Elected Official/Staff
Education Week’s
2015 Quality Counts focuses on what states are doing to support learning for very young children.
More students in the U.S. are eligible for free and reduced-price lunches than at any time in history, but some miss the point in quibbles over definitions.
Date:
January 28, 2015
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State officials in both South Carolina and Kansas are fighting court rulings to bring their finance systems up to constitutional standards.
The Rural Trust is a lead partner in a new grant to demonstrate innovative approaches to strengthening literacy among young rural children.
Date:
January 28, 2015
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In December the FCC gave E-Rate — the federal program that provides funding to schools and libraries for technology and high-speed internet — a funding increase of $1.5 billion.
Date:
January 28, 2015
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On October 2, 2014, the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights released guidance in the form of a Dear Colleague Letter to ensure that all students have equal access to educational resources. The guidance provides detailed and concrete information to educators on the standards established by Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Date:
January 06, 2015
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On December 22, 2014, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) announced the availability of more than $15 million for fellowships to train and develop the next generation of scientists who will lead agriculture into the future by solving current and future challenges facing society.
Date:
December 29, 2014
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The federal program that has provided billions to rural timber counties to help support schools and roads received no funding in Congress’s recent funding agreement.
Residents of rural counties are less likely than their urban counterparts to hold a four-year college degree—and the gap is growing.
Shooting injures four students outside a Portland, Oregon school.
Attorneys for the state Legislature of Arizona are back in court seeking a stay in a Court ruling requiring increased funding for schools. In California, schools are getting more funding along with greater flexibility and a mandate to work more closely with parents and community organizations.
A recent court ruling in Arizona found that the state’s charter schools are not entitled to the same level of funding as regular schools, and a complaint has been filed in with the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights claiming that most of Delaware’s charters are racially identifiable and that common enrollment practices violate several provisions of federal law.
The South Carolina Supreme Court has ruled the state is failing its constitutional duty to fund “minimally adequate” schools in low-wealth rural school districts.
Date:
November 24, 2014
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As states have failed to restore recession-era school funding cuts, citizens and school districts are seeking redress in the courts.
Date:
November 24, 2014
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The relationship between school funding for regular public schools and charters can be complicated. Lawsuits in Washington reveal some of the reasons why.
Date:
November 24, 2014
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