Welcome to your weekly update on the U.S. Department of Education, where we cut through the noise to spotlight what matters for education today.
This week's top headline: The Department's Student Privacy Policy Office launched an investigation into Tufts University and the National Student Clearinghouse over allegations that the National Study of Learning, Voting, and Engagement illegally shared student data to sway elections, potentially violating FERPA privacy laws. The Department also issued new guidance rescinding Biden-era policies that pushed schools to join this program, warning institutions using its upcoming data release could face penalties unless they get student consent first.
On the higher ed front, big moves are underway. The Department announced the Accreditation, Innovation, and Modernization committee, with nominations due by February 26—meetings kick off in April to slash red tape, prioritize data-driven student outcomes over DEI standards, and block discriminatory practices like race-based scholarships. Under Secretary Nicholas Kent celebrated a separate breakthrough, saying, "After more than 15 years of regulatory uncertainty, we've developed an accountability framework that institutions can work with, students will benefit from, and taxpayers can rightfully expect to improve outcomes." This new system holds all programs accountable via earnings thresholds—if they fail two out of three years, they lose federal loans and potentially Pell Grants.
Budget-wise, President Trump signed a $79 billion FY26 funding bill, up slightly from last year, rejecting deep cuts and preserving Pell at $7,395 max while mandating on-time grants to states and staff to handle core duties amid interagency shifts.
For American families, this means stronger student data protections and fairer loans, curbing debt traps. Colleges and states gain streamlined rules but face outcome-based scrutiny, pushing better value. Businesses benefit from workforce-aligned programs without political bias.
Listeners, nominate negotiators for AIM rulemaking at ed.gov by February 26, or comment on student loan proposals by March 2.
Watch for April sessions and final rules. Dive deeper at ed.gov. Get involved—your voice shapes these changes.
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