January 22, 1997 - At least three school districts in southwestern Minnnesota are NOT sending kids home this afternoon because of blizzard conditions. School officials say it's too dangerous to have kids driving home or riding in buses, so they'll sleep over at school. Arnold Prince is Superintendent of the Belview-Danube-Renville-Scared Heart School district. Arnold Prince is Superintendent of the Belview-Danube-Renville-Scared Heart School district. His district is keeping kids overnight, as are the Bird Island-Olivia-Lake Lillian and Gibbon-Fairfax-Wintrop districts. Sun 28-MAY 20:58:32 MPR NewsPro Archive - Wed 04/11/2001
January 23, 1997 - Midday looks at education funding in Minnesota. Studio guests are DFL Representative Becky Kelso of Shakopee, who is chair of the K-12 Budget Committee in the House; and Republican State Senator Gen Olson of Minnetrista, who is a member of the Senate K-12 Budget Division. Kelso and Olson share their views on funding and also answer listener questions.
January 27, 1997 - THE UNITED ARAB EMIRATES'S MONOPOLY INTERNET PROVIDER HAS LAUNCHED A SERVICE ON TO CENSOR SITES THAT BREACH 'LOCAL MORAL VALUES AND TRADITIONS.' THE MOVE FOLLOWS REPEATED CALLS TO REGULATE ACCESS TO THE INTERNET IN THE CONSERVATIVE GULF REGION, WHERE MOST WOMEN ARE VEILED, MAGAZINE PICTURES REVEALING CLEAVAGE OR BARE LEGS ARE BLACKED OUT AND QUE
January 28, 1997 - State education officials say they want more students out of classrooms learning about life in the real world. The Minnesota Department of Children, Families and Learning is preparing to launch a 23-million dollar school-to-work project. It's aimed at creating new educational experiences relevant to life and work...and giving students the skills needed to enter the workforce. Minnesota Public Radio's Tim Pugmire reports... --------------------------------------------------------- | D-CART ITEM: 0626 | TIME: 6:05 | OUTCUE: s.o.c. --------------------------------------------------------- It's an ageold problem...and an age old childhood excuse... students lose interest in learning when the subject seems irrelavant. The school-to-work movement tries to spark interest
January 29, 1997 - Minnesota teenager's have a much higher rate of vehicle accidents than other drivers. State officials say the young drivers need more training. So, beginning the first of February, Minnesotan's 18 or younger will need to wait six months between getting their permit and their drivers license. Minnesota Public Radio's Dan Olson reports. There's no waiting period for Minnesota fifteen year olds right now. The minute they get their permit and reach their 16th birthday, they can head for the nearest testing site and try for their license. Wayne Jerrow, a spokesman for the Minnesota Department of Public Safety says the new law requires a six month waiting period in an attempt to give the teens more experience. tape . . . the purpose is to give the young adults more practice time, and practice with their parents, with less risk.
January 29, 1997 - ** note host outcue ** The Minnesota Twins are nearing the end of a statewide roadtrip to more than seventy communities across the state. The Twins' winter caravan has been around for years as a way to thank fans and stir up support, but this year it's much larger than in the past. Critics say it's all designed to pitch a proposed new Twins stadium, especially to captive student audiences, but Twins' players say they're focusing on education. Minnesota Public Radio's Laura McCallum reports... HOST OUTCUE:
January 29, 1997 - The ANTI-smoking lobby at the state capitol believes THIS is the year to get the support needed to pass a bill designed to help keep cigarettes out of the hands of children. The bill gets a hearing tomorrow (today-thurs) in the House Commerce Committee. Minnesota Public Radio's Karen-Louise Boothe reports from the capitol: The bill establishes a system of licensing and compliance checks for retailers who sell tobacco and it provides for PENALITIES for stoes which sell tobacco to minors. The bill ALSO prohibits self-service tobacco displays in places accessible to minors. Under the legislation cities would not be preempted from passing local ordinances that are even MORE restrictive than state law.
January 31, 1997 - Many Minnesota school districts are wondering how to make up for missed "snow days." There's a lot of winter still to come, and while it's common for schools to build two or three extra days into the educational calendar, two or three extra WEEKs are another matter. Leif Enger of Mainstreet Radio reports. Any school superintendent will tell you, you can't win. Call off school on a stormy day, and parents will complain the weather's
February 3, 1997 - Many children growing up in the sixties assumed that by the time they were adults they would all be travelling in spaceships and making regular trips to the stars. Of course it hasn't quite worked out that way..... but in central Minnesota, the children of some of those wanna-be intergalactic explorers ARE getting a practical lessons in outer space. One teacher in Sauk Rapids has teamed up with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration--NASA--to teach students about space and aeronautics, but also about how to learn. . . . Minnesota Public Radio's Gretchen Lehmann (lay-mun) reports:
February 4, 1997 - A new elementary magnet school in Maplewood might be one of the most complex educational operations in the state. The school is supported financially by three districts, yet the school has its own district number and school board. The school is a voluntary desegregation project involving urban and suburban students. The curriculum has a duel focus of multicultural education and environmental studies. On top all this, the school is operating year-round. Minnesota Public Radio's Tim Pugmire takes a look at what could be a model for the future of elementary schools... The seeds for Tri-District school were planted seven years ago when Saint Paul school district officials began talking to neighboring suburban districts