School and learning
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Province, treaty commission develop new Grade 12 course
4 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 20, 2026Social media companies face legal reckoning over mental health harms to children
7 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026Fossilized vomit provides insight on predator that lived 290 million years ago
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026City library visits up 28 per cent from 2022
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026Making the most of Winnipeg’s biggest opportunity
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026Maintenance isn’t enough — we have to build
5 minute read Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026For the third year in a row, the atmosphere in Manitoba’s staffrooms during the provincial school funding announcement has been one of cautious relief rather than the dread we came to expect for a decade.
As a high school teacher-librarian and a parent with a child in the public system, I want to begin by acknowledging the progress made.
After the lean, adversarial years of the Brian Pallister and Heather Stefanson governments, years defined by the looming threat of Bill 64 and funding increases that didn’t even cover the cost of a box of pencils, the current NDP government has chosen a different path.
This $79.8-million injection for the 2026-27 school year, building on the $104-million and $67-million investments of the previous two years, represents nearly a quarter-billion-dollar shift in how we value our children’s future. For the nutrition programs, the salary harmonization, and the simple act of treating educators as partners rather than enemies: thank you.
Movement, proper sleep crucial for brain health
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026Elmwood students’ clothing venture instils pride, breaks down stereotypes in blue-collar neighbourhood
8 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 13, 2026Canada’s university funding system is broken
5 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 13, 2026School nutrition program prompts student trash talk
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026Arviat, Nunavut chosen as main campus location for Inuit Nunangat University
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Feb. 12, 2026Full-day kindergarten returning to city’s largest school division in the fall
5 minute read Preview Friday, Feb. 6, 2026Building up engineers: RRC Polytech, U of M celebrate collaboration
3 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026City rejects one-minute school-zone limit
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2026Future students will be wired differently, thanks to AI
4 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 16, 2026Donning the vest: Young crossing guards take up safety tradition
6 minute read Preview Monday, Jan. 5, 2026Food support and education
4 minute read Monday, Jan. 5, 2026My kids, like millions of others across Canada, are heading back to school today. They’re going to have a chance to learn, play, and thrive.
Sadly, this is not the case for the approximately 250 million children who are not attending school, including one-third of children in lower income countries. There are multiple reasons for this. Many countries chronically underinvest in education. But for many children, hunger is keeping them from the classroom.
I have seen this many times in my work managing humanitarian food programming with Canadian Foodgrains Bank.
In some cases, children are kept from school to work or find food. Recently, a partner organization in Zimbabwe reported that children were being pulled from school to forage for wild foods as their families coped with drought. A partner in Yemen talked about how children had to spend their mornings begging for food in the market instead of going to school. Girls, in particular, are kept home to look for food or care for other children while their parents try to find work and food.
Higher school taxes a preventable problem
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2025Province promises ‘proactive approach’ to truancy fight
4 minute read Preview Monday, Nov. 24, 2025When we choose to look away, public education suffers
5 minute read Monday, Nov. 24, 2025In his gripping 2025 memoir, Hiding from the School Bus: Breaking Free from Control, Fear, Isolation and a Childhood Without Education, Calvin Bagley recounts the escape from an early life of deviance, denial and deprivation under the guise of homeschooling.