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While some Northern Colorado schools aren鈥檛 fully funding traditional arts classes, like painting and choir, others are shifting their classes to be more career-focused.
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Faced with classrooms of distracted teens, many Colorado schools adopted new rules this year: Cell phones must be put away or they'll be taken away.
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Teachers and educators living in Steamboat Springs are struggling to find affordable housing. It's also difficult for many just to keep up with the cost of living. Listen to "Morning Edition" host Michael Lyle, Jr. discuss this story with Steamboat Pilot reporter Julia Coccaro and then read The Steamboat Pilot story at the link below.
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The 2024-25 school year is the last that the Summit School District will have International Baccalaureate for students below the 10th grade.
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State lawmakers are moving forward with the proposed budget for next year's schools. Here's where the funding is going.
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Education leaders across Colorado are grappling with how to respond to the Trump administration's immigration policies. They recently got help from a Nebraska superintendent who saw his own community shaken by an immigration raid two decades ago. He shares the lessons he learned, and his advice for educators in the months ahead.
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Colorado State University has made language changes on its websites following the Trump Administration鈥檚 guidelines to dismantle diversity, equity and inclusion practices.
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A recent study looked at undergraduate and graduate college math programs that prepare elementary school teachers and how much instructional time is devoted to teaching basic concepts and how to teach math. Only 1 in 8 programs met certain recommended minimums.
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Thousands of students in Colorado live in areas with underperforming schools known as 鈥渆ducation deserts.鈥 One state lawmaker wants to make it easier for charter schools to open in these areas 鈥 but the idea wouldn鈥檛 be without controversy. We鈥檒l hear about it on today鈥檚 In The NoCo.
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Driven by years of pressure from parents and advocates, Colorado lawmakers are considering a bill that would require all schools to screen early elementary students for signs of dyslexia, an effort supporters say is critical to catching reading struggles before they deepen.