American teens' mental health crisis: What's driving this?

A recent CDC report highlights what mental health experts have been ringing the alarm over: Teens, and specifically girls, are suffering.

Student loan forgiveness to go before Supreme Court: The arguments explained

On Tuesday, the Supreme Court will hear arguments over Biden’s student debt relief plan, which impacts millions of borrowers who could see their loans wiped away or reduced.

White student sues Howard University for $2 million over racial discrimination

A White student at Howard University’s law school is suing the institution for racial discrimination, alleging the school created a "hostile education environment."

Bogus nursing school issued 8,000 fake degrees, feds say

According to court documents, the schools issued nearly 8,000 fake nursing degrees to customers who paid around $17,000. Some people who say they took classes are losing their degrees.

Downingtown 6th graders train to be certified in CPR and AED

Giving kids the tools to save a life, as Downingtown sixth graders trained and certified in CPR and AED use. Sixth graders are strong enough to perform CPR and Downingtown students are taking the lead in teaching it.

Estimated 230K students in 21 states missing from school post-pandemic, analysis finds

These students didn’t move out of state, and they didn’t sign up for private school or home-school, according to an analysis by the Associated Press and Stanford researchers, based on publicly available data.

Temple withdraws free tuition from striking grad students

Temple University has withdrawn free tuition from striking graduate student assistants and given them a month to pay or face sanctions.

Saint Agnes School hosts Eagles pep rally ahead of Super Bowl Sunday
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FOX 29's Bob Kelly visits Saint Agnes School in West Chester, where students are having a fun Friday pep rally ahead of the Super Bowl.

Black-owned schools founded in the wake of Hurricane Katrina

After Hurricane Katrina, 7,000 employees in New Orleans were terminated, 4,000 of whom were teachers. Of those teachers, roughly 72% were African American.

Poorer districts win challenge to Pennsylvania public school funding

A Pennsylvania judge ruled Tuesday the state's funding of public education falls woefully short and violates students’ constitutional rights, siding with poorer districts in a lawsuit that was first launched eight years ago in pursuit of potentially billions of dollars in additional annual support.