Gabrielle Emanuel
-
As a response to immigration enforcement, religious communities are preparing to shelter people at risk of deportation. They're drawing on the ancient tradition of offering sanctuary for refugees.
-
How do you read a bank statement? Or a map? A program in Chicago is working to connect refugees with people who can teach them.
-
Many parents and teachers report that schools won't use the word dyslexia. Why might this be? And what is the Department of Education doing about it?
-
Many believe dyslexia is about jumbled letters, but experts say that's not quite right. This story explores what's happening in the brain that causes those backward letters.
-
Dyslexia is a reading problem, but its influence can be felt far beyond the classroom. It often disrupts home life, making dinnertime and bedtime a struggle.
-
Scientists are exploring how human brains learn to read — and discovering new ways that brains with dyslexia can learn to cope.
-
It's the most common learning disability, yet it's still hard to answer the question: What is it? An NPR reporter who has dyslexia talks with other people — young and old — in search of answers.
-
At the New England Aquarium, seals don't just cruise around the tank; they go to school each day. And their teacher has an individual lesson plan for each one of them.
-
New data shows violence in the home hinders the academic performance of their classmates, too. Reporting domestic violence makes a big difference.
-
A Harvard researcher has traced the roots of our math curriculum back through the centuries. And it hasn't changed much.