News

Even in moments of frustration, teachers can hold disruptive students accountable without punishing the class as a group.
A former special education teacher in Crown Point faces a felony battery charge for allegedly injuring an autistic student on April 10.
Meet two educators who say they’ve noticed negative behaviors decreasing after bringing more seating options to students.
Male Athlete of the Year is Ryker Dengler of West Liberty. He was a five-sport athlete, winning a state track title in the ...
Tulsa football commit and Tulsa Union defensive back Daijon Gaines is ranked No. 16 on The Oklahoman's Super 30 recruiting ...
Alabama's 2025 sales tax holiday kicks off Friday, July 18, through Sunday, July 20. During the weekend, families can buy ...
Brevard County students return to school on August 11, 2025, with kindergarten starting August 14 and pre-K on August 18. Key ...
When David Gater received the call notifying him that he would be inducted into the Indiana Football Hall of Fame, he was ...
Tony Cattani, the principal of Lenape High School in Medford, N.J., won in the high school category, while Damon Lewis, the ...
The Alice L. Walton School of Medicine welcomes its first students Monday with plans to teach a different approach to ...
Restoring order to America’s classrooms requires reversing years of misguided federal policies that focused on racial quotas ...
Inquirer Opinion on MSN5d
AI in the classroom
Every semester, when I go over the syllabus with the class, I hear an audible collective groan when they hear the word “research.” If students were diehard Nazis, they would reach for their guns when ...