The Department of Justice claims that a loan forgiveness initiative for educators of color discriminates against white teachers. Local educators say it’s a needed effort to bridge a diversity gap in Providence classrooms
Legal fight intensifies as educators and advocates warn that the vague law threatens support for disabled students and could lead to loss of essential funding
State recommendations for combating antisemitism in schools are facing pushback from educators and advocates who warn that the ADL’s influence may limit academic freedom and distort historical perspective
As Massachusetts schools brace for another year of teacher shortages, federal cuts have left vital funding programs hanging by a thread
In a Q&A with Prism, educator, activist, and author Jesse Hagopian discusses his new book “Teach Truth: The Struggle for Antiracist Education” and the challenges of teaching in Trump’s America
University faculty and professional organizations are seeing a “chilling effect” in the promotion of diversity and inclusion programs and warn of long-term consequences
Union leaders and education advocates warn that Trump’s executive order could hinder discrimination investigations, affect student loans, and put support services at risk
The resolution passed by a narrow 73-70 margin in January. One month later, it was defeated in a revote, 63-113
Three educators share how they use resources beyond traditional textbooks to build a more radical and reflective curriculum
Prism spoke to educators from Texas, Vermont, and New York who have found ways to address LGBTQIA+ justice in their classrooms in the face of censorship
As debates over critical race theory rage on, educators find creative ways to engage students about the U.S.’s racial past
A high school teacher in New Mexico discusses how literature can help young people make powerful connections to modern struggles for immigrant rights
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