Annmarie Timmins
Senior Reporter, Youth and EducationI write about youth and education in New Hampshire. I believe the experts for a news story are the people living the issue you are writing about, so I’m eager to learn how students and their families are navigating challenges in their daily lives — including childcare, bullying, academic demands and more. I’m also interested in exploring how changes in technology and funding are affecting education in New Hampshire, as well as what young Granite Staters are thinking about their experiences in school and life after graduation.
Annmarie can be reached at atimmins@nhpr.org.
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Dozens of families turned out to the say farewell to Concord's Monkey-Around Playground in White Park, which was built by volunteers for the area's school children in 1994. It's being replaced by a more accessible one.
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The book ban bill vetoed by Gov. Kelly Ayotte would have allowed parents to request books, films, and other items that depicted nudity and sexual contact to be removed from their child's school.
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This year’s legislative session saw many changes that will affect New Hampshire’s schools, students, and educators.
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A new law gives Gov. Kelly Ayotte and Attorney General John Formella significant power to decide how much victims are compensated for abuse they suffered at the state’s former youth detention center.
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Public schools risk losing state funding if they violate a new Republican-backed law that prohibits them from pursuing diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, including initiatives that consider color, physical disability, race, gender identity and sex.
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A new law allows any New Hampshire family to seek money from the state to pay for private school and homeschool expenses through the state’s voucher-style Education Freedom Account program.
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Now that every New Hampshire student is eligible for the state's school choice program, experts agree on one thing: The 10,000 student enrollment cap can be overridden.
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The decision — the latest in a decades-long court battle over what the state needs to spend to educate its students — does not mandate a dollar amount. But the justices said lawmakers and the governor need to address the underlying shortfall in school spending.
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The state budget set to take effect next week would give the governor and attorney general considerable control over the Youth Development Center Settlement Fund, including what victims are paid. A new lawsuit asks the court to halt that.
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The Republican-backed legislation would prohibit books depicting nudity and other acts intended for “sexual desire” in New Hampshire public schools.