Education News

MPR News keeps track of the latest education news in Minnesota so you can understand the events shaping the future of learning and how it impacts students at any level.

Stay informed about local education events, policies and more happening in schools and colleges across Minnesota.

Want to get your kids into college? Let them play Every day where we work, we see our young students struggling with the transition from home to school. They’re all wonderful kids, but some can’t share easily or listen in a group. Some have impulse control problems and have trouble keeping their hands to themselves;…
University of North Dakota senior Gerbert tells CNBC what he doesn’t like about the “Higher One” debit card, which holds students’ excess financial aid for a charge: “I don’t like the fact that someone’s taking money from money I borrowed.” CNBC also asks: Is it wise to outfit students with a card that lets them…
Why that instructor-edition textbook is valuable
This Minnesota Daily story sounds like a twist on the textbook market shenanigans I wrote about in October: Some entrepreneurs buy instructor editions at 20 cents on the dollar and re-sell them to distributors at more than triple that price, said Richard Hull, executive director of the Text and Academic Authors Association.
Memorial service today for St. Thomas professor who died in Christmas Day fall
The University of St. Thomas news service reports that a memorial service will be held this evening for John Rohwer, chair of the St. Thomas Health and Human Performance Department, who died Christmas Day after he fell off his roof while shoveling snow. He was 64. The memorial service will be at 6:30 p.m. at King…
Blogger Justin Cox quotes Dirty Jobs host Mike Rowe on how “alternatives” to college have gotten a bad rap in the past few decades — and why that’s hurting us: “Anything that’s not a four-year degree has become alternative. Once upon a time, alternative meant another way to get to the place you’d like to…
Lumina Foundation senior adviser Gordon Davies writes in The Huffington Post why the “best” higher-ed institutions have had to abandon their original mission of serving the public and instead become “engines of inequality”: The formerly blue-collar commuter institution now is a flashy residential university seeking a high place in a magazine’s ratings. The land grant…
Most Schools Violate Free Speech Act, New Study Shows Two thirds of colleges maintain speech codes that violate students’ First Amendment rights, according to a new report released by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE). (Huffington Post) On Average, Students Check Phones 1 To 5 Times During Class College students use cell phones…
American RadioWorks: Testing Teachers
Teachers matter. A lot. Studies show that students with the best teachers learn three times as much as students with the worst teachers. Politicians and education reformers are calling for big changes in how teachers are trained and evaluated - and in the way teachers are hired and fired too. Midday reprises the American RadioWorks documentary, "Testing Teachers."
American RadioWorks: Testing Teachers
Teachers matter. A lot. Studies show that students with the best teachers learn three times as much as students with the worst teachers. Politicians and education reformers are calling for big changes in how teachers are trained and evaluated - and in the way teachers are hired and fired too. Midday reprises the American RadioWorks documentary, "Testing Teachers."
American RadioWorks: Testing Teachers
Teachers matter. A lot. Studies show that students with the best teachers learn three times as much as students with the worst teachers. Politicians and education reformers are calling for big changes in how teachers are trained and evaluated - and in the way teachers are hired and fired too. Midday reprises the American RadioWorks documentary, "Testing Teachers."