The Amanda Knox of 2011 bears little resemblance to the confident-bordering-on-cocky Amanda Knox of 2009. In a look at how the last two years have changed the American, the AP talks to her family and friends, and paints a picture of a more mature but more wary and anxious 24-year-old….
Continue reading …Barack Obama is in for a fight in a pair of major swing states that he carried handily in 2008, according to a new Quinnipiac University poll. In both Ohio and Pennsylvania, 51% say the president doesn’t deserve another term, and 53% and 54% respectively disapprove of the job he’s…
Continue reading …This will go down in the annals of wacky pilot screw-ups: An All Nippon Airways passenger jet rolled over 131.7 degrees earlier this month—putting it almost belly-up—because a pilot accidentally turned the rudder trim knob instead of the one unlocking the cabin door, Japan’s Transport Safety Board…
Continue reading …Reebok has agreed to dole out up to $25 million in refunds for people who bought its EasyTone and RunTone shoes, in the mistaken belief that they’d actually help them tone their lower body as advertised. The move settles an FTC complaint that Reebok’s various claims about the shoe’s benefits—…
Continue reading …Now that NASA’s had time to crunch the numbers regarding last weekend’s falling satellite , it has a pretty good idea of where it splashed down—in the middle of nowhere in the South Pacific. The dead UARS craft entered the atmosphere generally above American Samoa, according to the new calculations,…
Continue reading …Moammar Gadhafi remains at large as the fight for his hometown of Sirte continues, but Libya’s new leaders have a new theory on where he is: in the desert near the Algerian border. A leader of the National Transitional Council tells Reuters that Gadhafi is likely being protected by nomadic…
Continue reading …Amazon’s new Kindle Fire has been getting a lot of hype as an “iPad killer,” but Apple shouldn’t exactly be quaking in its boots, opines John Paul Titlow of ReadWriteWeb . “As far as hardware is concerned, the Kindle Fire looks more like a cross between the Nook and the BlackBerry…
Continue reading …Department for Education stats show sharp decline year on year in babies adopted, down from 150 in 2007 – and 4,000 in 1976 The number of babies adopted in England fell to 60 last year despite a sharp rise in the number of children in care. The total number of adoptions has continued to drop, falling by 5% to 3,050 in the past year, according to Department for Education statistics. The number of babies adopted fell more sharply, to 60, compared with 70 in the previous year and 150 in 2007. This compares with about 4,000 in 1976. The number of children placed for adoption also fell to 2,450, a decline of 10% since 2007. The decline comes despite the statistics also showing there are 65,520 children in care, the highest number since 1987, with 3,660 of them under a year old. Children’s minister Tim Loughton said: “Today’s statistics are a timely reminder that we must redouble our efforts to do better for children in care. It’s worrying that the number of adoptions has continued to decline, and it’s simply not good enough for vulnerable children to be waiting well over two years to be adopted.” Ministers have issued new guidance to streamline the process and to stop councils dragging their heels on mixed-race adoption, he added. The government’s adoption adviser Martin Narey is also working to reduce delays in the system and to help local authorities improve their practices. On average, it takes two years and seven months before children are adopted, with the process taking more than three years in a quarter of cases. Most adopted children are aged between one and four when they join their new family, with the average age at adoption standing at three years and 10 months. The number of ethnic minority children adopted remains low, with just 60 Asian and 80 black children adopted last year, only 4% of the total. Three-quarters of children in care, or 48,530, were placed with a foster family, and 12%, or 7,910, were cared for in residential accommodation such as a children’s home or secure unit. The number of children in care placed for adoption at the end of March was 2,450, a fall of 10% on 2007. Anne Marie Carrie, chief executive of Barnardo’s, said: “An increase in care numbers coupled with another consecutive drop in adoption rates and of children being placed for adoption is deeply worrying. ” Everyone involved in the care system needs to be braver and should ‘act fast’ to place children with a new permanent family when it is clear that, even with support, the child’s birth family is not going to change and cannot cope. “It is imperative that decision-making is sped up at every stage of the adoption process, as we know that by the time a child is four years old they already have a far lesser chance of being adopted than a baby. “Successful adoptions not only transform the life of the child for the better, but also that of their new family.” The Fostering Network called for extra investment to ensure more foster homes are available for children in care. Robert Tapsfield, chief executive of the charity, said: “We know that fostering services and foster carers are under real pressure to deal with the continuing rise in numbers coming into care, and thousands more foster carers are still needed to provide stable and secure homes for all children who need them. “We also need a renewed focus on improving stability and outcomes which remain nothing like good enough. “Fostering must be a priority for both local and central government. In particular, it’s essential that investment in foster care is protected and, wherever possible, increased, in order to ensure that all children who need it can live with the right foster family.” Adoption Children Fostering David Batty guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …It’s time to bring the college admissions process into the modern age, writes Kevin Carey at the Atlantic . He doesn’t mean the process by which elite students get into Ivy League schools—he means the real world, where the vast majority of students end up picking a school because it…
Continue reading …Ever wonder why women tend to live longer than men? Well, it turns out the fairer sex is made of stronger stuff when it comes to fighting off disease and riding out shocks to their systems, according to a study published today from Ghent University in Belgium. Researchers found that…
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