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UC Board of Regents Wants Recommendations By End of Academic Year on SAT/ACT

Updated, July 15 The University of California Board of Regents chair said Tuesday morning she expects a recommendation from the faculty-led Academic Senate by the end of this academic year on whether the system should reinstate the SAT and ACT for incoming freshmen. The announcement came shortly after the Senate’s admissions board said it was...
By Jo Napolitano | July 14, 2026
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The Journey of Bobbie Simpson: Transgender Woman Making Strides on School Board in Deep Red Shasta County

This story was originally published on EdSource. The first openly transgender person elected to a California school board is sitting in a booth at Bartel’s Giant Burger — a 1970s-era roadside joint a few miles from downtown Redding in Shasta County. Mountains rise to the west and north. Big rigs rumbling up Interstate 5 can...
By Thomas Peele, EdSource | July 9, 2026
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Short Thousands of Bilingual Teachers, California Schools Turn to High School Students

This story was originally published on EdSource. California’s audacious goal of having half of all K-12 students enrolled in bilingual education programs by 2030 has encountered one big stumbling block — there aren’t enough qualified bilingual teachers. To help remedy that, a $10 million grant tucked in the state budget aims to help school districts...
By Zaidee Stavely, EdSource | July 8, 2026
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Can Ethnic Studies Bridge the Achievement Gap? San Francisco Program Shows Gains

San Francisco high school students, particularly those with high needs, enrolled in ethnic study courses achieved higher GPAs, stronger academic gains in math and science, and failed fewer courses, according to a new report. A new study from the universities of Pennsylvania and California analyzed a longstanding San Francisco Unified School District ethnic studies program,...
By Jessika Harkay | July 16, 2026
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The End of Homework? Teachers Grapple With Cheating in the Age of AI

At the beginning of each new class, Al Rabanera lets his students know that he knows they’re using AI. “I’m not going to pretend like you aren’t,” he tells his students. “I know it’s readily available for most of you, if not all of you.” A math teacher at La Vista High School in Fullerton,...
By Greg Toppo | July 15, 2026
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California School Libraries Blindsided by ‘Catastrophic’ Budget Cut

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. California librarians were stunned when a last-minute budget change stripped K-12 schools of a trove of research materials, potentially leaving thousands of students without resources to do reports, projects or homework assignments. Without notice to schools or librarians, the Legislature last week canceled...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | July 7, 2026
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California Bill Aims to Enlist Educators and Parents in Preventing Youth Suicide

This story was originally published by EdSource. Sign up for their daily newsletter Before Michaella Huck graduated from high school in 2018, she struggled with depression and anxiety and didn’t know where to get help. She’d hear stories of students who died on “suicide hill” in her Los Angeles neighborhood of San Pedro. It took a trusted...
By Vani Sanganeria, EdSource | July 1, 2026
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We Asked Students What They Needed. Then We Built Around the Answer

As educators, we spend a lot of time talking about the things we think are important. Attendance. Graduation rates. Test scores. Yes, those things matter. But before any of them improve, students have to believe that school is a place where they belong. This year, a student told me: “I gave up on myself because...
By Chantelle Cafferata | June 30, 2026
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International Teachers Needed in U.S. Classrooms Threatened by Visa Delays, Fees

Thousands of foreign-born teachers leading classrooms throughout the United States now find their jobs and status in jeopardy because of the Trump administration’s campaign to constrict all forms of immigration. Educators hired in recent years on H-1B visas for hard-to-fill K-12 vacancies are waiting more than 10 months for renewals, forcing many from their schools...
By Jo Napolitano | June 25, 2026
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Why Some California Schools Get Three Times More Funding Than Others

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. At Pinedale Elementary in Fresno, there’s almost no classroom aides, after-school tutors or behavioral counselors. Literacy activities and parent workshops are scarce. Field trips? Almost non-existent. The school survives on one of the lowest per-pupil expenditures in the state: $16,700 a year, nearly...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | June 25, 2026