News
From a cell phone ban to Ten Commandments posters, new state laws bring big changes to Texas schools
Lawmakers also approved new teacher raises, banned DEI initiatives and gave schools more flexibility to discipline students.
A second special session that has made approving the map a priority started Friday, as soon as the first one ended.
A judge temporarily barred Powered by People from fundraising for Democrats or financially supporting the quorum break.
Some Texas families and teachers criticize the end-of-the-year STAAR test for the enormous burdens it puts on students. They ...
Sweeping and sudden funding changes this year put two revered after-school programs for low-income Texans and a rural teacher ...
In the 2024-25 school year, 14% of Texas school districts got an A, 71% got a B or a C, and 15% got a D or an F, new state ...
The second session is set to consider the same agenda that stalled in the first, with redistricting and disaster response at ...
The third-term governor appears determined to win any battle — even if it means scorched-earth primary crusades or trying to ...
The Fourth of July flood bore a striking similarity to the Hill Country flood that killed 10 summer campers in 1987. In the ...
The Amarillo businessman said he would tap into the $20 million political action committee he launched last year to preserve ...
Fewer schools received a D or an F in the 2024-25 school year than the year prior. But for campuses that are underperforming, ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results