Policy & Legal: Page 83
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Ed Department plans to issue Title IX proposal in May, not April as expected
Advocates for sexual assault survivors had pressed the agency to speed up its timeline for publishing the highly anticipated draft rule.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 28, 2022 -
Opinion
Advancing an equity-oriented science of education
The president of the William T. Grant Foundation sees new opportunities at the other end of unprecedented challenges for U.S. education.
By Adam Gamoran • April 28, 2022 -
'This doesn't seem like a new problem': Supreme Court hears coach prayer case
The outcome of the case could require administrators to make "difficult judgment calls" down the road.
By Naaz Modan • April 26, 2022 -
Proposed Ed Dept rules are 'sneak attack' on charter schools, opponents say
The agency wants more transparency with for-profit organizations and to encourage collaboration between charters and traditional public schools.
By Kara Arundel • April 25, 2022 -
NCES: Schools scale back significantly on quarantines, masking
As much of the nation experiences low community spread of COVID-19, fewer schools required masks or needed to quarantine students in March.
By Naaz Modan • April 25, 2022 -
Universal school meal efforts grow in states
Advocates of free meals for all students feel hopeful about gaining state momentum as a key federal June 30 deadline looms.
By Anna Merod • April 20, 2022 -
4-day school week picks up steam in rural Texas districts
Districts adopting a four-day model should try to lengthen school days to lessen negative achievement effects, one expert said.
By Anna Merod • April 19, 2022 -
White House seeks to expand early intervention for young children
IDEA's Part C state coordinators agree with intent, but they question whether the disability program is the best entity to reach this population.
By Kara Arundel • April 18, 2022 -
Deep Dive
Remote learning special ed litigation lower than expected
Though disruptions continue and statutes of limitations on missed services have yet to expire in some places, a lawsuit spike hasn't materialized.
By Kara Arundel • April 12, 2022 -
4 things to know as SCOTUS weighs school coach's prayer ritual
Kennedy v. Bremerton School District could have implications for religious expression policies and "would invite more employees to test the limits."
By Naaz Modan • April 11, 2022 -
Report: 40% of districts plan to spend ESSER funds on tutoring
A FutureEd analysis indicates tutoring is becoming a popular investment to address learning loss, but experts are still awaiting data on its success.
By Anna Merod • April 7, 2022 -
Opinion
We need a 'Bill of Rights' for pandemic recovery
A former Education Department deputy assistant secretary suggests a 5-point plan of action for supporting student success.
By Ian Rosenblum • April 7, 2022 -
15 Republican attorneys general urge Ed Dept to halt Title IX rule change
The attorneys general are threatening to take legal action if the Biden administration issues a regulation protecting transgender students.
By Jeremy Bauer-Wolf • April 7, 2022 -
Biden administration launches effort to improve school air quality
The White House announcements on funding and guidance for improving school air quality are good first steps in a long journey, experts say.
By Anna Merod • April 6, 2022 -
Deep Dive
As Ed Dept weighs Title IX changes, pressure mounts from growing state anti-LGBTQ measures
Districts are caught between a rock and a hard place as they navigate conflicting state laws and federal urges to support LGBTQ students.
By Naaz Modan • April 6, 2022 -
Photo by Liza Summer from Pexels
OpinionWhy Congress must deliver on student mental health
An assistant principal writes that students need sustained mental health support to address the trauma and personal challenges of the pandemic.
By Beth Lehr • April 5, 2022 -
Universal school meals back on table in bipartisan Senate proposal
With school meal waivers set to expire June 30, advocates hope Congress will act on a bill to extend them through September 2023.
By Anna Merod • April 5, 2022 -
Texas says low attendance rates won't hurt school funding
School system leaders were concerned about losing money as they continue to respond to pandemic-related impacts.
By Kara Arundel • April 5, 2022 -
Deep Dive
How a Florida district reintroduced peanut butter after an 18-year absence
Lee County schools work to protect students with food allergies as supply chain problems and rising food prices lead to changes in cafeteria menus.
By Kara Arundel and Anna Merod • April 4, 2022 -
Grassroots initiative aims to combat anti-CRT movement
The effort comes as more states pass "educational gag order" bills over fears critical race theory is being taught in K-12 classrooms.
By Anna Merod • April 4, 2022 -
Biden administration announces expanded resources for transgender students
Initiatives and resources unveiled in recognition of Transgender Day of Visibility include training opportunities on supports for schools.
By Roger Riddell • March 31, 2022 -
Data breach exposes 820K New York City students' information
A cyberattack on vendor Illuminate Education exposed information that legally should have been encrypted, the NYC Department of Education said.
By Anna Merod • Updated June 2, 2022 -
NYC Board of Ed to pay teachers hundreds of millions in damages for biased licensing exam
The city has agreed to end appeals in Gulino v. Board of Education, a lawsuit originally brought against the district over two decades ago by four teachers.
By Naaz Modan • March 30, 2022 -
Biden proposes 15.6% increase for education spending in FY23
The proposed budget includes increases for Title I, students with disabilities and school health professionals.
By Kara Arundel • Updated March 29, 2022 -
Cardona urges state, district momentum on teacher shortages
The education secretary is expected to call for increased teacher pay, more robust prep programs and more in a Monday announcement.
By Naaz Modan • March 28, 2022