Hickory Hills
Education
Free Back Of The Yards Music Classes Inspiring Kids To Thrive, Learn
BACK OF THE YARDS — On a recent Tuesday, instruments resounded in the hallways of Agustin Lara Academy as Southwest Side students attended a free after-school music program. The People’s Music School, a nonprofit that has offered Chicagoans free music classes since 1976, started its Back of the Yards program in 2016. It has quickly grown, with 100 students from 35 Southwest Side schools joining this year. More students return every year, with an 80 percent retention rate, said Miriam Owens, the nonprofit’s president and CEO.
Steve Millar’s 3 takeaways from Week 6 of high school football season in Southland
We are ready to go into the home stretch of the regular season as Week 7 kicks off. Now is the time when conference championships start to get decided and playoff bids are secured or lost. Some teams — I’m looking at you, Brother Rice — helped themselves majorly in Week 6. Others are dealing with some adversity. Mount Carmel and St. Laurence both played without their starting quarterbacks and ...
Beyond Debate: A Revolution in Education
In high schools across the country, there is a growing belief that debate-based pedagogies improve civility and academic success by encouraging students to think critically, engage in high-level academic discourse, and construct compelling arguments. We follow students in Boston and Chicago public schools to witness the methodology’s impact.
Chicago college students demonstrate on 1-year mark of Oct. 7 attack
CHICAGO (CBS) -- While many stopped on Monday to mark one year since the deadly Hamas attack on Israel, student activists wanted to focus attention on the war in Gaza, which started soon after the attack.As student groups demonstrated on the campus of schools like DePaul University last year, some students walked out of their classes this year. Hundreds of students participated in Monday demonstrations on multiple Chicago colleges.Security wouldn't let CBS News Chicago on the property, so CBS News Chicago cameras caught a view from over the fence.Henna Ayesh, a DePaul student and lead organizer, said she's been involved...
Paul Alivisatos Discusses Free Speech, Budget, and 2030 Climate Plan
In an exclusive interview on October 2, co-Editors-in-Chief Kayla Rubenstein and Eva McCord and News Editor Tiffany Li spoke with University of Chicago President Paul Alivisatos. In his autumn quarter welcome email to the community, Alivisatos reiterated the University’s stance on free speech expressed in the Chicago Principles. The University announced on September 26, a few days before classes started, that it had received a $100 million donation dedicated towards free speech which it intended to use for the Chicago Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression, and that it was launching a new climate and energy institute on October 30. The University also continues to face the financial challenges that came to light last year.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.