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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.
Details how the AZ Safe Supportive Schools (S3) goals, objectives, activities, outputs, and outcomes relate to each other. This model was used to train S3 grant staff and support data collection analysis.
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.
The Region 15 Comprehensive Center (R15CC) Cross-State Rural Community of Practice (COP) is thrilled to announce a special one-hour virtual meeting to explore Why Rural Matters 2023, a recent report by the National Rural Education Association (NREA) and their partners. This report is the tenth in a series analyzing the contexts and conditions of rural education in each of the 50 states.
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 Mental Health Youth Action Board was created by Children’s to address a wave of young people under stress, says adult leader Heather Kennedy, and to destigmatize mental health issues.
One local high school is responding in a special way to the tragedies the Grand Valley has faced over the last year. The art club at Fruita Monument High School is creating a special art piece with the community called “Together We can Fly.”
This is a project called the Schools of Opportunity, launched a few years ago by educators who sought to highlight public high schools that actively seek to close opportunity gaps through 11 research-proven practices and not standardized test scores (which are more a measure of socioeconomic status than anything else).
Gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender youth in Colorado are more likely to plan or attempt suicide than their peers, according to results of a biennial health survey released this week.