Now wmur news nine daybreak. Good morning, everybody. Thanks for waking up with us. Hope you had a beautiful, long weekend. But it is back to work. The question is can we continue the gorgeous weather . Each of the next six days cooler than the day before. For the time being, though, it will be another fairly mild day. A couple showers around this morning. Into the afternoon. Studies of the downpours early this morning will be in southeastern areas of the state this afternoon. Out ahead of that, temperatures starting the day in the 40 s to mid 50 s. Eventually into the afternoon, we are in the 60 s to lower 70 s. Cooler air starts to move in a long. Our shower chances more in the forecast coming up. Let morning ride. Deb right now if you are friday starting your Early Morning commute on 93, watch for patches of heavy fog. That is slowing things down. To the split with 293. Things looking good through the city of manchester with no major problems. We have some lane shifts between exits
Her school district, mrs. Stenglers students showed some of the highest rates of improvements on test scores. We lost a great teacher because of how expensive Postsecondary Education is. And not only that, even with her moms sacrifice joelle, who is only in her second year of college already has 12,000 in Student Loans and she estimates her total debt will be around 30,000 by the time she graduates. Again, that is even with her mom leaving the job she loves the job really as a society we would want her to be in and that she is so great at. Now, at the round tables i have around the state of minnesota i always hear about students working multiple jobs. Sometimes even putting in 40 hours a week while going to school full time. Now working at school is a good thing. Its not a bad thing. Not necessarily. Some work can help students manage their time, become more productive and of course help pay for college. But evidence shows that when a student starts to work more than 15 hours a week, i
Replacing expensive textbooks with free educational resources could reduce college costs, but more professors and administrators need to promote the option, according to student research published Wednesday by the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University.