Posted inEducation, Student Loans

‘It’s Untenable’: The Unequal Burden of the Student Debt Crisis

The pause on student loan payments is scheduled to end Aug. 31, and millions of Americans are contending with the prospect of another burdensome monthly expense. Dozens of Democratic lawmakers have publicly called for a seventh extension on the payment freeze, and many experts believe that the Biden administration will oblige. But for Black Americans, […]

Posted inEducation, K-12

Why It’s So Hard for Schools to Teach About Slavery

The Texas Board of Education received national attention this summer when a group of eductors proposed a monumental change to the state’s second-grade social studies curriculum: introducing slavery as “involuntary relocation.”   The board rejected the proposal, but the incident is only the latest controversy surrounding how slavery is taught in American schools. Classes have held […]

Posted inEducation, K-12

Becky Pringle: The Black Woman Representing Teachers Across the Country

Many Americans learned Becky Pringle’s name for the first time last week, when she testified about the nation’s gun violence epidemic in front of the House Committee on Oversight and Reform.  Pringle, president of the National Education Association, recounted the stories of several deadly shootings that have struck schools nationwide recently, including last month’s massacre […]

Posted inEducation, K-12

How Police Officers Started Working at Schools — And Why Some People Want Them Out

It’s been 10 days since a gunman infiltrated an elementary school in the small town of Uvalde, Texas, fatally shooting 19 students and two teachers. But many questions remain about how police officers handled the tragic event and whether lives could have been spared. Families’ accounts of begging police officers to enter the school — […]

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