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EduClips: School News You Missed This Week From America鈥檚 15 Biggest Districts, Including Rethinking Punishment for Bullying & Sexual Harassment

EduClips is a roundup of the week鈥檚 top education headlines from America鈥檚 15 largest school districts, where more than 4 million students across eight states attend class every day. Read previous EduClips installments here. Get the week鈥檚 school and policy highlights delivered straight to your inbox by signing up for the

BROWARD COUNTY 鈥 POST-PARKLAND, REPORT URGES FORT LAUDERDALE SCHOOLS TO SPEND $200 MILLION ON MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS: Broward County officials said they were unsure if they could afford the $202 million recommended by a report to provide for mental health professionals for students and families. Mental health has been a major focus of the district since February鈥檚 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l get $200 million unless we hit the Powerball,鈥 board chairwoman Nora Rupert said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檒l make a dent in it.鈥 ()

FAIRFAX COUNTY 鈥 STUDENT ACCUSED OF SEXUAL MISCONDUCT SUES DISTRICT FOR DISCRIMINATION: A high school student and his father are suing the Fairfax County (Virginia) Public Schools in federal court, alleging the school system punished the boy unfairly for sexual misconduct because of his gender. According to the suit, three girls 鈥渃olluded鈥 to accuse the 16-year-old at Lake Braddock Secondary School of inappropriately touching them and making sexually explicit comments and gestures. In court papers, the boy and his father said the district 鈥渢reats male students accused of sexual misconduct by female students more aggressively than it otherwise would鈥 in order to 鈥渂e perceived as aggressively addressing the perceptions that sexual assault against female students is rampant on campuses.鈥 A spokesman for the district declined to comment on the case. ()

PUERTO RICO 鈥 LONG AFTER HURRICANE, ISLAND鈥橲 STUDENTS GRAPPLE WITH TRAUMA: Puerto Rico’s students are still wrestling with psychological trauma from Hurricane Maria and its aftermath. Joy Lynn Su谩rez-Kindy, a clinical psychologist who’s consulting with the island’s education department on mental health issues, examined responses from 64,000 students. Among the findings: Seven percent of students indicated they had “clinically significant symptoms” of post-traumatic stress disorder; eight percent said they had “clinically significant symptoms” of depression; and nine percent indicated they were at “high risk” of developing mental health disorders. ()

MIAMI-DADE 鈥 鈥楾HE OPIOID CRISIS IS REAL鈥 AND NEAR MIAMI鈥橲 SCHOOLS: Miami parents are up in arms due to sex and drug use at homeless encampments near five area schools. Officials are conducting a public health investigation into the spread of HIV and hepatitis at one site, where parents reported seeing several discarded drug needles. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 recall in this area ever dealing with a situation like this,鈥 said Superintendent Alberto Carvalho. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not surprising. All of the sudden the opioid crisis is real and it is not a crisis that鈥檚 touching just rural or urban America. It鈥檚 pretty universal and ubiquitous. And I think it鈥檚 encroaching upon areas where kids services are provided, like schools.鈥 ()

PHILADELPHIA 鈥 AS STATE CONTRIBUTIONS FOR SPECIAL ED COSTS FAIL TO KEEP PACE, SCHOOL DISTRICTS ARE PICKING UP THE TAB: Special education costs are far outpacing the state鈥檚 contribution to those expenses, according to a report by the Education Law Center and PA Schools Work. The result is that school districts are picking up bigger shares of the tabs. State aid for special education increased by $72 million between 2008 and 2016, but district special education costs grew by $1.54 billion, the report said. The report comes amid an ongoing lawsuit, partly brought by the center, that alleges the state鈥檚 funding formula is inadequate and discriminates against children in poorer communities. ()

HAWAII 鈥 STATE PROPOSES HARSHER PENALTIES FOR SEXUAL HARASSMENT, BULLYING: The Hawaii Department of Education is hoping to create a new offense of sexual harassment and to increase the offense classification for bullying as part of a series of changes to its misconduct and discipline policy. Under the proposed changes, bullying, cyberbullying, and harassment would be upgraded to the most serious offense classification for intermediate and high school students. For the first time, the rule changes also would acknowledge sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression in protections against bullying and harassment. The state Board of Education voted unanimously to send the proposed revisions to public hearings. ()

NEW YORK CITY 鈥 CHANCELLOR CARRANZA, MAYOR DE BLASIO DIFFER ON CHANGES TO CITY鈥橲 ELITE SCHOOLS: New York City schools chancellor Richard Carranza said that the education department could 鈥減robably鈥 change the admissions requirements at five of the city鈥檚 eight specialized high schools immediately, putting him at odds with Mayor Bill de Blasio, who holds that such a move could put the district in legal jeopardy. Carranza told the audience at a Hispanic Education Summit that the city could likely change the admissions requirements at those five schools, which weren鈥檛 named in the 1971 state law creating the enrollment process at the elite schools. But he suggested he would not push for those changes after the schools鈥 principals advised him against it. ()

CHICAGO 鈥 SEX ABUSE SCANDAL AT CITY鈥橲 SCHOOLS COSTS DISTRICT $4 MILLION FEDERAL GRANT: The fallout from Chicago Public Schools鈥 sexual abuse scandal continues. Now, the U.S. Department of Education has denied the district a $4 million federal grant because it failed to demonstrate that it is sufficiently addressing complaints of sexual violence. The department informed district officials last month that it had suspended this year’s installment of the Magnet Schools Assistance Program grant. Earlier this year, the department鈥檚 office for civil rights said the district had committed “serious and pervasive” violations of Title IX, the federal law designed to protect students from abuse, harassment, and gender-based discrimination. ()

Noteworthy Essays & Reflections

TEACHER DIVERSITY 鈥 Brown: Want to Close the Opportunity Gap? Start by Fixing the Diversity Gap Between Students of Color and Their Majority-White Teachers (Read at The74Million.org)

TEENAGERS 鈥 The Teen Brain: How Schools Can Help Students Manage Emotions and Make Better Decisions ()

#METOO 鈥 Even in #MeToo era, educators still aren’t sharing their stories ()

COMPETENCY-BASED EDUCATION 鈥 Is Competency-Based Education Just a Recycled Failed Policy? ()

Quotes of the Week

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l get $200 million unless we hit the Powerball.鈥 鈥擝roward County school board chairwoman Nora Rupert, on the funding a report recommended for mental health professionals to treat students and families after the Feb. 14 shooting massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. ()

鈥淎t a divisive time in the history of the country, we have to make sure we鈥檙e giving kids a chance to think for themselves.鈥 鈥Chris Gubbrud, who teaches sixth-grade social studies in South Dakota鈥檚 Mitchell School District, on using class time to discuss the appointment of Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court. (Read at The74Million.org)

鈥淭hese findings are just awful for anyone who wants a future. It鈥檚 worse than a criminal conviction, or just as bad.鈥 鈥Jesse Binnall, attorney for a student and his father suing the Fairfax County, Virginia, school district, saying the boy was unfairly punished for sexual misconduct because of his gender. The boy and his father say media reports that 鈥渟uggest the pervasive nature of sexual assault committed by male students鈥 influenced the district. ()

鈥淧articularly after 2016, it鈥檚 clear that our country is much more vulnerable to a demagogue who vilifies minorities when schools are racially segregated. When white students know few Mexican-American classmates or Muslim classmates, it鈥檚 much easier for someone to suggest that those groups are causing all your problems.鈥 鈥Richard Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at The Century Foundation, on the importance of integrating schools. (Read at The74Million.org)

鈥淚 was shocked. I didn鈥檛 realize this was going to be a race about money.鈥 鈥Emily Gasoi, a candidate for the Ward 1 State Board of Education seat in Washington, D.C., whose opponent raised nearly $60,000 as of August. More than $150,000 and counting has poured this year into races for the board seats, relatively obscure positions that wield little power in the District. ()

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