Next week, we take a look inside modern American families, meet the larger-than-life owner of an underground salon in Brussels and look back at the many challenges faced by George H.W. Bush’s foreign policy team.
Georgia will use its funding to improve the professional learning available to leaders and educators on personalized learning, expand student connectivity, and improve the infrastructure of – and expand access to – the Georgia Virtual School.
As the start of school quickly approaches, the Georgia Department of Education has partnered with Verizon to provide a fast-track to enable distance learning for students in 10 neighboring states.
In this timeline of the 48-hour uprising in Augusta, we chart its chronological and geographic path. We hear about rioters who targeted Chinese-owned businesses, while police in armored personnel carriers patrolled the streets. The National Guard also surrounded Paine College, a historically black college.
Are your kids missing the camp experience this summer? Welcome to Camp TV from WNET, a series for kids ages 5-10 that blends day camp and learning into one hour of playful fun.
Next week, we’ll go Beyond the CANVAS with PBS NewsHour to learn what drives a diverse group of artists and entertainers and meet an Israeli lawyer who is both reviled and beloved. We’ll also explore how conspiracy theories have moved from the fringes into center of U.S. politics.
This timely, music-filled special helps address some of the challenges and disappointments “little tigers” and their families may be experiencing due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
A listener reaches out to share his memories of Charlie Oatman. Fred McBrayer was a vocational rehabilitation counselor in Augusta, who worked with Oatman at his high school.
John Lewis, one of the most prominent and visible activists in the civil rights movement, passed away on July 17, 2020, at the age of 80. Use these free digital resources to explore the life and legacy of this civil rights icon.
GPB Education and the Georgia Department of Education have collaborated to offer "Getting Ready" guides for kids going into K-3. These guides will help families understand what children have already learned and can expect to learn when they get back to school.
Next week, we take a look back at some fabulous finds from the City of Angels, meet some radical girls looking to change the world, and find out how the COVID crisis is affecting our most vulnerable communities.
Why were Black Augustans so angry about Charles Oatman's death? Because it was a symbol for the myriad of other injustices and oppressions that they have dealt with everyday. This episode weaves together seemingly isolated issues that together stymied the progress and equality of Augusta's Black citizens.
Georgia’s Path to Recovery for K-12 Schools provides considerations, recommendations, and best practices to ensure a safe and successful 2020-2021 school year.
Next week, we revisit the most exciting finales from a beloved competition series, get an update on some Salt Lake City treasures, and learn the true story of the Iraq war from those who lived through it.
American Portrait is a national storytelling project which invites America to participate in a national conversation about what it really means to be an American today.
Students from the Jessye Norman School of the Arts reflect on what they learned in the first episode of the podcast about Charles Oatman’s 1970 death in a Richmond County jail. They also draw on comparisons to Sandra Bland, who died in a Texas jail cell in 2015.
Laura Osborne, a fifth grade teacher at Sand Hill Elementary School in Effingham County, GA, has received two special honors from the Air Force Association.
Next week, we celebrate 100 years of women’s suffrage in the U.S. with a two-part American Experience special exploring the movement that led to the passage of the 19th Amendment.