State unveils plan for new school-rating system
Massachusetts public schools would be required to cut in half the number of low-scoring students over the next six years in a plan that would supplant No Child Left Behind.
Massachusetts public schools would be required to cut in half the number of low-scoring students over the next six years in a plan that would supplant No Child Left Behind.
The decision sets up an election-year showdown over the White House’s main domestic policy achievement.
In a hearing that drew moans of shock, a Norfolk prosecutor said today that Donald Rudolph used knives and a hammer to kill his mother, his sister, and his mother’s boyfriend.
Tech Lab | First Take
The original Kindle, the first successful e-book reader, altered the literary habits of millions. The new Fire, colorful and powerful as it is, won’t have nearly as much impact.
Players called the league’s latest offer “extremely unfair” and began the process to disband the union. Commissioner David Stern said the move was a “big charade.”
Cambridge biotechnology companies are targeting the so-called microenvironment rather than just cancer cells in a bid to advance therapies.
Derek Frechette is pushing for legislation, known as Christian’s Law, that would require state and town-run camps with a swimming area to have Coast Guard-approved flotation devices on hand for all minors.
“It would be easy to escape.”
Edwin Guadalupe, 31, an inmate at MCI-Shirley
Boston City Councilor Maureen Feeney quietly resigned last week after 17 years in office. She has long been considered next in line for the job of city clerk.
MIT’s Endicott House has replaced the hundreds of gallons of chemicals it uses annually with just one cleaner - water, charged with an electrical current.
Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren drew about 1,000 supporters who pledged to work for her campaign during a volunteer event in Roxbury yesterday.
Facing a dismal job market and persistent economic woes, a young generation has seen its fervor for the president dissipate.
The Bruins said today that league officials opted not to fine or suspend Lucic for his hit on Sabres goalie Ryan Miller on Saturday.
Randy O. Frost, a psychology professor at Smith College and author of the 2010 book “Stuff,” is an expert on compulsive hoarding.
“The Brother/Sister Plays,’’ the trilogy by the gifted young playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney, is a challenge for any cast, but Company One's actors are up to the task.
Full coverage of the Globe’s investigation into OUI acquittal rates.
“It may seem intimidating when we say you are going to help transcribe ancient Greek papyri, but it’s all about pattern recognition, and the brain excels at pattern recognition.”
James Brusuelas, an Oxford classicist who is part of the Ancient Lives team