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Recent Editions
Education Slice
National
The U.S. Department of Education will continue distributing key K-12 funding through its existing grants system this summer, easing concerns among state and local officials that a planned transition to other agencies could delay critical payments. Programs such as Title I and special education funding under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act will be delivered via the traditional July 1 channel, giving states more time to prepare for a future shift to the Department of Labor, where many education programs are expected to move. Officials said the decision aims to prevent disruptions that could have impacted summer programs or school openings. However, uncertainty remains over whether future funding rounds, including those scheduled for October, will follow the same process. The transition reflects broader efforts by the Trump administration to shift responsibilities away from the Education Department, though logistical challenges, past funding delays, and concerns about the Labor Department’s capacity have made states cautious about relying on the new system.
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Education Slice
California
California has expanded free transitional kindergarten (TK) to all 4-year-olds this school year, but experts say there is a need for improvements in teacher training, class sizes, and curriculum standards. The National Institute for Early Education Research reported that while preschool enrollment surged to 1.8m kids, access remains uneven across the U.S. California's program, which serves nearly half of the state's 4-year-olds, met only three of the ten quality benchmarks last year. “We really want to make sure that quality piece and educational learning goals are centered in the program,” said Allison Friedman-Krauss, an associate research professor at NIEER. Despite the challenges, advocates like Jessica Sawko of Children Now believe that the expansion is just the beginning, stating: “Universal TK ... is a real win, but it's also just the start of the work and not the end of it.”
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Education Slice
Texas
In Texas, educators are finding innovative ways to comply with a federal ruling that mandates the display of the Ten Commandments in classrooms while resisting its implications. The Fifth Circuit's decision allows the state's 2025 law to remain in effect, but many teachers are creatively pushing back. One teacher noted: "I seriously haven't had one question or comment about it from any of the 150-ish kids that cycle through my room every day." Some educators are surrounding the mandated posters with materials from other belief systems or using resources from illegalposter.com to make a statement while adhering to the law. This approach has been described as "malicious compliance," where teachers follow the law's letter but challenge its intent. Others have expressed their refusal to display the posters at all, emphasizing the ongoing debate over church and state separation in education.
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Education Slice
Florida
The U.S. Department of Justice has postponed the deadline for public institutions to make their digital content accessible to individuals with disabilities, extending it to April 26, 2027, for larger entities and 2028 for smaller ones. This decision has sparked outrage among disability rights advocates, including Corbb O'Connor, president of the National Federation of the Blind of Minnesota, who said, "Yet again, the blind have been told to wait to live on terms of equality." The delay comes after years of anticipation for clearer guidelines under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), which had not previously defined digital accessibility standards. Jennifer Mathis, who helped craft the original rule, criticized the postponement as "mindless and cruel," emphasizing the need for certainty in accessibility regulations.
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