They’re taught in Hebrew and Arabic, in a program unusual in Israel for integrating students of different backgrounds. January 31, 2024 • The department needs extra time to fix a mistake that could have hurt lower-income borrowers, but the delay means all students will have to wait longer for their college aid offers. She wants to study business and computer science in the United States or Canada but is worried the absence of face-to-face classes “may undermine our chances to score well in the exams and as a result my place at universities I have applied to”. She has never met the six-year-olds and the students – from countries including China, India, Indonesia and Singapore – have only ever seen each other through a screen thanks to the pandemic. Support for teachers to address learning loss, including through digital technology.
- “One of my college freshmen’s fun fact was that she’s a public pooper.”
- Utah Gov. Spencer Cox recently urged school leaders to support policies halting cellphone use during class time.
- International students earning degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields in the United States will now be eligible to stay for three years of on-the-job training.
- A law scholar examines a pair of Supreme Court cases that pit the public’s free speech rights against politicians’ rights.
- The state’s Senate approved a bill that would force schools to notify parents if their children will be assigned to read books with sexually explicit content.
At AASA’s National Conference on Education, three superintendents detailed how wearable alarm badges have bolstered safety in their schools. In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, the school bus industry has undergone significant transformations, bringing to light a host… The Lexicon Schools recently hosted STEAM Fest, a vibrant celebration of creativity, innovation, and interdisciplinary learning.
School board members could soon be blocked from blocking people − and deleting their comments − on social media
The latest loan forgiveness, announced Wednesday by the Education Department, targets a specific group of longtime borrowers enrolled in the Biden administration’s much-touted repayment plan, which adjusts monthly bills based on people’s incomes. It brings the total amount of debt cancellation Biden has approved to $138 billion for nearly 4 million Americans. The news comes just a day before a group of federal negotiators is set to discuss broader plans for even more student debt relief.