-
Chris Beard was released on bond Monday after being arrested for allegedly assaulting a household member.
-
Tens of thousands of teachers in Texas have left the profession in the last year. The UT College of Education is trying to prepare and retain teachers as they face a range of challenges from low pay to a lack of support in the classroom.
-
A group of eight public school educators and one university professor have suggested the changes for second graders to the Texas State Board of Education which is considering social studies curriculum revisions this summer.
-
Only 15% of respondents to a recent University of Texas at Austin poll said access to the procedure should be completely outlawed.
-
More than half of the voters surveyed by the UT/Texas Politics Project were in favor of allowing abortion in Texas. The poll was conducted before the U.S. Supreme Court’s leaked draft opinion on the landmark 1973 decision that established the right to an abortion.
-
Thanks to a new environmental and natural resources systems clinic launched this spring, students like Varnadoe have the chance to take their interest in environmental law to the next level.
-
A jury awarded Evdokia Nikolova damages for past and future pain and suffering after finding UT Austin illegally discriminated against her when the school denied her tenure.
-
Sealy and his family have donated more than $1 billion over the past 100 years to UTMB and its medical institutions.
-
About $1 billion will go to support students, as the cost of living in Austin skyrockets.
-
A 150-year-old building on West Campus is the last remnant of a freedom colony, a community of formerly enslaved people. The building has been closed as an apartment complex was built up around it. Some say the historic structure has never really gotten its due.
-
Patrick said a recent resolution adopted by faculty at UT Austin about its academic freedom is another signal the “woke left” has gone too far.
-
The Texas Law Review has been edited and published by students at the University of Texas School of Law since 1922.This year, the independent journal did something for the first time in its 100-year history: It chose a Black editor in chief.