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Liz Willen

Dear reader,
 
As we approach a Thanksgiving like no other, our schools – when open – are struggling to serve both in-person and virtual learners, with real fears about the quality of online learning.
 
Our institutions of higher education are under great pressure as well, with parents worried about untenable debt loads while some students who already have bachelor’s degrees opt to return to school to learn trades that don’t require one.
 
Community colleges, in the meantime, are providing a much-needed lifeline to students struggling through the pandemic. Other experts are urging students not to put off their education during these tough times, and encouraging Black students to push past both historical and current obstacles, and fight for a better education. These are among the stories we bring you this week, and we welcome yours as you celebrate safely. Hit reply to this email to send your ideas to my team.

Liz Willen, Editor
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Main Idea 

Remote learners feel shortchanged in districts pressured to reopen in person

Schools are struggling to serve both in-person and virtual learners. Some parents and teachers worry that the quality of online learning has been sacrificed to accommodate school reopenings. 
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Reading List 

“Stuck in it until I die”: Parents get buried by college debt too 

ParentPlus loans have spiked, leading to financial disaster for many low- and middle-income families.


More people with bachelor’s degrees go back to school to learn skilled trades

Trend highlights how some students who get four-year educations don’t use them.
 

OPINION: Community colleges are helping students more than ever in the pandemic

It’s time to rethink how we measure community college success.


OPINION: Now is not the time to put college plans on hold

A plea for sticking it out during the pandemic amid worrying trends.


COLUMN: Dear Black students: Don’t let white efforts at miseducation deny your legacy

The upholders of white supremacy have always tried to control us by obstructing our path to the schoolhouse through law, propaganda and duplicity. They are doing it again.


Schools bring mindfulness to the classroom to help kids in the Covid-19 crisis

Mindfulness in schools is increasingly being used to help students with mental health and academic performance, but research on its effectiveness is not yet conclusive.


Just 3% of scientists and engineers are Black or Latina women. Here’s what teachers are doing about it

Less rote memorization and more real-world problem solving could help diversify the ranks of U.S. scientists and mathematicians.
Solutions 
"‘Smart Buses’ roll WiFi to students without access," KXAN

This week’s solutions section came from SolutionsU powered by Solutions Journalism Network and their database of solutions journalism. Search for more solutions.
👋 Contact Nichole Dobo at [email protected] to give feedback on The Hechinger Report’s newsletters. Did you know we produce newsletters on early childhood, education research, the future of learning, higher education and the state of Mississippi? And it helps us if you recommend our newsletters to a friend. 
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