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Government Funds Shielded Colleges From Extinction. In 2022, the Stakes Will Change.

ED Surge

That means for many institutions, HEERF funds will cease to be accessible in the year 2022. Based on recent guidelines from the Department of Education, institutions of higher education generally must expend their HEERF grants within one year of the date when the department processed funds for each specific grant.

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School Counselor of the Year Reflects on What Students and Teachers Lost and Gained in 2022

ED Surge

As 2022 turns into 2023, EdSurge asked educators and education leaders to share reflections on learning “lost” and “gained.” As our new normal continues on and we begin 2023, I’m reflecting on what my students and I lost in 2022—and what we’ve gained. If not now, then when?” In 2021, U.S.

educators

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Resources for Teachers and Instructional Coaches – February 2022

Edthena

2022 reads you shouldn’t miss. Read more at Government Technology: Edthena Launches AI for Teacher Professional Development and at The Hogan Report: 5 Big EdTech Deals. 2022 top resources for teachers and coaches ! . Here are our top picks for the Feb. Read on for the highlights, article links, and related content.

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What the Data Tells Us About How ESSER Spending Did and Didn’t Help Schools Recover

ED Surge

Both reading and math scores increased in districts in states like Mississippi, North Carolina and Tennessee, where the rate of ESSER spending per student was relatively high (over $1,000) from 2022 to 2023.

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PROOF POINTS: How Covid narrowed the STEM pipeline

The Hechinger Report

government are all trying to encourage more young Americans to pursue careers in STEM, an acronym for science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The leading indicators of STEM troubles ahead are apparent within the 2022 scores from a national test called the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).

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PROOF POINTS: Researchers say cries of teacher shortages are overblown

The Hechinger Report

Ninety percent of schools have increased the number of substitute teachers on staff or are trying to, according to a July 2022 RAND report, but schools are struggling to find new hires, feeding into an overall perception of shortages. The teaching profession, according to CNN in early 2022, was “in crisis.” The stories are scary.

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OPINION: A hopeful note for early childhood education in 2024 — Some states are stepping up investment

The Hechinger Report

There is one bright note: State and local governments are offering models of innovation and glimmers of hope in the face of such a dire challenge. In late 2022, New Mexico became the first state in the nation to create a permanent child care fund, making child care free or affordable for many families and increasing early educator wages.

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