An attack on a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach in Sydney has drawn attention to Australia’s distinctive Jewish community.
At the Denver Public Library, author Ingrid Law read her new picture book “You Are Not Alone” to an energetic group of kids, ...
Others have documented the legal and political ramifications of these settlements. My concern is more personal and more ...
Children's Day, celebrated annually on November 14th in India to commemorate the birth anniversary of the nation's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, is a day dedicated to honoring the most ...
To play this video you need to enable JavaScript. Pippa and Beth talk about some methods to improve the stories you tell in English. They look back at Georgie's story about a boy band and Neil's story ...
“The Parsis came all the way from Persia, landing on the coast of Gujarat, not far from where I live—Nargol. The ruler, Jadi Rana, didn’t want foreigners in his land. He sent them a silver urn, filled ...
A bill restricting private English tuition for young children is gaining traction in South Korea, with both liberal and conservative authorities uniting to tackle excessive academic pressure on ...
In response to Utah Gov. Spencer Cox (R) and Ian Marcus Corbin’s Oct. 28 op-ed, “The consequences of America’s moral drift,” Post Opinions asked readers how they find meaning and purpose. Here are ...
Schools now get a record £540million a year extra to teach children who don't speak English as a first language, the Daily Mail can today reveal. Department for Education (DfE) figures for the current ...
A crop of new children’s storybook Bibles aims to reach progressive Christians who are turned off by traditional presentations of Scripture, offering messages focused on diversity, inclusion and ...
Nicole Charky-Chami is a senior editor based in Los Angeles, writing and producing breaking news. She teaches journalism courses for UCLA Extension and previously taught at Loyola Marymount University ...
Eleven years after the term “jihadi bride” first came into circulation, the women and girls who left Australia for the ISIS-controlled areas of Syria and Iraq are again at the centre of a moral panic.