Policy & Legal: Page 42
-
SCOTUS hears case that could change IDEA dispute resolution
The case could result in barriers for school districts seeking to resolve IDEA claims, one legal expert said.
By Naaz Modan , Kara Arundel • Jan. 19, 2023 -
Survey: More than half of parents considering new schools for their children
The National School Choice Awareness Foundation poll’s findings come as public school enrollment is projected to fall by 4% within a decade.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 18, 2023 -
Trendline
Top 5 stories from K-12 Dive
K-12 Dive has gathered some a selection of our best coverage from 2024 so far as a one-stop resource on the trends to watch in the months ahead.
By K-12 Dive staff -
Should students have to change clothes for PE class?
Some schools are maintaining relaxed pandemic-era physical education dress codes, while others are sticking with policies requiring PE uniforms.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 17, 2023 -
California county’s superintendent ousters highlight growing concerns in communities
Contentious decisions to remove superintendents without cause have raised concerns about due process and students’ best interests.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 13, 2023 -
These 4 charts explain federal fiscal 2023 K-12 spending
Though some of the Biden administration’s ambitious requests weren’t met, Congress still raised budgets across a number of programs.
By Naaz Modan • Jan. 13, 2023 -
Majority of districts report increase in meal debt since pandemic waiver’s end
A School Nutrition Association survey also finds a drop in average daily school meal participation since a policy providing free meals to all students expired.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 12, 2023 -
Just 24% of public schools feel ‘very prepared’ for active shooters
NCES data suggests a lack of confidence in school safety preparedness after a record year of school shootings.
By Naaz Modan • Jan. 12, 2023 -
Cyberattack forces Iowa’s largest school district to cancel classes
The scope of the cyber incident at Des Moines Public Schools is still unknown as the district works to recover its network.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 11, 2023 -
Seattle Public Schools sues social media companies amid youth mental health crisis
Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, YouTube and TikTok played a major role in harming students’ mental health, the district’s lawsuit claims.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 11, 2023 -
Meta calls for increased regulation of child safety online
The social media giant wants more coordinated action after its first-ever Youth Safety and Well-Being Summit.
By Andrew Hutchinson • Jan. 11, 2023 -
Panel: Trauma of preschool suspensions, expulsions is long-lasting
Teacher, family and student supports are needed to end exclusionary discipline of young children, speakers said in a Hunt Institute webinar.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 10, 2023 -
Louisiana superintendent calls for removing TikTok from school devices
TikTok’s “lack of data privacy measures are extremely concerning,” said the state’s superintendent of education in a memo advising schools to ban the app.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 10, 2023 -
Virginia Foxx reclaims chair of House education committee
North Carolina Republican promises vigorous oversight of the federal government and stopping the Biden administration's regulatory agenda.
By Rick Seltzer , Kara Arundel • Jan. 10, 2023 -
States eye universal school meals ahead of legislative sessions
With little hope in an immediate federal pathway to secure free school meals for all, states are increasingly looking to institute their own policies.
By Anna Merod • Jan. 9, 2023 -
Obtaining Medicaid billing consent burdensome to staff, concerning to parents
Recent federal efforts to improve Medicaid school-based services and administrative processes have advocates hopeful.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 5, 2023 -
8 K-12 trends to watch in 2023
Academic recovery, family engagement, cyberthreats and school security concerns are among challenges coming at school leaders from all sides.
By Roger Riddell , Naaz Modan , Kara Arundel , Anna Merod • Jan. 4, 2023 -
K-12 federal funding sees 5.6% increase for FY 2023
Title I — the largest of the K-12 federal funding programs — will receive a $850 million increase over FY 2022 for a total of $18.4 billion.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 4, 2023 -
BY THE NUMBERS
By The Numbers: How districts are spending ESSER funds
In states' FY 2021, district subgrants for spending or planned spending equaled just over half of all federal COVID-19 emergency funding for K-12.
By Kara Arundel • Jan. 4, 2023 -
North Carolina district goes back to serving alternative meals
In the wake of pandemic-era universal meals ending, Guilford County Schools has accrued $111,627 in student meal debt and aims to slow the growth.
By Anna Merod • Dec. 22, 2022 -
Deep Dive
School shootings reach unprecedented high in 2022
There’s been an on-campus shooting ‘pretty much every single school day’ this fall, the founder of the K-12 School Shooting Database said.
By Naaz Modan , Kara Arundel • Dec. 21, 2022 -
Amid ‘tripledemic’ concerns, some schools revisit masking rules
Philadelphia schools are bringing back a temporary indoor mask requirement when students return to class in January.
By Anna Merod • Dec. 21, 2022 -
Title IX athlete case decided in favor of transgender students
A Connecticut school policy allowing transgender athletes to play on teams aligning with their gender identities could reach the U.S. Supreme Court.
By Naaz Modan • Dec. 20, 2022 -
OCR probe leads to changes in restraint, seclusion practices in Virginia program
The Southeastern Cooperative Education Programs did not reevaluate students after multiple incidents of restraint, seclusion, OCR found.
By Kara Arundel • Dec. 20, 2022 -
More adults say parents shouldn’t have to vaccinate children for MMR
Though a majority of adults still support school vaccine requirements for measles, mumps and rubella, the percentage has declined since 2019.
By Anna Merod • Dec. 19, 2022 -
Democrats push gun control in school shooting hearing as Republicans cite religion, family failures
Both parties worried about a lack of bipartisan agreement over firearm violence in schools during a House hearing on Uvalde and other mass shootings.
By Naaz Modan • Dec. 16, 2022