Aubri Juhasz
Aubri Juhasz is a news assistant for NPR's All Things Considered.
Juhasz first joined NPR and All Things Considered in 2018 as an intern. She helps shape the program's technology coverage as a producer for All Tech Considered. In this role, she's looked at topics ranging from cyber surveillance to social media, including producing All Things Considered host Audie Cornish's interview with head of Instagram Adam Mosseri.
She's reported stories from out in the field, including the surge in cycling deaths in New York City and the decision by some states to offer competitive video gaming to high school students as an extracurricular activity.
She also works on the show's book coverage and has produced interviews with countless authors, including Edgar Keret, Andrea Bernstein and Lauren Groff.
Producing All Things Considered host Ailsa Chang's conversation with chef and food writer Alison Roman was a career highlight, and the food was delicious.
She grew up on Long Island and holds a bachelor's degree in English and political science from Barnard College, Columbia University.
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Hurricane Ida walloped south Louisiana a month ago. The killer storm wrecked lives and buildings. Now, kids are beginning to head back to classrooms for the first time since the hurricane.
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Lusher Charter School, one of the city’s most selective and sought after public schools, will soon be renamed, following a unanimous vote from its school board Thursday night.
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More than 72,000 K-12 students in Louisiana have not returned to the classroom since Hurricane Ida hit late last month, Superintendent of Education Cade Brumley told state legislative members during a Tuesday meeting.
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Of the more than 13,500 public school students and staff that participated in New Orleans' new COVID-19 testing program last week, about 1% tested positive, the district said Monday in its first data update since Hurricane Ida made landfall on Aug. 29.
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As New Orleans Public Schools reopen following Hurricane Ida, the city’s charter operators are recommending, and in some cases requiring, that students test negative for COVID-19 in an effort to prevent a surge in post-storm cases from further disrupting the school year.
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Only a handful of New Orleans Public Schools reopened Wednesday after Hurricane Ida caused greater damage to the city’s campuses than was originally assessed. More than 30% of buildings are considered unfit for students and are undergoing repairs.
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Frederick A. Douglass High School is the only New Orleans public school set to resume classes virtually, rather than in-person, after Hurricane Ida caused significant damage to its Ninth Ward campus.
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More than 45,000 students in the state’s hard-hit River Parishes could face a month or more of school closures due to ongoing power outages, lack of running water and significant structural damage.
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Louisiana's K-12 students started the school year almost fully in-person. But almost two weeks after Hurricane Ida hit, more than 250,000 students are again waiting for their classrooms to reopen.
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With power now restored to much of New Orleans, the city’s public school system said individual schools will begin welcoming students back to the classroom as early as Wednesday, Sept. 15.