Navy Honors the Contributions of African Americans during 2018 African American/Black History Month
THE CHRONICLE — WASHINGTON (NNS) — The Navy joins the nation in celebrating the history of African American Sailors and civilians during African American/Black History Month, Feb. 1-28.
read moreVERMONT — Section 9 Proposal – North Bennington School District
VERMONT — The North Bennington Graded School District is pleased to submit this Self Evaluation Report as called for in Section 9 of Act 46 to the Vermont Agency of Education.
read moreVolunteers give makeover to Compton charter school
WAVE NEWSPAPERS — COMPTON — Celerity Achernar Charter School was given a much-needed exterior makeover Jan. 27. Housed in a part of the city that can be considered dreary and industrial, peppered with auto repair shops and residential houses, the school brightened its surroundings with a colorful call-to-action piece of artwork.
read moreA guide for white women who teach Black boys
THE CHICAGO CRUSADER — Did you know that there are 400,000 black men who have master’s degrees? I didn’t think so. That was just one of the many things I learned at a book signing and discussion of the newly released Guide for White Women Who Teach Black Boys.
read moreBetsy DeVos Opens Up ESSA Pilot Allowing Federal Money to Follow Students
School districts: Interested in having your local, state, and federal funding follow children, so that kids with greater need have more money attached to them? Now’s your chance.
read moreThe Outdated Study That Education Reformers Keep Citing
… a close look at the study raises questions about its relevance to modern education debates and the ability of new buzzed-about programs to achieve remotely similar results.
read moreSecretary DeVos Announces New Student-Centered Funding Pilot Program
Washington — U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos today announced new flexibility for school districts to create equitable, student-centered funding systems under a pilot program authorized by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).
read morePENNSYLVANIA: Act 45 Program: Quality School Leadership Identification (QSLID) Process
Research tells us that hiring the right principal is critical to school improvement, particularly in the lowest performing schools. With the right principal in place, student achievement can dramatically advance, and schools can retain effective teachers.
read moreSecretary DeVos Convenes Higher Education Summit: Innovation Blends Technology and the Personal Touch
“We need to question everything; to look for ways in which we can improve, and embrace the imperative of change.
read moreVIDEO: The NNPA ESSA Public Awareness Campaign
The National Newspaper Publishers Association’s ESSA Awareness Campaign is focused on informing and engaging parents, educators, elected officials and opinion leaders about efforts and policies aimed at closing achievement gaps for students of color and low-income students.
read moreThe Government Shutdown and K-12 Education: Your Guide
Here we go again: President Donald Trump and Congress were unable to reach agreement on temporary spending plan to keep the government open. So the U.S. Department of Education and other government agencies are on a partial shutdown, as of midnight Friday night. This is the first time this has happened in four years.
read moreBetsy DeVos Approves Six More ESSA Plans
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos has given six more states the thumbs-up on their plans to implement the Every Student Succeeds Act: Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kansas, Montana, and New Hampshire. These approvals bring the grand total of approved state ESSA plans...
read moreOPINION: We already know that poverty is a math problem. So, what else is it?
MINNESOTA SPOKESMAN-RECORDER — Last August, I introduced the first column in a six-part series declaring that “poverty is not a character flaw,” but rather a math problem (and so much more). The math problems identified during the course of the series focused on America’s substantial inequities in employment, education, housing and transportation.
read moreThousands Attend 34th Martin Luther King, Jr. Birthday Celebration at Marcus Center
MILWAUKEE COURIER — Thousands gathered at the Marcus Center of Performing Arts on Sunday, Jan. 14 to celebrate the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. From 1 pm to 3 pm, local elected and community leaders gave speeches on Dr. King’s legacy, and Milwaukee Public School students delivered speeches and displayed artwork inspired by Dr. King.
read moreWISCONSIN: Madison East teacher named Global Educator of the Year
MADISON — Claudine Clark, a world language teacher at Madison East High School, has found innovative ways to bring the world into her classroom, earning her the third annual Global Educator of the Year Award. Nomination letters cited the thousands of d…
read moreLaney, West Side Baptist’s Pocket Houses for Homeless Students
OAKLAND POST — Laney’s carpentry department has achieved success building tiny homes. They won a contest hosted by Sacramento Municipal Utility District for a tiny home they built in 2016. Councilmember Abel Guillén spearheaded a collaboration between the City of Oakland and their department with an $80,000 grant to Laney carpentry to build a tiny home prototype for mass production.
read moreMICHIGAN: Gov. Snyder’s MiSTEM Advisory Council Awards $2.85M to 34 STEM Projects
LANSING – Thirty-four Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs are sharing $2.85 million in state grants from Governor Rick Snyder’s MiSTEM Advisory Council, the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) announced today.
read moreAC Transit to Oakland Hills Schools Wins Reprieve
THE OAKLAND POST — The Oakland Unified School District and AC Transit have announced that bus transportation service to Montera Middle School, Skyline High School and Community Day School will be extended through June 2019.
read more25 Black Atlanta students chosen for Harvard summer program
THE CHICAGO CRUSADER — The Art Institute of Atlanta, where the surprise announcement was made, awarded the students $10,500 in scholarship money to attend the prestigious program. An additional $88,000 needs to be raised to support the students’ tuition, room and board, and travel.
read moreTexas Appleseed’s LSAT Scholarship Kicks Off for 2018
DALLAS POST TRIBUNE — AUSTIN, Texas — Texas Appleseed, a public interest justice center, is accepting scholarship applications as part of its Diversity Legal Scholars program, aimed at diversifying the legal profession. The program helps low-income students of color expand their law school options through a scholarship that covers the full cost of a Kaplan (LSAT) preparation course, valued at about $1,299 per scholar.
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