VIDEO: KEYNOTE – U.S. Secretaries of Education Panel on the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
Keynote: “U.S. Secretaries of Education Panel on the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)” on Thursday, Dec. 1 at the 2016 National Summit on Education
read moreTwo National Surveys Reinforce Parent Preference for School Choice
The first study was an analysis of data from the 2012 National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) survey, which was given to a representative sample of 17,166 households. In the survey, the US Department of Education asked parents about their satisfaction with their child’s school. While the data was collected in 2012, it had never been published until the EdNext analysis.
read moreBlack and Latino Male Achievement Matters
By Nyesha Stone Milwaukee Public Schools has begun to pave a way to a better future for young men and boys of color. The Department of Black and Latino Male Achievement (BLMA) was established to address the disparities in academic and life outcomes for…
read moreFinal Rule Released on Identifying Racial Bias in Special Education
The department’s regulation creates a standard approach that states must use in determining if their districts are over-enrolling minority students in special education compared to their peers of other races. If the disparities are large enough, districts are required to use 15 percent of their federal allotment under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act on “coordinated, early intervening services” aimed at addressing the issue.
read moreESSA Fifth “SQ/SS” Indicator: What Are Other States Doing?
For the past five months, we have followed the development of Minnesota’s state accountability plan as mandated by the federal Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). While the US Department of Education (USDE) has defined what must be included in four of the plans’ required indicators, states have the freedom to choose which measures they will include in their fifth indicator, of school quality/student success (SQ/SS).
read moreJournalist Known for Reporting on School Segregation Is Among MacArthur Fellows
Nikole Hannah-Jones, an investigative journalist known for her deep dives exploring race and the resegregation of the nation’s public schools, has been named a 2017 MacArthur Fellow, the so-called genius grants awarded in an anonymous process.
read moreReport: One in 10 city school students are homeless
More than 104,000 students were identified as homeless by NYS school districts and charter schools according to a report by New York State Technical and Education Assistance Center for Homeless Students.
read moreCould Democrats, Trump Team Up on K-12 Issues? – Education Week
Hemmed in by a Republican-controlled Congress and President Donald Trump, the top Democrats in the Senate and House have been working to parry GOP advances in general. But when it comes to education, could Democrats cut deals with Trump on at least a few issues?
read moreBudget Tangles Ensnare Key Early-Childhood Programs – Education Week
Congress is late in turning in two important assignments that affect young children: Both the Children’s Health Insurance Program and a federally funded program that provides counseling to vulnerable families expired Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year.
read moreWill Trump Get His K-12 Budget Cuts? Washington Edu-Insiders Say No.
President Donald Trump alarmed a lot of the education community when he proposed slashing the U.S. Department of Education’s nearly $70 billion budget by $9 billion. So will those cuts become a reality?
read moreThree Ways Betsy DeVos Could Push School Choice Without Congress
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’ school choice agenda has run into roadblocks on Capitol Hill. But, from her perch at the department, she has other levers to get states and districts to offer kids more schooling options, without help from anyone in Congress.
read moreGEORGIA: The Path Begins: Forest Kindergarten
In most schools, this would mean a day indoors with children and teachers wishing they could be outside. At Gilbert Elementary, you can look out the window and see a group of kindergarteners, in lime green rain suits, splashing their way across the playground on their way to the forest. These students will spend the next two hours making mud pies, building boats from found materials and observing the differences rain makes in their environment.
read moreEngineer Turned Teacher Helps Students Build Apps for Special Needs Counterparts
Nick Gattuso is a computer science teacher at Point Pleasant Borough High School in New Jersey, where his students have developed a suite of learning applications to assist students with disabilities, as well as an emergency-response app for school officials. Last year, his students’ work was honored by the state school boards association.
read moreNew from ASBJ: Anoka’s last-stop hope for students
Technical High School, as it’s sometimes called, is a last-stop hope for older students, ages 18 to 21, who—for one reason or another—are tantalizingly close to earning their high school diploma but need a little help to ultimately earn their degree.
read morePENNSYLVANIA: New School Rating System Will Have Less Emphasis on PSSAs, Keystones
THE MORNING CALL — The standardized tests that Pennsylvania students take every year aren’t going away, but they will count less under a new accountability system the state is developing.
read moreGet the facts on school segregation
School “resegregation” has been in the news lately, but is it real? Are our schools becoming less diverse, even as our student body becomes increasingly so?
read moreVIDEO: John B. King Jr. Receives the 2017 NNPA Excellence in Education Award
John B. King Jr. Receives the 2017 NNPA Excellence in Education Award, presented during the 2017 NNPA Leadership Awards Ceremony
read moreParents Deserve “Real” School Choice
Dr. Elizabeth Primas challenges Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on school choice.
read moreThe Importance of Educating All Children
“Some students begin school ahead of the pack. As educators, it is our responsibility to ensure all children, irrespective of their initial academic level continue to make progress.” – Dr. Elizabeth Primas talk about the Every Student Succeeds Act and the importance of educating all children.
read moreALC Panel Encourages High School Students to Pursue STEM Careers
A recent panel discussion hosted by members of the Congressional Black Caucus, showcased the importance of an education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM).
read more