New courses are on the way to some Greeley-Evans School District 6 students next year after the district earlier this week approved the adoption of updated curriculum for students taking Advanced ...
EdSource · When teens counsel teens: Why peer support programs are growing Enrolling students in high school math courses is a high-stakes endeavor with an outsize effect on students’ college ...
SAN ANTONIO — In a state that has passed anti-diversity laws and tried to squelch instruction on systemic racism, a new law could open doors for Latino and Black children long shut out of advanced ...
Sixth graders Zoe and Amoni, right, work together during Kelly Woodfin’s advanced math class in Union Public Schools. The Tulsa-area school district for about a decade has tried to increase enrollment ...
BRAINTREE - Did you like doing math in school? Many people didn't. But a non-profit in Massachusetts is increasing the number of students of color and low-income students in advanced level math ...
Students got a chance to be the ones in charge of grading this year. For the first time this July, the College Board released the student satisfaction ratings of the Advanced Placement courses it ...
Black students are more likely to enroll in advanced coursework—honors classes, Advanced Placement courses, or International Baccalaureate classes—when a black teacher is among the educators teaching ...
Shafter High Principal Russell Shipley says that within the last 10 years, AP offerings at the school have grown from three to 15. Shafter, Wasco, and Lost Hills Neighborhood Reporter SHAFTER, Calif. ...
MUNSTER -- A high school math problem-solving class would be deleted and replaced by a calculus class under a plan discussed Monday by the Munster School Board. According to Indiana Department of ...
The recent debate over California’s proposed math framework is missing the forest for the trees. In its myopic focus on which advanced math courses best prepare high school students for their futures, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. For decades, high-achieving high school students have been told the surest way to impress selective colleges is to take calculus.
Black and Hispanic students are less likely to be placed in advanced math classes than white and Asian students in the San Diego Unified School District. Meanwhile, students from low-income families ...