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LD OnLine News Headlines

The latest news stories about LD and ADHD.

Ed Department Plans To Scale Back IDEA Data Collection (opens in a new window)

Disability Scoop

September 05, 2025

The Trump administration is laying out plans to stop collecting certain information from states about students with disabilities.

The U.S. Department of Education wants to end data collection on what’s known as “significant disproportionality,” the agency said in a recent notice.

Opinion: We Shouldn’t Accept That Some Kids With Disabilities Just Won’t Learn to Read (opens in a new window)

The 74

September 02, 2025

There’s something people don’t tell you about being a special education teacher: It can feel lonely. 

We’re often left out of schoolwide instructional conversations. We don’t always have mentors who understand our setting. And there’s still resistance in some buildings to true inclusion and co-teaching. 

Teachers need evidence-based, structured, supplemental foundational curriculum to help struggling readers master challenges.

Opinion: I faked reading in third grade. Too many Black kids still have to (opens in a new window)

EdSource

August 22, 2025

I remember pretending to read. Holding open chapter books I couldn’t make sense of, flipping pages to keep up appearances. No one saw the panic behind my eyes when we went around the classroom reading aloud. I’d count ahead to figure out which paragraph would be mine and rehearse it in my head, praying the teacher didn’t ask a follow-up question. I wasn’t dumb. I just couldn’t read. That experience shaped my understanding of what’s at stake. It’s more than a reading issue; it challenges a child’s confidence and creates a silent barrier that too many face alone.

PBS accounts for nearly half of first graders’ most frequently watched educational TV and video programs (opens in a new window)

The Conversation

August 22, 2025

In a study about the kinds of media kids consume that the Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology published in June 2025, my colleagues and I surveyed the parents and other kinds of caregivers of 346 first graders. The study participants listed the TV shows, videos, apps and games the kids used the most. We found that only 12% of this content could be described as educational. PBS accounted for 45% of the educational TV or videos parents said their kids watched most often. This makes PBS the top source for children’s educational programming by far. Nickelodeon/Nick Jr. was in second place with 14%, and YouTube, at 9%, came in third.

The Future of Children’s Programming After Federal Cuts to Public Media (opens in a new window)

The 74

August 22, 2025

With federal funding for PBS and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting now wiped out, one of the few trusted, equity-driven sources of children’s media is seriously wounded. To meet the moment, policy leaders and educators must move beyond screen time limits and cell phone bans — and focus instead on a long-term vision rooted in shared public interest values, powered by human connection and guided by standards that prioritize children’s well-being from the start. The nation needs a strategy for children’s media that draws from the trusted legacy of public media and leverages today’s most promising tech tools. 

Your First Days as a New Elementary Teacher (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

August 22, 2025

There are so many moving parts to education that it’s easy to get lost in the shuffle in your first few years, but there are three main ideas that you need to keep in mind as the school year starts: Create routines for your classroom ahead of time, get to truly know your students, and be prepared to learn alongside them. Remembering these can help keep you growing as an instructor and help you start your year on a positive note.

What Stanford Learned By Crowdsourcing AI Solutions for Students With Disabilities (opens in a new window)

EdSurge

August 19, 2025

What promise might generative artificial intelligence hold for improving life and increasing equity for students with disabilities?

That question inspired a symposium last year, hosted by the Stanford Accelerator for Learning, which brought together education researchers, technologists and students. It included a hackathon where teachers and students with disabilities joined AI innovators to develop product prototypes.

NYC still hasn’t made most special education fixes required by court order two years ago (opens in a new window)

Chalkbeat

August 05, 2025

After a federal judge in 2023 ordered city officials to make dozens of reforms to more swiftly provide special education services to families who won legal disputes, top Education Department officials embraced the extra oversight.

Yet almost as soon as the order was handed down, the city began to miss deadlines. Now, two years later, the Education Department has failed to comply with most of the order’s requirements.

Mississippi turned around its schools. Its secret: Tools Michigan abandoned (opens in a new window)

Bridge Michigan

July 25, 2025

Test scores [in Mississippi] have improved dramatically in the past 15 years, and the state is now ranked as a Top 20 state for public education. Scores exceed Michigan’s across the spectrum, from Black and white students to poorer and richer ones. Known as the Mississippi Miracle, the state’s improvement is a testament to tenacity, not originality. Over the past 20 years, Michigan adopted many of the same tools and accountability standards as Mississippi, only to abandon them for another plan. While Michigan leaders talked about fixing education, Mississippi did it starting in 2013, approving and sticking with sometimes unpopular ideas like grading schools and holding back third graders who couldn’t read, while investing big in teacher training and literacy coaches. 

Teacher PD, Jobs on the Chopping Block as Trump’s Funding Freeze Continues (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

July 25, 2025

With billions of federal dollars frozen by the Trump administration, 85% of school district leaders say they now have to find alternative sources to pay for contracts they have already entered into. Half those leaders say they will have to cut staff to make ends meet if the money doesn’t arrive, according to a new survey. The survey, from AASA, the School Superintendents Association, paints a picture of how the Trump administration’s choice not to distribute more than $5 billion in federal school funds Congress approved in March is affecting districts as they prepare for the upcoming school year. To close the resulting budget holes, nearly three-quarters of leaders with contracts covered by the frozen funds say they will likely have to cut academic supports for students—like literacy and math coaches—and 83% plan to cut professional development for staff

6 Ways to Increase Family Engagement in Special Education (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

July 25, 2025

Strong parent partnerships are essential to effective special education, as collaboration between families and educators provides students with disabilities with academic, social and emotional, and behavioral support. While laws like the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act mandate involvement, genuine collaboration requires ongoing, intentional effort. Building trust can be challenging when families have felt unheard or excluded. Because of this, it’s crucial that educators adopt proactive, empathetic, and inclusive practices. The following six strategies offer evidence-based ways to strengthen trust and foster meaningful family partnerships.

Trump administration to release frozen after-school, summer program funds (opens in a new window)

K-12 Drive

July 25, 2025

The Trump administration will now release the federal funding for after-school and summer programs that districts and states expected to begin accessing July 1 but had been frozen by the Office of Management and Budget, OMB confirmed. The $1.3 billion for 21st Century Community Learning Centers was under review by OMB to ensure the funding aligned with Trump administration priorities. The weekslong delay had already caused cancellations and other disruptions to summer and school-year student services, according to educators, families, education organizations and lawmakers. Still under OMB review is about $5.6 billion in other K-12 funds, including programs for English learners, professional development, student academic supports, migrant services and adult education. OMB did not provide a time frame for the review or release of those funds.

Many Kids Aren’t Ready for School Before Age 5. So Why Do They Have to Go Anyway? (opens in a new window)

The 74

July 25, 2025

In D.C., and N.Y., age cutoffs for kindergarten fall far into the school year. As Maureen Yusuf-Morales, who has worked at public, charter and independent schools, suggests, “Parents with children born after September should be allowed choice with guidance based on developmental milestones, as opposed to birthdays being the only hard-and-fast rule.” Here are some ways to level the playing field for the youngest students: grades with multiple classes can be broken up into three- or four-month bands, so students are learning with a narrower-aged peer group; and repeating a year should be a more acceptable option. Any steps taken to help New York City’s youngest learners would provide the largest experimental sample size in the country, making those results potentially beneficial for students across America. 

All NYC public schools must use city-approved programs to help struggling readers next year (opens in a new window)

Chalkbeat New York

July 25, 2025

Beginning next school year, all of the city’s public schools — from elementary to high school — must pick from a list of at least nine city-approved intervention programs designed to help struggling readers, according to documents obtained by Chalkbeat. The city hopes “all NYC students become thriving readers and writers by 2035,” the document states. Intervention programs can involve a range of approaches. In elementary schools, for example, teachers may pull students into small groups to go over phonics concepts from earlier grade levels to reinforce the relationships between sounds and letters. In high school, some campuses use online platforms to help build vocabulary and comprehension skills.

A Perfect Lie: Perfectionism, Writing, and ADHD (opens in a new window)

ADDitude

June 10, 2025

“I never considered myself a perfectionist because the image that came to mind was of a Type-A overachiever who had their crap together, and I’ve never been mistaken for someone with their crap together. Things started making sense when I found out that procrastination is actually a result of perfectionism and anxiety. I would get so caught up with making things perfect that I’d struggle to finish, or even get started.”

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