Tag Archives: Education

OPINION | The History and Heritage of Asian and Pacific Islander Communities Belong in Our Classrooms

by Kyle Kinoshita


May is Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Among the many celebrations, it’s a time to honor family histories and learn from how our ancestors met and overcame the challenges of landing on these shores from their home countries. It’s also time to ensure these valuable stories are known to future generations of learners — meaning all students, not just those in our communities.

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YouthBuild: Where Young Adults Learn the Building Trades and Build Their Lives

by Lauryn Bray


In Building B of South Seattle College’s Georgetown Campus, a cohort of young adults meets Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. to participate in a national program designed to put them on a path to career success. YouthBuild is a pre-apprenticeship certification program for 18–24 year olds who are interested in specializing in a particular trade. Over a span of six months, the collective will be introduced to a variety of different trades such as carpentry, ironwork, electrical, and welding.

“The first part of the program is for folks who haven’t completed a high school diploma or GED. So for that crew especially, the information they have coming in is ‘I do not like traditional education but I like working with my hands.’ That’s all you need, honestly,’” said Jamie Pinilla-O’Dea, a program manager for YouthCare Seattle.

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OPINION | Sen. Murray’s Legacy: Funding Gaza’s Tragedy

by Jen Greenstein


As an elementary school social worker, doing my taxes this year involves a horrifying cognitive dissonance. How can it be that my tax money, earned from supporting students in Seattle, is funding the 2,000-ton bombs dropping on schools, hospitals, refugee camps, and homes in Gaza?

Over the past four months, the Israeli military has killed more than 12,000 children in Gaza. Israel’s offensive has orphaned or separated over 17,000 children from their families. In early February, Sen. Patty Murray, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, voted to send the Israeli military an additional $14.1 billion — even after the International Court of Justice investigated Israel for plausibly committing genocide and ordered Israel to take immediate steps to protect civilians in Gaza. How can my country do this in my name, as a Jew? And how can it be that Sen. Murray — a self-professed “mom in tennis shoes,” grandmother, and former preschool teacher — is signing the check?

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NEWS GLEAMS | Biden’s State of the Union Speech; No Criminal Charges for SPD Officer in Death of Jaahnavi Kandula

A roundup of news and announcements we don’t want to get lost in the fast-churning news cycle!

by Vee Hua 華婷婷


Continue reading NEWS GLEAMS | Biden’s State of the Union Speech; No Criminal Charges for SPD Officer in Death of Jaahnavi Kandula

OPINION | Equitable Funding Is Essential for All Public School Students

by Karen Lobos


Rainier Prep is a charter public middle school just south of Seattle that is free, public, and open to all. We serve 335 students, 97% of whom identify as members of the Global Majority (i.e., Black, Brown, Indigenous, and other students of color) and 73% of whom are from families with limited incomes. For eight years, we have delivered on our community’s vision for an exceptional college-prep public middle school option with the flexibility to innovate and meet the needs of all of our students. By integrating a foundation for academic growth with a robust, personalized advising and coaching program, our students, families, and partners are working together to navigate best-fit pathways for success in high schools, degrees, and careers.

However, because charter public schools like ours are not entitled to local property tax levies and lack access to dedicated funding for facilities, our students receive approximately 25% less public funding than their peers in traditional public schools. Last year, we called on legislators to address this funding inequity and were provisioned with one year of enrichment funding for charter public school students in the state budget. We are grateful for this critical support, which has allowed us to continue serving our students, increasing their access to technology integration, field studies, and enrichment activities.

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Black Lives Matter at School Started in Seattle, Took Root Nationally, Continues With a Week of Action

by Nimra Ahmad


Black Lives Matter (BLM) at School begins its Week of Action today, Feb. 5 — a week for Seattle Public Schools to focus on empowering Black youth. The movement, now national, started in 2016 at John Muir Elementary School when, upon getting a bomb threat, administrators had to cancel an assembly designed to support its Black students.

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OPINION | Civil Rights Reflection: Decolonization and Desegregation

by Mark Epstein


With devastation raining down against the people of Gaza and recent movements to reexamine our past, more people are beginning to question if what we have been led to believe about U.S. history is based in truth or myth. On a recent Nation magazine tour of the South, visiting Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas, and meeting Elizabeth Eckford was a focal point for understanding how U.S. history has not been taught accurately. Instead, it has often been taught with great omission, and this impedes the recovery from racism and segregation today. States across the South, including Arkansas and Florida, are key battlegrounds for those trying to stop a re-examination of our past.

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OPINION | Not All Student Enrollment Is Created Equal

by Hailey Karcher


In October 2023, Dunlap Elementary School in South Seattle learned that they would have to let go of two of their classroom teachers due to less-than-predicted student enrollment. This had an outsized cascading effect on many students in the school, with split grade classes created, teachers shuffled to different classrooms, and students rearranged to account for this staff reduction. These disruptions happened, of course, after the tone-setting, norm-creating month of September had already passed; students, teachers, and administrators would have to reboot, altering everyone’s expectations for that year.

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