educación
Miami (AFP) - Florida on Wednesday extended its controversial ban on lessons related to gender identity and sexual orientation to all school grades, a move pushed by the southern US state's Republican governor and likely presidential candidate Ron DeSantis. Dubbed by critics as the "Don't Say Gay" law, the policy was initially limited to kindergarten through third grade, but the state's Board of Education on Wednesday approved an expansion to grades four through 12. The expansion had already been approved by the Department of Education, which like the board is led by DeSantis appointees, and d...
AFP
Miami (AFP) - Shots ring out in a Miami school classroom. Inside, a dozen students, their clothing stained with what appears to be blood, desperately scream. A security agent walks down the hall, more shots are heard -- and a young man is swiftly knocked down. It's a terrifying scene -- but, thankfully, it is a simulation. The bullets are blanks, and the blood and wounds are fake, as are the screams and the guns carried by the dozens of police officers taking part. The teenagers are volunteers helping police to fine tune their reaction to school shootings in the United States, once again under...
AFP
Miami (AFP) - Florida governor Ron DeSantis on Friday signed a law that eliminates a statute that has for decades allowed entertainment giant Disney to act as a local government in Orlando, where it has its theme park. The move was the latest episode in a dispute between DeSantis' Republican administration and Disney, after the company criticized the passage in March of a law banning school lessons on sexual orientation. There was no immediate response by Disney to the decision, part of a cultural battle waged by Republican leaders across the United States. Disney was initially silent about th...
AFP
Los Angeles (AFP) - The governor of New Mexico started work Wednesday as a substitute teacher, replacing one of the thousands of educators across the United States who have been forced off work by the Covid-19 pandemic. Michelle Lujan Grisham -- a lawyer by training -- swapped the governor's mansion for the classroom as part of the "Supporting Teachers and Families" initiative designed to plug holes in staffing in schools and child care across the state. "It was maybe one of the best days in my entire career," Grisham said after the final school bell had rung. "It was easier than managing the ...
AFP
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