This story contains graphic descriptions that some readers may find disturbing.
A former member of Sean “Diddy” Combs‘ inner circle returned to the courtroom May 30 to offer more details of the hip-hop moguls’ alleged pattern of sexual and physical abuse during his criminal trial.
After a harrowing day of testimony from Combs’ ex-assistant, a woman going by the pseudonym “Mia,” prosecutors returned to continue building their case against the Grammy-winning rapper in his sweeping federal sex-crimes case.
During her second day of testimony, Mia painted a picture of long-term emotional and professional manipulation. She described a dynamic where Combs’ alleged threats were used to maintain control, including using an unreleased ABC series as leverage, and caused lasting trauma.
Mia’s testimony followed similar allegations from Deonte Nash, a friend and stylist of Ventura Fine, who claimed Combs tried to control all aspects of Cassie’s life during their decadelong relationship.
Combs, 55, was arrested in September 2024 and charged with sex trafficking, racketeering and transportation to engage in prostitution. He has pleaded not guilty.
In court, there was a 40-minute disagreement about showing a video of Mia singing “Happy Birthday” to Combs, which the defense submitted during the lunch break at 1:07 p.m.
Combs’ attorney Brian Steel said it was “prohibitive to show her demeanor and energy” and that it shows a “night and day” difference with how she was presented during direct examination.
Combs’ lead defense attorney Marc Agnifilo said that “the jury might conclude that her affect on the stand is an act,” noting the video confirms that her testimony is “false.” The defense said they just found the video on Thursday, May 29, and people emailed it to them as well. But Judge Arun Subramanian watched the video but precluded it as evidence and said the relevance is minimal.
One of the trial’s most contentious moments took place Friday.
Steel asked, “Isn’t it true that Mr. Combs never had forcible, sexual misconduct with you?” Mia said firmly, “I have not lied to anyone at all.” Steel pushed back, saying, “Isn’t it true that it never happened as many times as you told this jury?” Mia replied, “Everything I’ve said in this courtroom is true.” Steel doubled down: “What if you’re not a victim of sexual assault? Then what?” Prosecutors immediately objected, and Subramanian sustained it.
During her testimony, Mia said everyone around Combs “upheld his behavior and punishment toward me.” She said it was “an abusive relationship, a cycle of violence” and that she was “always searching for approval and confused what I had done wrong,” she testified.
“I don’t know how to explain it. I was young and manipulated. There were no streaming documentaries, no one was standing up,” Mia said. Steel then asked, “Why did you need someone else saying that it was wrong when Mr. Combs made you feel, according to your testimony, that he would kill you?” Mia responded, “My logic brain and my trauma brain: My trauma brain wins all the time.” Mia called herself a rule follower and a people pleaser: “You make excuses for people. I tend to take a lot more than normal people,” she said.
Steel then asked, “Mia, you’re not a weak person, are you?” to which she responded, “I’m not sure.”
Steel continued to go through social media posts of Mia supporting Combs through the years.
The court saw a scrapbook Mia made for Combs for his 45th birthday, which included clippings of magazine articles about Combs from 1991 to 1999. Mia wrote a sweet message in the scrapbook about reaching new heights and reminding Combs to take in his accomplishments. She wanted to remind him of “when this world made your eyes light up,” Mia wrote in the scrapbook. On the stand, Mia said he had come to her “depressed” and recalled Combs said, “I used to look at the world the way you did. What’s left if I’ve done everything?”
“He felt sad to me,” Mia testified, and she wanted to remind him that his success and life weren’t meaningless. Steel asked, “Did you ever tell him ‘you made my life feel meaningless, too’?” Mia said no, and that she has an “empathetic nature.” Steel asked how it’s even possible for Mia to be around a man who traumatized her and Cassie so much. “It’s called psychological abuse,” Mia said.
Steel disclosed that Mia has met with prosecutors or investigators 27 times in preparation for her trial testimony. She responded that she didn’t remember exactly how many times it was, but that it was a lot. She also told prosecutors that she couldn’t remember all the times that Combs sexually assaulted her.
“How do you have a good experience with a man who terrorized you?” Steel asked. “It’s easy,” Mia said, “because the dynamics would shift.”
On the stand, Mia said she was in fear of upsetting Combs, but there were good moments where he treated her like a best friend. Asked her how she could be best friends with someone who allegedly did all of these things to her, she quipped back, “I guess we can ask my therapist.” She added that Combs was “vulnerable” with her and that she felt “responsible” for him.
Asked how she could forget Combs slamming Ventura Fine into the bedframe, which the former assistant testified to May 29, Mia responded, “You don’t forget that. You get punished for bringing it up again.”
Steel continued to pull up social media posts, including one of Mia wishing Combs’ son Justin Combs a happy birthday and another congratulating Combs on a Ciroc event in Times Square, using the hashtag “family.”
“In these postings, do you ever say anything about how Mr. Combs violated you?” Steel asked, with Mia responding, “Never.”
Steel pulled up another post from 2014, captioned, “legends recognizing legends” of Combs giving an award to Jimmy Iovine. Steel asked, “One of the legends is the person who has traumatized you physically, emotionally, financially?”
More of Mia’s posts were mentioned, including from “The Chris Gethard Show” and another from “Funny or Die.” Mia explained that “Puff wanted to break into the comedy world” and that “it was great for Puff to have that comedic exposure.” She clarified that the posts were her promoting work.
“Once again, you post a picture on social media of the person who ruined your life?” Steel asked. “And my boss, yes,” Mia said.
Mia defended her posts, saying, “Of course I want to highlight the highs. I don’t think people wrote about the bad stuff on Instagram back then.” She added, “It was a very confusing cycle of ups and downs and violence.”
“You were in fear of Sean Combs every day, is that true?” Steel asked, with Mia clarifying she wasn’t on the days when Combs called her his best friend. Steel asked why she never told her family or friends about the alleged assaults, and Mia said she didn’t get to talk to her family and friends regularly. “I had to get permission to leave or do things. I had to beg to go to my grandma’s funeral,” Mia said.
Steel brought up again that Mia had said she loved Combs with all her heart. “That’s how I write to the people in my life,” Mia said. Steel asked, “Including the person you’re terrified of?” Mia responded, “Especially the person I’m terrified of.”
During cross-examination, Steel showed Mia a number of old social media posts. One was a social media post for Combs’ 45th birthday, where she wrote, “Happy birthday, Puff Daddy. Thank you for being the good kind of crazy,” adding that she loved him with all her heart. Steel remarked that this was five years after Combs first allegedly sexually assaulted her.
“You have Sean Combs shirtless in two of the pictures” in the collage of photos of Mia and Combs together, he said. “At this point, you have taken in so much trauma from him.”
“When the highs were high and the goods were good, you tried so hard to stay in that,” Mia said. Steel pressed her multiple times, saying, “Haven’t you said you’ve been sexually assaulted so many times that you can’t even remember?” Mia responded: “I don’t remember phrasing it that way.”
In more emotional testimony on May 30, Mia said she hired an employment lawyer to try to get a settlement from Combs after her exit, and asked for $10 million; ultimately she only received $400,000, half of which was taken by the lawyers.
She said she never said anything about the sexual assaults in those transactions, even though she mentioned some of Combs’ violence. She told the court that she would have taken her own sexual assault allegations aimed at Combs to her grave.
During the fall of 2016, Mia was told that Combs’ Revolt Films company, which she helped lead, was about to be shut down because the producer “no longer wants to be involved” in the film business. She said she was left completely traumatized and depressed.
Despite departing Combs’ company in 2017, Mia continued to hear from Combs and Damion “D-Roc” Butler, his associate and security guard.
After Ventura Fine filed her civil lawsuit in November 2023, Mia said that D-Roc made numerous attempts to call her and that she received texts from both him and Combs. She said she felt threatened and like they were trying to get her to agree not to say anything.
“He sounded nervous and was talking in circles,” she said of D-Roc on one of the few calls she answered. When Combs called her, she felt so traumatized that she said she threw her phone and ran outside. Ultimately, she never did speak to Combs, but prosecutors introduced into evidence an email from Combs in which he said, “You were my right hand for years,” and that he just wanted to talk to her for 10 minutes to refresh his memory about who was around him at the time and what happened.
“I wanted nothing to do with him. He was the person I was traumatized by. And he was coming back,” she said.
While detailing Combs’ alleged control tactics, Mia said she was suspended without pay several times, typically because she was on the receiving end of being screamed at on behalf of the Bad Boy Records founder. Mia said that on one occasion, she was suspended because Combs didn’t like the workout clothes that she had laid out for him. Another time, the prosecutor showed an email from Mia to D-Roc (who she said was like a big brother) in which she described Combs: “He’s so psycho… He’s so mean.”
She also described an incident on a yacht that Combs had chartered in St. Barts in 2010, when he asked her to count money in a safe. She said that security usually did that and she wasn’t good at it, but was trying to do a good job, when Combs suddenly started screaming at her that she was counting too slow.
“He got really irate with me,” Mia said. She added that Combs told her to get “out of here” despite being on the boat. “You better learn to walk on water like Jesus did,” she claimed Combs said, cursing at her.
When she went up to the third floor of the yacht and ultimately tried to get off the boat, she said the crew tried to return her to shore but didn’t, because they received a phone call ordering her to be brought back on Combs’ orders.
“I just wanted to run and hide and figure out a way out of St. Bart’s, to get away from him,” she said. Instead, she said Combs ordered her to accompany him on a jet to Las Vegas because he had a sudden change of plans, which she said traumatized her even further. Mia testified that she was suspended for that incident because she had acted insubordinately.
Early in her testimony May 30, Mia recalled how she had finally realized a lifelong dream and was involved in film production, including pitching a show to ABC that was loosely based on her role as a personal assistant working for a major celebrity like Combs.
She said Combs would constantly threaten to fire or suspend her, and even threatened to take away the opportunity that the ABC show provided. Ultimately, she said nothing ever came of the show.
“Mia” discussed her work for Combs as part of his entourage, who accompanied him on trips around the world. In court, she said the embattled mogul emotionally abused her to the point that she now suffers from “complex severe PTSD.” Due to her post-traumatic stress disorder diagnosis, Mia said she can’t get or keep a job because she is triggered by the most minor things, like somebody asking where she is.
“I would have to leave (work) because I would be triggered by very normal situations with an overwhelming fear of being in trouble,” the witness told the court. She added that “all of those feelings of getting in trouble come flooding back.”
When Mia was asked who triggered those feelings in her, she answered “Puff,” referring to Combs by his former moniker.
No, despite handing down a flurry of pardons this week, including one for reality stars Todd and Julie Chrisley, President Donald Trump did not include Combs on that list. But that doesn’t mean he can’t. According to Michigan State law professor Brian Kalt, Trump would be within his presidential rights to extend a preemptive pardon to Combs.
“These are federal charges so that’s the main limit,” Kalt tells USA TODAY. “The matter has (to) be federal, it has to be criminal vs. civil, and related to something that’s already been done. But the person doesn’t have to even be charged yet or convicted. The Supreme Court has said preemptive pardons are OK.”
It is unclear whether Trump has an interest in Combs’ case.
Mia, who worked for Combs from 2009 to 2017, testified on May 29 that he sexually assaulted her on “more than one” occasion. The former assistant alleged the first time Combs assaulted her was at the Plaza Hotel in New York City when they were celebrating his 40th birthday in 2009.
Mia recalled having two shots that were affecting her much more than alcohol typically impacted her memory and balance. She said Combs approached her in a penthouse suite and sexually assaulted her, and she woke up sitting on a chair in the morning.
In later years, Combs allegedly assaulted her several additional times, including at his Los Angeles home and on a private plane.
Prosecutors asked Mia on May 29 about a party at Prince’s house in 2011 or 2012. At the time, Mia and Cassie were staying at a hotel without Combs, but the two decided to sneak out to the “intimate” gathering at the late musician’s home.
Although the women reportedly attempted an abrupt exit from the party when they saw Combs arrive, Mia testified that Combs “caught up” with them and attacked Ventura Fine, with Prince’s security swiftly intervening. The next day, Mia said she was told Combs was suspending her without pay because she was “being insubordinate.”
Mia choked up while taking the stand on May 29 as she described an alleged incident during which she was afraid that Combs would “kill” Ventura Fine.
She said she was with Cassie and Nash at the singer’s Los Angeles apartment, helping her pack for a trip. They heard banging on the door, and a “very irate” Combs let himself in with a key and began screaming at Ventura Fine, later attacking Cassie and throwing her to the ground.
Mia claimed that working for Combs also entailed caring for Ventura Fine’s injuries, which included bringing her “whatever she needed,” such as arnica gel to help heal her bruises. When the wounds were “too obvious to cover up,” Ventura Fine was forced to stay at hotels, the woman explained.
Combs is facing federal sex-crimes and trafficking charges in a sprawling lawsuit that has eroded his status as a power player and kingmaker in the entertainment industry.
He was arrested in September 2024 and later charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution. The rapper has pleaded not guilty to all five counts against him.
Racketeering is the participation in an illegal scheme under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Statute, or RICO, as a way for the U.S. government to prosecute organizations that contribute to criminal activity.
Using RICO law, which is typically aimed at targeting multi-person criminal organizations, prosecutors allege that Combs coerced victims, some of whom they say were sex workers, through intimidation and narcotics to participate in “freak offs” — sometimes dayslong sex performances that federal prosecutors allege they have video of.
The trial will not be televised, as cameras are typically not allowed in federal criminal trial proceedings.
USA TODAY will be reporting live from the courtroom. Sign up for our newsletter for more updates.
Contributing: USA TODAY staff
If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 800.656.HOPE (4673) and Hotline.RAINN.org and en Español RAINN.org/es.
If you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or text “START” to 88788.
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No surprise Americans are ‘rooting for’ the UnitedHealthcare CEO’s killer – Al Jazeera
There is a class war raging in the US, and the healthcare system is one of its most violent fronts.
On the morning of December 4, Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare – the largest health insurer in the United States – was fatally shot in New York City. The suspect has yet to be apprehended and a motive has not been established, although the words “depose”, “deny”, and “delay” were found written in permanent marker on bullet casings at the crime scene – a potential allusion to manoeuvres by health insurance companies to avoid paying for the things they are supposed to pay for.
In the social media world, the tears for Thompson were few and far between, with Fox News lamenting on December 7 that a commemorative Facebook post by UnitedHealth Group – the parent company of UnitedHealthcare – had already racked up more than 77,000 laughing emoji reactions. Other social media users scattered witty counter-condolences across various online platforms, such as “My empathy is out of network” and “I’m sorry, prior authorization is required for thoughts and prayers” – a reference to another common tactic employed by UnitedHealthcare and similar firms to decline coverage and increase profit margins.
Meanwhile, The New York Times notes that, while authorities are pleading for help from the public in tracking down the suspected perpetrator, “some seem more interested in rooting for the gunman,” who is being “venerated as something approaching a folk hero”.
And yet it’s not difficult to understand why many Americans would fail to mourn the death of a man who symbolised a willfully dysfunctional, for-profit US healthcare system that is literally deadly in itself. Back in 2009, a Harvard Medical School study found that 45,000 Americans were dying every year for lack of health insurance. This, of course, does not include the countless insured Americans who die every year because their insurance companies opt to deny them life-saving treatment.
But that, after all, is how capitalism works: healthcare is a business, not a right, and human lives are expendable in the interest of ensuring that obscene wealth remains concentrated in the hands of an elite minority. Americans spend far more money per capita on healthcare than their counterparts in other developed nations – but it’s not like you get what you pay for. Often, the US healthcare experience consists of jumping through hellish bureaucratic hoops, spending a good portion of your life on hold on the telephone, and battling insurance claims denials – if you have the energy and time to do so.
Indeed, there’s no denying this claim: that it’s downright sick that people who are seeking medical treatment precisely because they are ill should be put through such mental and physical agony simply to obtain care. Public anger at the system is, therefore, absolutely logical – you might even call it a preexisting condition.
Of all the predatory firms that comprise the multitrillion-dollar US healthcare industry, UnitedHealthcare has a particularly vampiric reputation for charging huge premiums while pathologically denying claims left and right. As per The Associated Press news agency, UnitedHealthcare raked in $281bn in 2023, while Thompson himself enjoyed a $10.2m annual pay package.
This financial context is key when considering, for example, the recent case of a chronically ill college student in the US who was reportedly slammed with $800,000 in medical bills when UnitedHealthcare denied him coverage for the drugs his doctors had prescribed. Or consider the untold number of folks whose claims denials have ultimately constituted death sentences – and all to sustain those billions in revenue and Thompson’s annual pay package.
I personally have no health insurance policy, which is part of the reason I avoid the US like the plague despite it being my birthplace. I do, however, have some personal experience with UnitedHealthcare, which was my father’s insurer at the time of his death last year of prostate cancer in Washington, DC.
My dad was enrolled in the government-funded Medicare Advantage programme for seniors, which allows private firms like UnitedHealthcare to overbill the government for its services while skimping on providing needed care to the country’s elderly. Denied insurance coverage for the prostate cancer drug Xtandi – which, to add insult to injury, was developed with US taxpayer money – my father was forced to seek foundational financial support in order to acquire the medication. Had he not succeeded, he would have been billed no less than $14,579.01 for a one-month supply, ie, more than the average annual income in some countries.
Obviously, Brian Thompson is not personally responsible for the terminally ill state of society in the US – a country that managed to spend $916bn on its military in 2023 alone and that continues to fund Israel’s genocide in the Gaza Strip to the tune of tens of billions of dollars, all while poverty remains a leading cause of death among Americans.
But the man was in fact emblematic of the lethal inequality that underpins US corporatocracy, where the health insurance racket does its part to keep people so sick and debt-ridden that they can’t pose a challenge to the system. And that, at the end of the day, is why the gunman is being “venerated as something approaching a folk hero”.
The New York Times quotes Alex Goldenberg, a senior adviser at a research institute that tracks online threats, on the perceived “lionization of the shooter” and the implications of Thompson’s killing: “It’s being framed as some opening blow in a broader class war, which is very concerning as it heightens the threat environment for similar actors to engage in similar acts of violence.”
But there is already a class war raging in the US, and the healthcare system is one of its most violent fronts.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.
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Sen. Usman Highlights Nigeria’s Stride For Equitable Education – Leadership Newspapers
Chairman, Senate Committee on Education (Basic and Secondary), Senator Lawal Adamu Usman, has reiterated Nigeria’s commitment to equitable education delivery.
He said the country was taking bold steps to ensure access, quality and inclusiveness in learning across all levels, especially for marginalised groups such as the girl-child and children in conflict-affected communities.
Speaking at a high-level global education summit themed, “Global Priorities, Local Realities: Delivering Equity in Education,” at the Education World Forum in London, the senator, who represents Kaduna Central in the National Assembly, said the forum offered an opportunity for nations to assess the state of education and scale up efforts toward achieving Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG4).
Addressing distinguished delegates and global leaders, Usman noted, “This forum is more than an annual tradition. It is a global checkpoint. It reminds us that while the barriers to education may span continents, the solutions must be rooted in our local contexts, cultures and communities.”
Reflecting on his personal journey from a modest upbringing in Kaduna, the senator emphasised the urgency of tackling educational setbacks in developing countries.
He cited data from UNESCO which showed that only 17 percent of the SDGs are on track, with over 250 million children and young people out of school globally. Even more alarming, he stated, is the fact that two-thirds of children in low-income countries cannot read a simple sentence by age 10.
“More than half of the world’s out-of-school children live in sub-Saharan Africa,” Usman said, “In Nigeria alone, over 7.6 million children are out of school, with girls making up more than half of that number.”
He described the girl-child’s persistent challenges in enrolment, retention and completion of education as not just a human rights crisis but an economic emergency, warning that failure to invest adequately in education could cost the global economy massively in lost lifetime earnings by 2030.
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Strength Starts Here: Planet Fitness's annual 'High School Summer Pass' program returns this June – Grice Connect
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Planet Fitness, one of the largest and fastest-growing franchisors and operators of fitness centers with more members than any other fitness brand, announces the return of its annual High School Summer Pass™ program.
Celebrating its fifth year, the initiative invites high school teens ages 14 – 19¹ to go all in on the gym this summer to fuel their passions by working out for free at any of its 2,700+ Planet Fitness locations throughout the U.S. and Canada.
Teens can visit PlanetFitness.com/SummerPass to register for the program with club access beginning Sunday, June 1 through Sunday, August 31. Find the club nearest you here.
Since launching the program in 2019, Planet Fitness has invested more than $300M in waived membership dues to promote youth health and wellness, and improve the physical and mental health of millions of teens.2 Planet Fitness' High School Summer Pass program has helped millions of teens establish healthy fitness habits during the summer months, a critical time when many young people lack access to organized physical activities.
To better understand what today's teens are experiencing—and how to support them—Planet Fitness conducted a nationwide study,3 revealing the following key insights:
"At Planet Fitness, we offer a high value experience to both our members and High School Summer Pass participants in a welcoming, Judgement Free environment where everyone can get a great workout," said Colleen Keating, Chief Executive Officer. "With free access to our clubs throughout the summer, we're providing teens with the tools they need to develop healthy fitness habits that can last a lifetime. We look forward to welcoming teens this summer to experience the mental and physical health benefits of exercise in the Judgement Free Zone®."
To promote the 2025 High School Summer Pass program, Planet Fitness has teamed up with U.S. gymnast and 2-Time Olympic Medalist Stephen Nedoroscik who knows not only of the importance of a fitness routine, but the positive impact both physically and mentally that exercise has on overall wellness from a young age.
"Fitness and training have always been a huge part of my life – not just for competing, but for who I am as a person," said Stephen Nedoroscik, U.S. gymnast and 2-Time Olympic Medalist. "Staying at the top of my game, especially on the pommel horse, takes a ton of focus, discipline, and consistency. I've been lucky to train in places and with people that make me feel supported – and that positive environment makes all the difference. That's why I am excited to team up with Planet Fitness this summer to support their annual High School Summer Pass program. Giving teens free access to a place to move, feel confident, and chase their goals is powerful. It's a chance for young people to discover their strength, inside and out."
All High School Summer Pass participants will have access to:
For more information on High School Summer Pass, including how to sign up for the free summer membership at any of the more than 2,700 Planet Fitness locations in the U.S. and Canada, visit PlanetFitness.com/SummerPass.
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Macmillan Learning and Invoke Learning Partner to Bring Data-Driven Engagement to Higher Education – Business Wire
Macmillan Learning and Invoke Learning Partner to Bring Data-Driven Engagement to Higher Education
NEW YORK–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Macmillan Learning, a privately-held, family-owned digital learning company, today announced a new partnership with Invoke Learning, a leader in predictive analytics for higher education. Together, the two companies aim to address one of higher education’s most persistent challenges: using data to drive proactive decisions that improve student outcomes and operational effectiveness.
By combining the strengths of Macmillan Learning and Invoke Learning, colleges and universities now have the opportunity to move from insight to impact, and to transform the student experience both in and beyond the classroom.
Colleges generate vast amounts of student data, from LMS interactions and advising notes to enrollment and facility usage. But most of it remains trapped in unconnected systems, making it difficult to get a holistic and real-time view of students’ experiences. With this partnership, institutions can help break down these silos by integrating campus and public datasets into a unified, intelligent platform.
“Higher education has often used primary data as a tool for reflection,” said Steven Ray, Vice President of Enterprise Solutions at Macmillan Learning. “By combining the strengths of Macmillan Learning and Invoke Learning, colleges and universities now have the opportunity to move from insight to impact, and to transform the student experience both in and beyond the classroom.”
A recent study published in Science by researchers at UCLA and the MIT Press highlights just how wide this gap is. Based on interviews with provosts, librarians, and senior administrators, the study found that universities severely lag behind the private sector and government when using data to inform strategy. Despite isolated efforts to reduce redundancies and integrate systems, many institutions still lack the coordination and expertise to translate information into action.
“Too many institutions are dealing with data chaos,” said Lige Hensley, CEO at Invoke Learning. “The InvokeClarity platform brings all institutional data into one system, breaking down silos and enabling campus leaders to make faster, more informed decisions.”
Beyond academics, the partnership helps institutions improve operational efficiency and allocate resources more effectively. From assessing the impact of student success initiatives to improving campus-wide coordination, the combined insights from Macmillan Learning and Invoke Learning help institutions shift from reactive to proactive.
The partnership with Invoke Learning, a company founded by former higher education technology leaders, expands Macmillan Learning’s commitment to delivering actionable insights. Together, the two organizations are making complex institutional data more accessible and usable, empowering instructors and administrators to better support their students.
About Macmillan Learning
Macmillan Learning is a privately-held, family-owned company that inspires what’s possible for every learner. We envision a world in which every learner succeeds. Through our content, tools and services, we aim to make that a reality. To learn more, please visit macmillanlearning.com or join our Community.
About Invoke Learning
Built on an innovative data lakehouse foundation, Invoke Learning provides a cloud-native data platform that breaks down data silos across entire educational systems. Whether serving a single institution or a statewide consortium, Invoke Learning empowers higher education to gain actionable insights that lead to lasting impact—without the rigidity of legacy data warehouses. To learn more, please visit invokelearning.com.
Marisa Bluestone
Macmillan Learning
202-699-1495
marisa.bluestone@macmillan.com
Marisa Bluestone
Macmillan Learning
202-699-1495
marisa.bluestone@macmillan.com
Marisa Bluestone
Macmillan Learning
202-699-1495
marisa.bluestone@macmillan.com
© 2025 Business Wire, Inc.
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One day, one man, one mission: 24-hour running challenge for mental health – WGAL
A York County man is running for mental health during the month of May.
Garrett Williams is a trainer at Anytime Fitness in Shrewsbury.
On Friday, Williams started a 24-hour journey on a treadmill to show his support for suicide awareness.
They are calling the journey “Miles for Minds,” and it is to help raise money for a local organization called Building Bridges for Brianna.
Building Bridges for Brianna is an organization based out of York County that turned the grief of a father of a suicide victim into relief for others.
Read more about Building Bridges for Brianna
“I’m so minuscule in the big picture of all this,” Williams said. “There are people out there right now that are suffering terribly.”
Williams’ 24-hour trek started at 11 a.m., but the idea was pitched months ago.
“He first came to me and said, ‘Amanda, can I start a run club?’ And I was like, sure,” Amanda Wildes said, general manager at Anytime Fitness. “I went home that night, and I was like, we’re not just doing a run club, we’re going to do a fundraiser.”
They decided the 24-hour trek would help bring attention to the local run club that Wildes and Williams decided to form to help create community conversations around mental health.
“Running has helped me so much,” Williams said. “In a way, it saved my life.”
Williams and Wildes shared a mutual hardship revolving around suicide.
“Five years ago, I was suicidal,” Williams said. “Thank God for the Baltimore County social worker who took me down off of Pretty Boy Dam Bridge.”
After that experience, Williams said it was running that healed him.
“I got to experience runner’s high, and it was the first time I really opened up about my true thoughts and feelings that were way down deep and causing me to suffer terribly,” Williams said.
Wildes organized Friday’s overnight run and plans to be by Williams’ side through it all.
“I don’t want to get emotional, but it is very important,” Wildes said. “I feel like my purpose in life has always been to serve, to make a difference and inspire, and I feel so blessed to be part of this.”
Williams will stop his run Saturday at 11 a.m.
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Mental health initiative "Family Matters" launches in Little Rock with Tara Wallace – KATV
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LITTLE ROCK (KATV) — A new initiative aimed at promoting mental health awareness is launching in Little Rock.
The nonprofit Doc Project is introducing "Family Matters," a series of conversations focused on healing and peace. The event features Tara Wallace, an actress, speaker, and reality TV personality known for her role on VH1's "Love and Hip Hop."
Wallace, who has become a prominent advocate for women's wellness and emotional healing, shares her personal journey of growth, forgiveness, and resilience.
"I think that so many times we have always kind of swept things under the rug, and we don't talk about it enough to minimize things," Wallace said. "We have to know that there's a problem, to understand the need for the problem."
Wallace says the city's southern hospitality reminded her of her Mississippi roots. "I'm just really happy to be here, and you know, especially for the cause in which I'm here," she said.
The initiative aims to address the importance of forgiveness in the healing process. "Forgiveness is so important. It's important because to move on, for wholeness and clarity, for healing, forgiveness is a necessity," Wallace said. "We deserve to live with the healed versions of ourselves the same way we live with the broken versions of ourselves."
Wallace hopes participants will leave with a sense of being heard and the understanding that healing is essential.
"I hope that people take away that there are going to be new changes here in Arkansas," she said. "Sometimes we think that we're the only one going through something. So we're just kind of living and torturing ourselves in silence and to be able to start those conversations around, you know, family matters, right? And in order to have a healed family, we must first heal ourselves."
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AI coming to primary and secondary schools to maximize learning by machine – ChinaDaily
A mother of a fifth-grade student, surnamed Li, says that AI has sparked her daughter’s interest in making PowerPoint slides and generating AI templates.
“I hope she will be inspired by this and get to know computer technologies,” says Li.
Teachers and parents have also shown concern about the use of AI in the study.
“AI-generated teaching material still has its limitations,” says Ni Lili, a teacher at Xinyilu Primary School. “Presentations, speeches and supplementary materials produced by AI often lack personalization and do not fully reflect a teacher’s particular style.
“Additionally, AI-generated images and multimedia content sometimes do not align precisely with the given descriptions, requiring manual adjustment,” she says.
Parents also expressed concerns that excessive reliance on AI may weaken problem-solving abilities.
“When my child encounters a difficult question, her first instinct is to ask AI for the answer instead of thinking through the problem herself,” Li says.
Education experts emphasize that AI should serve as a tool to support student thinking rather than as a substitute for independent reasoning.
“AI in education should focus on guided learning, helping students develop problem-solving skills, rather than simply providing answers,” one expert says.
In February 2024, 184 schools were chosen as pilot centers to explore the philosophies, models and programs of AI education. The goal is to develop exemplary cases and experience that can be promoted on a larger scale.
In order to support the integration of AI into basic education, the Ministry of Education issued a directive in late 2024 outlining key objectives for advancing AI in primary and secondary education.
The plan aims to establish a structured AI curriculum, promote AI-driven teaching and assessment, and achieve full AI education in primary and secondary schools by 2030, equipping students with AI literacy and practical skills.
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