TRENTON — It will cost New Jersey $40 million to merge Rutgers University and the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, but the overall price tag to reorganize higher education in the state remains an open question.
|
The London-based company’s Pearson Education will keep more than 1,600 jobs in New Jersey, Lieutenant Governor Kim Guadagno said in a statement today.
|
MOUNT LAUREL, N.J., Feb. 7, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The New Jersey Technology Council (NJTC) announced today that Govi Rao, President and CEO of Noveda Technologies, has been named Chairman of the Board of ...
|
Dozens of Rutgers University students protested outside the New Jersey Statehouse as a Senate panel heard testimony on recommendations to reorganize the state's medical education system.
|
Stephanie Jennis, 16, of Montville and Giovanna Boyle, 13, of Montclair today were named New Jersey's top two youth volunteers for 2012 by The Prudential Spirit of Community Awards, a nationwide program honoring young people for outstanding acts of volunteerism.
|
TRENTON — Presidents of New Jersey’s public universities told state lawmakers Monday they are happy with parts of a proposed higher-education reconfiguration that would add to their schools, but they’re also reluctant to relinquish control over any of their existing campuses.
|
Board of education members from Princeton, Montgomery and West Windsor-Plainsboro have all completed mandatory criminal background checks required by a recent New Jersey law that disqualifies board members or members of charter school boards of trustees from serving if they have been convicted of certain crimes.
|
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — The head of the Senate Education Committee is reintroducing a bill to revise teacher tenure rules in New Jersey.
|
Two-thirds of South Jersey's public high schools maintained or improved their performance on the state's most recent standardized math exam and nearly 71 percent did so on the language-arts test, according to data released Wednesday by the New Jersey Department of Education.
|
The executive director of the New Jersey School Boards Association this afternoon commented on the decision by the state’s Council on Local Mandates, declaring the state’s Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights to be unconstitutional unless the Legislature provides funding for its implementation. “The Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights is a well-intentioned statute designed to ensure that no child is ever ...
|