A new lawsuit filed by a Reno High School student has raised questions about Nevada students’ rights when it comes to searches by school staff.
Education
A competency hearing has been pushed back three weeks for a student accused of beating and sexually assaulting his teacher.
An initiative that would have amended Nevada law to create education savings accounts overseen by the state treasurer was found unconstitutional.
The Clark County School Board voted 4-3 on Thursday night to appoint Lisa Guzman to the State Board of Education’s Assembly Bill 469 subcommittee.
The state will again consider allowing the Clark and Washoe county school districts to hire emergency substitute teachers who have only a high school diploma.
Black Fire Innovation Hub, which opened last year, represents UNLV’s first foray into the world of business accelerators in the gaming and hospitality space.
Applications for next school year can be submitted through Jan. 11. A lottery will be held if more applications are received than there are seats.
Linda Cavazos says the move to remove her from her post on Thursday came after she backed an agenda item to consider ending CCSD Superintendent Jesus Jara’s contract.
On Friday, Dan Reynolds returned to the place where it all began, in a way: Bonanza High School, where Imagine Dragons played a free show for students and teachers as part of Wal-Mart’s “Homecoming Concert” series.
The Clark County School District next week will consider creating a policy that would require all employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19.
The district sent emails and made robocalls to parents on Tuesday morning advising that all staff and students will be required to wear masks indoors and on district buses.
The study will test participants for COVID antibodies to help determine the prevalence of infection from those who are unvaccinated and the efficacy rate of vaccines.
Four students are doing a 10-week paid summer internship with the Nevada Mining Association and Nevada Bureau of Land Management.
Thousands of CCSD seniors marked the end of the 2020-2021 school year this week with some of the first in-person graduation ceremonies since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The university will launch a new pilot program where instructors will teach in-person and remote students simultaneously for some classes.