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Commentary: Well-trained teachers, hands-on lessons, quality tests: Fixing science education
Americans are skeptical of science. Public ambivalence has shown itself clearly in concerns over the safety and necessity of vaccines and in the dismissal of public health guidance designed to curtail the spread of COVID-19. None of this is surprising, given the anemic state of science education in the U.S. Far too many young people...
By Margaret Honey | March 13, 2023
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Video: A California teen’s research on bees’ memory is helping avert colony collapse disorder
When Rory Hu came across a news article about the global decline in honey bee populations, she was inspired to do something about it. Known as Colony Collapse Disorder, it puts the global food supply at serious risk. The teen from San Jose, California, dug deeper, discovering in her research that harmful pesticides can damage...
By Jim Fields | March 10, 2023
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LAUSD service workers move another step closer to a strike
Update, March 13: SEIU Local 99 announced over the weekend that it plans to hold a 3-day unfair labor practice strike to protest what it characterizes as harassment from LAUSD. The union will announce dates for the strike this Wednesday at a joint rally with the teachers union, UTLA. An FAQ on UTLA’s website says...
By Will Callan | March 8, 2023
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3 steps school districts can take to address the student mental health crisis
The nation’s schools are facing a crisis. The pandemic slowed student learning, and schools and families are eager to see academic improvement as quickly as possible. Access to trained school counselors can help students succeed in their classes, but there are too few counselors supporting too many kids with too varied challenges. This problem predates...
By Laura Smith | March 8, 2023
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LAUSD senior scores highest in nation on college-level computer science course
For Los Angeles Unified senior Yanxi Rodriguez, there was no sign the school day would deviate from any of the others that had passed in January — until her computer science teacher told her to check her email. “Mr. Flores told me, ‘Congratulations, did you see your email?’ And I’m like, ‘What email? I don’t...
By Cari Spencer | March 7, 2023
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Exclusive: Despite K-2 reading gains, results flat for 3rd grade ‘COVID kids’
The percentage of third graders on track in reading hasn’t budged since this time last year, new data shows — a reminder of the literacy setbacks experienced by kindergartners when schools shut down in 2020. Even so, the test’s administrators are interpreting the flatline at 54% as good news. Paul Gazzerro, director of data analysis at curriculum...
By Linda Jacobson | March 6, 2023
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How schools and programs around the country are making teaching more diverse
As a little girl growing up in El Salvador, Aracely Valdes loved school and dreamed of becoming a teacher. Yet, when she enrolled in the Fort Worth, Texas, public schools at age 15, a new immigrant who spoke no English, the path to fulfilling her dream was far from clear. Then, in her final year...
By Lynn Olson | March 2, 2023
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Watch: 17-year-old makes history by sequencing genome of pet fish
Indeever Madireddy, 17, is an avid fish lover. Not as food, but as pets. The San Jose, California teen meticulously raises his freshwater angelfish from egg to adulthood. But when one of his prized fish died, he was struck with an idea: use the fish for genetic mapping. Indeever says this is important for use...
By The 74 | March 1, 2023
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Nearly 1 in 5 teen girls ‘engulfed’ in wave of sexual violence; many suicidal
Public health officials have been sounding the alarm about young girls’ mental health, pointing to rises in hospitalization for suicide attempts and depression, especially during the pandemic. Now, new national data unveil one factor that could be exacerbating the crisis: a record increase in sexual violence. Nearly 1 in 5 teen girls experienced sexual violence...
By Marianna McMurdock | February 28, 2023
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In student loan case, Supreme Court to weigh pandemic’s ‘profound’ effect on borrowers
Even as it plans to end the COVID public health emergency, the Biden administration will make its case before the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday that the ongoing financial hardship caused by the pandemic continues to necessitate a one-time student loan forgiveness plan. The court will hear two cases that say the administration exceeded its authority when it...
By Linda Jacobson | February 27, 2023