Code For Tots
Chicago Public Schools Embrace Computer Science

Chicago’s public schools are breaking new ground by adding computer science to the core curriculum from kindergarten through senior year. The program, announced early this week, is a partnership with Code.org, the group behind the “Hour of Code,” which will be providing free teacher training and curriculum resources to Chicago’s teachers. Hopefully other cities will take the hint.

The Joys of Top-Down Systems
Hospice Providers Bilk Medicare

Hospices are gaming Medicare, taking on patients who aren’t actually dying. Ah, the joys of top-down systems.

Ruckus in Tokyo
Abe Stirs Controversy With Shrine Visit

Dressed to the nines and trailing media helicopters, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at last paid a visit to the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo. It was not his first visit there but it was the first by a sitting prime minister since 2006. The shrine, a monument to Japan’s fallen soldiers, is considered a symbol of Japanese wartime aggression by China and South Korea. Abe has repeatedly spoken of his desire to pay his respects at the shrine while in office, and Japan’s most conservative and hawkish prime minister in years finally got his wish today, only days after his government announced hefty upgrades to the country’s armed forces.

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Ukrainian Unrest
The Putin-Yanukovych Anti-Western Pact

Victor Yanukovych has presented his nation as a gift to Vladimir Putin, but the Ukrainian people have gathered in Kiev’s Independence Square to resist this move. Violence is still possible, and more is at stake than just the political future of one country.

Higher Ed Transformation
This Year in MOOCs

It’s been a roller coaster year for MOOCs, but despite some major setbacks over the past few months, the technology is still one of the hottest things going in higher-ed at the moment. In honor of MOOCs’ big year, EdSurge is taking a look at a number of statistics from the past few years which illustrate just how quickly MOOCs have grown.

Speed Reads
Around the Web in 5 Clicks

We have been playing around with the idea of doing a semi-regular link aggregation feature for the site—highlighting articles that are either relevant to themes we regularly cover, or interesting, or just plain amusing to us, but that also don’t require much extra commentary. Here’s our first attempt as we wind down for Chirstmas:

1. Coming soon: clinical trials on the fountain of youth.

2. “Run, she is trying to kill you.”

3. Pope Francis the Radical?

4. What could possibly go wrong…

5. Pakistan’s persecuted Christians.

Readers are encouraged to share their own links in the comments, with our standard decency rules applying: if you wouldn’t feel comfortable sharing the link with Grandma Mead, please don’t bother sharing it with the community here. Let us know what you’re reading.

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Erdogan's Uraveling
Protests Erupt as Turkey’s Crisis Deepens

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan finds his cabinet in disarray after a police corruption probe resulted in the arrests of high-profile officials and their family members. Erdoğan responded swiftly last week by firing top police officials—at least 70 at last count—but it wasn’t enough to quell anger over government corruption. The political crisis deepened over the weekend as protests broke out and the police intervened with water cannons and tear gas. In response, Erdoğan went on the offensive.

Popping the Bubble
Democrats Miss Again on Student Debt Fix

In an effort to cope with the student loan crisis, Senate Democrats have unveiled a plan to reduce the rate of student defaults by giving colleges more “skin in the game.” Essentially, the plan penalized universities with a large number of student defaults by forcing them to pay a fine to the feds. Giving colleges more accountability is a good thing, but this plan gives the federal government far more control over the market than we’re comfortable with.

"Revolution" in Egypt
Military to Democracy Activists: Support Us or Go to Jail

Egypt’s military dealt a heavy blow to the liberal democracy movement that played a big role in toppling the Mubarak regime back in 2011. Three activist leaders—Ahmed Maher, Mohamed Adel and Ahmed Douma—were convicted of participating in recent protests and sentenced to three years in prison and fined thousands of dollars. “It is time to shut up, to stay quiet,” the director of the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information told the New York Times. “There is only one choice — to support the military or to be in jail.”

Game of Thrones
The Samurai and the Tiger Join Forces to Face the Dragon

Japan and India began second-ever joint military exercises in the Indian Ocean this week, a tangible step toward closer cooperation between China’s two biggest Asian rivals. The relationship between Tokyo and New Delhi is warming, but don’t expect Beijing to sit idly by.

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