This is the story, over and over-- universal voucher programs cost way more than anyone pushing them predicts.
Yup. Everywhere there are vouchers, states are coming face to face with a huge price tag.
Indiana’s school voucher program use at all-time high, but there are fewer low-income families
LA Lawmakers Force “In God We Trust” Signs Down Public Classroom Throat
Drummond: Approval of Catholic charter school drove a stake in the heart of religious liberty
Do the homework on Moms for Liberty-affiliated school initiatives
Did a North Carolina Democratic lawmaker throw the party under the bus for the charter school industry?
I'm an educator and grandson of Holocaust survivors, and I see public schools failing to give students the historical knowledge they need to keep our democracy strong
Rethinking Localism in Education Law and Policy
Indiana's program continues to bring financial relief to the well-to-do and not-particularly-needy.
Literacy and NAEP Proficient
Testing Vendor Scores $40 Million Contract Increase in Tennessee
Kentucky school district considering bringing back remote learning
School board must find new insurance provider or take guns away from staff
CREDO Charter Study Shows Trivial and Inconsistent Gains
DEI education in America actually dates back to the 18th century
Soon We Won’t Have Enough Kids to Fill Our Schools. That’s a Problem.
Central Bucks seniors don’t want officials ‘who have made high school harder and more painful’ handing them their diplomas
Controversial book policy in Ludlow fails
Inside Florida’s ‘underground lab’ for far-right education policies
This time it's Tom Loveless trying to explain to people what NAEP proficiency really does and doesn't mean.
Lots of versions of this story out there, but thanks to MSN here's the Politico story without a paywall. DeSantis's Florida wants AP Psych without the gay, but the College Board says they learned their lesson from the Black History debacle, and they aren't going to budge.
Pearson scores big in Tennessee. Andy Spears has the story.
Interesting tale of a district that can't compete for teachers financially with its neighboring district, so instead of thinking outside the box. Teachers, we can't pay you more, but how would you like a four day live work week with one cyberschool day?
Insurance company decides that having a bunch of armed amateurs in a building is a liability. Who would have guessed? Okay, just about anyone, but here we are. Jay Waagmeester reports for Iowa Capital Dispatch.
CREDO Charter Study Shows Trivial and Inconsistent Gains
Yes, if you read here, you probably also read Diane Ravitch, but this one is too important to miss. The CREDO study and its claims of charter awesomeness are being reported everywhere. Carol Burris has looked at the real numbers-- and not so fast.
At the Washington Post, Penn State professor Bradford Vivian reminds us that DEI is not actually all that new.
Jessica Grose at the New York Times on a demographic trend that may spell trouble for some school districts.
Maddie Hanna at the Philadelphia Inquirer goes to a county where district leaders have been all about book bans and gag rules, and its graduating class is unimpressed.
In Massachusetts, a school board suggests that book ban supporters go home--to whatever place outside the district they live.
Sarasota County in Florida is Ground Zero for far right anti-inclusive policies. Kathryn Joyce looks at this very Florida place for Hechinger Report.
The indispensable Mercedes Schneider takes a look at a new Louisiana plan to get a Godly poster in every classroom. Good luck with that.
One of the most vocal opponents of that new religious charter school in Oklahoma is-- the Republican Attorney General of the state, who wrote a whole op-ed to further explain why he thinks it's a bad idea.
The York Dispatch in York PA is a smallish paper in a smallish place, but they know enough to recognize a "right-wing fever dream" when they see one. A whole editorial board wrote this take-down of the Moms.
Jeff Bryant looks at the defection of Tricia Cotham, and how it is tied to charter school politics.
Boaz Dvir, a Penn State professor, looks at the cost of shortchanging the teaching of history.
Okay, maybe a little wonky, but this is an interesting conversation with Derek Black about the problems of local approaches to education.
Things that Make Teachers Go Hmmm
Nancy Flanagan on Teach for America's newest recruitment drive.
Nickolas Kristoff thinks Mississippi pulled off a miracle. Thomas Ultican is unimpressed.
As always, you're invited to join me on substack for a more reliable in-you-inbox reading experience for whatever I've cranked out lately.
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