General education courses at Florida institutions no longer contain “indoctrinating concepts,” State University System Chancellor Ray Rodrigues announced this week following a Legislature-mandated review A 2023 law,
Today, the Florida Department of Education announced that mid-year progress monitoring results show students continue to succeed under the first-in-the-nation progress monitoring assessments.
Florida's education department says it will comply with a new federal directive to allow immigration enforcement into schools. The Trump administration on Tuesday rescinded a rule that created "protected areas" from Immigrations and Customs Enforcement ...
The big story: Florida’s scores on the latest round of the National Assessment of Educational Progress didn’t offer much to cheer about.
The state’s 8th-grade reading score was below the national average for the first time since 2015, and its 8th-grade math score was the lowest in 20 years.
The Florida Department of Education (FDOE) and Volunteer Florida are encouraging students to participate in the 2025 Black History Month student art and essay contests.
It’s been almost five years since school were closed down and students needed to do online learning during the pandemic.
Schools across America, including in Florida, are gearing up for the possibility of officials with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) showing up to their campuses.
Two Central Florida Democrats have filed legislation that would allow some K-12 students to take standardized tests in a language other than English in Florida. Democratic State Representatives Kristen Arrington and Rita Harris filed companion bills that would allow English language learners, or ELL students, to take tests in their first language.
The state’s public universities worked for months to vet their general-education courses in an attempt to bring them into compliance.
The Florida Board of Governors, a body that oversees the state’s public higher education system, will meet to approve the updated Gen Ed course list on Thursday.
Florida’s reading and math scores have dropped to their lowest levels in two decades, reflecting ongoing struggles in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.