The Latest
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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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Sponsored by Hager Companies
The key to improving teacher confidence in school safety is already in your doors
The best way to prepare students and teachers to handle any safety situation is to ensure they have confidence in their school’s safety infrastructure.
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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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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 21 hours ago -
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?
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BY THE NUMBERS
What did teacher turnover look like during the COVID-19 pandemic?
About 1 in 7 public school teachers changed schools or left the profession between 2020-21 and 2021-22, according to the Learning Policy Institute.
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How educators can help students learn to navigate polarizing issues
A report from the Or Initiative suggests educators can use digital literacy and encourage civil discourse to support student dialogue.
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21 states sue USDA over funding conditions they say would threaten school meal programs
The lawsuit pushes back on new grant conditions that bar funds being used for programs that support “gender ideology” or “illegal immigration.”
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NWEA: Kindergarten redshirting brings short-term academic gains only
The gains fall away by 3rd grade, and a delay in starting school can cost families an extra year of childcare, the firm's analysis says.
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Judge scraps another school admissions policies lawsuit
In the wake of SFFA v. Harvard, several challenges have claimed socioeconomic or experience factors are a proxy for race-based admissions.
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Column // LESSONS IN LEADERSHIP
How the new NYC schools chief plans to improve rigor and equity
Building a solid foundation for interventions and changing perceptions around math and reading success are among challenges Kamar Samuels faces.
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White House urges Congress to protect children on AI platforms
The Trump administration released a National Policy Framework for Artificial Intelligence as lawmakers consider bills to improve online safety for youth.
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States say Education Department not following mental health grant orders
The department is only providing grant recipients with six months of funding rather than a full year, the plaintiff states said in recent court documents.
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Court doesn’t buy school district’s defense for not complying with race bias settlement
Georgia’s Echols County School district argued “qualified immunity” meant it couldn’t be sued for refusing to implement changes.
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Education Department moves to shift student loan, FAFSA duties to Treasury
The U.S. Department of Treasury plans to take “operational responsibility” for defaulted loans before eventually managing the entire $1.7 trillion portfolio.
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Week In Review: Outcomes-based ed tech contracts and K-12 policies in court
We’re rounding up last week’s news, from governors prioritizing special education to federal support for the science of reading.
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Republican reps eye SCOTUS ruling on undocumented children in schools
Plyler v. Doe, which critics say burdens school resources, guarantees undocumented immigrants a free public education under the 14th Amendment.
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More middle and high schoolers are leaning on AI for homework
At the same time, students fear that using the technology to help with assignments will hinder their critical thinking skills, a Rand Corp. survey found.