Biden administration won't cancel standardized testing
The Department of Education announced Monday it would give school districts flexibility in administering standardized tests, but wouldn't allow broad cancellation of those exams.
The Department of Education announced Monday it would give school districts flexibility in administering standardized tests, but wouldn't allow broad cancellation of those exams.
The president will meet with local leaders in Texas after a winter storm that devastated the state.
The payments are part of a broader aid package the state Legislature approved Monday.
Only 13 states prioritize supermarket employees for COVID-19 vaccinations. "That's criminal," says head of UFCW.
"It does not honor us by having our name plastered on the side of a car," Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said
A Malaysian court has temporarily halted deporting 1,200 Myanmar nationals after a military coup in their homeland. Canada joins the U.S. in declaring China's treatment of its Muslim Uighur minority population a genocide. CBS News foreign correspondent Ian Lee joins CBSN AM to discuss these stories and more international news headlines.
Emma Coronel Aispuro is accused of working "closely with the command-and-control structure" of the Sinaloa cartel.
Lucia DeClerck, who survived the Spanish flu, two world wars, and the deaths of three husbands, is now the oldest person in her nursing home to beat COVID-19.
"If any one person's rights are suppressed by the state, it harms all of us by eroding the foundation of our constitution," one of his lawyers said.
Black business owners reported less revenue in 2020 than their White counterparts, according to H&R Block survey.
Netfilx's hit period drama is breaking records, breaking boundaries and inflaming passions.
Early childhood educators earn a national median wage of $11.65 an hour, said a report calling for government funding.
"Face the Nation" is the only Sunday show up across the board from last week, last year, and season to date
80 freshwater species have already been declared extinct — 16 of them in 2020 alone.
Rain and severe thunderstorms hit the South; Celebrating the history and meaning of Mother's Day.
Iran's government says cooperation with international nuclear inspectors is being curbed, but it's a nuanced move, and everyone seems to want to talk.
The SPLC says 704 Confederate monuments are still standing across the U.S.
Federal Reserve Chair signals he is in no hurry to hike interest rates, citing "great hardship" caused by COVID-19.
"My greatest prayer is that this is an inflection point that results in real institutional change for the better," he said.
U.S. surpasses 500,000 reported covid-19 deaths; 5.9% of population has received two vaccine doses
Prosecutor Steve Crump shows "48 Hours" correspondent Peter Van Sant what he didn’t show in court.
Two Senate committees are hearing testimony from security officials about lapses that allowed a pro-Trump mob to overrun the complex.
More than 200 people have been arrested in the seven weeks since the Capitol riot. But little is still known about them as individuals and how exactly they were radicalized. Ben Tracy talks to a Virginia woman struggling with her father's role at the Capitol as she tries to repair a relationship torn apart by politics.
Grocery workers have fought for hazard pay and expressed concerns for their safety for since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic nearly a year ago. Marc Perrone, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, spoke with Anne-Marie Green and Vladimir Duthiers about what would help grocery workers and Kroger's plans to close stores in California and Washington state after local governments required them to give workers hazard pay.
The wife of infamous drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman is expected to appear in court Tuesday over her alleged involvement in international drug trafficking. Court documents reveal the 31-year-old is also accused of helping her husband escape from a Mexican prison in 2015. Catherine Herridge reports.