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Showing 16 to 30 of 39 results Save | Export
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Alexandria Hurtt; Sherrie Reed; Kramer Dykeman; Justin Luu – Educational Policy, 2025
As the COVID-19 crisis disrupted schooling, recovery efforts in California included the adoption of Senate Bill (SB) 98, which mandated local educational agencies to complete Learning Continuity and Attendance Plans (LCPs). These plans act as critical snapshots of sensemaking and local policy implementation during crisis; however, their details…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, COVID-19, Pandemics, State Legislation
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Jeremy Rappleye; Hikaru Komatsu; Suzuka Nishiyama – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
As the sustainability imperative looms, mainstream educational research in the English-speaking world continues a long tradition of failing to see food as integral to education. Japan's tradition of "Shokuiku" (food education) stands in stark contrast, providing an external reference point to direct critical attention on Anglo-American…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sustainable Development, Foods Instruction, Food Service
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Allyson A. Spears; Alexis Zickafoose; Emily Wintermute; Peng Lu; Matthew T. Baker; Scott R. Cummings – Journal of Human Sciences & Extension, 2025
Health and wellness are foundational to thriving communities, yet many Americans face barriers that impact their access to essential health education and services. This study used a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach to assess the perceived strengths and needs of health and wellness resources of rural and urban Texas…
Descriptors: Public Health, Rural Areas, Urban Areas, Health Education
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Michelle Spiegel; Leah R. Clark; Thurston Domina; Vitaly Radsky; Paul Y. Yoo; Andrew Penner – Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 2025
Many educational policies hinge on the valid measurement of student economic disadvantage at the school level. Measures based on free and reduced-price lunch enrollment are used widely. However, recent research raises questions about their reliability, particularly following the introduction of universal free lunch in certain schools and…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Schools, Economically Disadvantaged, Lunch Programs, Poverty
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Kristy A. Anderson; Melissa Radey; Jessica E. Rast; Anne M. Roux; Lindsay Shea – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2025
Purpose: We used data from the National Survey of Children's Health to (1) examine differences in economic hardship and safety net program use after the implementation of federal relief efforts, and (2) assess whether the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated autism-based disparities in hardship and program use. Methods: We examined five dimensions of…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Poverty, Hunger
Margaret K. Wallace; Jason Jabbari; Yung Chun; Takeshi Terada; Somalis Chy – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Sociology of education scholars have positioned punitive discipline practices as factors that work to "push" unwanted students to drop out of school before graduating. However, limited research examines how punitive discipline practices may push students to transfer to another schools--potentially acting as a critical step in the process…
Descriptors: Discipline, Educational Practices, Student Mobility, Student School Relationship
UNICEF, 2025
Every dollar cut from education is more than a cut to a budget line, as it costs generations their future, with the poorest paying the highest price. A new UNICEF analysis shows that international aid to education is projected to fall by US$3.2 billion by 2026--a 24 per cent drop. If the announced cuts to official development assistance (ODA)…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Financial Support, Budgeting, Access to Education
Liana Washburn; Veronica Severn; Brett Eiffes; Myah Scott; Sophia Navarro; Kevin Conway – US Department of Agriculture, 2025
This report summarizes findings from the School Meals Operations Study (SMO), part of an ongoing series to assess school meal operations on a school year (SY) basis. This volume of the study covers July 2021 through the end of September 2022 and includes SY 2021-2022. When the COVID-19 pandemic began in March 2020, the Families First Coronavirus…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Child Health, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Nianbo Dong; Keith Herman; Benjamin Kelcey; Sirui Ren; Wendy Reinke; Jessaca Spybrook – Grantee Submission, 2025
Contextual, identity, and cultural factors are not only associated with student outcomes but can also serve to moderate the effects of interventions. However, the conventional analysis of moderation commonly used in school psychology is subject to the selection bias potentially introducing bias into estimated moderator effects. This article…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Statistical Analysis, Context Effect, Intervention
Simone Lombardini; Florence Kondylis; Benedetta Lerva; Jonas Heirman; Roshni Khincha; Hannah Uckat – World Bank, 2025
Poor nutritional choices and unhealthy behaviors are considered responsible for the rise in childhood overweight and obesity and may reinforce each other, creating a vicious cycle. This paper studies a primary school intervention designed to break the cycle early in life by replacing date bars with calorie-equivalent meals lower in sugar and fat.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nutrition, Health Promotion, Eating Habits
Chris Edwards – Cato Institute, 2025
The US Department of Agriculture runs a large array of farm and food subsidy programs. The school lunch and breakfast programs are two of the largest, which together with related school food programs will cost federal taxpayers an estimated $35 billion in 2025. Thirty million children, about 58 percent of students in public schools, receive school…
Descriptors: Lunch Programs, Breakfast Programs, Food, Public Schools
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Kristiina Janhonen; Cecilia Olsson; Maria Waling – Education Inquiry, 2025
This action research study explores how co-developing school meals can be taken as a case for education for sustainable development, as integrated to home economics education. We analyse a seven-month-process of collaborative participation in a Finnish secondary school conducted with two home economics teachers, a school food manager, and students…
Descriptors: Family and Consumer Sciences, Lunch Programs, Food, Secondary School Teachers
Colorado Department of Education, 2025
Three primary rounds of COVID relief funding were provided to Colorado between March 2020 and March 2021. These federal funding sources were: (1) the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act in March 2020; (2) the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations (CRRSA) Act in December 2020; and (3) the American Rescue…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Federal Aid, Federal Legislation, Pandemics
Kara Clifford Billings – Congressional Research Service, 2025
The federal government has a long history of investing in programs for feeding children, starting with federal aid for school lunch programs in the 1930s. Today, federal child nutrition programs support food served to children in schools and a variety of other settings. This report starts with an overview of child nutrition programs' funding…
Descriptors: Nutrition, Lunch Programs, Breakfast Programs, Food
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Ling-Ling Tsao; Yu-Ching Yeh; Hsin-Hui Lin – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
Many children today are in full-time early care and education settings; they may obtain one-half to two-thirds of daily nutrient needs during their time at the centers. Because of that, early care and education professionals can play a key role not only to offer nutritious food but also to help children establish healthy eating habits. The purpose…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Teacher Attitudes
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