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Taylor Masamitsu – Educational Policy, 2024
In 2021, Illinois became the first state in the United States to require that K-12 students learn about Asian American history. Illinois achieved this when lawmakers passed House Bill 376 (H.B. 376), colloquially known as the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History (TEAACH) Act. H.B. 376 received praise for being the first legislation…
Descriptors: State Legislation, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Asian Americans
Kingsbury, Ian; Greene, Jay; DeAngelis, Corey – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2023
Charter schools were originally intended to improve the American public education system by introducing innovative practices that could be replicated elsewhere. Charter critics and proponents alike, however, question the degree to which charter schools are truly innovative. While alarm has been raised about apparent conformity among charter…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Educational Innovation, State Legislation, State Policy
Catherine Kramarczuk Voulgarides; Rebecca Cruz; Natasha Strassfeld; Alexandra Aylward; Roey Ahram; Allison Firestone – Theory Into Practice, 2024
We outline a multidimensional ecological systems policy framework to better understand how the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and patterns of racial disproportionality in special education relate. The framework engages with ideology, power, privilege, and context across the multiple layers of the policy-implementation process…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Change, Ecology, Policy Analysis
DeNeal, Jen; Hatch, Emily; Kingston, Bradley – Education Trust-Midwest, 2023
According to a new analysis by The Education Trust-Midwest, Michigan is underfunding students from low-income backgrounds and English Learners by an estimated $5.1 billion annually compared to what leading states practice and what research indicates is needed for those students to succeed. The analysis also found that Michigan is near the bottom…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Educational Finance, Minority Group Students, Low Income Students
LoBue, Ann – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2023
This paper explores ideas about the role of the school principal embedded in New York State education policy. Many public schools across the state fail to deliver equitable opportunities and outcomes for an increasingly diverse student population and improving school leadership offers the potential for substantial returns. Drawing on concepts of…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Equal Education, Principals, Educational Policy
Teon Hayes; Elizabeth Lower-Basch – Center for Law and Social Policy, Inc. (CLASP), 2023
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) helps people with low incomes avoid hunger and afford food. It stimulates the economy, improves individuals' success at school and work, and promotes better health. SNAP's Employment and Training (E&T) program is designed to assist participants in gaining skills, training, or work experience…
Descriptors: Federal Programs, Nutrition, Employment Programs, Job Training
Pickford, Jocelyn; Robb, Duncan – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2021
In this first installment of the series on state-level policy and microschooling, the authors explain Idaho's recent legislative debate over two competing approaches to supporting the creation of small learning communities, known as microschools. Idaho's strong homeschooling community and its low-enrollment rural districts create political…
Descriptors: Small Schools, State Policy, Educational Policy, Educational Legislation
Wieczorek, Douglas; Aguilar, Israel; Mette, Ian – AASA Journal of Scholarship & Practice, 2022
This article investigates school system leaders' influence and control over local teacher supervision and evaluation systems (TSES) guided by the United States' (U.S.) Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). Using qualitative, textual document analysis methods, we analyzed 50 states' ESSA policies to determine the extent to which local education…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Educational Legislation, Elementary Secondary Education, Teacher Supervision
Michelle Croft; Bonnie O’Keefe; Marisa Mission; Juliet Squire – Bellwether, 2024
State summative assessments play an important role in measuring student learning and guiding educational improvement efforts, despite their limitations. But there is growing momentum in individual states and nationally to rethink these assessments with an eye toward reducing time spent on testing and increasing the tests' instructional relevance.…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Summative Evaluation, State Standards, Educational Improvement
Nora Gordon; Sarah Reber – Education Finance and Policy, 2024
What can the federal government do to help ensure that the public schools attended by children living in poverty have enough resources to serve their students? In this brief, we describe existing federal efforts to support education spending in high-poverty districts, discuss their limitations, and suggest alternative approaches for federal…
Descriptors: Financial Support, School Support, School Districts, Poverty
Johnson, Gina; Appel, Sara – Midwestern Higher Education Compact, 2020
The National Center for Higher Education Management Systems (NCHEMS) and MHEC were awarded a competitive grant from the American Institutes for Research in 2019 as part of its National Research Collaborative on Postsecondary Competency-based Education and Learning (cberesearch.org). The grant objective was to specifically identify state policies…
Descriptors: Transcripts (Written Records), Military Service, Military Training, Educational Policy
Rafa, Alyssa – Education Commission of the States, 2019
Exclusionary discipline -- suspensions or expulsions that remove students from the learning environment -- can have long-lasting, negative impacts on a student's trajectory. Research suggests that students who are suspended or expelled suffer academically and are more likely to drop out and be involved in the criminal justice system later in life.…
Descriptors: State Policy, Suspension, Expulsion, Elementary Secondary Education
Squire, Juliet – Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, 2021
In this report, the author explains the small-schools environment in New York City. Prior to the pandemic, the Big Apple had a small but growing microschool and learning pod community. New York City's frequent school closures throughout 2020 and 2021 caused many families to look more closely at these education options. New York State's stifling…
Descriptors: Small Schools, COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing
Wixom, Micah Ann – Education Commission of the States, 2019
Open enrollment is a form of school choice allowing students to select and transfer to a school of their choice, rather than attending a school based on where they live. Students may be allowed to transfer to another school within their resident school district (intradistrict) or to a school in another district (interdistrict). Some state leaders…
Descriptors: Open Enrollment, School Choice, Transfer Policy, Transfer Students
Jha, Nandan K.; Banerjee, Neena; Moller, Stephanie – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2020
We investigate the role of teachers' unions in state policymaking in the context of "No Child Left Behind." Our analyses of panel data show that political party control and region moderate the influence of teachers' unions in the adoption of accountability policies by states. Our analyses of marginal effects show that teachers' unions…
Descriptors: Unions, Accountability, Public Education, Adoption (Ideas)