Some lawmakers argue that by adding or expanding access to vouchers, charters and other school options, they are doing what parents want.
Author: Kayla Jimenez, USA TODAY
OpenAI launched a second tool to complement ChatGPT – and help teachers detect cheating
OpenAI wants to help students and educators benefit from its ChatGPT platform and doesn’t want its chatbot “to be used for misleading purposes.”
Sexist, racist and classist: Why the feds are getting involved in school dress codes
An oversight office is urging the Education Department to clue in schools on how dress codes evoke safety and discrimination concerns.
California storms are hitting schools hard. How is flooding affecting students?
Schools have been pummeled by flooding in California during a series of atmospheric river storms that hit school buildings and nearby roads and homes.
Jackson, Mississippi, water crisis closed school campuses (again). What is the path forward?
While Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba announces funding to repair city’s water infrastructure, experts are worried about student learning loss.
Congress got rid of a free lunch for all program. That means some students are going hungry
Students are back to racking up lunch debt this school year after federal legislation that provided free meals to all students expired.
Should period products be part of Title IX? The Education Department is weighing input.
The Education Department is reviewing comments asking that access to period products be mandated by Title IX, reversing an earlier position.
Period products aren’t free or accessible in schools. Students want to make that happen
Period poverty shows up in patchy state and local laws requiring free and accessible period products in schools across the nation.
The ‘Great Resignation’ hits school boards. Only 38% of members want to run for reelection
Only 38% of school board members plan to run for reelection, the national nonprofit School Board Partners found.
Reading and math test scores fell across US during the pandemic. How did your state fare?
America’s test scores dropped in reading and math, new NAEP report card data released Monday shows.