School choice debate not over as Nevada’s governor has a plan to fund private school scholarships
The AP looks at the Nevada governor's latest attempt to make vouchers happen in his state.
Staff sues Woodland Park school district over new 'punitive' media policy
From the Gallery of Bad Policies, we have Woodland Park schools in Colorado, where the district has declared that teachers and staff can't post anything about the district without superintendent approval.
Meanwhile, college professors in Idaho are pushing back against a "don't mention abortion" law. Kylie Chung reports at Jezebel.
“Betsy DeVos Was a Disaster. I Think Erika Donalds Could Be Worse.”
Next frontier in Fla. education wars: Climate
Florida says it doesn’t want indoctrination in schools — but look at the materials it just approved
Kiera Butler at Mother Jones with a well-detailed look at Erika Donalds, the queen of school privatization in Florida. The hook (that she could be Trump's next education secretary) is a stretch, but the rest of this is excellent. Bonus: at last, a mainstream outlet covers the actual origins of Moms For America.
Arianna Skibell at Politico looks at one of the effects of letting PragerU into Florida classrooms.
If you can use an introduction to PragerU and their propaganda machine, Valerie Strauss at the Washington Post has you covered.
AI Chatbot ‘Ed’ Will Be L.A. Unified’s Newest Student Adviser, Superintendent Says
A new AI app lets users ‘text’ with Jesus. Some call it blasphemy.
EdWeek picks up a piece from the LA Times about the newest step forward in the dehumanizing of student care.
Fiona Andre at Washington Post writes about one more awesome use of AI, which could not possibly end terribly I'm sure.
Well, hell. Allegedly the state has said that students can take the course--they just won't get graduation credits from it. We'll see.
Teach for America Promised to Fix the Teacher Exodus Before Anyone Even Noticed There Was One. Now It’s Choking on Its Own Failure
Steven Singer looks at TFA and the teacher exodus and how the bad ideas of one hjelped feed the other.
Big-City Mayors Are Getting Kicked Out of Schools
Interesting take from Alan Greenblatt at Governing-- are we finally getting mayors out of the school-running business (at which they mostly sucked)?
The indispensable Mercedes Schneider takes a look at the highly dispensable, and yet somehow still failing upwards, John White
Critical thinking education trumps banning and censorship in battle against disinformation, study suggests
Progressives Are Defeating Conservatives in School Board Elections—Even in Ohio
Democratic lawmakers attend ALEC meeting to see what might be on the Legislature’s agenda
Banned in Boston (Globe) II: the Barr Foundation/Hostetter 2021 Political Team
The Case for Vouchers Collapses
Grand jury investigating bid-rigging involving DeSantis’ education department
The Education Policies Governor Ron DeSantis Has Enacted in Florida Are Just Plain Scary
Middle Schoolers: The Myth and the Reality
Ron DeSantis Announces He Will Live As Slave For One Year To Prove It Not Bad
What's most effective way to combat misinformation? Probably not banning the source. From PsyPost, a look at a study on the topic.
Some folks have been saying this all along (I see you, Jennifer Berkshire)--being a far right book-banning anti-LGBTQ right winger is not a winning strategy on the local level. From David Pepper in Washington Monthly.
Jill Filipovic at the Atlantic questions trigger warnings and whether they might have had the opposite of their intended effect.
What a fun piece. A couple of Democratic lawmakers report from inside a gathering of the corporate right-wing bill mill. It is... illuminating.
Maurice Cunningham with more view inside the dark money machinery that the Boston Globe carefully avoids noticing.
At Carolina Forward, an explanation of why voucher programs are a bad idea for education policy.
Billy Townsend was following this story forever, but now the feds are involved in the wacky story of that time that competing corrupt officials got in each others' way. Because Florida.
These things hit the fan one at a time, so it helps every so often to back up and look at a slightly bigger picture. Jan Resseger is here to help do that.
Speaking of summing up a barrage of bad policy ideas, Gary Rubinstein takes a look at the junk that's hitting Houston schools after the state takeover.
Should officials loosen work requirements so that 14 year olds can work in bars? Should officials have their heads examined? Nancy Flanagan with some reality checks about middle schoolers.
The Onion. Enjoy.
Meanwhile, at Forbes. com, I look at a study that shows social-emotional development really matters.
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