Claire Fiddian-Green: A big hairy goal—boost math literacy in Indiana
Hoosier students are not acquiring the math skills they need for success in a global economy.
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Hoosier students are not acquiring the math skills they need for success in a global economy.
For some students, “home” is where they expect to be protected from upsetting facts and strange ideas.
These school leaders cower in townships hoping no one calls them out.
Asking for a salary history serves no purpose that benefits the worker.
I wish that I had listened to my wife and tried for number four or even five
It is apparent by this conversation that many conservative Republicans discarded their integrity decades ago.
A number of the governor’s ideas are positive. But I don’t see them as strong enough to take us to the “next level.”
There have been a lot of accomplishments, and yet he says there is more to do.
Being an informed voter does take effort and commitment, but we all have to do it.
Amrou Awaysheh, an IU Kelley School of Business assistant professor of operations management, is building an IoT-based system he says can save factories $100 million annually in verified energy savings.
The legislation is meant to protect an individual’s right to sell or give his or her ticket to an event to someone else, should they choose to do so.
A Republican strategist who pleaded guilty to conspiracy Thursday said in court that at least eight people were used as conduits for illegal corporate donations from an Indianapolis gaming company to former Indiana Sen. Brent Waltz when he ran for U.S. Congress in 2016.
The firm sued the city in mid-November, after it threatened to take the 91-acre site from Ambrose, by eminent domain if necessary, to ensure the property is developed.
The State Board of Education’s decision to end the takeover confirmed the waning enthusiasm in Indiana for state oversight of failing schools. But it also revealed how much Indianapolis Public Schools has transformed in recent years.
The bill moved through the Indiana General Assembly faster than usual. The chambers usually wait until the halfway point of the session to consider legislation that originated in the opposite chamber.
The House and Senate will need to reach agreement on a single version in the coming weeks of the legislative session.
The city of Indianapolis released a study Thursday that looks at disparities minority-owned businesses face as part of the city’s business-contracting processes.
The woman claims she was harassed and subjected to a hostile work environment after ending a sexual relationship with the owner’s son-in-law.
Investigators say the man, who made an initial court appearance Wednesday, embezzled more than $715,000 from an Indianapolis-based company in an elaborate scheme involving at least 151 unauthorized checks.
The Indianapolis-based NCAA will now permit elite athletes to be paid for training expenses by the U.S. Olympic Committee and other national governing bodies.