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Top News Chalkbeat Tennessee The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights is investigating Shelby County Schools for discrimination of migrant students with issues affecting English learners and limited English proficiency parental communication. Read more>> |
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St. Louis Post-Dispatch A group of parents of St. Louis charter school students have been denied their request to intervene in a legal battle over desegregation funding. The parents had wanted a say in a litigation that could force the charter schools to return more than $50 million to St. Louis Public Schools. Read more>> WFTV Just weeks before school starts, the Orange County School District is still short more than 300 teachers. State rules have changed this year, allowing schools to open as early as August 10, leaving schools scrambling to make sure enough teachers will be on tap on day one. Read more>> |
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From DA Magazine Designing for disasters Patricia Daddona Designing new buildings or retrofitting existing ones to meet standards for natural disasters is an especially complex challenge for school leaders. But building to a more modern code makes a district eligible for more federal assistance Read more>> |
The Detroit News The new Detroit Public Schools Community District is partnering with stakeholders to keep students engaged over the summer. The new district joined forces with the Michigan Science Center, the Department of Natural Resources’ Outdoor Adventure Center and others to provide educational activities centered on STEAM. Read more>> Milwaukee Journal Sentinel The state Department of Public Instruction last week boosted the amount of money it distributes to rural districts to offset their high transportation costs by $2.5 million. But many rural district officials remain discouraged by a formula that leaves most of them out in the cold. Read more>> The New Orleans Advocate The Orleans Parish School Board voted to use $1.5 million of its $62.5 million surplus to begin the massive effort of returning most New Orleans public schools to local control. The $1.5 million the board approved will be used to hire staff to work on the transition. Read more>> |
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Opinion & Analysis The Daily Signal The long-term bloat of public school staff in the District of Columbia shows that parents need innovative and more effective ways to control education spending for their children, instead of letting the school district continue to fritter it away with hiring non-lead-teachers. Read more>> U.S. News & World Report Let's start asking what successful for-profits can teach us about improving K12 education. Those who pigeonhole for-profit charter schools because of a misconception about profit motive, as well as those who defend failing schools simply because they are public, are failing students. We need adults to have a frank conversation about every mechanism for success at their disposal. Read more>> |
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Courier-Journal The first years of teaching are difficult. The difference for our next generation of new teachers is that unlike those before, they will not have to go at it alone. Considering the payoffs—lower teacher turnover, higher confidence and improved student outcomes—programs to support new teachers and their mentors are well worth it. Read more>> |
Industry News Odysseyware Odysseyware is teaming up with the National Academy Foundation to expand its career and technical education offerings in the field of agriculture. The foundation's more than 700 academies nationwide can now offer agriculture courses including Agricultural Mechanics I, Agricultural Mechanics II, Agricultural Biology, and Veterinary Sciences. Read more>> NetSupport NetSupport DNA, new multiple language packs for schools' safeguarding keyword and phrase databases, will enable staff in schools with a diverse ethnic mix of students to be able to monitor community languages other than English for safeguarding purposes Read more>> Tecogen Inc. Tecogen's induction-based CM-75 combined heat and power units will be installed in three different schools in and around New York and New Jersey. Total combined deal value for the projects is approximately half a million dollars. Read more>> |
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Construction Watch City News Service via KPBS Most school districts in the region have improved the transparency of their construction bond programs, but there remains ample room for improvement, according to a report released by the San Diego Taxpayers Educational Foundation. Seven school districts earned perfect scores on transparency. Read more>> The Courier-Tribune County commissioners voted to accept a loan from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for a new high school for the North Carolina county. Land has been set aside next to Montgomery Community College, which would allow sharing of an advanced career and technical facility to be constructed with the high school. Read more>> |