Tim Lloyd
Tim Lloyd grew up north of Kansas City and holds a masters degree in journalism from the University of Missouri, Columbia. Prior to joining St. Louis Public Radio, he launched digital reporting efforts for Harvest Public Media, a Corporation for Public Broadcasting funded collaboration between Midwestern NPR member stations that focuses on agriculture and food issues. His stories have aired on a variety of stations and shows including Morning Edition, Marketplace, KCUR, KPR, IPR, NET, WFIU. He won regional Edward R Murrow Awards in 2013 for Writing, Hard News and was part of the reporting team that won for Continuing Coverage. In 2010 he received the national Debakey Journalism Award and in 2009 he won a Missouri Press Association award for Best News Feature.
-
Tiffany Anderson serves as a crossing guard in the Jennings School District outside St. Louis, Mo. She's also the superintendent, and that's just one way she stretches district money in creative ways.
-
How much money a school can spend on its students still depends, in large part, on local property taxes. And many states aren't doing much to level the field for poor kids.
-
How much money a school can spend on its students still depends, in large part, on local property taxes. And many states aren't doing much to level the field for poor kids.
-
Updated at 4:50 p.m. - More than a dozen people have died as a result of historic flooding throughout Missouri. And the state isn’t out of the wood just...
-
It’s the holiday season, and like many of you, we’re taking stock. Taking stock of what we accomplished with this We Live Here project; the stories and...
-
The activist group Concerned Student 1950 has vowed to keep pushing for change in the wake of resignations by both the University of Missouri system President, Tim Wolfe, and chancellor of the Columbia campus, R. Bowen Loftin. Among their demands is increasing the number of black faculty members at Mizzou from 3 percent to 10 percent over the next two years.
-
Lost learning time often means lost potential. That’s the message from a new national report from nonprofits Attendance Works and Healthy Schools...
-
For any school district, the path to success is rarely clear, but in Missouri, new numbers create a MAP that is particularly hard to read. And that...
-
As urban schools across the country continue to lose students, the question districts like St. Louis face is: What to do with all of those empty buildings?
-
Updated at 9:30 am on Friday, June 6. Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon plans to veto this year’s version of a school transfer bill, legislative sources said...