Parents and educators may feel helpless to stop widespread drug use among adolescents, but evidence-based interventions can make a difference by building children’s skills and adult-child relationships.
Read MoreCommunity colleges are increasingly offering a more affordable alternative for Latino students when it comes to getting a bachelor’s degree.
Read MoreIn New York City, hands-on learning is taking on a new dimension as students partner with researchers to monitor air pollution in their schools and neighborhoods. Students use the data they generate to address environmental injustices and pursue broader legislative change.
Read MoreSilvia Rodríguez Vega made a promise to herself after working with children who drew their own fears. The result is a book that shows the powerful effect of art as healing.
Read MoreThrough the power of literature, oral storytelling and identity, Cuban American author Meg Medina, the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature, invites children into the world of books.
Read MoreHigh schools that treat trans teenagers with respect and care provide essential emotional and academic support, and help these students develop self-confidence and thrive.
Read MoreOne family’s quest for a better life and education for their U.S.-born children leads them south of the border.
Read MoreAre the challenges of Puerto Rico’s schools a taste of what other districts will face? Puerto Rico’s school system, the sixth largest in the U.S., is reeling from repeated natural disasters and enrollment losses. Can new federal attention help?
Read MoreHow one nonprofit program in Florida is trying to shrink the academic and financial gaps for farmworker families.
Read MoreIn New York City and across the country, publicly-funded education programs for doulas of color are booming. A movement to advocate for Medicaid to cover doula services for low-income, pregnant people, has succeeded in several states, which helps make a doula career more accessible to people of color.
Read MoreMigrant students and their families follow the seasons year-round to sow and harvest America’s produce. Students take pride in their families’ work ethic — but struggle to continue their schooling. The 50-year-old CAMP scholarship helps hundreds of them go to college.
Read MoreLos Angeles Unified bets on tutoring for post-pandemic recovery, but progress at many schools is slow.
Read MoreAs the battle continues over a federal student loan forgiveness plan, many Latino families face their own tough circumstances when it comes to ballooning college debt.
Read MoreIn a wide-ranging interview with palabra, Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona laid out his vision for the future of education, and his take on student debt relief and school safety.
Read MoreUndocumented students win a fight for educational equality in Arizona, but their future remains uncertain.
Read MoreA high school program in Los Angeles brings students into the changing world of architecture
Read MoreOverrepresentation of Black, Hispanic students among those suspended for missing school could violate civil rights law
Read MoreSuspending students for absences, tardiness compounds learning loss
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