-
Los bastiones de la inmersión en dos idiomas reconstruyen la educación bilingüe en California
California es, en casi todos los aspectos, uno de los estados más diversos y vibrantes de los Estados Unidos. Es el estado más poblado del país; además, no tiene ningún grupo racial o étnico mayoritario. La combinación de las inversiones públicas en el sistema de la Universidad de California y la actitud hospitalaria del estado...
By Conor Williams | July 31, 2024
-
In California, rebuilding bilingual education in schools after an 18-year ban
California is, by almost every measure, one of the United States’ most diverse and vibrant states. The country’s most populous state, it also has no majority racial or ethnic group. The combination of public investments in the University of California system and the state’s welcoming approach to immigration have created a dynamic, technology-infused economy that...
By Conor Williams | July 31, 2024
-
The key investors who once touted L.A. Schools’ failed $6M AI chatbot go silent
Earlier this summer, leaders at the ed tech company AllHere, contracted by Los Angeles schools to build a heavily hyped $6 million AI chatbot, offered assurances to one of its investors. At the time, principals with Boston Impact Initiative were finalizing the firm’s annual impact assessment of AllHere, a 2016 startup that offered a tech-driven...
By Mark Keierleber | July 30, 2024
-
Harris could set Democrats’ K–12 agenda by reviving ideas from 2020
Fortified by a stream of Democratic endorsements and high-dollar donations, Vice President Kamala Harris appeared every bit the presidential contender when she appeared before the national convention of the American Federation of Teachers last week. Addressing thousands of her party’s most loyal supporters just days after being endorsed by President Joe Biden, the newly ascendant...
By Kevin Mahnken | July 29, 2024
-
‘Brown’ devastated the Black teaching force. It’s long past time to fix that
It’s been 70 years since the groundbreaking Brown v. Board of Education ruling that declared racial segregation in schools unconstitutional. We recognize that Brown was a seminal moment in the Civil Rights Movement. Yet we also acknowledge its profound consequences. Before Brown, in the 17 states that had segregated school systems, 35% to 50% of...
By Tequilla Brownie & Marc Morial | July 25, 2024
-
Unlikely ed allies join forces to cut chronic absenteeism in half by 2029
Three high-profile education advocacy and research groups crossed political lines in Washington, D.C., Wednesday to announce an ambitious goal: cutting chronic absenteeism in half over the next five years. For the first time, the conservative American Enterprise Institute, the left-leaning Education Trust and the national nonprofit Attendance Works joined forces to confront an issue that...
By Amanda Geduld | July 24, 2024
-
LA Unified faces criticism after collapse of splashy AI tool “Ed”
Parents, educators, and advocates criticized Los Angeles Unified’s bumpy rollout and collapse of its splashy artificial intelligence chatbot “Ed” – even as the district moved ahead with more projects powered by the cutting-edge technology. LAUSD last month shut down the chatbot after the firm hired to build it lost its CEO and furloughed workers. District officials...
By Ben Chapman | July 23, 2024
-
‘I needed help’: Students spill the truth about college experiences
Community college student Jennifer Toledo says earning a four-year degree is exciting, but has had difficulty navigating the complicated higher education system after growing up in Mexico. Benjamin Gregory, a former community college student, managed to graduate with an associate degree and transfer to a four-year school despite the challenges of enrolling as an older...
By Joshua Bay | July 22, 2024
-
Benjamin Riley: AI is another ed tech promise destined to fail
For more than a decade, Benjamin Riley has been at the forefront of efforts to get educators to think more deeply about how we learn. As the founder of Deans for Impact in 2015, he enlisted university education school deans to incorporate findings from cognitive science into teacher preparation. Before that, he spent five years...
By Greg Toppo | July 18, 2024
-
FAFSA nightmare might not be over: Education Department won’t rule out another wave of financial aid delays for college students this fall
The botched rollout of a revamped process to apply for federal financial aid could have long-lasting effects, with students receiving less money for college this fall and others so fed up they’re delaying their educations. Now, with the traditional Oct. 1 start of the next financial aid season less than three months away, the U.S....
By Linda Jacobson | July 17, 2024