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From California to New Jersey, ‘Nation’s Report Card’ is fueling efforts to close learning gaps worsened by COVID
Alabama recently deployed math coaches to low-performing schools; New Jersey is creating new statewide civics and history assessments; and California leaders are planning major investments in professional development to turn around achievement declines. Those are all efforts fueled by data from the Nation’s Report Card to close learning gaps worsened by the pandemic. It’s encouraging...
By Lesley Muldoon | January 11, 2024
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Emergency-hired teachers do just as well as those who go through normal training
When K-12 schools closed their doors for in-person instruction in spring 2020, it had a variety of negative effects on students and teachers. It also shut off the training opportunities for future educators. In response, states instituted a variety of short-term waivers allowing candidates to teach without fulfilling their normal requirements. Those policies helped candidates...
By Chad Aldeman | January 10, 2024
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A rose-colored recovery: Study says parents don’t grasp scope of COVID’s academic damage
Last week, as leading education experts gathered — again —to ponder the nation’s sluggish recovery from pandemic learning loss, one speaker put the issue in stark relief. “This is the biggest problem facing America,” Jens Ludwig, a University of Chicago professor, said flatly. Nonetheless, he told those assembled at the Washington, D.C., event sponsored by...
By Linda Jacobson | January 9, 2024
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New analysis finds charter school sector still has plenty of room to grow
The conventional wisdom in some quarters is that the charter school movement has run its course. Abandoned by an increasingly progressive Democratic Party for being “neo-liberal” and by an increasingly populist Republican Party for being “technocratic,” charter schools (the story goes) are falling into the chasm that has opened up in the political center of...
By Michael J. Petrilli | January 8, 2024
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One-on-one tutoring program bets big on teaching kindergartners to read
High-dosage tutoring is one of the most effective tools to help students recover from lost learning, including in subjects like reading, where many are far behind. But what if schools didn’t wait until students fell behind? What if all kindergartners got a reading tutor from the start? That’s what the early-literacy tutoring company Once is...
By Julian Roberts-Grmela | January 4, 2024
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14 charts that changed the way we looked at America’s schools in 2023
For K–12 education, 2023 was a year spent over a threshold. Schools had one foot in the shutdown era, still struggling to restore a sense of normalcy that disappeared in 2020. A steep rise in behavioral and disciplinary issues, which many teachers hoped would be only the temporary product of COVID’s generational disruption to routines,...
By Kevin Mahnken | January 3, 2024
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7 artificial intelligence trends that could reshape education in 2024
The future of education has never looked more creative and promising. Since making its public debut last year, ChatGPT has profoundly impacted my perspective on generative AI in education. As a writer and former high school English teacher, I experienced an existential crisis watching the chatbot effortlessly generate lesson plans and rubrics — tasks that...
By Edward Montalvo, The XQ Institute | January 2, 2024
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How Do Teachers Feel About Their Jobs & the Impact of AI? New Survey Has Answers
Each year, the ed tech company I work for, HMH, conducts a survey designed to understand the obstacles and opportunities teachers and administrators experience. This year’s Educator Confidence Report revealed new insights into how more than 1,200 K-12 teachers are feeling about the profession overall, as well as their attitudes toward generative artificial intelligence —...
By Francie Alexander | December 27, 2023
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A youth psychology expert explains what’s behind the harmful behavior of bullies
Being bullied can make your life miserable, and decades of research prove it: Bullied children and teens are at risk for anxiety, depression, dropping out of school, peer rejection, social isolation and self-harm. Adults can be bullied too, often at a job, and they may suffer just as much as kids do. [cta_rss_snippet] I’m a...
By Sara Goldstein, The Conversation | December 20, 2023
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Best education articles of 2023: Our 9 most shared stories about LA students & schools
2023 continued to be a tumultuous time for the nation’s second largest school district, as enrollment, transportation and other issues continued to disrupt Los Angeles Unified post-pandemic. The year began with a heated battle at LAUSD for special needs services, with parents and advocates slamming the district’s regressive rollout plan. LA School Report also talked...
By LA School Report | December 19, 2023