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The Best of March: Our 11 Most Popular Articles About Students, Schools & Protests This Month

We’ve collected our 11 most popular and buzzed-about stories from the month of March. (Want to see more? Check out our roundups from previous months — and our 17 most popular articles of 2017)

From our coverage of National Student Walkout Day to a story about a 10-year-old girl from Flint, Michigan, who raised $16,000 to bring 800 of her fellow students to see the blockbuster superhero movie “Black Panther” – if March is a month of great expectations, then the storylines we found springing up in schools across America did not disappoint.

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Seventeen-year-old Annie McCasland of Potomac, Maryland, holds up a sign during a rally at the U.S. Capitol to urge Congress to take action against gun violence on March 14, 2018, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. (Photo credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

1. Inside the National School Walkout: What We Saw at 7 Very Different Marches Against Gun Violence

WHAT IT FELT LIKE TO MARCH WITH 800,000 STUDENTS: In one of the largest demonstrations since Vietnam, protesters led by survivors of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting flooded Washington, D.C., to demand action to end gun violence. With tears, signs, and resolve, the students issued a call to action echoed in more than 800 sister demonstrations around the globe. The 74’s Emmeline Zhao joined the march and came back with this report about the scope of the spectacle, and the students she met along the way.

2. Analysis: How Will a Janus Ruling Impact Teachers and Unions in Each State? Data & Interactive Maps Tell the Story

FACING JANUS: The Supreme Court’s eventual ruling in the Janus agency fees case will have an enormous impact on teachers unions overall. But what will it mean for individual states and bargaining units? Contributors Kate Walsh and Kency Nittler did a deep dive, illustrating how a decision in favor of Janus would affect teachers and unions in each state, with interactive maps showing where teachers can bargain collectively, what they’re allowed to negotiate, and where unions are permitted to collect agency fees.

Students work together in an advanced computer science class. (Photo credit: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

3. Lowery: Giftedness Doesn’t Discriminate by Skin Color or Income Level — and Gifted Education Programs Shouldn’t Either

THE GATEKEEPERS OF GIFTEDNESS: When EdTrust VP Lillian Lowery was a principal, she knew on her first day in her new, diverse school which the advanced classes were — the students were all white. It wasn’t that the students of color were less intelligent or hardworking, but somehow they weren’t identified as gifted or recommended for accelerated programs. Decades later, she writes, things haven’t changed much. Fixing this gross inequity will require districts and schools to take a good look at adult biases — and states can lead the way by demanding improved opportunities for all students under the Every Student Succeeds Act.

LaDarien Griffin, #15, of the St. Bonaventure Bonnies attempts a layup against the UCLA Bruins during the second half of a game in the 2018 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament at UD Arena in Dayton, Ohio, on March 13, 2018. The Bonnies defeated the Bruins 65–58. (Photo credit: Joe Robbins/Getty Images)

4. An NCAA Bracket for Income Mobility: If the Tournament Were About Moving Up the Economic Ladder, These Schools Would Make the Sweet Sixteen

AN NCAA ‘SWEET SIXTEEN’ FOR INCOME MOBILITY: What would the NCAA bracket look like if it rewarded schools that did best in moving students up the economic ladder? A hint: UCLA and the University of Houston would be in the Final Four. Jorge Klor de Alva, president of the Nexus Research and Policy Center, and Mark Schneider, a vice president and institute fellow at the American Institutes for Research and the president of College Measures, offer a parallel bracket in the 2018 Income Mobility Tournament, based on data from the Equality of Opportunity Project housed at Stanford University.

In contrast to the NCAA bracket, which maps the performance of the 68 teams vying for the Division 1 men’s basketball national championship, the mobility bracket plots how well each of the participating schools manages to move its students to the top quintile of the income distribution although their parents came from the bottom quintile.

Photo credit: Seaside City Council

5. Three Guns Accidentally Fired In Schools In One Week; At Least 29 Killed & 51 Injured at Schools in 2018

SHOTS FIRED IN HIGH SCHOOL’S FIREARM SAFETY CLASS: In a strange bit of timing, a California high school teacher accidentally discharged a round from his handgun into the ceiling during a class on firearm safety Tuesday — one day before a massive national walkout by students to bring attention to school safety and gun violence. Mark Keierleber reported it was the third accidental shooting at a school that week — a perhaps alarming statistic as lawmakers in Washington considered arming teachers in the wake of the Feb. 14 school mass shooting in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 people dead.

Photo credit: LuLu Brezzell

6. 10-Year-Old Flint, Michigan, Girl Took 800 High-Needs Kids to See Black Panther. Now, She’s Their Hero, Too

LITTLE MISS FLINT DOES IT AGAIN: Two years ago, when the drinking water in Flint, Michigan, was found to be contaminated with lead, a young girl named Mari Copeny wrote to President Barack Obama about the crisis — producing a face-to-face meeting between the leader of the Free World and the youngster dubbed Little Miss Flint. Now 10, Mari has become a powerful advocate for Flint’s many low-income children of color, and she just took 800 of the city’s neediest kids — children who couldn’t afford even a movie ticket — to meet the nation’s newest on-screen hero in the hottest film of the season, “Black Panther.” Contributor Meredith Nelson wrote the inspiring story.

Students from Montgomery Blair High School in Silver Spring, Maryland, march down Colesville Road in support of gun reform legislation on Feb. 21, 2018. (Photo credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images)

7. Pondiscio: Civil Disobedience Means Facing Consequences. School-Sanctioned Walkouts Rob Students of That Lesson

WHEN SCHOOLS SANCTION A WALKOUT: Schools that refuse to enforce standard discipline over the Parkland protest may regret it down the road. The vast majority of schools are publicly financed and government-run. If school officials grant students permission to walk out to protest gun violence, Robert Pondiscio writes, they must also not punish those who disrupt learning to protest in favor of gun rights, or for or against abortion, police violence, or any conceivable political cause.

Kaya Henderson (Photo credit: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

8. Eden: D.C. Public Schools Deserves an F for Bogus Reforms, Faked Successes, and Disastrous Failures

THE D.C. DISASTER: Two years ago, D.C. Public Schools was seen as a model of transformational education reform. Today, it’s hard to keep track of the scandals. These failures were not isolated incidents, writes contributor Max Eden; rather, they are one side of a coin — fake successes being the other — minted by the ed reform movement. Those education reformers who constantly talk about accountability should practice it within their own ranks and admit that what they created in D.C. was nothing short of disaster.

Photo credit: Melanie Stetson Freeman/The Christian Science Monitor via Getty Images

9. Harvard-MIT Personalized Learning Program to Help Early Readers Gets $30M From Chan Zuckerberg Initiative

$30 MILLION FOR READING INTERVENTION: A new collaboration between MIT and Harvard will tackle the literacy crisis with the help of a $30 million investment from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Over five years, the team will create a diagnostic tool to identify at-risk readers and develop personalized solutions for improving their reading capabilities. The work is important at a time when only one-third of the nation’s fourth-graders are proficient in reading — and grade-level literacy benchmarks are strong indicators of future academic success, Kate Stringer reports.

DACA supporters protest the Trump administration’s termination of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. (Photo credit: Ronen Tivony/Getty Images)

10. Does the March 5 DACA Deadline Still Matter? 5 Things to Know About the Countdown to a Meaningless Monday — and Why Dreamers Should Still Be Worried

SO, ABOUT THAT MARCH 5 DEADLINE: Ever since the Trump administration announced in September that it would end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in six months, all eyes have focused on March 5, the deadline the president set for Congress to act without putting hundreds of thousands of people at risk for deportation. But that legislative fix never came, and the futures of DACA recipients — thousands of whom are students, teachers, or parents of children in K-12 classrooms — remain uncertain. Still, that doesn’t mean we’re about to see mass deportations of young people, in part because of two federal court injunctions basically deeming that March 5 deadline meaningless. Mark Keierleber answered five questions about the deadline, and what it means for the Dreamers.

Three education films are nominated for Academy Awards: DeKalb Elementary, Lady Bird, and Traffic Stop. (Photo credit: Reed Van Dyk, A24, HBO)

11. Oscar Preview: 3 Ways Education Could Take Center Stage at Sunday Night’s Academy Awards

EDUCATION WALKS THE OSCAR RED CARPET: A girl takes on her senior year at a Catholic high school. A teacher comes to terms with the violence she suffered at the hands of the police. A bookkeeper persuades a school shooter to hand over his weapon. This year’s Academy Awards acknowledged not one, not two, but three education films — Lady Bird, Traffic Stop and DeKalb Elementary. And the third, considered a front-runner in its category, gave the issue of school safety a dramatic moment in the Oscar spotlight. Kate Stringer had the edu-Oscar story.

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