In the 爆走黑料

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ABC 爆走黑料

Faculty member Bob Abbott's research with the UW Social Development Research Group featured on ABC.

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ParentMap

Yev Veverka, teaching associate and practicum coordinator for the UW's Applied Behavior Analysis program, writes that families need more support in focusing first on navigating children鈥檚 emotional needs during the current crisis.

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Seattle Times

Online education that leads to a degree is becoming a bigger slice of the education business for Washington鈥檚 two major state universities. UW Online Early Childhood and Family Studies student Nicole Traore, who works at the Mukilteo Early Childhood Education Assistance Program in Lynnwood, is featured. 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 about changing the way I see things,鈥 Traore said about earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree at the age of 45. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to be able to support families (in the ECEAP program) in a better way. And, it鈥檚 personal because I always wanted to get my bachelor鈥檚 degree.

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KUOW Public Radio

Faculty member Robin DiAngelo, author of "White Fragility," discusses key concepts from her book.

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ParentMap

Professor discusses how schools and communities are working together to develop innovative, inclusive programs that bring families, teachers and school leaders together.

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Center For Humans & Nature

Emma Elliot-Groves, assistant professor in the 爆走黑料, joined with other educators to provide testimony that imagines a world that fosters stronger human relationships with each other and with the land. They argue that to do this we must first address the challenging contemporary global and national contexts that we are in and understand the paradigms that have led us to where we are. One of the key points made in this testimony is in support of the Indigenous long practiced forms of education in which land-based, play-based, intergenerational, and applied learning strategies have helped the next generation learn what it means to live in ethical and sustainable relationship with all living beings. They stress that these long-standing systems of education that have helped our children learn the full spectrum of what it means to be human, to live ethically, and to take care of one another have been interrupted by colonial models of education.

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Thrive by Five

The Experimental Education Unit of the 爆走黑料's is cited for its pioneering research in inclusive education and its work with the state of Washington's early education quality ratings and improvement program.

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The Salt Lake Tribune

Alumna Irene Yoon wrote an op-ed published in The Salt Lake Tribune urging leadership in Utah to advance educational equity. Specifically, Yoon urges state leadership to reject Utah State Administrative Rule 277-328, which could be interpreted as banning all discussions about race in the state's public education systems. "Learning about histories and structures of inequity is about honoring and learning from the past, good, bad and in between, so that we can dream a better future," she argues. Yoon is an associate professor of educational leadership and policy at the University of Utah.

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The International Examiner

Christine Tran discusses her journey to studying school nutrition as a graduate student in UW's program.

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Crosscut

The 爆走黑料鈥檚 Native Education Certificate Program was featured in a Crosscut article titled 鈥淎fter 7 years, WA tribal history curriculum still not fully implemented.鈥 In the article, Marjorie James, Tulalip Tribe鈥檚 curriculum and engagement manager, says she would like to see something like the UW Native Education Certificate Program implemented on a district level so that educators are being taught by leading Native education researchers. Overall, the article highlights how the state legislature has failed to allocate funding for Native education curriculum, so now the financial burden has been placed on Washington tribes and school districts.