Support nonprofit news

$10/mo
$15/mo 
OTHER
DONATE

  • Newsletters
  • About
  • Donate
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS Feed
Skip to content
The Hechinger Report

The Hechinger Report

Covering Innovation & Inequality in Education

  • Newsletters
  • About
  • Donate

Solutions

We explain what’s working, what’s not and what matters in education. Our stories are deeply researched, carefully written and rigorously edited. Our mission isn’t only to expose problems. We want to find out what’s being done to fix them and whether those solutions are working and can be replicated.

In math teacher Danielle Bosse’s classroom, three students take assessments (foreground) while their classmates learn and practice different math skills.
Posted inElementary to High School

Making room for grassroots change

Avatar photo by Tara García Mathewson August 2, 2018March 30, 2020
Participants from the college’s Summer Bridge program traditionally leave their mark on campus in the school colors of black, purple and gold.
Posted inNews

Can ‘work colleges’ in cities become a low-cost, high-value model for the future?

Delece Smith-Barrow by Delece Smith-Barrow July 26, 2018April 8, 2021
Posted inElementary to High School

How Silicon Valley schools are trying to boost lower-income students into high-tech jobs

Avatar photo by Joanne Jacobs June 7, 2018November 23, 2020
Posted inNews

Are educational videos leaving low-income students behind?

Avatar photo by Jill Barshay May 14, 2018April 8, 2021
Posted inProof Points

20 judgments a teacher makes in 1 minute and 28 seconds

Avatar photo by Jill Barshay May 7, 2018September 5, 2024
Rutgers Newark sophomore Stacy Tyndall, 19, laughs at an "Orange Is the New Black"-themed wall of dormitory rules in her campus residence hall. Tyndall, a criminal justice major who wants to be a judge, grew up 15 minutes from the campus.
Posted inDivided We Learn, Higher Education, News, Solutions

How one university is luring coveted honors students with social justice

by Matt Krupnick May 2, 2018April 8, 2021
Dominic, 3 and Zaire, 2, play while their moms take part in a conversation about bullying at a Family Scholar House Café Night.
Posted inCommunity Colleges, Divided We Learn, Higher Education, News, Race and Equity, Solutions

These formerly homeless single moms beat the odds and are now college grads

Avatar photo by Meredith Kolodner April 22, 2018April 8, 2021
Student Jeremy Pichardo works with freshman Angela Cutone in the Culinary Arts department.
Posted inElementary to High School

A vocational school curriculum that includes genocide studies and British literature

Avatar photo by Emily Richmond April 16, 2018October 13, 2020
Posted inElementary to High School

Revamped and rigorous, career and technical education is ready to be taken seriously

Avatar photo by Sarah Gonser April 13, 2018March 30, 2020
Posted inElementary to High School

Using vocational education to teach academic courses

Amadou Diallo is a journalist, playwright and photographer whose writing has appeared in The New York Times, Wirecutter, The Atlantic, Al Jazeera America and The Christian Science Monitor. He has been a regular contributor to The Hechinger Report since 2017. A former musician and composer, he is a graduate of New York University and is always happy to weigh in on just which of Miles Davis’ classic quintets was the best. by Amadou Diallo April 11, 2018March 30, 2020

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 65 66 67 68 69 … 79 Older posts
  • About
  • Topics
  • Interactives
  • Use Our Stories
  • Corrections
  • Newsletters
  • Sponsorship
  • Jobs
© 2024 The Hechinger Report Powered by Newspack
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS Feed