Shanda Winget, a language arts teacher at San Juan High School in Blanding, was named the Teacher of the Year on April 1 at the San Juan School District Education Foundation Teacher Appreciation Banqu
AGAINST A BACKDROP OF SHRINKING reservoirs in a a decades long mega-drought and the driest period in 1,200 years, the Colorado River is burgeoning with
To the Editor:
The research cited in this article supports a compelling link between the presence of a warm, available maternal grandmother and positive mother-child outcomes. But women without such mothers can and do become wonderful mothers themselves, despite what is presented as a critical deficit.
Over the last 27 years, I’ve interviewed hundreds of women who were children, adolescents and young adults when their own mothers died. These women often feel a lack of confidence as parents, particularly around raising children past the age they were when their mothers died.
They may feel anxious about dying young. They are also prone to resurgences of grief when a first child is born, which can be mistaken for postpartum depression.
The authors are among the founding members of WomenOfBearsEars.org., which supports restoration of Bears Ears National Monument.
April 25, 2021, 11:00 a.m. ET
We are among the Women of Bears Ears Indigenous women who support our families and communities in the protections of ancestral lands. We come from Diné, Nuche, Pueblo and other allied Native Nations. From these Southwestern lands, twin buttes rise; they are known as Bears Ears.
We have been birthed into these lands. The umbilical cords of our ancestors are buried here. Our genealogies are intertwined.
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Elouise Wilson.Credit.Rachael Cassells
Our clans are passed on through our mothers. We are matrilineal societies that carry the bloodlines of our people. The Clan Mothers have always tended to the landscapes that gave them birth for hundreds of generations. Our ancestors are rooted here. We are grounded here.
800 managers trained to overcome unconscious bias at Bristol City Council
Specialist head-hunters are being used, but fewer young people are being hired
17:53, 6 JAN 2021
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Bristol City Council has overhauled how it hires staff in a major drive to tackle institutional racism.