
Ryan Delaney
Ryan Delaney works on the Innovation Trail project - covering technology, economic development, startups and other issues relating to New York's innovation economy.
Ryan began his public radio career working for WAER in Syracuse while still in college, where his work was honored by the Syracuse Press Club. He then returned to Syracuse, N.Y. from Albany where he worked at WAMC. Prior to that, Ryan filed stories for The Allegheny Front in Pittsburgh.
His reporting has also been heard on NPR, Vermont Public Radio and New Hampshire Public Radio.
Ryan grew up in Burlington, Vt. He has a degree in broadcast journalism and international relations from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and Maxwell School at Syracuse University.
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St. Louis Public Radio’s Ryan Delaney is in Germany this month to report on how that country handles keeping its schools open.
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Some districts are bringing students back to classrooms but some schools have already had to close because of possible virus exposure.
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There is no obvious benchmark for school leaders to use to decide whether it’s safe for teachers and students to be in classrooms together.
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Wentzville’s 17,000 students are some of the first and the few in the broader St. Louis region to return to school in person. It’s an experience that’s being missed for most public school children and parents in St. Louis and St. Louis County.
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On the heels of financial struggles in higher education, the pandemic could land a death blow to smaller colleges dotting rural Missouri and Illinois.
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Many school systems in the St. Louis region are continuing with remote learning to start the school year, after first cautiously releasing plans that included the option for families to choose in-school instruction.
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Gov. Mike Parson met with about a dozen St. Louis-area superintendents Wednesday afternoon to discuss how, or if, to return to school in a few weeks. He's leaving that decision up to them.
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As school districts consider their reopening plans, one summer enrichment program offers a glimpse of what in-person school could look like in the fall — from health checks to social distancing.
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Brittany Woods Middle School feels too empty, too quiet, when teacher Anne Cummings comes to the school to maintain its garden. The building in...
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Federal money meant to help low-income families with food costs while kids were home from school this spring is reaching just 60% of Missouri’s eligible...