Also serving the communities of De Luz, Rainbow, Camp Pendleton, Pala and Pauma

National / Education


Sorted by date  Results 1 - 15 of 15

  • US colleges divided over requiring student vaccinations

    Village News Staff|Updated Apr 12, 2021

    BOSTON — U.S. colleges hoping for a return to normalcy next fall are weighing how far they should go in urging students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, including whether they should — or legally can — require it. Universities including Rutgers, Brown, Cornell and Northeastern recently told students they must get vaccinated before returning to campus next fall. They hope to achieve herd immunity on campus, which they say would allow them to loosen spacing restrictions in class...

  • What do the kids say? K-12 students sound off on school

    Updated Aug 11, 2020

    LEANNE ITALIE Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) - Parents have weighed in on reopening schools. Teachers have weighed in. Public health experts, too, along with cities, states and President Donald Trump. But what about the kids themselves? As the grown-ups fret, kindergartners to high schoolers faced with a range of scenarios for virtual and in-person classes are expressing both fear and glee over leaving home to learn. Many said they're most worried about fellow students...

  • Amid virus, uncertainty, parents decide how to school kids

    Updated Jul 25, 2020

    TAMMY WEBBER and STEPHEN GROVES Associated Press Joshua Claybourn is leaning toward sending his kindergarten daughter to in-person classes at a private school next month. Holly Davis' sixth-grade daughter will learn online, though the family has not yet decided what to do for school for a teenage daughter who requires special accommodations for hearing problems and dyslexia and another who's starting college. As they decide how their children will learn this fall amid the...

  • Foreign students weigh studying in person vs. losing visas

    Updated Jul 11, 2020

    SUMAN NAISHADHAM, CHEYANNE MUMPHREY and HILARY POWELL Associated Press PHOENIX (AP) — International students worried about a new immigration policy that could potentially cost them their visas say they feel stuck between being unnecessarily exposed during the coronavirus pandemic and being able to finish their studies in America. Students from countries as diverse as India, China and Brazil told The Associated Press they are scrambling to devise plans after federal immigration authorities notified colleges this week that inte...

  • Trump threatens to pull tax exemption for schools, colleges

    Updated Jul 10, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer In his push to get schools and colleges to reopen this fall, President Donald Trump is again taking aim at their finances, this time threatening their tax-exempt status. Trump said on Twitter on Friday he was ordering the Treasury Department to re-examine the tax-exempt status of schools that he says provide "radical indoctrination" instead of education. "Too many Universities and School Systems are about Radical Left Indoctrination, not...

  • CDC head sticking to school-opening guides Trump criticized

    Updated Jul 9, 2020

    JEFF AMY and CAROLE FELDMAN Associated Press ATLANTA (AP) - Federal health officials won't revise their coronavirus guidelines for reopening schools despite criticism from President Donald Trump, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. What they will do, he said, is provide additional information to help states, communities and parents decide what to do and when. "Our guidelines are our guidelines," Dr. Robert Redfield declared. In draft CDC...

  • Harvard, MIT sue to block ICE rule on international students

    Updated Jul 8, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer BOSTON (AP) — Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday challenging the Trump administration's decision to bar international students from staying in the U.S. if they take classes entirely online this fall. The lawsuit, filed in Boston's federal court, seeks to prevent federal immigration authorities from enforcing the rule. The universities contend that the directive violates the Administrative Procedures Act because officials f...

  • Trump threatens to cut federal aid if schools don't reopen

    Updated Jul 8, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer President Donald Trump on Wednesday threatened to withhold federal funding if America's schools don't reopen in the fall despite the coronavirus, and he lashed out at federal health officials over reopening guidelines that he complained are impractical and expensive. As Trump increased his pressure on state and local officials, New York City announced that most of its students would return to classrooms only two or three days a week and...

  • States sue US department over virus relief funds for schools

    Updated Jul 7, 2020

    OLGA R. RODRIGUEZ and DAVID EGGERT Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The U.S. Department of Education is attempting to take pandemic relief funds away from K-12 public schools and divert the money to private schools, California and four other Democratic-led states argued in a lawsuit filed Tuesday against the Trump administration. California Attorney General Xavier Becerra and Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced the lawsuit, which was joined by Maine, New Mexic...

  • Trump says he will pressure states to reopen schools in fall

    Updated Jul 7, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer President Donald Trump on Tuesday launched an all-out effort to reopen schools this fall, arguing that some are keeping schools closed not because of the coronavirus pandemic, but for political reasons against the will of families. "We want to reopen the schools. Everybody wants it. The moms want it, the dads want it, the kids want it. It's time to do it," Trump said at a White House event. "We're very much gong to put pressure on governors a...

  • DeVos rejects part-time reopening for schools amid pandemic

    Updated Jul 7, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Tuesday assailed plans by some local districts to offer in-person instruction only a few days a week and said schools must be "fully operational" even amid the coronavirus pandemic. Anything less, she says, would fail students and taxpayers. DeVos made the comments during a call with governors as the Trump administration launched an all-out effort to get schools and colleges to reopen. Audio of the call was obtained by The Associated Press. "Ultimately,...

  • DeVos excludes DACA recipients, foreign students from grants

    Updated Apr 23, 2020

    COLLIN BINKLEY AP Education Writer The Trump administration is barring most international students and all students who entered the U.S. illegally from receiving emergency college grants approved by Congress as part of nearly $2 trillion coronavirus rescue package. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos issued the restriction in new guidelines released Tuesday telling colleges how to distribute more than $6 billion in grants meant to help students cover unexpected costs triggered by the pandemic. Earlier guidance from the Education...

  • Volunteer + tutor = learning and fun for isolated students

    Updated Apr 22, 2020

    LUIS ANDRES HENAO Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) - "Tell us about Vikings; tell us about shipwrecks; tells us about pirates and ancient myths." Sara Herlevsen nods, smiles and answers these questions from students via video conferencing. Or this 31-year-old massage therapist and tutor from Calgary helps them with their math homework, a science quiz or an art project. Sometimes, she simply listens. Many want someone to talk to because the spread of the coronavirus outbreak has...

  • "I just can't do this." Harried parents forgo home school

    Updated Apr 21, 2020

    GILLIAN FLACCUS and JOCELYN GECKER Associated Press Frustration is mounting as more families across the U.S. enter their second or even third week of distance learning - and some overwhelmed parents say it will be their last. Amid the barrage of learning apps, video meet-ups and e-mailed assignments that pass as pandemic home school, some frustrated and exhausted parents are choosing to disconnect entirely for the rest of the academic year. Others are cramming all their...

  • Teachers on TV: Classes hit the airwaves during pandemic

    Updated Apr 18, 2020

    MIKE CATALINI Associated Press TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - Using his cat's blanket as green screen, history teacher Bill Smith recorded himself teaching a lesson on New Jersey's underground railroad, taking student viewers on a tour of sites including a river where slave hunters would try to reenslave people attempting crossings. The lesson was broadcast over television airwaves for the state's homebound students, part of an effort to keep children engaged in learning during the...