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London exhibit spotlights Victor Hugo's lesser-known talent -- drawing
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Iraqis find Ramadan joy in centuries-old ring game
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Under threat from Trump, Canada set to hold snap elections
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Pope to return to Vatican after five-week hospitalisation
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Too chummy with Trumpies? California governor's podcast rattles both sides
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'Antipathy' to US: Tourists turning away from Trump's America
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Draper back down to earth, Zverev advances, in Miami
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Hovland grabs share of Valspar lead in bid to end PGA title drought
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Wales open with win in World Cup qualifying, Haaland on target for Norway
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Vast crowds rally in Istanbul in support of arrested mayor
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Israel opposition urges general strike over security chief ouster
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Draper back down to earth with early exit in Miami
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Tens of thousands in France protest racism and far right
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Cancelled downhills give Brignone and Odermatt World Cup titles
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Israel launches more strikes on Lebanon after rocket fire
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Vast crowds rally in Istanbul as mayor quizzed by prosecutors
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Zverev in bright start, wildcard Wong ousts Shelton
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Fatah urges Hamas to cede power to safeguard 'Palestinians' existence'
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France resist Ireland rally to win Women's Six Nations opener as Scotland edge Wales
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Israel launches more strikes on Lebanon after cross-border rocket fire
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'Surf and turf' protest in Spain against factory, mine
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Spain coach hails emerging talent ahead of Netherlands clash
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Pope to leave hospital for Vatican on Sunday
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Kohli stars as Bengaluru thrash Kolkata in IPL opener
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Putin not a 'bad guy,' Trump envoy says
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Turkey braces for fourth night of protest as mayor arrives in court
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Hundreds pay tribute to Russia's deadly Crocus attack
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Evans consolidates lead at hectic Safari Rally Kenya
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Van der Poel pounces past Pogacar to secure Milan-San Remo double
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Van der Poel pounces past Pogacar at Milan-San Remo
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France resist Ireland rally to win Women's Six Nations opener
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Turkey braces for fourth night of protests as police quiz mayor
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Germany riding 'surge' ahead of Italy showdown in Nations League
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Duplantis 'grinds' for gold as stellar trio headline electrifying world indoors
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England's Atkinson eager to remain fresh for India and Australia series
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Pro-Trump US senator meets Chinese vice premier
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On Khartoum front line, Sudan women medics risk all for patients
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Beijing simplifies marriages to encourage Chinese to wed
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Holloway wins third successive world indoor 60m hurdles gold
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Appeal of Vietnam death row tycoon to begin in separate case
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Pole vault king Duplantis sees off Karalis for third world indoor gold
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Girl among two dead as Israel strikes Lebanon after cross-border rocket fire
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In-demand Hoeness extends deal as Stuttgart coach
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England Women's captain Knight leaves role after Ashes whitewash
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Ingebrigtsen wins 3,000m gold to keep world indoor double bid alive
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Russia hopes for 'progress' at Saudi talks: negotiator
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Protests intensify as South Korean court prepares to rule on impeached president
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Sudan army advances in central Khartoum after retaking palace
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Pope to make first public appearance Sunday since hospitalisation
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One dead as Israel strikes Lebanon after cross-border rocket fire

Has US Education Dept impeded students? False claims by conservatives
Do American students really rank at the bottom of international comparisons and does the United States really spend more per pupil than any other country?
Those are the false claims made by President Donald Trump and his backers to justify shutting the Department of Education.
Trump signed an executive order on Thursday to close the department, which was created in 1979. While it cannot be shuttered without the approval of Congress, the department will likely be starved of funds and staff by the order.
The Trump administration had already sought to gut the department in early March by shedding almost 1,800 jobs, or about half of its staff, which according to Education Secretary Linda McMahon would help "our scores go up."
- Do US students really rank last? False -
"No matter how you cut it, the US is not scoring at the bottom of the international rankings," Nat Malkus, senior fellow and the deputy director of education policy at the conservative-leaning American Enterprise Institute, told AFP. "The US ranks in the middle of the pack on most international assessments."
Fifteen-year-old US students placed above average in reading and close to average in math on the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's latest Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) test.
Two other international tests, the PIRLS in 2021 for reading and the TIMSS in 2023 for science and mathematics, also place American kids within the average of the countries tested.
National tests did show a drop off after 2019, but that was partly attributed to disruptions caused by Covid shutdowns, with similar patterns seen in other countries.
But the picture is nowhere near as catastrophic as many of Trump's conservative supporters claim.
Nationally, in 2024, 76 percent of fourth-grade students (ages 9-10) and 61 percent of eighth-grade students (ages 13-14) met or exceeded the expected baseline in mathematics, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) results. In reading, they were 60 percent and 67 percent above the minimum, respectively.
It is also false that students "have fallen behind" since the creation of the DoE, a claim made by Republican Representative Byron Donalds of Florida.
For example, the average math proficiency of fourth-graders has increased by 24 points since 1990, and the average reading proficiency has not changed since 1992, according to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES).
Malkus at the AEI said the "Department could improve how it supports US education" but cannot "be held responsible for student outcomes."
- Highest cost per student in the world? False -
Trump has claimed "we spend more per pupil than any other country in the world, and we're ranked at the bottom of the list."
He says his "dream" is to "move education into the states so that the states instead of bureaucrats working in Washington can run education" -- as proposed in the conservative "Project 2025" program that has guided the new administration.
But that's already the case. Each US state runs its own education system, with the DoE primarily responsible for administering student loans offered by the federal government, assisting disadvantaged students and enforcing rights.
While it does spend more per student than most countries, the United States ranked fifth in 2019 and sixth in 2021 in the OECD ranking for spending per primary and secondary student, far behind Luxembourg and Norway. And that spending is the responsibility of the states, with the federal government representing only about 13 percent of total funding.
"In the US only 4 percent of total federal spending is devoted to education, compared to about 10 percent on average in the countries in the OECD," said Fernando Reimers, a Harvard professor specializing in international education.
Several Democratic states, parents associations and the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) have all filed appeals against the dismantling of the department.
The AFT said in a press release that shutting the department will hurt "ten million students who rely on financial aid to go to college or pursue a trade" as well as "millions of students with disabilities and students living in poverty."
F.Wilson--AT