National news

Feds investigate another Texas school district for its gender identity mandate

Katy ISD’s board voted this past fall to require staff to notify parents if their child wants to use a different pronoun or identifies as a different gender.

Missouri governor signs $468M education bill that boosts teacher pay, expands charters

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed legislation Tuesday that boosts the minimum salary for teachers, changes the formula for funding public schools and expands a tax-credit scholarship for private schools.

School nurses say increased Medicaid reimbursement would provide more stable future

Wisconsin lawmakers did not act on a proposal to allow school districts to receive all federal Medicaid funding reimbursed for school-based services, like physical therapy and skilled nursing.

House Republicans’ next target: Reports of antisemitism in K12 schools

After helping topple two college presidents, Congress will grill school district leaders from New York City; Berkeley, Calif.; and Montgomery County in Maryland.

Want to show teachers appreciation? This top school gives them more freedom

Superintendent Joel Herbs calls the A.D. Henderson School faculty his “secret sauce” and argues the school’s success can be duplicated anywhere—if administrators cede some control.

Study finds segregation increasing in large districts—and school choice is a factor

Two main factors are driving the increase: the end of most court oversight that required school districts to create integrated schools, and policies that favor school choice and parental preference.

Inside a rural Iowa school district’s fight to save public education

When Kevin Hosbond was teaching English and coaching speech in the rural southeast Iowa school district of Fairfield, his position was on the chopping block three separate times. Each time, students and parents convinced the school board to save his position.

Are schools too focused on mental health?

Recent studies cast doubt on whether large-scale mental health interventions are making young people better. Some even suggest they can have a negative effect.

California could require kids to learn how to manage money. Should voters decide curriculum?

Students would learn about paying for college, online banking, taxes, budgeting, credit, retirement accounts, loans, how the stock market works and other topics.

Special education students in Utah’s largest district must switch schools—and parents are furious

This fall, the Alpine School District will implement a new “consolidated” special education class structure, forcing about 150 special education students in grades K-6 to transfer to different schools.

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