While boycotting and collective activism can be hard concepts to explain to children, these conversations can be powerful ...
Use clear jars or piggy banks so kids can literally watch their money grow. It makes saving visible and satisfying. Some ...
Tuesday is Speak Up and Succeed Day. It’s to encourage people to speak their minds and voice their opinions — respectfully. In Mommy Matters, we have five ways you can start teaching your child to ...
AI agents can now see your face, hear your tone and respond in real time. Teaching machines the art of being human means going far beyond surface mimicry.
I arrived at Founders Classical Academy of Lewisville, Texas, in September 2023 and found my way to the gym of the lower school, where the K–5 students gather every morning. Usually the kids from one ...
COLUMBIA, S.C. — The South Carolina Department of Education is seeking $18 million to fund a new curriculum addressing the effects of screen addiction among children. The proposed program, named ...
Authors Jonathan Haidt and Catherine Price join TODAY’s Jenna Bush Hager and guest co-host Willie Geist to talk about their new book “The Amazing Generation: Your Guide to Fun and Freedom in a ...
Sure, you could get the kids on your holiday list a Labubu or a flashy gaming system. But you believe in giving gifts that educate young people about core life skills — like managing their money.
Professor Xiao Wang, director of University of Virginia's Supreme Court Clinic, litigated the case of Ames v. Ohio Youth Services. The thrust of the case was quite simple, and intuitively appealing: ...
At Little Chefs, Big Change classes, kids learn to cook healthy, affordable food, and taste test it too. Classes are free and operated out of after-school programs, community centers, summer camps and ...
We teach our kids to read, write and ride a bike. But we often skip one essential life skill: money management. Learn how to start the money conversation with your kids in our latest course, How To ...
Should American K–12 students be taught, without informing their parents, to sympathize with terrorists? Of course not. But that’s exactly what’s happening in K–12 schools across the country, thanks ...