A potential school bus strike threatens to coincide with public school children's return to school in the fall, said Chancellor David Banks.
The Department of Education concluded as early as 2018 that some religious schools stinted on secular education but didn’t intervene.
Union president Michael Mulgrew is pressing occupational and physical therapists to vote again on a deal they rejected.
Detailed reports show significant deficiencies at four schools, including no English instruction at all.
Dr. Riverso succeeds Brother Daniel Gardner, FSC, to become the College’s 21st president.
Yomaira Figueroa to Lead “Centro” as it Begins its Second Half Century
Next year's calendar has been tweaked with more vacation days, Diwali will be an official school holiday, and more.
Ann Marie Mauro to be the next Joan Hansen Grabe Dean of the School of Nursing at Hunter
These school cafeterias got an "F" for frightening this year.
A tentative contract agreement announced Tuesday provides substantial wage increases for 120,000 United Federation of Teachers workers.
All public school students scheduled to attend classes Friday will instead have a remote learning day, officials said.
The wait is over, parents.
"We are BEGGING you for the NYC school calendar, so we can plan our lives, and not live in chaos," one parent wrote nearly two weeks ago.
Teachers and parents raised concerns about the DESSA, a social-emotional learning tool that schools began using last year.
Will Bring Leaders Together to Study Nation’s Highest Office; Establish LIU as a Leading Institution for Civic Education and Research
A new program — "New York City Reads" — aims to help the half of public school students who can't read at their grade level, officials said.
Publishing data about 1,575 of NYC schools meant combining data from two city agencies. Here’s how we did it.
While NYC’s public libraries avoided deep budget cuts last week, most libraries in public schools lack a leader, which hurts students.
Students and community members will build pathways to green jobs and develop solutions to climate change, food injustice and systemic racism
Fourth graders in New York City scored lower in math tests than other public school students in large cities, according to a new study.
Black children, who make up a quarter of students in New York City schools, accounted for 59% of handcuffed students.
Organizations join together in humanitarian effort to help individuals with limb loss across the globe.
"It’s about challenging the culture of racial discrimination at Success Academy,” Jerald Times said about his lawsuit.
Harlem’s public university seeks to shrink English teacher pay to close a $10M budget gap — and that’s before looming spending reductions.
The Archdiocese of New York announced Wednesday that 12 schools will close at the end of the 2022-23 academic year.
Grading was done centrally for over a decade to reduce score manipulation, but state policy is changing again.
The proposal is expected to be introduced this month in Albany. The intention is to make emotional wellness a health priority.
Some NYC educators are seeing an uptick in marijuana use during the school day, and it’s starting at a younger age
Hostos Community College students are entering their second year of in-person classes. But they still have to go off-campus for food.
From a sky-high cost of living to a dearth of part-time jobs, New York City is just terrible for students, a new study found.
It's not too late to help their children navigate the highly selective college admissions process.
The nation's largest school system's enrollment dropped 1.8 percent this year, but still has 903,000 students, preliminary data shows.
A school district made up of New York City’s homeless students would be larger than 99.5 percent of districts nationwide, advocates said.
New York City Schools Chancellor David Banks is working to find solutions, CBS2's Natalie Duddridge reported Thursday.
Parents told Adams kids carry pepper spray to face commutes during which people defecate in front of them. His response? Project Pivot.
"We found DOE should do more to prepare students to be college ready," a new audit by State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli concluded.
A new program called "College Choice" will pay for tuition not covered by financial aid and provide $60 a day for students in foster care.
"If you’re working hard and you’re making the grade," said Chancellor Banks, "you should not be thrown into a lottery with just everybody."
After a fight over releasing the first full state exam results since the pandemic, city parents can see how schools fared.
School lunches will be less "Eww" and more "Yum-o!" now that Rachael Ray is developing plant-based meals for the city, officials said.