All Education
- Students need help catching up. Tennessee tries tutoring.
How should schools mitigate the pandemic’s effect on learning? In Tennessee, a statewide tutoring program is seeing positive results.
- Right to transfer: Why it’s a game changer for college athletes
Forget the fiefdom of the all-powerful coach. In football and beyond, college sports programs face a culture change as players win new rights.
- Rising book bans: Grounds for moral panic?
Books in schools and libraries increasingly have targets on their spines. The more partisan the battle has become, the more it manifests as a power struggle, rather than an effort to best serve children.
- FocusOpting out: A wider range of parents drives home-school surge
The pandemic has prompted more families to turn to home schooling. For some parents, the decision is driven by culture as much as by academics.
- First Look'Cyber snow days': Data hacks send US schools scrambling
Across the United States, hackers have homed in on a new target: schools. Cyberattacks have been occurring with greater frequency and severity – affecting everything from fire alarms to personal data – forcing some schools to close for days.
- Cover StoryTeaching race in schools: Have these moms found a way forward?
Amid the turmoil of fraught school board meetings, a group of moms hopes to foster genuine conversation on race, even when everyone doesn’t agree.
- What happens to US education if there’s no one to teach?
School systems are seeking interim solutions to staffing shortages, but also need to face longer-term challenges with recruiting and retaining teachers.
- First LookStudents to swap pencils for laptops as SAT exam moves online
On Tuesday, administrators announced that the SAT exam is moving online, which will parallel a shift to digital testing already underway in schools. The format change will begin abroad next year and in the United States in 2024.
- First LookSupreme Court to hear challenge to race-based college admissions
The U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly upheld race-conscious admissions since the 1970s. Now, it takes up a challenge to two lawsuits alleging Harvard University and the University of North Carolina intentionally discriminated against Asian American applicants.
- First LookHow should race be taught? New Mexico might have a model.
Home to sizable Hispanic and Native American populations, New Mexico wants to make sure its social studies curriculum is inclusive of a diverse student body. That includes rethinking how to teach sensitive history, such as the legacy of Spanish conquistadors.
- First LookHow teachers plan to talk to their students about Jan. 6
With the anniversary of the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol insurrection fast approaching, teachers are grappling with how best to address the event itself, as well as complex themes of democracy, politics, and race.
- Cover StoryFifth graders as futurists: Imagining the world in 20 years
What will the future look like? We decided to ask a creative bunch, simultaneously concerned yet optimistic: fifth grade students.
- Reading, writing, and cybersecurity: Education for the digital age
Students are at home in the digital world, but do they know how to best defend it? Schools focus more specifically on improving cybersecurity skills.
- First LookThreats of school violence on TikTok spur educators into action
In the aftermath of a school shooting in Michigan, bomb and shooting threats have been circulating among students on the social media app TikTok. School officials across the nation are doing their best to assure parents their kids are safe by stepping up security.
- Room for everyone: Tribal college expands its reach
When the pandemic hit, a tribal college moved all its courses online and offered them without charge to any Native student.
- Retire on campus? Colleges find community with intergenerational living.
This senior living residence on a university campus may have found a way to tackle ageism: housing different generations in close proximity.
- How charging parents in a school shooting could change the conversation
How is thinking changing around preventing school shootings? A rare approach is getting more attention: holding parents legally accountable.
- The case that could breach the wall between church and state
Carson v. Makin shows the Supreme Court’s evolution of thought in recent decades on the separation of church and state.
- Student loan safety net needs mending: How simplifying can help
The Biden administration is canceling student loan debt for some vulnerable borrowers and making existing loan forgiveness options easier to get.
- Civil debate about education? Two opponents offer a blueprint.
How can Americans who disagree talk productively about education? Through their book and podcast, two opponents offer ideas for moving forward.