Education

Reducing the Separation of Religious Schools and Public Money

Reducing the Separation of Religious Schools and Public Money

Brief #56 – Education Policy
By Steve Piazza

In line with a recent string of United States Supreme Court (USSC) decisions lauded by many as protecting religious freedoms, the USSC overturned a lower court decision that prevented state money from being used for religious school tuition. The June 21, 2022 6-3 decision in Carson v. Makin was arrived at by an ideologically divided court.

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Ongoing Government Efforts to Keep Homeless Children and Youth in School

Ongoing Government Efforts to Keep Homeless Children and Youth in School

Brief #55 – Education
By Steve Piazza

After being approved last March by the House and Senate strictly along party lines, the American Rescue Plan Act (ARP) of 2021 was signed into law by President Biden. The ARP is a program supplement to Title VII-B of the McKinney-Vento Act, and focusesfederal action that addresses homelessness and that has gone through various iterations since 1986.

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Schools, Universities Now Leading Targets of Ransomware Attacks

Schools, Universities Now Leading Targets of Ransomware Attacks

Brief #54 – Education
By Lynn Waldsmith

A new viral threat known as ransomware is attacking schools and universities throughout the country. According to security company Sophos, 64 percent of higher education institutions and 56 percent of K-12 schools were struck by ransomware last year.

According to the company’s State of Ransomware in Education 2022 report, that means an average of 60 percent across the education sector overall, up from 44 percent in 2020.

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Biden Administration Promotes New Changes in Student Loan Policies

Biden Administration Promotes New Changes in Student Loan Policies

Brief #52 – Education
By Lynn Waldsmith

Being debt-free will soon be a dream come true for tens of thousands of borrowers, now that the Dept. of Education has announced it is taking steps to overhaul the federal student loan system. In addition, millions of borrowers will move one step closer to reaching that same dream.

Too many choices, complicated terms, misinformation from servicers – these are just some of the problems that have plagued federal student loan borrowers for years.

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Mental Health Needs of Children and Youth Escalate During COVID-19 Era

Mental Health Needs of Children and Youth Escalate During COVID-19 Era

Brief #69 – Education Policy
By Yelena Korshunov

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, everybody said that Greg was an exceptional basketball player. He was a leader of his middle school basketball team. He shot a basketball at the school court with his friends every single day after class, unless it was pouring rain. When the COVID-19 tsunami came, Greg had to quarantine, as did all of his friends.

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Students Abandon Class and Demand Remote Learning During COVID Spike

Students Abandon Class and Demand Remote Learning During COVID Spike

Brief #64 – Education Policy
By Yelena Korshunov

“Is my child safe in school?” This is a question that millions of parents ask themselves today. Remote learning vs. in-person. In-person vs. remote. Multiple pros and cons, dipped in wordy discussions without being resolved, challenge students and their parents to solve this dilemma on their own. On Monday, January 10th, the New York City Department of Education reported 11,825 students and 2,298 staff COVID cases.

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