|
|
|
Newsletter continues after sponsor message
|
|
|
TRIO, the collection of federal programs that help underrepresented students get into and through college, came up at a hearing Tuesday about a White House proposal on Education Department spending. The budget would eliminate money for TRIO, which has for years enjoyed bipartisan support. Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the program hasn’t lived up to its own metrics and suggested being open to changing its premise from helping students with college to making it about workforce training, which, as Sequoia and Jonaki Mehta reported, several senators disliked. Read more about TRIO in this deep dive from our partners at The Hechinger Report.
Inflation is sucking the life out of teacher pay raises, report says The average salary for a public school teacher in the U.S. rose to $74,495 in the last school year, up 3.5% from the year before. But adjusted for inflation, today's teachers are estimated to be earning less, not more, than they were in 2017, according to the National Education Association.
— Cory Turner, Education Correspondent, NPR
Should schools get rid of homework? Some educators are saying yes Federal data suggests that the amount of math homework assigned to fourth and eighth grade students, in particular, has been steadily declining.
— Ariel Gilreath, Reporter, The Hechinger Report
Why emotional disturbance, a special ed category, is a double-edged sword for students Often, students labeled EBD are kids whom teachers and school administrators have deemed too disruptive to remain in regular classrooms. Once a student gets this label, it's hard to shake.
— Laurie Stern, NPR News
Baby teeth hold clues to the harms of toxic metals for infants — and older kids By analyzing layers in these teeth, scientists have pinpointed a critical window when baby brains are most vulnerable to toxic metals — and linked that to behavior problems later in life.
— Maria Godoy, Science Correspondent, NPR |
|
You are the “public” in public media.
We just finished celebrating Public Media Giving Days. Supporters shared heartfelt stories and championed the independent news that the NPR Network provides. Check out some of our favorite comments below!
If you already contributed — thank you! If not, it’s never too late to stand with this public service as we face an uncharted future without federal funding. |
|
|
|
And here's something to make you smile... |
Welcome to 'Anxietyland' theme park, where the rides are no fun.
From the Emotional Roller Coaster to the Worry-go-round, cartoonist Gemma Correll walks us through her brain's not-so-amusing amusement park in a darkly funny memoir.
It's 2018 and cartoonist Gemma Correll is not doing well. In the midst of a week-long panic attack, she is trying everything to get her nervous system to calm down. She tries long walks through her Northern California neighborhood, meditation apps, magnesium and all the liquor in her home. Lying on the ground in the fetal position is her choice method. But nothing works.
Instead, she lies awake at night, gags at the sight of food and since she can't get her eyes to focus, ignores work deadlines. One week turns into several. She is unraveling.
Her spiral takes her down a rickety wooden roller coaster into "The Abyss" of exhaustion and she begins to give up. Sitting on the floor crying to her husband, she says she needs to go to the hospital. Her husband agrees.
This is where Correll's new graphic memoir Anxietyland begins — but it's not where her relationship with anxiety begins. For that, she takes us back to her childhood and walks us through her life living in a terrible theme park called Anxietyland. |
|
|
| | | |