Diversity & Equity
Maryland’s diverse Montgomery County epitomizes the challenges faced by school communities worried about both a spike in anti-Jewish hate and Israel’s conduct since Oct. 7.
Since 1965, Fayette County schools have been operating under a desegregation order. Some worry that without court oversight, the system will resegregate.
Nearly half attend schools with high concentrations of poverty, while funding disparities undermine recovery from learning loss.
History often pays attention to Oliver Brown and the male lawyers behind the landmark case. But 12 Black mothers from Kansas also played a crucial role in challenging inequities in their children’s schools.
The lawsuit asserts that the law is ‘unconstitutionally vague.’
As more states require schools to teach Asian American history, an Illinois program is helping teachers bolster their own knowledge and integrate lessons into curriculum they already use.
The announcement set off alarm bells for school integration advocates, who worry it could roll back progress diversifying several high-demand schools.
“We want to be a place that has a lab site that’s like, ‘We’ve figured this out. We have a cadre of schools that, in my most aspirational dream, have eliminated the achievement gap,’” one principal said.
Black and Hispanic students have historically had far less access to sports. The situation has led one school’s dean to file a federal civil rights complaint.
An analysis of district data shows more than half of Chicago’s public high schools have dress codes and nearly all of those schools serve mostly Black or Hispanic students.
The report’s recommendations include ones that require cooperation from the city and other organizations.
For parent Emma Gonzalez Gutierrez, one message from a teacher helped her surprise her daughter at school.
Gov. Ron DeSantis and LGBTQ groups have both claimed that the settlement is a win.
District officials want instruction to be more consistent across school buildings. Staffing will be a challenge.
Three new national studies find that teachers are self-censoring at high rates, and that students and teachers are more comfortable talking about race in school than LGBTQ issues.
By declining to hear the case, the Supreme Court leaves intact admissions policies that aim to increase diversity at selective high schools. But other legal challenges may be in store.
Sen. Lisa Cutter, a co-sponsor of the bill, said she plans to amend the bill so it’s less prescriptive.
A national survey of U.S. principals found that restrictions on whether eighth graders can take the gateway math class vary a lot by state.
Children with disabilities will continue to join our community and need to go to school. So why are we still busing them far from home?
The department is currently helping 25 Spanish-speaking applicants. But funding for the team will run out in September unless state lawmakers step in.