Some states are facing a bumpy transition as they adjust to the altered assessment landscape and had to cope with a late 2013 surge in test-takers. ...
Since the War on Poverty, the average gap in per-pupil spending between two states grew by 256 percent, an Education Week analysis finds. ...
Fifty years after the War on Poverty began, schools serving children in Cincinnati's West End are still largely segregated by economics and race. ...
An improving economy, schools' greater reliance on digital resources, and demand for common-core materials are creating new revenues, two recent reports suggest. ...
A new law that requires schools to allow transgender students to use the restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity faces a recall effort. ...
Small schools in New York City offer a test case for the benefits of small high schools, but also underscore problems of race and social class segregation they may inadvertently promote, Bruce Fuller writes. ...
The dispute between the district and the teachers' union over the jointly designed system shows the stark distinction between ambitious policy plans and the realities of implementation. ...