Policy & Legal: Page 67


  • Packaging of Pfizer and BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine in pediatric formulation
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    Courtesy of Pfizer
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    FDA staff supportive of Pfizer, Moderna COVID vaccines in young children

    Agency scientists found the shots to be similarly effective in kids as in older teenagers and raised no major safety red flags, documents published ahead of a meeting of agency advisers this week show.

    By Jonathan Gardner , Ned Pagliarulo • June 13, 2022
  • Miguel Cardona sits surrounded by students and others
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    The image by U.S. Department of Education is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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    How can school systems sustain federal funding to address teacher shortages?

    Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said “federal funding alone is not going to cut it” during a Thursday speech. “We need this at all levels.”

    By June 10, 2022
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    Stock Photo via Getty Images
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    Trendline

    Attendance and Absenteeism

    Our latest K-12 Dive Trendline takes a closer look at chronic absenteeism’s impact on schools and where educators are seeing success with attendance.

    By K-12 Dive staff
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    Stock Photo via Getty Images
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    Report: New 3-digit suicide prevention hotline needs significant improvements

    Just over half of behavioral health program directors are equipped to help children calling in about suicide, a RAND Corp. report finds.

    By June 10, 2022
  • US Department of Education building in Washington, DC
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    The image by Farragutful is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
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    Ed Dept report shows 'pass the trash' state policies uneven

    Title IX regulations passed under the Trump administration left open a loophole that could exacerbate the problem, and it has yet to be addressed.

    By June 9, 2022
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    skodonnell via Getty Images
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    Maintenance of equity final rule clarifies reporting requirements, extends deadline

    Advocates are hopeful an American Rescue Plan provision spurs action to make equitable spending and staffing practices permanent.

    By June 8, 2022
  • A student's hand is shown lifting an individually bagged lunch from a cafeteria table during pandemic-era distribution and distancing protocols as students returned to schools.
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    John Moore via Getty Images
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    USDA invests $100M in school meal program innovation

    The agency's Healthy Food Incentive Fund program comes as federal pandemic era meal waivers are set to expire June 30.

    By June 3, 2022
  • National Head Start early learning preschool
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    Permission granted by National Head Start Association
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    'We can't out-pay Walmart': Head Start classrooms close after staff turnover

    In a survey, an overwhelming 90% of respondents said they had to close classrooms permanently or temporarily due to lack of personnel. 

    By June 3, 2022
  • pride classroom school LGBTQ inclusion
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    Alexander Vorotyntsev via Getty Images
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    More states pass bills restricting transgender students on sports teams

    The increase in states banning transgender students comes as the Education Department postpones Title IX regulations.

    By June 1, 2022
  • A Reset Center classroom in Texas' Dallas Independent School District.
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    Permission granted by Dallas Independent School District
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    Dallas sees positive results in first year of discipline reform

    Suspension rates dropped significantly under new approaches to eliminate disproportionate discipline and build positive relationships.

    By May 31, 2022
  • The early morning sun strikes the U.S. Capitol November 6, 2006 in Washington, DC.
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    Win McNamee/Staff via Getty Images
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    Mental health, community schools top of mind in FY 23 House hearing

    Lawmakers and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona discussed school supports in response to this week's Texas school shooting.

    By May 27, 2022
  • A teacher sits alone at her desk in an empty classroom as she prepares for students to return to its nigh-forgotten desks following COVID-19 closures.
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    George Frey via Getty Images
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    House subcommittee hearing explores teacher shortage solutions

    Proposed ways to address vacancies ranged from increasing investments in community schools to removing barriers for teaching credentials.

    By May 26, 2022
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    Octavio Jones via Getty Images
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    NSBA independent review finds no Biden administration collusion in controversial letter

    The September letter requested that threats against school board members be investigated as possible “domestic terrorism” under the Patriot Act.

    By May 24, 2022
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    Alex Wong via Getty Images
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    Education Department delays release of draft Title IX rule again, now targets June

    The agency at one point planned to publish proposed regulations directing how colleges must adjudicate sexual misconduct in April, then postponed to May.

    By May 23, 2022
  • Packaging for a pediatric formulation of Pfizer and BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine
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    Courtesy of Pfizer
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    Pfizer says 3 doses of its COVID-19 vaccine work in youngest children

    The drugmaker, along with partner BioNTech, plans to submit the new data to the FDA this week. The agency has scheduled a meeting for outside experts to review the data in mid-June.

    By Jonathan Gardner • May 23, 2022
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    Alex Wong via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    ESSER spending is a journey: How can ed leaders invest to keep the trip running?

    A former superintendent and a policy expert write that coordinated spending and braiding funds are essential steps to maintain the ESSER "road trip."

    By Robert Avossa and Dana Godek • May 23, 2022
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    Karen Ducey via Getty Images
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    School nutrition directors prepare for next academic year with and without universal meals

    With no funding to provide all students free meals, one Colorado school district expects to raise meal prices by 50 to 75 cents.

    By May 20, 2022
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    Stefan Zaklin / Stringer / via Getty Images via Getty Images
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    Lawmakers and witnesses discuss race, gender in classrooms

    Where some in a Thursday congressional hearing saw curriculum limits as censorship and intimidation, others said divisive topics distract from instruction.

    By May 20, 2022
  • President Barack Obama, joined by Education Secretary Arne Duncan, stands at a podium to deliver remarks at the White House.
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    Brendan Hoffman via Getty Images
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    A look at 13 years of Title IX policy in public schools

    With the implementation of the Biden administration’s rule governing the federal sex discrimination law, we look back at major events in recent Title IX history.

    By Updated Aug. 2, 2024
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    Joe Raedle via Getty Images
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    House panel: Juvenile justice reforms need coordinated school-community response

    Speakers at a House subcommittee hearing discuss how involving youth in extracurricular activities and employment can prevent delinquency.

    By May 18, 2022
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    OlyaSolodenko/iStock via Getty Images
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    These 5 charts illustrate school finance entering the pandemic

    A new analysis offers a snapshot of the "limbo" many states and districts were dealing with just prior to the distribution of federal relief funding.

    By May 17, 2022
  • US Department of Education building in Washington, DC
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    The image by Farragutful is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
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    Ed Dept offers 18-month extension requests for ARP spending

    AASA says extensions would allow districts time to plan facility improvements while dealing with challenges from supply chain and labor shortages.

    By May 13, 2022
  • A boy and girl are sitting in the back of an elementary classroom during a lesson. One of the children is raising his hand.
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    Michael Loccisano via Getty Images
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    Why states and districts are struggling with ARP's maintenance of equity

    Different local accounting approaches and delays in actual spending figures have made implementation difficult, education experts say.

    By May 13, 2022
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    OlyaSolodenko/iStock via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    Big money, big ideas: Will schools seize the day along with the cash?

    A former school district CFO writes administrators have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to make bold moves that expand effectiveness and opportunities.

    By Erin Covington • May 13, 2022
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    Anna Moneymaker / Staff via Getty Images
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    From the Archive: Could overturning Roe v. Wade impact high school dropout rates?

    Many of the same student subgroups who are already lagging in academic achievement are also less likely to be able to access abortion care.

    By May 12, 2022
  • Stacks of $100 bills being produced.
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    Mark Wilson via Getty Images
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    NCES: States entered pandemic with smaller year-over-year funding increases

    The most recent data only accounts for about three months of COVID-19 closures, and many states had not yet disbursed federal relief funds.

    By May 11, 2022