-
In a rare Zoom-only meeting of the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan, regents reiterated their refusal to meet protesters' demands for divestment from Israel.
-
No longer is the idea that “girls can’t do math and science.” In 2023, CMU received a grant from the National Science Foundation to foster gender inclusivity in STEM.
-
The state of Michigan is offering $10,000 scholarships to students entering the electric vehicle industry.The Michigander EV Scholars program is intended to help fill thousands of vacancies in the industry.
-
The plan focuses on technology and diverse learners
-
A bill in the state Senate would remove a requirement to holdback Michigan third-graders who don’t meet certain reading benchmarks.
-
A bill introduced in the Michigan Legislature would roll back part of the state’s so-called third grade reading law.
-
The state is rolling out grants to help schools hire resource officers to be on hand to help with campus safety and crisis management. The grants will add up to nearly $25 million. The money will go to 195 local and intermediate school districts and charter schools with a focus on smaller schools that don’t already have resource officers.
-
Sandy Pierce is the senior executive vice president of Huntington National Bank and previously held other senior roles at First Merit Corporation, RBS Citizens and JPMorgan Chase.
-
The commission consists of members representing parents, the state police, the state health department, the state Department of Education and others.After months of meeting, the Michigan House School Safety Task Force’s final report is out.The 12-page document breaks up its focus areas to prevention, mitigation and response measures.
-
An update from the Michigan Department of Education shows dozens of schools are falling behind.
-
The school board for Dearborn Public Schools has banned two books, weeks after the controversy over books on school shelves reached a fever pitch. Cheyna Roth talks with Bridge Michigan's Isabel Lohman about the school board meeting that went from 600 participants last month, down to 60.
-
If passed, the bill would allow high school students to satisfy their economics requirement with a course in personal finance.