The articles today on the COVID lockdowns make clear that California’s draconian approach to school closures will have huge ...
We spoke with Laurie Halse Anderson, recipient of the 2023 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, about her new middle grade novel, ...
Parents of children with disabilities and complex medical needs have raised concerns about the quality of care provided at a ...
Families are winding back the clock to convince their kids to eat vegetables — all the way to the Jurassic era — in a TikTok ...
The NIH has begun cancelling grant-funded research for dozens of projects studying ways to overcome vaccine hesitancy, but ...
Gina Kirschenheiter is sharing a health update on ex-husband Matt Kirschenheiter after he suffered a heart attack. Get ...
Our advice columnists have heard it all over the years—so today we’re diving into the archives of Care and Feeding, Slate’s ...
Florida legislators passed a public health insurance expansion that would help poor and disabled children get better coverage over a year ago, but it still hasn’t used the funds.
It was disheartening to see our collaboratively written, research-based letter about bike lanes dismissed as “opinion” in a response letter in the March 5 edition of Wednesday Journal’s Viewpoints ...
Medically Unnecessary: Florida holds key to better coverage for disabled kids. Why hasn’t it helped?
Legislators passed a public health insurance expansion that would help poor and disabled children get better coverage over a year ago, but funds remain unused.
Publishing three books is a true accomplishment and it’s something a local 11-year-old girl pulled off in a year.
Joshua Suddith, a 13-year-old from Georgia, receives an acceptance letter from Morehouse College, surpassing his goal set at age 4.
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