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.
Students from Lexington, KY high schools shared their opinions on school safety with the District Safety Advisory Council, including metal detectors and mental health resources.
The Mayor of Lexington, KY announced the city will provide first-ever violence prevention grants to 16 public schools in Fayette County to help increase services and interventions for youth most impacted by the trauma of violence.
A joint program between Murray State University and the West Kentucky Educational Cooperative is being awarded $3 million in funding to help with mental health initiatives, including the addition of mental health counselors in fourteen local school districts.
The Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky is funding a program in Russell County and nine surrounding counties to help children and youth dealing with violence, addiction and other trauma.
TOWSON, Md. (WBFF) — It keeps happening over and over again. Angry and sometimes frustrated parents sending in cellphone video capturing fights in Baltimore County Public Schools.
Concerns over safety in schools prompted a rally organized by the Randallstown NAACP before Tuesday night's Board of Education meeting.
Emotional stress is causing more students to leave college and keeping others from enrolling. This comes at a time when people need post-high school education more than ever—and the country desperately needs their talent. As the chorus over mental health grows, colleges and universities are finding new ways to extend scarce resources and build holistic networks of support for students.
Mississippi's chamber of commerce and workforce development office are working together on an ambitious goal: get more than half of the state's workforce college-educated by 2030. Education and policy leaders say the effort takes on new urgency in the aftermath of the pandemic and its impact on the decline in the number of Mississippians going to college.
KILN, Miss. — Middle school bullying doesn’t usually make it into the pages of the school-sanctioned yearbook. At Hancock Middle School this year, it did, say outraged parents, alumni and community members, the Sun Herald reported.