BPS students demand ‘new rules, clean schools’ in City Hall Plaza rally
Student sent a list of demands to the mayor, including facility improvements and more educators of color.
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FAFSA delays put pressure on overstretched school counselors in Mass.
The Education Department did not release its revision of a crucial federal financial aid form until the end of December — a three-month delay. Overwhelmed school counselors worry that delay will result in more students “slipping through the cracks.” -
Newton teachers and school committee reach tentative agreement after 11-day strike
Massachusetts’ longest teachers strike in 30 years appears headed for resolution. -
Newton paraprofessionals earn lower wages compared to other districts
Salary increases for paraprofessionals remain a sticking point in the Newton teacher strike negotiations. Among its wealthier neighboring school districts, teacher aide wages in Newton are one of the lowest. -
Parents feel the impact as Newton teachers strike continues
They have been scrambling to secure last-minute childcare, fulfill their own work responsibilities and keep their children occupied. -
Newton teachers are on the picket line. Here’s what state law says about striking
Teachers are calling for increased pay and more social workers in schools. -
‘We need education’: Nonprofit director reflects on Holocaust Remembrance Day
Saturday is Holocaust Remembrance Day, yet too many young people lack basic knowledge about the genocide. -
To address climate anxiety, colleges embrace environmental humanities
While higher education veterans question whether students enrolled in these new courses are learning anything to address the climate crisis and land a job, Harvard students say they're gaining a nuanced understanding of climate issues. -
Standardized tests aren't biased, says new data—but scores reflect society's biases
A new report shows that standardized testing results are a better indicator than grade point average alone for student success in college. -
Newton teachers strike enters 3rd day as fines and frustrations mount
Pay for educators — including teachers' assistants — a point of contention. -
Professors fear creeping authoritarianism in academia amid Harvard fallout
Following the resignation of Harvard president Claudine Gay, some professors warn that political encroachment in academia is a sign of the times — and rising authoritarianism.