18 minutes
Bill e Hillary Clinton concordaram em depor diante de uma comissão parlamentar dos EUA sobre o caso Jeffrey Epstein, após ameaça de sanções por desobediência. O casal é questionado sobre os vínculos do ex-presidente com o criminoso sexual. A decisão interrompe temporariamente a possibilidade de acusações formais pelo Departamento de Justiça, liderado por Pam Bondi, próxima a Donald Trump, mas coloca em evidência debates sobre transparência e responsabilidade de figuras públicas em nível global.
18 minutes
Bill e Hillary Clinton concordaram em depor diante de uma comissão parlamentar dos EUA sobre o caso Jeffrey Epstein, após ameaça de sanções por desobediência. O casal é questionado sobre os vínculos do ex-presidente com o criminoso sexual. A decisão interrompe temporariamente a possibilidade de acusações formais pelo Departamento de Justiça, liderado por Pam Bondi, próxima a Donald Trump, mas coloca em evidência debates sobre transparência e responsabilidade de figuras públicas em nível global.
19 minutes

Egoja e një përfaqësuesi të qeverisë është arsyeja për mosrritjen e pagave të punëtorëve, thotë kryetari i Lidhjes së Sindikatave të Maqedonisë (LSM), Slobodan Trendafilov. Sipas tij, vitin e kaluar punëdhënësit ishin të gatshëm të rrisnin pagat e punëtorëve me të paktën 6.000 denarë, nëse qeveria do të hiqte dorë përkohësisht nga kontributet, transmeton Portalb.mk. […]

Egoja e një përfaqësuesi të qeverisë është arsyeja për mosrritjen e pagave të punëtorëve, thotë kryetari i Lidhjes së Sindikatave të Maqedonisë (LSM), Slobodan Trendafilov. Sipas tij, vitin e kaluar punëdhënësit ishin të gatshëm të rrisnin pagat e punëtorëve me të paktën 6.000 denarë, nëse qeveria do të hiqte dorë përkohësisht nga kontributet, transmeton Portalb.mk. […]
21 minutes
На Северном Кавказе практику изъятия детей у матерей после развода редко называют похищением – чаще "возвращением ребенка в семью отца". За этими словами скрываются годы безрезультатных попыток женщин сохранить контакт с детьми. Почему их интересы оказываются на втором плане, а мнение семьи и старейшин весит больше закона, разбиралась редакция Кавказ.Реалии. Молодая жительница Ингушетии Пятимат Евкурова семь лет добивалась права общаться с сыном, которого силой забрал бывший муж. Она...
На Северном Кавказе практику изъятия детей у матерей после развода редко называют похищением – чаще "возвращением ребенка в семью отца". За этими словами скрываются годы безрезультатных попыток женщин сохранить контакт с детьми. Почему их интересы оказываются на втором плане, а мнение семьи и старейшин весит больше закона, разбиралась редакция Кавказ.Реалии. Молодая жительница Ингушетии Пятимат Евкурова семь лет добивалась права общаться с сыном, которого силой забрал бывший муж. Она...
23 minutes
States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]
States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]
23 minutes
Tim gabungan Bea Cukai Kota Langsa, Polres Aceh Timur, Balai Gakkum Kehutanan Wilayah Sumatera, dan Balai Konservasi Sumber Daya Alam (BKSDA) Aceh menggagalkan penyelundupan ratusan satwa liar dilindungi di Pante Bayam, Kecamatan Madat, Kabupaten Aceh Timur, Aceh, Jumat (30/1/2026). “Berbagai jenis satwa tersebut hendak dikirim ke Thailand” jelas Dwi Harmawanto, Kepala Kantor Bea Cukai Langsa, […] The post Penyelundupan Ratusan Satwa Liar Dilindungi dari Aceh ke Thailand Digagalkan appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.
Tim gabungan Bea Cukai Kota Langsa, Polres Aceh Timur, Balai Gakkum Kehutanan Wilayah Sumatera, dan Balai Konservasi Sumber Daya Alam (BKSDA) Aceh menggagalkan penyelundupan ratusan satwa liar dilindungi di Pante Bayam, Kecamatan Madat, Kabupaten Aceh Timur, Aceh, Jumat (30/1/2026). “Berbagai jenis satwa tersebut hendak dikirim ke Thailand” jelas Dwi Harmawanto, Kepala Kantor Bea Cukai Langsa, […] The post Penyelundupan Ratusan Satwa Liar Dilindungi dari Aceh ke Thailand Digagalkan appeared first on Mongabay.co.id.
23 minutes
West Virginia is spending more than $62 million putting hundreds of foster children in out-of-state facilities across the country. Some children are more than 2,000 miles from home in states like California and Washington. Gov. Patrick Morrisey has asked lawmakers for $6 million with the goal of bringing 380 children back to West Virginia. “Is […]
23 minutes
West Virginia is spending more than $62 million putting hundreds of foster children in out-of-state facilities across the country. Some children are more than 2,000 miles from home in states like California and Washington. Gov. Patrick Morrisey has asked lawmakers for $6 million with the goal of bringing 380 children back to West Virginia. “Is […]
23 minutes
Democrats have filed to run for at least 85 of the 100 seats in the West Virginia House of Delegates and 17 of the 19 seats up for grabs in the Senate this year. The at least 125 Democrats running for seats in the Legislature — along with others running for federal and county-level seats […]
Democrats have filed to run for at least 85 of the 100 seats in the West Virginia House of Delegates and 17 of the 19 seats up for grabs in the Senate this year. The at least 125 Democrats running for seats in the Legislature — along with others running for federal and county-level seats […]
23 minutes

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House is expected to vote as soon as Tuesday on the government funding package that will end the ongoing partial government shutdown once it becomes law. The Senate voted Friday evening to approve the legislation after President Donald Trump and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., brokered a deal to remove the full-year […]

WASHINGTON — The U.S. House is expected to vote as soon as Tuesday on the government funding package that will end the ongoing partial government shutdown once it becomes law. The Senate voted Friday evening to approve the legislation after President Donald Trump and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., brokered a deal to remove the full-year […]
23 minutes
WASHINGTON — A federal judge late Monday blocked the termination of temporary protections for roughly 350,000 Haitians from taking effect, a move that prevents the Trump administration from acting to deport them as litigation continues. In a searing 83-page order, District of Columbia federal Judge Ana C. Reyes found that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem […]
WASHINGTON — A federal judge late Monday blocked the termination of temporary protections for roughly 350,000 Haitians from taking effect, a move that prevents the Trump administration from acting to deport them as litigation continues. In a searing 83-page order, District of Columbia federal Judge Ana C. Reyes found that Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem […]
23 minutes
States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]
States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]
24 minutes

A special election is set for Saturday to fill five vacant seats in the Louisiana Legislature, including one spot in the Senate and four in the House of Representatives. State Senate District 3 was left open when Joe Bouie, D-New Orleans, stepped down to take the chancellor’s role at Southern University New Orleans. Four Democrats […]

A special election is set for Saturday to fill five vacant seats in the Louisiana Legislature, including one spot in the Senate and four in the House of Representatives. State Senate District 3 was left open when Joe Bouie, D-New Orleans, stepped down to take the chancellor’s role at Southern University New Orleans. Four Democrats […]
24 minutes

States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]

States that were leaders in childhood vaccination before the pandemic are among those losing ground as exemptions and unfounded skepticism take hold, encouraged by the Trump administration’s stance under U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Expanded exemptions for parents are likely to drop both Mississippi and West Virginia from the top […]
24 minutes

After rejecting millions of dollars in federal funds intended to help families buy food for their children during the summer, Tennessee officials have begun recruiting organizations to participate in a separate program that serves meals at churches, playgrounds and community centers. Advocates who work to end child hunger in Tennessee praise the Summer Food Services […]

After rejecting millions of dollars in federal funds intended to help families buy food for their children during the summer, Tennessee officials have begun recruiting organizations to participate in a separate program that serves meals at churches, playgrounds and community centers. Advocates who work to end child hunger in Tennessee praise the Summer Food Services […]
24 minutes
Сотрудники Службы военной контрразведки (SKW) задержали сотрудника Министерства национальной обороны Польши по подозрению в сотрудничестве с иностранной разведкой. Об этом сообщается на сайте польского оборонного ведомства. Дело расследует военная контрразведка. Другие подробности не приводятся. По данным Onet, задержанный работал в Департаменте стратегии и планирования Минобороны, его подозревают в сотрудничестве с российской разведкой. Мужчину задержали третьего февраля примерно в 8:00...
24 minutes
Сотрудники Службы военной контрразведки (SKW) задержали сотрудника Министерства национальной обороны Польши по подозрению в сотрудничестве с иностранной разведкой. Об этом сообщается на сайте польского оборонного ведомства. Дело расследует военная контрразведка. Другие подробности не приводятся. По данным Onet, задержанный работал в Департаменте стратегии и планирования Минобороны, его подозревают в сотрудничестве с российской разведкой. Мужчину задержали третьего февраля примерно в 8:00...
24 minutes

More than 10 states have complied with a Department of Justice demand for voter rolls.

More than 10 states have complied with a Department of Justice demand for voter rolls.
24 minutes
Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system. Jeán Ruiz remembers their high school years in Kensington as a period of stress and survival — both at home and at school. They lived in affordable housing with their single mom. The time they might have used for homework or tutoring was often spent doing odd jobs to help pay the rent. Those worries made it tough to prioritize school, they said. They recalled trying to focus on 12th grade calculus: “I was so lost and confused.” Ruiz wasn’t alone. Family and financial stress, on top of daily exposure to poverty and drug use, make it harder for many Kensington students to make it to graduation, according to experts and educators. Kensington’s median income is among the lowest of all Philadelphia neighborhoods, and it has twice the number of adults without diplomas as the city on average, according to a 2025 report from Pew Research. “It’s not like we don’t want to get diplomas,” said Ruiz, who is now 24. “It’s just that it’s inaccessible for us.” Experts say a high school diploma is a crucial foundation for stable employment later in life. Research shows people with diplomas earn bigger salaries, are qualified for a wider variety of jobs, and even have stronger health outcomes. That’s why high schools are building up support for students like Ruiz through strategies like embedding college prep organizations, mentorship, and career counseling. And graduation rates are trending upward for some schools in the neighborhood, creating a new wave of Kensington kids who make it past the finish line. “Graduating from high school is a life or death issue,” School District of Philadelphia Superintendent Tony Watlington said in his State of the Schools address this month. “When children graduate college and career ready, it has a major impact on the economy of any city.” Amiyah Acosta-Peterson, a 10th grader at Kensington Creative and Performing Arts High School, known as KCAPA, said her family and extra school support have helped keep her on the path toward college. “My family, they motivate me to get good grades,” she said. “They tell me the benefits of it. The teachers also do it. So that’s what makes me want to keep going.” She holds tight to her dream of becoming a doctor, despite the hopelessness she says many students feel when they walk past open-air drug use on the way to school each day. That kind of environment leads them not to take school as seriously as they could, she said. For Ruiz, the key to graduating high school was supportive teachers as well as mentors at Taller Puertoriqueño, a Puerto Rican cultural center in Kensington. They now lead an after-school STEAM program there for neighborhood kids. “Everyone is trying their best to become their dream,” Ruiz said. “And sustain not only themselves but their village as well.” Showing Kensington kids their potential Graduation rates at several high schools in Kensington are on the rise. According to district data, the share of students who graduated from Kensington High School, or KHS, within four years rose from 63% in 2017 to 72% in 2023. Kensington Health Sciences Academy, or KHSA, had a four-year graduation rate of 83% in 2023, up from 71% in 2017, although KCAPA’s graduation rate has declined from 76% in 2017 to 72% in 2023. Rising graduation rates haven’t taken place in a vacuum. There have also been major statewide changes to graduation criteria recently that aim to create more options for all Pennsylvania students to earn diplomas. But getting diplomas into student hands largely comes down to staff supporting students on the ground, said Kensington High School Principal Jose Lebron. Some of the work is handled by non-profit organizations like 12+, a program that stations advisers inside schools to help keep students on track to graduation and postsecondary opportunities. The non-profit launched at KHSA in 2012. The group has an open door policy: KHS seniors averaged 32 check-ins with their 12+ advisers in 2024 — far beyond the capacity of the school’s regular guidance counselors, each of whom is assigned over 200 students. KHS guidance counselor Liz Winter helps students figure out what they need to graduate. But when they deviate from the plan and start missing too much school, Winter may connect them to 12+. Many of those students aren’t considering higher education and say they want a job, but don’t know what kind. Once students understand what a high school degree unlocks, “going to school all of a sudden becomes way more incentivized,” said Frank Wang, the chief of staff for 12+. Across all the schools that 12+ works in, he added, “We’re seeing convincingly that our students want to be in school more, and attendance is a strong correlation to graduation rates.” Advisers with 12+ show students what is available to them beyond graduation, whether it’s college, a trade apprenticeship, a workforce development certificate, and help them with incremental steps towards those options, like completing the FAFSA, working on resumes, or helping them get a merit scholarship. “12+ is the missing link,” Winter said. Advisers meeting with students inside the 12+ space at Kensington High School. Every senior has their photo on the wall, and can place stickers alongside to celebrate their accomplishments. Another program, Heights Philadelphia, pairs students with career counselors or college advisers who can support them with interview preparation, class selection and financial aid. Chief program officer Annie Soler said 100% of students in the Heights program graduate high school and 90% enroll in college. “We’re seeking out students who might not be on the trajectory for college or for entering into the workforce,” she said. “We’re recruiting 10th graders and supporting them through 12th.” That kind of one-on-one help is especially important for students who come from communities where knowledge about getting a college education is limited, said Laura Perna with the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education. “Students in Kensington may have strong family support and be able to persist through adversity, and at the same time they may not have networks and sources for how to navigate through these systems — college applications, financial support, which middle and high school courses to take,” she said. Making these efforts successful requires forming trust and relationships, said Joyce Li, a supervisor with 12+. Advisers ask students about their lives and find out what immediate concerns are hurting their attendance. Sometimes it’s relationship drama, or it’s fear of a teacher after a low grade. It’s a holistic approach to mentorship, troubleshooting whatever obstacles are in students’ way, strategizing steps forward. Often they’ll start talking about the future after the stressful situation has passed. “They need to know there’s life after high school,” Li said. “That there’s hope, that there are good things in store for them.” Trusted adults can be key to motivating students While 12+ and other groups focus more on career-readiness, school staff might deal with more personal and academic issues. Lebron said KHS throws out a safety net for students by ensuring teachers accommodate them, providing check-ins at report-card periods, and offering informational town halls about graduation requirements. They also offer credit recovery and summer school, if all else fails. Lebron referenced lack of support at home as a contributing factor for a student not making it across the finish line. When they don’t have parents’ encouragement, the onus falls on the school. That’s all the more reason to have pipelines to alternative workforce programs and mentorship, said Kensington Health Sciences Academy Principal Dr. Nemet Eren. “Sometimes it feels like we are squeezing blood from a stone, because there’s just so much that needs to happen, and we need support from outside programs,” Eren said. The students at risk of not graduating are often identified early, most likely because of low attendance. Winter said combatting absenteeism starts with parents. “We need parent involvement,” she said. “We have a lot of kids right now facing mental health [challenges] … because their parents are checked out,” she said. Much of her job is dedicated to meeting with parents, to better understand what’s going on behind the scenes and help coach them on how to motivate their kids. For Nasir Davis, a Kensington High School junior, the support of his family, teachers, and basketball team — the Kensington Tigers, a team made up of KHS, KCAPA, and KHSA students — keeps him on track. “I could go to different people if I got problems with the work,” Davis said. Ethan Feuer, head coach of Kensington Tigers boys basketball, speaks with the team at half time during a game against Northeast High School on Jan. 19, 2026. To be on the Tigers, who had a successful season and landed third in their division, the players have to sign a contract agreeing to maintain average grades of C or above, a standard set by coach Ethan Feuer. If they can’t keep their grades up, they’re benched. It means “they don’t have time for basketball,” said Feuer, who teaches ninth grade English at KHSA. Players on the team look up to Feuer, have built tight relationships with the coach, and appreciate his high standards. After a victory over Philadelphia Academy Charter in early January, Feuer said everyone on the team will graduate: “I’ll have kids during practice sitting on the sideline doing their homework and working together before they can step foot onto the court.” Whether it’s a coach, a parent, a teacher or an adviser, it all comes down to having at least one caring adult, said Li, the supervisor with 12+. “There are all these opportunities and resources,” she said. “But if you don’t feel like the person who’s telling you this stuff cares about you and genuinely follows up with you consistently, then they’re not going to do it.” https://resolvephilly.org/PJC” target=“_blank”>https://static.chalkbeat.org/partner-logos/pjc-transparent.png” /> Chalkbeat is one of more than 25 news organizations powering the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. We do solutions reporting on things that affect daily life in our city where the problem and symptoms are obvious, but what’s driving them isn’t. Follow at @PHLJournoCollab. Sammy Caiola covers solutions to gun violence in and around Philadelphia schools. Have ideas for her? Get in touch at scaiola@chalkbeat.org.
24 minutes
Sign up for Chalkbeat Philadelphia’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system. Jeán Ruiz remembers their high school years in Kensington as a period of stress and survival — both at home and at school. They lived in affordable housing with their single mom. The time they might have used for homework or tutoring was often spent doing odd jobs to help pay the rent. Those worries made it tough to prioritize school, they said. They recalled trying to focus on 12th grade calculus: “I was so lost and confused.” Ruiz wasn’t alone. Family and financial stress, on top of daily exposure to poverty and drug use, make it harder for many Kensington students to make it to graduation, according to experts and educators. Kensington’s median income is among the lowest of all Philadelphia neighborhoods, and it has twice the number of adults without diplomas as the city on average, according to a 2025 report from Pew Research. “It’s not like we don’t want to get diplomas,” said Ruiz, who is now 24. “It’s just that it’s inaccessible for us.” Experts say a high school diploma is a crucial foundation for stable employment later in life. Research shows people with diplomas earn bigger salaries, are qualified for a wider variety of jobs, and even have stronger health outcomes. That’s why high schools are building up support for students like Ruiz through strategies like embedding college prep organizations, mentorship, and career counseling. And graduation rates are trending upward for some schools in the neighborhood, creating a new wave of Kensington kids who make it past the finish line. “Graduating from high school is a life or death issue,” School District of Philadelphia Superintendent Tony Watlington said in his State of the Schools address this month. “When children graduate college and career ready, it has a major impact on the economy of any city.” Amiyah Acosta-Peterson, a 10th grader at Kensington Creative and Performing Arts High School, known as KCAPA, said her family and extra school support have helped keep her on the path toward college. “My family, they motivate me to get good grades,” she said. “They tell me the benefits of it. The teachers also do it. So that’s what makes me want to keep going.” She holds tight to her dream of becoming a doctor, despite the hopelessness she says many students feel when they walk past open-air drug use on the way to school each day. That kind of environment leads them not to take school as seriously as they could, she said. For Ruiz, the key to graduating high school was supportive teachers as well as mentors at Taller Puertoriqueño, a Puerto Rican cultural center in Kensington. They now lead an after-school STEAM program there for neighborhood kids. “Everyone is trying their best to become their dream,” Ruiz said. “And sustain not only themselves but their village as well.” Showing Kensington kids their potential Graduation rates at several high schools in Kensington are on the rise. According to district data, the share of students who graduated from Kensington High School, or KHS, within four years rose from 63% in 2017 to 72% in 2023. Kensington Health Sciences Academy, or KHSA, had a four-year graduation rate of 83% in 2023, up from 71% in 2017, although KCAPA’s graduation rate has declined from 76% in 2017 to 72% in 2023. Rising graduation rates haven’t taken place in a vacuum. There have also been major statewide changes to graduation criteria recently that aim to create more options for all Pennsylvania students to earn diplomas. But getting diplomas into student hands largely comes down to staff supporting students on the ground, said Kensington High School Principal Jose Lebron. Some of the work is handled by non-profit organizations like 12+, a program that stations advisers inside schools to help keep students on track to graduation and postsecondary opportunities. The non-profit launched at KHSA in 2012. The group has an open door policy: KHS seniors averaged 32 check-ins with their 12+ advisers in 2024 — far beyond the capacity of the school’s regular guidance counselors, each of whom is assigned over 200 students. KHS guidance counselor Liz Winter helps students figure out what they need to graduate. But when they deviate from the plan and start missing too much school, Winter may connect them to 12+. Many of those students aren’t considering higher education and say they want a job, but don’t know what kind. Once students understand what a high school degree unlocks, “going to school all of a sudden becomes way more incentivized,” said Frank Wang, the chief of staff for 12+. Across all the schools that 12+ works in, he added, “We’re seeing convincingly that our students want to be in school more, and attendance is a strong correlation to graduation rates.” Advisers with 12+ show students what is available to them beyond graduation, whether it’s college, a trade apprenticeship, a workforce development certificate, and help them with incremental steps towards those options, like completing the FAFSA, working on resumes, or helping them get a merit scholarship. “12+ is the missing link,” Winter said. Advisers meeting with students inside the 12+ space at Kensington High School. Every senior has their photo on the wall, and can place stickers alongside to celebrate their accomplishments. Another program, Heights Philadelphia, pairs students with career counselors or college advisers who can support them with interview preparation, class selection and financial aid. Chief program officer Annie Soler said 100% of students in the Heights program graduate high school and 90% enroll in college. “We’re seeking out students who might not be on the trajectory for college or for entering into the workforce,” she said. “We’re recruiting 10th graders and supporting them through 12th.” That kind of one-on-one help is especially important for students who come from communities where knowledge about getting a college education is limited, said Laura Perna with the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education. “Students in Kensington may have strong family support and be able to persist through adversity, and at the same time they may not have networks and sources for how to navigate through these systems — college applications, financial support, which middle and high school courses to take,” she said. Making these efforts successful requires forming trust and relationships, said Joyce Li, a supervisor with 12+. Advisers ask students about their lives and find out what immediate concerns are hurting their attendance. Sometimes it’s relationship drama, or it’s fear of a teacher after a low grade. It’s a holistic approach to mentorship, troubleshooting whatever obstacles are in students’ way, strategizing steps forward. Often they’ll start talking about the future after the stressful situation has passed. “They need to know there’s life after high school,” Li said. “That there’s hope, that there are good things in store for them.” Trusted adults can be key to motivating students While 12+ and other groups focus more on career-readiness, school staff might deal with more personal and academic issues. Lebron said KHS throws out a safety net for students by ensuring teachers accommodate them, providing check-ins at report-card periods, and offering informational town halls about graduation requirements. They also offer credit recovery and summer school, if all else fails. Lebron referenced lack of support at home as a contributing factor for a student not making it across the finish line. When they don’t have parents’ encouragement, the onus falls on the school. That’s all the more reason to have pipelines to alternative workforce programs and mentorship, said Kensington Health Sciences Academy Principal Dr. Nemet Eren. “Sometimes it feels like we are squeezing blood from a stone, because there’s just so much that needs to happen, and we need support from outside programs,” Eren said. The students at risk of not graduating are often identified early, most likely because of low attendance. Winter said combatting absenteeism starts with parents. “We need parent involvement,” she said. “We have a lot of kids right now facing mental health [challenges] … because their parents are checked out,” she said. Much of her job is dedicated to meeting with parents, to better understand what’s going on behind the scenes and help coach them on how to motivate their kids. For Nasir Davis, a Kensington High School junior, the support of his family, teachers, and basketball team — the Kensington Tigers, a team made up of KHS, KCAPA, and KHSA students — keeps him on track. “I could go to different people if I got problems with the work,” Davis said. Ethan Feuer, head coach of Kensington Tigers boys basketball, speaks with the team at half time during a game against Northeast High School on Jan. 19, 2026. To be on the Tigers, who had a successful season and landed third in their division, the players have to sign a contract agreeing to maintain average grades of C or above, a standard set by coach Ethan Feuer. If they can’t keep their grades up, they’re benched. It means “they don’t have time for basketball,” said Feuer, who teaches ninth grade English at KHSA. Players on the team look up to Feuer, have built tight relationships with the coach, and appreciate his high standards. After a victory over Philadelphia Academy Charter in early January, Feuer said everyone on the team will graduate: “I’ll have kids during practice sitting on the sideline doing their homework and working together before they can step foot onto the court.” Whether it’s a coach, a parent, a teacher or an adviser, it all comes down to having at least one caring adult, said Li, the supervisor with 12+. “There are all these opportunities and resources,” she said. “But if you don’t feel like the person who’s telling you this stuff cares about you and genuinely follows up with you consistently, then they’re not going to do it.” https://resolvephilly.org/PJC” target=“_blank”>https://static.chalkbeat.org/partner-logos/pjc-transparent.png” /> Chalkbeat is one of more than 25 news organizations powering the Philadelphia Journalism Collaborative. We do solutions reporting on things that affect daily life in our city where the problem and symptoms are obvious, but what’s driving them isn’t. Follow at @PHLJournoCollab. Sammy Caiola covers solutions to gun violence in and around Philadelphia schools. Have ideas for her? Get in touch at scaiola@chalkbeat.org.
24 minutes
In Vietnam, soldiers were rewarded based on body counts. ICE deportation goals are a chilling reminder of that policy. The post Deportation quotas are a 2026 version of Vietnam body counts appeared first on MinnPost.
In Vietnam, soldiers were rewarded based on body counts. ICE deportation goals are a chilling reminder of that policy. The post Deportation quotas are a 2026 version of Vietnam body counts appeared first on MinnPost.
24 minutes
When Chad Raines took over his family’s Texas cotton farm in 2008, he thought the going would be easy. That’s because their first year was relatively profitable — but the success was short-lived. “The next 11 years was just loss after loss after loss,” Raines said in a Daily Yonder interview. “We just kept digging […] The post Fear Over Farmland Loss Is Slowing Renewable Energy Development in Rural Areas appeared first on The Daily Yonder.
When Chad Raines took over his family’s Texas cotton farm in 2008, he thought the going would be easy. That’s because their first year was relatively profitable — but the success was short-lived. “The next 11 years was just loss after loss after loss,” Raines said in a Daily Yonder interview. “We just kept digging […] The post Fear Over Farmland Loss Is Slowing Renewable Energy Development in Rural Areas appeared first on The Daily Yonder.
24 minutes
Detroit is the first on P-Funk’s symphonic tour of cities yet to be revealed. Outlier Media · Nichole Christian · George Clinton fuses funk with classical sounds for a new groove
Detroit is the first on P-Funk’s symphonic tour of cities yet to be revealed. Outlier Media · Nichole Christian · George Clinton fuses funk with classical sounds for a new groove
24 minutes
Ashley Fairbanks felt anxious as she scrolled through seemingly endless reports of federal immigration agents arresting and detaining people in Minnesota. It felt personal for Fairbanks, who lives in Texas but grew up on the south side of Minneapolis. Her closest friends and family still live in the area, including her dad, who works near […]
24 minutes
Ashley Fairbanks felt anxious as she scrolled through seemingly endless reports of federal immigration agents arresting and detaining people in Minnesota. It felt personal for Fairbanks, who lives in Texas but grew up on the south side of Minneapolis. Her closest friends and family still live in the area, including her dad, who works near […]