A Jewish Affinity Group formed at UNLV after the Oct. 7 attack on Israel hopes to make interactions more “educational” than the recent protest on campus.
Education
An outsider was arrested after she allegedly vandalized a UNLV sign with the words “Free Palestine” Thursday night, according to university officials.
The land will soon be transferred to UNLV and the city of North Las Vegas from the Bureau of Land Management.
Groups organized a “Walkout for Palestine” event in the amphitheater at UNLV, joining a growing list of groups protesting against the war in Gaza at college campuses.
Before leaving CCSD this year, then-Superintendent Jesus Jara gave members of his executive cabinet significant raises, including a pay hike of 40 percent to the chief of police.
The public school district that covers the Las Vegas Valley is launching a recruitment campaign that will primarily target teachers in California.
The movie studio would be built at the Harry Reid Research and Technology Park in southwest Las Vegas, but that depends on a bill clearing the Nevada Legislature.
UNLV is proposing to enter into a 99-year ground lease for 42 acres of university-owned land near the Strip that would generate over a billion of dollars of revenue.
A CCSD educator arrested in connection with a student-teacher fight was ordered released without bail after a court appearance.
The Clark County School District is looking to make it easier to hire retired employees to fill “critical” vacant teaching, other jobs.
Clark County School District police have arrested a man connected to a student-teacher fight at Valley High School on Thursday.
A ’70s theme for the evening celebration proved fitting, given that the library first opened in a tiny storefront in 1973.
The city of Las Vegas has announced that it will again allow drivers to pay for some parking tickets with the donation of school supplies.
The school tallied 35,229 words for middle schools, those with enrollments of 500 to 1,000 students. The total ranked them seventh among all schools in the country.
Ten former elementary school students received four-year college scholarships as promised in 2015 by a non-profit group.