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How We’re Helping Students Succeed in the Classroom and in Life

BLACKPRESSUSA NEWSWIRE — Experts are always looking for ways to reduce stress in the classroom. Some districts have designed calm rooms with yoga mats and sound machines and others have brought dogs into schools to calm nerves.

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By Janet R. Damon, Ed.S, MLIS

Janet Damon (left) is one of five recipients of The NEA Foundation’s Horace Mann Awards for Teaching Excellence and was Colorado Teacher of the Year in 2025.

Experts are always looking for ways to reduce stress in the classroom. Some districts have designed calm rooms with yoga mats and sound machines and others have brought dogs into schools to calm nerves. Some say artificial intelligence can give students the boost they need.  

Yet as a veteran history teacher, I know the latest trends can’t easily replace what has always worked: truly connecting with our students in authentic and meaningful ways.  

This is especially important at DELTA High School, an alternative high school in Denver where all of our teachers partner with students who have faced challenges in life and in traditional school settings.  

A student I’ll call Cassie illustrates the situation. One day, she passed me a sticky note that said, “Please do not ever call on me.”  

After class, I asked Cassie about the note and she explained that she had paralyzing anxiety. It was so severe that she often walked out of classes in her last school. She would sometimes disappear for days, leaving her mother feeling frustrated. We were Cassie’s last chance to graduate.  

As I formed a positive relationship with Cassie, I discovered that she was passionate about women’s rights. During our civics unit, she researched income equality.  

The lesson required a presentation and I asked if she wanted to present to me or the entire class or me — she chose to stand in front of the class.  

During her talk, a young man interrupted her to give his opinion. Cassie didn’t walk out and didn’t lose her temper; she used her advocacy skills to make her case.  

When class ended, she jumped for joy and said, “Ms. Damon, did you see me? Did you see what I did?” Cassie found that using her voice aided her in resolving conflicts.  

This individual moment appears to reflect a broader trend. The Healthy Kids Colorado Survey, which samples middle and high school students across Colorado, found that high schoolers experiencing persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness dropped by 14 percentage points between 2021 and 2023 (the most recent reporting years).

Youth can heal and flourish when schools embrace our approach, which focuses on deep listening and a belief in the power of care.  

Let me share an example. When I met “Aiden,” he was exhausted and often struggled to stay awake in class.  

As I worked with him, he explained that his dad was dealing with a serious illness and the loss of family income forced Aiden to pick up part-time jobs that ended late at night. In the morning, his mom was still working and needed him to take his siblings to school. He felt overwhelmed and defeated.  

By listening to his experiences, I knew he needed more support. Our school counselor helped him find a job closer to school while I opened my class at lunchtime for him to have one-on-one time to catch up with coursework.  

By the end of his second year, his father had recovered and Aiden joined the football team, beginning a new chapter of his high school experience.  

I was overjoyed when Aiden emailed me, writing that he wanted to apply for college and asking for my help with an application letter. He was accepted to college, earns good grades, and excels on the college football team.

Our student body faces every hurdle you see in the news, including housing insecurity, immigration fears, and incarceration of a parent or caregiver.

I believe that every school can help mend our communities. Indeed, we’re replacing trauma with collective healing through community, connection, and a spirit of collaboration. Research in other states shows that such an approach brings positive results across the board.  

Indeed, it all starts by asking a student a simple question: “I’m here to listen, how can I help you to succeed?”  

Damon is one of five recipients of The NEA Foundation’s Horace Mann Awards for Teaching Excellence and was Colorado Teacher of the Year in 2025.

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LIVE from the NMA Convention Raheem DeVaughn Says The Time Is Now: Let’s End HIV in Our Communities #2

Set against the backdrop of the NMA conference, Executive Officers from the National Medical Association, Grammy Award Winning Artist and Advocate Raheem DeVaughn, and Gilead Sciences experts, are holding today an important conversation on HIV prevention and health equity. Black women continue to be disproportionately impacted by HIV despite advances in prevention options. Today’s event […]

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Set against the backdrop of the NMA conference, Executive Officers from the National Medical Association, Grammy Award Winning Artist and Advocate Raheem DeVaughn, and Gilead Sciences experts, are holding today an important conversation on HIV prevention and health equity.

Black women continue to be disproportionately impacted by HIV despite advances in prevention options. Today’s event is designed to uplift voices, explore barriers to access, and increase awareness and key updates about PrEP, a proven prevention method that remains underutilized among Black women. This timely gathering will feature voices from across health, media, and advocacy as we break stigma and center equity in HIV prevention.

Additional stats and information to know:

Black women continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV, with Black women representing more than 50% of new HIV diagnoses among women in the U.S. in 2022, despite comprising just 13% of women in the U.S.

Women made up only 8% of PrEP users despite representing 19% of all new HIV diagnoses in 2022.

● Gilead Sciences is increasing awareness and addressing stigma by encouraging regular HIV testing and having judgment-free conversations with your healthcare provider about prevention options, including oral PrEP and long-acting injectable PrEP options.

● PrEP is an HIV prevention medication that has been available since 2012.

● Only 1 in 3 people in the U.S. who could benefit from PrEP were prescribed a form of PrEP in 2022.

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TRUMP: “Washington, D.C. is Safe”

BLACKPRESSUSA NEWSWIRE — President Trump, who typically travels with a full contingent of high-level protection, insinuated that he finally felt safe enough to go to dinner in the District of Columbia. “My wife and I went out to dinner last night for the first time in four years,” said the nation’s 47th president.

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Photo: iStockphoto / NNPA.

By Apriil Ryan
BlackPressUSA Washington Bureau Chief and White House Correspondent

“Washington, D.C. is safe,” President Trump declared from the Oval Office today. Those words came while Trump was hosting Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. During the question-and-answer session, which primarily focused on a peace deal in the Russian-Ukrainian war, Trump explained, “You did that in four days.” He was speaking of how fast the National Guard quelled the violence in what was once called Chocolate City.

The President deployed the National Guard to D.C. a week ago, to a city with reduced crime rates over the previous year. Violent crime dropped by 26%, marking the lowest level in 30 years. Homicides also fell by 11%.

President Trump, who typically travels with a full contingent of high-level protection, insinuated that he finally felt safe enough to go to dinner in the District of Columbia. “My wife and I went out to dinner last night for the first time in four years,” said the nation’s 47th president.

Trump reinforced his claim about the newly acquired safety in D.C. by relaying that a friend’s son is attending dinner in D.C., something he would not have done last year.

After the president finished his comments, a reporter/commentator in the room with close connections to Marjorie Taylor Greene jumped into the high-level conversation to affirm the president’s comments, saying, “I walked around yesterday with MTG. If you can walk around D.C. with MTG and not be attacked, this city is safe.”

That reporter was the same person who chastised President Zelenskyy months ago during his first Oval Office meeting with Trump for not wearing a business suit. Zelenskyy, a wartime President, has been clad in less formal attire to reflect the country’s current war stance against Russia.

Without any sourcing, President Trump also said, “People that haven’t gone out to dinner in Washington, D.C., in two years are going out to dinner, and the restaurants the last two days have been busier than they’ve been in a long time.”

The increase in policing in Washington, D.C. is because a 19-year-old former Doge employee was carjacked in the early hours of the morning recently.

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Rising Energy Costs Weigh Heaviest on Black Households

BLACKPRESSUSA NEWSWIRE — For many African American families, the cost of keeping the lights on and homes heated or cooled is not just a monthly bill — it’s a crushing financial burden.

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Rising Electricity Utility Prices and Energy Demand (Photo by Douglas Rissing)

By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

For many African American families, the cost of keeping the lights on and homes heated or cooled is not just a monthly bill — it’s a crushing financial burden.

A new national study from Binghamton University and California State University, San Bernardino, finds that Black households spend a far larger share of their income on energy compared to white households, even when income levels are the same. “We often say that African Americans suffer more, but we often blame it just on income. And the reality is, there is something more there,” study author George Homsy, associate professor at Binghamton University, wrote. “It’s not just because they tend to be poor. There is something that’s putting them at a disadvantage. I think what happened is it happens to be where they live.” The study, published in Energy Research & Social Science, analyzed 65,000 census tracts across the United States. It found that while the average American household spends about 3.2% of income on energy bills, households in the majority African American census tracts spend an average of 5.1%.

Homsy and researcher Ki Eun Kang point to the age and condition of housing stock, along with lower homeownership rates, as key drivers. Their research concludes that “energy burden is not simply a matter of income or energy cost but also race, which might be driven by place.” Older, less energy-efficient housing and high rental rates in Black communities mean residents often cannot make upgrades like improved insulation or new appliances, locking families into higher bills.

Tradeoffs and Health Risks

The consequences go beyond money. Families forced to spend 10% or more of their income on energy — what experts classify as “unmanageable” — may cut back on food, medicine, or other essentials. More than 12 million U.S. households report leaving their homes at unsafe temperatures to reduce costs, while millions more fall behind on utility bills. The health effects are severe. High energy burdens increase risks of asthma, depression, poor sleep, pneumonia, and even premature death. The issue is especially acute for African Americans, who are disproportionately exposed to housing and environmental conditions that amplify these risks.

Washington, D.C.: A Case Study

In Washington, D.C., the problem is particularly stark. A recent analysis by the Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN) shows that SNAP-eligible households spend more than 20% of their income on energy bills. Across the metro area, nearly two-thirds of low-income households devote over 6% of their income to energy, and 40% face what researchers call a “severe financial strain,” paying more than 10%. Pepco, the District’s primary electricity provider, has implemented three consecutive annual rate hikes, pushing the average household bill to $114 per month as of January 2025. Shutoffs have followed — nearly 12,000 customers lost service in 2024, with disconnections doubling after a summer rate hike. Washington Gas has also sought a 12% rate increase and pushed a controversial $215 million pipeline replacement project, rebranded as “District SAFE.” The plan could ultimately cost D.C. households an additional $45,000 each over several decades, or nearly $1,000 annually added to bills.

Historical Roots

Researchers argue that these inequities are not accidental but rooted in history. The ScienceDirect study reveals that African American communities living in formerly redlined neighborhoods continue to face disadvantages today — from poor housing quality to higher climate risks. Homsy says policymakers must make targeted efforts. “It is harder to get to rental units where a lot of poor people live,” he noted. “We need to work harder to get into these communities of color.”

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