News for young children
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Rare red auroras dazzle as part of Manitoba light show
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025High score: Winnipeg Video Game Orchestra goes from joysticks to drumsticks
5 minute read Preview Monday, Nov. 10, 2025Hurrying hard for Jamaican flavours infusing West St. Paul Curling Club
7 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025Artificial art a threat to human creativity
4 minute read Preview Sunday, Nov. 9, 2025Our monuments, statues and memorials give form to honouring, grieving lives lost in war
14 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025Puppy Sphere yoga chain rolls out ‘mood-boosting’ first classes in Winnipeg
4 minute read Preview Friday, Nov. 7, 2025City tries to get the most bang for its (sewage) buck
4 minute read Preview Friday, Nov. 7, 2025Donation drive back on its feet after sock theft
3 minute read Preview Friday, Nov. 7, 2025Slime, Battleship and Trivial Pursuit join the Toy Hall of Fame
3 minute read Preview Monday, Nov. 10, 2025Invention of combine part reaps recognition in Time
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025It’s easy to take arts and culture for granted. Not because they don’t matter, but because they’re woven so deeply into our daily lives.
They’re in the stories we tell, the music in our earbuds, the festivals that bring neighbours into the streets and the murals that brighten our downtowns.
Arts and culture are part of who we are as Manitobans.
But the arts aren’t just “nice to have.” They’re essential. Especially right now.
No dog? No problem: Local program offers offices pup for a day
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025Winnipeg students develop critical aptitude essential for navigating media landscape
14 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025Trustees want say in school zone redesign
5 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025Dictionary.com’s word of the year is ‘6-7.’ But is it even a word and what does it mean?
3 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 31, 2025When the internet first arrived in the mid-1990s, it screeched. Literally.
It screamed its way into our homes through the telephone lines, a metallic cry that sounded like the future forcing its way through. We waited through the static, convinced that life was about to get easier. People said it would save us time, let us work from home and give us more hours with our families.
No one mentioned that it would also move into our bedrooms, our pockets and our dreams. No one could have imagined that it would change how we fight, how we march, how we plead for justice. That the fight for justice itself would become a digital labyrinth where truth moves slowly and attention moves fast.
Back then, when a heroine from a popular early-2000s television show was dumped with nothing but a handwritten note, it became a cultural tragedy. There was nothing noble about writing your cowardice on a Post-it. A few years later, a company fired hundreds by email and it made national news. Today, we “quietly quit” through apps without blinking, edit our grief into reels, add the music the app suggests and call it closure.