Aug 20 Watch Al Jazeera America Debuts on Cable Amid Availability Concerns in Crowded Market Al Jazeera America Debuts on Cable Amid Availability Concerns in Crowded Market… Continue watching
Feb 15 Watch Double Jeopardy and the Constitution Students investigate the Double Jeopardy clause in the Fifth Amendment. Continue watching
Feb 15 Watch Calories and the Constitution Students investigate the connection between the U.S. Constitution and school lunches. Continue watching
Sep 26 Watch PBS NewsHour Student Reporting Labs By PBS News Hour Students + Public media mentors+ News = Student Reporting Labs… Continue watching
Sep 10 Watch From the Halls of Worrall Elementary School, News by Students with Asperger’s News has an agenda at Worrall Elementary School in Broomall, Pa., where students with Asperger's syndrome 'go live' in their own broadcast each year. Their teachers say it's one of the best ways for students to learn to speak clearly,… Continue watching
May 14 Watch JPMorgan Says Farewell to a Top Executive Amid Fallout From Huge Losses JPMorgan Says Farewell to a Top Executive Amid Fallout From Huge Losses… Continue watching
Apr 05 Watch For Troubled Media Industry, Some Hope as Mobile News Consumption Grows For Troubled Media Industry, Some Hope as Mobile News Consumption Grows… Continue watching
Apr 02 Watch Syria Analyst: ‘We’re in for a Long, Protracted Struggle’ Met with heavy skepticism by U.S. officials, Syria's government signaled Monday plans to stop fighting by next week, according to Arab League envoy Kofi Annan. Judy Woodruff, the University of Oklahoma's Joshua Landis and Al Arabiya News Network's Hisham Melhem… Continue watching
Jan 11 Watch Taxes: How High Is Too High? Economics correspondent Paul Solman explores the question of just how high U.S. tax rates should or shouldn't be and examines the relationship between economic activity and tax rates. It's part of his ongoing reporting series, Making Sen$e of financial news. Continue watching
Dec 13 Watch News Literacy Project Trains Young People to Be Skeptical Media Consumers A program called the News Literacy Project is training young people in several major cities how to separate fact from fiction in the news they consume. Jeffrey Brown reports. Continue watching