Remove 2022 Remove Government Remove Oral History
article thumbnail

LGBTQ+ Histories of the United States: Summer 2022 NEH-sponsored Institute

ASHP CML

history, from early America to the 1990s, and engaged sources suited for classroom use, including military and government records, oral history interviews, literature, photography, and organizational archives. The institute introduced the rich body of recent scholarship covering the span of U.S.

History 40
article thumbnail

‘Next year will be a better year’: An oral history of year three of pandemic schooling, Part III

The Hechinger Report

Prince George’s County schools had an unusual school year compared with others in the Washington metropolitan area: It started the 2021-2022 school year with thousands of elementary students in remote learning, an option for parents that ended in January 2022. In the second year, you get a lot of time to do the governing.

educators

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Plunging NAEP scores make clear the long and difficult road ahead to pandemic recovery

The Hechinger Report

Related: An oral history of year three of pandemic schooling. Students in 2022 are performing at a level last seen two decades ago.”. Related: Pace of learning back to normal during the 2021-22 pandemic school year but student achievement lags far behind.

article thumbnail

“We’re really underwater here:” An oral history of year three of pandemic schooling, Part II

The Hechinger Report

What we heard was that January 2022 proved to be one of the most challenging months of the pandemic yet in many school districts as they were forced to close schools that could not operate safely due to stunningly high staff absence rates. FREMONT COUNTY, WYOMING. PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY, MARYLAND. REDMOND, OREGON. CLEVELAND, OHIO.

article thumbnail

As Humanities Fight for Support, New Journal Aims to Celebrate Their Role in Public Life

ED Surge

A scholarly book or article about history or philosophy counts. So does a local oral-history project, an art exhibit, or a dinner-table conversation about books, movies, or music. Like air, humanities-driven work is everywhere but taken for granted, so much a part of life its easy to overlook.