A handwritten note has sparked fury and disbelief online after a parent drew attention not to the child’s performance—but to the teacher’s own errors.
Elementary students across School District 25 are learning critical thinking skills and exploring new technologies through ...
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Did Natalia Dyer win a spelling bee in third grade?
Natalia Dyer once knew how to spell “chrysanthemum”...or did she? Mike Johnson scrambles to pass Pentagon bill as GOP ranks seethe With the penny going away, what should you do with the ones in your ...
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Education is releasing new data for the 2024-25 IREAD test, specifically how it relates to repeating third grade. The assessment tests whether third graders ...
Just over 3,000 third graders were kept from advancing to the fourth grade in 2025 after being unable to pass the Indiana standardized reading test. Data released during the State Board of Education ...
MIAMI (KABC) -- Miami third-grade teacher Mary Crippen has been incorporating her love for the NFL into her curriculum for years. Recently, one lucky student in her classroom got a big surprise from ...
Out of nearly 3,300 third graders in New Orleans public schools last year, only four were required to repeat the grade under a new state reading law. It isn't because the city's students are so ...
While the Michigan Department of Education leaders praised improvements made by students in some grades in reading and math on the state test, the state's third graders continued to slide in reading ...
There are thousands of students in Indiana who were in 3rd grade last school year and did not advance to the 4th grade this school year. The IREAD retention law now requires 3rd grade students to be ...
A third grade reading and retention law took effect for Tennessee public school children in 2023. Students must meet a state reading benchmark or take extra steps to avoid being held back. Three full ...
Parents are stressed, and kids are coming home crying. These are the emotions more families say they're experiencing this summer because of a new law that will likely mean more third graders are kept ...
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