Below are the site contents that matched your search. Use the text box and tags on the left side of the page to refine your search. The NCSSLE logo appears next to resources produced by NCSSLE.
Late last week, the Seattle-based caffeinater to the masses held a press conference to unveil a free job-training program for young people at its location on Camelback Road west of Seventh Avenue as part of a nationwide effort to put a dent in disconnection.
Two school leaders from Isaac Middle School in Phoenix, Arizona share key strategies implemented to improve the Title I school’s culture and performance.
Students from Arizona’s Tempe Union High School District have written and produced peer-to-peer public safety announcements to raise awareness about fentanyl, Good Samaritan laws, commonly laced recreational and counterfeit prescription drugs, and overdose reversal medication.
School shootings and mass shootings have become an unfortunate reality in modern day America. Following the Parkland, FL, shooting last February, survivors advocate for gun control and students across the country have mobilized to take action against gun violence.
The Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority led Saturday's workshop which included guests who dealt with their own issues growing up and also gave kids an opportunity to think about the issue and develop their own public service announcements about the issues.
D.C.’s Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE) released a draft of social-emotional learning (SEL) standards for students in the D.C. public and public charter schools
When this principal accepted the position at Langley Elementary in Washington, D.C., they had two objectives in mind: one, to empower teachers who truly care about supporting the whole child, and two, to inspire a schoolwide culture shift.
Cynthia Brown-Thomas’s job requires her to rise before the sun. It pays a meager stipend of $2.65 an hour. An exhausting display of patience is a must. She credits the job with saving her life.
TWIN FALLS, Idaho (KMVT/KSVT) — As a parent, when you send your children to school, you want them to be safe.
One Twin Falls father learned, however, that not only was his daughter attacked on campus but there was video evidence of the altercation.
One evening in mid-October, Leslie Montgomery said her daughter received a barrage of emails to her school email account. Montgomery said her daughter— a seventh grader at the Christian private school Greenleaf Friends Academy — had been the subject of bullying by fellow students since enrolling in the school last year.