The leader of the national organization said that the university chapter’s president had not been authorized to speak with “Vanity Fair” for a profile in which she said President Trump’s youngest son was “sort of like an oddity on campus.”
Education department gives ultimatum to stop using ‘racial preferences’ as factors in admissions or risk losing money
The Trump administration is giving the US’s schools and universities two weeks to eliminate diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money, raising the stakes in the president’s fight against “wokeness”.
In a memo on Friday, the education department gave an ultimatum to stop...
Director RaMell Ross details horrors behind Florida School for Boys that backdropped the moving film adaptation
It was one of the darkest, most shameful episodes in Florida’s grotesque history of state-sanctioned racism: dozens of children, most of them Black, beaten or shot to death, or sexually abused in a decades-long reign of terror at a secretive and remote reform school.
[Nile Post] Moroto Municipality Member of Parliament Francis Lorika Adome has provided cash vouchers to more than 400 students in Karamoja to support their education.
[Shabait] Mendefera, 18 February 2025 – The ‘Indomaso’ Award has been presented to outstanding students in the Southern Region who achieved high scores in the 2023/2024 eighth-grade national examination. The award ceremony, organized in collaboration with the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students and the Ministry of Education in the region, was held on 15 February at Mendefera Stadium.
As an early years specialist, I’ve seen the drastic impact of screens replacing physical activity and face-to-face interaction
As an early years education specialist, over the past decade I have seen children enter classrooms with fewer and fewer of the skills needed to begin their formal education. The key culprit, in my opinion? Screen time.
[The Herald] The Zimbabwe School Examinations Council (ZIMSEC) has opened registration for the June and November 2025 Ordinary and Advanced Level examinations.
[The Herald] Government is seized with reviewing minimum standards for licensing of schools as part of measures to address the sprouting of illegal learning institutions attributed to the shortage of schools.
[Premium Times] The prosecution witness said the UBEC Project Monitoring Committee discovered the projects were abandoned despite UBEC’s approval for the projects and funds for their execution, released.
[SAnews.gov.za] Higher Education and Training Deputy Minister, Buti Manamela, says the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) must act swiftly against the exploitation of vulnerable students by landlords.
[Nyasa Times] Ethanol Company (EthCo), a subsidiary of conglomerate Press Corporation Limited (PCL) has reaffirmed its commitment to environmental conservation after planting 1000 trees at Majiga Primary School in Nkhotakota over the weekend.
[Leadership] Nigeria’s critical sectors, including banking, education, and government sectors, are facing an increasing wave of cyber-attacks, with the country climbing to 11th place among Africa’s most targeted nations, according to a report, raising concerns about safety of confidential information, finances and personal data of individuals.
Experts say greater awareness is needed of the misery that can be caused by the condition
Laxatives and nappies: how schools are coping with constipation in pupils
More than 44,000 children were admitted to hospital with constipation last year, according to NHS figures that highlight the potentially serious health consequences of the condition.
Data for England and Wales reveals a 60% rise in...
One headteacher says diet, exercise and lack of water are factors in rise of cases
Primary-age child constipation rates up 60% in England and Wales
Laxatives in the school medical cabinet, nappies in case of accidents, and hospital admissions for the most severe cases are being reported by teachers in England, suggesting that constipation is an increasing problem for their pupils.
The department’s Office for Civil Rights warned that it would penalize schools that consider race in scholarships, hiring and an array of other activities.