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President Donald Trump wasted little time in making his mark on the nation’s K-12 schools after taking the oath of office for his second term on Jan. 20. The 100 days since then have been unlike the start of any other presidential administration, due to the quantity and velocity of education-related policy shifts.
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Texas mother Breggett Rideau talks about her 10-year fight for a law that requires the state's school districts to install cameras in self-contained special education classrooms upon parent request. ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
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The benefits of freshly prepared foods are widely known, but the kitchen can be a daunting place for many teens. A group of trained chefs in Omaha, Nebraska, are showing young people from low-income neighborhoods how to navigate through the kitchen and learn how to make healthy meals on a budget.
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Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
In July of 2021, Robert “Robby” Asberry took over as the new superintendent of Hancock County Schools, a small district in Hawesville, Kentucky. Driven by the negative academic effects of the pandemic on students and his own son’s struggles with reading, Asberry made overhauling the district’s literacy instruction one of his first priorities. Here’s what happened next.
As childhood obesity soars among low-income communities with limited access to fresh produce, some educators in Colorado are combating the problem by joining the farm-to-preschool movement. Now these preschoolers are learning their ABCs while picking veggies from the school garden and preparing healthy meals.
PBS NewsHour Special Correspondent Cat Wise reports.
Read more:
Leaders To Learn From: Bertrand Weber
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NSsOAtSZMmA
Farm to Turntable: Career-Tech in Action at Cleveland Boys & Girls Club
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek..../campaign-k-12/2016/
The latest shooting inside an American school killed 18-year-old senior Kendrick Castillo and wounded eight other students. The accused shooters—both students at the K-12 STEM School Highlands Ranch in suburban Denver—had not been flagged as possible threats, according to police. Education Week reporter Evie Blad talks with NewsHour’s Judy Woodruff about the major challenges schools face in protecting—and preparing—students from gun violence, even though most children will never encounter a shooter in their school.
Trevor Boffone, a high school Spanish teacher in Houston who spoke with Roadtrip Nation, offers advice on how to prevent burnout. He talks about only working contract hours, finding the things that bring you joy, and putting yourself first.
Video courtesy of Road Trip Nation
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Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news, analysis, and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our comprehensive coverage of education policy takes the form of articles, photography, and video journalism.
Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education, please contact Education Week Library at reprints@educationweek.org
Two years ago, a magnet high school for students pursuing careers in education opened in San Antonio.
Here, 10th graders at CAST Teach describe the qualities that make a good teacher, what inspired them to pursue careers in education, and their fears for the future.
Every year, Education Week searches for some of the nation's most exceptional school district leaders. Hear from three of these honorees - who we are introducing early - about what drives them as educators and leaders. The full slate of 2019 Leaders To Learn From will be announced in February.
Summer professional development is a fixture for educators and school districts, but there’s consensus that it shouldn’t be business as usual after a pandemic-disrupted school year. Education Week talked to teachers and principals about how they think this year’s PD can address crucial issues like students’ social-emotional learning needs, academics, and how to make sure teachers have a hand in shaping their training.
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Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news, analysis, and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our comprehensive coverage of education policy takes the form of articles, photography, and video journalism.
Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
- Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/e....ducationweek?sub_con
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education, please contact Education Week Library at reprints@educationweek.org
"The big problem with public education is the teachers' unions--they protect bad teachers." Sound familiar?
Produced by: John D. Tulenko ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
In a year of unprecedented teacher activism, Jahana Hayes, the 2016 National Teacher of the Year, decided to make a run for the U.S. House of Representatives—and won. In an exclusive interview with Education Week, Hayes discusses her journey from Connecticut classroom to Washington and her priorities as a new lawmaker.
Leaders to Learn From: Dupree Interview ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
Experience Camps, a summer program for children who are coping with the loss of a loved one, offers a safe space for kids to experience and work through the many emotions that come with grief. Here, the program’s founder discusses some of the tactics they employ, and how those same practices can be brought into the school building.
Charles Curtis is the psychologist at Ron Brown College Prep, a unique public high school in Washington, D.C. for young men of color. As a central member of the school's CARE team, Curtis is responsible for establishing and helping to carry out the school's unorthodox approach to student discipline: restorative justice. Curtis explains what restorative justice means in a school setting and why he believes it's essential for young black men, who disproportionately experience exclusion when they misbehave at school through suspensions and expulsions. Ron Brown--which has an intense focus on developing students' social-emotional skills and creating a culture where students feel safe physically and comfortable expressing themselves in the classroom--also emphasizes a college-preparatory curriculum. For the past year, Education Week's Kavitha Cardoza and NPR's Cory Turner visited Ron Brown weekly -- and some weeks, daily -- to witness the birth of this new school and to see how its staff tackles some of the toughest challenges in education. We spent hundreds of hours there, from the earliest days to the last bell.
Read more: http://www.edweek.org/ew/proje....cts/raising-kings-dc
Zach Champagne, assistant in research at FCR-STEM at Florida State University, compares the “traditional” area model for teaching fractions to the number-line model emphasized in the Common Core State Standards. ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
By working together and balancing urgency with careful planning, the superintendent and CIO of the Houston Independent School District are setting the bar for how to manage a 1-to-1 student computing initiative in a large urban district. This video was produced as part of Education Week’s Leaders To Learn From project, recognizing outstanding school district leaders from around the country. More at http://leaders.edweek.org. ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
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- On Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/edweek/
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
Joseph Davis, the new superintendent of the Ferguson-Florissant School District, discusses why he applied for the job after Michael Brown’s shooting death and his plans to work with the community to transform the school system. Read more: http://www.edweek.org/ew/artic....les/2015/09/16/qa-fe ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
- Subscribe to our Channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscri....ption_center?add_use
- On Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/edweek/
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.
The pandemic took a huge bite out of 4th and 8th graders’ progress in reading and math, according to the 2022 results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, also known as “the nation’s report card.”
It’s the first national assessment students have participated in since the pandemic began, and it revealed the steepest declines in student math scores since the federal testing program began in the early 1990s. In reading, students’ scores were knocked back by a decade or more.
Achievement dropped for all students: boys and girls, white, Black, and Hispanic students, students in poverty and wealthy students. And while top performers fared the best, struggling learners suffered the steepest declines.
The devastating portrait of student achievement painted by the results contrasts with parents’ view of how their children are doing in school. Ninety percent say their children are working at grade level or better.
Assistant Editor Sarah D. Sparks breaks down the latest findings and explains what makes the main NAEP assessment findings attention-worthy.
Rather than waiting to see how job losses and higher housing costs would impact the schools in Vancouver, Wash., top leaders in the district set out in 2008 to create an “opportunity zone” where schools would focus on addressing the impact of poverty that can affect students’ classroom performance.
In several phases, schools in the opportunity zone each set aside space for a family- and community-resource center staffed by a coordinator to help meet the needs of students and their families. Each resource center developed its own menu of services that are tailored to the specific needs of the school community, offering things like food pantries, free clothing, referrals to mental-health services, family-literacy classes, GED prep programs for parents, and on-site dental care through mobile dental vans.
“We have a vested interest in the success of young people,” Superintendent Steve Webb says. “Too many of our young people have barriers to student success in their homes and in their neighborhoods. ... If not us, then who?”
City leaders and school volunteers credit Webb and his chief of staff, Tom Hagley, with helping make that vision a reality.
This video was produced as part of Education Week’s Leaders To Learn From project, recognizing outstanding school district leaders from around the country. More at http://leaders.edweek.org ____________________
Want more stories about schools across the nation, including the latest news and unique perspectives on education issues? Visit www.edweek.org.
About Education Week:
Education Week is America’s most trusted source of independent K-12 education news, analysis, and opinion. Our work serves to raise the level of understanding and discourse about education among school and district leaders, policymakers, researchers, teachers, and the public. Published by the nonprofit organization Editorial Projects in Education, Education Week has been providing award-winning coverage of the field for over 35 years.
Follow Education Week:
- Subscribe to our Channel: http://www.youtube.com/subscri....ption_center?add_use
- On Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/edweek/
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To license video footage from Editorial Projects in Education please contact the Education Week Library at library@epe.org.