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LAS CRUCES - A new hotline has been finalized, meant for students, family and community members to report instances of racism and racially-based bullying in school settings.
The Anti-Racism Anti-Oppression Hotline — 1-505-226-3911 — went live on Monday. Reports can also be submitted by text, email at hotline.bea@gmail.com or by completing a form online at https://forms.gle/Tmt5ne1GyfSLpEw56.
On this episode of Working Well we talk with Elvina Charley, Ed.S. She is a bi-lingual Diné (Navajo) school psychologist primarily supporting the Navajo Nation of Northeastern Arizona. Her school educates over 2,000 kindergarten through 12th grade students; a majority of students are bilingual and speak the language of the Navajo people.
A New Mexico school addresses sexual assault, suicide and other hard topics with help from the people students are most likely to listen to: each other.
Making sure a kid has a binder — or perhaps something else that binds him or her to learning — is the bottom line for the Communities In Schools program, which works to help students and families gain a foothold on educational success.
A year after Texas lawmakers prohibited schools from suspending most young students, some Central Texas districts are still using the practice, including one that reported a surprisingly high 571 suspensions in the 2017-18 school year.
In North Texas there is a growing gap between jobs and the skilled workers to fill them. There is a bright spot, though, and it's called P-TECH (Pathways to Technology Early College High School).
For high school students across the Houston area, exploring STEM can range from preparing for a one-day innovation competition to attending a school-within-a-school that encourages science and technology careers.
The girls attending the Houston ISD STEM magnet school, where a poster in the hallway proclaims "Sushi rolls, not gender roles," are hitting upon a stubborn problem in STEM, short for science, technology, engineering and math.
The Texas Education Agency will not hold fifth- and eighth-grade students back in Hurricane Harvey-affected areas based on standardized test scores given this year, Education Commissioner Mike Morath announced Thursday.