"When they need to make stupid stupider, they send me up," Chaz Stevens said.
Cook and Johnson, the state representative for House District 139, are vying to succeed new Houston Mayor John Whitmire in the state senate. A special election to complete the 2024 portion of Whitmire's term is scheduled for May 4, and Cook and Johnson will again compete in a Democratic primary runoff on May 28.
Open to Victorville students in grades K-10, Connections Academy at Springs will meet the needs of students who will benefit from the flexibility to fit school into their lives and seek academic challenges in line with state standards with a fully online program. at vvng.com #vvng #news #education
Pallid Amy Winehouse biopic is an impressive platform for its star, Marisa Abela
Houston Matters discusses why colleges and universities have turned back to using standardized test scores in admissions.
Innovations in K-12 education have kept Colorado at the forefront of progress for decades, but a new bill-HB24-1363-threatens to reverse many of the state’s gains.
This scintillating and noirish adaptation leaves Matt Damon’s 1999 version in the shade. It’s largely thanks to Scott – who is just mesmerising
Hamilton County School Board member Rhonda Thurman of District 1, who retires this year, went through the highlights of her 20-year career for the Pachyderm Club Monday, including her push for more charter schools and against "weak principals".
The Faculty Senate tabled undoing the public censure of Hoover fellow Scott Atlas, who made anti-vaccine and inflammatory comments during the COVID-19 pandemic, to a later date. The Senate failed to pass a resolution on public Canvas.
Governor Josh Shapiro is proposing a flat tuition cost of $8,000 for cyber charter students, meaning Pennsylvania school districts have to pick up the tab for students that enroll in cyber charters
This is one of the most amazing stories to come down the pike in I don't know how long, published over the weekend in The Washington Post. The short version is that Tim Sheehy
A Charleston businesswoman whose fight to legalize mobile cosmetology services in South Carolina made headlines earlier this year is celebrating a major, though still incomplete, victory in the state Senate. “I’m really happy,” Ring My Belle owner Megan O’Brien told Statehouse Report after the Senate unanimously passed its mobile cosmetology bill on April 4, clearing the measure for consideration […]