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LD OnLine News Headlines

The latest news stories about LD and ADHD.

How to Engage Parents for Support During Testing Season (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

March 07, 2025

The responsibility of testing falls on students, school staff, and administration. However, it is important to include parents who can bolster student confidence and increase performance. This can also alleviate stress for students and schools. Here are four ways that schools can ask parents for help during testing season.

How Instructional Coaches Can Help Teachers Use Data More Effectively (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

March 07, 2025

In my job as an instructional coach at a K–6 elementary school, it seemed like people would run away when the conversation turned to data. Creating systemic schoolwide systems for collecting and analyzing data to benefit teachers has become one of my primary tasks. These systems are now at the heart of some of the meaningful changes happening in our school for teachers and students. Data can bring hope, especially when it shows we are on the right path to achieving student growth.

The Reading Wars Go to Court (opens in a new window)

Education Next

March 07, 2025

In December 2024, two Massachusetts parents sued Calkins, Fountas and Pinnell, their publishers HMH (formerly Houghton Mifflin) and Greenwood, and the Teachers College Board of Trustees. Unlike previous literacy-related lawsuits that claimed inferior literacy instruction violated students’ state constitutional rights, this lawsuit, Conley v. Calkins, contends that the defendants violated state consumer-protection statutes by fraudulently claiming their programs were supported by research.

How Schools Make Up for the Feds’ Unfulfilled Special Ed. Funding Commitment (opens in a new window)

Education Week

March 04, 2025

Pop quiz: How many times has the federal government fulfilled its original commitment to supply 40 percent of the average per-pupil expenditure to pay for the costs of special education? Answer: Never. In fact, only once—in 2009—has federal funding even exceeded 20 percent, despite a promise in the first version of what is now the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act to reach 40 percent by 1982.

How Department of Education cuts could hurt resources for students with disabilities (opens in a new window)

PBS News Hour

February 27, 2025

As the Trump administration continues to downsize and dismantle many government agencies, the Department of Education could be next on the chopping block. At stake are resources and support for more than seven million students with disabilities who depend on the agency to ensure access to a free public education. Judy Woodruff reports for our series, Disability Reframed.

Q&A: Khan Academy’s Kristen DiCerbo on the Promise & Limits of AI in Schools — and How It Could Spark a New Era of ‘Conversational’ Testing (opens in a new window)

The 74

February 24, 2025

Khan’s chief learning officer says AI isn’t education’s ‘golden ticket,’ but can be ‘an important tool in the toolbox’ in improving student outcomes. Khan Academy founder Sal Khan and chief learning officer Kristen DiCerbo negotiated a partnership with Open AI, and just five months later, their AI-powered Khanmigo tutoring bot debuted. Last summer, Khan Academy launched an AI writing coach. Nearly two years in, DiCerbo remains bullish on the possibilities of AI tutoring, cheerfully engaging critics about the limitations of the technology, even as by all measures it evolves and improves.

It’s Important to Talk About Learning Accommodations With Your Students—Here’s How to Do It (opens in a new window)

Edutopia

February 24, 2025

How do we build foundational literacy skills in preschool? We turn to the research. Cognitive neuroscientist Stanislas Dehaene’s research supports integrating authentic language and literacy skills in children’s everyday experiences before kindergarten. Children learn many important skills in preschool that will build literacy skills, but none as critical as the following three: print awareness, phonological awareness, and phonics. In this article, I’ll share activities implemented in my classroom when I was a teacher, as well as activities that my teachers have implemented over the years.

DOGE’s death blow to education studies (opens in a new window)

The Hechinger Report

February 24, 2025

A virtual wrecking ball took aim last Monday at the relatively small, wonky corner of the Department of Education: evaluation studies and data collection. Researchers described the canceled projects as rigorous evaluations of how the federal government spends education dollars, efforts to improve the reading and math skills of U.S. students and guides for teachers on evidence-based methods of instruction. Many of the projects were near completion and had mostly been paid out, which means that the implied savings are likely much less than $881 million touted by DOGE. DOGE also terminated masses of census-like data collections that are used to track student trends and help schools make informed decisions. U.S. participation in international assessments was also canceled. Without those data points and results, it may be impossible to tell how well students are doing.

“Is My Child’s IEP in Danger?” (opens in a new window)

ADDitude

February 13, 2025

Significant cuts and changes within the U.S. Department of Education are causing worry among parents of children with ADHD and other learning differences who qualify for school services and accommodations. Here’s what you need to know about IEP law and 504 Plan protections.

Mothers, metaphors and dyslexia: What language reveals about the challenges of a child’s learning disability (opens in a new window)

The Conversation

November 19, 2024

Alarm bells. Red flags. A labyrinth.

These are just a few of the metaphors that mothers of children with dyslexia use to describe the journey from noticing their child’s literacy challenges to receiving a diagnosis and then advocating to secure services to help their children succeed. By paying attention to the images used in these metaphors, teachers and administrators can better understand the difficulties parents and children face and learn to be more responsive.

West End run for sensory adaptation of Cinderella (opens in a new window)

BBC

November 05, 2024

The production, which explores themes of identity, self-expression and magic, includes specially designed sensory materials, along with an original music score and changes to the traditional storyline and characters.

“This production represents a significant step towards addressing this disparity and promoting ongoing inclusivity in the West End and national cultural landscape.”

Three AI Tools That Can Foster Student Agency (opens in a new window)

International Literacy Association

November 01, 2024

As we explore ways to empower students and foster engagement in literacy instruction, it is essential to consider how innovative tools, such as artificial intelligence (AI), can play a pivotal role. AI offers educators new opportunities to personalize learning experiences, promote student choice, and streamline the creation of a diverse range of activities.

Do Leveled Books Have Any Place in the Classroom? (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

October 21, 2024

Leveled books have been a staple in early elementary reading instruction for more than two decades, with 61 percent of K-2 and special education teachers having said that they use them for small group work. But as the “science of reading” movement has spread, these texts have come under fire. Initially, they encourage students to guess at words rather than use their phonics skills, researchers say, which can prevent children from mapping the letter-sound connections that allow them to become fluent readers. A second problem is how they sort students into levels.

Is Dyslexia a ‘Superpower’? What Students Want Their Teachers to Know (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

October 08, 2024

Education Week interviewed five high school students who attend Jemicy School, an independent co-ed school for grades 1-12 in Baltimore that specializes in serving students with dyslexia and related language-based learning differences. The students opened up about their individual journeys with dyslexia, explained what the diagnosis has come to mean to them, and offered some advice for teachers.

Talking to Students About Their Learning Differences: A Guide for Teachers (opens in a new window)

Education Week (subscription)

October 07, 2024

Whether a student has dyslexia, dyscalculia, dysgraphia, or any other neurodivergent condition that makes learning harder for them, such as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, it helps for them to have a basic understanding of why they struggle to learn or do things when their neurotypical peers don’t. It can improve students’ confidence and their ability to advocate for themselves in the classroom, which is an especially important skill when they get into high school, college, and the workforce, say experts.

How Much Does Special Education Truly Cost? Finally, an Answer Is on the Horizon (opens in a new window)

Education Week

August 27, 2024

How much do America’s schools spend to provide special education services to students with disabilities? How have special education costs nationwide risen over the last two decades? What is the typical cost of providing services to a K-12 student who has autism, or ADHD, or Down syndrome?

The answer to all of these questions is painfully simple: We don’t know.

AI’s Potential in Special Education: What Teachers and Parents Think (opens in a new window)

Education Week

August 06, 2024

Educators and parents of students with intellectual and developmental disabilities are optimistic about artificial intelligence’s potential to create more inclusive classrooms and close educational gaps between students with disabilities and those without, concludes a report from the Special Olympics Global Center for Inclusion in Education. However, both groups are also concerned about the possibility that AI use in schools could decrease human interaction and that schools with fewer resources could be left behind, the report found.

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