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Department of Education News

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Department of Education News
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  • Department of Education News

    Education Shifts: New Interagency Deals Reshape K-12 Control and State School Flexibility

    2026-03-09 | 2 mins.
    Welcome to your weekly update on the U.S. Department of Education. This week’s biggest headline: the department announced new interagency agreements shifting key K-12 programs like school safety grants, community schools, family engagement, and educational TV to the Department of Health and Human Services, while handing foreign gift reporting for colleges to the State Department. Education Secretary Linda McMahon called it “a practical step toward greater efficiency, stronger coordination, and meaningful improvement.”

    These moves build on nine such partnerships since last year, aiming to shrink federal bureaucracy and return control to states. No funding interruptions for grantees, but critics like the agency’s staff union president Rachel Gittleman warn of risks like waste and weaker oversight, especially for beleaguered programs totaling $514 million. Meanwhile, states are stepping up: February saw bills advancing in 16 states for better literacy and math, like Missouri’s new reading screeners and third-grade gates, and Indiana’s push for 60 minutes of daily math. The White House also proclaimed National School Choice Week, touting merit-based reforms and ending federal funds for DEI and anti-American curricula.

    For American families, this means more state flexibility in schooling—think expanded charters in Georgia and Utah ESAs letting siblings join without hassle—but potential chaos in special needs or safety supports. Businesses gain from streamlined workforce ties via Labor partnerships, while states face new accountability pressures, like annual improvement plans. Local governments brace for ripple effects on Title I funds.

    Experts at ExcelinEd note math screeners could boost outcomes, with Alabama already mandating daily instruction. Watch for March deadlines on these state bills and ED’s next staff shifts.

    Stay informed at ed.gov/newsroom. If you’re a parent, contact your state reps on choice programs.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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  • Department of Education News

    Education Shifts: Federal Power Returns to States Under New Interagency Deals

    2026-03-06 | 2 mins.
    Welcome to your weekly update on the U.S. Department of Education. This week, the biggest headline is the Department's announcement of two new interagency agreements with the State Department and HHS to dismantle federal bureaucracy and shift education functions back to states, as detailed in their official press release.

    Secretary Linda McMahon called it a practical step, saying, "As we continue to break up the federal education bureaucracy and return education to the states, our new partnerships... represent greater efficiency and stronger coordination." These moves hand school safety and disaster prep to HHS, which already runs related programs, and route foreign gift data from universities to national security experts.

    Key developments include threats to withhold funds from districts running DEIA programs deemed discriminatory, per American Progress reports, and pushes for ESSA waivers that could let states skip accountability testing, as Indiana has requested. On higher ed, proposed rules aim to simplify student loans and expand TRIO access to undocumented high schoolers, with comments due soon after Federal Register publication. A fresh Title IX probe targets a Wisconsin district over restroom policies.

    For American citizens, this means streamlined aid but potential chaos in school safety and civil rights enforcement, hitting families in under-resourced areas hardest. Businesses and orgs face less red tape but funding risks for diversity initiatives. States and locals brace for delays as ED hollows out, per New America analysis, forcing them to fill gaps in migrant ed and English learner support. International ties? Minimal so far, but State partnerships could safeguard against foreign influence in colleges.

    Data point: These shifts involve hundreds of millions in school safety grants now under HHS. Watch for accreditation overhauls via upcoming negotiated rulemaking, effective mid-2026, and more outsourcing.

    Citizens, submit comments on proposed regs at regulations.gov and contact reps on waivers. Stay tuned for grant competitions on school choice.

    Next, track ESSA waiver approvals and Title IX probes. For more, visit ed.gov/newsroom. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe now! This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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  • Department of Education News

    Education Overhaul: States Gain Power as Federal Programs Shift to HHS and Beyond

    2026-02-27 | 2 mins.
    Welcome back, listeners, to your weekly dive into the U.S. Department of Education's biggest moves. This week, the standout headline is the Department's fresh interagency agreements announced February 23, shifting programs like school safety grants, community schools, and family engagement to Health and Human Services, plus foreign gift reporting to the State Department. These are the ninth such deals since May 2025, all aimed at shrinking the federal role and handing power back to states, as Secretary Linda McMahon put it: "These partnerships represent a practical step toward greater efficiency and meaningful improvement."

    On top of that, on February 26, the Department dropped an interpretive rule to slash barriers for new accrediting agencies in higher ed, sparking competition to fix what Under Secretary Nicholas Kent calls a "broken system" focused too much on ideology over student outcomes. Since 1999, only four new accreditors have been greenlit—now that's changing with resumed recognitions, lifted switch moratoriums, and $15 million in FIPSE grants for reform. Look for the AIM Negotiated Rulemaking Committee kicking off in April 2026.

    President Trump's National School Choice Week proclamation doubles down, pushing universal choice, Trump Accounts for K-12 savings via 529s, and DEI's end in schools. These shifts hit families hard—parents gain more school options and less bureaucracy, potentially saving billions, but critics like Sen. Patty Murray warn of disrupted resources amid lawsuits over cut grants.

    Businesses and colleges face accreditation shakeups for better job prep, while states manage more locally despite a flat $514 million for transferred K-12 programs. Unions fret over staff strains risking waste.

    For citizens, engage by commenting on the upcoming Accreditation Handbook updates or state choice programs. Watch HHS competitions this spring and the revised Compact for Academic Excellence.

    Stay informed at ed.gov. If input's open, submit now—your voice shapes this. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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  • Department of Education News

    Education Overhaul: $79B Funding Bill, Workforce Shifts, and New Accountability Rules

    2026-02-23 | 2 mins.
    Welcome to your weekly update on the U.S. Department of Education, where we cut through the noise to spotlight what's really moving the needle for education.

    This week's blockbuster: President Trump signed a $79 billion education funding bill into law, locking in fiscal 2026 priorities like campus-based aid for Federal Work-Study and FSEOG programs. Higher Ed Dive reports this stabilizes funding based on prior-year appropriations, giving schools breathing room amid reforms.

    Key shifts include the HEP Division moving to the Department of Labor starting January 20, streamlining postsecondary and workforce programs. Assistant Secretary Dr. David Barker calls it realignment for workforce success, while DOL's Dr. Henry Mack praises it as boosting skills for economic dominance. Powers Law's February update also flags the Accreditation, Innovation, and Modernization rulemaking, launched January 26, targeting accreditor competition, student outcomes over DEI mandates, and intellectual diversity—comments due March 2 on the RISE NPRM too.

    Impacts hit hard: American families gain simpler loans and Workforce Pell Grants under the Working Families Tax Cuts Act, but states brace for chaos from ED's hollowing out via interagency shifts. Businesses cheer accountability tying aid to earnings thresholds—failing programs lose loans after two of three years. New America warns local districts face delays in special ed and CTE.

    The Office for Civil Rights secured 31 agreements February 19 ending university ties to The Ph.D. Project, amid GAO scrutiny of its 2025 staff cuts.

    Quote from Secretary Linda McMahon on the new AHEAD framework: "We've developed an accountability framework institutions can work with, students will benefit from, and taxpayers expect."

    Watch the March 4-6 FSA Training Conference and March 2 comment deadlines. Citizens, submit feedback via regulations.gov to shape rules.

    Next, track AIM rulemaking sessions. Dive deeper at ed.gov/newsroom. If input's open, make your voice heard.

    Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
  • Department of Education News

    Transforming Student Aid and Higher Ed Under the Trump Administration

    2026-02-16 | 3 mins.
    The Trump administration is moving at historic pace on student financial aid, with the Department of Education announcing this week that it's taking the first step to develop the 2027-28 FAFSA form, targeting an October 2026 launch. Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent called this a dramatic turnaround, saying after years of mismanagement under the previous administration that left students and families struggling with delays and confusion, they've delivered historic progress in just one year by launching the earliest and most streamlined FAFSA form in history.

    But the changes go far beyond the application itself. The Department is simultaneously reshaping higher education through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed into law last July. Beginning this summer, new graduate students will be capped at twenty thousand five hundred dollars in federal loans per year with a hundred thousand dollar aggregate limit, a significant shift in borrowing authority. The Department is also proposing new repayment plans designed to make loans more manageable for borrowers as millions are returning to active repayment status.

    Behind the scenes, there's major structural reorganization happening. The Department is integrating postsecondary education and workforce development by detailing staff to work with the Labor Department, essentially merging fragmented programs into what officials describe as a unified system prioritizing industry-driven training. The administration has also established new Accreditation Innovation and Modernization rulemaking to streamline how colleges are recognized and evaluated while emphasizing student outcomes over compliance metrics.

    The impact varies dramatically depending on where you live and what students you serve. In blue states, school districts are bracing for targeted scrutiny of diversity and inclusion programs through heightened Title VI and Title IX enforcement. For higher education institutions, there's both opportunity and uncertainty. The Department is providing more flexibility in how federal funds are used, but also demanding biweekly reporting on interagency coordination as functions migrate between agencies.

    State leaders are being advised to step up, particularly around protecting English learner programs and establishing their own civil rights oversight since the Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights has been significantly reduced. The coming months will test whether this rapid restructuring delivers the promised efficiency or creates the chaos and delays that critics warn could disrupt aid delivery.

    For the latest updates on FAFSA deadlines, loan repayment options, and state-level guidance, visit ed.gov. If you're an educator or administrator, watch for the March 2 deadline to comment on new Title IV program rules. Thank you for tuning in to this week's education policy update. Be sure to subscribe for more coverage as these changes unfold. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai

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    This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

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Discover insightful discussions on "Department of Education," a podcast dedicated to exploring the dynamic world of education. Join experts, educators, and thought leaders as they delve into current trends, innovative teaching strategies, and policy changes shaping the future of learning. Whether you're a teacher, student, or education enthusiast, tune in to gain valuable knowledge and stay informed about the evolving educational landscape.For more info go to Http://www.quietplease.aiCheck out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs
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