5 minutes

BridgeDetroit
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We don’t do this work for awards, but when it happens, we are proud!

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BridgeDetroit
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We don’t do this work for awards, but when it happens, we are proud!

Uma década de Belo Monte
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15 minutes

Observatório da Imprensa
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Na semana em que se completam dez anos de inauguração da Usina Hidrelétrica de Belo Monte, situada em Altamira, no Pará, o jornalismo – tão afeito a efemérides deste tipo – apresenta uma abordagem insuficiente diante desta obra repleta de controvérsias. A ausência de conteúdos de maior fôlego impede o aprofundamento desejado na história e […] O post Uma década de Belo Monte apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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Na semana em que se completam dez anos de inauguração da Usina Hidrelétrica de Belo Monte, situada em Altamira, no Pará, o jornalismo – tão afeito a efemérides deste tipo – apresenta uma abordagem insuficiente diante desta obra repleta de controvérsias. A ausência de conteúdos de maior fôlego impede o aprofundamento desejado na história e […] O post Uma década de Belo Monte apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

The civil rights movement represented a kind of pax romana in Black–Jewish relations — symbolized most enduringly by the image of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel marching beside Martin Luther King Jr. from Selma to Montgomery. While many Jewish and Black Americans recall that era with a sense of wistful nostalgia, the relationship has become increasingly... The post The Black Jewish experience, and Black-Jewish relations, take center stage on Fifth Avenue appeared first on The Forward.

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The civil rights movement represented a kind of pax romana in Black–Jewish relations — symbolized most enduringly by the image of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel marching beside Martin Luther King Jr. from Selma to Montgomery. While many Jewish and Black Americans recall that era with a sense of wistful nostalgia, the relationship has become increasingly... The post The Black Jewish experience, and Black-Jewish relations, take center stage on Fifth Avenue appeared first on The Forward.

The Department of Justice has sued 30 states for access to their voter data, and eight of those lawsuits have now been dismissed. Judge dismisses federal government’s lawsuit over Wisconsin voter records is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

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The Department of Justice has sued 30 states for access to their voter data, and eight of those lawsuits have now been dismissed. Judge dismisses federal government’s lawsuit over Wisconsin voter records is a post from Wisconsin Watch, a non-profit investigative news site covering Wisconsin since 2009. Please consider making a contribution to support our journalism.

18 minutes

Observatório da Imprensa
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A lida diária da reportagem nos ensina que na política nada é definitivo até que seja contado o último voto na urna. Portanto, é precipitado estimar o tamanho dos estragos, ou benefícios, que trarão para a candidatura a presidente da República do senador Flávio Bolsonaro (PL-RJ), 45 anos, o seu envolvimento com o ex-banqueiro Daniel […] O post O “irmão Vorcaro” de Flávio derruba o disfarce de “Bolsonaro bonzinho”? apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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A lida diária da reportagem nos ensina que na política nada é definitivo até que seja contado o último voto na urna. Portanto, é precipitado estimar o tamanho dos estragos, ou benefícios, que trarão para a candidatura a presidente da República do senador Flávio Bolsonaro (PL-RJ), 45 anos, o seu envolvimento com o ex-banqueiro Daniel […] O post O “irmão Vorcaro” de Flávio derruba o disfarce de “Bolsonaro bonzinho”? apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

Este viernes 22 de mayo, a las 09:00 hrs. el presidente José Antonio Kast se reunirá con su gabinete ministerial...

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BioBioChile
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Este viernes 22 de mayo, a las 09:00 hrs. el presidente José Antonio Kast se reunirá con su gabinete ministerial...

Há 26 anos, antes mesmo da divulgação das primeiras atrações, o concurso Garota Festa do Divino já movimenta a cidade e anuncia que o clima da festa começou. Realizado ainda nos primeiros meses do ano, o concurso se tornou tradição e marca, simbolicamente, a abertura das celebrações da tradicional Festa do Divino em Poções, ao […] O post Garota Festa do Divino 2026: conheça a estudante Letícia Silva, coroada da edição apareceu primeiro em Site Coreto.

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Há 26 anos, antes mesmo da divulgação das primeiras atrações, o concurso Garota Festa do Divino já movimenta a cidade e anuncia que o clima da festa começou. Realizado ainda nos primeiros meses do ano, o concurso se tornou tradição e marca, simbolicamente, a abertura das celebrações da tradicional Festa do Divino em Poções, ao […] O post Garota Festa do Divino 2026: conheça a estudante Letícia Silva, coroada da edição apareceu primeiro em Site Coreto.

22 minutes

Utah News Dispatch
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Memorial Day is always a special occasion on which Americans pay tribute to military personnel who died during their service to our country.  In the Beehive State and elsewhere in America, for instance, small American flags are placed at the grave sites of honorees by dedicated volunteers.  The observance began in the wake of the […]

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Utah News Dispatch
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Memorial Day is always a special occasion on which Americans pay tribute to military personnel who died during their service to our country.  In the Beehive State and elsewhere in America, for instance, small American flags are placed at the grave sites of honorees by dedicated volunteers.  The observance began in the wake of the […]

23 minutes

Fort Worth Report
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A 30-year resident moves up to lead the city’s tourism efforts at Visit Fort Worth, replacing retiring Bob Jameson.

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Fort Worth Report
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A 30-year resident moves up to lead the city’s tourism efforts at Visit Fort Worth, replacing retiring Bob Jameson.

Three of the storytellers who will present at a fundraiser for the Wichita Journalism Collaborative on Tuesday shared insights about their perspectives with a Wichita Eagle reporter by video. Julian […] The post Hear from the speakers who’ll discuss testing the American Dream appeared first on KLC Journal - A Civic Issues Magazine from the Kansas Leadership Center

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The Journal
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Three of the storytellers who will present at a fundraiser for the Wichita Journalism Collaborative on Tuesday shared insights about their perspectives with a Wichita Eagle reporter by video. Julian […] The post Hear from the speakers who’ll discuss testing the American Dream appeared first on KLC Journal - A Civic Issues Magazine from the Kansas Leadership Center

The May 20, 2026, Tribal Council election resulted in four runoff elections set to take place in July and featured some very close contests in the sovereign nation.

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KAXE
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The May 20, 2026, Tribal Council election resulted in four runoff elections set to take place in July and featured some very close contests in the sovereign nation.

25 minutes

New Jersey Monitor
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The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a voting rights bill Thursday that supporters said would counter changes to the federal Voting Rights Act.

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New Jersey Monitor
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The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a voting rights bill Thursday that supporters said would counter changes to the federal Voting Rights Act.

26 minutes

Minnesota Reformer
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This story is republished with permission from KAXE/KBXE. GRAND RAPIDS — Cynthia “Cyndy” Martin pleaded guilty to criminal vehicular homicide and leaving the scene Thursday, May 21, in the 2024 death of 19-year-old Carter Haithcock on Highway 169 near Nashwauk. The plea agreement for Martin includes 364 days in jail, which is a downward departure […]

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Minnesota Reformer
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This story is republished with permission from KAXE/KBXE. GRAND RAPIDS — Cynthia “Cyndy” Martin pleaded guilty to criminal vehicular homicide and leaving the scene Thursday, May 21, in the 2024 death of 19-year-old Carter Haithcock on Highway 169 near Nashwauk. The plea agreement for Martin includes 364 days in jail, which is a downward departure […]

Construído ao longo de cinco anos, o álbum reúne participações de Rashid, Luellem de Castro e Luana Karoo e chega pela Dutra Records em parceria com a Sony Music O post “Nada Fica Fora do Lugar”: o álbum de estreia de Caio Nunez apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

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Mídia NINJA
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Construído ao longo de cinco anos, o álbum reúne participações de Rashid, Luellem de Castro e Luana Karoo e chega pela Dutra Records em parceria com a Sony Music O post “Nada Fica Fora do Lugar”: o álbum de estreia de Caio Nunez apareceu primeiro em Mídia NINJA.

27 minutes

美国之音
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2026年5月22日《VOA今日焦点》重点新闻内容包括:特朗普总统重申绝不允许伊朗保留浓缩铀;美国以谋杀罪起诉古巴前独裁者卡斯特罗;美国国务院针对埃博拉发布新的旅行警示。

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美国之音
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2026年5月22日《VOA今日焦点》重点新闻内容包括:特朗普总统重申绝不允许伊朗保留浓缩铀;美国以谋杀罪起诉古巴前独裁者卡斯特罗;美国国务院针对埃博拉发布新的旅行警示。

27 minutes

Observatório da Imprensa
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O filme alemão Tausend Zeilen (2022, “Mil linhas”), é baseado no livro Tausend Zeilen Lüge – Das System Relotius und der deutsche Journalismus, do jornalista espanhol Juan Moreno, lançado em 2019. Neste, Moreno narra sua experiencia no caso que viria a ser possivelmente o maior escândalo do jornalismo alemão em décadas. Aliás, do jornalismo alemão e mundial. Juan Moreno, radicado há […] O post Vários frames de mentiras: a comédia sobre um drama jornalístico apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

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Observatório da Imprensa
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O filme alemão Tausend Zeilen (2022, “Mil linhas”), é baseado no livro Tausend Zeilen Lüge – Das System Relotius und der deutsche Journalismus, do jornalista espanhol Juan Moreno, lançado em 2019. Neste, Moreno narra sua experiencia no caso que viria a ser possivelmente o maior escândalo do jornalismo alemão em décadas. Aliás, do jornalismo alemão e mundial. Juan Moreno, radicado há […] O post Vários frames de mentiras: a comédia sobre um drama jornalístico apareceu primeiro em Observatório da Imprensa.

Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.A reshuffling of contracts for New York City’s sprawling free after-school program has separated some schools from beloved, longstanding providers, sparking fury from parents, program staffers, and school administrators.The changes came as part of the city’s first attempt in years to re-bid contracts for community-based organizations, who get city funding to operate the COMPASS after-school program for more than 100,000 elementary and middle school students.Re-bidding the contracts allowed the city to expand the program by 10,000 seats and make long-needed changes to providers’ pay rates, which now come out to around $4,000 to $7,000 per student depending on age, city officials and providers said. But the new contracts, which were announced earlier this month and run through 2032, in some cases edged out providers who have been working with schools for more than a decade, and had the support of principals and families.In Manhattan, multiple middle schools that have long worked with the organization Manhattan Youth were assigned new providers starting this fall, according to a petition and joint letter from parent leaders across the schools.“Making sweeping changes to successful and trusted afterschool programs without transparency, stakeholder engagement, or demonstrated justification does not serve students or families,” wrote the parents, some of whom staged protests Thursday afternoon.It wasn’t immediately clear how many programs citywide were turned over to new providers. Chantal Alba, a spokesperson for the Youth and Community Development Department, said “most” of the 927 schools with after-school contracts are continuing on with their existing provider – 71 schools are opening a program for the first time next year.“DYCD understands how important long-standing afterschool relationships are to families, and we recognize that a change in provider can feel disruptive,” Alba wrote. “These transitions are the result of a standardized competitive process, not a reflection on the value a particular organization has brought to a school community.”Providers who lost out on contracts at schools where they’ve been successfully working for years said they’ve gotten no clear explanation on why they weren’t selected. “We’re all very confused,” said Manuela Garcia, a program director for the Coalition for Hispanic Family Services at Louis Armstrong Middle School in East Elmhurst, Queens. Garcia’s program has operated an arts-focused after-school program at Louis Armstrong for 12 years, but lost out to a larger provider in this year’s contract re-procurement.“We did everything we were supposed to do,” she said. “Why are we being uprooted … to bring somebody else brand new to start over?New rules, little transparencyIn past years, providers had to secure a signed agreement from a principal before applying for a contract at that school, giving the principal broad discretion to select a provider. This year, principals could rank multiple providers, according to people familiar with the process. In some cases, they didn’t get their top choice.“Despite our school clearly identifying Manhattan Youth as the best fit for our community, a different provider was selected,” Computer School principal Jessica Shalom wrote to families last weekend, according to a copy of the letter shared with Chalkbeat.In seeking “clarification” from the Department of Youth and Community Development, Shalom said she “received dismissive responses that failed to acknowledge the depth of our current partnership with Manhattan Youth and the significant impact this potential change would have on our community.”Alba, the DYCD spokesperson, said more than 80% of principals received their first- or second-choice provider. Asking principals to rank programs allowed “more providers to participate … while still ensuring principal input is reflected,” she said.“DYCD must balance principal preferences with competitive scoring, capacity, and provider diversity,” Alba added.Severing longstanding relationships between providers and schools isn’t the only concern. Providers that are losing their contracts after the summer might struggle with retaining staff for Summer Rising, the city’s free summer program, said Nora Moran, policy and advocacy director at United Neighborhood Houses, an umbrella organization for several after-school organizations. She also wondered if the city’s notoriously slow contracting process would be able to meet the demand of having to certify so many new contracts for the fall.Still, the outdated contracts needed to be rebid, Moran said. And throughout the bidding process, the city had been open about wanting to diversify the pool of providers.While that’s a “good goal,” Moran said, it’s a “hard situation all around” because there are “always winners and losers” in a procurement process.“In some circumstances, these are really longstanding relationships, and so for certain schools, it is going to be a really big change,” she said. “Also, there’s new opportunity that comes with new providers, and some organizations are happy that they’re going to have the chance to expand their work.”Particular after-school programs are often a draw for families Families at some of the schools switching providers say the shift could significantly diminish their kids’ school experience — and undercut one of the reasons they chose the school in the first place.Alexandra Cardasis, whose daughter is in sixth grade at Simon Baruch Middle School, compared Manhattan Youth’s vast offerings, including theater and a multi-school sports league, to “a suburban experience at a large school.”“When you’re trying to keep like families in the public school system,” she added, “these are the things that make people want to come.” Families at Simon Baruch are trying to fight back, said Gilberte Lal, president of the school’s parent-teacher association, who planned to deliver about 400 student letters to the city. “The anxiety that these children feel wondering what’s going to happen to their mentors, it’s heartbreaking,” said Lal. Out of the school’s roughly 1,000 students, all but about 36 participate in Manhattan Youth’s array of 50 weekly offerings, from ceramics and nail art to orchestra, drama, and Dungeons and Dragons. The program also offers many teams that are part of the Middle School Athletic League — that would cost the school about $200,000 to cover next year, Lal said. The program has 90 staffers, three of whom are full-time, and many of whom are paraprofessionals or teachers at the school. The new provider, the Imogen Roche Foundation, which focuses on social-emotional health, has mainly worked with elementary schools, raising concerns among families whether it can quickly scale up a sophisticated program for middle schoolers. At Louis Armstrong, an arts-focused middle school in Queens, the Coalition for Hispanic Family Services over years built a theater-based after-school program that perfectly fit the school’s needs, said Garcia, the program director.The program has developed partnerships with professional theater organizations, worked closely with school staff to build a shared performing arts program, and routinely connects students to outside services like therapy, access to food, and healthcare, Garcia said. She’s now working on gathering documentation she can use to support an appeal of DYCD’s contract decision.“This has been really devastating,” she said, “and I’ve taken it upon myself to organize the community.”Michael Elsen-Rooney is a reporter for Chalkbeat New York, covering NYC public schools. Contact Michael at melsen-rooney@chalkbeat.orgAmy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy at azimmer@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.A reshuffling of contracts for New York City’s sprawling free after-school program has separated some schools from beloved, longstanding providers, sparking fury from parents, program staffers, and school administrators.The changes came as part of the city’s first attempt in years to re-bid contracts for community-based organizations, who get city funding to operate the COMPASS after-school program for more than 100,000 elementary and middle school students.Re-bidding the contracts allowed the city to expand the program by 10,000 seats and make long-needed changes to providers’ pay rates, which now come out to around $4,000 to $7,000 per student depending on age, city officials and providers said. But the new contracts, which were announced earlier this month and run through 2032, in some cases edged out providers who have been working with schools for more than a decade, and had the support of principals and families.In Manhattan, multiple middle schools that have long worked with the organization Manhattan Youth were assigned new providers starting this fall, according to a petition and joint letter from parent leaders across the schools.“Making sweeping changes to successful and trusted afterschool programs without transparency, stakeholder engagement, or demonstrated justification does not serve students or families,” wrote the parents, some of whom staged protests Thursday afternoon.It wasn’t immediately clear how many programs citywide were turned over to new providers. Chantal Alba, a spokesperson for the Youth and Community Development Department, said “most” of the 927 schools with after-school contracts are continuing on with their existing provider – 71 schools are opening a program for the first time next year.“DYCD understands how important long-standing afterschool relationships are to families, and we recognize that a change in provider can feel disruptive,” Alba wrote. “These transitions are the result of a standardized competitive process, not a reflection on the value a particular organization has brought to a school community.”Providers who lost out on contracts at schools where they’ve been successfully working for years said they’ve gotten no clear explanation on why they weren’t selected. “We’re all very confused,” said Manuela Garcia, a program director for the Coalition for Hispanic Family Services at Louis Armstrong Middle School in East Elmhurst, Queens. Garcia’s program has operated an arts-focused after-school program at Louis Armstrong for 12 years, but lost out to a larger provider in this year’s contract re-procurement.“We did everything we were supposed to do,” she said. “Why are we being uprooted … to bring somebody else brand new to start over?New rules, little transparencyIn past years, providers had to secure a signed agreement from a principal before applying for a contract at that school, giving the principal broad discretion to select a provider. This year, principals could rank multiple providers, according to people familiar with the process. In some cases, they didn’t get their top choice.“Despite our school clearly identifying Manhattan Youth as the best fit for our community, a different provider was selected,” Computer School principal Jessica Shalom wrote to families last weekend, according to a copy of the letter shared with Chalkbeat.In seeking “clarification” from the Department of Youth and Community Development, Shalom said she “received dismissive responses that failed to acknowledge the depth of our current partnership with Manhattan Youth and the significant impact this potential change would have on our community.”Alba, the DYCD spokesperson, said more than 80% of principals received their first- or second-choice provider. Asking principals to rank programs allowed “more providers to participate … while still ensuring principal input is reflected,” she said.“DYCD must balance principal preferences with competitive scoring, capacity, and provider diversity,” Alba added.Severing longstanding relationships between providers and schools isn’t the only concern. Providers that are losing their contracts after the summer might struggle with retaining staff for Summer Rising, the city’s free summer program, said Nora Moran, policy and advocacy director at United Neighborhood Houses, an umbrella organization for several after-school organizations. She also wondered if the city’s notoriously slow contracting process would be able to meet the demand of having to certify so many new contracts for the fall.Still, the outdated contracts needed to be rebid, Moran said. And throughout the bidding process, the city had been open about wanting to diversify the pool of providers.While that’s a “good goal,” Moran said, it’s a “hard situation all around” because there are “always winners and losers” in a procurement process.“In some circumstances, these are really longstanding relationships, and so for certain schools, it is going to be a really big change,” she said. “Also, there’s new opportunity that comes with new providers, and some organizations are happy that they’re going to have the chance to expand their work.”Particular after-school programs are often a draw for families Families at some of the schools switching providers say the shift could significantly diminish their kids’ school experience — and undercut one of the reasons they chose the school in the first place.Alexandra Cardasis, whose daughter is in sixth grade at Simon Baruch Middle School, compared Manhattan Youth’s vast offerings, including theater and a multi-school sports league, to “a suburban experience at a large school.”“When you’re trying to keep like families in the public school system,” she added, “these are the things that make people want to come.” Families at Simon Baruch are trying to fight back, said Gilberte Lal, president of the school’s parent-teacher association, who planned to deliver about 400 student letters to the city. “The anxiety that these children feel wondering what’s going to happen to their mentors, it’s heartbreaking,” said Lal. Out of the school’s roughly 1,000 students, all but about 36 participate in Manhattan Youth’s array of 50 weekly offerings, from ceramics and nail art to orchestra, drama, and Dungeons and Dragons. The program also offers many teams that are part of the Middle School Athletic League — that would cost the school about $200,000 to cover next year, Lal said. The program has 90 staffers, three of whom are full-time, and many of whom are paraprofessionals or teachers at the school. The new provider, the Imogen Roche Foundation, which focuses on social-emotional health, has mainly worked with elementary schools, raising concerns among families whether it can quickly scale up a sophisticated program for middle schoolers. At Louis Armstrong, an arts-focused middle school in Queens, the Coalition for Hispanic Family Services over years built a theater-based after-school program that perfectly fit the school’s needs, said Garcia, the program director.The program has developed partnerships with professional theater organizations, worked closely with school staff to build a shared performing arts program, and routinely connects students to outside services like therapy, access to food, and healthcare, Garcia said. She’s now working on gathering documentation she can use to support an appeal of DYCD’s contract decision.“This has been really devastating,” she said, “and I’ve taken it upon myself to organize the community.”Michael Elsen-Rooney is a reporter for Chalkbeat New York, covering NYC public schools. Contact Michael at melsen-rooney@chalkbeat.orgAmy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy at azimmer@chalkbeat.org.

黄仁勋领导的半导体和人工智能图形处理巨擘集团英伟达5月20日公布了2026年第一季度业绩,远超预期,净利润创下583亿欧元的历史新高。然而,由于推理领域(即预训练人工智能算法的执行)竞争日趋激烈,市场此次依然较为低迷。

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法国国际广播电台
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黄仁勋领导的半导体和人工智能图形处理巨擘集团英伟达5月20日公布了2026年第一季度业绩,远超预期,净利润创下583亿欧元的历史新高。然而,由于推理领域(即预训练人工智能算法的执行)竞争日趋激烈,市场此次依然较为低迷。

黃仁勳領導的半導體和人工智能圖形處理巨擘集團英偉達5月20日公布了2026年第一季度業績,遠超預期,凈利潤創下583億歐元的歷史新高。然而,由於推理領域(即預訓練人工智能算法的執行)競爭日趨激烈,市場此次依然較為低迷。

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法國國際廣播電台
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黃仁勳領導的半導體和人工智能圖形處理巨擘集團英偉達5月20日公布了2026年第一季度業績,遠超預期,凈利潤創下583億歐元的歷史新高。然而,由於推理領域(即預訓練人工智能算法的執行)競爭日趨激烈,市場此次依然較為低迷。

“I’m like the kid who graduated high school and never went away.”  This is my one-liner when introducing myself professionally and explaining my connection to the Kenan Fellows Program for Teacher Leadership (KFP). In 2011, I was a fourth-year science... The post Perspective | Where teachers become leaders: Celebrating 26 years of the Kenan Fellows Program appeared first on EdNC.

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“I’m like the kid who graduated high school and never went away.”  This is my one-liner when introducing myself professionally and explaining my connection to the Kenan Fellows Program for Teacher Leadership (KFP). In 2011, I was a fourth-year science... The post Perspective | Where teachers become leaders: Celebrating 26 years of the Kenan Fellows Program appeared first on EdNC.