By Maya Pottiger Overall teacher well-being has returned to pre-pandemic levels, but Black teachers are struggling. It’s been a tumultuous couple of years for teachers, but things are finally looking […]
Category: Education
Average student loan payments to top $200 once resumed
By Chris Horymski Millions of student loan borrowers will soon be adding a monthly student loan payment on top of the other household bills like credit cards and car loans. […]
History of affirmative action in higher education
By Joseph Lamour On June 29, 2023, the Supreme Court ruled in two cases—regarding Harvard and the University of North Carolina’s admissions practices—that using race as a factor for college […]
CAMP EXPOSURE RETURNS TO DFW
Camp Exposure announced its fourth annual Educational Football Camp, a three-day exclusive overnight camp designed to empower participants in their personal and professional growth, enabling them to explore their identity, […]
Summer Camp Inflation and Why Accessibility for Black Students is Crucial
In 2022, summer camp prices rose by more than half nationwide. And amidst another wave of inflation hitting the US economy, prices for summer programming are up at varying rates […]
If Discrimination Had a Yearbook, SCOTUS Would Win ‘Most Likely to Succeed’
By Patrick Washington Originally appeared in Word in Black The Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action lets “any mini Karen with a social media account” claim discrimination and strip rights […]
Supreme Court Strikes Down Affirmative Action
NNPA NEWS — “By gutting equitable access to our country’s higher education system, today’s majority conservative Supreme Court ruled against Black and Brown students’ access to the American Dream,” said Jessica […]
20 Years After Tasby v Moses’ Resolution, is Segregation in Dallas Schools Truly Dead?
The month of June holds consequential significance in Black history in America. Juneteenth – while a celebration of the true realization of freedom for enslaved Black folk across the South […]
Creating the Next Generation of Black Teachers
By Maya Pottiger Originally appeared in Word in Black The Black Educators Initiative is on a mission to train 750 Black teachers by 2024. Before Kiana Beamon started teaching, there […]
Texas’ pick to lead Houston’s schools used aggressive, polarizing methods in Dallas
Mike Miles has wasted no time in restructuring schools and proposing administrative layoffs. The changes are designed to pay teachers at struggling schools more if their students show improvement. Mike […]
