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Education

Highlights

  1. Professors Are Uniquely Powerful. That May Be Changing.

    Faculty members are used to sharing power with presidents and trustees to run universities. But some presidents and lawmakers have made moves to reduce their say.

     By

    In September, faculty members held a silent vigil in defense of academic freedom and shared governance at the Emory University campus in Atlanta.
    In September, faculty members held a silent vigil in defense of academic freedom and shared governance at the Emory University campus in Atlanta.
    CreditNicole Craine for The New York Times
    1. Book Bans Live On in School District Now Run by Democrats

      Democrats swept a school board election in Bucks County after Republicans instituted book bans and other changes. But the right-wing “parental rights” movement has left an indelible mark.

       By

      School board meetings held at Pennridge High School in Perkasie, Pa., used to be heated affairs.
      School board meetings held at Pennridge High School in Perkasie, Pa., used to be heated affairs.
      CreditRachel Wisniewski for The New York Times
  1. Professors in Trouble Over Protests Wonder if Academic Freedom Is Dying

    Universities have cracked down on professors for pro-Palestinian activism, saying they are protecting students and tamping down on hate speech. Faculty members say punishments have put a “chill in the air.”

     By

    Since last school year, professors at Columbia University and across the country have joined their students in activism.
    CreditC.S. Muncy for The New York Times
  2. Columbia Bars Vocal Pro-Israel Professor From Campus

    The university said Shai Davidai had repeatedly harassed and intimidated employees. He said the university had not done enough to crack down on pro-Palestinian protests.

     By Vimal Patel and

    Shai Davidai, an assistant professor at Columbia University’s business school, has been temporarily barred from campus, the university said.
    CreditAdam Gray for The New York Times
  3. Pro-Palestinian Group at Columbia Now Backs ‘Armed Resistance’ by Hamas

    Columbia University Apartheid Divest has withdrawn an apology it made last spring for a member who said “Zionists don’t deserve to live.”

     By

    Some protests marking the anniversary of Oct. 7 celebrated the Hamas military operation against Israel.
    CreditBing Guan for The New York Times
  4. Brown Rejects Protesters’ Push to Divest Over Israel Ties

    The university made a deal with pro-Palestinian students last spring to consider their demands if they ended a protest encampment. But the university board voted against divestment.

     By

    Brown University said on Wednesday that its governing board had rejected a student proposal that called on the school to divest from companies with ties to Israel.
    CreditDavid Goldman/Associated Press
  1. Pro-Palestinian Group Is Relentless in Its Criticism of Israel, and It Isn’t Backing Down

    Within Our Lifetime, a group formed by New York students, has galvanized pro-Palestinian activists who are calling for the end of Israel — and facing accusations of antisemitism.

     By

    Protesters at a rally organized by the pro-Palestinian group Within Our Lifetime outside a campaign event for Kamala Harris in Harlem in August.
    CreditAdam Gray for The New York Times
  2. Nevada Asked A.I. Which Students Need Help. The Answer Caused an Outcry.

    The new system cut the number of students deemed “at risk” in the state by 200,000, leading to tough moral and ethical questions over which children deserve extra assistance.

     By

    Renee Fairless, a charter school principal, said that at her school, which serves many children living in poverty, a new A.I. algorithm led to a sharp drop in the number identified as needing more resources.
    CreditMikayla Whitmore for The New York Times
  3. For Some Children, Hurricane Helene’s Ruin ‘Could Take Years to Get Over’

    School closures and traumatic experiences could affect children long after schools reopen. Experts worry that similar scenarios are happening with much more frequency because of climate change.

     By Troy Closson and

    Raven Echols, 37, center left, said her school-age children are growing restless while their North Carolina schools remain closed. She said she may send them to Georgia so they don’t fall behind.
    CreditJuan Diego Reyes for The New York Times
  4. Campuses Are Calmer, but They Are Not Normal, Students and Faculty Say

    A year of war in Gaza has left college students and faculty feeling shaken and angry, with the world and with each other.

     By Sharon Otterman and

    Hamilton Hall at Columbia University on Oct. 1. The building was occupied by dozens of protesters in April.
    Credit
  5. Oklahoma Schools Need 55,000 Bibles. Trump-Endorsed Book Fits the Bill.

    The bid details for new Bibles the state is buying seem to point to a version promoted by former President Donald J. Trump.

     By

    Oklahoma’s education superintendent, Ryan Walters, mandated that all public school classrooms have a Bible.
    CreditDaniel Shular/Tulsa World, via Associated Press

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Learning: A Special Report

More in Learning: A Special Report ›
  1. Back to School and Back to Normal. Or at Least Close Enough.

    As school began this year, we sent reporters to find out how much — or how little — has changed since the pandemic changed everything.

     By

    First graders at Vare-Washington Elementary School in Philadelphia.
    CreditHannah Yoon for The New York Times
  2. At the Edge of a Cliff, Some Colleges Are Teaming Up to Survive

    Faced with declining enrollment, smaller schools are harnessing innovative ideas — like course sharing — to attract otherwise reluctant students.

     By

    Adrian College is a liberal arts school of just over 1,600 undergraduates in Michigan.
    CreditErin Kirkland for The New York Times
  3. Community Schools Offer More Than Just Teaching

    The concept has been around for a while, but the pandemic reinforced the importance of providing support to families and students to enhance learning.

     By

    Students at Dr. Michael D. Fox elementary school wear light blue and khaki uniforms. The community school in Hartford, Conn., works with 10 to 20 organizations to help students and families.
    CreditIke Abakah for The New York Times
  4. Could Tutoring Be the Best Tool for Fighting Learning Loss?

    In-school tutoring is not a silver bullet. But it may help students and schools reduce some pandemic-related slides in achievement.

     By

    Joi Mitchell didn’t want to follow family members into classroom teaching but found a way to work with students by serving as a tutor, including on the Cardozo campus.
    CreditJason Andrew for The New York Times
  5. Meeting the Mental Health Challenge in School and at Home

    From kindergarten through college, educators are experimenting with ways to ease the stress students are facing — not only from the pandemic, but from life itself.

     By

    CreditMonika Aichele
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