Photo credit: EdTech Magazine

Photo credit: EdTech Magazine

Pandemic Aid Helps Narrow Mississippi’s Digital Divide

Students from Mississippi’s Title I schools reap benefits from technology upgrades thanks to state and federal funds.

EdTech Magazine

Photo credit: Mareesa Nicosia

Photo credit: Mareesa Nicosia

Alaska Schools Pay a Price for the Nation’s Slowest Internet, but Change is Coming

A new fiber-optic cable along Alaska’s coast could transform how technology is used in rural classrooms.

The Hechinger Report | Cross-published in Wired

Photo credit: Eric Keto

Photo credit: Eric Keto

The School Doomed by Climate Change

Environmental changes threaten the survival of Alaska’s predominantly native Newtok School—and the entire village.

The Atlantic | The 74

Accompanying video (co-producer)

Photo credit: Project Destined

Photo credit: Project Destined

Future Builders

A banker and developer are teaching urban youth about real estate investing—with a little help from A-Rod

Penta Magazine

Photo credit: Heather Martino

Photo credit: Heather Martino

The Forgotten Students of California’s Drought

Schools are watching students leave as their families fight to combat the consequences of the dry spell.

The Atlantic | The 74

Accompanying video

Photo credit: Harry Hamburg, Associated Press

Photo credit: Harry Hamburg, Associated Press

The Future of Restraint and Seclusion in Schools

Mississippi could be the next state to pass regulations determining how the harsh punishment tactics are used on children.

The Atlantic | The 74

Photo credit: Mareesa Nicosia

Photo credit: Mareesa Nicosia

Indiana’s Free Pre-K: Adored by Parents, Beset with Growing Pains

Three years in, why are only a fraction of the state’s 4-year-olds enrolled in On My Way?

The Hechinger Report | U.S. News & World Report

Photo credit: Tuskegee University 

Photo credit: Tuskegee University 

Lily McNair, Trailblazer

Tuskegee University’s first female president seeks excellence through mentorship, accountability, and amity.

Princeton Alumni Weekly

Photo credit: The Underline

Photo credit: The Underline

Public Space Philanthropy is Having a Moment

The Underline in Miami is weaving drab, underused areas into a 10-mile linear park designed for eco-friendly commuting and recreation.

Penta Magazine

Photo credit: Max-o-matic

Photo credit: Max-o-matic

In College Towns, Parents Opt to Buy Housing

In cities with big student populations, the cycle from summer to fall invigorates the real estate market, as scholars—or their parents—snap up off-campus housing, often with long-term capital gains in mind.

Penta Magazine