


Why you may ask? Maybe because it is unique (how many other magazines you can use this adjective to describe them?) maybe because it is a MUST read for anyone who really wants to be in the know maybe because The Week, in its condensed view of the world, will continue to shed some light that will help our intellect as we move ahead in this new century watching the world become flatter by the day or maybe because Felix Dennis is a genius who knows, to put it bluntly, that the light at the end of the tunnel for the news business is not the train coming. Well, Felix Dennis sold his other media properties in the US (Maxim, Blender, etc.) but he kept The Week. A formula that many said would never work, (On a side note, I still remember the worlds of a CEO of a major publishing company telling me, “This magazine will never work in America.”)… and international media” and offers it on a silver-platter, well, in fact it offers it on 44 pages of ink on paper weekly every Friday in The Week and pixels on a screen daily at Started in the UK in the late 90s and launched in the US by media maven Felix Dennis in 2001, The Week is still delivering news and opinions from all around the world both in print and on the web. True to its name, The Week provides its readers with “all you need to know about everything that matters.” A magazine that distills “the best of the U.S. * Not all titles are available in all markets.There are newsweeklies and there is The Week. Publisher: Editorial Projects in Education Inc. Check with your local library to see if they offer Flipster digital magazines. Please note: Flipster is a subscription service for libraries, schools and corporations and is not intendedįor individual use.

Patrons, students or employees can read on-the-go. Get a digital magazine subscription of Education Week for your library, school or business which your Other in-depth coverage includes regular, deep-dive topical reports on subjects like personalized learning, teacher recruitment, and assessment. The flagship Education Week newspaper publishes 37 issues a year, including three special annual reports (Quality Counts, Technology Counts, and Leaders to Learn From). It is owned by Editorial Projects in Education (EPE), a nonprofit organization, whose mission is to raise awareness and understanding of critical issues facing American schools. It is known for providing both news and analysis, along with explanatory and investigative journalism across a range of digital, print, and broadcast platforms as well as through live and virtual events. Education Week is an award-winning independent news organization that has covered K-12 education since 1981.
