Social Science News

Educators to discuss how to better serve Latino pupils

Author: Dusty Rhodes, News Editor

Published Date:October 10, 2011

A panel of local educators who specialize in meeting the needs of immigrant children will discuss strategies for providing early childhood and elementary education to young Latinos at noon on Oct. 14 (Friday).

Published Date: October 10, 2011


Historian mixes policy and personal stories in history of U.S. immigration

Author: Craig Chamberlain, Social Sciences Editor

Published Date:September 28, 2011

Its not one border, one time, that makes an immigrant, says Dorothee Schneider. Its not a matter of crossing over and youre done. Despite what many politicians want us to believe, Schneider said, not everyone who has migrated to the U.S. has tried to stay permanently, successful immigration does not always mean Americanization, and successful immigrants dont all become U.S. citizens.

Published Date: September 28, 2011


Crisis nursery kids more likely to return to families from foster care

Author: Sharita Forrest

Published Date:September 19, 2011

Children who receive crisis nursery services prior to being placed in out-of-home care are twice as likely to be reunited with their biological families as other children in Illinois child welfare system, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Illinois.

Published Date: September 19, 2011


Study offers insight for returning troops and their relationships

Author: Craig Chamberlain, Social Sciences Editor

Published Date:August 31, 2011

Troops overseas often want nothing more than to get back home to loved ones but the reunion period often can be more emotionally taxing than the deployment. Returning service members are at a greater risk of both depressive symptoms and relationship distress, and research shows the two often go together, says University of Illinois researcher Leanne Knobloch.

Published Date: August 31, 2011


Historian charts a transformation of the night, from fear to embrace

Author: Craig Chamberlain, Social Sciences Editor

Published Date:August 18, 2011

Darkness truly ruled the night in the Europe of 1500. People feared almost everything about the hours after sunset, says University of Illinois historian Craig Koslofsky. Two centuries later well before the age of electricity the cities of northern Europe, at least, had embraced the night much as we do today, says Koslofsky, the author of Evenings Empire: A History of the Night in Early Modern Europe, recently published by Cambridge University Press.

Published Date: August 18, 2011