This week, we feature some new hope for student parents, who disproportionately give up before they reach the finish line. Fewer than 4 in 10 graduate with a degree within six years, compared with more than 6 in 10 other students. Having young children and working simultaneously makes prioritizing education particularly difficult. But colleges — recognizing declining enrollments and demographic changes — are now paying attention to the needs of student-parents, from priority course registration to on-site childcare.
And our new interactive tool helps prospective college studentswho may need child care search whether institutions offer them that option.
Such care remains elusive, however, for many others: In the first installment of our new series with the Education Reporting Collaborative, we look at how the country's child care crisis affects working mothers and how the high cost of child care has upended the careers of even those with college degrees.
Education in our new climate reality: Interested in how students and education systems are preparing for climate change? Let us know, with this two-question survey.
A message from this week's sponsor:
The Jack Kent Cooke Foundation is dedicated to advancing the education of exceptionally promising students who have financial need. Visit JKCF.org to learn about scholarship opportunities for middle school, high school, and community college transfer students.
While women’s workforce participation has recovered from the pandemic, mothers without four-year degrees are disproportionately forced out of jobs because of child care costs
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Districts that try to ‘detrack’ — or stop sorting students by perceived ability — often face parental pushback. But a handful of districts show it can be done
Thousands of migrant children, some bused to Colorado from Texas, have helped stave off enrollment-related cuts, but now some schools are running out of space and teachers are growing fatigued
I’ve seen too many schools abandon curriculums before making sure teachers understand how to use them
Listen Up
This month, we and our partners at GBH bring you a new season of the College Uncovered podcast. In our first season, we helped you navigate the college admissions process. Now we’re back with season 2 to guide you through the even more confusing territory of financial aid and some of the ways colleges make their prices seem much lower than they actually are. These are the latest episodes: