- Asks Kentuckians to engage fully with their schools, learning directly from students, teachers, and staff about the work happening there.
- Advocates a groundswell of support for the good work being done in those schools
- Calls for debates about any weaknesses in that work to be based on sound information and mutual respect – and a focus on solutions that support the Commonwealth’s progress.
- Urges all Kentuckians to be open to engaging hard truths about America’s history with injustice in our past and to work to ensure we pass on the learning from those times in order not to repeat them. We can only truly know our own personal lived experience. Striving to hear and understand another’s, is critical for progress.
In a newly-published study, children admitted to the Tennessee state-funded preschool program by lottery did less well than those who were not admitted, based on data for sixth grade:
assessments results
disciplinary infractions
attendance
identification for special education services (excluding those for physical disabilities)
A budget for fiscal years 2023 and 2024 was voted out by the Kentucky House of Representatives on Thursday. While continuing many features of the original House Bill 1, the updated budget shows important increases to investments in early literacy, career and technical education, and postsecondary institutions, along with a reduced contribution to teacher retirement. This post will highlight the newest changes and added investments, while raising concerns about early childhood underinvestment.
Governor Beshear’s recommended budget for the next two fiscal years aims very high for most elements of the education continuum, calling for Kentucky to make major steps toward a Big Bold Future. The Office of State Budget Director has posted the full plans, and you can also get further detail from our early childhood, P-12 education, and postsecondary budget summaries.
The 2022 Kentucky General Assembly can take action to give Kentucky’s youngest learners the strong start they need to grow into exemplary readers and high achievers. Early literacy is the key to ensure more young Kentuckians excel in the primary classroom. Students must learn to read from kindergarten through third grade so that they may read to learn in school and throughout the course of their lives.
Education stands to win big in the U.S. Congress’s social spending bill. After a months-long impasse, a mutually-agreed framework among lawmakers in Washington may signal an agreement on critical investments in American students as young as 3-years old to those engaged in post-secondary pursuits.
Prichard Committee Member William “Bill” Garmer passed away peacefully surrounded by family on July 30, 2021, in Lexington. Bill became a member of the Prichard Committee’s board of directors in 2011 and was serving as Secretary/Treasurer at the time of his passing. He joined the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence in 2010.
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]One full academic year has passed with varying degrees of in-person and virtual learning across the state. It is now time to roll up…
The Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education (CPE) this week approved campus tuition and fee rates for public colleges and universities for the upcoming 2022 school year. All of Kentucky’s postsecondary institutions stayed under the tuition caps adopted by CPE:
No more than 3.0 percent over two years, and a maximum increase of no more than 2.0 percent in any one year, for public research and comprehensive universities.
Last month, following the approval of the American Rescue Plan, I wrote about the need for communities to come to the table to talk about education recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. As guidance from the U.S. Department of Education on the use of these funds has been made available, it’s apparent that community, parent, and education stakeholder buy-in isn’t just on my wish list – it’s a requirement.
