'Treehouse' classroom bringing outside in A classroom has been turned into a "treehouse" with log benches instead of chairs, in an attempt to improve health and stimulate pupils. Lindale Primary School near Grange-over-Sands, Cumbria, sits ... 04/24/2024 - 6:34 pm | View Link
National conference in Orlando bringing school leaders together to share safety tools School leaders from across the country are coming together in Central Florida to learn how to better protect their students and staff. 04/24/2024 - 10:30 am | View Link
Bringing corporate America to the classroom in Bronzeville Students at Bronzeville Classical are learning about cultivating a small business. Katrina Roddy founded Classroom to Career (C2C) to teach kids about entrepreneurship. 04/24/2024 - 4:12 am | View Link
Is climate anxiety affecting whether people of color want to have kids? A new book seeks to find out. In “Climate Anxiety and the Kid Question,” Jade Sasser asks how race intersects with this increasingly difficult decision. 04/24/2024 - 1:11 am | View Link
Enhancing Classroom Engagement by Creating ‘the Buzz’ A classroom that buzzes is one that has an intangible pull. At our school, we want to define the buzz not only so that we can see more of it, but also to cultivate it and help our teachers to do so. 04/23/2024 - 8:59 am | View Link
“A Secret Service agent tasked with protecting Vice President Kamala Harris brawled with several other agents on Monday morning,” the New York Post reports.
“The agent in question, whose identity has not been revealed, was immediately ‘removed from their assignment,’”
Trump-supporting conspiracy theorist Jim Hoft posted a message to his readers saying they are filing Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection claiming it is as a result of the progressive liberal lawfare attacks against our media outlet.
Hoft didn't say exactly who, what, or why this is happening now, but Will Sommer from the Washington Post has some information.
While he didn’t name which lawsuits he was referencing, the site is being sued for claims of defamation and infliction of emotional distress by Ruby Freeman and Wandrea Moss, two Georgia election workers who say they faced threats after the site leveled baseless accusations of ballot fraud against them.
That sounds about right.
When House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) emerged onto the steps of Columbia University’s Low Memorial Library on Wednesday afternoon, he was greeted with a deafening sound: hundreds of booing students.
Johnson had just emerged from meetings with Jewish students at the university to discuss what he, other Republicans, and some Democrats allege is rising antisemitism on campuses nationwide.