Remarkable Woman Annalies Corbin: Transforming education
Through initiatives like the PAST Innovation Lab and her Learning Unboxed podcast, she has impacted millions of students and educators championing hands-on, equitable learning. A nationally recognized speaker and author, Corbin is reshaping K -12 education to better prepare future generations for real-world success.
'The PAST Foundation is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to help kids, in particular, find their passions in life that they can then turn into careers,' said Corbin. 'Particularly, our hope is into STEM careers.'
Science, technology, engineering and math — students find STEM at the PAST Innovation Lab, and they make it work. The lab has 3D printers, small and very large.
'Our goal is hands-on, hands-on, hands-on,' said Corbin. 'So we know that not only can you not do what you don't know, you can't be what you can't see, all of those pieces roll together.'
PAST partners with local school districts and high school students to earn class credit. The programs start at kindergarten and go through college with summer, after school, and holiday break opportunities.
'Kids fly drones, kids learn how to be artists, to put murals up on buildings, kids learn how to potentially go into health care fields, just literally everything,' said Corbin.
All of this is the brainchild of Corbin, who admits she was a restless learner.
'I was a kid that tried all the majors,' said Corbin. 'My parents gave me all kinds of grief about it. But the reality of it is I love to learn. And so the idea of just being stuck in one thing didn't really appeal to me. And so I tried lots of stuff. And what that taught me is that there's just so much potential out there.'
Teachers from around the country are trained by PAST to use hands-on learning to help students find their own passion. When they do, attendance and grades go up. PAST teams with industries and employers, many of which provide financial support.
'We get funding from corporations, we get funding from individuals, we have families that support and provide funding for other kids to attend camps,' said Corbin. 'We get state funding, we have federal funding, lots of grants. We write an awful lot of grants around here.'
Twenty-five years in, Corbin has written detailed books about her teaching methods, which have been used by 22,000 teachers and nearly three million students.
'If we can help influence the way the systems and the structures of modern education are going to work moving forward, then we will have been successful to benefit those kids,' said Corbin. 'I know we're changing lives. [I am] so incredibly proud of all the work that everybody over the last 25 years has done to make this endeavor possible and for it to thrive.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Politico
29-07-2025
- Politico
Alameda was just the tip (of the geoengineering iceberg)
With help from Alex Nieves and Camille von Kaenel SEA LEGS: Remember last year's short-lived climate experiment in San Francisco Bay to test the prospects of altering cloud behavior by spraying seawater into the air? Turns out researchers had been planning something much bigger than the series of sprays off the deck of the USS Hornet, a retired aircraft carrier docked in Alameda. As Corbin Hiar reports for POLITICO's E&E News, University of Washington researchers were secretly planning on deploying their technology across a stretch of ocean larger than Puerto Rico. Even before last year's test began, the researchers were talking with consultants and donors (including cryptocurrency billionaire Chris Larsen, philanthropist Rachel Pritzker and venture capitalist Chris Sacca) about conducting a 3,900-square-mile cloud-creation test off the west coasts of North America, Chile or south-central Africa, according to more than 400 internal documents Corbin obtained through an open records request to the University of Washington. 'At such scales, meaningful changes in clouds will be readily detectable from space,' said a 2023 research plan from the university's Marine Cloud Brightening Program. The plans would have been contingent on the Alameda experiment going well — which it didn't, after city officials got so much public pushback and were so taken aback by the project's lack of transparency that they ordered a halt to it. University of Washington researchers downplayed the latest findings, saying that their work would have focused on research rather than deployment. The program does not 'recommend, support or develop plans for the use of marine cloud brightening to alter weather or climate,' Sarah Doherty, an atmospheric and climate science professor at the university who leads the program, said in a statement to Corbin. But unaffiliated academics said the process was flawed. 'Alameda was a stepping stone to something much larger, and there wasn't any engagement with local communities,' said Sikina Jinnah, an environmental studies professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz. 'That's a serious misstep.' It's another public-relations setback for geoengineering writ large, which is drawing criticism from both ends of the scientific spectrum. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a law last month that bans the injection or release of chemicals into the atmosphere 'for the express purpose of affecting the temperature, weather, climate, or intensity of sunlight.' Meanwhile, more than 575 scientists have called for a ban on geoengineering development because it 'cannot be governed globally in a fair, inclusive, and effective manner.' And Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who has erroneously suggested that geoengineering is responsible for the deadly July 4 flood in Texas and introduced a bill to criminalize the technology, reposted Corbin's story on Sunday. 'There are many extreme and potentially deadly geoengineering projects happening,' she said. 'We must pass my Clear Skies Act to protect our skies and our sun!!' — CH, DK Did someone forward you this newsletter? Sign up here! MISS US?: The news kept happening last week while California Climate was off. Here's what went down on POLITICO Pro: Desperate times: The California Energy Commission confirmed Wednesday that it's convening discussions with 'market players' ahead of Valero and Phillips 66's planned closure of two of the state's nine refineries by April 2026, which together account for 17 percent of the state's refining capacity. It's the latest move from Gov. Gavin Newsom's administration to woo oil companies back to the state, coming on the heels of legislative language to ease oil-well permitting. LCFS in the crosshairs: Environmental groups sued the California Air Resources Board (again) over the state's controversial emissions trading market for transportation fuels, arguing that the agency didn't consider costs for low-income communities when it adopted new program rules last year. The groups, including Food and Water Watch and the Animal Defense Legal Fund, filed the lawsuit in Fresno County Superior Court. The groups also challenged the LCFS amendments in a December lawsuit claiming the agency fell short of requirements in the California Environmental Quality Act by not fully analyzing the environmental and community costs of its update. A new plan for powering data centers: The California Public Utilities Commission signed off on a new interim rule that will allow PG&E to connect data centers and other large energy users to the grid more quickly. Those energy users will now have standardized permitting requirements, instead of having to apply on a case-by-case basis, potentially shaving months off the time it takes to be approved. Only customers able to pay for the transmission costs upfront will be eligible. A smelly agreement: U.S. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced a deal with Mexican officials Thursday to speed up repairs and upgrades to wastewater treatment infrastructure in an effort to stop untreated sewage from flowing into San Diego waters. The U.S. agreed to expand capacity at a major wastewater treatment plant and release funding to complete pump station and collection pipe repairs, while the Mexican government pledged to look for funding to accelerate planned construction on projects. Delta dealing: The State Water Resources Control Board on Thursday endorsed a proposal, backed by Newsom, that would allow cities and farmers to conserve water and restore habitat instead of abiding by minimum flow requirements. Newsom praised the board after the hearing, but groups like the Golden State Salmon Association accused board members of 'collapsing under pressure' to approve voluntary agreements environmentalists and tribes have long criticized as too lenient and lacking accountability. — AN, CvK SOME OPTIONS: Electric vehicle advocates are pushing Newsom and agency officials to double down on EV investments as they scramble to counterbalance the Trump administration's rollback of the state's sales mandates and Biden-era tax incentives. A group of EV manufacturers, charger developers and environmentalists — including Rivian, Terawatt and the Natural Resources Defense Council — sent a letter to state officials last week, calling on them to backfill federal cuts to EV rebates and offer more financing and permitting streamlining for charging infrastructure. The seven-page letter also urges the state to reauthorize its cap-and-trade program and protect the low-carbon fuel standard, a pair of carbon-trading markets that provide funding for EV incentives and infrastructure. The industry's policy outline comes after Newsom issued an executive order June 12 giving state agencies 60 days to issue recommendations for maintaining EV adoption and as CARB is holding a series of public meetings around the state to gather options (the next one is scheduled for Thursday). — AN ENDANGERMENT IN DANGER: The Trump administration is about to take a sledgehammer to the cornerstone of the federal government's efforts to regulate carbon emissions. The EPA plans to release a proposal Tuesday that would overturn a 2009 scientific finding that greenhouse gases endanger human health and welfare — the predicate for most climate regulations under the Clean Air Act, Jean Chemnick and Zack Colman report for POLITICO's E&E News. If the courts uphold Trump's move to repeal the endangerment finding, it could be easier for EPA to quickly undo a host of Biden-era climate rules for power plants and oil and gas methane without replacing them with new standards. That's on top of the administration's assault on state climate policies, like California's electric vehicle mandate, which Republicans revoked last month. — AN, JC, ZC RAKESTRAW RETURNS: Newsom reappointed Andrew Rakestraw as chair of the Board of Environmental Safety on Friday. Rakestraw, a former climate adviser for the Biden administration, was appointed in March to finish the term of former chair Jeanne Rizzo, who retired in February. He was previously a senior climate negotiator at the U.S. Department of State and a senior adviser for John Kerry, Biden's climate envoy. — Nearly two dozen California House representatives are demanding NOAA investigate a spike in gray whale deaths off the state's coast. — Replacement tires are generally less fuel-efficient than those that come on new cars, costing drivers extra gas money and increasing emissions, a new study finds. — The Trump administration is celebrating the revival of three oil rigs off Santa Barbara, as state regulators pursue fines and cease-and-desist orders against the company behind the restart.
Yahoo
11-06-2025
- Yahoo
At least half of Hilliard students exempt from some final exams under state test policy
HILLIARD, Ohio (WCMH) — Hilliard City Schools students who score well on their state tests do not have to take final exams, a district spokesperson confirmed. District announcements show the program began as an incentive for students to do well on Ohio's state tests. Any student who got a proficient score, or 700 and higher, in Algebra I, Biology, English II, Geometry, U.S. History and U.S. Government could choose to be exempted from that course's end-of-year exam. According to state records, this policy would exempt more than half of the students from these exams. Ohio has five levels of performance for its state exams: limited, basic, proficient, accelerated and advanced. Ohio Department of Education Press Secretary Lacey Snoke said students must score competently enough on state tests — a 684 or higher — to graduate. DEI law cosponsor calls Ohio State's Juneteenth guidelines an 'intentional overreaction' 'Ohio's State Tests provide valuable insights into how well our students are growing in the knowledge and skills outlined in Ohio's Learning Standards,' Snoke said. 'They also help guide and strengthen future teaching, ensuring that we are preparing our students for long-term success in school, careers and life.' Snoke said districts have control over their daily operations, including things like final exams, so Hilliard is able to offer incentives like this one. According to state data, the policy would exempt more than half of Hilliard's students from these exams. Hilliard students had their worst scores in Geometry, with 53.8% of students earning a proficient score. In the 2023-2024 school year, as many as 80% of students could have skipped their final exams thanks to the incentive. Hilliard scores better on these tests than most districts, but it lags behind similar districts in its scoring. The state identifies similar school districts for easy comparison, and Hilliard is grouped in with other suburban schools with low student poverty rates and large student bodies. The state considers Worthington, Gahanna-Jefferson, Pickerington, Dublin and Westerville similar districts. A Hilliard spokesperson said the incentive was common practice among central Ohio schools. At Columbus City Schools, district policy exempts most students with an 'A' in a course from the final, and many districts — including Hilliard — exempt students from end-of-year exams if they take a relevant AP test. South-Western City Schools teachers, board clash over contract However, none of the five central Ohio districts that the state qualifies as 'similar' to Hilliard appear to offer the same exemption. Gahanna allows individual instructors to choose if they will have an exam and don't have an adjusted schedule. Westerville requires exams at the end of each semester, exempting only seniors in good standing with an 80% or higher in the class. Dublin City Schools requires teachers to administer exams at the end of the semester, and all students are required to take them unless they have a specific approved exemption. 'Examinations of this type are excellent tools for determining the degree of knowledge obtained from a course,' Dublin schools said. 'They also provide excellent preparation for the type of examinations encountered in higher education.' Hilliard students who scored proficient or higher on the state test but had a near-failing grade in the class were 'highly encouraged' to take their exams as a chance to improve their grades, but not required. Any student who wanted to take their final exam was allowed to. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Politico
10-06-2025
- Politico
Trump's new tactic for bypassing Congress
President Donald Trump's budget chief is trying out an audacious strategy to eliminate congressionally approved funding without lawmakers' sign-off. Russ Vought, who leads the Office of Management and Budget, has directed a dozen federal agencies to freeze upward of $30 billion in spending on a broad array of programs, including ones at NASA and the Environmental Protection Agency, write Scott Waldman and Corbin Hiar. The plan is to delay that funding until the final weeks of the fiscal year, which runs until Sept. 30. Then, the White House will ask Congress to permanently eliminate the funding through a so-called rescission request. Even if Congress rejects the request — or, more likely, doesn't vote on it at all — the White House could try to withhold the funds until the fiscal year clock resets on Oct. 1 and the cuts become permanent. If the so-called pocket rescission works, it could pave the way for the administration to retroactively cancel congressional funding. 'I think it upends a fundamental check and balance contemplated in our Constitution, and I don't understand how you subordinate Congress' power of the purse,' Joseph Carlile, former associate director at OMB in the Biden administration, told Scott and Corbin. Vought is calling the funding freeze a deferral — which first requires congressional sign-off. But instead, he has told agencies to withhold the funds before he sends the deferral package to Congress. Some agency officials were 'shocked' at the move, an administration source with direct knowledge of the plan told Scott and Corbin. In a Friday email to top officials, the National Science Foundation's budget director wrote that the spending freeze targets the agency's research and education programs. 'I imagine you will all have questions, as do we,' Caitlyn Fife wrote. 'However we are immediately focused on pulling the funds back to ensure there are no further commitments or obligations.' Also on the list are tens of millions of dollars for national park operations as well as more than $100 million in science spending at NASA, which includes climate research. The strategy is expected to draw legal pushback. That could land the administration's effort before the Supreme Court, which Vought would welcome. He has long argued that impounding some congressionally appropriated funding is constitutional, and he has said he wants the Supreme Court to validate what would be a significant weakening of congressional oversight of the federal budget. It's Tuesday — thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Arianna Skibell. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy. Send your tips, comments, questions to askibell@ Today in POLITICO Energy's podcast: Debra Kahn breaks down how carbon capture has largely dodged GOP attacks and why the technology hits close to home for House Speaker Mike Johnson. hot off the press Dispatches from POLITICO's 2025 Energy Summit today in Washington: GOP megabill could undermine US energy production, Republicans warnFive takeaways from the Trump administration officials, lawmakers, former policymakers and business leaders who spoke today. Trump energy adviser slams renewables, says focus is on fossil fuelsSome other Republicans might favor investing in solar and wind energy, but 'the president is in charge,' the executive director of the National Energy Dominance Council said. Energy powerhouse to Republicans: Don't 'take renewables off the table'The head of NextEra Energy warns that building new natural gas generation and nuclear power will take too long — and wind and solar power are quicker to add now. Heinrich: 'Republicans are going to own increased energy prices'GOP candidates will pay an 'enormous political price' for their cuts to renewable energy projects, the New Mexico Democrat predicted. Power Centers EPA to propose rolling back power plant ruleEPA will move Wednesday to repeal federal limits on power plant climate pollution, write Jean Chemnick and Zack Colman. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin will announce the proposal to roll back the Biden-era rule at an event at agency headquarters, according to six people familiar with the situation. He will also propose repealing a separate regulation to curb hazardous air pollution such as mercury. Scrapping the power plant rule would effectively shelve regulations for the electricity sector, which accounts for one-quarter of U.S. greenhouse gases. California vehicle emission rules on chopping blockTrump plans to sign a trio of resolutions Thursday to revoke California's national-leading vehicle emissions standards, writes Alex Nieves. Trump's signature will finalize his administration's monthslong effort to thwart California's authority to set stricter electrification rules for passenger vehicles and commercial trucks, along with higher standards for heavy-duty diesel engines. Democrats scramble to save green creditsSenate Democrats are ramping up pressure on Republicans to try to protect swaths of their 2022 climate law as the GOP races to advance their party-line megabill, writes Kelsey Brugger. The situation has Democrats trying to influence legislation they have no intention of supporting. Whether they succeed is another question altogether. Utilities await DOE action on loansA growing chorus of consumer advocates and environmentalists is urging Trump's Energy Department to lock in billions of dollars in loan guarantees for utilities, arguing that the loans will help cut utility bills for everyday Americans as prices spike nationwide, write Brian Dabbs and Jason Plautz. The $23 billion in Biden-era loans — much of which would go to Midwest states that voted for Trump — could trigger big investments in new long-range power lines, batteries, clean energy and natural gas infrastructure. Subscriber Zone A showcase of some of our best subscriber content. Trump has taken a 'scorched earth' approach to climate policy by going far beyond his first-term actions, a former diplomat said Tuesday during the POLITICO Energy Summit. Utah Republican Sen. John Curtis raised doubts Tuesday the GOP could pass its megabill by its self-imposed Independence Day deadline. House Energy and Commerce Chair Brett Guthrie suggested Tuesday that he is looking ahead of the fight over Republicans' mega reconciliation bill toward bipartisan legislation tackling issues like artificial intelligence. That's it for today, folks! Thanks for reading.