All Articles


Education Transformation

Higher-ed pedagogy is adjusting to a student-centered style of education, multiple learning modalities, and technology. Until very recently, faculty have been "digital immigrants," while today's students are "digital natives" who are a

Learning by Experience

As outdoor learning spaces become more and more incorporated in school design, one can't help but ask, what needs to be considered when designing them to ensure that they're useful? The experts have several thoughts.

International Competition

Higher education is not immune to international competition. Not all that long ago, the United States was "the" place to go for a college education; foreign students were scrambling to attend U.S. colleges and universities. But that is changing

PACT Mentoring Program

This holistic PACT model is fundamentally different than most programs as it provides one person as a "go-to" source, thereby eliminating the frustration that students experience when assistance is fragmented into segregated silos, such as singl

Dealing With the Digital Natives

Fundamental changes must occur within our schools if we wish to prepare American students to compete in the world economy. The necessary changes will require the integration of classroom technology, changes to classroom configurations and funding for retr

Integrated Campus Security

With students, faculty, staff, security officers, and campus police officers integrated into a campus security effort, well-integrated security technology will work faster, better, and more effectively.

What's Next

What does the future hold? College Planning & Management asks industry leaders what to expect in the upcoming year… and the answers may surprise you.

A Look Ahead

2012 isn't easy to predict, but the future isn't necessarily bleak. Carrying on our beginning-of-the-year tradition, here is what we can look forward to during 2012, from the viewpoint of several people who dedicate their time and talents for th

Community Colleges Must Lead the Way in Reshaping Higher Education

This is a critical time for the American community college. I've seen what can happen when an industry ignores the need for innovation and reform from within, and it's certain that higher education is headed down the same path if we do not respond. Now is

Pushing Back Against Zero Tolerance

Zero tolerance originally addressed illegal activities like selling drugs. Over time, however, the policy has broadened in scope to include behaviors that pose no threat to others such as truancy and even dress code violations. Student protestors call zer

The Things I've Learned 2011

What I've learned is that there are some changes that I happily embrace and there are others that I simply need to force myself to accept as part of doing business or living life. Either way, I now know that, no matter what, change is going to happen

Lunch by Design

There are numerous criteria to consider in the design of a K-12 kitchen and cafeteria. There is a lot of planning that should and must be done. It's a lot easier to plan for and provide the mechanical, electrical, plumbing, space, adjacencies and dur

Fixing the Title I Comparability Requirement

In far too many places, Title I money is filling budget gaps rather than being used to close achievement gaps. In a plan for this year's reauthorization of No Child Left Behind, the Obama administration proposes closing the loopholes in the current compar

Window Film

Retrofitting 
with window film is also a more cost-
effective option than installing new windows. In fact, the U.S. Department of Energy's laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), says that &&a

Close It Up & Lock It Down?!?

No matter what your memories are of school days gone by, there can be little debate about today's need for improved building security. Meeting the need to protect students, staff and visitors requires the effective implementation of access control me

No Blinding Light

Today commercial grade windows for K-12 classroooms often include internal features that contribute to students' thermal comfort. One such feature is between-the-glass venetian blinds (sometimes called interstitial, internal or integral blinds).

Re-Inventing School

Modern K-12 school designs can take advantage of three different technologies that give schools forward-looking capabilities: administrative technologies, educational technologies and smart building technologies.

A Safe Environment

The EPA's first-ever federal guidelines for locating school facilities encourage high-performance schools, stress the importance of locating schools near populations and infrastructure and promote schools as diverse centers of communities. They urge commu

An Important Decision

Risk and vulnerability for today's school environment is of great concern to not just school boards, administrators and teachers, but also to parents and other students. The technology behind IT security and vulnerability is often too much for a scho

Optimizing Print Services Saves Big Money

school district has printers, copiers and multi-functional printers (MFPs) of varying ages and capabilities and contracts spread throughout the district. There's no real control over who uses them or how much they're used, and no one's keep

Needs Have Changed

Can you build a new school today for the cost of a 1987 school plus inflation? Yes, you can but it's not likely to support a 21st century education. School districts could save money on initial costs by being "penny-wise and pound foolish." Judg