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Tag: teachers

  • Plenty of schools have no-zeroes policies. And most teachers hate it, a new survey finds

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    This story was originally published by Chalkbeat. Sign up for their newsletters at ckbe.at/newsletters.

    About one in four teachers say their schools don’t give students zeroes. And nearly all of them hate it.

    The collection of practices known as equitable grading, which includes not giving students zeroes, not taking off points for lateness, and letting students retake tests, has spread in the aftermath of the pandemic. But it wasn’t known how widespread the practices were.

    A new nationally representative survey released Wednesday finds equitable grading practices are fairly common, though nowhere near universal. More than half of K-12 teachers said their school or district used at least one equitable grading practice.

    The most common practice — and the one that drew the most heated opposition in the fall 2024 survey — is not giving students zeroes for missing assignments or failed tests. Just over a quarter of teachers said their school or district has a no-zeroes policy.

    Around 3 in 10 teachers said their school or district allowed students to retake tests without penalty, and a similar share said they did not deduct points when students turned in work late. About 1 in 10 teachers said they were not permitted to factor class participation or homework into students’ final grades.

    Only 6% of teachers said their school used four or more equitable grading practices.

    That was surprising to Adam Tyner, who co-authored the new report for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a conservative think tank, in partnership with the RAND Corporation, a nonprofit research organization. He expected more schools would be following a “whole package” of grading reforms supported by advocates like former teacher and education consultant Joe Feldman, who wrote the influential book “Grading for Equity.”

    “It’s not like this has swept the country,” said Tyner, who has studied grading practices. He argues that some policies meant to create equity lead to grade inflation and don’t benefit students.

    The findings come as many schools are rethinking what students should have to do to get a high school diploma, and how much emphasis should be put on grades. At the same time, many schools continue to struggle with student disengagement and historically high rates of absenteeism following the pandemic. As a result, they’re trying to hold students accountable for their work without making it impossible to catch up on missed assignments.

    Though ideas about how to grade students more fairly predate the pandemic, several large districts started rethinking their grading practices following that disruption, as more students struggled to meet strict deadlines or do their homework.

    Proponents of equitable grading say it’s important for students to be able to show what they know over time, and that just a few zeroes averaged into a grade can make it difficult for students to ever catch up. When students don’t see a path to passing a class, it can make them less motivated or stop trying altogether.

    Still, some teachers have pushed back, arguing that no-zeroes policies can hurt student motivation, too.

    That showed up in the recent survey.

    Eight in 10 teachers said giving students partial credit for assignments they didn’t turn in was harmful to student engagement. Opposition to no-zeroes policies came from teachers of various racial backgrounds, experience levels, and who worked with different demographics of students.

    No-zeroes policies can take various forms but often mean that the lowest possible grade is a 50 on a 100-point scale. Some schools use software that will automatically convert lower grades to a 50, one teacher wrote on the survey.

    Schools that enrolled mostly students of color were more likely to have no-zeroes policies, the survey found. And middle schools were more likely than high schools and elementary schools to have no-zeroes policies, no-late-penalty policies, and retake policies.

    Researchers weren’t sure why those policies popped up more in middle schools.

    But Katherine Holden, a former middle school principal in Oregon’s Ashland School District who trains school districts on equitable grading practices, has some guesses.

    High schools may be more worried that changing their grading practices will make it harder for students to get into college, Holden said — a misconception in her eyes. And districts may see middle schoolers as especially likely to benefit from things like clear grading rubrics and multiple chances to show what they know, as they are still developing their organization and time-management skills.

    In the open-ended section of the survey, several teachers expressed concerns that no-zeroes policies were unfair and contributed to low student motivation.

    “Students are now doing below-average work or no work at all and are walking out with a C or B,” one teacher told researchers.

    “Most teachers can’t stand the ‘gifty fifty,’” said another.

    More than half of teachers said letting students turn in work late without any penalty was harmful to student engagement.

    “[The policy] removes the incentive for students to ever turn work in on time, and then it becomes difficult to pass back graded work because of cheating,” one teacher said.

    But teachers were more evenly divided on whether allowing students to retake tests was harmful or not.

    “Allowing retakes without penalty encourages a growth mindset, but it also promotes avoidance and procrastination,” one teacher said.

    Another said teachers end up grading almost every assignment more than once because students have no reason to give their best effort the first time.

    The report’s authors recommend getting rid of blanket policies in favor of letting individual teachers make those calls. Research has shown that other grading reforms, such as grading written assignments anonymously or using grading rubrics, can reduce bias.

    Still, teachers don’t agree on the best approach to grading. In the survey, 58% of teachers said it was more important to have clear schoolwide policies to ensure fair student grading — though the question didn’t indicate what that policy should look like — while the rest preferred using their professional judgment.

    “There are ways to combat bias, there are ways to make grading more fair, and we’re not against any of that,” Tyner said. “What we’re really concerned about is when we’re lowering standards, or lowering expectations. … Accountability is always a balancing act.”

    Nicole Paxton, the principal of Mountain Vista Community School, a K-8 school in Colorado’s Harrison School District 2, has seen that balancing act in action.

    Her district adopted a policy a few years ago that requires teachers to grade students on a 50-100 scale. Students get at least a 50% if they turn in work, but they get a “missing” grade if they don’t do the assignment. Middle and high schoolers are allowed to make up missing or incomplete assignments. But it has to be done within the same quarter, and teachers can deduct up to 10% for late assignments.

    Paxton thinks the policy was the right move for her district. She says she’s seen it motivate kids who are struggling to keep trying, when before they stopped doing their work because they didn’t think they could ever bounce back from a few zeroes.

    “As adults, in the real world, we get to show what we know and learn in our careers,” Paxton said. “And I think that kids are able to do that in our building, too.”

    Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

    For more news on classroom trends, visit eSN’s Innovative Teaching hub.

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    Kalyn Belsha, Chalkbeat

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  • DC region could be doing more to attract, retain teachers for most vulnerable students, report finds – WTOP News

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    The D.C. region could be doing more to attract and retain special education and English language learner teachers, according to a new analysis from the National Council on Teacher Quality.

    The D.C. region could be doing more to attract and retain special education and English language teachers, according to a new analysis from the National Council on Teacher Quality.

    The report found that Hawaii is the only state that pays special education teachers enough to “make a meaningful difference” in attracting new educators into the classroom.

    In the D.C. area, Heather Peske, the council’s president, said incentives are critical, because D.C. and Maryland are in the top 10 jurisdictions with the highest proportion of English language learning students.

    Broadly, “the stakes are really high right now,” Peske said.

    “We see chronic shortages of special education and English learner teachers, and this means that students miss out on the effective instruction they need,” she said. “What we see in the data is that students with disabilities and English learners face persistent and troubling academic disparities, because we’re not giving them enough access to effective teachers.”

    The report considered different factors — including compensation, financial incentives such as loan forgiveness and licensure tests — to determine how districts could attract and retain teachers.

    D.C. is offering strong professional learning to English learner and special education teachers, Peske said. However, the city “could be doing much more when it comes to offering financial incentives.”

    Maryland, she said, does a good job of providing specific standards for teacher and principal preparation programs, but similarly falls short for providing financial incentives. Virginia, according to Peske, does well in providing standards and expectations for teacher and principal preparation.

    “D.C., Maryland and Virginia all could be doing much more when it comes to offering financial incentives, differentiated pay, for example, for teachers of English learners and teachers who teach special education,” Peske said.

    Offering more money or a loan forgiveness program helps to boost the number of teachers that can be drawn to a district or state, Peske said.

    Stronger preparation programs, compensation and other financial incentives can help states “really tackle persistent special ed and English language teacher vacancies,” Peske said.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

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    Scott Gelman

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  • COLUMN: Trump’s push for ‘patriotic’ education could further chill history instruction

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    High school history teacher Antoine Stroman says he wants his students to ask “the hard questions” — about slavery, Jim Crow, the murder of George Floyd and other painful episodes that have shaped the United States. 

    Now, Stroman worries that President Donald Trump’s push for “patriotic education” could complicate the direct, factual way he teaches such events. Last month, the president announced a plan to present American history that emphasizes “a unifying and uplifting portrayal of the nation’s founding ideals,” and inspires “a love of country.” 

    Stroman does not believe students at the magnet high school where he teaches in Philadelphia will buy this version, nor do many of the teachers I’ve spoken with. They say they are committed to honest accounts of the shameful events and painful eras that mark our nation’s history.

    “As a teacher, you have to have some conversations about teaching slavery. It is hard,” Stroman told me. “Teaching the Holocaust is hard. I can’t not teach something because it is hurtful. My students will come in and ask questions, and you really have to make up your mind to say, ‘I can’t rain dance around this.’” 

    Related: Become a lifelong learner. Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter featuring the most important stories in education. 

    These are tense times for educators: In recent weeks, dozens of teachers and college professors have been fired or placed under investigation for social media posts about their views of slain 31-year-old conservative activist Charlie Kirk, ushering in a slew of lawsuits and legal challenges

    In Indiana, a portal called Eyes on Education encourages parents of school children, students and educators to submit “real examples” of objectionable curricula, policies or programs. And nearly 250 state, federal and local entities have introduced bills and other policies that restrict the content of teaching and trainings related to race and sex in public school. Supporters of these laws say discussion of such topics can leave students feeling inferior or superior based on race, gender or ethnicity; they believe parents, not schools, should teach students about political doctrine.

    “It has become very difficult to navigate,” said Jacob Maddaus, who teaches high school and college history in Maine and regularly participates in workshops on civics and the Constitution, including programs funded by the Sandra Day O’Connor Institute. Almost 80 percent of teachers surveyed recently by the institute say they have “self-censored” in class due to fear of pushback or controversy. They also reported feeling underprepared, unsupported and increasingly afraid to teach vital material.

    After Kirk’s death Trump launched a new “civics education coalition,” aimed at “renewing patriotism, strengthening civic knowledge, and advancing a shared understanding of America’s founding principles in schools across the nation.” The coalition is made up made up almost entirely of conservative groups, including Kirk’s Turning Point USA, whose chief education officer, Hutz Hertzberg, said in a statement announcing the effort that he “is more resolved than ever to advance God-centered, virtuous education for students.” 

    So far, no specific guidelines have emerged: Emails to the Department of Education — sent after the government shut down — were not returned. 

    Related: Teaching social studies in a polarized world 

    Some students, concerned about the shifting historical narratives, have taken steps to help preserve and expand their peers’ access to civics instruction. Among them is Mariya Tinch, an 18-year-old high school senior from rural North Carolina. “Trump’s goal of teaching ‘patriotic’ education is actually what made me start developing my app, called Revolve Justice, to help young students who didn’t have access to proper civic education get access to policies and form their own political opinions instead of having them decided for them,” she told me. 

    Growing up in a predominantly white area, Tinch said, “caused civic education to be more polarized in my life than I would like as a young Black girl. A lot of my knowledge in regard to civic education came from outside research after teachers were unable to fully answer my questions about the depth of the issues that we are taught to ignore.”

    Mariya Tinch, a high school senior in North Carolina, at the 2025 Ready, Set, App! competition (second from left). She developed an app to help students get access to policies and form their own political opinions. Credit: Courtesy of Mariya Tinch

    Other students are upset about federal cuts to history education programs, including National History Day, a 50-year-old nonprofit that runs a history competition for some 500,000 students who engage in original historic research and provides teachers with resources and training. Youth groups are now forming as well, including Voters of Tomorrow, which has a goal of building youth political power by “engaging, educating, and empowering our peers.” 

    Related: What National Endowment for the Humanities cuts mean for high schoolers like me

    There will surely be more attention focused on the founders’ original ideals for America as we approach the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence this July. Some teachers and groups that support civics teachers are creating resources, including the nonprofit iCivics, with its “We can teach hard things — and we should” guidelines.

    How all of these different messages resonate with students remains to be seen. In the meantime, Jessica Ellison, executive director of the nonprofit National Council for History Education is fielding a lot of questions from history teachers and giving them specific advice.

    “They might be anxious about any teaching that could get them on social media or reported by a student or parent,” Ellison told me, noting the strategy she shares with teachers is to focus on “the three S’s –— sources, state standards and student questions.” 

    Ellison also encourages teachers to “lean into the work of historians. Read the original sources, the primary sources, the secession documents from Mississippi and put them in front of students. If it is direct from the source you cannot argue with it.”

    In September, students at Berlin High School in Delaware, Ohio, participated in a sign creation and postcard campaign for a levy on the ballot. Credit: Courtesy Michael LaFlamme

    Michael LaFlamme has his own methods: He teaches Advanced Placement government and U.S. history at Olentangy Berlin High School outside of Columbus, Ohio, where many of his students work the polls during elections to see up close how voting works. They learn about civics via a participatory political science project that asks students to write a letter to an elected official. He also encourages students to watch debates or political or Sunday morning news shows with a parent or grandparent, and attend a school board meeting.

    “There is so much good learning to be done around current events,” LaFlamme told me, noting that “it becomes more about community and experience. We are looking at all of it as political scientists.”

    For Maddaus, the teacher in Maine, there is yet another obstacle: How his students consume news reinforces the enormous obstacles he and other teachers face to keep them informed and thinking critically. Earlier this fall, he heard some of his students talking about a rumor they’d heard over the weekend. 

    “Mr. Maddaus, is it true? Is President Donald Trump dead?” they asked. 

    Maddaus immediately wanted to know how they got this false news. 

    “We saw it on TikTok,” one of the students replied — not a surprising answer, perhaps, given that 4 out of 10 young adults get their news from the platform.

    Maddaus says he shook his head, corrected the record and then went back to his regularly scheduled history lesson. 

    Contact editor in chief Liz Willen at willen@hechingerreport.org.

    This column about patriotism in education was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

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    Liz Willen

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  • STUDENT VOICE: Learning to debate is an important facet of education, but too often public school students are left out 

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    Ever since I first stepped onto the debate stage, I have been passionate about speech and debate. For the last three of my high school years, I have competed and placed nationally at major tournaments in Dallas, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta and Las Vegas, among many others. Debate demands an incredible amount of research, preparation and practice, but those aren’t the biggest challenges for me.  

    I attend a public high school in California that lacks a formal debate program or coach, which has forced me to choose between quitting an activity I love and competing independently without any school support.  

    I chose the latter. And that means I prepare alone in the dark, navigate complex registration processes and, most importantly, pay hefty fees. 

    As many of us know, debate is an effective way to strengthen students’ comprehension, critical thinking and presentation skills. Debate allows students to explore ideas in a myriad of topics, from biotechnology to nuclear proliferation​​​​, and find their unique passions and interests. 

    Yet for many students, a lack of school support is a major entry barrier. It has turned debate into another private-school-dominated space, where private-school students receive access to higher quality research and on-the-spot coaching on argument structure and prose, like a football coach adjusting strategy on the sidelines. Additionally, most prestigious tournaments in the U.S. prohibit non-school-affiliated debaters like me from competing altogether.  

    Related: A lot goes on in classrooms from kindergarten to high school. Keep up with our free weekly newsletter on K-12 education.  

    These circumstances de facto prevent lower-income debaters from becoming successful in the activity. And that is why I believe that all schools should incorporate speech and debate classes into their core curriculums. Existing history and English teachers could act as debate coaches, as they do in many private schools. School districts could even combine programs across high schools to save resources while expanding access (Mountain View High School and Los Altos High School in California have pursued this strategy).  

    Over the past two decades, the debate community has engaged in efforts to democratize access to speech and debate through the creation of new formats (for example, public forum), local debate associations and urban debate leagues, among others.  

    However, many of these initiatives haven’t been successful. These newer formats, initially intended to lessen the research burden on debaters, have shifted toward emphasizing strict evidence standards and complex debate jargon. This shift has made debate less, not more, accessible, and led to more students from private schools — who were quickly able to ​​​​out-prepare those from public​​ schools — entering and dominating the competition.  

    Local debate associations and​​​​ competitive leagues for neighboring schools have provided more students with opportunities to participate. Still, debate via these organizations is limited, as they don’t provide direct coaching to member schools or rigorous opportunities for students, and prohibit certain students and programs from competing.  

    Similarly, urban debate leagues (for example, the Los Angeles Metropolitan ​​​​Debate League) have been incredibly successful in expanding debate access to lower-income and minority students; however, these programs are concentrated in major metropolitan cities, face opposition from some school districts and rely on donor funding, which can be uncertain.  

    In my debate rounds, I have analyzed pressing social problems such as global warming and economic inequality through a policymaking lens; in some rounds I defended increased wealth taxes, and in others I argued against bans on fossil fuels. Without debate, I wouldn’t be so conscious of the issues in my community. Now, as I enter college, I’m looking forward to continuing debate and leveraging my skills to fight for change.  

    Related: High school students find common ground on the debate stage 

    Speaking of college, in the competition for admission to the most selective colleges, extracurricular involvement can be a deciding factor, and debate is an excellent way to stand out, at least for those students with proper support.  

    However, when students from rural and low-income communities lack access to the same opportunities as students from more metropolitan and higher-income communities, we risk exacerbating the educational achievement gap to our collective detriment.  

    In the meantime, debate tournaments should reduce entry barriers for nontraditional debaters and for students from public schools without coaches and extra support.  

    Without these initiatives, too many rural and low-income students will be excluded from an amazing activity, one that is especially important in today’s polarizing and divisive climate.  

    Aayush Gandhi is a student at Dublin High School. He is an avid writer and nationally ranked Lincoln-Douglas debater.  

    Contact the opinion editor at opinion@hechingerreport.org.  

    This story about debate programs was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for Hechinger’s weekly newsletter.  

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

    Join us today.

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    Aayush Gandhi

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  • Rethinking the role of guest teachers

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    Key points:

    When I think about the importance of consistent classroom coverage, I always come back to the idea that students deserve to feel like their classroom is their home for the next 10 months. That sense of stability is critical, not just for their learning, but for their overall well-being.

    Educators don’t always know what our students are going through outside of the school setting. Life at home for them can be challenging–maybe they’re moving often or face an unpredictable home life. What we want for our students when they step into our classrooms is consistency. We want them to see that same smiling face, hear that same calming voice, and sit in their same assigned seat. When those structures disappear, the consistency in student performance also diminishes. For students to be successful, consistency is the key.

    The challenge of classroom coverage

    Like many districts across the country, the School District of Lee County in Florida has faced challenges with substitute teacher coverage. At one point, we were operating with a 66 percent fill rate, meaning over one-third of substitute positions went unfilled on any given day. This created hurdles for our staff and students, as administrators worked creatively to ensure classrooms were covered. While these challenges tested our flexibility, they also highlighted an important opportunity to rethink how we approach the role of guest teachers. By focusing on consistency and connection, we can better support our students’ sense of belonging and their ability to thrive in the classroom.

    Building culture through integration

    The solution wasn’t just filling positions; it was changing how we think about guest teachers and their role in our school community. Treating substitute teachers as temporary outsiders was counterproductive. Instead, we needed to integrate them into our school culture from day one.

    Now, we make it a priority to include our long-term guest teachers in our back-to-school week activities. We invite them to set up classrooms, participate in staff meetings, and join professional development sessions. By immersing them in our school culture from the beginning, we help them feel included and prepared, which directly benefits our students.

    This approach has improved our fill rates. We ended our first semester of working with Kelly Education to find and train substitute teachers by reaching an 89 percent fill rate, and now we’re consistently in the high 90s. More importantly, we’ve been able to extend coverage to areas we previously couldn’t staff, such as paraprofessional positions in our high-needs ESE classrooms.

    Creating stability for students

    When students walk into a classroom and know that the same person will be there, it changes everything. They can build relationships. They can establish routines. They can feel secure enough to take academic risks and engage fully in their learning.

    I think about my own kids, who go to school in Lee County, and I want them to enjoy every minute of being there. I want them to walk into a classroom knowing that this person is going to be with them for the long haul. This consistency has had a profound impact on school culture, especially in schools that previously had high vacancy rates. There’s a sense of calm that comes from knowing who will be in the classroom each day. Our full-time instructional staff aren’t feeling the strain of having additional students in their classrooms or having to cover during their planning periods. Our administrative assistants aren’t constantly working to place people here and there.

    Professional development and support

    We are utilizing guest teachers from Kelly Education to fill vacant positions until permanent teachers are hired. Previously, when we worked with Kelly Education, any of their staff could be assigned to cover a classroom. We have now enhanced this arrangement to require that all guest teachers who fill a vacant position until permanently filled hold current teaching certificates.  Guest teachers who are filling vacant positions are integrated into our school community by receiving the same professional development opportunities as our full-time staff. They attend trainings during preschool week, participate in staff meetings, and have access to curriculum resources and support.

    This investment in their professional growth pays dividends in student outcomes. When guest teachers understand our expectations, know our procedures, and feel connected to our mission, they’re better equipped to maintain the learning environment that students need.

    This school year alone, we interviewed nearly 3,000 substitute candidates and hired 1,700. Even more impressive, close to 100 substitute teachers have converted to full-time employment within our district, with 50 of those hires happening just last school year. With all the recent new hires over the summer and start of the school year, we are at 367 guest teachers converted to full-time employment. When guest teachers feel valued, many choose to make our district their permanent home.

    The ripple effect on achievement

    While specific achievement data requires deeper analysis, the cultural transformation in our schools has been remarkable. Consistency in the classroom creates the foundation for all other learning to happen. Students can focus on academics instead of adjusting to new personalities and expectations every day. Teachers can maintain their instructional momentum instead of spending time re-establishing classroom norms after each absence.

    A model for other districts

    Our ultimate goal is to have zero vacancies on the first day of school, ensuring that each student achieves their highest personal potential. We want every student to feel at home in their classroom. I want my own kids, and every child in our district, to walk into school and feel welcomed, supported, and ready to learn.

    For leaders facing similar challenges, my advice is to rethink how you approach substitute teaching. Don’t treat guest teachers as a temporary Band-Aid. Instead, view them as integral members of your educational team who deserve the same support, training, and respect as your full-time staff.

    When guest teachers are integrated into your school culture from day one, when they’re equipped with the support and professional development they need, and when they’re part of a reliable system that puts students first, everyone wins. The consistency this creates isn’t just about filling positions–it’s about building the stable, nurturing environment that every child deserves.

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    Johanna A. Tortosa Earsley, School District of Lee County

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  • OPINION: After-school and summer programs can help more students learn to embrace numbers and become ‘math people’ after all

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    As a teacher, I heard it all the time: “I’m not a math person.” 

    I would be in line at the grocery store, wearing a math T-shirt one of my students got for me, and I’d hear it: “Algebra? Who needs it?”  

    I would ask the person if they’d shopped with a coupon, bought a cheaper store brand, looked at the unit price on toilet paper or if they’d mentally calculated their total before heading to the checkout line. 

    I’d smile and say — “All of that is algebraic thinking.”  

    Despite my assurances, the idea that “I am just not into math” was, and still is, pervasive. Sometimes the thought comes from students, often from parents or colleagues, and more often than not it is said with a kind of resignation — as if math were a club you either got into early or missed forever. 

    That mindset has never been more insidious than it is now, when mathematics knowledge is needed more than ever. Every day we rely on math to interpret data, whether it’s tracking public health trends, forecasting weather, making financial decisions or navigating technology. 

    Related: A lot goes on in classrooms from kindergarten to high school. Keep up with our free weekly newsletter on K-12 education.  

    The ability to reason quantitatively, spot patterns and make decisions based on evidence has become integral to how we all navigate the world. Yet recent national data shows we’re falling short. Fewer than one in three eighth graders are on grade level in math, according to the latest National Assessment of Educational Progress scores. 

    Across nearly every industry, from agriculture to aerospace, mathematical reasoning is becoming more essential. Employers across sectors increasingly need people who can interpret data, test ideas and solve unfamiliar problems.  

    If we want more young people to access these growing opportunities, we need to rapidly expand access to the after-school and summer programs that help them develop the confidence and curiosity to build math skills. 

    Right now, too many young people are missing out. After-school and summer learning programs are rarely included in state or federal improvement plans, even though research shows that they are proven to reinforce classroom learning and build student confidence.  

    In addition, educators in these programs could benefit from training and resources to help young people connect more fully with math.  

    With the right support from funders and policymakers, these challenges can be addressed, and millions more students can build the math skills they’ll need. Every student deserves the chance to build confidence in math, not just those who excel early.  

    The stakes are far too high to keep throwing the same solutions at the problem. We need to think differently — not just about how we teach math, but how and where young people experience it. 

    After-school and summer programs give young people a chance to engage with math in low-pressure settings that don’t feel like an extension of school. They aren’t bound by curriculum or high-stakes test prep.  

    In these programs, educators can naturally bring math into real-life experiences — budgeting for a community project, designing a video game, planning the route for a field trip or understanding the data behind a favorite sport or song.  

    These programs also create opportunities to engage families in everyday math and to elevate older youth as peer mentors or tutors — making math feel more personal, social and relevant. 

    Out-of-school experiences mean students aren’t expected to memorize a formula before they can explore an idea. They’re encouraged to ask questions, try things out and see what happens. 

    And, importantly, they can take time to try, reflect and try again, without fear of being wrong. 

    Related: A lot of hope was pinned on after-school programs — now some are shutting their doors 

    When mistakes are treated as part of the mathematical reasoning process, students start to take more risks. They begin trusting themselves to navigate challenges, which builds their confidence. 

    That shift is especially important for students who have internalized the message that math isn’t for them, and it will carry them much further than an emphasis on better test scores and grades.  

    At STEM Next, we’re working to foster that shift by supporting after-school and summer programs, training informal educators and strengthening the learning environments where math confidence takes root.  

    Our recent publication offers a closer look at how after-school and summer programs are helping students experience math differently, and why that shift matters now more than ever.  

    Expanding access to these programs isn’t just to help kids grow math skills today, it’s a long-term investment in our workforce and our future.  

    Camsie McAdams is director of the Institute for a STEM Ready America at STEM Next Opportunity Fund. 

    Contact the opinion editor at opinion@hechingerreport.org.  

    This story about after-school programs was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for Hechinger’s weekly newsletter.  

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

    Join us today.

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    Camsie McAdams

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  • Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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    Ryan Walters, Oklahoma’s embattled state superintendent of public instruction, announced his resignation on Wednesday evening after a tenure defined by political theater, culture war mandates, and hostility toward marginalized students. His departure was made public not in Oklahoma City but on Fox News, where Walters declared he would become CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, a conservative nonprofit dedicated to fighting teachers’ unions nationwide.

    Related: Oklahoma superintendent and Libs of TikTok celebrate bullying gay principal out of job for drag persona

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers’ unions,” Walters said on air. “We have seen the teachers’ unions use money and power to corrupt our schools, to undermine our schools. We will build an army of teachers to defeat the teachers’ unions once and for all.”

    For many in Oklahoma, the news marked both relief and exasperation. Walters leaves behind a state education system that slid further down national rankings, faced lawsuits over unconstitutional directives, and endured a steady stream of scandals. But he also carries his divisive agenda to a broader stage, raising alarms among advocates who warn his politics could further inflame national debates over public education.

    Advocates: “A pivotal moment”

    For many advocacy groups, Walters’ resignation was a watershed.

    “Oklahomans for Equality recognizes the resignation of State Superintendent Ryan Walters as a pivotal moment for our state,” Hailey Briggs, the group’s executive director, told The Advocate. “Under his tenure, many of Oklahoma’s most marginalized students, including 2SLGBTQIA+ youth, and the educators who support them faced harmful rhetoric and policies that threatened safe and affirming learning environments.”

    Related: Ryan Walters wants Turning Point chapters in Oklahoma high schools — or will he resign before it happens?

    GLAAD was equally blunt. “Ryan Walters’s record shows profound failure for Oklahoma’s public school students, faculty, and families, including failing to keep students safe,” a spokesperson told The Advocate. “2SLGBTQIA+ students in Oklahoma deserve leaders who will recognize them and their basic needs to be themselves and be safe, which are essential to everyone’s ability to learn and thrive. The Walters era will be defined by his failures, a permanent record that will follow him wherever he goes.”

    The Human Rights Campaign echoed the criticism and cheered the extreme politician’s exit. “I’m excited for Oklahoma’s parents, who no longer have to deal with Walters’s gross politicization of their children’s education,” HRC communications director Laurel Powell told The Advocate. “I sincerely hope their next superintendent is more focused on educational outcomes than culture wars.”

    Teachers’ unions respond

    Walters’ new role — leading a group aimed squarely at weakening teachers’ unions — drew fierce reaction from labor leaders.

    “Today is a good day for Oklahoma’s kids,” Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, told The Advocate. “It’s no surprise that Mr. Walters, after failing on the job, is leaving the state. Any educator worth their salt understands it’s impossible to educate students if you don’t support teachers. Walters didn’t do that in Oklahoma and now, at a time we need to bring the country together, he’s trying to export his divisive rhetoric nationally.”

    Related: Outrage after Oklahoma education superintendent reframes Nex Benedict’s death without naming the teen

    Weingarten, a frequent target of those on the right, including Walters, dismissed his new allies, including the Freedom Foundation, which she said has “nothing to do with either education or freedom.” “Teachers are more unionized than any other profession, and the Freedom Foundation’s post-Janus campaign to convince teachers to drop their union has been a dismal failure,” she said. “Schools are about helping kids develop the passion and purpose to pave pathways to a better life — and that means working together, not going to war, a lesson Walters appears not to have learned.”

    A tenure of extremes

    Elected in 2022 after serving as the appointed state education secretary, Walters quickly emerged as one of the country’s most polarizing figures. He aligned himself closely with Donald Trump, lauded Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk, and openly sought to use Oklahoma schools as a proving ground for his far-right vision.

    Related: Education Secretary Linda McMahon snubs Oklahoma’s extremist superintendent of schools

    In June 2024, Walters ordered that every Oklahoma public school teach the Bible and the Ten Commandments, a directive that critics said trampled constitutional limits on religion in public institutions. He later pushed social studies standards that echoed Trump’s false claims of mass voter fraud in the 2020 election, and this week, he announced that every Oklahoma high school would be required to host a Turning Point USA chapter, after Kirk’s assassination.

    Walters sought to require out-of-state teachers from places like California and New York to pass ideological screening tests against “woke indoctrination.” He harassed educators who defended LGBTQ+ students, promoted book bans, and appeared with far-right anti-government extremist group Moms for Liberty at state expense.

    Perhaps most controversially, Walters appointed Chaya Raichik, the Brooklyn-based creator of the Libs of TikTok social media account dedicated to harassing liberals and LGBTQ+ people, to Oklahoma’s Library Media Advisory Committee. Raichik had no educational background, no ties to Oklahoma, and no children in the state’s schools. Her online campaigns have been linked to threats against schools and libraries across the country, which experts describe as examples of stochastic terrorism. Critics said Walters had effectively invited a professional provocateur into the official policymaking process.

    Walters was briefly floated as a potential second Trump term cabinet pick for secretary of education and considered running for governor, but his polarizing record earned him condemnation from both Democrats and Republicans.

    Fallout from Nex Benedict’s death

    Walters’ policies became especially explosive after the death of 16-year-old Nex Benedict in February 2024. Benedict, a transgender and Two Spirit teenager of Choctaw heritage, was beaten in a high school bathroom and later died by suicide. The tragedy drew national attention, with advocates linking Benedict’s vulnerability to the hostile climate Walters fostered.

    Related: After Nex Benedict’s death, Oklahoma’s Ryan Walters: Just two genders, as God intended

    In the aftermath, Walters denied the existence and history of Two Spirit people, even though they are a well-documented part of Indigenous traditions in Oklahoma. Tribal leaders and LGBTQ+ advocates viewed his denial as erasure that compounded the harm facing Native youth.

    GLAAD notes that 35 percent of transgender students nationwide report being assaulted in bathrooms that do not align with their gender identity — a statistic worsened, they argued, by Walters’ rhetoric portraying transgender youth as threats rather than children needing protection.

    A record of scandal

    Investigations and lawsuits plagued Walters’ office. He clashed with school boards over censorship and television broadcasts, was accused of mishandling pandemic relief funds, some of which were spent on appliances and video game consoles, and presided over plummeting reading proficiency scores.

    Walters was unpopular within his own party. Attorney General Gentner Drummond, a Republican now running for governor in 2026, said Walters’ tenure had been “an embarrassment to our state.” “Ever since Gov. Stitt appointed Ryan Walters to serve as Secretary of Education, we have witnessed a stream of never-ending scandal and political drama,” Drummond said in a statement. “Even worse, test scores and reading proficiency are at historic lows. It’s time for a State Superintendent of Public Instruction who will actually focus on quality instruction in our public schools.”

    What comes next

    Walters’ resignation spares him what was expected to be a bruising re-election campaign in 2026.

    Related: Ryan Walters’s latest gambit fails as critics outnumber supporters at Oklahoma education meeting

    For Oklahoma, though, the immediate question is who will replace him — and whether the state can begin to recover from the tumult. “This change in leadership is an opportunity to recommit to inclusion, respect, and quality education,” Briggs said. “We urge state leaders to listen to educators, families, and young people, and to build classrooms where every child feels safe and supported and where educators are trusted and equipped to do their work.”

    This article originally appeared on Advocate: Oklahoma advocates & educators celebrate state superintendent Ryan Walters’s resignation as ‘pivotal moment’

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  • GOP Education Official Quits After Years Of Scandals And Controversies

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    Ryan Walters, the Oklahoma superintendent of public instruction, is resigning after three controversial years in the role to lead a right-wing group he said will “destroy the teachers unions.”

    Walters, who was elected in November 2022 and began serving the following January, spent his entire tenure making headlines for his attacks on teachers unions, including baselessly smearing educators as child abusers.

    It appears Walters is ready to take his grudge against teachers to a national stage by becoming CEO of the Teacher Freedom Alliance, which bills itself as an “alternative” to teachers unions.

    “We’re going to destroy the teachers unions,” Walters said Wednesday night on Fox News, as he announced his resignation and new role. “We’ve seen [them] use money and power to corrupt our schools.”

    He did not mention his resignation at the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s monthly meeting on Thursday. Instead, he used his opening remarks to speak about Charlie Kirk, the CEO of Turning Point USA who was fatally shot in Utah earlier this month, and gave the floor over to a TPUSA employee.

    Walters announced on Tuesday that every high school in Oklahoma would have a TPUSA chapter on campus. Kirk toured college campuses through his work with the organization, and often spread racist and misogynistic rhetoric to his young audiences.

    When a local reporter asked on Tuesday what would happen to schools that decline to establish a chapter, he threatened to revoke their accreditation. “They would be in danger of not being a school district if they decided to reject a club that is here to promote civic engagement,” he said.

    It’s unclear whether the plan to establish Turning Point USA chapters at high schools will move forward after Walters leaves office.

    The Oklahoma schools chief has been embroiled in a string of controversies and scandals.

    Walters has spent the past three years claiming without evidence that Oklahoma public schools are awash in sexually explicit material. He appointed right-wing influencer Chaya Raichik to a library advisory committee in January 2024, despite her lack of experience. Raichik gained notoriety through her Libs of Tik Tok account on X (formerly Twitter), where she posts videos of teachers who advocate for LGBTQ+ rights.

    After Donald Trump won the 2024 election, Walters proposed a rule for Oklahoma schools that would require districts to collect citizenship data, a measure that could have caused immigrant parents to pull their children from school. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1982 that all children, regardless of immigration status, are entitled to enroll in a public school, but Walters’ proposal was in line with Trump’s hard-line immigration policies.

    The Christian right has been attempting to inject religion into the public school system, and Walters has been at the forefront of the movement. In June 2024, Walters ordered Oklahoma public schools to use the Bible in instruction, even though the U.S. Constitution prohibits the government from favoring one religion over another. He also attempted to purchase Bibles for schools that would enrich Trump ally Lee Greenwood, but was subsequently sued and blocked from implementing the policy.

    Some organizations are celebrating his departure from Oklahoma schools.

    “This is a win for Oklahomans. They’re better off without Walters,” Rachel Laser, the CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a nonprofit legal organization dedicated to keeping the government secular, said in a statement. “At every turn Ryan Walters abused the power of his government office as he attempted to impose his personal religious beliefs on Oklahoma school children.”

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  • What To Do When You Cannot Stand Your Kid’s Teacher

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    My mother couldn’t stand my fourth-grade teacher. In fact, no parent seemed to like her. She and other parents would constantly complain to the teacher about their kids’ poor performances, her tendency to pick favorites or the time she had a high-performing student grade tests for her.

    Despite my mom’s intense dislike for her, I still had to deal with her every day that school year, which made for uncomfortable confrontations and a lot of stress for a 9-year-old to handle.

    There comes a point in your kid’s school career when they get a teacher with whom you may not mesh well, whether you feel they’re mistreating your child, are generally nasty or are just not a good fit for your kid’s learning style.

    However, overcoming that dislike is crucial for helping your child succeed throughout the school year.

    While both parties usually have the student’s best interests at heart, misunderstandings, personality differences or communication styles can sometimes lead to tension,” said Farnaz Heydari, principal of Grant Elementary School in the Bay Area.

    If you find yourself in a similar position, here’s how to help mend the situation for the sake of your child’s learning.

    Why Conflicts Between Parents and Teachers Happen

    Parents and teachers may butt heads for different reasons. One could be that the parent thinks the teacher is targeting their child, or being unfair or inattentive to their needs.

    “Many parents think their child is the only one in the class,” Danielle M., a New York City public school teacher, told HuffPost.

    Danielle also noted that many parents get frustrated when teachers aren’t available all hours of the day to answer their questions:

    “We can’t always answer a parent’s 6 p.m. email because we leave school and return home to take care of our own children,” the teacher said.

    Other times, a conflict is rooted in deeper concerns, Heydari said.

    “A parent might be worried about their child’s struggles or a teacher might feel overwhelmed with workload and responsibilities.”

    What To Do If You Don’t Like Your Kid’s Teacher

    Even when a parent or teacher is perceived as “difficult,” collaboration is absolutely important and plays a pivotal role in a student’s academic, social and emotional development,” Heydari said.

    Below are some tips for handling the situation to get through the school year with few problems.

    Set expectations and communication guidelines at the beginning of the school year.

    “At the beginning of the school year, roles, expectations and preferred ways of communication should be established,” Heydari said.

    And we don’t mean telling your teacher how to do their job. Instead, give your teacher insight into how your child learns and behaves. Did they struggle with a specific subject last year? Are there family problems at home that could impact your child’s academic performance?

    “Clear, respectful and regular communication prevents many misunderstandings,” Heydari said. When something happens, how will you connect with the teacher? Is there an online form where you can submit questions? Are they the type to call you if there’s a problem with your child?

    By laying the groundwork at the beginning of the year, you provide the teacher with a better understanding of how your child thinks and behaves, and you are better prepared to tackle any issues that may arise down the line.

    Ask questions instead of making demands.

    Have you ever been surprised when your kid comes home with a bad grade, especially since they’re typically an A student? This is just one of many situations where a parent and teacher might clash. Instead of marching to your kid’s teacher and demanding to change the grade, approach the situation with curiosity and understanding.

    “Entitlement is a big turn-off, especially when we want the best for your child, too,” Danielle said. For example, instead of saying, “Fix my child’s grade!” ask what the child struggled with, how you can help and if there is any ability to gain extra credit.

    Also, pay attention to how you’re speaking to the teacher as well.

    “Oftentimes, tone can come off differently via email, so a phone call or face-to-face conversation would probably be the most helpful and gets to the point,” explained Danielle.

    Don’t go over their heads, no matter how tempting it is.

    Danielle warns against going behind a teacher’s back to solve any issues. Generally, you should try reaching out to your kid’s teacher and solve the problem yourselves. You can try intervention strategies such as using a homework notebook, a daily log or frequent teacher/parent communication.

    “If no middle ground is reached, I would communicate with the teacher that things will be escalated to a higher power,” Danielle said.

    Bring it back to your student.

    When disagreements occur, Heydari suggests reframing the conversation by reminding the parties that they intend to support the student.

    “A shared commitment is at the core of the parent-teacher relationship in helping students succeed,” she added. “Keeping this at the forefront can redirect energy from frustration toward problem-solving when any issues arise.”

    Remember, teachers are human and have a job to do.

    Teachers juggle a huge workload, often with multiple students ― sometimes 30 at a time ― ensuring they meet their requirements while doing a lot with small budgets and limited time.

    “[As a teacher] I constantly stress that my only goal is to help the child,” Danielle said. “I try to imagine what I would want someone to say if speaking to my child. ”We want to be attentive to your child and give them as much help as we can, but we often have over 33 students in one class and teach three or more sections. That’s 99 kids!”

    Sometimes, certain personalities just do not mesh. But at the end of the day, teachers are no different than you. They have to get up, go to work, take care of their families and also enjoy their free time outside of the classroom. The best thing you can do for your child is to work together as a team.

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  • Back-to-school success for all: Building vital classroom skills

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    Key points:

    As students and teachers prepare for a new school year, it’s important to remember that success in the classroom isn’t just about academics; it’s about supporting the whole child. From motor skills and posture to organization, focus, and sensory regulation, the right strategies can make the learning process smoother and more enjoyable for everyone. 

    While occupational therapy (OT) is often associated with special education, many OTs like me use and share the supportive tips and tools described below in general education settings to benefit all learners. By integrating simple, classroom-friendly strategies into daily routines, teachers can help students build independence and confidence and see long-term success. 

    Motor skills

    One of the most crucial areas to address is motor skills. Many children entering kindergarten have not yet fully mastered tasks such as cutting or forming letters and shapes correctly. Simple strategies can encourage independence, such as using a “scissor template” taped to a desk to guide proper finger placement or offering verbal cues like “thumbs up” to remind children how to hold the tool correctly. Encouraging the use of a “helper hand” to move the paper reinforces bilateral coordination.

    For writing, providing small pencils or broken crayons helps children develop a mature grasp pattern and better handwriting skills. Posture is equally important; children should sit with their feet flat on the floor and their elbows slightly above the tabletop. Adjustable desks, sturdy footrests, or non-slip mats can all help. Structured warm-up activities like animal walks or yoga poses before seated work also prepare the sensory system for focus and promote better posture while completing these tasks.

    Executive function

    Equally important are executive function skills–organization, planning, and self-regulation techniques–that lay the foundation for academic achievement. Teachers can support these skills by using visual reminders, checklists, and color-coded materials to boost organization. Breaking larger assignments into smaller tasks and using timers can help children manage their time effectively. Tools such as social stories, behavior charts, and reward systems can motivate learners and improve impulse control, self-awareness, and flexibility.

    Social-emotional learning

    Social-emotional learning (SEL) is another vital area of focus, because navigating relationships can be tricky for children. Social-emotional learning helps learners understand their emotions, express them appropriately, and recognize what to expect from others and their environment.

    Traditional playground games like Red Light/Green Lightor Simon Says encourage turn-taking and following directions. Structured programs such as the Zones of Regulation use color-coded illustrations to help children recognize their emotions and respond constructively. For example, the “blue zone” represents low energy or boredom, the “green zone” is calm and focused, the “yellow zone” signals fidgetiness or loss of control, and the “red zone” reflects anger or frustration. Creating a personalized “menu” of coping strategies–such as deep breathing, counting to 10, or squeezing a stress ball–gives children practical tools to manage their emotions. Keeping a card with these strategies at their desks makes it easy to remember to leverage those tools in the future. Even something as simple as caring for a class pet can encourage empathy, responsibility, and social growth.

    Body awareness

    Body awareness and smooth transitions are also key to a successful classroom environment. Some children struggle to maintain personal space or focus during activities like walking in line. Teachers can prepare students for hall walking with warm-up exercises such as vertical jumps or marching in place. Keeping young children’s hands busy–by carrying books rather than using a cart–also helps. Alternating between tiptoe and heel walking can further engage students during key transitions. To build awareness of personal space, teachers can use inflatable cushions, small carpet squares, or marked spots on the floor. Encouraging children to stretch their arms outward as a guide reinforces boundaries in shared spaces as well.

    Sensory processing

    Supporting sensory processing benefits all learners by promoting focus and regulation. A sensory-friendly classroom might include fabric light covers to reduce glare, or subtle scent cues used intentionally to calm or energize students at different times. Scheduled motor breaks during transitions–such as yoga stretches, pushing, pulling, or stomping activities–help reset the sensory system. For students with higher sensory needs, a “calming corner” with mats, pillows, weighted blankets, and quiet activities provides a safe retreat for regaining focus.

    The vital role of occupational therapists in schools

    Employing OTs as full-time staff in school districts ensures these strategies and tools are implemented effectively and provides ongoing support for both students and educators alike. With OTs integrated into daily classroom activities, student challenges can be addressed early, preventing them from becoming larger problems. Skill deficits requiring more intensive intervention can be identified without delay as well. Research demonstrates that collaboration between OTs and teachers–through shared strategies and co-teaching–leads to improved student outcomes.

    Wishing you a successful and rewarding school year ahead!

    Latest posts by eSchool Media Contributors (see all)

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    Linda Rini, OTD, MS, OTR/L, CLC, Touro University School of Health Sciences Occupational Therapy Program

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  • Charter school supporters rally for ‘equal treatment’, more funding as mayoral election nears • Brooklyn Paper

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    A coalition of over 200 New York City public charter schools marched across the Brooklyn Bridge last week in what school networks are calling a show of support for a “child’s right to learn” and opponents have labeled as forced advocacy.

    Eva Moskowitz, founder and CEO of Success Academy — after hosting organizer webinars, sending SOS emails to supporters, family and faculty, and allegedly admonishing employees for failing to lobby elected officials to her — rallied on Sept. 18 with some 15,000 students, parents and staff, then “marched for excellence” from Brooklyn to Printing House Square, just outside New York’s City Hall.

    The rally was described by organizers as an opportunity for advocates to “raise their voices in unity” and send a message demanding “excellence as a civil right,” as well as “equal treatment and access to excellent schools.”

    Supporters said the rally was an opportunity to demand equal treatment of and access to charter schools. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    “This rally is about equity, justice and opportunity,” said Samantha Robin, a parent at Dream Charter School. “Parents deserve the freedom to choose schools that honor their children’s genius, their culture, and their potential.”

    With mere weeks before the New York City mayoral election, charter schools, facing the prospect of a new mayor opposed to their expansion in Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, are framing the “March for Excellence” rally as part of a yearslong larger fight for the equal treatment of charter school students.

    The rally comes at a delicate moment for the charter sector. Charters, which are publicly funded and privately run, serve 15% of city students but have experienced slowed growth in enrollment since the pandemic, according to research from the New York City Charter School Center.

    Mamdani, the only major mayoral candidate running in November, has been critical of charters. He centered his education platform on universal child care and has been vocal about his intention to review charter school funding as mayor.

    rally
    Thousands of people attended the rally and march.Photo courtesy of March for Excellence
    success academy CEO eva moskowitz
    Success Ccademy CEO Eva Moskowitz, who organized the rally and allegedly demanded that Success students and teachers attend. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    Supporters in attendance included Rafiq Kalam Id-Din, Chair of the Black, Latinx, and Asian Charter Collaborative; Leslie-Bernard Joseph, CEO of KIPP NYC public schools; and many charter school families and faculty, who were instructed on organizing and staying on message throughout the event.

    Rumors circulated online that faculty attendance at the rally was compulsory.

    In the r/survivingsuccess group on Reddit, one user’s simple question concerning the veracity of the claim sent members of the small but sprawling community of current and former charter school teachers into a frenzy.

    Reporting that details internal emails and other documents about the event suggest a coordinated effort to pressure employees into participating and coerce students into demonstrating what the charters are calling targeted advocacy.

    Will Doyle, 21, grew up attending public schools in the Bay Ridge area. Now a first-year teacher with Success Academy in Sheepshead Bay, Doyle explained the reason for the rally.

    charter school students at rally
    A number of charter schools canceled classes for the day and brought students to the rally instead. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    “We’re here advocating for charter schools, but I do know that with the mayoral elections coming up, some candidates oppose the expansion of charter schools,” Doyle said. “From what I’ve heard, mayoral candidate Mamdani seeks to oppose the expansion of charter schools. I don’t have a source for that, but I have done some personal research. I don’t know if he’s the only one.”

    Doyle said he was happy to attend the rally because he works for a charter school and all employees are required to attend these events as part of their job.

    An operations associate with Success, who asked not to remain anonymous, echoed that the event was planned due to a general concern about “certain candidates” in the upcoming election. The associate noted that Success Academy is trying to show a presence for the cause of charter schools.

    “I think that [charters] definitely would advocate that they need more money and space. But I think the big thing is just accounting for future challenges,” he said.

    students march across brooklyn bridge
    Rallygoers marched across the Brooklyn Bridge to Manhattan after the Cadman Plaza event. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    While the repercussions for skipping the rally may not seem swift or severe, staff at the charters have said they worry about the condition of their working environments should they opt not to attend the rally.

    “I think that there is pressure. I know that it might not reflect directly on your employment, but it’ll reflect on your experience in the school building if you weren’t going to be here,” the associate said.

    CUNY law professor David Bloomfield told Gothamist that under laws governing nonprofits, charters can require staff to participate in demonstrations if they are advocating for the schools, rather than speaking in support or opposition to a political candidate.

    Documents obtained by a reporter for Labor New York showed that Zeta Charter elementary and middle schoolers had classroom instruction canceled for the day and instead were scheduled to participate in a “school-on-a-bus” civics lesson, suggesting the event was part of the school’s curriculum for the 2025-2026 academic year.

    charter school rally
    Some lawmakers are calling for an investigation of the event, which they said was a “misuse” of public funds. Photo by Jonathan Portee

    Pop-up tents for rally “marshals” to hand out water, snacks, and protest signs were scattered around Cadman Plaza Park. First-year parents and teachers showed little hesitation in sharing their excitement about the event, while members of the charter system with more than a year under their belt were often skittish about sharing their reasons for attending. 

    A day after the rally, two lawmakers — state Sens. John Liu and Shelley Mayer, who chair the senate’s education committee — called for an investigation of the event, which they said had been an “egregious misuse of instructional time and state funds.” 

    The pair said in a letter that the state provides public funding to charter schools “to educate students, not for political activism or for influencing elections.” If violations are uncovered, they said, the state should take back a portion of the funding it had provided to the participating charter schools. 

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    By Jonathan Portee

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  • No love for ‘no zero’ grading policy at Manassas town hall – WTOP News

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    The Manassas City Public Schools grading scale was a hot-button issue at the School Board’s community town hall Sept. 11, with parents asking the board to reverse the division’s “no zero” policy.

    The Manassas City Public Schools grading scale was a hot-button issue at the School Board’s community town hall Sept. 11, with parents asking the board to reverse the division’s “no zero” policy.

    The School Board implemented a 50-100 grading scale and a no-zero policy in the 2021-22 school year. At the town hall, which covered four key topics, parents resoundingly rejected the grading policy. Other topics included the school system’s calendar, communications and school day start and end times.

    After a brief breakdown of the four topics, attendees of the town hall broke out into small discussion groups. Those who sat in the discussion group on the grading policy, hosted by School Board Chair Suzanne Seaberg and board member Sara Brescia, did not mince words on the policy.

    One parent, Ryan Steinbach, recalled the most recent time the board voted on the grading policy, which resulted in a 5-2 vote to maintain the current grading scale. The board at the time decided it needed more evidence the policy was not working.

    Steinbach provided his own evidence of what he views as the scale’s failure.

    “Years of provisional accreditation, years of academic performance that is well below that of our peers who have the same demographics as us, years of just kids being checked out and parent-teacher conferences …where the teachers are blaming the no-zero policy,” he said. “We are failing on every level.”

    While Brescia has long been critical of the grading policy, Seaberg defended it – causing friction with many of the parents in attendance. Seaberg said she thinks differently as a parent than as a School Board member.

    As chair of the board, she said, her No. 1 priority is student outcomes. When it comes to outcomes, Seaberg said, if a student has a bad first quarter and receives multiple zeroes, “they may never be able to bring that grade up.”

    Others in the group argued that’s not necessarily true and pointed out students are given opportunities for reattempts.

    Steinbach added there’s one key piece missing from the argument for a no-zero policy.

    “One thing I think that is fundamentally missing from your philosophy is that there’s value in failure. We learn from failure, and we learn, ‘Oh my god, I can fail,’” Steinbach said. “We don’t allow a kid to experience that. If we convince them that they can’t fail, then we are putting them into a college system where they will fail.”

    Steinbach, speaking directly to Seaberg, said he didn’t believe she would “do this” to her own children, and therefore she shouldn’t “do that to the children we put in your care.”

    Ultimately, Seaberg said, parents can always set their own expectations for their children and decide what is best for them.

    “Because I expect certain things from my kids, just like you all expect things from your kids, and there’s nothing holding you back from expecting more than what this grading policy is,” Seaberg said.

    Brescia, along with parents in the small group, said there is – and should be in the policy – a distinction between a zero that’s “earned” through earnest effort and one that’s received for zero effort and not turning in work.

    Brescia added she’s not aware of any school division that moved to a 50-100 grading scale and maintained a no-zero policy for no effort. Fairfax County was previously a 50-100 scale and no zero at all, but it has reintroduced a zero if no effort is made on the assignment after two weeks.

    “I’m truly not aware of anybody who doesn’t recognize the distinction between these two,” Brescia said.

    ‘Exhausted’ teachers

    Karen Huff, a retired teacher of 35 years in the school division, told InsideNoVa teachers are exhausted – in part, because of policies such as this one.

    Huff, who taught elementary school, said the grading policy is failing even the youngest kids in the school system.

    “You don’t teach children how to live and how to grow by making everything easy for them,” she said. “I’m 66 years old. The reason I can be what I am now is because of the struggles that I made.”

    Huff clarified, though, she never made things easy for her students.

    “I went and told them, ‘Sometimes you fall, but you got to get back up.’ Because it’s not the failing that’s the problem, it’s the staying down that’s the problem,” she said.

    During the meeting’s question-and-answer session, the grading policy remained the largest point of discussion.

    Steinbach asked the board what evidence the board used to support the change to the no-zero policy and what evidence is the board “clinging to” that supports keeping this policy.

    Board member Lisa Stevens said she wants certain guarantees before agreeing to change the policy.

    “I would want to be able to guarantee that changing the policy wouldn’t result in higher absenteeism rates, lower on-time graduation rates and lower SOL scores,” Stevens said. “We don’t have evidence that says that won’t happen if you change the policy.”

    To the idea the board would seek guarantees before reversing the no-zero policy, Brescia said there’s almost no way to make decisions with guarantees.

    “That’s an extremely high and unreasonable standard … we don’t set that standard for anything else,” Brecia said.

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    Jeffery Leon

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  • OPINION: The push to expand school choice should not diminish civic education

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    From Texas to Florida to Arizona, school voucher policies are reshaping the landscape of American education. The Trump administration champions federal support for voucher expansion, and many state-level leaders are advancing school choice programs. Billions of public dollars are now flowing to private schools, church networks and microeducation platforms.  

    The push to expand school choice is not just reallocating public funds to private institutions. It is reorganizing the very purpose of schooling. And in that shift, something essential is being lost — the public mission of education as a foundation of democracy. 

    Civic education is becoming fragmented, underfunded and institutionally weak.  

    In this moment of sweeping change, as public dollars shift from common institutions to private and alternative schools, the shared civic entities that once supported democratic learning are being diminished or lost entirely — traditional structures like public schools, libraries and community colleges are no longer guaranteed common spaces. 

    The result is a disjointed system in which students may gain academic content or career preparation but receive little support in learning how to lead with integrity, think across differences or sustain democratic institutions. The very idea of public life is at risk, especially in places where shared experience has been replaced by polarization. We need civic education more than ever. 

    Related: A lot goes on in classrooms from kindergarten to high school. Keep up with our free weekly newsletter on K-12 education.  

    If we want students who can lead a multiracial democracy, we need schools of every type to take civic formation seriously. That includes religious schools, charter schools and homeschooling networks. The responsibility cannot fall on public schools alone. Civic formation is not an ideological project. It is a democratic one, involving the long-term work of building the skills, habits and values that prepare people to work across differences and take responsibility for shared democratic life. 

    What we need now is a civic education strategy that matches the scale of the changes reshaping American schooling. This will mean fostering coordinated investment, institutional partnerships and recognition that the stakes are not just academic, they are also democratic. 

    Americans overwhelmingly support civic instruction. According to a 2020 survey in Texas by the Center of Women in Politics and Public Policy and iCivics, just 49 percent of teachers statewide believed that enough time was being devoted to teaching civics knowledge, and just 23 percent said the same about participatory-democracy skills. This gap is not unique to Texas, but there is little agreement on how civics should be taught, and even less structural support for the schools trying to do it. 

    Without serious investment, civic formation will remain an afterthought — a patchwork effort disconnected from the design of most educational systems. 

    This is not an argument against vouchers in principle. Families should have options. But in the move to decentralize education, we risk hollowing out its civic core. A democratic society cannot survive on academic content alone. It requires citizens — not just in the legal sense, but in the civic one. 

    A democratic society needs people who can deliberate, organize, collaborate and build a shared future with others who do not think or live like they do. 

    And that’s why we are building a framework in Texas that others can adopt and adapt to their own civic mission. 

    The pioneering Democracy Schools model, to which I contribute, supports civic formation across a range of public and private schools, colleges, community organizations and professional networks.  

    Civic infrastructure is the term we use to describe our approach: the design of relationships, institutions and systems that hold democracy together. Just as engineers build physical infrastructure, educators and civic leaders must build civic infrastructure by working with communities, not for or on them. 

    We start from a democratic tradition rooted in the Black freedom struggle. Freedom, in this view, is not just protection from domination. It is the capacity to act, build and see oneself reflected in the world. This view of citizenship demands more than voice. It calls for the ability to shape institutions, policies and public narratives from the ground up. 

    Related: STUDENT VOICE: My generation knows less about civics than my parents’ generation did, yet we need it more than ever 

    The model speaks to a national crisis: the erosion of shared civic space in education. It must be practiced and must be supported by institutions that understand their role in building public life. Historically Black colleges and universities like Huston-Tillotson University offer a powerful example. They are not elite pipelines disconnected from everyday life. They are rooted in community, oriented toward public leadership and shaped by a history of democratic struggle. They show what it looks like to educate for civic capacity — not just for upward mobility. They remind us that education is not only about what students know, but about who they become and what kind of world they are prepared to help shape. 

    Our national future depends on how well we prepare young people to take responsibility for shared institutions and pluralistic public life. This cannot be accomplished through content standards alone. It requires civic ecosystems designed to cultivate public authorship. 

    We have an enormous stake in preparing the next generation for the demands of democratic life. What kind of society are we preparing young people to lead? The answer will not come from any single institution. It will come from partnerships across sectors, aligned in purpose even if diverse in approach. 

    We are eager to collaborate with any organization — public, private or faith-based — committed to building the civic infrastructure that sustains our democracy. Wherever education takes place, civic formation must remain a central concern. 

    Robert Ceresa is the founding director of the Politics Lab of the James L. Farmer House, Huston-Tillotson University. 

    Contact the opinion editor at opinion@hechingerreport.org.  

    This story about civic education was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for Hechinger’s weekly newsletter.

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

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    Robert M. Ceresa

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  • Preliminary data shows Chicago Public Schools enrollment falls to historic low: report

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    Chicago Public Schools enrollment dipped further than last year, preliminary data shows.

    Chalkbeat analyzed preliminary data of the district’s enrollment ahead of Sept. 15, when the district releases the official count. The outlet reported that data, which is available on CPS school profiles, shows a decline in the number of English language learners and Black students.

    Chicago Public Schools has not officially provided its enrollment for the 2025-26 school year. 

    The district told Fox News Digital that it would not comment on the preliminary numbers.

    Chicago Public Schools enrollment dipped further than last year as reports showed the district was presiding over empty classrooms. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

    “Chicago Public Schools utilizes the 20th day of school each year – which this year is September 15th – as the official Districtwide student enrollment count.  With that in mind, CPS will not comment on any figures before the final analysis of 20th day enrollment as numbers normally fluctuate during the first month of school as late registrations and student mobility continue to affect totals,” a spokesperson said.

    “Twentieth day enrollment is a CPS-owned metric that does not have any explicit relationship to funding levels for CPS. The District will provide an enrollment update to the Chicago Board of Education later this fall, following the 20th day,” the spokesperson added.

    CHICAGO PUBLIC SCHOOLS AGREES TO PAY FEDS BACK $1 MILLION OVER MISALLOCATED GRANTS

    According to Chalkbeat, CPS saw a 4% decrease in students from last year looking at preliminary numbers.

    Enrollment currently stands at just over 313,000 students—the lowest the district has ever recorded—with 12,000 fewer students than last year, the report said.

    A recent report showed that declining enrollment in Chicago left about 150 of its schools half-empty.

    The Chalkbeat and ProPublica report found that 47 schools are operating at less than one-third capacity, driving up costs and limiting course offerings.

    SCHOOL DISTRICTS HIRE CONSULTANTS TO RECRUIT STUDENTS AS THEY FACE ENROLLMENT CRISIS: REPORT

    Preteen Boy doing schoolwork with dad. New Jersey lawmakers are considering a bill that would require homeschooling parents to teach diversity, equity, and inclusion, climate change, and gender identity, while also expanding state oversight.

    There has been an increase in parents choosing to homeschool their children since the pandemic, indicating a growing trend of parents overlooking public schools. (iStock)

    Chicago Public Schools had roughly 325,000 students enrolled last school year after losing 70,000 students over a decade. CPU officials have recently noted a continuous increase in the percentage of students with special needs. 

    A declining birth rate, global migration, and the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to declining enrollment in CPS.

    Chicago Public Schools enrollment challenges reflect a broader shift in American education, where families are increasingly exploring alternatives such as homeschooling, microschools, and school-choice programs. Homeschooling in particular grew after the COVID-19 pandemic, indicating more parents who are looking beyond public schools.

    Arizona became the first state to offer universal school choice in 2022, launching an $800 million program that gives parents $7,000 to put toward tuition. Several other states followed suit, signaling a wider movement toward alternatives to traditional public schools.

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  • Maryland teacher faces calls for resignation over controversial Charlie Kirk meme

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    A Maryland county executive called for the resignation of a middle school teacher who allegedly posted a joke online about the shooting of Charlie Kirk.

    According to local news outlet WBOC, a teacher based in Delmarva, Maryland, faced backlash on social media for their reaction to the conservative activist’s assassination on Wednesday.

    “As with much of the country, numerous Delmarva neighbors took to social media to add their perspective on Kirk’s death. In at least three cases, online posts from local teachers drew the outrage of their communities,” the outlet reported.

    In one case, the unidentified teacher, an employee at Salisbury Middle School, reportedly shared a meme depicting President Donald Trump telling Kirk, “This [Jeffrey] Epstein thing won’t die, gonna need you to take one for the team.”

    I’M A DEMOCRAT, AND CHARLIE KIRK’S MURDER MUST UNITE ALL AMERICANS AGAINST VIOLENCE

    According to WBOC, a Maryland teacher faced backlash on social media for their reaction to conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s fatal shooting. (Rebecca Noble/AFP via Getty Images)

    Wicomico County Executive Julie Giordano told Fox News Digital that she was disturbed by the reactions to the death of Kirk on social media.

    “The tragic and senseless death of Charlie Kirk has shaken so many across our nation, and like many of you, I have been deeply disturbed to see some of the horrific and inappropriate posts circulating on social media in response to this loss. Regardless of political views, celebrating or mocking the death of any individual is cruel, unacceptable, and has no place in our community,” the official explained.

    Giordano said to Fox News Digital that she is aware of the concerns regarding the post allegedly made by the staff member.

    “I am aware of the concerns regarding a post allegedly made by a staff member at Salisbury Middle School. While personnel matters fall under the responsibility of the Board of Education and the Superintendent, I share in the concern and outrage that someone entrusted with the care and education of our children would engage in such behavior. Our children deserve to be taught and mentored by adults who model respect, compassion, and responsibility.”

    According to WBOC, Giordano on Wednesday “called for the resignation of a Wicomico County teacher after she says he ‘expressed support for political violence.’” 

    According to The Baltimore Sun, Giordano wrote on Facebook, “Tomorrow morning, I will be sending a formal letter to both the Wicomico County Board of Education and the Superintendent demanding the resignation of an individual within our school system who has openly promoted political violence.” 

    WATCH: BIPARTISAN GROUP OF LAWMAKERS EXPRESS SHOCK, GRIEF AFTER CHARLIE KIRK’S KILLING

    Wicomico County Public Schools told Fox News Digital on Thursday that they were made aware of the social media post by a Salisbury Middle School teacher on Wednesday evening.

    classroom for young students

    A Maryland county executive called for the resignation of a middle school teacher who reportedly expressed support for political violence. (Getty Images)

    “The posting of a meme and comments in relation to a very serious incident has been an unexpected, unnecessary and unwelcome disruption to school and school system operations. The social media post does not reflect the values of Wicomico County Public Schools and the Wicomico County Board of Education, and is not what we expect of our employees,” the spokesperson said to Fox News Digital.

    Wicomico County Public School officials are currently reviewing the teacher’s actions that caused online controversy.

    Desks in classroom

    Wicomico County Executive Julie Giordano told Fox News Digital that she was disturbed by some of the reactions to the death of Kirk on social media. (iStock)

    COLUMBIA STUDENT SATIRE SITE JOKES ABOUT CHARLIE KIRK’S DEATH

    “We truly appreciate those who have taken time to share their concerns and assure everyone that this personnel matter is being immediately addressed. Wicomico County Public Schools staff are reviewing the situation carefully and will take appropriate action in accordance with our policies and commitment to maintaining a safe and respectful learning environment for our students. We thank those who have contacted us out of concern for our students and their education,” the spokesperson added.

    Wicomico County Public School officials are not able to comment on personnel matters.

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    “As a community, we must be better than this. Political disagreements should never cross into the realm of dehumanization or the glorification of violence. I call on everyone in Wicomico County to set a higher standard — one of civility, decency, and respect for all human life.”

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  • Teachers in 3 Mass. school districts under investigation after Charlie Kirk death comments

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    Teachers in 3 Mass. school districts under investigation after Charlie Kirk death comments

    At least three Massachusetts school districts are conducting investigations into teachers’ comments on the recent assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    Framingham Public Schools Superintendent Robert A. Tremblay confirmed to Boston 25 News that a teacher in the district had been placed on leave over a social media post about the death of Kirk, who was shot Wednesday while speaking at an event on the campus of Utah Valley University in Orem.

    Tremblay didn’t identify the teacher or comment on the content of the post, but said an internal review was underway.

    “As a District, we are committed to fostering a safe and respectful environment for everyone. We do not condone violence or hateful behavior in any form,” Tremblay said in a statement. “While the law prevents us from discussing specific personnel matters, the employee is on leave pending an internal review. Be assured that we are addressing the situation in full compliance with all applicable laws, regulations, and policies.”

    Sharon Public Schools Superintendent Peter J. Botelho and Sharon High School Principal Kristen M. Keenan announced Thursday that they were made aware of a teacher’s social media post that contained “highly inappropriate and insensitive commentary” about Kirk’s death.

    “Today, we were made aware of and were extremely concerned about a recent personal social media post by a member of our staff that has been shared publicly in other social media posts,” Botelho and Keenan wrote in a letter to the school community. “We recognize that this post has caused distress for members of our school community.”

    Botelho and Keenan didn’t identify the teacher in question, and they didn’t comment on the content of the post, only noting that the views don’t reflect the values of the town’s schools.

    “The views expressed in that post categorically do not reflect the values of Sharon High School or Sharon Public Schools. As a district and school, we are and remain committed to fostering an environment grounded in empathy, respect, and thoughtful reflection and dialogue,” Botelho and Keenan wrote. “The post in question is inconsistent with those values, and we are reviewing and addressing the matter in accordance with established district policies and procedures.”

    Botelho and Keenan didn’t say if the teacher would face any disciplinary action.

    That incident comes as teacher at Wachusett Regional High School in Holden was placed on leave over another “inappropriate” social media post about Kirk’s killing.

    “These comments sparked heated debate, millions of views, and brought into question the safety of school operations for both students and staff at WRHS,” the Holden Police Department said in a statement.

    In the wake of the comments, police officers were assigned to patrol the high school campus throughout Thursday out of an abundance of caution.

    Police and school officials didn’t reveal what the teacher’s post stated, but screenshots floating around on social media showed the words, “Just a reminder, we’re NOT offering sympathy.”

    While investigators uncovered no credible threat, Wachusett Regional School District Superintendent James Reilly and School Committee Chair Lauren Salmon-Garrett announced the teacher will remain on leave “for the foreseeable future and is not allowed on school property” while an investigation is conducted.

    “As many are aware, a teacher has been accused of making inappropriate comments in response to this event on her own personal social media page,” Reilly and Salmon-Garrett wrote in a letter to the school community. “Please know that Wachusett Regional School District condemns violence in all forms. Political violence, especially, has no place in our country, and it directly contradicts our nation’s founding principles.”

    The incidents in Framingham, Sharon, and Holden both remain under investigation.

    President Donald Trump announced on Friday morning that Kirk’s suspected killer had been captured. Law enforcement later identified the alleged shooter as 22-year-old Tyler Robinson.

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  • Vancouver School Staff Authorize Strike – KXL

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    VANCOUVER, WA – Leaders of the Vancouver Association of Educational Support Professionals say 80 percent of union members on Thursday night voted to authorize a strike if Vancouver Public Schools management and their union’s bargaining team are unable to reach agreement on a new contract.  However, a strike date has yet to be determined.

    “We remain hopeful that we will be able to reach an agreement,” said VAESP President Chipo Sowards, who is a Media Clerk at Hudson Bay High School and Lincoln Elementary School.  “What’s most important to us is the safety and well-being of our students and school staff and we hope district management will work with us on solutions.”

    Mediation is expected to continue between union members and district representatives.  The union said a session had been scheduled for Friday, September 12th.

    VAESP reportedly represents more than 800 classified staff, including paraeducators, clerks, secretaries, technology support specialist, Braillists, and American Sign Language interpreters.

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  • OPINION: NAEP scores show we need new approaches, more resources and all hands on deck to address underlying education problems

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    America’s future is not made in factories or innovation labs — it’s forged in classrooms. We can’t bring good jobs back to U.S. shores if we don’t first educate a workforce capable of doing them. The latest National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, known as the Nation’s Report Card, paints a grim picture, with test scores down since 2019 for eighth graders in science and 12th graders in math and reading.  

    The lowest-performing learners lost the most ground, leaving large percentages of students unable to perform the strong academic work required for postsecondary life. Only about 1 in 5 high school seniors scored at the NAEP Proficient level in math. That puts them at a terrible disadvantage since STEM positions make up a growing percentage of the workforce. Nearly half were working below even the NAEP Basic level, meaning they likely don’t know how to use percentages to solve real-world problems. 

    This isn’t the first bad report card we’ve seen since the pandemic upended learning five years ago, but progress in American education has generally been stalled for at least a decade. Leaders at every level need to stop using the pandemic as an excuse and start looking for solutions. There have been times in the past when Republicans and Democrats have come together around education. While that may be difficult to do today, it’s needed more than ever. 

    Related: A lot goes on in classrooms from kindergarten to high school. Keep up with our free weekly newsletter on K-12 education.  

    We need new approaches, more resources and all hands on deck to help students develop the knowledge and skills to thrive in an increasingly complicated world. The teens who took the 12th grade tests are now out of school. They’re facing a workforce disrupted by AI and demanding more from them — not less. Even young people who opt not to go to college, such as those looking to work in manufacturing, for example, need more advanced STEM and literacy skills than in the past. 

    There are some areas of educational progress around the country we can learn from. For example, Indiana is remaking the American high school experience to personalize it and connect it to the world of work, while Rhode Island is reinvigorating career and technical education to embed it with more rigor and ensure it provides an on-ramp to an array of postsecondary options, including college. 

    We can also expand on the reforms that are taking root in elementary education. An emphasis on the research behind teaching children to read, sometimes referred to as the science of reading, is effective. And states like Mississippi and Louisiana, leaders in this movement, have seen strong literacy gains. We can apply that kind of evidence-based approach across K-12 subjects and grades. 

    It’s also vital to listen to what students are saying. Fortunately, the Nation’s Report Card can help with this.  

    Survey data accompanying the eighth grade science assessment suggests that inquiry-based learning is in decline. Fewer students say they’re spending time on things like designing experiments to answer research questions. That kind of instruction helps students build science knowledge and develop key skills like the ability to think critically and to collaborate with peers, exactly the kind of skills that AI can’t replace. 

    Related: Nation’s Report Card at risk, researchers say 

    The best instruction has a purpose for learning, explores real-world problems and makes connections to work. Most states have passed science standards that promote this kind of instruction, but more resources are needed to get aligned materials into schools and provide teachers with the training to use them effectively. 

    Getting kids out of the classroom helps too. I invited elementary school students to my farm in western Massachusetts a few years ago and vividly recall a fourth grader’s aha moment, finally understanding decimals when collecting 2.25 inches of rain in a vial. It was a terrific example of how interdisciplinary science is and how powerful it is in experiential learning settings. 

    It’s true that science resources, such as lab materials, can be expensive; however, schools can tap into community partners and business leaders for assistance. In Massachusetts, for example, General Electric has helped bring mobile technology labs into schools.  

    One thing I am grateful for, even amid all this bad education news, is the high-quality data shining a light on the problems we’re facing. There are too many voices today calling for a rollback of testing. That’s a mistake. Obtaining meaningful data, such as that found on the Nation’s Report Card, is crucial. Of course, what we do with it matters even more. 

    It has been 42 years since American leaders from across political parties and sectors came together to bring attention to “A Nation at Risk,” a landmark report that spurred significant education reforms. And it’s been 36 years since 49 governors came together and defined the state role in K-12 schooling.  

    After these milestones, the nation saw sustained progress on NAEP. We need that same leadership now. 

    Republican Jane Swift is a former governor from Massachusetts who serves on the National Assessment Governing Board, which oversees the Nation’s Report Card. She is also the CEO of Education at Work, a nonprofit that connects college students with work-based learning opportunities. 

    Contact the opinion editor at opinion@hechingerreport.org. 

    This story about NAEP scores was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for Hechinger’s weekly newsletter.

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

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  • 5 keys to AI success: A roadmap for K–12 administrators

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    Key points:

    Like many educators, I have strong feelings about the abundance of artificial intelligence now used in schools. Some teachers choose to take a Gandalf approach to AI and declare that it “SHALL NOT PASS!” the doors to their classroom. Others adopt what could be called a Champman’s Homer attitude, one of awe and wonder at the vast new horizon of possibility laid out before them. Mine has been an equal mix of excitement and frustration. I believe there really are some powerful, transformative technologies out there that have the potential to revolutionize education in countless ways. Unfortunately, right now, we are not implementing them particularly well.

    So, how do we introduce AI into our classrooms so that it elevates student curiosity, creativity, and critical thinking? I believe there are five keys to making this a successful reality:

    1. Vision: There are many ways to be a great teacher and build a positive learning environment, and each school has its own unique flavor of excellence. The presence of AI shouldn’t change schools’ fundamental visions; rather, leaders should help to identify ways in which new technologies can work in service of their broader mission. Grounding AI in that reality is where we start–as you embark on your AI journey, it helps to know clearly where you’re headed!
    2. Agreement: Consensus is vital when it comes to including AI in schools.If it’s going to be used, it’s important to build broad agreement on where, when, and how it should be used. This can be challenging, but it’s not impossible. By gathering diverse stakeholders together–teachers, parents, students, staff–schools can draft social contracts that specify AI’s role and limits in learning. This gets everyone pulling in the same direction and invested in a shared goal.
    3. Learning: One interesting aspect of AI is that right now, everybody is learning how to use it–including teachers! There are so many different tools and strategies that can be used to spark deep learning. Teachers need training that helps them to explore these possibilities and get hands-on experience, seeing for themselves just what these tools can do for them. That way, they are better equipped to help students use AI ethically, responsibly, and effectively.   
    4. Unleashing: Once teachers have been exposed to the different ways AI tools can effectively promote deeper learning, we want to unleash them in the classroom. Every classroom has its own unique set of needs, and teachers should test whether these new AI tools and techniques have a positive impact on their students. One way to think about it is to think of the school as a beehive. Bees don’t move together in a swarm–instead, they spread out, searching for the most productive areas and bringing their findings back to the hive. In the same way, teachers should take their new knowledge into the classroom and test to see how well it performs before sharing their findings with everyone else.         
    5. Evaluation: Every educator knows that making mistakes is a part of the learning process. With every new technology will comes drawbacks, unforeseen problems, and well-laid plans that don’t reach fruition. What matters is our willingness to evaluate what works, what doesn’t, and change our approach accordingly. One helpful strategy is to have teachers get together in groups and share what is and isn’t working for them. This allows the best practices to be shared throughout the community while also connecting educators who are facing similar problems.      

    All technology can be used for good or for ill. While the growing presence of AI can make some teachers nervous, it doesn’t change the fundamental mission of education or the role we play in fostering student growth. Instead, teachers and administrators should view this as an opportunity to further transform our classrooms into spaces that spark student inquiry. Let’s embrace the challenge before us and work together to build a future for our students where technology amplifies their learning but never defines it.

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    Ben Talsma, Van Andel Institute for Education

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  • Lawsuit saves massive reading experiment

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    This story was reported by and originally published by APM Reports in connection with its podcast Sold a Story: How Teach Kids to Read Went So Wrong.

    The Zoom call was supposed to be a regular check-in for the team at Boston University. They’d wrapped up work on a massive, federally funded study of a system to detect when kids are having trouble learning to read and get them help immediately. The team was just waiting for the data on the early warning system to be analyzed.

    But one of the professors, Nancy Nelson, interrupted the call. She had just gotten an email: The Trump administration was canceling the study — the largest experiment on reading ever funded by the Institute of Education Sciences, the U.S. Department of Education’s research arm.

    The study had been 6 1/2 years in the making, and results were scheduled to be released in a matter of months. Ninety-three percent of the funds had already been spent. But the Trump Administration was saying the $41 million project was over. Three years of data, collected from more than 100 elementary schools in seven states, was being shelved. 

    Carol Dissen, a teacher trainer on the Boston University team, was stunned. She never expected it, “never in a million years.” She thought about all the students she believes would have benefited from the early warning system, and the tears flowed.

    Disadvantaged kids “rely on our school system in order to change the trajectory of their lives,” Dissen said, still choking up as she recalled the February meeting months later. “We worked hard for three years to show that it works and that you can make a change for those students. And to hear that the data wasn’t going to be analyzed and shared, it’s devastating — absolutely devastating.”

    If it hadn’t been for legal action, the results of the study on the early warning system might never have been released. But in response to a lawsuit filed by two research associations, lawyers for the Trump administration said in June that it would voluntarily reinstate the contract for the study — a concession it argued should allow the administration to go forward with its other deep cuts to education research. 

    That study was just one of about 106 education-related contracts totaling $820 million that the Department of Government Efficiency terminated. The abrupt cancellation meant researchers missed their year-end data collection, punctuating large-scale experiments and longitudinal studies with question marks. They cut students off from services, taking mentors away from high school students with disabilities trying to plan for life after graduation.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Education did not respond to an email requesting comment.

    Tabbye Chavous, executive director of the American Educational Research Association, one of the groups that filed suit, said that the administration did “begin to backtrack” by restoring some contracts. But she said that most of the institute’s research and data functions have not been restarted, in spite of Congressional mandates, and the layoffs have left it without the staff necessary to complete that work. 

    When contractors resume the early warning system study, they will be reporting to a much-diminished agency. Layoffs have shrunk the Institute of Education Sciences to a tenth of its former size. The specialist who oversaw the contract is gone. And researchers worry about how the cancellations will affect future studies — and schools’ willingness to use that research in their decision-making.

    It’s an episode that highlights the new administration’s approach to governing — flipping projects off and on, seemingly with little regard for the consequences, all in the name of efficiency.

    “What’s efficient about that?” asked Kim Gibbons, a researcher at the University of Minnesota who was also involved in the study. “It doesn’t make any sense to me. But probably, like all of us, I’m learning a lot of things don’t make sense right now.”

    Related: Become a lifelong learner. Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter featuring the most important stories in education. 

    The early warning system at the center of the reinstated study is formally known as a multi-tiered system of support for reading. The idea is to identify struggling readers early and get them targeted help before they fail. 

    The system is modeled after medicine — the same way doctors monitor symptoms and escalate treatments for a worsening illness. A person with a fever might take a day off work to rest. If it doesn’t go away, they’ll get a check-up from a doctor and maybe some medication. But if the bug lasts, they might need a stronger prescription. 

    The early warning system takes a similar approach, dosing up the intensity of instruction based on student needs. The system starts with a strong reading curriculum for all students, adds small-group lessons for those falling behind and provides one-on-one interventions for the most at-risk students. Testing continues throughout to measure how students respond.

    Before, “you had to wait to fail in order to be eligible for special education,” said Nelson, the Boston University professor. “You had to be far enough behind your peers that you were found eligible.” The idea behind the early warning system, Nelson explained, “was to try and provide some support to students between general and special education. It really created that supplemental space that was missing before.” 

    A 2015 federal law recommended schools adopt this rapid response system. In the years after, many schools said they’d added it, but researchers agree that few implemented it well. 

    So in 2018, the Institute of Education Sciences hired contractors from the American Institutes for Research, a nonprofit organization that conducts social science research, to run the experiment. 

    Mike Garet, a vice president at the American Institutes for Research, said each component of the early warning system has lots of research to back it up, but the model hadn’t really been tested in an experiment. They had to see if the benefits of the system would be worth the teachers’ time.

    “You could imagine a school that could spend a lot of time trying to schedule students’ assessments, scoring them, having meetings about them, scheduling (small-group) instruction and keeping track of the materials. And they spend so much time doing all that, actually they don’t have enough time left to teach reading,” Garet said.

    “There’s a lot of theoretical arguments for why it should work,” he added. But until this study, “we didn’t really look carefully at all the engineering details that are required to do that well and to get good results.”

    The federal government’s large-scale evaluations don’t just confirm whether a program works in theory: They’re meant to reveal what it takes to make it work in hundreds of classrooms with different students. 

    Over 6 1/2 years, right through the pandemic’s closures, the contractors from Garet’s organization identified two promising models of this early warning system, recruited seven school districts to join in a randomized experiment and collected three years of data. They methodically compared how the two models fared against the way schools usually operated — amid the messy reality of a large-scale rollout.

    Annette Sisler, an elementary school principal in Junction City, Oregon, adopted one of the models, Enhanced Core Reading Instruction, this school year. Before her school adopted the model, Dissen, the education consultant from Boston University, had asked Sisler to follow a small group of children throughout the day, observing what lessons they received. 

    Sisler remembered one first grade girl who did well in a phonics lesson with all her classmates, smiling and engaged. But later in the day, with a different phonics lesson in a small group, she looked confused. Then, in yet another phonics lesson for her special-education class, she became so frustrated that she kicked another student. The instruction was disjointed, Sisler found.

    “It was all out of line,” Sisler said. The student “doesn’t know what lesson she’s on, what she’s supposed to be learning, how to apply it. We weren’t priming her little brain to then be ready to read.”

    Sisler said the new model brought lessons into alignment. After just one year, the share of her second grade students struggling with reading fluency dropped from 43 percent in the fall to just 8 percent in the spring.

    School districts want to do what’s right for their students, Nelson, the Boston University professor, said. But they need studies to know what’s actually right for their students. “In the absence of those data, they’re doing it a little bit more blindly.”

    Related: Suddenly sacked 

    The reinstatement of the early warning system study remains an exception. Of more than 100 canceled contracts from the Institute of Education Sciences, the Trump administration has reinstated only 12 of them, according to a June court filing and a review of federal spending data. Lawyers said the administration is reevaluating whether to reinstate or rebid up to 16 others.

    By reinstating this one contract, the administration’s lawyers argued the department had fulfilled its congressionally mandated duty to evaluate how effectively students with disabilities are being taught. They argued they shouldn’t have to bring back two other large-scale special education studies. A longitudinal study that had been going on for 14 years and a $45 million experiment to help students with disabilities succeed after high school both remain dead, according to the administration’s lawyers.

    Researchers say the cancellations are already affecting other federally funded studies, as school districts are now hesitant to sign up for experiments that could be nixed midway through. It already takes a lot of convincing to sign districts up for a randomized experiment. Only some of their schools will get the promising program that’s being studied, and evaluators will be a constant presence, monitoring compliance and collecting data. Nelson said the disruption of the early warning system study left some school superintendents “skittish” about participating in one of her follow-up studies. 

    Education researchers know that protecting their relationships with schools is one of their most important jobs, Nelson said. The Trump administration’s actions were “a major, terrible example of how to completely disrupt those relationships,” she said. She said the cancellation had only increased “mistrust” in research among educators.

    While a few studies are running again, the Institution of Education Sciences now has limited capacity to undertake future large-scale experiments — and then translate the findings into practice. 

    “It’s a critical activity, finding out what works for whom under what circumstances,” said Russ Whitehurst, the institute’s founding director under President George W. Bush. “You can’t do it if you don’t have offices that are equipped to collect and disseminate the information.” 

    The Institute of Education Sciences, for instance, distilled takeaways from research in handy practice guides for teachers. Those contracts were canceled and aren’t coming back.

    Garet, the American Institutes for Research vice president, said the early warning system study shows just how hard it is to get school systems to change. It takes far more than publishing a paper, even one that reports significant positive effects.

    “Unfortunately,” he said, “scientific results aren’t self-implementing.”

    The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

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    By Christopher Peak, APM Reports

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