Policy & Regulation: Page 135


  • DC chancellor: Better planning necessary to prevent charter 'cannibalism'

    Kaya Henderson says more productive dialogue is needed between charter and traditional public schools.  

    By Allie Gross • July 9, 2014
  • SD Teach For America wants more Native Americans among its ranks

    The recruitment efforts signal a push for more culturally responsive teaching in underserved rural reservation schools.

    By Allie Gross • July 9, 2014
  • Kansas refuses to release reading and math data

    Officals say the data was compromised by spring cyberattacks. 

    By Allie Gross • July 9, 2014
  • NY voters should decide on Common Core, says gubernatorial candidate

    Republican Rob Astorino believes voters should be able to voice their opinions through a "Stop Common Core" ballot initiative.  

    By Allie Gross • July 9, 2014
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    Fotolia
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    The Atlantic: Think twice before sharing that new ed study

    The publication created a new guide to combat the social media spread of studies that may not be fully understood or completed.

    By Allie Gross • July 9, 2014
  • Obama administration calls for better teachers in underserved schools

    The U.S. Department of Education wants states to develop plans to ensure students at all schools have highly skilled teachers.

    By Allie Gross • July 8, 2014
  • Ed coalition supports billion-dollar Wi-Fi plan

    Support comes as the FCC plans to vote on the expansion of its E-Rate program, which currently finances school Wi-Fi expansion.  

    By Allie Gross • July 8, 2014
  • NEA: Duncan must resign

    U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan's reaction to a landmark California tenure decision was the final straw for the nation's largest teachers' union.

    By Allie Gross • July 8, 2014
  • Florida districts in disagreement on free lunches

    A "universal" free lunch program has been adopted by many districts in the state, but some aren't too keen on its guidelines.

    By July 7, 2014
  • Kentucky high school's transgender policy sparks parent protest

    The school is allowing transgendered students to use bathrooms in line with their gender identity.  

    By Allie Gross • July 7, 2014
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    The image by Brad Flickinger is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    Illinois law lowers required start age for kindergarten

    Children must now be enrolled by age 6.  

    By Allie Gross • July 7, 2014
  • Bonuses entice early childhood educators in Georgia

    A new state program works to reward preschool teachers pursuing further education.

    By Allie Gross • July 7, 2014
  • U.S. Ed. Dept. approves 5 NCLB waivers

    The states involved could have even more flexibility if they continue to create teacher and administrator evaluation programs.  

    By Allie Gross • July 7, 2014
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    Roger Riddell/Education Dive
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    Deep Dive

    How 3 state education departments are embracing the future [ISTE]

    Ed tech leaders from Indiana, New Jersey, and North Carolina gathered in a Sunday panel to talk device deployments, new online exams, digital resources, and more.

    By July 3, 2014
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    Students in Georgia grappling with geometry and algebra

    Education officials released results from the state's tougher math exams.  

    By Allie Gross • July 3, 2014
  • Oklahoma City promotes failing third graders

    Some 514 students will transition to the fourth grade despite failing the state test.  

    By Allie Gross • July 3, 2014
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    Fotolia
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    Wyoming's science standards at a standstill

    The Wyoming Board of Education didn't like how lawmakers inserted themselves in the process.  

    By Allie Gross • July 3, 2014
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    Tennessee may give break to high-scoring teachers

    A proposed plan would allow teachers who score high on evaluations to skip required training necessary for advancement or license renewal.

    By Allie Gross • July 2, 2014
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    The Business Journals, Edited By: Kendall Davis/Construction Dive
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    $23M for art in NYC schools

    Another 120 arts teachers will be hired in the Big Apple.

    By Allie Gross • July 2, 2014
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    Will New Mexico tie teacher evals to pay?

    A potential plan would connect evals to the state's three-tiered licensure system, which affects pay.  

    By Allie Gross • July 2, 2014
  • $3M for tech split between 15 Idaho schools

    The money is meant to be used on new technologies that will boost academics.  

    By Allie Gross • July 2, 2014
  • Louisiana: Special ed changes prompt debate

    Two national groups have issued reports pushing against Gov. Bobby Jindal's special education plan.  

    By Allie Gross • July 1, 2014
  • NJ lawmakers suggest postponing teacher evals tied to tests

    Students begin taking the new Common Core-aligned PARCC exams next year. 

    By Allie Gross • July 1, 2014
  • Indiana meets new NCLB waiver deadline

    State Superintendent Glenda Ritz submitted a request for a new No Child Left Behind waiver Monday 

    By Allie Gross • July 1, 2014
  • Georgia school leaders push back on law OKing teachers with guns

    The educators argue that the law does not make students safer and actually creates more issues.  

    By Allie Gross • June 30, 2014