Policy & Regulation: Page 63


  • Trump promises $20B for states promoting school choice

    The Republican presidential nominee visited an Ohio charter school Thursday, announcing plans to use existing federal money to support states with charter and school choice laws.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 9, 2016
  • Obama administration announces rubric to guide use of school resource officers

    The Department of Justice funds up to 150 school resource officer positions per year through the Community Oriented Policing Services office, and it now has new rules for doing so.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 9, 2016
  • Connecticut judge orders near-complete overhaul of state ed system

    While similar lawsuits have prompted mandates to develop new funding formulas that make education systems more equitable, the Connecticut decision will have a much broader impact.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 9, 2016
  • Studies suggest students without disabilities adversely impacted by inclusion

    Education Week reports on multiple studies that have found more absences and lower math and reading scores among students learning in classrooms alongside peers with behavioral or emotional disabilities.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 9, 2016
  • Cuomo mandates lead testing in all New York schools

    The State Department of Health issued new regulations this week requiring all schools to test drinking fountains for lead contamination by the end of October.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 8, 2016
  • Researchers find growing outside influence in school board elections

    Wealthy donors are increasingly targeting school board races in far-flung districts to achieve school reform goals, often by electing candidates who oppose local teacher unions.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 8, 2016
  • Chronic absenteeism plagues more than poor urban districts

    Some districts saw more than half of students chronically absent in the 2013-14 school year, according to federal data.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 7, 2016
  • Focusing on teacher improvement over firing could spur greater success

    An op-ed for the Los Angeles Times argues the majority of teachers in U.S. schools are good, but not great, and districts would get a greater reward for making them better than firing their colleagues.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 7, 2016
  • Harlem all-girls school created early example of excellence

    The Young Women’s Leadership School of East Harlem opened in 1996 and quickly drew a civil rights complaint for its single-gender admission requirement, but it pressed on and set a precedent.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 7, 2016
  • Clinton would boost pre-K, but hurdles likely

    Throughout her career, Hillary Clinton has focused on issues relating to child health and education, her fully formed ideas about what is best could hurt her efforts if elected.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 6, 2016
  • California counties hire juvenile detention transition specialists

    These specialists help students get into the right classes and transition successfully to some type of educational placement once they are released, whether that is a traditional or alternative school.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 6, 2016
  • Foreign language education provides diplomatic benefits, more

    The United States has moved away from a commitment to foreign language acquisition in recent decades, but employers care about bilingualism and research shows it has positive effects.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 6, 2016
  • DC schools' celebrated PE policy goes largely ignored

    Only 10 of more than 200 public schools are in compliance with the DC Healthy Schools Act's requirements, according to the Office of the State Superintendent of Education.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 2, 2016
  • Mental health disorders common among students, but support is limited

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate as many as one in five kids experience a mental disorder in a given year, but school staffs are swamped.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 2, 2016
  • Lead contamination presents uncontroversial ed opportunity for private donors

    Ryan Cooper, a national correspondent for The Week, suggests lead abatement could be an uncontroversial school reform strategy that is likely to improve student performance.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 2, 2016
  • Top-rated Chicago elementary principal resigns in public letter to Emanuel

    Troy LaRaviere, a vocal critic of Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s education policies, published a letter of resignation this week, surrendering to a coordinated ouster by the mayor’s administration.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 1, 2016
  • SmartAsset ranking identifies best places to be a teacher

    The personal finance technology company has issued its second annual ranking of the 140 largest metro areas based on how good teachers have it, and those in Pennsylvania and Ohio rise to the top.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 1, 2016
  • Ed Dept releases 'supplement not supplant' rules

    The U.S. Department of Education outlined draft regulations for how school districts can allocate Title I dollars, and the criticism was quick and fierce from educators and lawmakers.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Sept. 1, 2016
  • Poll shows split in perception of public ed's purpose

    Phi Delta Kappa International’s 48th annual public poll about education revealed a lack of consensus over the role of public schools and perspectives that do not align with policy.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 31, 2016
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    The image by Robert Couse-Baker is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    Data mining, other tactics help administrators tackle absenteeism

    An initial review of attendance data can help administrators figure out which students are chronically absent, or on their way to that designation, and take steps to get them to class.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 31, 2016
  • NLRB says two charters are private, not public

    The National Labor Relations Board decided cases involving charter schools in New York and Pennsylvania last week, concluding both are private corporations for the purposes of labor law.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 31, 2016
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    Report suggest strategies for diversifying teacher ranks

    Research from the Brookings Institution outlines the scope of the diversity problem in K-12 schools and the best ways to address it, based on their projected impact.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 31, 2016
  • Supreme Court considers hearing New Mexico textbook case

    Public school parents sued the New Mexico Public Education Department and several private schools in 2012, arguing the constitutionality of using public dollars for private school textbooks.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 30, 2016
  • Tennessee district focuses instruction on 7 common goals

    When Chris Marczak became superintendent of the Maury County School District, he did a listening tour with all 22 schools and community stakeholders to develop shared goals for students.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 30, 2016
  • High opt-out states preparing for federal sanctions

    As the opt-out movement pushes on, states are expecting penalties from the US Department of Education, which requires that districts test at least 95% of students.

    By Tara GarcĂ­a Mathewson • Aug. 29, 2016