Teachers, Don't Just Shut Up and Teach
Our political system is out of balance, and teachers must prepare the next generation to do better, argues teacher-turned-legislator John Waldron.
Our political system is out of balance, and teachers must prepare the next generation to do better, argues teacher-turned-legislator John Waldron.
The governors of Oklahoma and South Carolina have directed significant portions of their states' federal education relief aid to fund private school scholarships.
The state, which earned a D-plus, has struggled with school finance issues and endured teacher strikes and battles over pay, but also earned B-plus for funding equity.
This Quality Counts 2019 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
This Quality Counts 2020 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
Spending millions to guard against COVID-19 spread, district leaders also must convince parents school buildings are safe.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a large swath of land in Oklahoma is still an American Indian reservation, a decision that may have ramifications for education.
Writing in dissent, Justice Clarence Thomas said a lower court had disrupted state property tax revenue for schools and other government services.
Maine Gov. Paul LePage says he plans to forgo the process of selecting a new commissioner for the state education department and will instead take on the role himself.
Teachers felt that iPads "provide no educational function in the classroom" and are often used to play games in class.
Middle and high schools in Maine are returning their iPads and switching back to laptops after a survey found that 88.5 percent of teachers and 74 percent of students in one district preferred laptops for schoolwork and instruction, reports the Lewiston-Auburn Sun Journal.
Gov. Paul LePage believes Maine has a glut of school superintendents, and he intends to pressure districts into consolidating administrations with the two-year budget he will propose in early 2017.
In five northern U.S. states, black students comprise more than a fifth of ELL enrollment.
The Trump administration backs three families seeking to require the state of Maine to pay tuition for their children to attend religious high schools.
This Quality Counts 2019 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
The rocky shift to remote learning has exacerbated inequities for the nation's 5 million English-learners. An army of multilingual liaisons work round the clock to plug widening gaps.
This Quality Counts 2020 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
The justices declined to take up a major challenge to exclusive-bargaining arrangements for teachers' unions and other public employee labor organizations.
Strict protocols and limited community spread helped a Maine high school stay open for in person instruction when its first coronavirus case turned up.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit turns away claims of religious discrimination by families seeking to use Maine's "tuitioning" program.
Eliminating gifted programs all together is the wrong solution to fixing racial and economic imbalances, argues James R. Delisle.
The U.S. Department of Education's office for civil rights said that some students were placed in self-contained special education settings without an individualized justification for doing so.
Students at Bellevue Elementary in Syracuse, N.Y., spend an extra 70 minutes at school each day, and their principal says the extended school day has improved their academic performance.
Private schools in New York soon will be required to report suspected sexual abuse of students in their schools to law enforcement, bringing the independent schools under the same rules as public schools.
This Quality Counts 2020 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
Students returning to schools in Virginia and New York this fall will be required to participate in mental-health education as part of their health and physical education courses.
The money, which will be allocated over three years, is expected to make major and minor improvements to schools throughout the city.
The New York state legislature passed a bill that would make the use of state test scores in these evaluations optional, leaving the decision up to districts and making it subject to collective bargaining.
It's hard to keep the coronavirus crisis in perspective, especially when that perspective keeps shifting, writes New York City teacher Colin Lieu.
Dez-Ann Romain, a Brooklyn principal, is believed to be the first full-time, front-line educator to die from COVID-19.
The days are a technology overload, mixed with the joy of seeing her students' faces and worry about her own family's health and safety, New York City teacher Ariel Sacks writes.
Gov. Andrew Cuomo pushed back on the Mayor Bill de Blasio's announcement, however, saying "no decision" had been made about reopening schools in New York City or elsewhere in the state.
More than half of all states have ordered schools closed for multiple weeks to help slow the pandemic.
A bill in Nebraska would require high school students to take a civics examination before graduating.
A Nebraska senator introduced a bill that would give teachers legal cover to physically restraint disruptive students, prompting a strong positive response from members of the state teachers' union.
A school cook in Nebraska was canned after he mixed kangaroo meat into chili made for students.
U.S. Ed Secretary DeVos has approved plans for 46 states, plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Still waiting: California, Florida, Oklahoma, and Utah.
Nebraska's education department released an interactive instructional materials map last week, showing what curricula districts have adopted for English-language arts, math, and K-8 science.
This Quality Counts 2019 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
This poem pays tribute to the more than 400 teachers, principals, bus drivers, custodians, and other staff members we have lost to the pandemic so far.
A former high school athletic standout and homecoming king, Pedro Garcia III “could connect with anybody,” no matter the language, said a teaching colleague in Cozad, Neb.
It's worth remembering how far we've come on educating students with disabilities, writes Nebraska's education commissioner Matthew L. Blomstedt.
This Quality Counts 2020 Highlights Report captures all the data you need to assess your state's performance on key educational outcomes.
The shift could have lasting effects on both public schools and the home-schooling movement.