7 minutes
Durval de Noronha, jurista e árbitro internacional, lançou nesta semana o livro “O Regime Internacional dos Direitos Humanos e o Sul Global” (Observador Legal Editora, 2026). A obra debate as contradições entre os instrumentos internacionais de garantia de direitos humanos e as violações praticadas por países que os subscrevem. Em entrevista ao programa Conversa Bem […] Fonte
Durval de Noronha, jurista e árbitro internacional, lançou nesta semana o livro “O Regime Internacional dos Direitos Humanos e o Sul Global” (Observador Legal Editora, 2026). A obra debate as contradições entre os instrumentos internacionais de garantia de direitos humanos e as violações praticadas por países que os subscrevem. Em entrevista ao programa Conversa Bem […] Fonte
10 minutes
No próximo domingo (31), a Marcha da Maconha Fortaleza (MFF) chega em sua 18ª edição ocupando às ruas da capital cearense com o tema “Ceará que planta libertação, marcha pela Legalização”. Em defesa da regulamentação da cannabis e da revisão da política proibicionista brasileira, o evento que tem concentração a partir das 15h, na Estátua […] Fonte
No próximo domingo (31), a Marcha da Maconha Fortaleza (MFF) chega em sua 18ª edição ocupando às ruas da capital cearense com o tema “Ceará que planta libertação, marcha pela Legalização”. Em defesa da regulamentação da cannabis e da revisão da política proibicionista brasileira, o evento que tem concentração a partir das 15h, na Estátua […] Fonte
11 minutes
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Wisconsin’s free newsletter here.The League of Women Voters of Wisconsin is challenging the state’s law governing voters’ ability to fix missing information on their absentee ballots, alleging that the law violates the Wisconsin Constitution by giving clerks a vast amount of discretion over whether to reject ballots.The group is asking a Dane County judge to require all clerks to provide voters notice when an absentee ballot certificate is lacking necessary information — such as a signature or the address of a voter or the person who witnessed the ballot’s casting — and give them an opportunity to add that information before rejecting the ballot, a process known as “curing” the ballot.Right now, the law tells clerks that they “may” return incomplete absentee ballots to voters. That results in some municipal clerks sending voters prompt notice about faulty ballots, while other clerks put those ballots in the rejected pile without informing the voter at all, the lawsuit states. Municipalities also treat absentee ballots differently depending on when they receive them, the lawsuit alleges, and those that arrive closer to Election Day often have a lesser chance of getting cured.The lawsuit, which names the Wisconsin Elections Commission as the defendant, argues that, without a blanket curing requirement, “mail-in absentee ballots are jeopardized by the lack of mandatory notice and curing opportunities across the state.”This case, which comes a few months ahead of Wisconsin’s 2026 primary election, is the latest in a long line of lawsuits over what to do when information is missing on absentee ballot certificates. In recent years, courts have allowed clerks to use their discretion to determine what constitutes a proper witness address but taken away their ability to fix missing information on the address form.“Right now, we have ballots that come in weeks ahead of the election, and they’re being set aside for rejection with no attempt by the clerk to contact the voter,” Debra Cronmiller, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin, told Votebeat. “If even one clerk is not curing ballots, that’s one clerk too many in a democratic system where voting is an absolute right,” Cronmiller said, adding that the number of clerks who fail to follow the practice could reach into the hundreds.While the lack of uniformity could create legal issues, clerks say a blanket curing requirement could be difficult to implement if courts maintain the state’s 8 p.m. Election Day deadline for receiving ballots as the deadline to cure those ballots, too. In 2024, Milwaukee received about 150 mail ballots just minutes before polls closed. At that late hour, it would have been virtually impossible for officials to notify those voters about any deficiencies with their ballots — much less give them a chance to cure them before the polls closed.Size and resource disparities between Wisconsin’s many municipalities would also present challenges to a uniform curing system. A part-time clerk working from home in a small rural town operates with dramatically fewer resources than election officials in Milwaukee, where thousands of absentee ballots can arrive on Election Day. Resources in both settings would be stretched by a uniform curing requirement, depending on how courts ultimately require it to be implemented. If courts grant the league some version of the relief it is seeking, questions about how the process would work in practice could also be settled in court.Marathon County Clerk Kim Trueblood, a Republican, said another complicating factor for clerks is that Wisconsin’s voter registration form doesn’t require registrants to provide their email addresses and phone numbers.Trueblood said she already tells the 60 municipal clerks in the county to try to cure ballots, but that process is harder when voters don’t provide contact information or when ballots are returned on Election Day. Requiring voters to provide their contact information would make a curing requirement a lot easier to comply with, she said.If such a requirement were imposed ahead of this year’s midterms, Trueblood said, bigger villages and cities would likely have the staff and resources to contact every voter, but for town clerks who work a different full-time job and spend just a few hours working as a clerk on weekends and evenings, “it could be a little more challenging.”Curing lawsuits play out in Wisconsin and across the nationBallot curing practices vary widely across the country. Some states don’t allow curing at all. Others allow voters to cure absentee ballots well after Election Day if they’re missing a date, signature, address or something else. As arguments over voting practices increasingly head to court, lawsuits over ballot curing have played out across the nation. In Pennsylvania, for example, ballot curing is neither required nor prohibited under state law. Similar to Wisconsin, different counties have different curing practices — some allow voters to cure their ballots, while others don’t.In North Carolina, a robust curing process was created as the result of a lawsuit that mirrors the one in Wisconsin. It was brought by the League of Women Voters of North Carolina, among other groups, and relied on a similar allegation: that the lack of a statewide-mandated procedure to cure absentee ballots amounted to a denial of voters’ right to due process under the U.S. Constitution. The lawsuit resulted in a settlement that created a curing requirement in every county. Now, voters have up to three days after Election Day to cure issues on their ballot.The ballot rejection rate has dropped dramatically as a result of the case, said Joselle Torres, a spokesperson for Democracy North Carolina, a voting rights group that joined the state’s league chapter in the case. But she added that state and local funding is crucial to educate poll workers, voters, and other election officials about the changes — “and that’s no small fee.”Marc Meredith, a political science professor at the University of Pennsylvania who researched ballot curing in North Carolina in the wake of the settlement, said he had initially expected under 50% of voters to fix their ballot or vote a new one. But ultimately, about 82% of the 26,000 voters eligible to cure their ballots did so. Many opted to vote a new ballot in person rather than fix their old one, he said.Curing has potential benefits but also challenges in WisconsinThe drastic increase in the number of voters curing their ballots in North Carolina may not be replicated in Wisconsin, where many municipalities already have curing notifications and procedures in place.Another difference is that North Carolina has 100 counties running elections, whereas Wisconsin has about 1,850 municipalities doing so. That could complicate implementation, Meredith said, because the same procedures would need to work in places ranging from Milwaukee to towns with 100 residents. “In the places that aren’t currently curing,” he added. “I would expect lots of voters would take opportunities to make corrections.”That issue of municipalities not curing ballots is especially pronounced in rural Wisconsin, Cronmiller said. There, part-time clerks don’t always have the bandwidth to return ballots to voters ahead of Election Day, she said. If courts call for a more stringent curing requirement, Cronmiller added, “it would force all municipalities to give resources sufficient to their clerks so they could do this work.”A requirement for clerks to tell voters can create practical issues in bigger cities, too, especially those that can receive thousands of ballots on Election Day.To get every last ballot cured, Wisconsin would likely have to implement a cure deadline after Election Day, Meredith said. “You don’t want to let the perfect be the enemy of the good, is my opinion on these things,” Meredith said. “There are going to be some things that will slip through the cracks, but … don’t let the fact that a few might slip through the cracks prevent you from putting that system in that way that would help the rest.”At the highest level, the League of Women Voters is seeking a declaration that Wisconsin’s discretionary ballot-curing law violates the state constitution, said Nina Beck, a counsel at the Fair Elections Center, which represents the league in Wisconsin and also represented the North Carolina league chapter in its lawsuit to create ballot-curing there. What’s required under the due process clause of the Wisconsin Constitution, Beck said, is adequate notice and the ability to cure a defect if clerks are otherwise denying people their fundamental right to vote. Instead, right now, clerks are dealing with curing in many different ways and may even be treating voters within the same municipality differently, she said. “That’s fundamentally unfair.”If the court sides with the league, the group will ask the court to set a uniform procedure for all clerks to follow, Beck said, adding that the current system is “kind of a free-for-all.” Alexander Shur is a reporter for Votebeat based in Wisconsin. Contact Alexander at ashur@votebeat.org.
11 minutes
Votebeat is a nonprofit news organization reporting on voting access and election administration across the U.S. Sign up for Votebeat Wisconsin’s free newsletter here.The League of Women Voters of Wisconsin is challenging the state’s law governing voters’ ability to fix missing information on their absentee ballots, alleging that the law violates the Wisconsin Constitution by giving clerks a vast amount of discretion over whether to reject ballots.The group is asking a Dane County judge to require all clerks to provide voters notice when an absentee ballot certificate is lacking necessary information — such as a signature or the address of a voter or the person who witnessed the ballot’s casting — and give them an opportunity to add that information before rejecting the ballot, a process known as “curing” the ballot.Right now, the law tells clerks that they “may” return incomplete absentee ballots to voters. That results in some municipal clerks sending voters prompt notice about faulty ballots, while other clerks put those ballots in the rejected pile without informing the voter at all, the lawsuit states. Municipalities also treat absentee ballots differently depending on when they receive them, the lawsuit alleges, and those that arrive closer to Election Day often have a lesser chance of getting cured.The lawsuit, which names the Wisconsin Elections Commission as the defendant, argues that, without a blanket curing requirement, “mail-in absentee ballots are jeopardized by the lack of mandatory notice and curing opportunities across the state.”This case, which comes a few months ahead of Wisconsin’s 2026 primary election, is the latest in a long line of lawsuits over what to do when information is missing on absentee ballot certificates. In recent years, courts have allowed clerks to use their discretion to determine what constitutes a proper witness address but taken away their ability to fix missing information on the address form.“Right now, we have ballots that come in weeks ahead of the election, and they’re being set aside for rejection with no attempt by the clerk to contact the voter,” Debra Cronmiller, executive director of the League of Women Voters of Wisconsin, told Votebeat. “If even one clerk is not curing ballots, that’s one clerk too many in a democratic system where voting is an absolute right,” Cronmiller said, adding that the number of clerks who fail to follow the practice could reach into the hundreds.While the lack of uniformity could create legal issues, clerks say a blanket curing requirement could be difficult to implement if courts maintain the state’s 8 p.m. Election Day deadline for receiving ballots as the deadline to cure those ballots, too. In 2024, Milwaukee received about 150 mail ballots just minutes before polls closed. At that late hour, it would have been virtually impossible for officials to notify those voters about any deficiencies with their ballots — much less give them a chance to cure them before the polls closed.Size and resource disparities between Wisconsin’s many municipalities would also present challenges to a uniform curing system. A part-time clerk working from home in a small rural town operates with dramatically fewer resources than election officials in Milwaukee, where thousands of absentee ballots can arrive on Election Day. Resources in both settings would be stretched by a uniform curing requirement, depending on how courts ultimately require it to be implemented. If courts grant the league some version of the relief it is seeking, questions about how the process would work in practice could also be settled in court.Marathon County Clerk Kim Trueblood, a Republican, said another complicating factor for clerks is that Wisconsin’s voter registration form doesn’t require registrants to provide their email addresses and phone numbers.Trueblood said she already tells the 60 municipal clerks in the county to try to cure ballots, but that process is harder when voters don’t provide contact information or when ballots are returned on Election Day. Requiring voters to provide their contact information would make a curing requirement a lot easier to comply with, she said.If such a requirement were imposed ahead of this year’s midterms, Trueblood said, bigger villages and cities would likely have the staff and resources to contact every voter, but for town clerks who work a different full-time job and spend just a few hours working as a clerk on weekends and evenings, “it could be a little more challenging.”Curing lawsuits play out in Wisconsin and across the nationBallot curing practices vary widely across the country. Some states don’t allow curing at all. Others allow voters to cure absentee ballots well after Election Day if they’re missing a date, signature, address or something else. As arguments over voting practices increasingly head to court, lawsuits over ballot curing have played out across the nation. In Pennsylvania, for example, ballot curing is neither required nor prohibited under state law. Similar to Wisconsin, different counties have different curing practices — some allow voters to cure their ballots, while others don’t.In North Carolina, a robust curing process was created as the result of a lawsuit that mirrors the one in Wisconsin. It was brought by the League of Women Voters of North Carolina, among other groups, and relied on a similar allegation: that the lack of a statewide-mandated procedure to cure absentee ballots amounted to a denial of voters’ right to due process under the U.S. Constitution. The lawsuit resulted in a settlement that created a curing requirement in every county. Now, voters have up to three days after Election Day to cure issues on their ballot.The ballot rejection rate has dropped dramatically as a result of the case, said Joselle Torres, a spokesperson for Democracy North Carolina, a voting rights group that joined the state’s league chapter in the case. But she added that state and local funding is crucial to educate poll workers, voters, and other election officials about the changes — “and that’s no small fee.”Marc Meredith, a political science professor at the University of Pennsylvania who researched ballot curing in North Carolina in the wake of the settlement, said he had initially expected under 50% of voters to fix their ballot or vote a new one. But ultimately, about 82% of the 26,000 voters eligible to cure their ballots did so. Many opted to vote a new ballot in person rather than fix their old one, he said.Curing has potential benefits but also challenges in WisconsinThe drastic increase in the number of voters curing their ballots in North Carolina may not be replicated in Wisconsin, where many municipalities already have curing notifications and procedures in place.Another difference is that North Carolina has 100 counties running elections, whereas Wisconsin has about 1,850 municipalities doing so. That could complicate implementation, Meredith said, because the same procedures would need to work in places ranging from Milwaukee to towns with 100 residents. “In the places that aren’t currently curing,” he added. “I would expect lots of voters would take opportunities to make corrections.”That issue of municipalities not curing ballots is especially pronounced in rural Wisconsin, Cronmiller said. There, part-time clerks don’t always have the bandwidth to return ballots to voters ahead of Election Day, she said. If courts call for a more stringent curing requirement, Cronmiller added, “it would force all municipalities to give resources sufficient to their clerks so they could do this work.”A requirement for clerks to tell voters can create practical issues in bigger cities, too, especially those that can receive thousands of ballots on Election Day.To get every last ballot cured, Wisconsin would likely have to implement a cure deadline after Election Day, Meredith said. “You don’t want to let the perfect be the enemy of the good, is my opinion on these things,” Meredith said. “There are going to be some things that will slip through the cracks, but … don’t let the fact that a few might slip through the cracks prevent you from putting that system in that way that would help the rest.”At the highest level, the League of Women Voters is seeking a declaration that Wisconsin’s discretionary ballot-curing law violates the state constitution, said Nina Beck, a counsel at the Fair Elections Center, which represents the league in Wisconsin and also represented the North Carolina league chapter in its lawsuit to create ballot-curing there. What’s required under the due process clause of the Wisconsin Constitution, Beck said, is adequate notice and the ability to cure a defect if clerks are otherwise denying people their fundamental right to vote. Instead, right now, clerks are dealing with curing in many different ways and may even be treating voters within the same municipality differently, she said. “That’s fundamentally unfair.”If the court sides with the league, the group will ask the court to set a uniform procedure for all clerks to follow, Beck said, adding that the current system is “kind of a free-for-all.” Alexander Shur is a reporter for Votebeat based in Wisconsin. Contact Alexander at ashur@votebeat.org.
12 minutes
Hai dúas semanas dous torques e o brazalete de ouro, de posible orixe castrexa e procedentes dunha colección particular galega, foron vendidos nunha poxa realizada pola casa Ansorena por un total de 210.000 euros
12 minutes
Hai dúas semanas dous torques e o brazalete de ouro, de posible orixe castrexa e procedentes dunha colección particular galega, foron vendidos nunha poxa realizada pola casa Ansorena por un total de 210.000 euros
13 minutes
Više javno tužilaštvo u Beogradu saopštilo je u utorak da posmrtni ostaci, koji su pronađeni 21. maja, pripadaju muškarcu A.N, u slučaju zbog kojeg je uhapšen i načelnik beogradske policije. Kako se navodi u saopštenju Institut za sudsku medicinu "Milovan Milovanović" je 26. maja dostavio Tužilaštvu zapisnik o izvršenoj identifikaciji posmrtnih ostataka koji su pronađeni u buretu na teritoriji Opštine Inđija, 60 km severno od Beograda. "DNK analizom utvrđeno je da se radi o A.N. čiji je...
Više javno tužilaštvo u Beogradu saopštilo je u utorak da posmrtni ostaci, koji su pronađeni 21. maja, pripadaju muškarcu A.N, u slučaju zbog kojeg je uhapšen i načelnik beogradske policije. Kako se navodi u saopštenju Institut za sudsku medicinu "Milovan Milovanović" je 26. maja dostavio Tužilaštvu zapisnik o izvršenoj identifikaciji posmrtnih ostataka koji su pronađeni u buretu na teritoriji Opštine Inđija, 60 km severno od Beograda. "DNK analizom utvrđeno je da se radi o A.N. čiji je...
13 minutes
Președinta R.Moldova, Maia Sandu, a convocat, marți, Consiliul Național de Securitate (CNS) care a analizat situația energetică a țării, în contextul riscurilor legate de tensiunile internaționale și al evoluțiilor de pe piețele externe, precum și măsurile necesare pentru asigurarea securității energetice a țării în perioada următoare.
Președinta R.Moldova, Maia Sandu, a convocat, marți, Consiliul Național de Securitate (CNS) care a analizat situația energetică a țării, în contextul riscurilor legate de tensiunile internaționale și al evoluțiilor de pe piețele externe, precum și măsurile necesare pentru asigurarea securității energetice a țării în perioada următoare.
13 minutes

Live coverage of the 2026 Mackinac Policy Conference begins at 2:15 pm. Mike Duggan is scheduled to speak at 5:30 pm.

Live coverage of the 2026 Mackinac Policy Conference begins at 2:15 pm. Mike Duggan is scheduled to speak at 5:30 pm.
13 minutes
California has led the nation in identifying hearing loss in newborns. It should not then leave families to fend for themselves to get treatment.
California has led the nation in identifying hearing loss in newborns. It should not then leave families to fend for themselves to get treatment.
15 minutes
Partîyên Kurdistana Rojhilat daxwaz kir ku agirbesta di navbera Îran û Amerîkayê de, Herêma Kurdistanê jî di nava xwe de bihewîne, eger weha nebe ew ê têkoşîna xwe ya çekdarî bibin nav axa Rojhilatê Kurdistanê.
15 minutes
Partîyên Kurdistana Rojhilat daxwaz kir ku agirbesta di navbera Îran û Amerîkayê de, Herêma Kurdistanê jî di nava xwe de bihewîne, eger weha nebe ew ê têkoşîna xwe ya çekdarî bibin nav axa Rojhilatê Kurdistanê.
18 minutes
Plentziako ikastetxe horretako irakasleek bi elkarretaratze egin dituzte egoera salatzeko, eta Hezkuntza Sailari egotzi diote irakasleak «babesgabe» uztea. Haien arabera, «mehatxuak, erasoak eta umiliazoak» ohiko bihurtu dira.
Plentziako ikastetxe horretako irakasleek bi elkarretaratze egin dituzte egoera salatzeko, eta Hezkuntza Sailari egotzi diote irakasleak «babesgabe» uztea. Haien arabera, «mehatxuak, erasoak eta umiliazoak» ohiko bihurtu dira.
18 minutes
سێنتکۆم ئەو هەواڵانە ڕەتدەکاتەوە کە باس لەوە دەکەن هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا دەستیان کردبێتەوە بە یاوەریکردنی کەشتییە بازرگانییەکان بۆ پاراستنیان لەکاتی تێپەڕبوونیان بە تەنگەی هورمزدا. فەرماندەیی ناوەندی ئەمەریکا، سێنتکۆم لە پەیامێکدا لە تۆڕی کۆمەڵایەتی ئێکس ڕایگەیاندووە ئەو بانگەشانەی کە لە هەندێک میدیادا دەکرێن کە گوایا هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا ئەرکی بەڕێوبردن یان هاوکاریکردنی کەشتییە بازرگانییەکانی دەستپێکردووەتەوە بۆ ئەوەی بە تەنگەی هورمزدا تێپەڕن، درۆیە. سێنتکۆم جەختی لەوە کردووەتەوە...
سێنتکۆم ئەو هەواڵانە ڕەتدەکاتەوە کە باس لەوە دەکەن هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا دەستیان کردبێتەوە بە یاوەریکردنی کەشتییە بازرگانییەکان بۆ پاراستنیان لەکاتی تێپەڕبوونیان بە تەنگەی هورمزدا. فەرماندەیی ناوەندی ئەمەریکا، سێنتکۆم لە پەیامێکدا لە تۆڕی کۆمەڵایەتی ئێکس ڕایگەیاندووە ئەو بانگەشانەی کە لە هەندێک میدیادا دەکرێن کە گوایا هێزی دەریایی ئەمەریکا ئەرکی بەڕێوبردن یان هاوکاریکردنی کەشتییە بازرگانییەکانی دەستپێکردووەتەوە بۆ ئەوەی بە تەنگەی هورمزدا تێپەڕن، درۆیە. سێنتکۆم جەختی لەوە کردووەتەوە...
19 minutes
В поселке Ропша Ленинградской области ищут 41-летнего Андрея Кийко, известного как «сосновский маньяк». В розыске участвуют подразделения Минобороны и полиции. Жители Ропши видели человека в штатском, который показывал прохожим на улице ориентировку с фотографией Кийко, сообщают издания 47 news и «Фонтанка».
В поселке Ропша Ленинградской области ищут 41-летнего Андрея Кийко, известного как «сосновский маньяк». В розыске участвуют подразделения Минобороны и полиции. Жители Ропши видели человека в штатском, который показывал прохожим на улице ориентировку с фотографией Кийко, сообщают издания 47 news и «Фонтанка».
20 minutes
A memória das lutas populares de Contagem, na Região Metropolitana de Belo Horizonte (RMBH), ganhou um novo instrumento de registro e valorização. No dia 14 de maio, a prefeitura realizou o seminário de apresentação da Cartografia dos Movimentos Sociais e Sindicais da cidade, iniciativa construída em parceria com a Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG) […] Fonte
20 minutes
A memória das lutas populares de Contagem, na Região Metropolitana de Belo Horizonte (RMBH), ganhou um novo instrumento de registro e valorização. No dia 14 de maio, a prefeitura realizou o seminário de apresentação da Cartografia dos Movimentos Sociais e Sindicais da cidade, iniciativa construída em parceria com a Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG) […] Fonte
21 minutes
Gontzal Agote Le crime du 3e étage filmaz mintzatu da Gontzal Records Irrati Plazako zinema atalean
21 minutes
Gontzal Agote Le crime du 3e étage filmaz mintzatu da Gontzal Records Irrati Plazako zinema atalean
22 minutes
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.A decade ago, New York City officials promised that all schools would have access to “meaningful” computer science education by this school year.Computer Science for All, known as CS4All, also had particular equity goals of reaching girls and students of color.The share of students enrolled in computer science classes has quadrupled from roughly 5.5%, or 54,000, in 2016, to 20%, or more than 193,000, in 2024. And CS4All made gains in growing the number of underrepresented students. Still, just 1 in 5 schools citywide are meeting CS4All’s goals for girls, Latinos, and Black students, according to a data brief released Tuesday from the Center for an Urban Future, a New York City-based think tank.Though the initiative “still has unfinished business,” the timing is also ripe for CS4All 2.0, said Eli Dvorkin, the center’s editorial and policy director, who believes that the city’s education system needs to rethink its approach to computer science in the age of artificial intelligence. “Just because entry-level coding work is in serious decline, it doesn’t mean that demand for computational thinking is going away,” Dvorkin said. Instead, “every teacher should be able to prepare young people to think critically and solve problems and use judgement on whether and when to use AI tools and how they work and why.”He acknowledged the “understandable concerns” many parents have about how much screen time their children are spending in school. But he believes that “evidence-based” computer science education is an antidote to passive screen time.“I think there’s a very real chance that Mayor [Zohran] Mamdani’s legacy will be shaped in part by how our public school system adapts to the AI era,” Dvorkin said, “and that means a strategy to a retool computational-thinking education for the world we inhabit right now.”This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity. There’s been some progress in the number of computer science classes offered in the city, but did the program meet the goals outlined 10 years ago? New York City has done something genuinely impressive. More than 90% of schools now offer computer science, up from a tiny handful a decade ago, but access is not the same thing as participation. Our data shows that just 20% of student students were actually enrolled in computer science classes.The data also shows that the city is still pretty far from the original promise of computer science for all: Just about 19% of schools are meeting CS4all equity and participation goals. So that’s why now is the time for the Mamdani administration to launch a CS4all 2.0 that should focus on closing the gaps that remain in participation, equity, and teacher preparation, and move toward integrating computational thinking across the curriculum.Now that we’re at the 10-year mark, is the program over?At the school-level and even centrally, there’s still an effort underway to continue to build on the work of CS4all, but in terms of a unifying centralized effort to advance this work, learning from the successes in the challenges of the first decade, and charting a path forward for the next one, we’re not there yet.And this is a risky moment for the country ‘s largest public school system to be without an organizing effort around computing education.The school system did put out some preliminary guidance around the use of AI in schools. It’s important work. But this is, I think, the even bigger challenge: What should the New York City public school system’s computing education strategy look like in the AI-era? The goal can’t simply be to teach some students to code in 11th through 12th grade. In fact, that kind of technical knowledge may be in rapid freefall right now with the rise of generative AI. But AI also raises the bar for embedding computational thinking across the whole curriculum so that every young person learns how to think critically and ask hard questions and solve problems with computers. That’s the only way to ensure that our young people are able to graduate from high school capable of fully understanding these powerful systems that are shaping our lives. Computer science education can’t just mean a coding elective for some. As you say, the city’s AI framework is one piece. But how we educate kids should be an urgent part of this conversation, too, especially as we see the world changing and the job force changing.It feels like a lot of the conversation is focused on being for or against technology. At a time when AI tools are flooding into students’ lives both at school and at home, the answer isn’t simply more devices or more apps. I think most parents and teachers would agree, it’s certainly not more screen time. But it is deeper computational fluency — the ability to understand, question, and shape technology rather than just consume it. That’s computing education done right. I think there’s a misperception that advocating for evidence-based, age-appropriate, and even joyful computing education is simply synonymous with more screen time. That couldn’t be further from the truth. But we need a teaching workforce in New York City that is equipped to integrate computational thinking — the building blocks of computing education— into every young person’s classroom experience. I think a lot of people — perhaps even teachers — would be surprised that you can teach computational thinking without screens. There’s a growing body of evidence that shows the dangers of exposing young children to too much screen time. But that doesn’t mean deferring computing education until later. That means we have to be much more creative about how we can integrate a computing education into classroom settings without screens.There is a program at CUNY’s colleges of education called CITE — computing integrated teacher education. And what CITE does is equip CUNY professors that are teaching our future K-12 teachers to integrate computational thinking and learning into their pedagogy. The power of this model is pretty profound because about a third of all new public school teachers in New York City every year are hired out of CUNY. We’re now at a point where the first participants in CITE programs have actually been entering the classroom as student teachers or they’re beginning their first full-time teaching assignments. With the screen time and AI backlash, do you think there will be an appetite to push for CS4all 2.0?I think the backlash against screen time actually strengthens the case for CS4all 2.0. Parents are right to worry about passive, addictive, and poorly governed technology use in our classrooms. But the answer is not to leave students less prepared to understand technology, it’s to teach them how technology really works, how to question it, think critically about it, and how to use it responsibly and creatively. So one key question is: Are New York City public school students going to be the people of the future who will shape how that technology is created and deployed?I think the argument is strong that our future economy will only become more bifurcated between roles that require sophisticated computational thinking skills — including the critical thinking and judgment skills that should be an essential part of a CS4all 2.0 — and low wage work that does not pay enough to enable New Yorkers to afford life in the most expensive city in America. Amy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy atazimmer@chalkbeat.org.
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.A decade ago, New York City officials promised that all schools would have access to “meaningful” computer science education by this school year.Computer Science for All, known as CS4All, also had particular equity goals of reaching girls and students of color.The share of students enrolled in computer science classes has quadrupled from roughly 5.5%, or 54,000, in 2016, to 20%, or more than 193,000, in 2024. And CS4All made gains in growing the number of underrepresented students. Still, just 1 in 5 schools citywide are meeting CS4All’s goals for girls, Latinos, and Black students, according to a data brief released Tuesday from the Center for an Urban Future, a New York City-based think tank.Though the initiative “still has unfinished business,” the timing is also ripe for CS4All 2.0, said Eli Dvorkin, the center’s editorial and policy director, who believes that the city’s education system needs to rethink its approach to computer science in the age of artificial intelligence. “Just because entry-level coding work is in serious decline, it doesn’t mean that demand for computational thinking is going away,” Dvorkin said. Instead, “every teacher should be able to prepare young people to think critically and solve problems and use judgement on whether and when to use AI tools and how they work and why.”He acknowledged the “understandable concerns” many parents have about how much screen time their children are spending in school. But he believes that “evidence-based” computer science education is an antidote to passive screen time.“I think there’s a very real chance that Mayor [Zohran] Mamdani’s legacy will be shaped in part by how our public school system adapts to the AI era,” Dvorkin said, “and that means a strategy to a retool computational-thinking education for the world we inhabit right now.”This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity. There’s been some progress in the number of computer science classes offered in the city, but did the program meet the goals outlined 10 years ago? New York City has done something genuinely impressive. More than 90% of schools now offer computer science, up from a tiny handful a decade ago, but access is not the same thing as participation. Our data shows that just 20% of student students were actually enrolled in computer science classes.The data also shows that the city is still pretty far from the original promise of computer science for all: Just about 19% of schools are meeting CS4all equity and participation goals. So that’s why now is the time for the Mamdani administration to launch a CS4all 2.0 that should focus on closing the gaps that remain in participation, equity, and teacher preparation, and move toward integrating computational thinking across the curriculum.Now that we’re at the 10-year mark, is the program over?At the school-level and even centrally, there’s still an effort underway to continue to build on the work of CS4all, but in terms of a unifying centralized effort to advance this work, learning from the successes in the challenges of the first decade, and charting a path forward for the next one, we’re not there yet.And this is a risky moment for the country ‘s largest public school system to be without an organizing effort around computing education.The school system did put out some preliminary guidance around the use of AI in schools. It’s important work. But this is, I think, the even bigger challenge: What should the New York City public school system’s computing education strategy look like in the AI-era? The goal can’t simply be to teach some students to code in 11th through 12th grade. In fact, that kind of technical knowledge may be in rapid freefall right now with the rise of generative AI. But AI also raises the bar for embedding computational thinking across the whole curriculum so that every young person learns how to think critically and ask hard questions and solve problems with computers. That’s the only way to ensure that our young people are able to graduate from high school capable of fully understanding these powerful systems that are shaping our lives. Computer science education can’t just mean a coding elective for some. As you say, the city’s AI framework is one piece. But how we educate kids should be an urgent part of this conversation, too, especially as we see the world changing and the job force changing.It feels like a lot of the conversation is focused on being for or against technology. At a time when AI tools are flooding into students’ lives both at school and at home, the answer isn’t simply more devices or more apps. I think most parents and teachers would agree, it’s certainly not more screen time. But it is deeper computational fluency — the ability to understand, question, and shape technology rather than just consume it. That’s computing education done right. I think there’s a misperception that advocating for evidence-based, age-appropriate, and even joyful computing education is simply synonymous with more screen time. That couldn’t be further from the truth. But we need a teaching workforce in New York City that is equipped to integrate computational thinking — the building blocks of computing education— into every young person’s classroom experience. I think a lot of people — perhaps even teachers — would be surprised that you can teach computational thinking without screens. There’s a growing body of evidence that shows the dangers of exposing young children to too much screen time. But that doesn’t mean deferring computing education until later. That means we have to be much more creative about how we can integrate a computing education into classroom settings without screens.There is a program at CUNY’s colleges of education called CITE — computing integrated teacher education. And what CITE does is equip CUNY professors that are teaching our future K-12 teachers to integrate computational thinking and learning into their pedagogy. The power of this model is pretty profound because about a third of all new public school teachers in New York City every year are hired out of CUNY. We’re now at a point where the first participants in CITE programs have actually been entering the classroom as student teachers or they’re beginning their first full-time teaching assignments. With the screen time and AI backlash, do you think there will be an appetite to push for CS4all 2.0?I think the backlash against screen time actually strengthens the case for CS4all 2.0. Parents are right to worry about passive, addictive, and poorly governed technology use in our classrooms. But the answer is not to leave students less prepared to understand technology, it’s to teach them how technology really works, how to question it, think critically about it, and how to use it responsibly and creatively. So one key question is: Are New York City public school students going to be the people of the future who will shape how that technology is created and deployed?I think the argument is strong that our future economy will only become more bifurcated between roles that require sophisticated computational thinking skills — including the critical thinking and judgment skills that should be an essential part of a CS4all 2.0 — and low wage work that does not pay enough to enable New Yorkers to afford life in the most expensive city in America. Amy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy atazimmer@chalkbeat.org.
22 minutes
Современный научный консенсус о том, что главным фактором глобального потепления является деятельность человека, складывался более двухсот лет. Как пишет Le Monde, этот путь оказался далеко не линейным: сначала потепление воспринимали скорее как благоприятное явление, затем учёные полагали, что океаны смогут поглотить избыток CO₂, позднее компьютерное моделирование показало, что естественных факторов недостаточно для объяснения происходящих изменений, а уже после усиления научного консенсуса возникло организованное климатоскептическое движение. Его, как отмечает газета, активно поддерживала часть нефтяной отрасли, а сегодня тезисы климатического скептицизма продолжают продвигать некоторые политики, в том числе президент США Дональд Трамп.
Современный научный консенсус о том, что главным фактором глобального потепления является деятельность человека, складывался более двухсот лет. Как пишет Le Monde, этот путь оказался далеко не линейным: сначала потепление воспринимали скорее как благоприятное явление, затем учёные полагали, что океаны смогут поглотить избыток CO₂, позднее компьютерное моделирование показало, что естественных факторов недостаточно для объяснения происходящих изменений, а уже после усиления научного консенсуса возникло организованное климатоскептическое движение. Его, как отмечает газета, активно поддерживала часть нефтяной отрасли, а сегодня тезисы климатического скептицизма продолжают продвигать некоторые политики, в том числе президент США Дональд Трамп.
22 minutes
A taxa de homicídios no Brasil chegou, em 2024, ao menor patamar desde o início da série histórica do Atlas da Violência, iniciada em 2014. A pesquisa é realizada anualmente pelo Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea) e pelo Fórum Brasileiro de Segurança Pública (FBSP) e foi divulgada nesta terça-feira (26). O país registrou 20,1 […] Fonte
A taxa de homicídios no Brasil chegou, em 2024, ao menor patamar desde o início da série histórica do Atlas da Violência, iniciada em 2014. A pesquisa é realizada anualmente pelo Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada (Ipea) e pelo Fórum Brasileiro de Segurança Pública (FBSP) e foi divulgada nesta terça-feira (26). O país registrou 20,1 […] Fonte
24 minutes

Në dy qytetet e Maqedonisë së Veriut të dielën do të luhen dy ndeshjet vendimtare për kualifikim në Ligën e Parë në futbollin e RMV-së. Në garë është Shkupi, Shkëndija e Haraçinës, AP Brera dhe Pelisteri, raporton Portalb.mk. Në Kavadar do të luhet ndeshja ndërmjet Pelisterit dhe Shkëndijës, ndërsa në Manastir ndeshja ndërmjet AP Brerës […]

24 minutes
Në dy qytetet e Maqedonisë së Veriut të dielën do të luhen dy ndeshjet vendimtare për kualifikim në Ligën e Parë në futbollin e RMV-së. Në garë është Shkupi, Shkëndija e Haraçinës, AP Brera dhe Pelisteri, raporton Portalb.mk. Në Kavadar do të luhet ndeshja ndërmjet Pelisterit dhe Shkëndijës, ndërsa në Manastir ndeshja ndërmjet AP Brerës […]
27 minutes

Semanas después de hacerse viral, el vídeo sobre síntomas de cáncer de pulmón llega con fuerza al Día Mundial Sin Tabaco.

Semanas después de hacerse viral, el vídeo sobre síntomas de cáncer de pulmón llega con fuerza al Día Mundial Sin Tabaco.
27 minutes
Dramatic images of glowing projectiles streaking down from space on May 24 marked the latest combat use of Russia's Oreshnik missile against Ukraine. Here is how the missile works, and why some of its payloads don't explode.
Dramatic images of glowing projectiles streaking down from space on May 24 marked the latest combat use of Russia's Oreshnik missile against Ukraine. Here is how the missile works, and why some of its payloads don't explode.