logo
episode-header-image
Jan 2022
13m 57s

Amid Covid Surge, Students And Teachers ...

NPR
About this episode
tail spinning
Up next
Yesterday
How the Epstein files are upending U.K. politics
The latest disclosure from the U.S. Department of Justice’s investigation of Jeffrey Epstein is threatening the U.K. ruling government.New documents have led Peter Mandelson, a former ambassador to the U.S., to resign from Britain’s House of Lords and from the Labour Party.The fa ... Show More
9m 36s
Feb 8
What does it mean when the president urges Republicans to "nationalize the voting"?
The power to regulate federal elections rests with states and Congress, according to the Constitution. Yet President Trump repeatedly questioned the integrity of election systems, despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud, and in recent days has urged Republicans to take over ... Show More
8m 44s
Feb 7
Covering the ICE surge in Minneapolis
Reporting on the ICE surge in MinneapolisLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy 
10m 2s
Recommended Episodes
Aug 2020
Why Teachers Aren’t Ready to Reopen Schools
<p>With the possibility that millions or tens of millions of American children will not enter a classroom for an entire year, school districts face an agonizing choice: Do the benefits of in-person learning outweigh the risks it poses to public health in a pandemic? Today, we exp ... Show More
26m 25s
Aug 2021
Back to School Amid the Delta Variant
<p>To ensure students’ safe return to in-person learning amid a surge in the Delta variant of the coronavirus, some school districts plan to institute mask mandates.</p><p>Yet that move isn’t necessarily straightforward — several of the country’s hardest-hit states have banned su ... Show More
27m 8s
May 2020
"People saw we were more than just teachers all day," when coronavirus shut down their schools
Kids have been learning from home for weeks now because of the coronavirus pandemic. The classroom is now the dining room or kitchen table, and students are getting lessons from teachers on a laptop, rather than in person. Obviously this has been a big adjustment for parents, but ... Show More
30m 36s
Oct 2021
Systemic Complacency, it's Time to Wake Up - an interview with Suzanne Gallagher
<p>Today’s show rundown: </p> <p>Pete Buttigieg says that the incredible economic policies of the Biden administration have kept us from the jaws, of the teeth if a recession. What a crock. Washington always has a one size fits all mentality. They have no credibility, because l ... Show More
1h 5m
Aug 2020
A Tale of Two Teachers
Across the country school districts are deciding whether to start the new school year in person. For many teachers, this uncertainty has left them anxious. CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta takes us into the experience of two high school teachers from opposite side ... Show More
15m 28s
Mar 2022
How can I support my own and my students’ mental wellbeing?
COVID-19 has affected so much of how we deliver education and language teaching. As schools (in some parts of the world) return to something approaching normality, it’s important to consider the mental health impact of the pandemic. Confronted with other challenging issues as wel ... Show More
25m 25s
Aug 2021
Gov. DeSantis threatens salaries if schools mandate masks
Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis announced the state could move to withhold salaries of those who violate the ban on mask mandates in schools. Gov. DeSantis issued an executive order last month directing the state’s health and education departments to issue rules preventing t ... Show More
42m 2s
Sep 2020
Good Morning de New York, où la rentrée scolaire divise en plein Covid-19
<p>La rentrée scolaire à New York se déroule en plusieurs étapes. Cette semaine, ce sont les écoles maternelles qui rouvrent. En tout, la ville compte plus d’un million et demi d’écoliers. Une reprise loin de se passer en douceur. New York a été durement frappée par le coronaviru ... Show More
3m 58s
Nov 2018
What schools look like when we fund them fairly
All across the country, it seems like a given: places with more expensive houses have nicer schools because they can pay higher taxes. That’s just how education seems to work. Except in Vermont. Two decades ago, the state passed a radical law to equalize education funding. On thi ... Show More
33m 16s