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Florida rejected 35% of the social studies textbooks publishers hoped to sell to public schools this year and forced others to delete or change passages state leaders disliked, including ...
Selena Masse inspires seventh-graders to learn history through speakers and books about young people in tough situations.
Elementary students in Lafayette Parish should have new social studies textbooks when school starts again in August. The school board agreed Tuesday to allocate $850,000 for the new materials for ...
The Florida Department of Education on Tuesday released the initial list of social studies textbooks it approved — and rejected — for the upcoming school year, including approving a book where ...
May 16 (UPI) --The Florida Department of Education announced on April 10 that it had rejected 35% of the social studies books publishers submitted for approval and use in the state's public schools.
To review the state’s social studies books and provide feedback to the state Department of Education, visit flimadoption.org and sign up as a guest reviewer. ...
Florida has rejected dozens of social studies textbooks and worked with publishers to edit dozens more, the state’s education department announced on Tuesday, in the latest effort under Gov. Ron ...
Florida rejected 35% of the social studies textbooks publishers hoped to sell to public schools this year and forced others to delete or change passages state leaders disliked, including ...
Over six dozen Connecticut laws, including the state’s next budget and bond package, will wholly or partially take effect on ...
The Johnston Community School District Board of Education has approved materials to buy for an updated social studies curriculum — minus a handful of books that it believes could violate Iowa law.
The social-studies textbook Hall and her cohort rallied to keep is no longer available to Temecula students from kindergarten through grade five. Yet the fight against book bans is not simply an ...
Florida rejected 35% of the social studies textbooks publishers hoped to sell to public schools this year and forced others to delete or change passages state leaders disliked.