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Education Slice helps you stay ahead of essential education news shaping your profession. With a dedicated daily National Edition and three strategic State Editions in California, Texas and Florida, we bring our unique blend of AI and education expertise to research and monitor 100,000s of articles to share a summary of the most relevant and useful content to help you lead, innovate and grow.

From Kindergarten to K-12, Edtech news, school management and teaching strategies… Education Slice is the only trusted online news source in the US dedicated to covering current headlines, articles, reports and interviews to make sure you’re at the forefront of changes in the education industry.

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Education Slice
National
Districts prepare for more federal funding disruptions after 2025 delays

School districts across the U.S. are taking a more cautious approach to budgeting as concerns linger over the reliability of federal education funding following last year's temporary withholding of nearly $7bn in K-12 formula grants. While the Trump administration has assured states that more than $20bn in federal funding due on July 1 will be distributed on schedule, many district leaders remain wary after the unexpected delays experienced in 2025. Some districts are strengthening reserve policies, identifying potential spending cuts, and treating federal aid as supplemental rather than guaranteed funding. Concerns persist over the administration's broader efforts to reshape federal education spending, including the withholding of more than $2bn in competitive grants, the transfer of some grant administration responsibilities to the Department of Labor, and proposals to reduce future education funding. Although Congress largely rejected proposed education spending cuts in the current fiscal year, uncertainty remains around future budgets. A House appropriations proposal for fiscal 2027 would reduce Title I funding by $1.6bn and eliminate more than $3bn in funding for teacher development and English-language learner programs. As a result, many district leaders are preparing for the possibility of future disruptions even as federal officials continue to promise that current funding streams will remain intact.

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Education Slice
California
GOP lawmakers clash with SF Schools

Republican lawmakers have accused San Francisco USD of promoting political and gender ideology, claiming it indoctrinates students and pressures teachers to mislead parents. During a congressional hearing titled “Breaking Trust: Attacks on Parental Rights, Inappropriate Content and Legal Abuses in America's Schools,” Superintendent Maria Su defended the district's policies on transgender students and ethnic studies, stating, “SFUSD does not seek to direct students' personal beliefs, identities or family values. Our role is educational.” The Department of Justice is currently investigating four California school districts, including San Francisco Unified, regarding their policies on gender identity and sexual orientation. Su emphasized the importance of creating safe environments for students, asserting that the district is committed to following state and federal laws while allowing parents to opt out of certain educational content. The hearing highlighted the ongoing national debate over parental rights and LGBTQ+ issues in education.

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Education Slice
Texas
Texas teachers score big with TIA

Gov. Greg Abbott announced the allocation of over $750m in Teacher Incentive Allotment (TIA) funds to more than 65,000 Texas teachers across over 800 school systems. This brings the total TIA awards to over $1.8bn since the program's inception. "Texas is blessed with teachers who have educated and inspired students for generations," Abbott said. The TIA aims to retain effective educators and enhance instructional quality, leading to higher salaries. Research from Texas Tech University indicates that TIA implementation has resulted in a 20% increase in teacher retention for top-performing educators. Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath emphasized the importance of rewarding effective teachers, stating: "Teachers are the single most important in-school factor that affects student outcomes." Participation in TIA is expected to grow from 809 school systems to over 1,000 by fall 2026.

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Florida
Student behavior remains top challenge in U.S. classrooms

A new RAND Corporation survey has found that student misbehavior has surpassed low pay as teachers’ leading source of job-related stress, with a majority of educators ranking classroom management among their top three concerns. While teachers continue to report higher levels of stress, burnout, and depression than comparable working adults, the share planning to leave the profession has declined, with 18% saying they intend to leave at the end of the school year, down from 23% in 2022-23. Nearly one-quarter of teachers, and 30% of those in their first five years, said they plan to remain in the classroom as long as possible. The report also found that teachers work an average of 50 hours per week in school, spend an additional 13 hours on secondary jobs, and continue to absorb classroom costs themselves, spending an average of $665 annually on supplies. Despite receiving pay raises, 61% of teachers earned less in real terms after inflation, highlighting the ongoing financial pressures facing the profession.

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