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Major publisher joins book ban lawsuit against Florida school district
The lawsuit, which includes publishing giant Penguin Random House among its plaintiffs, is the first of its kind against a school district.
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Sponsored by Corwin
The 5 steps of a collective efficacy cycle
Corwin advocates for teachers to work smarter, not harder, by planning for success.
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More young children are back in preschool
A NIEER study shows enrollment rose in 2021-22 compared to the year before, but still lags behind pre-pandemic numbers.
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Pop Quiz: Test yourself on this week’s K-12 news
From new research on pandemic learning loss to a major publisher joining a book ban lawsuit, what did you learn from our stories the week of May 15?
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Share your school district’s rising leaders
We’re seeking trailblazing leaders to feature in our third annual spotlight on assistant principals and district administrators.
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Education Department updates guidance on school prayer
The guidance comes almost a year after the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a high school football coach’s public prayer on the 50-yard line.
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Cardona defends Ed Dept policies, budget request in House grilling
GOP lawmakers took issue with transgender rights and raising the debt ceiling. Democrats want more resources for underserved students.
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Public weighs in on Title IX athletics rule with more than 150K comments
The proposal has elicited concern from both ends of the political spectrum over both the inclusion and exclusion of transgender students.
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School food prices soar by nearly 300%, consumer price index shows
A School Nutrition Association survey had already revealed concerns over food costs in January, with almost all school nutrition directors citing rising prices.
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Pandemic learning loss likely exacerbated by district, community factors
A study finds high-poverty and high-minority school districts that spent more time in remote and hybrid instruction saw greater academic declines.
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How can schools help students understand the science of social media?
Rather than banning social media outright, schools should help students understand its effect on the brain and how to moderate use, one expert says.
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Lost and Found: What gets left behind at schools?
From water bottles to a toaster oven, schools share their most common and unusual unclaimed items and how they attempt to find the owners.
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School safety a key focus as 澳洲幸运5历史开奖号码-开奖走势图号码查询-历史记录 ‘maximizes’ Bipartisan Safer Communities Act
President Joe Biden announced 13 new actions for implementing the law, including over $1 billion to help high-need districts apply for funding.
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Opinion
School foodservice programs deserve better than Beltway ‘experts’
Rep. Virginia Foxx and Sen. John Boozman write that school nutrition professionals should hold the decision-making power on the contents of school meals.
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These 5 best practices can help schools make the most of social media
Consistency, accuracy and highlighting positives should all be top of mind in schools’ approaches to social media, experts say.
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PaperCut actively exploited by multiple threat actors, targeting education sector
Education is a key market for the print management software, which threat actors have targeted since mid-April.
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Principal: Educators must be ‘unapologetic’ in pushing for leadership roles
Mary Pat Cumming, leader of the FAIR School in Minneapolis and a NASSP board member, says it's important to create space for potential leaders.
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Senators probe Education Dept FY 24 spending plan
Senators raised Title I, IDEA, CTE, rural schools as priority areas. A House plan, however, promises to make severe across-the-board agency cuts.
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Housing is increasingly unaffordable for teachers in many metropolitan areas
Rental costs can range from 47% of a teacher’s salary in San Francisco to 17% in Wichita, Kansas, according to a NCTQ analysis.
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Survey: Despite partisan divide on curriculum, most agree decisions should fall on school districts
Overall, 42% of adult U.S. citizens surveyed by YouGov said a parent should try to change school curriculum if they disagree with certain materials.
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What does the end of Title 42 mean for schools?
Local officials and the federal government aim to provide resources to schools to support newcomer students who are English learners.
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As national COVID-19 emergency ends, a look back on the virus’ impact on schools
These are the key events that shifted how schools operated throughout the health crisis over the last three years.
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Retrieved from U.S. Department of Education on September 19, 2022
Education Department: Colleges should place more Federal Work-Study students in K-12 support roles
Within two years, institutions should try to use at least 15% of work-study funding to employ students in community service activities, the agency said.
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How can schools build a broader view of postsecondary learning into curriculum?
One expert suggests it’s never too soon to introduce students to alternative pathways, and partnerships can help expand these opportunities.
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Deep Dive
幸运体彩澳洲五分彩 anticipates a summer of school construction
As schools plan for a surge of ESSER-supported upgrades over summer break, many administrators remain concerned about spending deadlines.
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With chronic absenteeism on the upswing, how can schools tackle attendance issues?
Experts estimate chronic absenteeism rates have doubled since the COVID-19 pandemic began, and a new FutureEd report offers over two dozen remedies.