Community and school step up to support teen denied Kalamazoo Promise scholarship for being homeless
CHICAGO CRUSADER — A Kalamazoo teen who learned just before graduation that she wouldn’t be eligible for the Kalamazoo Promise Scholarship is getting some support today.
read moreDeepening Students’ Learning at Pittsburgh Brashear High School
After the Pennsylvania Department of Education identified Pittsburgh Brashear High School as a priority school for improvement, the school’s educators began to rethink their approach to instruction.
read moreDESE Recognizes 2018 Pioneers in Education
Six educators will be honored as Pioneers in Education on Monday, July 30, for their commitment and contributions to public education in Missouri.
read moreCOMMENTARY: Trump Wants to Merge the Ed. and Labor Departments. Here’s Why That’s a Bad Idea
President Donald Trump has proposed combining the U.S. Departments of Education and Labor. After asking educators for their opinions about the merger, Education Week reported that “educators, by and large, don’t seem to be fans of this idea.”
read moreFlorida is Last State Awaiting ESSA Plan Approval
President Donald Trump’s administration has in many ways held up Florida’s education system as a model for the nation. It’s hired many former Florida education officials to top jobs in its own education department.
read moreWhy I Chose to be the Mentor for the NNPA’s Discover the Unexpected Journalism Fellowship Program
When I was a little girl I wanted two things: a pair of magic earrings, identical to the ones in my favorite cartoon, and to be a Fairy Princess Ballerina Astronaut
read moreParents’ Day: Helping Parents Work, So Children Can Succeed
MILWAUKEE COURIER — This past Mother’s Day about $1.9 billion dollars’ worth of flowers and $2.2 billion dollars in ties and other clothing items were spent to purchase gifts on Father’s Day. So, why is it that Parents’ Day, held on the fourth Sunday in July, usually passes without anyone noticing?
read moreCOMMENTARY: You Don’t Have to Break the Bank to Give Back to HBCUs
AFRO NEWSPAPER — Earlier this year, a man named Jack Weldon Patrick passed away in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. A long-time lawyer, Patrick was remembered as a family man, an advocate for social justice, and a respected community leader.
read moreSummer Reading Programs Coming To An End, But It Doesn’t Stop There
CHARLESTON CHRONICLE — South Carolina Reading Partners in two weeks will wind up its summer reading program at Charleston’s Arthur Christopher Gymnasium after having spent the past month helping participants in the gym’s annual “Jump To It” summer camp prevent ‘Summer Slide’ reading skills loss. The program ends July 26. A second site at Hunley Park Elementary School in North Charleston began June 11 and ends July 19.
read moreCommon adopts an NYC classroom, presents $10k to school
AMSTERDAM NEWS — Grammy winning recording-artist and Oscar winning actor, Common, took a break from his busy schedule to surprise the students of PS 111 in New York City.
read more‘Juuling’ and Teenagers: 3 Things Principals and Teachers Need to Know
EDUCATION WEEK — There’s also a whole juuling culture online, where students share YouTube videos of how to hollow out highlighters to conceal the compact devices, and how to slide them up shirt sleeves.
read moreMost Teens Won’t Have Jobs This Summer, Study Finds
WASHINGTON INFORMER — The proportion of teenagers in the U.S. summer labor force declined for two decades while the number of legal and illegal immigrants holding a job has more than doubled, a new report from Center for Immigration Studies states.
read moreNNPA ESSA Educator Spotlight: Millennial Jarren Small Brings Innovation to Education with “LegendsDoLive”
Jarren Small, a 28 year-old, Missouri City native and community activist, launched LegendsDoLive, in an effort to improve educational outcomes for disadvantaged youth.
read moreHISD thanks Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority for Harvey efforts
DEFENDER NEWS NETWORK — During Houston’s time of devastation, Alpha Kappa Alpha — one of the oldest African-American and Greek letter organizations — provided thousands of dollars in donations, as well as clothes, shoes, nonperishable food items, toiletries, and school supplies that were distributed districtwide to those impacted by the storm.
read moreNew workshop: Sensory Storytime Programs
ALA Publishing eLearning Solutions announces an exciting new workshop, Sensory Storytime Programs with Jennifer Roy. This workshop will last 90 minutes and take place at 2:30pm Eastern/1:30 Central/12:30 Mountain/11:30am Pacific on Wed., July 25, 2018.
read moreTrump Ed. Dept. Announces New Career and Technical Education Grants
Got an idea for supporting the transition for high school Career and Technical Education students into post-secondary education and the workforce? The U.S. Department of Education wants to hear from you.
read moreStudents from Once-Segregated Norfolk School Change the Conversation on Race
THE NEW JOURNAL AND GUIDE — In February 1959, Patricia Turner and her brother James Turner, Jr., walked through the front door of the Norview Middle School and into the history books. They were two of the Norfolk 17, the first Black students to desegregate six Norfolk public schools.
read moreWhat Would a Merged Education and Labor Department Look Like?
EDUCATION WEEK — …congressional Democrats overwhelmingly panned the proposal, which would almost certainly need their votes to pass. Republicans said the idea is worthy of consideration but haven’t introduced legislation to make it a reality.
read moreNNPA, New Journal and Guide Host National Black Parents’ Town Hall in Norfolk
The National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) recently hosted its second National Black Parents’ Town Hall Meeting on Educational Excellence at the Gethsemane Community Fellowship Church in Norfolk, Va.
read moreOPINION: We Must Reform Obama’s School Discipline Policies for the Safety of Our Children
…in 2014, the Departments of Education and Justice put public schools on notice. If they suspended or expelled students of any racial group more than any other, they could face a federal investigation. In place of discipline to punish bad behavior, they were urged to use positive reinforcement instead.
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