From vaping, the cost of supplies to cellphone policies, the WTOP team is studying up on hot-button topics in education across the D.C. region. Follow our series “WTOP Goes Back to School” on air and ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio -Cuyahoga County Community College students will not lose transit passes, unlike Cleveland State University students, because Tri-C doesn’t pay for them with student fees. A change in ...
New trends take over social media in about as much time as it takes to make one post. When a man shared his thoughts on how grades don’t necessarily correlate with greatness, he had plenty of people ...
CHICAGO (WLS) -- There was a pro-Palestinian gathering at Chicago's Federal Plaza Tuesday. Activists are rallying in support of a Columbia University graduate, and legal permanent resident, who's ...
For many Cuyahoga Community College students, the more difficult test isn’t in the classroom — it’s finding enough money to cover food, housing or child care. A new $1 million gift from Medical Mutual ...
Antimatter is an edtech company that operates under a simple, enticing premise: If a student really understands a topic, then they’ll be able to make a meme about it. “To be able to shitpost, you have ...
More students in the District are reading on grade level than before the pandemic, according to test data shared Thursday. More than 37 percent of students scored proficient on standardized reading ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Statewide scores in the S.C. Ready test show some students in South Carolina continue to struggle.
Lucy Messina and Easton Rapp are Southwestern Middle School’s recipients for this year’s Triple “C” award. The faculty nominates students who have shown “Character, Courage, and Commitment” throughout ...
Today, we remember the six D.C. students and teachers who were killed on 9/11 while on a plane for a field trip. 24 years ago, Leckie Elementary School teacher Hilda Taylor and student Bernard Brown, ...
Former students say military veterans who led J.R.O.T.C. classes in U.S. high schools fashioned themselves as mentors, then used their power to manipulate and abuse. Credit... Supported by By Mike ...