In this week's edition of our education news roundup, we take you from school vouchers to AP exams to community college.
Betsy DeVos speaks to American Legislative Exchange Council
Protests greeted the education secretary in Denver this week at her speech to the American Legislative Exchange Council. Her family has close ties to the organization, which brings together state legislators, free-market conservatives and corporate sponsors to write model bills that get adopted all over the country.
ALEC and Betsy DeVos both back vouchers, tax credit scholarships, education savings accounts and expansions of charter, home-schooling, virtual and for-profit providers. Her rhetoric, here, was more fiery than in previous appearances, as she faced off against critics —"defenders of the status quo" — and praised ALEC for "the fight" to expand school choice. She also hit familiar notes:
"Choice in education is good politics because it's good policy. It's good policy because it comes from good parents who want better for their children."
As we reported
House Republicans have just rejected the school choice expansions in Trump's initial budget request. Recent studies have shown mixed-to-negative results for voucher programs, and there have been successful fights against voucher expansion even in staunchly red states like Texas.
House budget resolution has cuts to education
The Republican-controlled House has been working on its spending plan, including for education.
This week, the budget committee adopted
a plan
Last week, House Republicans introduced an
appropriations bill
Many more girls taking AP computer science
The nonprofit Code.org, which promotes computer science education,
noted
Much of this growth is due to last year's introduction of a new AP course,
AP Computer Science Principles
Despite the progress in exposure to computer science in high schools, there is a long way to go: Only a little over 1 in 4 of those who took an AP computer science exam this year were girls, and only 1 in 5 were underrepresented minorities.
California community college chancellor calls for dropping algebra
Eloy Ortiz Oakley, chancellor of the California community college system, the nation's largest,
told NPR's Robert Siegel
Billions in private student loan debt may be erased
Tens of thousands of borrowers could have their decades-old private student loan debt forgiven because of to financial companies' poor record keeping,
an investigation by The New York Times
The forgiven debt would amount to $5 billion —
which is just a fraction of the $108 billion
Feminist groups call on Candice Jackson to reject "rape myths"
A total of 58 feminist and legal organizations
signed a letter
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