In 2021, California instructional coach Jennifer Yoo-Brannon described herself as a demoralized educator, not burnt out, but demoralized. Five years later, she writes that she has come full circle. https://t.co/PZ6VmsGI7p
Third graders in Charleston gather around board games designed to identify and boost strengths and weaknesses, part of a shift from selecting gifted students to developing talent in all students.
https://t.co/4TTPnJOH0P
In 2023, fourth-grade boys outperformed female peers in a vast majority of schools, widening a gender gap in math that existed before the pandemic, according to an international study released last week.
https://t.co/cIyNWKTP5q
Deaunna Watson, a 2023-24 Voices of Change fellow and former director of diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging at a preK-8 Catholic Montessori school in Cincinnati, writes about the toll of equity work in K-12 education. https://t.co/6yeUiMvEe0
State-funded preschool spending hit an all-time high of nearly $14.4 billion, according to the National Institute of Early Education Research's "State of Preschool: 2025 Yearbook." California alone accounted for $4.1 billion. https://t.co/T3nmE2nbI6
Deaunna Watson, a 2023-24 Voices of Change fellow and former director of diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging at a preK-8 Catholic Montessori school in Cincinnati, writes about the toll of equity work in K-12 education. https://t.co/6yeUiMvEe0
In 2023, fourth-grade boys outperformed female peers in a vast majority of schools, widening a gender gap in math that existed before the pandemic, according to an international study released last week.
https://t.co/cIyNWKTP5q
In the Charleston County School District, pushing for universal testing of all fourth-grade students resulted in three times as many students identified as gifted, rising from 40 to 150 across the district.
https://t.co/4TTPnJOH0P
State-funded preschool spending hit an all-time high of nearly $14.4 billion, according to the National Institute of Early Education Research's "State of Preschool: 2025 Yearbook." California alone accounted for $4.1 billion. https://t.co/T3nmE2nbI6
In 2021, California instructional coach Jennifer Yoo-Brannon described herself as a demoralized educator, not burnt out, but demoralized. Five years later, Jennifer Yoo-Brannon writes that she has come full circle. https://t.co/PZ6VmsGI7p
More than 3,000 digital accessibility lawsuits were filed last year, according to reporting on the DOJ's decision to extend its compliance deadline for schools. https://t.co/NmWODnPWfI
Only 14% of school districts had completed required digital accessibility updates as of last December, according to a National School Public Relations Association survey. A federal compliance deadline hits April 24. https://t.co/c2ieAkSWQk
In 2023, fourth-grade boys outperformed female peers in a vast majority of schools, widening a gender gap in math that existed before the pandemic, according to an international study released last week.
https://t.co/cIyNWKTP5q
More than 3,000 digital accessibility lawsuits were filed last year, according to reporting on the DOJ's decision to extend its compliance deadline for schools. https://t.co/NmWODnPWfI
State-funded preschool spending hit an all-time high of nearly $14.4 billion, according to the National Institute of Early Education Research's "State of Preschool: 2025 Yearbook." California alone accounted for $4.1 billion. https://t.co/T3nmE2nbI6
Only 14% of school districts had completed required digital accessibility updates as of last December, according to a National School Public Relations Association survey. A federal compliance deadline hits April 24. https://t.co/c2ieAkSWQk
In the Charleston County School District, pushing for universal testing of all fourth-grade students resulted in three times as many students identified as gifted, rising from 40 to 150 across the district.
https://t.co/4TTPnJOH0P
Meet the 2026-27 @ISTE_ASCD Voices of Change Fellows.
Six K-12 educators sharing first-person stories on how AI, technology, and innovation are reshaping classrooms β published throughout the year on EdSurge.
π: https://t.co/otPxrbbRgW
Some children learn to read because their schools taught phonics and screened for reading disabilities in kindergarten, writes Avery Thrush, a former teacher now at the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. https://t.co/tJPXez4mrT
In 2021, California instructional coach Jennifer Yoo-Brannon described herself as a demoralized educator, not burnt out, but demoralized. Five years later, Jennifer Yoo-Brannon writes that she has come full circle. https://t.co/PZ6VmsGI7p