Education Late Seattle school buses hit low-income kids hardest Several buses to some of the district’s poorest schools, including West Seattle Elementary, Emerson Elementary and Wing Luke Elementary, were running two hours late Friday morning. Ann Dornfeld
Arts & Life PHOTOS: I want ‘to be the first female Eagle Scout and beat my brother’ Megan Farmer Tom Banse
Education Homeless kids are falling behind in school. And it's worse than previously thought Kim Malcolm talks with Liza Burell about a new report that looks at the academic challenges faced by homeless students in Washington state. Burell is program director with Building Changes, a Seattle non-profit. Kim Malcolm Andy Hurst
Arts & Life What happened after I blacked out — and why didn’t one of those young men intervene? Mandy Greer
Education Seattle students walk out in protest of teacher displacement Nova is a small school with about 300 students. If it loses just two teachers - that's 15% of their teachers. Casey Martin
Education How student journalists uncovered the sexual misconduct story at WSU Kim Malcolm talks with The Daily Evergreen reporter Ian Smay about his investigation into sexual misconduct allegations against former Washington State University quarterback Jason Gesser. Kim Malcolm Andy Hurst
Technology After head tax, tech and Seattle lawmakers look for ways to mend This fall, the city and tech are starting to partner on solutions. Carolyn Adolph
Education Seattle officials tighten growth goals on UW The University of Washington is planning for an influx of 35,000 more students in the next decade. Paige Browning
Education Seattle's new school superintendent on late buses and racial equity Superintendent Denise Juneau takes listener questions about transportation problems, poor schools in the district, and how well Seattle compares with other school districts across the country. Katherine Banwell Bill Radke
Education WA Teachers got big raises this year, but are they sustainable? Kim Malcolm talks with Democratic State Rep. Christine Rolfes about how the state legislature will approach education funding in the coming years. Kim Malcolm Andy Hurst