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Tagged With "Hawaii Tribune Herald"

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Hawaii asks for input from residents to shape education strategic plan

Leisa Irwin ·
An article published today by the Hawaii Tribune Herald states that the state of Hawaii is seeking input from residents to assist in creating an updated strategic plan for the public school system. There was a meeting held today (the same day the article came out), and there is another meeting slated for August 24th from 4:30 - 6:30 at Waiakea High School in Hilo. This could be a great opportunity to ask the state to address adverse childhood experiences in their education goals. The full...
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Student’s resilience in family crisis leads to college dream [Herald Tribune]

Karen Clemmer ·
My first year of college went by so fast. It’s hard to believe it’s already over. When I was in high school, it would have been harder to believe anyone who told me that I would be living my dream of attending college and having my own room on a gorgeous campus that feels like home. I was determined to go to college, but in high school my family situation threatened all my plans. After my father went to prison and my mother’s mental illness became more severe, I took responsibility for my...
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BPS team targets helping kids overcome trauma [BostonHerald.com]

Samantha Sangenito ·
Boston Public Schools — faced with thousands of students who have experienced trauma — is building a team that will help 
kids overcome emotional 
and social obstacles with a $1.6 million federal grant. “We have great opportunity to be able to notice students who may have been influenced by trauma,” 
BPS Superintendent Tommy Chang told the Herald. “The reality is, students can be influenced by trauma through so many different things.” [For more of this story, written by Chris Villani, go to ...
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Women's Fund grant recipients to build amygdala rooms [www.washtimesherald.com]

Laura Pinhey ·
Thanks to a grant from the Daviess County Community Foundation’s Women’s Fund, two area school corporations will be able to offer additional services to help improve the lives of students both in and out of the classroom. Daviess-Martin Special Education Co-op School Academic and Behavior Coach Missy Brothers and Kelly Miller, Washington Community Schools social worker, made the pitch for their project “Addressing the Emotional, Social and Academic Health of our Youth” last week at the...
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Yakima Valley organizations, teachers aim to mitigate effects of adverse childhood experiences [yakimaherald.com]

Alicia Doktor ·
Ivan Godinez arrived at Sunnyside High School one recent morning in an angry mood, rudely responding to Principal Ryan Maxwell who noticed Godinez was late and asked him if he was going to class. That’s when teacher Felix DeLeon stepped in. “He’s like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa.’ He calmed me down,” Godinez said of DeLeon, who immediately took the teen aside and talked with him privately rather than confronting him in anger. A junior, Godinez has attended several Yakima Valley schools, having moved...
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Students lead US push for fuller Black history education [amp.miamiherald.com]

By Mike Catalni, Miami Herald, April 8,, 2021 Ebele Azikiwe was in the sixth grade last year when February came and it was time to learn about Black history again. She was, by then, familiar with the curriculum: Rosa Parks, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and a discussion on slavery. Just like the year before, she said, and the year before that. Then came George Floyd's death in May, and she wrote to the administration at her school in Cherry Hill, in New Jersey's Philadelphia suburbs, to...
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Some teachers alarmed by Florida civics training approach on religion, slavery (tampabay.com)

Several South Florida high school educators are alarmed that a new state civics initiative designed to prepare students to be “virtuous citizens” is infused with a Christian and conservative ideology after a three-day training session in Broward County last week. Teachers who spoke to the Times/Herald said they don’t object to the state’s new standards for civics, but they do take issue with how the state wants them to be taught. “It was very skewed,” said Barbara Segal, a 12th-grade...
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