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California celebrates its linguistic diversity while shortchanging bilingual ed

California always seems to be ahead of the curve. Huge numbers of you are reading this column on Apple devices designed in Cupertino — and you got here by clicking a link on one of the social media companies with headquarters just down the road from there in Silicon Valley. The Golden State: it’s where...
By Conor Williams | November 21, 2023
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Opinion: An R&D initiative to put $20M into community-based ‘ecosystems’ of learning

The American education system is stuck in an out-moded design for learning. The change the world is going through is accelerating, and we need to radically redesign how we support children and youth. Whether it’s the infusion of artificial intelligence into our world, or the need to solve the existential problems facing our society, our...
By Kelly Young | November 15, 2023
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Noguera & Freedberg: How a robust arts curriculum can contribute to school equity

Too often, the things that get kids most excited about learning have been stripped out of the school curriculum. No wonder when asked: “how was school”, so many students kids respond “boring.” It shouldn’t be that way, and wouldn’t be if arts and music education were more widely available. However, over the past few decades,...
By Pedro Noguera and Louis Freedberg | November 13, 2023
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America is facing a shortage of STEM teachers: Here’s one way to solve it

Ever since the Soviet Union launched Sputnik into orbit on Oct. 4, 1957, America has been struggling to recruit and retain STEM teachers in its public middle and high schools. In the 2017-2018 school year, approximately 100,000 teacher jobs in STEM – or science, technology, engineering and mathematics – went unfilled at the high school...
By Gerard Robinson | November 8, 2023
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To be globally competitive, the U.S. Must value STEM as much as literacy

The world is dependent on innovations, systems and equipment that are designed and sustained using science, engineering, technology and mathematics. This means the nurturing of STEM talent cannot be reserved for a slice of our student population but, instead, an essential component of every student’s educational journey. It turns out, industry agrees. Our colleagues in...
By Amy McGrath | October 30, 2023
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Opinion: How have schools improved since the pandemic? What teachers had to say

COVID-19 impacted every aspect of life, and schools are still dealing with its residual effects. Many teachers blame the pandemic for low achievement and isolation from peers as the root cause of student conflicts in schools. But are there more positive narratives to tell? In doing research for my Ph.D. program, I sought out the...
By Cory Beets | October 18, 2023
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Opinion: Finding ‘lost Einsteins’ means fixing K-5 science, especially in rural schools

This nation’s economic security will be won or lost based on the ability of elementary schools to energize science education. That is because the country is at the start of a massive effort intended to bring semiconductor manufacturing to the Southwest, battery research and development to rural upstate New York and more. It’s an effort...
By Jeanne McCarty | October 11, 2023
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Opinion: How are kids really doing after COVID-19? Survey of 500K students has answers

The back-to-school scene as I dropped my daughter off for her first day of school today was delightfully, if unnervingly, normal. For parents around the country, this is the first back-to-school season since the end of COVID-19 as a public health emergency, and that is something to celebrate. As the country emerges from a pandemic that...
By Jen Vorse Wilka | October 5, 2023
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Opinion: How a family COVID project became a fun, creative outlet for children nationwide

The vibe in education these days is dark. Test scores are falling, students’ mental health needs are growing and educators are becoming more and more exasperated. Perhaps schools should focus on fun. This isn’t a fanciful wish that’s out of touch with the stark challenges facing many communities. Rather, it’s a strategy, a means to an end, a practical...
By Stacey Gillet | October 4, 2023
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Opinion: As schools see a wave of immigrants, the past offers lessons for the U.S.

There is a 1905 photograph taken by Lewis Hine titled “Italian Family Seeking Lost Baggage, Ellis Island.” It shows a mother, with a scarf covering her hair and a baby in her arms, and two children: a boy, about 11 or 12 years old, with what looks like a laundry bag over his shoulder, and...
By Adam Strom & Meisha Lamb-Bell | September 29, 2023