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The hearing is the first of four stops in the finance committee’s so-called “roadshow” to learn what Wisconsinites want from the next two-year state budget.
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Quilting has long been a way of telling stories. Milwaukee artist Grace Rother is building on that tradition by exploring her identity as a queer person through quilts.
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NPR's Annual Student Podcast Challenge has returned for a fifth year. The competition invites middle and high school students to collaborate with their community, schools, and teachers to make creative podcasts.
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Madison East High School senior, Kadjata Bah, reflects on being named journalist of the year by the Wisconsin Journalism Education Association.
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Wisconsin Republicans are poised to block a new policy from Democratic Gov. Tony Evers requiring students to get vaccinated against meningitis and tightening student chickenpox vaccination mandates.
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Osher Lifelong Learning Institute director Sarah Grammer and Greg Jenks, the current president of their advisory board, shares more about the program and its impact on the community.
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Some teachers and scholars today say so much of Black people’s history is still not included in U.S. curriculums. At the same time, some states want to dictate the type of Black history that can be taught.
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Ten female students at the UW-Milwaukee thought they had full scholarships. Now the Afghan evacuees are scrambling to pay for school.
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Nationwide, community members are protesting the teaching of social-emotional learning – largely because conservatives have linked it with another flashpoint in public education: critical race theory.
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‘I just couldn’t bring myself to eat it’: National supply chain and labor shortages have led to worse meals — and a new push to go local.