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Former school resource officer Julie Q. Smith will lead Indiana’s new Office of School Safety.
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More than 400 programs will be changed next year. It will impact about 4 percent of graduates in Indiana, or 3,300 each year.
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A federal appeals court revived a former Brownsburg music teacher’s lawsuit that claims he was pushed out of his job because he refused to use transgender students’ preferred pronouns and names.
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Indiana is asking the public to weigh in on a proposed school accountability system that would assign A-F grades based on test scores and broader measures like work ethic and postsecondary readiness.
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Indiana’s college enrollment rate has fallen to its lowest level on record, prompting new debate over education policy and workforce preparedness.
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The only American Sign Language interpreting program at a public university in Indiana will be cut as a result of a new policy in the state budget. Advocates warn Indiana already has a shortage of interpreters and this will reduce access for the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community.
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Increased attention on school attendance has prompted recent concern among some families, especially parents whose children frequently miss school for medical reasons.
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A judge ruled that Union School Corporation can operate normally until 2027, despite a new state law ordering its closure and restricting new contracts.
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The former leader of the Indiana School for the Deaf said budget cuts risk students’ safety and the school’s ability to function.
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Indiana’s latest ILEARN results show stagnant English scores and modest math gains, with middle schoolers and English learners facing the steepest challenges.