-
Elizabeth Chilton will succeed current University of New Hampshire president James Dean this summer.
-
The majority of those arrested during pro-Palestinian protests at the University of New Hampshire and Dartmouth campuses have been charged with trespassing or resisting arrest.
-
The Attorney General's office says if the order goes into effect, the state will be unable to fund schools.
-
Schools across the country, and here in the Granite State, continue to face pressure to remove titles that have LGBTQ+ characters or deal with mature themes. Now, the New Hampshire Department of Education is getting involved in book banning debates.
-
Having that information would help school officials get a clearer picture of how to help students who are interested in military service, a coalition of education commissioners say.
-
In the last year, Commissioner Frank Edelblut and his deputies have repeatedly pressed one district to explain its decision making around library content.
-
The program is open to all adults working with kids, including parents, guardians and homeschool instructors.
-
Those that are approved would receive four years of loan repayments. They would need to work in the same school district for all four years to get the full benefit.
-
Monday's decision is the latest in a decades-long fight over who should pay for public schools and how much that should cost.
-
The judge says the state should fund at least $7,356 per pupil – not the current $4,100. He also found the statewide education property tax unconstitutional.
-
The program provides eligible families with the same amount the state pays per pupil to public school districts — about $4,500 — to pay for private school tuition or home school expenses.
-
Out-of-state undergraduate students will see a 2.5% increase in tuition at Keene State College and UNH, while it will stay flat at Plymouth State.