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Natow, Rebecca S.; Reddy, Vikash; Ioannou, Victoria – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2023
In the United States, higher education institutions must be authorized as postsecondary education providers -- through a process known as state authorization -- to be eligible to receive federal student financial aid funds. Through state authorization policies, state governments play a key role in maintaining accountability for higher education.…
Descriptors: Responses, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Policy Formation
Mokher, Christine G.; Park-Gaghan, Toby J.; Hu, Shouping – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2023
Florida's developmental education reform has benefitted most students directly impacted by the reform and has helped to reduce existing achievement gaps by race/ethnicity, English Language Learner status, and academic preparation in short-term outcomes like college course-taking and credit accumulation. Even though the reform was not specifically…
Descriptors: Remedial Instruction, Educational Change, Academic Achievement, Achievement Gap
Dammu, Indira; O'Keefe, Bonnie – Bellwether, 2023
State education finance sets the stage for what is possible in schools. Too many state education finance systems today are inequitable, outdated, and inadequate, and there are often significant political barriers to change. Advocates for educational equity can and should play an essential role in shaping the allocation and structure of state…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Public Schools, State Aid, Educational Finance
Greene, Jay P.; Gonzalez, Mike – Heritage Foundation, 2023
Surprisingly, public universities in Virginia have larger diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) bureaucracies than taxpayer-funded universities in any other state. George Mason University, which has a reputation as a right-of-center institution, has 7.4 DEI personnel per 100 tenure-track faculty, which is the highest of any public university in…
Descriptors: State Universities, Equal Education, Diversity, Inclusion
Institute for Women's Policy Research, 2023
Earning a college degree has long been critical to unlocking many high-paying jobs -- and, as a result, to economic mobility and security. Increasingly, however, the traditional "norm" of a college student -- one who enrolls straight out of high school, receives some support from their parents, lives on campus, and does not have work or…
Descriptors: College Students, Parents, Nontraditional Students, Access to Education
Kirsten Slungaard Mumma – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
The recent spike in book challenges has put school libraries at the center of heated political debates. I investigate the relationship between local politics and school library collections using data on books with controversial content in 6,631 public school libraries. Libraries in conservative areas have fewer titles with LGBTQ+, race/racism, or…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Books, School Libraries, Library Materials
Zuckerman, Sarah J.; Garrett, Amanda L.; Sarver, Susan; Huddleston-Casas, Catherine – International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy, 2020
The quality and quantity of early childhood care and education services have risen as a key reform area for influencing educational and economic outcomes. However, changes in this policy arena are stymied by the fragmentation of this policy arena. Collaborative approaches have been proposed to create systems-level change. Collective impact is one…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Early Childhood Education, Cooperation, Interdisciplinary Approach
Education Commission of the States, 2020
The population of English learners (ELs) in K-12 schools continues to grow. Between the 2009-10 and 2014-15 school years, the percentage of English learners increased in over half of the states, and in 2017, English learners made up 10.1% of the total student population. Research suggests that in their transition to English, non-native speakers…
Descriptors: English Language Learners, Definitions, State Policy, Educational Policy
Education Commission of the States, 2020
Following a high-quality early care and pre-K experience, the kindergarten-through-third-grade years set the foundation upon which future learning builds; and strengthening this continuum creates opportunities for later success. Key components of a quality experience in K-3 include school readiness and transitions, kindergarten requirements,…
Descriptors: State Policy, Educational Policy, Primary Education, School Entrance Age
Rafa, Alyssa; Erwin, Ben; Kelley, Bryan; Wixom, Micah Ann – Education Commission of the States, 2020
Charter schools are semi-autonomous public schools that receive public funds. They operate under a written contract with a state, district, or other entity (referred to as an authorizer or sponsor). Charter school laws vary from state to state and often differ on several important factors, such as who may authorize charter schools, how authorizers…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, State Policy, Educational Policy, Comparative Analysis
Jonathan Kaplan – Learning Policy Institute, 2025
In 2013, California enacted an ambitious school funding reform--the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). The LCFF fundamentally overhauled the state's prior K-12 education finance system, which studies found to be inequitable, irrational, and highly centralized. More than a decade after its enactment, a growing body of research indicates the LCFF…
Descriptors: Funding Formulas, Educational Finance, Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education
Antonia Gordon – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
For the past thirty years, Michigan has used Emergency Management (EM) and receiverships to solve city and school finance issues. The impact of these state intervention policies has been highly publicized and has led to institutional distrust among black citizens in urban communities --with the Flint water crisis standing out as the most infamous…
Descriptors: School Districts, State Policy, Intervention, Urban Areas
Sayda Martinez-Alvarado – EdTrust, 2025
College enrollment has increased over the years but so has the cost. The total cost of attending college -- including tuition, room and board, necessary books and supplies, and more -- would be prohibitive for most students if not for financial aid. Yet, many students still cite financial barriers as the top reason for opting out of college.…
Descriptors: State Policy, Student Financial Aid, College Applicants, Low Income Students
Hayley Weddle; Ayesha K. Hashim; Ogechi N. Irondi – Educational Policy, 2025
While recent research provides insights into how district and school leaders responded to the extraordinary disruptions created by the COVID-19 pandemic, less is known about the role of influential state-level education leaders during the crisis. In this paper, we draw on interviews with state leaders to examine their efforts to support students'…
Descriptors: State Boards of Education, State Departments of Education, State School District Relationship, State Supervisors
Nathan Favero; Ali Kagalwala – Educational Policy, 2025
States diverge widely when it comes to education funding choices, leading to substantial differences in how much states spend on schooling, the role of local versus state revenue sources, and relative differences among districts in funding levels. Prior studies have documented that Democratic party control of state governments appears to be…
Descriptors: Politics of Education, Educational Finance, Ideology, Resource Allocation

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