Fiction Pick of the Week: "The Liar"
Childhood lies and truthful, uncomfortable memories.
Childhood lies and truthful, uncomfortable memories.
James Tadd Adcox Granta Aug 2016 15min Permalink
An investigation into sexual abuse at elite New England schools.
Jenn Abelson, Bella English, Jonathan Saltzman, Todd Wallack Boston Globe May 2016 25min Permalink
Most of the country is trying to keep guns out of schools. A town in rural Idaho is taking the opposite approach.
Anne Helen Petersen Buzzfeed Mar 2016 25min Permalink
Corey Arthur made headlines after being arrested and convicted in connection with the 1997 murder of his high school teacher. But the story is much more complicated than that.
Alexander Nazaryan Newsweek Feb 2016 Permalink
On Dec. 18, 2007, the school board in Pinellas Country, Florida, voted to abandon integration. They justified the decision with bold promises: Schools in poor, black neighborhoods would get more money, more staff, more resources. They delivered none of that. A 5-part investigation.
On a thin sliver of land called Rojava where “rules of the neighboring ISIS caliphate ha[ve] been inverted,” a Kurdish Syrian college trains its future autonomous leaders.
Wes Enzinna New York Times Magazine Nov 2015 30min Permalink
Marriage, infidelity, distance, and communications.
Jean McGarry Guernica Nov 2015 20min Permalink
Ricky Williams today.
Lindsey Adler Buzzfeed Sep 2015 15min Permalink
The struggles of Xavier University, a tiny, historically-black school in New Orleans, to train students for medical school.
Nikole Hannah-Jones New York Times Magazine Sep 2015 20min Permalink
The Academy of Art University in San Francisco is very profitable for the family who runs it. But not so much for the students who attend in hopes of becoming artists.
Katia Savchuk Forbes Aug 2015 Permalink
A controversial effort divides students by race in order to combat racism.
Lisa Miller New York May 2015 30min Permalink
How one community is struggling to understand and respond to a cluster of suicides.
Diana Kapp San Francisco Magazine May 2015 25min Permalink
Mel and Norma Gabler of Longview, Texas, want to tell your children what to learn in school.
William Martin Texas Monthly Nov 1982 30min Permalink
The theme-park chain where kids learn to pilot a plane, pay taxes, and pretend to be adults.
Rebecca Mead New Yorker Jan 2015 25min Permalink
College is when we first get drunk. Euripides’ The Bacchae can help us learn how to do it right.
Rob Goodman The Chronicle of Higher Education Dec 2014 10min Permalink
For more than a century, boys were sent to the Florida School for Boys reformatory. Many were beaten brutally and bear the physical and psychological scars to this day. Many others, though, never came home.
A search for lost boys and the reasons why they died.
A neglected cemetery yields more bodies than expected, but names are harder to find.
Ben Montgomery Tampa Bay Times Dec 2014 50min Permalink
Michael Brown beat the odds by graduating from high school before his death—odds that remain stacked against black students in St. Louis and the rest of the country.
Nikole Hannah-Jones ProPublica Dec 2014 20min Permalink
Ozel Clifford Brazil was a respected clergyman who helped thousands of African-American teens go to college. He broke the law to do it.
Robyn Price Pierre The Atlantic Dec 2014 30min Permalink
What the Chinese education system can teach America about relying on test scores as the main metric of success.
Diane Ravitch New York Review of Books Nov 2014 15min Permalink
The organization is listening to criticism — and changing.
Dana Goldstein Vox Sep 2014 20min Permalink
A story of childhood trouble and minor delinquency.
"None of this, of course, has stopped any of them from pulling the girls’ hair or throwing pencils or losing track of time and getting locked out of school. He looks at the younger one standing there with his hands behind him and gives him a little shove. Everyone grows alert, awaiting the silent war. The boy drops his hands and looks back at him, and then they are all shoving and wrestling (carefully, quietly, so as not to attract attention, holding in their breath) and distracting him from his thoughts. The immediacy of the situation wanes. His father does not arrive. He relaxes, the wrestling over, rolls his foot over the soccer ball. They all stop and pant for a moment. There is still that space–the one in the corner of his brain–and as long as he can see it, he’s not quite safe."
Elisabeth Hamilton PANK Magazine Sep 2014 10min Permalink
Tony Ma will bet you as much as $600,000 to train your student for college acceptance. If the student gets into their top choice school, Ma takes the cash. Rejected? He gets nothing.
Peter Waldman Businessweek Sep 2014 15min Permalink
How an education reform effort became the new Obamacare.
Tim Murphy Mother Jones Sep 2014 25min Permalink
On learning a new language, a new culture, and why “it must never be concluded that an urge toward the cosmopolitan, toward true education, will make people stop hitting you.”
Ta-Nehisi Coates The Atlantic Aug 2014 15min Permalink
Why Parks Middle School decided to cheat.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Jul 2014 35min Permalink