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Selective colleges try harder to get rural students to attend. More than 90,000 rural students applied to institutions that are part of a network of selective colleges trying to boost rural enrollment. That’s up 15% over the year before. Now the work has turned to getting these students to actually show up on campus in the fall and graduate four years later.
— Jon Marcus, The Hechinger Report
Native kids with disabilities were held in wooden boxes. Sweeping reforms are coming. An investigation by New York’s education department, obtained by NPR, found at least five elementary-age students with disabilities were confined in a "wooden box for a timeout" at the end of 2025. "They were subjected to seclusion when they were placed in 'stations' with the door held shut," according to the report, which concludes parents of children held in the boxes weren't notified, violating state regulations.
— Brian Mann, correspondent, NPR
Some researchers say restored federal funding is too little, too late. Some of the billions of dollars previously frozen or withheld from research institutions and agencies have been restored, but it's too late to save some researchers’ work.
— Katia Riddle, correspondent, NPR Science desk
Acclaimed author Sara Novic chats about her new memoir, 'Mother Tongue.' Author Sara Novic is obsessed with language — its power, how it connects us and also how it can isolate us. Her latest book, a memoir, is called Mother Tongue. In it, she chronicles losing her hearing at age 12, learning American Sign Language and finding a deaf community.
— Elissa Nadworny, correspondent, NPR
Linda McMahon defends dismantling the Education Department, shifting its work. Lawmakers and the education secretary tussled over education issues that will affect the lives of millions of Americans, including whether new Republican caps on federal student loans will lower the cost of college, what role the government should play in trying to improve abysmal literacy rates among U.S. students — and whether the Department of Education should even exist.
— Cory Turner, correspondent, NPR
The MAHA movement is coming to school cafeterias. Here's what that means for kids. School districts are waiting to see if it will become more expensive to prepare meals because of new federal dietary guidelines, which will affect what can be served in school cafeterias.
— Joe Hernandez, correspondent, NPR
About 7 million kids live in a home with a loaded and unlocked gun, a study finds. That's according to a new study published in JAMA Network Open.
— Rhitu Chatterjee, health correspondent, NPR
They graduate to six figure salaries, and grueling work. Industry groups say there are roughly 8,000 open positions across the U.S. maritime sector. More than 5,000 are with the Military Sealift Command, the federal agency responsible for keeping Navy ships stocked with fuel, food and ammunition in waters around the world. SUNY Maritime College and the other state-run maritime academies are trying to fill that gap.
— Steve Kastenbaum, for NPR |
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And here's something to make you smile... |
In Fairbanks, Alaska, spring happens almost overnight
In many places, spring happens gradually. But in far-north Fairbanks, Alaska, birch and aspen trees often put their leaves out over a span of just 24-48 hours, a dramatic event known as "greenup."
When botanist Jan Dawe moved up to Fairbanks in 1975, the first greenup she saw felt like magic. “To be able to watch the same tree at 8 o'clock in the morning, noon, 6 o'clock at night, and you could see that they were growing,” she says. “The forest turns from the dull gray of winter into this fresh green burst.”
Further south, Dawe says, trees may have seven months to soak up the sun through their leaves and make it into food. But in Fairbanks, it's more like four.
“And if you're going to be a successful plant, you have to get your leaves out there,” Dawe says.
Hannah Hill lives in Fairbanks and calls greenup a seasonal holiday.
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