From archive to audio, the Making Gay History podcast brings LGBTQ+ voices into today’s classrooms. It includes historical ...
According to the latest NEA data, teacher salaries continue to increase, but they have not kept pace with inflation over the past decade, leaving many educators financially worse off. As educator ...
These Aspiring Educators and active teachers share how they are using AI—and predict how it may shape their future classrooms. Ethan Rapp, a junior in secondary history education at Pennsylvania ...
Education professionals are crucial in supporting and advocating for LGBTQ+ students, ensuring they can learn and explore in a safe classroom and school space. There is no doubt that this has been a ...
Twenty-seven states now have laws mandating or encouraging cursive instruction in public schools—up from only 14 a decade ago. Proponents believe cursive is an important life skill that has ...
This resource is intended for educators and their unions as general guidance on supporting inclusive education in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in Mahmoud v. Taylor. This guidance is ...
Recent gains in teacher pay have helped many districts address teacher retention. But salaries need to improve more to help attract new educators. Major salary increases in Charleston, South Carolina ...
Student behavior has nearly overtaken pay as the top concern among educators—and it’s driving some out of the profession. Today, 4 out of 5 teachers and education support professionals find student ...
NEA Higher Ed members are sitting on mountains of data that they assembled through federally funded research but are now cut off before sharing the findings that U.S. taxpayers paid for. Their topics ...
WASHINGTON — U.S. educators still suffer from too-low wages and a lack of professional respect, according to four new reports examining educator pay and school funding from pre-K through college. The ...
Many school districts are still struggling with staff shortages and more educators are feeling burned out and demoralized. Higher pay always helps with teacher retention, but improving working ...
The highest paid professor in the U.S. is likely a man, at a research university, who teaches medicine or engineering. It’s definitely not a woman, at a historically Black college, teaching education.