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Schools expanded the availability of foundational computer science classes, but stubborn gaps in access to those courses persist.
There are far more students interested in studying computer science than there are kids who have taken a computer science class. And that gap is especially pronounced for Black and Hispanic ...
UNO has pledged to add 80 credentialed K-12 computer science teachers over the next three years in Nebraska through courses that lead to state teaching endorsements in information technology. UNO ...
“ The California Computer Science Access Report,” by the Kapor Center and Computer Science for California, examined the computer science landscape in the state’s public high schools. It found that 42% ...
In spite of statewide initiatives to increase access to and participation in computer science classes, California lags behind the national average of 60% and trails about three dozen other states ...
Unless Assembly Bill 2097 — requiring every public high school to teach a computer science course — advances in the state Legislature on Thursday, access to computer science in California will ...
Abraham Lincoln High School won a national diversity award earlier this spring because girls made up a majority of school's the Advanced Placement Computer Science Principles class.
I believe that I am the only girl in my computer science class because girls are less exposed to computer science from an early age, and there are fewer role models in the field.
Lori Martin of Chesapeake Public Schools predicts a looming workforce crisis in Virginia as the demand for computer science skills outstrips supply. Martin, the STEAM/CTE coordinator, spearheads th… ...
The Kansas State Board of Education is considering a proposal that would allow high schools to use computer science as a graduation credit.
For majors such as information science and computer science, enrollment has nearly doubled in the past five years, creating additional anxiety for students during the add/drop period. While the ...
We'll hear about the Oregon Department of Education's first statewide plan for computer science education, released late last year.