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.
Designed to help stakeholders better understand the policy environment surrounding current school discipline practices in our country. This compendium provides information on school discipline laws and administrative regulations for the United States, including the 50 States, Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico.
Serves as a website for disseminating the latest resources and information on policies and actions related to New York's "Enough is Enough" legislation to combat sexual assault on college and university campuses statewide.
Provides a unifying framework for schools, families, and communities to understand, select, and organize their learning supports (i.e., strategies, programs, and practices used to create conditions to enhance learning).
Singing chants and bearing signs that read “Counselors Not Cops” and “Students Can’t Read If Students Can’t Breathe,” more than 200 students, parents, teachers and City Council members rallied outside City Hall on Wednesday, before marching a few blocks to New York Police Department headquarters at 1 Police Plaza. Their demand: remove all police from public schools.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — The Hamilton County School Board has a new report out that finds there's one type of bullying in schools across the county that's the highest it's ever been: bullying based on a student's race.
Like many parents on May 24, Kelly Goldmann, whose three children attend Wauwatosa Schools, watched in horror as the news unfolded about the violent tragedy in Uvalde, Texas, where a gunman killed 19 students and two teachers and wounded 17 others.
After seeing other parents experience her worst fear that day she knew she had to do something.
While the City University of New York has been hailed as an engine of social mobility, some 55 percent of students across 19 of its campuses recently were housing insecure. Now, a partnership with the Neighborhood Coalition for Shelter is launching an innovative pilot program to help give students affordable housing, while also easing a serious obstacle to academic success.
Students and mental health professionals presented youth's perspective on the mental health crisis to educate groups and discuss mental well-being in the same context as physical wellness.
High school students and staff took part in a Mental Health Matters Summit aimed at creating discussion surrounding mental health to reduce the stigma and create awareness about available resources.