Tag Archive: university


Norovirus sickens George Washington Univ. students (AP)

WASHINGTON – Officials at George Washington University in Washington are alerting the campus that about 85 students have been sickened by the norovirus this week.

University officials said in a statement Wednesday that norovirus was the cause of dozens of cases of gastrointestinal illness. Officials said students who live at the Foggy Bottom campus, the Mount Vernon campus and off campus were affected but that they could not find a common link.

Students were advised to wash their hands frequently and disinfect surfaces. The school also said it would beef up cleaning of commonly used areas.

Symptoms of norovirus include nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. The virus is usually not considered serious and most people recover in one or two days.

Norovirus sickens George Washington Univ. students
(AP)

Obama to seek $5 billion to transform teaching profession (Reuters)

(Reuters) – U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan will deliver a scathing critique of teacher training colleges on Wednesday as he unveils a $5 billion initiative to transform the teaching profession from top to bottom.

In remarks scheduled for delivery at 3:30 p.m. EST (2030 GMT), Duncan will argue that the profession needs to become more selective, offer more consistent training, evaluate teacher effectiveness more critically and reward the best teachers with salaries on par with doctors and lawyers.

“Many of our schools of education are mediocre at best. Many teachers are poorly trained and isolated in their classrooms,” Duncan will say in remarks prepared for an online town hall meeting with educators.

“No other profession carries a greater burden for securing America's future. And no other profession deserves more respect,” added Duncan, who once headed Chicago's public schools.

But his ambitious goals may run into major roadblocks.

President Barack Obama's administration wants states to compete for a share in $5 billion in federal grants to overhaul their teacher training colleges and create new standards for teacher evaluations. But that fund is subject to congressional approval, and Republicans have already served notice they intend to fight new spending initiatives.

All four Republican candidates seeking to challenge Obama in November's election have called for greatly reducing the federal role in education.

On the state level, it is unclear where legislators will find the resources to raise teacher salaries or offer sizeable bonuses to the most effective teachers, as Duncan has repeatedly urged. Many states have cut tens of millions in funding for primary and secondary education in recent years as they grapple with enormous budget deficits.

Duncan's rebuke of teacher colleges is also likely to arouse opposition from the institutions themselves. His description of many schools as ineffective rankles teacher educators such as Michael Morehead, dean of New Mexico State University's College of Education.

'MISPERCEPTION'

In recent years, Morehead said teacher colleges had dramatically boosted their standards. Decades ago, he said, anyone with even a mediocre grade-point average in high school could get into a teacher college, flounder through the courses and yet still graduate as a teacher.

Now, he said, many schools were more selective in their admissions and required hundreds of hours of apprenticeship, or student teaching, before granting a diploma. Many states also require teachers to pass one or more licensing exams before taking charge of a classroom.

“It's certainly a misperception” that teacher colleges are failing, Morehead said. “Yet that's what is consistently expressed.”

But Tim Knowles, who directs the University of Chicago's Urban Education Institute, said reforms in teacher education were sorely needed. About half of new teachers who go to work in urban schools leave the profession within five years. Many of them complain they were not prepared for their responsibilities. Knowles said some new teachers had spent as little as six weeks in apprenticeships before being put in front of their own classrooms.

Knowles said he hoped the Obama initiative would prod states to rank teacher colleges by how well they prepare their graduates, how long those graduates remain in the teaching profession and how much impact they have on their students, as measured by standardized test scores.

Otherwise, he said, it was hard to tell how effective they were. “Right now, it's a total free-for-all,” he said.

The Obama initiative is called RESPECT, an acronym for Recognizing Educational Success, Professional Excellence and Collaborative Teaching.

The American Federation of Teachers, a national teachers' union, has issued a general statement of support for Obama's education reform policies but has not commented on the specific details of the Duncan proposal.

(Reporting By Stephanie Simon in Denver; Editing by Peter Cooney)

Obama to seek $5 billion to transform teaching profession
(Reuters)

Court hears challenge to CA affirmative action ban (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO – Backers of affirmative action asked a federal appeals court Monday to overturn California’s 15-year-old ban on considering race in public college admissions, citing a steep drop in black, Latino and Native American students at the state’s elite campuses.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeal heard arguments in the latest legal challenge to Proposition 209, the landmark voter initiative that barred racial, ethnic and gender preferences in public education, employment and contracting.

The affirmative action ban has withstood multiple challenges since voters approved it in 1996, but advocates say their campaign to overturn it has been bolstered by recent court decisions, as well as support from Gov. Jerry Brown.

Dozens of minority students backing the plaintiffs filled the courtroom for the hour-long hearing, when the justices questioned whether they should tamper with a 1997 ruling in which the same appellate court upheld Proposition 209.

Attorneys for the plaintiffs said affirmative action is needed to increase racial diversity at the University of California’s most prestigious campuses and professional schools. Data shows that UC’s efforts to enroll diverse student populations without considering race have failed, they argued.

“What you see before you is a new form of separate and unequal going on right before our eyes,” plaintiffs’ attorney George Washington told the three male justices.

Ralph Kasarda, who is defending Proposition 209, told the justices that the San Francisco-based appellate court was correct when it upheld the affirmative-action ban. He called the current challenge “redundant and baseless.”

“Proposition 209 guarantees everyone’s right to be treated fairly and not be discriminated against based on skin color or gender,” said Kasarda, an attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation, which represented the sponsors of the 1996 ballot measure.

The complaint was filed in January 2010 by several dozen minority students and advocacy groups who say the ban violates the civil rights of black, Latino and Native American students. Those groups make up about half of California’s high school graduates, but much smaller percentages at UC’s most competitive campuses.

For example, at UC Berkeley, the current freshmen class of California residents is roughly 1 percent Native American, 3.5 percent black, 15 percent Latino, 30 percent white and 48 percent Asian, according to UC data.

“As a state-serving institution, the university should reflect the demographics of California, and right now it doesn’t,” said Magali Flores, 20, a third-year Latina student majoring in ethnic studies at UC Berkeley. “Prop. 209 wants to pretend that race isn’t real.”

The court agreed to hear the case after U.S. District Judge Samuel Conti dismissed the lawsuit in December 2010. The California Supreme Court has twice ruled that Proposition 209 is constitutional.

Advocates say justices need to reconsider in light of recent court rulings on the issue.

In 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the University of Michigan Law School could consider race in admissions decisions to promote campus diversity.

Last year, a three-judge panel of the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals cited that ruling when it overturned Michigan’s affirmative action ban. The full appellate court has agreed to reconsider the case.

Brown joined the plaintiffs in arguing the affirmative action ban is unconstitutional.

Court hears challenge to CA affirmative action ban
(AP)

Stanford University nets $6.2B in 5-year campaign (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO – Stanford University said Wednesday its latest five-year fundraising drive netted $6.2 billion, one of the largest amounts ever collected in a higher-education campaign.

Money raised by the Stanford Challenge is being used to fund an interdisciplinary approach to teaching and research on areas such as education, environment, human health and international affairs, school officials said.

“We’ve undertaken a new model in higher education, with experts from different fields joining together,” Stanford President John Hennessy said in a statement. “This kind of collaboration has enabled Stanford to assume a larger role in addressing global problems.”

The money is providing funding for more than 160 endowed faculty positions, 360 graduate student fellowships, the construction or renovation of 38 campus buildings, $27 million in seed grants for innovative research and more than $250 million for need-based undergraduate scholarships.

The $6.2 billion Stanford raised surpasses the $4.3 billion goal set when the campaign was launched in October 2006. During the campaign that ended Dec. 31, the university received donations from more than 166,000 alumni, parents and community members.

The university received donations of more than $50 million from Stanford alumni such as Yahoo Inc. co-founder Jerry Yang, Nike Inc. co-founder Phil Knight and Silicon Valley venture capitalist Robert King.

Stanford is the last university to announce a successful multibillion fundraising campaign. Last year, Yale University said it had raised $3.9 billion, and the University of Pennsylvania said it collected $3.5 billion.

“It’s an impressive drive for funds that most public universities can only dream to eventually match,” said John Aubrey Douglass, a researcher at the Center for Studies in Higher Education at the University of California, Berkeley. “Donors are attracted to the big-name universities, but I worry some that the rich keep getting richer.”

Stanford University nets $6.2B in 5-year campaign
(AP)

College presidents wary of Obama cost-control plan (AP)

WASHINGTON – Public university presidents facing ever-increasing state budget cuts are raising concerns about President Barack Obama’s plan to force colleges and universities to contain tuition prices or face losing federal dollars.

Illinois State University President Al Bowman says the reality is that deficits in many public schools can’t be easily overcome with simple modifications. Bowman says he’s happy to hear Obama call for state-level support of public universities but adds that, given the decreases in state aid, tying federal support to tuition is a product of “fuzzy math.”

Obama spelled out his proposal Friday at the University of Michigan.

College presidents wary of Obama cost-control plan
(AP)

Obama pushes colleges to keep tuition under control (Reuters)

ANN ARBOR, Michigan (Reuters) – President Barack Obama, appearing before thousands of cheering students at the University of Michigan, touted his plan on Friday to reward colleges that keep their tuition under control with more federal aid as he makes school affordability a top election-year priority.

Obama, seeking to reform federal aid for students to pay spiraling college costs, unveiled fresh details of a proposal to make higher education affordable for more families that he first announced on Tuesday in his State of the Union address.

His plan is aimed at helping students pay for a higher education, which is seen as crucial for employment as the country is grappling with an 8.5 percent jobless rate. It also specifically targets the issue of income and access, a central focus of the November 6 presidential race that has zeroed in on the nation's widening wealth gap.

Obama's plan would have his administration redistribute campus-based aid, which is handled directly by schools, based on schools' performance: colleges that keep tuition costs in check and get students to graduate would get more money than other schools that do not.

“We're putting colleges on notice: you can't assume that you'll just jack up tuition every single year. If you can't stop tuition from going up, then the funding you get from taxpayers each year will go down,” the Democratic president said at the speech that had all the trappings of a campaign event with striped bunting and a crowd-filled stage.

Obama couched his remarks in the broad populist themes of his re-election campaign – of sticking up for the middle class, rewarding companies for bringing jobs back home, and ensuring that the rich pay higher taxes.

“We should push colleges to do better. We should hold them accountable if they don't,” he told a crowd of about 4,000 people.

Low-interest federal Perkins loans for poor students will also be expanded to $10 billion a year, the White House said in a statement. Another $1 billion grant will go to states that reform their higher education systems, it added.

Obama also called for a “college scorecard” that would give prospective students and families a uniform, easy-to-read look at information such as tuition and graduation rates across all universities — just as labels on food packages offer a standard look at essential facts.

Other proposed changes would require congressional action, something many analysts and others see as unlikely in an election year.

Obama wants lawmakers to increase the number of work-study jobs over the next five years. He also has called on Congress to block an increase in interest rates on federal student loans set to take effect July 1, doubling from 3.4 percent to 6.8 percent for about 7.4 million students with Stafford loans, low-interest loans directly from the Department of Education.

(Writing By Susan Heavey; additional reporting by Alister Bull in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham and Vicki Allen)

Obama pushes colleges to keep tuition under control
(Reuters)

Broken schools breed South Africa’s "lost generation" (Reuters)

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – The first blow to Martha Netshiozwe's future came when her parents died of AIDS. The second came when she ran out of money and had to drop out of a South African high school.

Netshiozwe, 23, is a product of the first post-apartheid generation who entered a new and aspiring education system which aimed to heal the economic divisions created by the white-minority government. But like many, she left without the skills to qualify for anything other than manual labor.

Despite pouring billions of dollars into education, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) has little to show for its money except for public primary schools regarded as among the worst in the world and millions of students destined for a life in the underclass.

“If you don't have an education, you don't have a chance in life,” said Netshiozwe, who is unemployed with little prospect of finding regular work. She and her HIV-infected aunt live together and scrape by on about $100 a month in welfare benefits.

Nearly half of South Africa's 18 to 24 year olds — the first generation educated after apartheid ended in 1994 — are not in the education system and do not have a job, according to government data.

Academics have called this group the “lost generation” and worry it will grow larger unless the government fixes a system riddled with failing schools, unskilled educators and corruption that stops funding from reaching its intended destinations.

“This is an appalling waste of human potential and a potential source of serious social instability,” the Ministry of Higher Education said this month when it unveiled sweeping plans

for boosting university enrollment and improving vocational colleges.

The lost generation poses long term risks for Africa's largest economy, which is trying to grow its tax base as it funds increased social spending.

There are about three people receiving social welfare payments for each taxpayer. While the recipients of state funds are set to increase substantially under anti-poverty programs, the number of taxpayers is not, which should cause already yawning budget deficits to widen.

Major ratings agencies are also worried.

Fitch, this month, and Moody's a few months ago, downgraded the outlook for South Africa, saying the government has not done enough to tackle structural problems including chronic unemployment, growing state debt and a broken education system.

CRIPPLED BY CORRUPTION

South Africa does not suffer a lack of plans or finances for education, the largest sector of state spending and accounting for more than 20 percent of the budget.

The problems are with implementation.

Corruption eats away at money. Teachers are poorly trained and challenged by a constantly shifting curriculum. Schools are often shut by teachers' strikes.

There have been numerous changes for the better in the ANC-run education system with more of the country's blacks, excluded from most high-quality education under apartheid, entering high-performing schools.

Once almost exclusively white, universities now reflect the racial composition of the country with more people from groups disenfranchised by apartheid climbing the ladder with a degree or diploma.

But at the same time, the number of people living in poverty has changed little since apartheid ended, with no remedy in sight given the structural problems in education.

“As things stand, the ANC is wreaking untold damage on our children and, consequently, on the country's future, just as apartheid education did in the past,” said Barney Mthombothi, editor of the influential weekly Financial Mail.

Hundreds of schools do not have electricity or running water and absenteeism has become such a concern that President Jacob Zuma has begged teachers to show up for classes.

A study by graft watchdog Transparency International last year pointed to massive local level corruption resulting in millions of students not having desks, chairs or books.

The central government has been trying to take over two provincial education systems that are effectively bankrupt.

In Limpopo province, students started the school year in January without textbooks even though millions of dollars had been allocated for purchases, with media reports saying a politically connected figure may have pocketed the funds.

This month, the central government said Limpopo, which has recorded some of the country's worst results in standardized testing, had unauthorized expenditure of 2.2 billion rand ($275 million). The province had more than 2,400 teachers on the payroll, including 200 “ghost teachers” who were not in classrooms but were still paid.

TICKET OUT OF POVERTY

A university education is seen as the best ticket out of poverty. Competition is fierce and at some of the top schools, there are about 10 applicants for each place.

The desperate demand for higher education led to a stampede at the University of Johannesburg this month when thousands of applicants lined up for a few hundred available places on the final day to submit paperwork.

“The lofty status of universities is an indicator of a lack of status for any other alternative for post-school education,” said Frances Faller, an education expert at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.

About eight in 10 unemployed have not completed secondary education or just made it through high school. Only six percent of South Africa's jobless have a university degree, a study from the South African Institute for Race Relations said.

The odds are also stacked against those who hope to find entry-level employment. Economists say labor laws make it difficult for employers who want to take on new workers and train them for jobs.

A cozy relationship between the ANC and organized labor, formed in their partnership against apartheid, has hampered apprenticeship programs.

The ANC, which relies on the 2 million members of top labor federation COSATU as a source of votes, has put off plans denounced by unions but backed by economists to reduce youth unemployment by allowing firms to hire youths at cut-rate wages and train them up.

“We will never let them get away with making these laws even more 'flexible' to allow even higher levels of exploitation,” COSATU said in a statement.

ANC governments have spent billions of dollars on job training programs only to see large sums lost to corruption, while producing few graduates with skills required by employers.

“I know what will happen to me if I don't get into school,” said university applicant Eddie Ncube, 18.

“Look at what I am exposed to. I am from the ghetto. Without school, I will get into drugs and I'll never find a job.”

($1 = 8.0169 South African rand)

(Additional reporting by Ndundu Sithole; Editing by Rosalind Russell)

Broken schools breed South Africa’s "lost generation"
(Reuters)

Sharon McNary believes in having tough teacher evaluations.

But these days, the Memphis principal finds herself rushing to cram in what amounts to 20 times the number of observations previously required for veteran teachers – including those she knows are excellent – sometimes to the detriment of her other duties.

“I don’t think there’s a principal that would say they don’t agree we don’t need a more rigorous evaluation system,” says Ms. McNary, who is president of the Tennessee Principals Association as well as principal at Richland Elementary. “But now it seems that we’ve gone to [the opposite] extreme.”

In New York, which is also beginning to implement a new teacher evaluation system this year, many principals are even less constrained in their opinion.

RECOMMENDED: Education reform: eight school chiefs to watch

“There is no evidence that any of this works,” says Carol Burris, a Long Island principal who co-authored an open letter of concern with more than 1,200 other principals in the state. “Our worry is that over time these practices are going to hurt kids and destroy the positive culture of our schools.”

The direction of education reform – and the requirements of the federal government’s Race to the Top competition in particular – means numerous states are now planning to use tough new evaluation systems based at least in part on student growth, tracked by value-added test scores.

But as the first states begin implementing these systems on a broad scale, some are encountering pushback not just from teachers – which is somewhat expected – but from principals and other administrators.

In some cases they question the practicality of the new system, and in others the entire premise on which it’s built. And even a few supporters of rigorous – and high-stakes – teacher evaluations wonder whether rushing them in might backfire.

“It’s something of a Hobson’s choice between rolling out something quickly that’s almost surely going to be flawed in major ways or going about it gradually, and maybe never getting a full implementation,” says Grover “Russ” Whitehurst, director of the Brown Center of Education Policy at the Brookings Institution. “I think there’s a very strong tension between the timetable that works politically … and the practical realities of large-scale reform.”

Tennessee and Florida, both of which are receiving federal funds through Race to the Top, are fully implementing their new evaluation systems this year, and Delaware and North Carolina have most of their models in place. Race to the Top, which awarded $4 billion to 11 states and the District of Columbia in 2010, required the reforms, though it allowed states to choose what sort of system it would use and to determine the timetable.

At the Department of Education, Brad Jupp, a senior adviser on teacher initiatives, says some sort of backlash to changes of this magnitude are inevitable – as are glitches along the way.

“It’s safe to say that when you change people’s work routines in serious ways, they stress,” says Mr. Jupp.

“You’re never going to plan something to perfection,” Jupp says. “Spending time trying to plan things elaborately and building internal support is nowhere near as important as getting things running.”

In Tennessee, the biggest complaint from many principals is simply the amount of time required from them for the new observation system. Veteran teachers, who in the past only needed to be evaluated every five years, now get four observations a year. Untenured teachers need six.

Each observation involves a complicated rubric and scoring system, discussions with the teacher before and afterward, and a written report – a total of perhaps two to four hours for each one, Ms. McNary estimates.

And there are still problems with how the data will be used. For now, many will be judged on school-wide data for reading or math, even if they teach history, art, or physical education – a much-publicized phenomenon that has made the system seem ridiculous in some news stories.

“No one wants to read the headline about the 12th grade physics teacher being evaluated on 9th grade writing scores,” says Sandi Jacobs, vice president at the National Center for Teacher Quality. “That’s not helpful to the cause.”

Still, Tennessee has the basic support of its teacher’s union – even though president Gera Summerford says she has a lot of issues with the implementation of the reforms.

New York, on the other hand, faces a far deeper crisis.

Earlier this month, it was cited by the Department of Education as one of three Race to the Top states lagging on the promises it made in its application (the other two were Florida and Hawaii), in particular due to its problems with the getting new evaluation system in place.

“New York has a chance to be a national leader or a laggard, and we are only interested in supporting real courage and bold leadership,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in a statement, noting that failure to follow through on its commitments “could cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars for improving New York schools.”

A cadre of concerned principals, more than a quarter of all principals statewide, has signed an open letter questioning the wisdom of basing so much on test scores and rushing so quickly.

“I believe in testing. But to use the tests the way they’re being used by the state I don’t think will improve education,” says Katie Zahedi, principal of the Linden Avenue Middle School in Red Hook, New York. She worries that the system will discourage teachers from taking on more challenging students and that it will crowd out any instruction not directly tied to the test.

Chris Brewer, a principal at the rural Morrisville-Eaton Middle High School in Morrisville, N.Y., agrees – and says that the one silver lining has been that opposition over the evaluations has brought together the administration and the teachers’ union in opposition.

At the training he attended on conducting observations in the new system, Mr. Brewer says he was shown a video of an airplane being built in the sky – an analogy for the figure-it-out-as-you-go process educators are now in.

“At the very end, it shows a little kid on this airplane looking out and smiling,” he says.

“But this system has not been tested, has not been tried. I’m not willing to put my kid on board this plane.”

But supporters of the new evaluations say that kids are just who they do care about.

“The status quo in American public education for decades and decades has put all the risk on the students,” says Bill Sanders, a retired University of Tennessee professor and senior research fellow at the SAS Institute.  “What we’re talking about now from a policy point of view is how do we balance the risk.”

At the Department of Education, Jupp, for many years a classroom teacher himself, is sympathetic to the fears of teachers and principals like those in New York, and believes their concerns should be taken seriously – but says they need to give the reforms more of a chance.

One thing he’s learned from years of pushing big changes, he says, is that “your worst fears don’t necessarily occur.” 

“I don’t think it’s going to be pain-free to move from one era to the next, but I do think it’s a great opportunity for us as a profession.” 

RECOMMENDED: Persistent achievement gap vexes education reformers: Six takeaways 

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Under education reform, school principals swamped by teacher evaluations
(The Christian Science Monitor)

Ala. university suspect wants report kept secret (AP)

DEDHAM, Mass. – A lawyer for an Alabama professor who could be executed for allegedly killing three colleagues asked a judge Wednesday to keep a report into the 1986 killing of her brother secret, arguing it could prejudice a jury against her.

Amy Bishop was indicted in the murder of her brother Seth in June 2010, after she was charged with opening fire on her co-workers at the University of Alabama in Huntsville in February 2010, killing three and wounding three others.

The charges in her brother’s death came after a Massachusetts judge conducted a closed-door inquest.

The shooting of 18-year-old Seth Bishop at the family’s Braintree home was initially ruled an accident after Amy Bishop told police she accidentally shot her brother while trying to unload her father’s shotgun.

The Boston Globe challenged a judge’s decision to keep the inquest records sealed, saying the release of the documents could shed light on why authorities didn’t prosecute Bishop in her brother’s death 26 years ago.

Bishop’s lawyer, Larry Tipton, said Wednesday that releasing the “highly prejudicial information” contained in the inquest report, two months before Bishop is scheduled to go on trial in Alabama, could undermine her chances of receiving a fair trial.

“I think that that’s a very important, unique consideration,” Tipton argued to Norfolk Superior Court Judge Kenneth Fishman.

Deana El-Mallawany, a lawyer for the Globe, said the newspaper has been seeking the inquest report since June 2010.

“There’s a strong interest in knowing the adequacy of law enforcement investigation,” El-Mallawany said.

She said Bishop’s lawyer in Alabama has already said Bishop will use an insanity defense, and her Massachusetts lawyer hasn’t shown that releasing the inquest report would taint the jury pool.

But the judge challenged the assertion that publicity about the report wouldn’t affect Bishop’s trial in Alabama, saying it could “potentially weigh heavily” on her lawyer’s ability to defend her in the university killings.

Fishman did not immediately rule on the defense request to keep the report sealed.

Last month, the highest court in Massachusetts ruled that the inquest report into Seth Bishop’s death could be released publicly. But it also said Bishop’s lawyer could go to court to argue that there was “good cause” why it should remain sealed.

The Supreme Judicial Court’s decision also outlined new rules for the release of inquest materials. The high court said the automatic impoundment of the records ends after the subject of the inquest is indicted by a grand jury or after prosecutors decide not to present the case to a grand jury.

Ala. university suspect wants report kept secret
(AP)

Stress blamed for student tics at New York school (Reuters)

BUFFALO (Reuters) – State health officials have determined stress likely caused a dozen female high school students to suddenly experience tics and other neurological symptoms associated with Tourette Syndrome, they said on Friday.

The Le Roy Central School District, about 50 miles east of Buffalo, scrambled to conduct environmental testing for air quality and mold after 12 students developed tics and impulsive verbal behavior over the course of the last three months.

But state health investigators ruled out environmental factors, latent side-effects from drugs or vaccines like Guardasil, trauma or genetic factors.

The girls were all treated by doctors and most are improving, school officials said.

“Stress is often attributed to these kind of symptoms,” Jeffrey Hammond, a spokesman with the New York State Department of Health, said on Friday, echoing the opinion of neurologists who have treated the girls.

“The Le Roy school is safe,” Hammond said. “The environment or an infection is not the cause of the students' tics. There are many causes of tics-like symptoms.”

Dr. David Lichter, clinical professor of neurology at the University at Buffalo, said he evaluated one of the girls who exhibited involuntary movements as well as periods of unresponsiveness.

Lichter said a phenomenon called “mass psychogenic illness,” once called mass hysteria, is likely the cause.

He said high levels of stress may increase the chances.

“Subjects turn subconscious psychological stresses into physical symptoms, and they do it without being conscious of it,” he said.

“I don't think the girls in this particular school are more stressed. The thing about this outbreak – and it has been documented around the world – is there may be one or two who manifest a true organic disorder, and then modeling behavior takes place,” Lichter said.

The health department continues to monitor each case. No new cases have been reported.

(Editing By Barbara Goldberg and Paul Thomasch)

Stress blamed for student tics at New York school
(Reuters)

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