The Latest
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Week In Review: A $17.25M student data privacy settlement and the end of ESSER
We’re rounding up last week’s news, from AI’s use in reviewing books and curricula to diminishing returns for career and technical education.
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What the $17.25M PowerSchool Naviance settlement means for school districts
District leaders will face questions from families who receive settlement notices as ed tech pushback grows, a K-12 cybersecurity expert says.
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LGBTQ+ students report schools feel more hostile
Two-thirds of students reported feeling unsafe because of their LGBTQ+ identity in 2024-25, according to data from an annual survey by Glisten.
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H-1B visa program hits cap for the next fiscal year
Immigration and the H-1B visa program have been targets of the Trump administration, and many changes have left employers scrambling to comply.
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Deep Dive
As AI enters book ban disputes, here’s what it means for school districts
Tools seeking to help districts get ahead of challenges have resulted in auto-flags for thousands books, from political memoirs to the works of Shakespeare.
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AI is moving quickly. How can districts keep up?
In an ILO Group webinar, education leaders detailed how they implement and govern AI by sharing responsibilities across departments and piloting tools.
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CTE programs’ earnings boosts may diminish over time, study finds
Construction, transportation and manufacturing were associated with stronger wage returns for students, according to a Fordham Institute study.
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POP QUIZ
Test yourself on the past week’s K-12 news
From superintendents’ average tenure length to the end of ESSER spending, what did you learn from our recent stories?
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Professional development is linked to higher scores, but what works best?
Coaching and collaboration were among aspects found to be particularly useful in a review of meta-analyses by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.
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How scaffolding prior knowledge into new concepts can build engagement
Framing material in the context of what students already know can make it more relevant and culturally responsive, teacher educators say.
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3 state education chiefs share how they’re leading innovation efforts
Leaders from Connecticut, Wisconsin and Alabama explain how partnering with stakeholders and staying the course through reforms can bring improvements.
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Should executive functioning be more thoroughly embedded in math curricula?
Cognitive flexibility and collaboration are among skills strengthened by the subject, researchers say.
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San Jose USD closes 5 elementary schools after 20% enrollment drop
The California district reported it lost 6,000 students since the 2017-18 school year as birthrates decline and the Bay Area’s cost of living goes up.
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Deep Dive
ESSER pandemic spending is over. What will its legacy be?
Education finance experts say the effectiveness of relief funds is hard to measure — but schools would be worse off without the money.
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DOL seeks to hike H-1B visa holder wage rates to curb ‘abuse’ of program
While schools are unlikely to be affected by the proposed changes, AASA said it’s still concerned about the $100,000 H-1B fee imposed by President Donald Trump last year.
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This student-led mental health group has seen promising results so far
Laguna Beach High School’s peer-to-peer mental health initiative, the Student Support Collective, is proving to boost student safety and belonging.
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Tracker
As student enrollment declines, a look at public school closures
We’re tracking districts’ plans to shutter or consolidate schools amid enrollment pressure from falling birthrates and growing school choice.
Updated March 31, 2026 -
Week In Review: School meal funds in the courts and new staffing data
We’re rounding up last week’s news, from the Education Department’s latest interagency agreement to superintendents’ average tenure.
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The average length of current superintendents’ tenure? 5.4 years
A growing percentage of district leaders also report declining economic conditions in their districts in a new AASA salary and benefits study.
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Retrieved from U.S. Department of Education/Flickr on March 25, 2026
Interagency agreements now number 10. Here are the details.
Supporters say the Education Department outsourcing reduces federal bureaucracy. Critics claim it adds confusion.
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Retrieved from Oklahoma Statewide Charter School Board.
Oklahoma charter board faces second suit over Jewish school’s rejection
Rejecting a religious group's bid to open a public school is unconstitutional, the organization’s lawsuit claims.
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STAFFED UP
Maryland sees return on investment in grow-your-own programs
High school participants in the Teacher Academy of Maryland were 45% more likely to become teachers within 10 years, researchers found.
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DeKalb County prioritizes feedback on school closure, repurposing list
Up to 28 schools could be closed, converted or repurposed, the Georgia district said as it seeks to balance enrollment across its buildings.
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Grade 3-8 students need updated literacy skills supports, report says
The Advanced Education Research & Development Fund report offers insights into where older readers struggle and advice on how to help them.
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POP QUIZ
Test yourself on the past week’s K-12 news
From pushback against an education-related Supreme Court ruling to new data on kindergarten redshirting, what did you learn from our recent stories?