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Summarizes the points made in President Obama's 2014 State of the Union Address, in which he reinforced the message that education plays an important role in our country. Includes excerpts from the speech, education priorities, and details about educators and students present in the first lady's viewing area.
Lists websites and resources that help students keep reading over summer break. This website provides parents and guardians with ways to take advantage of students' passion for technology through reading apps and websites.
Presents a recently updated federal website featuring resources, tools, policy guidance and information for parents, educators, administrators, service providers, and advocates for infants, toddlers, and youth with disabilities.
Studies abound about the state of mental health and college students. Citing some measure of sadness, anxiety, feelings of burnout, or use of unhealthy coping skills, these studies say the same thing: College students are struggling. Leaders in Washington are starting to listen. The Biden administration recently called on colleges to use federal COVID relief funding to add mental health support for students.
Offers updated school connectedness webpages with the latest science and recommendations from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. Learn how schools can connect to protect student mental health.
First-generation students often find it hard to navigate college life. Many face economic challenges, juggle jobs to support their families, and encounter social challenges. To help them, some colleges are going beyond academic support. They’re re-evaluating physical spaces on campus to figure out how to create an environment of belonging.
After struggling as an undergraduate at University of California, Irvine, Andrea Mora is now the school's director of basic needs and tasked with supervising various services that the university provides to students whose backgrounds and life stories are much like her own: students from low-income or immigrant backgrounds; first in their families to attend college; Black, Hispanic or Indigenous, or BIPOC.
In Missouri, St. Louis County jail detainees can now take college credit courses through St. Louis Community College. Inmates who have a high school diploma can take up to two classes a semester and earn three credits for each eight-week session.