Author: BelieveAgain

The just-approved California state budget strips authority from the elected state superintendent of public instruction, transferring power in January to an appointee of the governor, dramatically changing the oversight and management of a public school system serving more than 6 million students from preschool through 12th grade.The change was pushed through by Gov. Gavin Newsom at the urging of academics and education reformers who have long criticized how the state’s $149 billion public education system is governed.In essence, the change consolidates increased power within the governor’s office—streamlining and largely replacing a diffuse system in which the state superintendent has significant…

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A pair of federal judges struck down a Trump administration overhaul to a public service forgiveness program for student loans, ruling Tuesday in separate cases in favor of advocates who said the program risked becoming a tool for political retribution.U.S. District Judge Myong Joun in Massachusetts vacated the U.S. Education Department’s changes, saying they overstepped the agency’s power and threatened to violate First Amendment protections for free speech. The ruling came in response to a pair of lawsuits filed by more than 20 states along with a coalition of nonprofit groups and cities.In Washington, D.C., District Judge Amir Ali in…

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The Trump administration has expanded its list of graduate degrees it considers “professional” for federal student-loan purposes in response to a court order issued last week. But the list still lacks graduate-level teaching and education leadership degrees, meaning students pursuing them will still be subject to lower borrowing caps.In addition, the administration warns that the list, issued weeks before the start of the fall semester, may not be final.The updated list of 29 “professional” graduate degrees the U.S. Department of Education released late Monday—up from the 11 included on its original list—marks the latest twist in the Trump administration’s implementation…

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The onslaught of federal grant cancellations that hit K-12 education last year has slowed—but schools and students affected by the cuts are still feeling the direct effects of lost funding.Schools across Illinois are preparing to lay off staffers this week after a federal judge last Friday narrowed the path to reinstatement of canceled grants for community schools programming. The Trump administration recently redoubled its efforts to disrupt funding for school-based mental health supports. And on Tuesday, K-12 advocates filed a new lawsuit arguing that the White House has illegally withheld congressionally appropriated funds for education research and data collection.These developments…

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The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld state laws barring transgender girls and women from playing on school athletic teams, in another setback for transgender people.The court’s conservative majority, which has repeatedly ruled against transgender Americans in the past year, ruled that state bans in Idaho and West Virginia don’t violate the Constitution or the federal law known as Title IX, which prohibits sex discrimination in education.More than two dozen other Republican-led states have adopted bans on female transgender athletes, and the decision seems certain to extend to them as well. Left unresolved by the outcome are lawsuits challenging state laws…

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Last week, the Trump administration issued controversial new interagency agreements moving the office for civil rights and the office overseeing special education out of the Department of Education. There’ve been a lot of questions about what this all means in practice. Well, few are better positioned to answer them than Lindsay Fryer, president of Lodestone DC, who’s worked on both the House and Senate education committees and was the Senate’s lead negotiator on the Every Student Succeeds Act. I reached out to get Lindsay’s take on what to make of these changes. Here’s what she had to say.—Rick Rick: Lindsay,…

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The U.S. Department of Education violated the law when it set a definition of “professional” graduate degree that excluded education and several other fields, a federal judge has ruled.The Wednesday ruling from Judge Beryl Howell came in response to lawsuits from professional health care organizations and the National Education Association that challenged the agency’s May regulation limiting the definition of “professional” degrees to just 11 mostly doctoral-level degrees.The One Big Beautiful Bill Act that President Donald Trump signed last summer imposed new caps on how much graduate students can borrow in federal student loans, in a move proponents have said…

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An Oregon federal lawmaker is seeking to impeach U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon over her shuttering of major Education Department functions, part of her stated goal to shut down the department entirely.U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Dist. 1, cited the transfer of Education Department programs to other parts of the federal government, essentially gutting the department, as reason to oust the secretary. Most recently, the department relocated its civil rights and disability services offices to the U.S. Department of Justice, a move critics say will prevent school discrimination cases from being resolved across the country.McMahon, an ex-CEO of World Wrestling…

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Last week, the U.S. Department of Education announced that it has given up significant aspects of its civil rights enforcement obligations to the U.S Department of Justice’s civil rights division. It appears that the Education Department’s office for civil rights will now use the DOJ’s civil rights division to evaluate, investigate, and resolve complaints from students and families. The administration’s press materials call it a partnership and promise families won’t notice the difference. Families will notice.The reason is a single, unglamorous distinction. OCR is obligated to look at all complaints. Its own case-processing manual requires it to evaluate every complaint…

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A state that has yet to commit to participating in the federal school choice tax credit starting next year has passed a new law restricting scholarships awarded under the program primarily to public school and low-income students.Vermont is the first state to pass such rules for the new scholarship tax credit program, an approach some Democrats have said they may favor to direct more of the law’s benefits to public rather than private schools and to students from lower-income families.But the new rules set Vermont on a collision course with the Trump administration as it develops regulations governing the first…

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