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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New Orleans Public Schools reported a record number of COVID cases and quarantines.
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Due to the current surge of cases of the delta variant of COVID-19, Louisiana is dangerously low on intensive care unit beds, according to the latest data on COVID-19 from the state's health department.
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Before students set foot in the classroom last week, the delta variant had already caused significant disruptions at some New Orleans public schools, according to data released Monday.
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Education reporter Aubri Juhasz spoke with Dr. Amanda Jackson, a pediatrician and vice president of physician services at New Orleans Children’s Hospital, about pediatric COVID-19 cases, vaccine hesitancy and what it would take for schools to shut down again.
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Louisiana hit a new record this past weekend when COVID-19 hospitalizations reached 2,720. It was the fifth time the state broke its hospitalization record in the last week, according to data released Monday.
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Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry issued a legal opinion Friday that said the state’s top school board, not Gov. John Bel Edwards, has the authority to dictate masking policies in public schools.
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New Orleans Public Schools Superintendent Henderson Lewis Jr. doubled down on his decision not to offer virtual learning for the coming school year at a press conference Thursday.
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Delta Variant 'More Apt To Make Kids Sick,' Pediatric Cases On The Rise In Louisiana As Schools ReopLouisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards could issue a statewide mask mandate as early as Monday impacting back-to-school plans for the state’s 70 districts, most of which have decided not to require face coverings for the coming school year.
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The coronavirus pandemic’s fourth wave has not changed state-wide back-to-school plans in the Gulf South, where cases are rising and mask use is voluntary.
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With COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations on the rise in Louisiana, some parents have begun to question whether their children will be able to start the school year in-person. But ask any school or health official and the answer — at least for now — is still the same: Schools will reopen.