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Science and Education/Education

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  • 1 week ago | nea.org | Mary Ellen Flannery

    The classroom poster that led to international headlines and eventually Sarah Inama’s resignation says simply, “Everyone is Welcome Here.” Under those letters are 10 raised hands, in skin tones that range from dark brown to pale pink. The message is clear. It is what it says. Black, white, Asian, Hispanic, Native, or some combination of the above: You are welcome in this classroom. This teacher values you. She thinks you’re important.

  • 2 weeks ago | nea.org | Cindy Long

    It was a tough young lawyer from Brooklyn who helped make NEA the strongest voice for public school education in America. The career of Robert (Bob) Chanin as NEA’s general counsel spanned four decades, from 1968 to 2009, which were among the most volatile periods in the organization’s history. He argued five cases (winning four) and filed another 25 amicus briefs before the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • 1 month ago | nea.org | Mary Ellen Flannery

    “Everybody wants more computer-science teachers—and we are on the verge of telling them how to do it—and now we can’t!” says Caroline Hardin, a Western Washington University professor. Earlier this month, the National Science Foundation (NSF) suddenly terminated Hardin’s three-year, $231,554 grant, about two-thirds of the way through her team’s work. Their task? Investigating the lack of licensed computer-science teachers in U.S., especially women and educators of color.

  • 1 month ago | nea.org | Amanda Litvinov

    Iowa Spanish teacher Nancy Baker Curtis’s nine-and-a-half-year-old son Charlie loves monster trucks, playing with his friends, and bike-riding with his mom. Earlier this year, he was running down the sidewalk, fell, and had to get stitches in his chin. “It’s terrible, of course, but it’s also amazing because at the age of two, he couldn’t crawl or even sit up,” says Baker Curtis.

  • 1 month ago | nea.org | Kalie Walker |Jesse Andrews

    By: Kalie Walker, Contributor Key Takeaways According to Pen America, there were more than 10,000 instances of books bans in the 2023-24 academic year—the highest number recorded yet. Calling them a ”hoax,” the U.S. Education Department under President Trump has rescinded all guidance on book bans.

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