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Pandemic fuels state voucher programs

Pandemic fuels state voucher programs

In the summer of 2020, just a couple of months after most students struggled through remote schooling caused by the pandemic, 800 Granite State students were on a waiting list seeking a scholarship to pursue other education options.

Kate Baker Demers, who runs an organization that administers the education tax credit scholarship program, said typically that waiting list had only had about 30 students on it.

Exploring race and diversity beyond the classroom

Exploring race and diversity beyond the classroom

Exeter Region Cooperative District is slightly less diverse and more wealthy than the state as a whole.

According to the New Hampshire Department of Education, in 2020-21, about 91% of students were non-Hispanic white, while nearly 4% of students were Asian, 2.5% were Hispanic or Latino, about 1.4% were multi-racial, about .8% were Black and about .5% were Indigenous. About 4.2% of students at Exeter High were eligible to receive free and reduced lunch.

Mind the gap

Mind the gap

Manchester West High senior David Chestnut remembers hearing a distinctly unconvincing pitch from a college recruiter during a giant assembly about why he and his classmates should go to college.

The recruiter tried to get the high schoolers excited about the idea of coming to his campus. But as Chestnut looked around, he saw that few of his classmates were even paying attention, let alone interested.

Project AIM: Q& A with SNHU Professor Lowell Matthews

Project AIM: Q& A with SNHU Professor Lowell Matthews

Through Project AIM, Dr. Lowell C. Matthews is looking to provide opportunities to the forgotten.

The program offers incarcerated learners an “educational pathway,” that will not only help them to obtain the skills they need to become integrated and productive members of society, but college credits that can lead to an undergraduate degree from Southern New Hampshire University.

The part of incarceration that mattered was the rehabilitation

The part of incarceration that mattered was the rehabilitation

Imagine walking into a secured prison yard. One so secured with the walls so high that when you look up, all you see is the sky. You go back to your cell. It’s so loud and the potential for violence so ripe, you’re always on high alert. It’s easy to succumb to that culture. How do you cope? How do you pass the time in a place like that?

'A clear winner': How education in prison can help people after release

'A clear winner': How education in prison can help people after release

Evenor Pineda didn’t graduate high school the first time around. But after landing in state prison in his 20s, he worked toward his degree through Granite State High School — part of a special school district for people serving prison time in New Hampshire.
“The first half of my sentence, I was in the mix,” Pineda, now 39, of Nashua, said in a recent interview. “You know, I was still kind of walking that fine line between these two worlds where, sure, I went to school and I participated in programs. But I also was very involved with the politics, you know, the gang life, and all that stuff.”

Exploring race and diversity beyond the classroom

Exploring race and diversity beyond the classroom

Exeter Region Cooperative District is slightly less diverse and more wealthy than the state as a whole.

According to the New Hampshire Department of Education, in 2020-21, about 91% of students were non-Hispanic white, while nearly 4% of students were Asian, 2.5% were Hispanic or Latino, about 1.4% were multi-racial and about .8% were Black. About 4.2% of students at Exeter High were eligible to receive free and reduced lunch.

Education & Equity: Exploring the state of public schools in New Hampshire

Education & Equity: Exploring the state of public schools in New Hampshire

Public education in New Hampshire stands at a crossroads.

While schools continue adjusting to the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, they're also at the center of state-level discussions about what and how students should learn — and who should pay for their education.