New Trump administration rule has Washington's international students on edge ‘I'm not going to be able to do the work that I need to do successfully.’ Esmy Jimenez
Veteran Educator On The Endless But 'Joyful' Work Of Creating Anti-Racist Education Pirette McKamey, the principal at Mission High School in San Francisco, says anti-racist education "makes you want to keep growing and changing and doing better by your students." Ailsa Chang
Columbia University President On New ICE Regulations Regarding International Students NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks to Lee Bollinger, president of Columbia University, about new regulations regarding international students released Monday by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Effective Anti-Racist Education Requires More Diverse Teachers, More Training Travis Bristol, an assistant professor of education at the University of California at Berkeley, explains how teacher training and the presence of Black teachers can help reshape education. Ailsa Chang
School Reopenings Should Keep Public Health In Mind, Pediatric Group Says NPR's David Greene talks to Sally Goza, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, who was at the White House Tuesday when President Trump announced he is urging schools to reopen in the fall.
We Are Repeating Discrimination Experiment Every Day, Educator Says NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Jane Elliott, who created the blue-eyes/brown-eyes classroom experiment in 1968 to teach students about racism. It was so enlightening, she repeated it for decades.
Why U.S. Schools Are Still Segregated — And One Idea To Help Change That Rebecca Sibilia, founder of EdBuild, says a Supreme Court case shaped a funding model for public schools that reinforces inequity. She tells All Things Considered about a new model that could help. Ailsa Chang
How Teachers Are Thinking About Reopening Schools NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer speaks with three teachers — Maxie Hollingsworth, Mariah Najmuddin and Karen Lloyd — to hear how they're thinking about schools reopening amid a global pandemic.
UW plans to welcome some students back to campus in the fall A letter sent by university president Anna Mari Cauce on Monday pointed to a hybrid approach to resuming classes starting September 30. Some courses will remain online and some will be available in person. Kate Walters
Why A History Professor Says 'Racist' Emancipation Memorial Shouldn't Come Down Protesters want to remove the Emancipation Memorial in Washington, D.C. NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Yale history professor David Blight about why he thinks the memorial should stay up.