The earn-and-learn expansion of federal Pell Grant eligibility offers policymakers an opportunity to leverage our most ...
Samuel Abrams, professor of politics at Sarah Lawrence College, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss Abrams recent op-ed in Real ...
The Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) did not just cut the Institute of Education Sciences ...
At last week’s ASU+GSV conference in San Diego, I was asked to try to decipher the state of education politics alongside my ...
Overlooked and undervalued, three remote school districts show what could be possible with even more support from the state ...
It would be fair to say that Will, a recent graduate from a rural high school in the Midwest, has school-to-work to thank for ...
Peterson to discuss Ney’s recent Substack post, “How the Wealthy Game Disability Laws for Ivy League Gains.” Vol. 26, No. 1 ...
Earlier this month, Yale University’s ten-member Committee on Trust in Higher Education issued a bracing, 58-page report on what’s driven plunging trust in higher ed. The committee was formed a year ...
The tide has turned on reading instruction. Nearly all states have passed “science of reading” laws, and most researchers and educators now agree students need to learn letters and sounds explicitly ...
Subscribe to the web content of Education Next and begin receiving the latest education news, opinion, research, reviews, and podcasts delivered weekly to your inbox. Click below and join the ...
Northland College in Ashland, Wisconsin, held its final commencement ceremony in 2025 before closing permanently due to financial challenges and declining enrollment. The college had been in operation ...
What does partisan polarization mean for schooling and higher education?