Georgia receives $61 million for reading and literacy
GaDOE’s Literacy for Learning, Living and Leading in Georgia (L4GA) initiative was awarded funding through the Striving Readers grant, which was developed to serve children in need. Georgia has been awarded $20,526,600 per year over three years, totaling $61,579,800.
read moreBetsy DeVos Urged to Reject Florida’s ESSA Plan by Civil Rights Groups
Several civil rights and education advocacy groups have a simple message for Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos: Just say no to Florida’s Every Student Succeeds Act plan.
read moreILLINOIS: VIDEO — An Introduction to the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
An Introduction to the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
read moreReport: One-third of all NY schools have no Black or Latino teachers
A new report from The Education Trust-New York shows that many Black and Brown students are taught by people who don’t look like them.
read moreStates’ ESSA Plans Fall Short on Educator Equity, NCTQ Analysis Finds – Teacher Beat – Education Week
Most states are not planning to do enough to prevent low-income students and students of color from being disproportionately taught by ineffective or inexperienced teachers, according to the National Council on Teacher Quality.
read moreNew list highlights nation’s most affordable HBCUs
Black college database The Hundred-Seven has published a list of public Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) that are recognized for their affordability. The 16 colleges have been identified because of their lower overall costs (before and after financial aid packages) compared to other similar colleges- in state and out-of-state.
read moreThe Unique Challenges Facing Young Middle-Class Black Teachers in High Poverty Schools
A new book explores how middle class teachers of color can balance economic and social class when working in low-income schools.
read morePrivileged Kids Aren’t the Only Ones Who Deserve a Good Education – Education Week
Throughout the past year, we have heard broad assertions that U.S. public schools are failing low-income children, suggestions that teachers are a major part of the problem, and pledges from President Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to fix the problem in a business-like manner.
read moreMichigan Student Aid Offers Six Tips When Applying for Scholarships
“Applying for scholarships can be confusing and many students don’t know where to begin,” said Anne Wohlfert, director of the Michigan Department of Treasury’s Student Financial Services Bureau. “There are many scholarships out there. It’s all about following a few basic tips to create a perfect application that opens the door to more money for college.”
read moreApp aims to get students with disabilities on ‘trajectory for independent living’
Pennsylvania teens and young adults with disabilities now have access to a free app designed to help them find jobs, manage their needs and get on track to living independently.
read moreAre School Ratings in ESSA Plans Clear for Parents? Check Out One Analysis
Every state has turned in a plan to implement the Every Student Succeeds Act. So how do those plans stack up against each other and against No Child Left Behind, the previous version of the law? The Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a think tank headed up by Michael Petrili, a former Bush administration aide, is out with a look Tuesday.
read moreSchool segregation persists in the new New Orleans, study says
The earth-shaking overhaul of New Orleans education after Hurricane Katrina has not fixed one of the city’s enduring problems: public school segregation. That’s according to a study Tulane’s Education Research Alliance for New Orleans.
read moreBlack Parent Town Hall spotlights ESSA, quality education
CROSSROADS NEWS — Parents, grandparents and anyone raising school-age children, as well as property owners in DeKalb and across Georgia, can find out about the new national education law – Every Student Succeed Act, or ESSA – at a Black Parents’ Town Hall Meeting on Educational Excellence on Oct. 23 at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta.
read moreEducation law on student achievement calls for parent input
Parents of K-12 children are encouraged to learn about the new Every Student Succeed Act (ESSA), which is offering $1.6 billion in funding and more flexibility to individual states and school districts in how students learn and are evaluated.
read moreBetsy DeVos: Stop ‘Forcing’ Four-Year Degrees as Only Pathway to Success
Washington — U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos told a meeting Monday that the country needs to quit trying to push every student to attend a four-year college, and open up apprenticeships and other workplace learning experiences to more students.
read moreWhat’s in store for Georgia’s lowest-performing schools?
Georgia’s lowest-performing schools should know by the end of the year whether they’ll be subject to state intervention. Among the schools that will be considered are eight in the Bibb County district, three in Dooly County and one in Peach County.
read moreThese barbers did more than cut hair when they visited a Macon elementary school
Boys at Hartley Elementary School got free haircuts on Monday, Nov. 13, 2017, during the “Books with Barbers” event at the school. A partnership between several local barbers and the school’s Family Engagement program made the haircuts possible.
read moreEducators get $13 million grant to recruit 900 teachers by 2020
A $13 million dollar federal grant has been awarded to two New Orleans universities and four nonprofits in an effort to recruit and train 900 diverse teachers for Louisiana by 2020.
read moreESSA growth vs. proficiency: a former teacher’s perspective
Right now, state education departments are working to try to come up with a plan that meets all the requirements of the Federal government’s Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). One area that has received a lot of attention in ESSA is the student accountability section and the required indicators that hold schools accountable for student…
read moreSome States Look Beyond Reading, Math in ESSA Accountability
Under the Every Student Succeeds Act, students in Delaware will be held accountable for social studies and science. Massachusetts and Vermont are also incorporating science into their systems, and Illinois is hoping to add it down the line.
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