School and learning
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Trustee suspended for third time in three years
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2025Situation near school sparks safety concerns
4 minute read Thursday, Sep. 25, 2025Less than 100 metres away from an Elmwood elementary school’s front door, several bike wheels and frames lie around a front yard with garbage piled high in a shopping cart near the home’s fence.
Parents and staff at River Elm School are concerned for student safety due to suspicious activity at the home.
One school staffer, who the Free Press is not naming, has witnessed trucks full with scrap metal, eavestroughs and bikes idle outside the home. He also saw what he believed to be drug deals on and near the property.
“It’s become this twisted joke among staff that all of this is happening and no one is doing anything about it,” he said. “It’s a huge blight on the neighbourhood.”
Charges upgraded to attempted murder in summer sword attack
2 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 24, 2025A deal that will cost Manitobans dearly
4 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Premier Wab Kinew stood at a podium recently and proudly announced his government’s first major construction initiative: four new schools. But instead of celebrating good news for families and for the men and women who will build them. Manitobans should be alarmed.
Buried in the fanfare was a deal that hands monopoly control of these projects to a select group of building trades unions. This is not about better schools or stronger communities — it’s about rewarding political friends with a sweetheart deal that shuts out most of Manitoba’s construction industry.
Premier Kinew has given union leaders exactly what they wanted: guaranteed work and a stranglehold over projects funded by taxpayers. He is favouring 8,000 traditional building trades union workers and shutting out more than 80 per cent of the workers who work for open shop companies and progressive union workers.
The unfair and discriminatory treatment of the vast majority of construction workers in Manitoba who will be denied opportunities to work on government funded infrastructure is shocking. And Manitobans will bear the cost of this backroom deal. When governments restrict competition, taxpayers always pay more and get less.
Winnipegger’s artwork chosen for Walmart’s national Orange Shirt offering
5 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 22, 2025Canadian Women & Sport launches new campaign to keep girls playing in youth sports
4 minute read Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Half of Canadian girls drop out of organized sports by the time they're 17, according to Canadian Women & Sport.
But the non-profit organization has a plan to stop that from happening.
Canadian Women & Sport launched a national campaign called Get Girl Coached on Monday. It's designed to change how youth sports are run in an effort to keep girls involved.
The call to action is focused on listening to young female athletes about what they need to keep playing sports.
Domestic enrolment helped U of W’s fiscal health: president
4 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025‘You gave him purpose… gave him his freedom’: grateful mother from Colombia celebrates Sunshine Fund
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Province to reimburse Brandon school division for evacuee costs
2 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Stop the online world, I want to get off
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Kemp and Elizarov intend to keep the party going
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Alberta bans sexual images in school library books under revised order
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025ChatGPT — get away from my em dash
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 6, 2025Setting aside money for post-secondary education shouldn’t slip through budgeting cracks
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 6, 2025Los Angeles school district settles with parents who sued over distance learning
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025AI chatbots changing online threat landscape as Ottawa reviews legislation
8 minute read Preview Sunday, Sep. 21, 2025The defunded Corporation for Public Broadcasting will get one of TV’s biggest prizes
2 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 20, 2025Margaret Atwood takes aim at Alberta’s school library books ban with satirical story
3 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025These colleges are welcoming pets in dorms to reduce students’ stress and anxiety
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Federal judge refuses to block Alabama law banning DEI initiatives in public schools
3 minute read Thursday, Sep. 25, 2025A federal judge on Wednesday declined a request to block an Alabama law that bans diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in public schools and the teaching of what Republican lawmakers dubbed “divisive concepts” related to race and gender.
U.S. District Judge David Proctor wrote that University of Alabama students and professors who filed a lawsuit challenging the law as unconstitutional did not meet the legal burden required for a preliminary injunction, which he called “an extraordinary and drastic remedy.” The civil lawsuit challenging the statute will go forward, but the law will remain in place while it does.
The Alabama measure, which took effect Oct. 1, is part of a wave of proposals from Republican lawmakers across the country taking aim at DEI programs on college campuses.
The Alabama law prohibits public schools from funding or sponsoring any DEI program. It also prohibits schools from requiring students to assent to eight “divisive concepts” including that fault, blame or bias should be assigned to a race or sex or that any person should acknowledge a sense of guilt, complicity or a need to apologize because of their race, sex or national origin.