Examining the challenges facing the American education system and identifying practical policy solutions. The Brown Center on Education Policy @BrookingsInst.
The 2020s have been rough for America's school boards, marked by pandemic politics, culture-war conflicts, and falling student achievement. On June 8, we'll host a webinar to accompany the release of two new reports on the state of school boards.
RSVP: https://t.co/2sh6ABqC3Q
Getting low-income students to college isn't just about financial aid—it's about navigating the paperwork. Research on Tennessee's Advise TN finds that hands-on technical advising increased college enrollment by 4 percentage points statewide. https://t.co/yQJDIdoUtC
Tuition-free doesn't mean cost-free, and that gap is where many free college programs lose students.
In a new report, @katharinemeyer and Isabel McMullen dig into the design choices and tradeoffs that shape whether free college delivers on its promise. https://t.co/0h9jbrl639
Before the Supreme Court banned race-conscious admissions, nine elite institutions enrolled Black students at rates of 10% or higher. Today, only two do, representing the steepest losses of any underrepresented group. https://t.co/b3HgM20NFY
The dismantling of the Institute of Education Sciences has disrupted the nation’s education research infrastructure at precisely the moment policymakers need it most, warn @daphnabassok and co-authors. https://t.co/tWVAT8GNuD
The Trump administration has rescinded Biden-era guidance barring ICE from "protected areas," giving agents more autonomy to operate near hospitals, churches, and schools—putting millions of students at risk. https://t.co/0T2WvUXUVi
Are community college bachelor’s degrees a sound investment?
@riacton and co-authors finds they occupy a unique "middle ground"—offering a significant pay bump over associate degrees while costing roughly $14,000 less than traditional four-year programs. https://t.co/lYKpk7kzkc
While graduate degrees are increasingly common, data on their costs and returns remain more limited than for undergraduate programs. @ProfitOfEd pieces together disparate sources to show how these degrees provide a substantial earnings premium. https://t.co/9gLpmZRtBi
Teacher working conditions declined with the onset of the pandemic, and they continued to decline after schools returned to normal operations—fueling a crisis in professional prestige and contributing to a collapse in student academic recovery. https://t.co/xTaqR149se
Why do many families miss out on free early childhood education and food assistance? It’s the "compliance costs" of a broken system. @JonValant and Lindsay Weixler show how a unified application helps families navigate these government barriers. https://t.co/fn7t4sKyFr
STEM teacher shortages in high-need schools limit student opportunity. A new report by @DrMikeHansen and co-authors evaluates two decades of the NSF Noyce Program to see if it’s effectively bringing qualified teachers where they’re needed most. https://t.co/bTt0Pknur2
Despite his claims, the president cannot eliminate the Department of Education without Congress, but that has not stopped his sweeping reforms. Brookings scholars return a year later to assess the department’s most pressing changes and what lies ahead. https://t.co/yltmVYfHgu
Since Trump took office, the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights has resolved zero sexual assault cases and no racial harassment cases against Black or Latino students, writes Rachel M. Perera. https://t.co/08lTX2jnnc
A college degree remains one of the clearest paths to economic security, but federal cuts are pushing it further out of reach for low-income students. @katharinemeyer explains how slashing TRIO and GEAR UP weakens higher education protections. https://t.co/iqGQpBOAX3
Join us on Feb. 23 at 2:00 p.m. ET for a discussion on the state of the K-12 STEM teacher workforce and efforts to support the pipeline through the Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship Program.
RSVP here: https://t.co/1JHcYSdfIP
The idea that kindergarten disadvantages boys doesn’t hold up to the evidence. @MeganKuhfeld analyzes data from nearly 12 million students to reveal how boys and girls actually progress in math and reading. https://t.co/8LyH6fUYqa
New research shows that 90% of adults support some form of cellphone bans in classrooms—and surprisingly, 80% of students agree with them. @AnnaSaavedra19 and co-authors examine teacher and student perspectives on the impact of cellphone use at school. https://t.co/MmNo9UnLVj
Demand for subsidized child care far exceeds supply in the United States. Daphna Bassok and co-authors examine the federal freeze of child care funds in five states and draw on new survey data to show how cuts to subsidies affect families and children. https://t.co/KvLWaPnW7G
Mamdani’s vision for free child care in NYC aims to ease financial pressure on the middle class and narrow education gaps for low-income children. However, Bruce Fuller argues doing so requires policy tradeoffs that can make or break the mayor’s plan. https://t.co/ERUZv8oeig
The Trump administration’s tax-credit scholarship program aims to increase education opportunities for students, but a lack of program details raises concerns over mismanagement. @JonValant offers strategies to ensure transparency and state discretion. https://t.co/59qtVSniXZ