Welcome to another edition of NPR Ed's Weekly Roundup!
Warren announces 'DeVos Watch'
Since before her entry into politics, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has been a fervent advocate of consumer protection, particularly when it comes to financial matters, like student loans. In an
op-ed
What are these alleged steps?
Most of the actions that the Education Department has taken so far with respect to student loans are pretty tough to unpack in simple terms. Betsy DeVos hired two advisers from the for-profit college industry, one of whom resigned after Warren
sent a pointed letter
As part of her project, Warren is asking for "whistleblower tips" about DeVos from the general public.
In other DeVos news, a story in The New York Times
pointed out
Online upgrades for special education and income-based repayment
The federal hub for resources on the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, or IDEA, was
revamped
And, the IRS data retrieval tool is now
back up and working
Education journalists meet, without the Education Secretary
The 70th annual National Seminar of the Education Writers Association took place this week, the largest single gathering of journalists on the education beat. The association's top award for the year went to Brian Rosenthal, whose series in the Houston Chronicle
investigated
Every previous education secretary has addressed the group; DeVos begged off due to a scheduling conflict.
Slate, Columbia University investigate online high school courses
Slate magazine just
wrapped up
"The view from the ground suggests that many online credit recovery courses are subpar substitutes for traditional classroom instruction."
A team of reporters found dramatic increases in graduation rates in districts that "relied on virtual learning as a crutch to lets kids retake—and sometimes retake and retake—core subjects that they failed the first time around."
New Orleans principal loses his job after being filmed with Nazi insignia
Nicholas Dean, principal of the Crescent Leadership Academy, an alternative charter high school in New Orleans, was fired after
a video surfaced
Initially, he told the The Times-Picayune that, "I went because I am a historian." Later, after his dismissal, he had no comment.
NPR Ed
interviewed
The city of Boston
announced
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