
How a Hip-Hop Mindset Can Help Teachers in a Time of Turmoil | Opinion
How a Hip-Hop Mindset Can Help Teachers in a Time of Turmoil | Opinion
How a Hip-Hop Mindset Can Help Teachers in a Time of Turmoil | Opinion
Twitter’s move on July 1, 2023, to limit the number of tweets users can see in a day was the latest in a series of decisions that has spurred millions of users to sign up with alternative microblogging platforms since Elon Musk acquired Twitter last year.
As educators and advocates for public schools, we believe in empowering our students with the knowledge and skills they’ll need to succeed and thrive later in life — but we also recognize our responsibility to provide a stable future for young people doesn’t end there.
On Wednesday, with much of the Eastern Seaboard cloaked in dense smog from wildfires raging hundreds of miles away across the Canadian border, all those historic sites you learned about in sixth grade social studies class were still visible – but the dense haze, and the glare from the sunlight bouncing off of it, also was impossible to miss.
I think a lot of people my age are frustrated with the policies created by those before us. Inflation isn’t new, and prices are continually rising. But incomes and economic security from the government aren’t rising at the same rate.
“Our state has long failed children, particularly those from families with low incomes, when it comes to education.”
For decades, sluggish tax revenue and difficult funding decisions defined Michigan’s state government budgeting process.
In our training as medical students, we have had the privilege to participate in the care of new parents during postpartum visits.
Thirty years ago, then-Gov. John Engler used to say that the best-educated state wins. Michigan has not been winning.
In Fiscal Year (FY) 2011, the year Republican Gov. Rick Snyder took office, an average of 79,660 Michigan families per month received cash assistance through the Family Independence Program (FIP). Eleven years later, in 2022, only 11,947 families received it.
How a Hip-Hop Mindset Can Help Teachers in a Time of Turmoil | Opinion
Twitter’s move on July 1, 2023, to limit the number of tweets users can see in a day was the latest in a series of decisions that has spurred millions of users to sign up with alternative microblogging platforms since Elon Musk acquired Twitter last year.
As educators and advocates for public schools, we believe in empowering our students with the knowledge and skills they’ll need to succeed and thrive later in life — but we also recognize our responsibility to provide a stable future for young people doesn’t end there.
On Wednesday, with much of the Eastern Seaboard cloaked in dense smog from wildfires raging hundreds of miles away across the Canadian border, all those historic sites you learned about in sixth grade social studies class were still visible – but the dense haze, and the glare from the sunlight bouncing off of it, also was impossible to miss.
I think a lot of people my age are frustrated with the policies created by those before us. Inflation isn’t new, and prices are continually rising. But incomes and economic security from the government aren’t rising at the same rate.
“Our state has long failed children, particularly those from families with low incomes, when it comes to education.”
For decades, sluggish tax revenue and difficult funding decisions defined Michigan’s state government budgeting process.
In our training as medical students, we have had the privilege to participate in the care of new parents during postpartum visits.
Thirty years ago, then-Gov. John Engler used to say that the best-educated state wins. Michigan has not been winning.
In Fiscal Year (FY) 2011, the year Republican Gov. Rick Snyder took office, an average of 79,660 Michigan families per month received cash assistance through the Family Independence Program (FIP). Eleven years later, in 2022, only 11,947 families received it.