda Gates chimed in, “The first word that comes to mind is: Wow. The example you’re setting today is an inspiration to us and the world.”

Buffett himself pledged shares of his Berkshire Hathaway Inc <BRKa.N> company that were then worth $ 31 billion to Gates’ foundation in 2006, and at the time ranked as the largest single gift.

A YOUNG PHILANTHROPIST

Zuckerberg is relatively young to commit so much of his wealth. Microsoft Corp <MSFT.O> co-founder Gates was 45 in 2000, the year he and his wife founded the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Buffett was 76 in 2006 when he committed to give away all of his Berkshire Hathaway stock to philanthropic organizations.

About $ 350 billion is given away each year in the United States by charities, said Stacy Palmer, editor of the Chronicle of Philanthropy. She said Zuckerberg and his wife’s announcement was remarkable not just because of the size of the donation, but because of their ages.

“Our lists of the top donors are usually dominated by people in their 70s or 80s,” she said. “This is a message to other young people who are deciding what to do with their great wealth.”

In welcoming the birth of his first child on his Facebook page, Zuckerberg posted a photo of himself, his wife and their daughter, Maxima, nicknamed Max, along with a post entitled “A letter to our daughter.”
(http://on.fb.me/1MVnGOj)

In the 2,220-word letter, Zuckerberg and Chan, a pediatrician, touched on issues including health, education, Internet access and learning before announcing the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, which aims to “advance human potential and promote equality.”

They plan to give away 99 percent of their Facebook shares over their lifetimes to advance the initiative, which was formed as a limited liability company. It will begin by focusing on curing disease, Internet connectivity, community building and personalized learning – the idea that technology can help students learn at different paces.

Maxima Chan Zuckerberg was born early last week — though Facebook did not specify her birth date — and weighed 7 lbs 8 ounces (3.4 kg) at birth. Last month, Zuckerberg announced he would take two months of paternity leave after the birth.

Chan and Zuckerberg have so far committed $ 1.6 billion to their philanthropy. They have given several donations this year, including to public schools, initiatives to bring better wireless Internet access and to San Francisco General Hospital, where Chan works as a pediatrician.

Zuckerberg and Chan said they will share more details when they return from their maternity and paternity leaves.

Zuckerberg has started his leave, a Facebook representative said, and will be available if “absolutely needed.” Sheryl Sandberg, chief operating officer, and Mike Schroepfer, chief technology officer, will run the company in Zuckerberg’s absence.


(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Abhirup Roy in Bengaluru; Writing by Bernard Orr; Editing by Stephen R. Trousdale, Bill Rigby, Lisa Shumaker and Leslie Adler)
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SRN News » Business

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Hamstrung by Congress, Obama tries to clinch climate pact


WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is trying to negotiate a legacy-making climate change pact this coming week in Paris with one hand tied behind his back. Congress can’t even agree whether global warming is real.

Scientists point to the global agreement, years in the making, as the last, best hope for averting the worst effects of global warming. Obama has spent months prodding other countries to make ambitious carbon-cutting pledges to the agreement, which he hopes will become the framework for countries to tackle the climate issue long beyond the end of his presidency in early 2017.

But Republicans have tried to undermine the president by sowing uncertainty about whether the U.S. will make good on its promises. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and other GOP leaders have warned other countries not to trust any deal Obama may strike; other GOP allies are working to nullify Obama’s emissions-cutting steps at home.

“America is extremely divided, and there doesn’t seem to be any prospect that’s going to change at least in the next year or two,” Gov. Jerry Brown, D-Calif., who is attending the talks, said in an interview. “America’s leadership is not as great as it should be given the recalcitrance and the continuing obstructionism of the opposition party.”

About 150 heads of state are set to join Obama for talks on Monday and Tuesday as the deal nears the finish line. The goal is to secure worldwide cuts to emissions of heat-trapping gases to limit the rise of global temperatures to about another 2 degrees from now.

With little room for error, leaders have tried to avoid the pitfalls that undercut global climate negotiations in the past — specifically, those in Kyoto, Japan, in the early 1990s and in Denmark during Obama’s first term.
The deal in Kyoto — which the U.S. never ratified — spared developing countries such as China and India from mandatory emissions cuts, causing resentment in the U.S. and other industrialized countries. The Paris agreement would be the first to involve all countries.

In Copenhagen in 2009, leaders managed only to produce a broad-strokes agreement that fell far short of intended goals.

The concept behind a Paris pact is that the 170 or so nations already have filed their plans. They would then promise to fulfill their commitments in a separate arrangement to avoid the need for ratification by the Republican-run Senate. That dual-level agreement could be considered part of a 1992 treaty already approved by the Senate, said Nigel Purvis, an environmental negotiator in the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations.
 
But it’s not just about whether or not to ratify.

In the United States, the talks are entangled in the debate about whether humans really are contributing to climate change, and what, if anything, policymakers should do about it. Almost all Republicans, along with some Democrats, oppose the steps Obama has taken to curb greenhouse gas emissions, arguing they will hurt the economy, shutter coal plants and eliminate jobs in power-producing states.

Half the states are suing the administration to try to block Obama’s unprecedented regulations to cut power plant emissions by roughly one-third by 2030. These states say Obama has exceeded his authority and is misusing the decades-old Clean Air Act. If their lawsuit succeeds, Obama would be hard-pressed to deliver the 26 percent to 28 percent cut in overall U.S. emissions by 2030 that he has promised as America’s contribution.

Opponents also are trying to gut the power plant rules through a rarely used legislative maneuver that already has passed the Senate. A House vote is expected while international negotiators are in Paris.

Senate Republicans are working to block Obama’s request for the first installment of a $ 3 billion pledge to a U.N. fund to help countries adapt to climate change, a priority for poorer countries. What’s more, the Republicans running for president are unanimous in their opposition to Obama’s power plant rules; many say that if elected, they immediately would rip up the rules.

“In the end, we will not get to climate safety without the legislative branch participating,” said Jeffrey Sachs, an economist who heads Columbia University’s Earth Institute.

Obama’s aides say commitments from China to curb emissions show that developing nations are finally on board. Republicans had argued that U.S. action would be irrelevant as long as major emitters such as China were still polluting, while India and other developing countries tried to hide behind China’s inaction and said they bore less responsibility because they historically have emitted less than the U.S.

The Obama administration mostly has acted through executive power: proposing the carbon dioxide limits on power plants, which mostly affect coal-fired plants; putting limits on methane emissions; and ratcheting up fuel efficiency standards for cars and trucks, which also cuts down on carbon pollution.

All of that is ambitious and serious, but probably not enough, said Jennifer Morgan of the nongovernmental organization World Resources Institute.

“There are players in the United States that want to hold on to the current energy system that we have,” such as oil and coal companies, Morgan said. “They tend to be quite powerful in our system.”

The White House says Obama plans to highlight how developing countries are stepping up when he meets on the sidelines of the Paris talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Obama also expects to talk with the leaders of island nations at risk from rising seas and warmer temperatures.
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Follow Josh Lederman at http://twitter.com/joshledermanAP and Seth Borenstein at http://twitter.com/borenbears
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SRN News » Science

Amazon gadget sales more than triple over Thanksgiving weekend


(Reuters) – Amazon.com Inc said sales of its electronic gadgets more than tripled over the Thanksgiving weekend from last year, with the Fire tablet the top-selling product.

Sales of the 7-inch tablet more than tripled, while the Fire TV set-top box sold six times more than last year, the company said, without providing the number of units sold.

Amazon’s shares were up 1 percent at $ 671 in early trading on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Alan John Koshy; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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SRN News » Science

Asian shares rally, shrug off China PMIs


By Lisa Twaronite

TOKYO (Reuters) – Asian shares were solidly higher on Tuesday, as investors latched on to tentative signs of stabilisation in China even as twin factory surveys highlighted the fragile state of the world’s second-largest economy.

Financial spreadbetters predicted the buoyant mood to carry over to European trading, with Britain’s FTSE 100 <.FTSE> seen opening as much as 0.5 percent higher, Germany’s DAX <.GDAXI> 0.4 percent, and France’s CAC 40 <.FCHI> 0.5 percent.

“European indices are set to start December on a positive note,” Farbod Mimeh, a junior dealer at Capital Spreads in London, said in a note to clients.

“Asian shares climbed higher after the release of mixed Chinese PMI data hinting that government support measures may finally have served their purpose as the economy shows signs of levelling out,” Mimeh said.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan <.MIAPJ0000PUS> extended early gains and was up 1.8 percent, while Japan’s Nikkei <.N225> ended up 1.3 percent, closing above the 20,000 level for the first time since August.

Wall Street lost ground overnight, though major U.S. indexes still gained for the second straight month and U.S. stock futures <ESc1> added 0.6 percent in late Asian trade.

China’s official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) stood at a three-year low of 49.6 in November, compared with the previous month’s reading of 49.8 and below both forecasts for a reading of 49.8 as well as the 50-point mark that separates growth from contraction.

But the private Caixin/Markit China Manufacturing PMI showed factory activity contracted at a slower pace than in October, fuelling hopes the economy may be slowly levelling out in response to a series of government support measures.

“This indicates that pressure on economic growth has eased and fiscal policy has had a strong effect,” said He Fan, chief economist at Caixin Insight Group.
“Overall, the economy is still on track to become more stable.”
China’s major stock indexes erased losses after spending much of the day in negative territory. The CSI300 index <.CSI300> was 0.6 percent higher and the Shanghai Composite Index <.SSEC> rose 0.1 percent.

China’s yuan was flat in onshore trading <CNY=CFXS>, after the International Monetary Fund on Monday admitted the yuan into its Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket alongside the dollar, euro, pound sterling and yen.

The widely expected move was a milestone in China’s integration into global finances and a nod of approval to the country’s reforms.

“What is interesting about the new weightings is that the biggest change is for the euro, which now accounts for 30.9 percent of the basket instead of 37.4 percent. While EUR/USD did not have much of a reaction to the news, it is certainly not positive for the currency,” Kathy Lien, managing director of FX strategy for BK Asset Management, said in a note to clients.

The euro was already under pressure on expectations that the European Central Bank will announce further easing measures at its policy meeting on Thursday.

The euro inched up to $ 1.0579 <EUR=>, nursing losses just above a 7 1/2-month low of $ 1.0557 marked on Monday.

Against the yen, the dollar edged down about 0.1 percent to 122.95 <JPY=>.

The dollar index <.DXY>, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major rival currencies, edged down to 100.07, but remained within sight of its more than 12-year high of 100.39 hit in March.

The dollar had gained overnight despite disappointing U.S. economic data. The Chicago Purchasing Management Index fell in November, indicating a contraction in the Midwest factory sector.

Investors looked past the PMI, and ahead to the key nonfarm payrolls report which will be released on Friday. Economists expect it to show that employers added 200,000 jobs in November, according to a Reuters poll. A solid report would cement expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve is on track to increase interest rates this month for the first time in nearly a decade.

By contrast, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) held rates steady at 2 percent at its policy meeting.
Following the decision, the Australian dollar was up about 0.4 percent at $ 0.7257 <AUD=D4>.
Australian shares <.AJXO> rallied 1.9 percent, extending gains after trade data showed that Australia’s economy enjoyed a huge lift last quarter from a rebound in resource exports.

U.S. crude oil prices clawed back some lost ground after volatile trading overnight in which they first rallied and then erased gains after a survey estimated higher OPEC output. U.S. crude <CLc1> added 0.9 percent to $ 42.01 a barrel.

Brent crude futures <LCOc1> were up 0.5 percent to $ 44.84.

Spot gold <XAU=> was up about 0.8 percent at $ 1,071.86 an ounce, getting a reprieve as the recently robust dollar weakened and helped it move away from a nearly six-year low of $ 1,052.46 plumbed last week.

(Additional reporting by Xiaoyi Shao and Nick Heath in Beijing; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Eric Meijer)
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SRN News » Business


Rosberg ends F1 season on a hat-trick high

ABU DHABI (Reuters) – Nico Rosberg ended the Formula One season on a winning high in Abu Dhabi on Sunday with team mate and triple world champion Lewis Hamilton following him home in a record 12th one-two finish for dominant Mercedes.

The German’s third win in a row, from a sixth successive pole position, dashed Hamilton’s hopes of a 44th career victory in car 44 on the 44th anniversary of the founding of the United Arab Emirates.

The Briton, who clinched the title in Texas last month with three races to spare, finished 8.2 seconds behind Rosberg after an attempt at a different strategy failed to produce the desired result.

Hamilton had asked over the team radio with 15 laps to go whether he could go to the end having made only one pitstop to Rosberg’s two but was left in no doubt that such a move would not work.

He then pitted on the next lap.

Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen took third place ahead of team mate Sebastian Vettel, who started 15th, for only the Finn’s third podium appearance of the season.

The win was the 16th in 19 races for Mercedes.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Clare Fallon)
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Obama hopes to marshal strong action against climate change

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama is hoping to marshal strong global action against climate change at the historic conference in Paris and reassure the world that the U.S. can deliver on its own commitments.

Obama, due to arrive in the French capital late Sunday, and more than 150 world leaders were assembling for the opening days of a two-week conference where countries are trying to negotiate an agreement aimed at avoiding a calamitous increase in global temperatures.

Obama and French president Francois Hollande planned to attend the launch of a clean technology initiative by Bill Gates, according to a French source not authorized to publicly discuss details before the announcement and speaking on condition of anonymity. The United States, France, India, South Korea, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Canada and Norway have committed to participate in the project to develop clean energies, the source said.

Eager to leave a legacy of environmental protection, Obama scheduled meetings with the leaders of China and India to underscore how developing nations are embracing the effort to combat climate change. Also on the agenda were sessions with the leaders of a few island nations, to highlight “the existential challenge” they face from rising sea levels, in the words of the president’s deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes.
Obama, with just a year left in office, wants to lead the world by example on climate change. But he faces pushback at home that makes it harder for him to credibly make the case on the world stage that the U.S. will honor its promises.

The U.S. is the world’s second largest climate polluter, surpassed only by China, and the president has pledged that the U.S. will cut its overall emissions by 26 percent to 28 percent by 2030.
But his climate action plan has run into stiff opposition from Republicans who control Congress. They say his commitment to reduce emissions from U.S. power plants would cost thousands of American jobs and raise electricity costs for businesses and families.

Half the states are suing to block the power plant rules, claiming Obama has abused his authority under the Clean Air Act. The president also faces congressional opposition to committing U.S. dollars to a U.N. Green Climate Fund designed to help poorer countries combat climate change.

Adele Morris, a climate and energy expert at the Brookings Institution, said all the turmoil at home “makes it a challenge rhetorically, at least, for the U.S. to commit significantly to the targets that it’s announced.”
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Associated Press writer Sylvie Corbet in Paris contributed to this report.
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Follow Nancy Benac on Twitter at http://twitter.com/nbenac
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U.S. store sales down slightly for Thanksgiving and Black Friday



By Nandita Bose

CHICAGO (Reuters) – Sales at U.S. brick-and-mortar stores on Thanksgiving Day and Black Friday were down slightly from last year, but the performance was still seen as strong in a holiday shopping season where discounts spread well beyond the weekend and many shoppers moved to the web.

Online sales were up by double digits, according to data released on Saturday.

Data from analytics firm RetailNext showed overall sales for both days fell 1.5 percent on flat customer traffic, while average spending per shopper dropped 1.4 percent.

Preliminary data from ShopperTrak showed sales at stores totaled about $ 12.1 billion on Thursday and Friday. The company said it is an “estimated decrease from last year” but did not give the percentage decline due to an internal change in the way it calculates data. Last year, it reported sales of $ 12.29 billion for the same period.

ShopperTrak will release its final sales numbers on Tuesday. It stuck by its forecast of a 2.4 percent increase for November and December sales.

The data highlights the waning importance of Black Friday, which until a few years ago kicked off the holiday shopping season, as more retailers start discounting earlier in the month and open their doors on Thanksgiving Day.

Both firms said that despite the fall in sales over the two days, the performance must be interpreted as a good one for retail stores because sales held up amid rising competition from online shopping and were better than expected due to pent-up consumer demand and lower gas prices.

Last year Black Friday and Thanksgiving sales were disappointing, forcing retailers to double down on discounts which led to a last-minute shopping frenzy.

“It’s still a good performance for the weekend, given the growth that is being witnessed online as well,” ShopperTrak founder Bill Martin said.

ShopperTrak said Thanksgiving and Black Friday generated $ 1.8 billion and $ 10.4 billion in sales respectively. Martin said early promotions in November were a bigger factor hurting Black Friday than store openings on Thanksgiving evening.

Customer traffic remained flat on Thanksgiving Day from a year earlier while traffic fell 1.8 percent on Black Friday, RetailNext said. Their estimate last year showed overall traffic for both days fell 14 percent.

“The numbers are down but it’s still a better sales trend during the two days than we have seen for physical retail through the year and especially after a very difficult summer and October,” Shelley Kohan, vice president of retail consulting at RetailNext, said.

Electronics and toys, which were better promotions did well, both firms said. Apparel sales struggled despite better promotions, Kohan said.

ONLINE SALES STRONG

Separate data underscored the ongoing shift of shopping to online retailers.

Online Thanksgiving and Black Friday sales tracked by Adobe Digital Index were $ 4.47 billion, up 18 percent from a year earlier and higher than its expectation of $ 4.35 billion. Adobe tracked 80 percent of all online transactions from the top 100 U.S. retailers.

Brick-and-mortar retailers who have online operations offered better web deals during Thanksgiving and Black Friday and saw higher sales than online only retailers, said Tamara Gaffney, principal research analyst at Adobe Digital Index.

She said discounting levels online averaged 26 and 24 percent on both days respectively, and remained similar to last year’s levels.

(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Chicago; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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Pope outlines Mexico trip with four stops, including Juarez

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE (AP) — Pope Francis says he hopes to add the key Mexico-U.S. border city of Juarez to his Mexico itinerary next year, confirming the trip will have a strong immigration theme.

Speaking to reporters en route home from Africa on Monday, Francis said he would begin his trip in the capital, Mexico City, to pray before the Virgin of Guadalupe “the mother of the Americas.”

He said he planned to visit Chiapas on Mexico’s southern border with Guatemala, where many Central African migrants pass through en route to the United States. He said he was “almost sure” that he would end his visit in Ciudad Juarez, on Mexico’s northern border with the U.S. In between, he said he would stop in Morelia.

Church officials have said the trip will begin Feb. 12.

Francis also said he planned to return to Brazil in 2017 to mark a special feast of the Virgin of Aparecida, and that other countries on that trip are likely. He has yet to return to his native Argentina, and a planned Argentina-Uruguay-Chile trip rumored for 2016 has apparently been scrapped.

In other travel, Francis said he has promised the patriarchs of Armenia that he would visit, but no date has been discussed.

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SRN News » Religious News

Monday, November 30, 2015

20-year-old Chinese player on the cusp of history at HSBC


SHANGHAI (AP) — Li Haotong practically grew up with the HSBC Champions. He took part in its junior golf program, watching over the last decade as players like Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Ernie Els competed at Sheshan International.

And now the 20-year-old Li is one round away from a chance to win this World Golf Championship, which was nearly too much for him to digest Saturday.

“This tournament is so big — it’s too big,” Li said after a 6-under 66 that left him one shot out of the lead going into the final round. “I know that the final day, a lot of people are going to be making a lot of birdies. That’s why I thought my goal of this tournament would be making the top 10, because making the top 10 will already be a highlight and a milestone for my short career.

“I hope that tomorrow I can do well and finish at the position where I want to.”

Kevin Kisner was at 16-under 200 and leading, and Russell Knox was to return Sunday morning to play the 18th hole with a chance to share the lead. Li was tied with Dustin Johnson, who won the HSBC Champions two years ago. Two shots behind was Jordan Spieth, the Masters and U.S. Open champion.

So when Li was asked if he could win, he switched from Chinese to his limited English.
“I don’t think so,” he with a big laugh and infectious smile.

He sure looked capable during a third round at Sheshan International that featured big swings on the leaderboard, a big charge from Spieth and endless cheers from a Chinese gallery who had reason to hope that one of their own could deliver a young golfing nation its biggest victory.

He opened with four straight birdies and never faded. Li dropped only one shot on the tough par-5 fifth hole. When he found the water on the par-5 14th, he still managed to scramble for par. And he followed that with a 5-iron into 4 feet for birdie on the 15th that pulled him within one shot of the lead.

Liang Wenchong is the only Chinese player to finish in the top 10 at a PGA Tour event. He tied for eighth at Whistling Straits in the 2010 PGA Championship.

“If it’s destined for me to do something good, you cannot stop it,” Li said. “So what I will try to do is I will do my best tomorrow and see how things go.”

This is what HSBC had in mind when it started this tournament in 2005 and within two years attached a junior program to its sponsorship.

Woods marveled at the poise of a 12-year-old junior who played a par 3 with him in a pro-am five years ago. The boy’s name was Guan Tianlang, and two years later he won the Asia Pacific Amateur and then made the cut in the Masters. Adam Scott last year played with an 11-year-old girl who was so impressive that Scott figured she was a lock for the LPGA Tour if she did nothing else but continue to play.

Li was at the HSBC Champions last year, closed with a 67 and tied for 35th with Spieth and Jimmy Walker.

“If anyone wants to see just how far golf in China has come over the last decade, then look at the leaderboard,” said Giles Morgan, global head of sponsorship and events at HSBC. “It’s an incredible story.
Haotong is one of our own. Our vision was to have a player from the program finish in the top 20 in the World Golf Championships within a decade. And there is every chance that will happen tomorrow — or even better.”

Li played the PGA Tour China series last year and finished among the top five to earn his card on the Web.com Tour. He challenged for a PGA Tour midway through the season until fading to finish No. 49 on the money list, at least securing Web.com status for next year.

“I started getting used to the intensity because of the way I played on the Web.com,” he said. “The challenge and the competition was so intense that sometimes I felt like I cannot breathe properly. But every week, I want to do better.”

Kisner is making his first trip to China, and he joked earlier in the week that the tone of the cheer is different from what he hears on the PGA Tour. But there was no mistaking who the cheers were for in the group ahead of him as Li kept making birdies.

“I haven’t met him, but I have a friend of ours from the Web.com Tour that told me he’s a great kid,” Kisner said. “I don’t know anything about him. But he seemed to be playing great. I’m sure he’s excited to play in his home country and looking forward to it.”

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SRN News » Sports


Stewart hopes Rosberg can take title off Hamilton

By Alan Baldwin

ABU DHABI (Reuters) – Jackie Stewart, Britain’s first and until this season only triple Formula One world champion, would like to see Germany’s Nico Rosberg take the title off Mercedes team mate Lewis Hamilton in 2016.

Rosberg faces a crucial year after finishing runner-up to Hamilton, who can become Britain’s first ever four times champion, for the past two campaigns.

The German must either rise to the challenge and follow in the footsteps of father Keke, Finland’s 1982 world champion, or be written off as a number two.

“It would be good if he won the title. That would be very good,” Stewart, 76, told Reuters at the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix won by Rosberg.

“There is nothing to stop Rosberg winning. He is quick. We have seen him have so many pole positions. He is smoother (than Hamilton),” he added.

“Lewis is quite aggressive so therefore he has won more races because of that aggression, but sometimes that can bite you also.”

Hamilton won 10 of this year’s 19 races to Rosberg’s six but the German came good at the end with a run of three in a row and six successive pole positions.

The challenge for Rosberg, who made his debut with Williams in 2006 and now has 14 career wins, is to show that he can also win when it matters most and not just when nothing is at stake.
“He is good, and there is no question about it. The trouble is you have to be very good and he has got to just step up that little bit extra,” said Stewart.

The Scot’s desire to see Rosberg succeed has nothing to do with any personal animosity towards Hamilton but more for Formula One to provide more excitement and to put on more of a show when one team is so utterly dominant.

If Mercedes are again racing on a different level next season, it will be more important than ever for Rosberg to take the fight to his team mate.

The closing races of 2015 offered hope for the future but just how much of a pointer they really are remains to be seen.

“There’s been so much discussion about has he stepped up his game or has the car come towards him development-wise?” said Mercedes motorsport director Toto Wolff. “Or has Lewis unconsciously just taken it more easily?

“I don’t know…I think we have to find out.”

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Justin Palmer)
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SRN News » Sports
(Reuters) – Morgan Stanley plans to cut up to 25 percent of its fixed-income jobs, Bloomberg reported, citing people with familiar with the matter.

The workforce reduction will be across all regions and is set to take place in the next two weeks, Bloomberg said, citing two of the people.

Morgan Stanley declined to comment on the Bloomberg story.

The Wall Street bank reported a 42 percent slide in bond trading in the third quarter, one of its worst performances since the financial crisis.

Ted Pick, who was in charge of the company’s equities business, was picked by Chief Executive James Gorman last month to oversee its entire trading business to facilitate better coordination between the firm’s bond and equities desks.

The company’s shares, which have fallen 12.9 percent this year up to Friday’s close, were up 1.3 percent in afternoon trading.

(Reporting By Sudarshan Varadhan in Bengaluru; Editing by Anil D’Silva)
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SRN News » Business

Holiday shopping unlikely to cheer many investors

By Noel Randewich

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – The holiday shopping rush that kicked off on Friday is unlikely to bring much cheer to investors looking for a revival in retail stocks.

After months of uninspiring sales growth and recent disappointments from Macy’s and Nordstrom, shareholders of apparel sellers have had little to be thankful for and face a challenging holiday season.
Retail sales were expected to grow by 3.7 percent in November and December, declining slightly from the 4.1 percent growth in the 2014 year-period, the National Retail Federation (NRF) said in a forecast reaffirmed on Sunday.

NRF’s survey of 4,281 consumers showed shoppers on average spent or planned to spend about $ 300 over the Thanksgiving weekend, which ran from Thursday, Nov. 26 through Sunday, Nov. 29.

That is down from about $ 381 over the same weekend last year, although the federation said those numbers are not comparable because of a change in its survey’s methodology. The survey also showed an equal number of U.S. shoppers sought to buy items online as they did in physical stores over the Thanksgiving weekend.

Shares of Macys and Nordstrom have reflected a shift by consumers away from discretionary items like designer-label clothes and cosmetics toward online spending and merchandise such as smartphones, televisions, home goods and travel.

Macy’s stock has plummeted 39 percent this year while Nordstrom is down 22 percent and Tiffany & Co is 23 percent lower – all far worse than the benchmark S&P 500 index’s 1 percent gain.
On the other hand, Home Depot has surged 29 percent in 2015 and discount store Dollar Tree is up 6 percent.

The S&P 500 retail index has risen 27 percent this year, with much of that gain driven by its largest component, Amazon.com, which continues to undercut brick-and-mortar rivals and has seen its stock more than double this year.

Earnings expectations vary for the holiday shopping quarter; Lowe’s on average is expected to grow its earnings by 29 percent from a year ago while video game store GameStop is seen growing earnings by 9 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Gap Inc, which warned this month about weak sales and a strong dollar, is seen posting a 24 percent drop in fourth-quarter earnings.

“You really have to bifurcate between the largely apparel retailers and hard-goods retailers,” said Anthony Chukumba, an analyst at BB&T Capital Markets.

His top picks include discount retailer Big Lots as well as Best Buy, which specializes in the electronic goods consumers are buying these days and also has a compelling valuation at 12 times expected earnings. By comparison, Nordstrom trades around 17 times earnings and Target has a price-earnings ratio of 15.
Polls going into holiday season have been mixed: A Reuters/Ipsos survey found more people planned to cut holiday spending than to boost it, while Gallup reported Americans plan to spend an average of $ 830 each on gifts this season, up from $ 720 a year ago at this time.

U.S. retail sales edged up a meager 0.1 percent last month after staying unchanged in both September and August, according to the Commerce Department.

FBR technology analyst Daniel Ives and his team planned to visit at least 25 Best Buys and other big-box stores over the weekend in New York and other major cities to gauge consumer appetite for Microsoft’s Xbox One game console and Apple’s smartwatch, launched in April.

“It’s not quantitative, but it gives you anecdotal data points that become part of the mosaic of your thesis about whether to be bullish or bearish on trends, names and products,” Ives said.

Since 2008, early sales estimates following Black Friday and Cyber Monday have had little or no bearing on retail stock performance for the holiday quarter, according to a report by LPL financial.

The short-term performance of stocks in the week after Thanksgiving has also been similarly inconsistent.
For the past three years, Wal-Mart Stores has lost as much as 3.9 percent or gained as much as 2.6 percent in the week following Black Friday, according to Thomson Reuters data.

By comparison, the S&P 500 has been flat to up 0.5 percent in the week following Black Friday for the past three years.

Amazon.com’s stock performance in the week following Thanksgiving has been even more erratic. It lost 8 percent last year, lost 2 percent in 2013 and jumped 5 percent in 2012.

(Additional reporting by Barani Krishnan; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Jonathan Oatis)
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A Math Teacher’s Day at Ed Camp


My Day at Ed Camp

By Barry Garelick

I attended an “Ed Camp” recently. This is one of many types of informal gatherings of teachers to talk about various education-related topics. The camp I attended took place at a charter school that prided itself on a student-centered approach to learning. In keeping with the school’s focus, the camp also took a student-centered approach: participants wrote ideas for sessions on Post-It notes which were placed on a whiteboard. The conference organizers then put the Post-It notes in categories that formed various sessions which were then led by whomever wanted to lead them.

The topic suggestions were placed into nine separate categories/sessions. For each of three one-hour periods, there were three sessions that participants could choose from.  I chose “Motivation,” “Feedback in lieu of grades” and “The balance between student-centered and teacher-centered in a classroom.”
By way of background, I went to school in the 50’s and 60’s and am on a second career of teaching math in high school and secondary school after retiring several years ago. I am considered by most to use “traditional” practices rather than the progressive techniques one sees today. A few decades ago there was a mix of opinions on what are considered “best practices” in teaching—some of which included traditional methods. The older generation of teachers, however, has been almost entirely replaced by the new guard.
This has resulted in a prevalent new group-think which holds that traditional teaching is outmoded and ineffective. The participants at Ed Camp were of the new guard; mostly people ranging in age between 20’s and 40’s. A few people were in their 50’s or early 60’s, but were subscribed to the same group-think. From what I could tell, I was the only traditionalist present.

Motivation Session
All participants at this session generally agreed that motivation was important and that if classrooms do not have focus, there is loss of attention. They also agreed that students did well in a structured environment and that set routines and clear expectations were motivators. These two consensus items were uttered with the same somnambulant automaticity with which many say grace before chowing down a meal.

Participants then went to town describing various motivating/engaging activities including having students spell out words using their bodies to shape the letters (though I have forgotten what this had to do with whatever was being taught).  After a few more suggestions, someone pointed out that no matter how engaging the activity, the novelty of it wears off, so you can only do it a few times before students are bored — which, I suppose, leaves teachers with the option of more traditional approaches like a warm-up question and then teaching the class.

The issue of group work came up. Group work ranks high on the group-think spectrum as something worthwhile for all students.  So when a teacher said that group work may be difficult for students who are introverts, the feeling of cognitive dissonance was distinctly present in the room.  But the dissonance was quickly dispelled by the same teacher who brought it up. “Well, think of it this way,” he said. “How many times have you gone to professional development sessions and the leader says ‘Now turn to your neighbor and discuss such and such’ and you go ‘Oh, no! Do I have to?’” General agreement ensued.
“But,” he went on, “You kind of think to yourself, ‘Well, OK, let’s get this over with’ and pretty soon you’re doing it and it isn’t that bad. So I think maybe we just have to get kids to think beyond themselves and just go with it, and they’ll see it isn’t that bad.”

I’m fairly certain most of the attendees had been through—and probably hated—professional development sessions that were group-work oriented.  But if there was any disagreement with what he said, it was not voiced.

There was consensus that students responded well to competition.  Teachers noted that students like to see high scores posted or go for extra credit assignments or questions on tests. Such agreement was surprising given that it goes against the trend of the “everyone is special” movement in which all students win awards or graduating classes have multiple valedictorians. Unless one includes competition as being an integral part of collaboration and working in teams and groups, competition would seem to be its antithesis.

Another unexpected result was related by a second grade teacher who taught at the school where the Ed Camp was held. She had assigned her students to groups and arranged her class in clusters of desks as many classrooms are these days. One day her students asked her, “Can we be in rows facing the front of the classroom?”  She tried to reason with them, explaining that when she had been in school she always had to sit in rows and would have loved the opportunity to sit in groups. They told her that it was easier to be in rows because they wouldn’t have to twist around to see what the teacher was doing at the board.  The students assigned themselves numbers randomly so the teacher could put them in straight rows according to their numbers. Since this was a student-centered decision at a school that valued student-centered activities, the teacher reluctantly went along with what they wanted.

Think Pair Share: Harbinger of Things to Come?
The initial premise of the next session I attended—feedback–was that students should be given guidance rather than interim or even final grades. This is not a new concept, as evidenced by a recent comment I saw on a popular education blog: “When numerical/letter grades are king, real learning is kicked to the curb, along with meaningful assessment.”

Like many educational ideas, this one sounds like it ought to be superior to a system of grading that many have accused of being unfair for years, until you get into the details—things like subjectivity and how students will be assessed. The moderator—who did most of the talking in this particular session—said that in guidance-based regimes, students should be told whether they are doing a task correctly or incorrectly and that the key to completing a task was to ensure that students had an appropriate process. I couldn’t be absolutely sure, but it sounded like process trumped content.

He brought up math as an example and said, “I like to give kids problems they don’t know how to do.” This is not the first time I’ve heard this. While I agree that students should be given challenging problems, I also believe that they need to start from a place that they know and advance bit by bit to variants on a basic problem structure to be able to take on non-routine problems.

Such process is known as scaffolding, but modern purveyors of education theory hold that scaffolding should not be used and that flexible thinking –applying prior knowledge to a new and unfamiliar problems or situations—comes with repeated exposure to such problems. Supposedly this develops a “problem solving schema” and “habit of mind” that is independent of acquired procedural skills or facts. But to pull off what this teacher wanted—having them solve something totally different than what they’ve seen—students are given feedback. The feedback is in the form of questions to motivate them to learn what they need to know and ultimately to solve the problem in a “just in time” basis.

The notion of supplying feedback in the form of guidance seemed to this moderator to be a new and cutting edge thing, and in fact announced that the activity of “Think-Pair-Share” was antiquated and should be abandoned. “Think-Pair-Share” has been around for at least 10 years.  The first time I heard about “Think, Pair, Share” was in a course I took in ed school. Briefly, students work together to solve a problem or answer a question, discuss the question with their partner(s) and share their ideas and/or contrasting opinions with the rest of the class.

But now it was considered passé, the main problem with it being that students didn’t know what to say to each other about whatever it was they were to discuss. And that was likely because they had little or no knowledge of the subject that they were supposed to talk about, and which was supposed to give them the insights and knowledge that they previously lacked.

Did this mean that perhaps there was now some evidence that direct and explicit instruction could have beneficial educational outcomes? No. Feedback and guidance was the new “Think Pair Share.” Student-centered and inquiry-based approaches are still alive and well. And in closing, the moderator added that students need good solid relationships with one another and with the teacher. To this end, the moderator said, putting students in straight rows will NOT build such relationships.

I was tempted to bring up the story of the second grade class that insisted they wanted to be in rows but we were out of time. In fact, we ran over and I was late to the last session on the balance between teacher and student in a student-centered classroom.

Defining Balance—or Not
The conversation in the third and last session of the day was already underway with some talk going on about how effective student-centered communication is fostered using something called “Sentence frames” or “word moves”. These are a set of certain phrases students are encouraged to use when engaging in dialogue, such as, “One point that was not clear to me was ___”, “I see your point but what about ___”, “I’m still not convinced that ___”.

The discussion was in the context of procedures used in conducting student-centered classes. I didn’t know how much about balance they had discussed, and although it is not my habit to interrupt a discussion, I did inject myself using the following sentence frame: “So what do you think is the balance between teacher-centered and student-centered instruction?”

The responses I received were immediate:
“Oh, I just talk at the students forever and go on and on,” said a youngish woman. Another teacher chimed in, “Yes, I tell them that it would be so much easier for them if they just listened…”  This went on for another few seconds, and though I was tempted to use a sentence frame like, “I see your point but what about___?” the one I chose was a bit more aggressive.  “Is that your answer to my question?” I asked. “You think a teacher-centered classroom as all about lecturing with no room for questions or dialogue?”

The woman who first answered me said, “No, I was just being funny.” The conversation turned serious once again with the answer to my question being that the teacher-centered portion of a student-centered classroom is, “teaching the students to be student-centered successfully.” That, roughly translated, means giving them instructions and guidance to do their student-centered inquiry-based assignment.

Example: “In ten minutes, you will complete an outline of what you are going to investigate. Go.”  Ten minutes pass, teacher spot checks various outlines. “Now one person will be the lead investigator, another will be the note-taker, the third person will write the conclusion and the fourth person will do the presentation.”  And so on.

The conversation turned to “student outcomes” and “growth-mindset.” This last phrase, a concept made popular by Carol Dweck, is the theory that students can develop their abilities by believing that they can do so. The term has taken hold as its own motivational poster in classrooms, professional development seminars and Ed Camps across America.  Someone remarked that the idea of growth mindset itself is a student-centered concept. I suppose it is, if you combine belief in yourself with hard work, instruction, and practice—things I don’t hear much about when I hear about growth-mindset.

“Growth-mindset” led into students’ beliefs in themselves, which led to how grades are bad and rubrics were better. A middle school social studies teacher lamented that he was stuck giving students grades because the school district required them, though most of the teachers in his schools used rubrics not to grade, but to provide feedback to students.  (The charter school at which this Ed Camp was held did not give grades, but rather student reports. After the social studies teacher’s lamentation about grades, one teacher who taught at this school cackled “I’m so glad I don’t have to keep grade books anymore!”)

The social studies teacher said that what used to be an A under the old grading system was now a C in his class using his rubric. He didn’t go into details about his rubric except to say that he bases grades on it, and “meets expectations” would be a C.  “I tell parents that I have no problem with a student who gets a C in my class, because that means he or she was meeting expectations. If a student wants better than a C, they can go over the rubric with me to see what is required.”

This struck me as strange. If you give tests and assignments that cover the material and take some effort to do well on them, then maintaining an average of a 90% or more would assure some mastery of the material.  Or does he consider that to be “middle school stuff” and to get an A under his rubric now requires—what?  I never found out. Classes I’ve seen that use rubrics have several: rubrics for group work, presentations, collaboration, essay analysis, presentations and so forth, and there are many categories – like this one for a project presentation in a middle school social studies class . How does one differentiate between “strong student creativity” and “exceptional degree of student creativity” under the “Originality” category? I suspect it’s a matter of “I’ll know it when I see it”.

As time grew shorter, discussions cascaded onto each other, culminating in a discussion about homework. The social studies teacher said he didn’t assign homework, and this turned out to be the practice of most of the teachers in the room. Some of the teachers did report that they received pressure from parents about lack of homework. Parents who ask their kids what they do in school and get the usual “Not much” often follow with “Well, what’s your homework?” and were dismayed to find that the student had none. Parents confronted various teachers, arguing that not assigning homework will not prepare students for the real world. The social studies teacher who was emerging as de facto opinion leader for the session said that in the real world you didn’t have homework, so why should we expect it of our students? This was a bit confusing given that teachers do a lot of work at home. In fact, in many professions it is not unusual to have to do work at home.

But he went on. “And if the real world is high school and college, first of all, not all students go to college. And show me the evidence that homework in high school prepares them for college.” This is the type of argument that seems beguiling if you practice saying it in front of a mirror with an audience applause track playing in your mind. Or alternatively, saying it at Ed Camp sessions like these.

“It is not preparation for the real world,” he repeated, and then clarified that he viewed homework as largely drill and practice activities which in his view held absolutely no value, and certainly, in his opinion, is not something done in the real world. (I should note that I was the only math teacher in this session, but I decided to keep quiet given the reaction when I asked my question at the beginning of the session.)
With parents spotlighted as detractors from how teachers conducted their student-centered classrooms, the session ended with one teacher lamenting how one parent complained that, “This education of my child is becoming my job.”  The teachers all identified with having heard that before. “Gee, sorry to hear that being a parent is so tough” was the general response in the room.

Having been in the position of a parent raising a daughter subjected to student-centered classrooms, I think what that parent meant was not so much, “Why should I be involved in my child’s education?” but rather: “I’m doing a lot of teaching at home that should be going on in the school.” Many parents have complained that students are not being taught grammar, math facts, and other necessities of education, but which teachers of student-centered classrooms consider “drill and kill” and “drudge work.”  That may account for the popularity of learning centers like Sylvan, Huntington and Kumon, which all focus on these things.

The Group-Think of Teaching
Driving home from the Ed Camp, I was reminded of a movie I saw long ago called “The Wicker Man,” in which a deeply Christian, Scottish police officer investigates a missing child on an island in Scotland that practices paganism—and in the end is burnt to death as a human sacrifice to the islanders’ gods. A key point of the film was that the officer’s religion counted for nothing in the midst of different and prevailing beliefs. The winners in such conflicts are those who by virtue of numbers have the means to enforce their beliefs.
I wondered whether in ten years’ time  more parents would accept the inquiry-based and student-centered approach more readily as a result of having been subjected to such techniques themselves? Or would there now be a permanent split: parents who came through the system who are happy with their kids being taught as they had been, and parents who had benefitted from the more traditional techniques used in learning centers or from the dwindling number of schools who practiced them?  Would the ideas and techniques discussed at Ed Camp be viewed as outmoded, just as “Think-Pair-Share,” so popular a few years ago, had fallen out of favor? Or would they be replaced by a slight variation of the same thing?
Whatever the outcome, it was fairly clear to me that any new educational techniques would be portrayed as a measured and informed decision, a step in the right direction and, of course, progress.
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Barry Garelick has written extensively about math education in various publications including The Atlantic, Education Next, Educational Leadership, and Education News. He recently retired from the U.S. EPA and is teaching middle and high school math in California. He has written a book about his experiences as a long- term substitute in a high school and middle school in California: “Teaching Math in the 21st Century”.
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