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Key Michigan lawmakers seek action on crowded elementary school classes Lansing — State lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle said they plan to take steps in the coming months to try to lower crowded class sizes in Michigan's schools. Legislators and school superintendents have floated ideas in recent days for accomplishing the goal, ranging from capping the number of students allowed in classes to allocating money specifically for addressing packed rooms to changing the way the state divvies up dollars for education. During a Tuesday press conference, Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall, R-Richland Township, said his caucus is interested in addressing class sizes and that legislation would be “forthcoming” to tackle high student-to-teacher ratios. The GOP House leader didn't outline what the upcoming measure would be. “It’s something we’ve been hearing anecdotally from a lot of parents across our districts,” Hall told reporters. “They feel that, in a lot of these cases, these kids are in classes that are too big.” On Tuesday, The Detroit News reported the results of a months-long investigation that found thousands of Michigan elementary school students were learning in classes that featured 30 children or more. Through records obtained under the state's Freedom of Information Act, The News tracked 206 individual elementary school classrooms across 48 school districts in the past two years that featured at least 30 students. Amid ongoing concerns about inadequate reading scores in Michigan, the class size numbers revealed by The News conflicted with guidelines detailed in a majority of other states and with what Michigan education officials said would create the ideal environment to promote learning. More: Michigan school districts pack kids into classrooms as reading scores falter More: Michigan schools often exceed class size limits despite teacher contract caps Michigan Superintendent of Public Instruction Michael Rice, who leads the state Department of Education, said elementary school classrooms should be "markedly" smaller than 30 students. Rice said the class sizes for kindergarten through third grade in high-poverty areas should be about 17-19 students. In March, state Senate Education Chairwoman Dayna Polehanki, D-Livonia, announced she wanted to consider placing class size caps for grades kindergarten through third grade in schools with high rates of students living in poverty. "I'd like to see class sizes capped in high-poverty districts in K-3 to give the kids that time with the teacher," Polehanki said. "So the teacher has that individualized time with that student." Polehanki said she is working with the Michigan Department of Education on optimal class sizes to put into state policy. Such a policy would represent a significant shift for Michigan, which has some of the largest elementary school class sizes in the nation, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics. While at least 31 of the 50 states have laws about class sizes, tie funding to small classes or set goals for their schools to attempt to meet and for which to be accountable, Michigan currently doesn't. As an example, Tennessee state law includes both average class size benchmarks for school buildings and maximum class size limits for individual classes. The average class size standard in Tennessee for kindergarten through third grade is 20 students per class and the maximum limit is 25. Of 797 individual elementary school classes examined by The News in Michigan for the 2024-25 school year, 63% had 25 or more students in them. About one in seven classrooms examined by The News had 30 or more students. 'A packed environment' Cindy Eyestone, who has two children at Carkenord Elementary within L'Anse Creuse Public Schools in Macomb County, is among the Michigan parents who would like to see lawmakers or school leaders take action regarding the size of elementary school classes in the state. Eyestone previously worked in the Detroit school district for 25 years. This school year, she's served as a substitute teacher at her kids' school. One of her children is in a kindergarten class with 26 students in it, she said. It's "absolutely ludicrous" to think a single teacher would be able to educate a kindergarten class of 26 students and meet the 5-year-old students' emotional needs, Eyestone said. Students' behavior has gotten worse than it was years ago and their social needs have increased, she said of her prior experience serving as a teacher. “We can’t develop children in a packed environment," Eyestone said. "Let’s take a fish tank, for instance. You’re limited to the amount of fish you can put in a fish tank," Eyestone said. "Otherwise, they don’t grow properly. They don’t have enough room to grow. These are fish. … Yet, you’re shoving 26 kids into a classroom and putting a teacher in front of them.” In response to a public records request from The News, L'Anse Creuse Public Schools reported two fourth grade classes and two fifth grade classes at Carkenord Elementary with 30 students this school year. But Molly Macek, director of education policy at the free-market-oriented Mackinac Center for Public Policy in Midland, argued Tuesday that decisions on class sizes should be left up to individual schools. Likewise, Macek said improving teacher quality would be a better focus for lawmakers than shrinking class sizes. Funding models Nikolai Vitti, the superintendent of the Detroit Public Schools Community District, said his district has been working intentionally to lower its class sizes. Michigan needs to create a more aggressive and better-funded teacher development and retention process so it has enough educators to lower class sizes, he said. "This can be assisted by funding districts and schools with a class size cap in mind," said Vitti, who has led Michigan's largest school district for nearly eight years. Michigan lawmakers primarily fund school districts through an annual budget that's based on a per-pupil foundation allowance. Districts get base-level funding of $9,608 per student. So whether that student is in a class with 15 other children or in a class with 30 others, the base funding remains the same, giving schools little direct financial incentive to shrink the size of classes. The state could supplement the per-pupil model with a class-size-ratio-funding model, tying some portion of the money to class sizes, Vitti said. Multiple superintendents told The News that one obstacle to pursuing smaller class sizes in Michigan is the unpredictability of state funding. Michigan lawmakers decide independently each year how much funding schools will get for the next school year and the overall funding level is tied to enrollment, which can swing from year to year. The per-pupil funding approach, adopted as part of Proposal A in 1994, was based in part on holding schools accountable by having the money follow the student, whose family could decide to switch districts if they were dissatisfied. Schools need additional taxpayer support but also "sustained and predictable" funding, said Matthew Lobban, the superintendent of Davison Community Schools in Genesee County. "With reliable funding, we could recruit and retain more instructional, intervention and support staff, ensuring that students receive the targeted academic and behavioral supports they need," Lobban said. 'Where the rub is' Lawmakers took steps last year to give school districts the ability to use some of the dollars they receive for economically disadvantaged students to lower class sizes, said Sen. Darrin Camilleri, a Trenton Democrat and former teacher who chairs the Senate subcommittee that crafts the annual budget for Michigan's K-12 schools. In next year's state budget, which will be debated in the coming months, Camilleri said he wants to find additional funding for decreasing class sizes in Michigan. Lowering class sizes leads to better academic outcomes, the Downriver lawmaker said. "That is the clearest data that we can find," Camilleri said of the strategy. The Democratic-led Michigan Senate and the Republican-controlled state House will have to work together on the upcoming budget. State Rep. Tim Kelly, R-Saginaw Township, chairman of the state House Appropriations Subcommittee on School Aid, said Tuesday he is open to hearing more about Polehanki's idea of capping class sizes for high-poverty schools. "I'm not going to say to hell with that," Kelly said. Most people believe small class sizes will lead to better outcomes, the Republican legislator said. Asked if he agreed with that idea, Kelly responded, "Overall, yeah." "But I think if you have a highly effective teacher, it really doesn't matter," Kelly said. "That's where the rub is." cmauger@detroitnews.com Staff Writer Beth LeBlanc contributed. Want to comment on this story? Become a subscriber today. Click here. This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Key Michigan lawmakers seek action on crowded elementary school classes

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Michigan's state superintendent of schools will retire in October Lansing — Michael Rice, Michigan's superintendent of public instruction and the leader of the state's Department of Education, announced Friday that he plans to retire from his position on Oct. 3. Rice has had the job since 2019, when the State Board of Education selected him out of dozens of applicants. He was previously the superintendent of Kalamazoo Public Schools. Rice's upcoming departure means the state board will have to pick a replacement amid intensifying pressure, from both sides of the aisle, to improve test scores in Michigan's schools. For the average reading score of fourth-graders, Michigan ranked 44th among the 50 states in 2024, according to the results of the National Assessment of Educational Progress. “It’s been an honor to serve Michigan’s 1.4 million public school children over the last six school years," Rice said on Friday. "It’s been a privilege to work with the State Board of Education and the state’s talented teachers, students, parents, administrators, support staff, Gov. Whitmer, state legislators, education organizations, broader community and the dedicated staff of the Michigan Department of Education, small in number but mighty in battle, to improve education for our children." A list of Rice's accomplishments, provided by the Michigan Department of Education, included the state reaching its highest four-year graduation rate in history, 82.8%, in 2024. Pamela Pugh, president of the State Board of Education, said Rice had demonstrated a "steadfast commitment to putting children first" "From record-high graduation rates to greater investments in public schools, the passage of monumental literacy legislation into law, teacher shortage rectification measures, the advocacy for and expansion of career and technical education, Advanced Placement, dual enrollment, and other forms of secondary school rigor and expanded mental health services in schools, Dr. Rice’s leadership has delivered transformative outcomes and laid pathways for continued improvement to Michigan schools," Pugh said. But Rice has drawn criticism during his tenure in the superintendent post, especially from Republicans who've contended he hasn't done enough to improve test scores after interruptions in in-person learning during the COVID-19 pandemic. At a Michigan House committee hearing last month, Rep. Timmy Beson, R-Bay City, asked Rice, "How do we keep going the wrong way and you still have a job, sir?" Rice countered that chronic absenteeism in Michigan schools had declined and graduation rates had increased. "Based on a number metrics, we're going in the right way," Rice said. Rice began his career in education as a high school French teacher and speech and debate program founder and coach in the Washington, D.C., public schools. He spent five years as a school superintendent in Clifton, N.J. before leading the Kalamazoo school district for 12 years. Rice's tenure also saw Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer create a new and separate state department focused on promoting pre-kindergarten access and higher education in Michigan, seemingly shifting some oversight away from the Michigan Department of Education, which doesn't fall under the governor's powers. Under the Michigan Constitution, it's the eight-member State Board of Education, currently controlled by Democrats, that has the ability to appoint the superintendent of public instruction. cmauger@detroitnews.com Staff Writer Jennifer Chambers contributed. Want to comment on this story? Become a subscriber today. Click here. This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Michigan's state superintendent of schools will retire in October

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Michigan schools could lose up to $42M in federal pandemic reimbursement funds More than two dozen Michigan school districts face losing nearly $42 million in reimbursement for federal pandemic relief funds after the U.S. Education Secretary Linda McMahon rescinded a previously set deadline. Michigan education officials said state education agencies across the country, including the Michigan Department of Education, received a communication from McMahon late Friday announcing that the deadline for reimbursement requests for Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations and American Rescue Plan funds had been changed from March 28, 2026, to one full year earlier — which meant March 28, 2025. McMahon wrote that the extended deadline “was not justified” and that states and school districts “have had ample time to liquidate obligations,” according to a copy of the letter obtained by Education Week. “By failing to meet the clear deadline in the regulation, you ran the risk that the Department would deny your extension request,” McMahon said in the letter, according to Education Week. “Extending deadlines for COVID-related grants, which are in fact taxpayer funds, years after the COVID pandemic ended is not consistent with the Department’s priorities and thus not a worthwhile exercise of its discretion.” Like some other states, Michigan had been approved to submit delayed requests for late reimbursement of their pre-approved projects, state superintendent Michael F. Rice said in a statement on Monday. "Walking back a federal commitment to pandemic relief funds to improve the air quality, healthfulness, and safety of schools coming out of the pandemic is unacceptable," Rice said in a statement. "Michigan’s children stand to lose more than $40 million. Twenty-seven districts across the state have preapproved financial obligations that met criteria set by the U.S. Department of Education for extending the districts’ deadlines to request reimbursement of these funds. Instead, Secretary McMahon and the Trump Administration abruptly withdrew approval. These funds were approved to be spent on projects including heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, boilers, and windows." Rice said the 27 districts entered into contracts with the understanding that their pre-approved projects would be reimbursed by the federal government. A change in administrations should not void previous commitments, Rice said. Without the reimbursement, Rice said districts may be forced to reduce instructional expenditures for students, diminish savings or both to honor these contracts. Under funds from the American Rescue Plan, Flint Community Schools could lose $15.6 million in reimbursement, while the Hamtramck School District faces a reimbursement loss of $7.2 million. Under funds from the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations, West Bloomfield School District could lose $734,015 in reimbursement. The full list of districts that expect reimbursement for American Rescue Plan funds includes Battle Creek Public Schools, $3.38 million; Benton Harbor Area Schools, $4.57 million; Bridgeport-Spaulding Schools, $543,527; Brighton Area Schools, $1.19 million; Chandler Park Academy, $1 million; Lincoln Park School District, $1.39 million; Pontiac School District, $3.2 million; Port Huron Area Schools, $497,205; Reed City Area Schools, $58,469 and Woodhaven-Brownstown Schools, $1.25 million. Districts seeking reimbursement for Covid relief funds include: Adrian Public Schools; $7,281; Carman-Ainsworth Comm. Schools, $234,818; Grandville Public Schools, $24,545; Greenville Public Schools, $24,022; Insight School of Michigan, $33,363; Marquette Area Public Schools, $9,912; Marysville Public Schools, $367,159; Michigan Great Lakes Virtual Academy, $79,928; Northville Public Schools, $62,650; River Rouge, City School District, $28,772; Royal Oak Schools, $44,398; Van Buren Public Schools, $90,000; Wayland Union Schools, $66,135; and Whiteford Agricultural School District, $98,143. McMahon has been tasked by President Donald Trump to close the federal education department and return the authority over education to the states. Trump ordered McMahon to continue to deliver services, programs and benefits "uninterrupted" and requires that any programs or activities receiving any remaining federal education funds not advance diversity, equity and inclusion or gender ideology. The move follows the layoffs of half of the department's 4,133-member staff on March 11. jchambers@detroitnews.com This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Michigan schools could lose up to $42M in federal pandemic reimbursement funds

Michigan schools could lose up to $42M in federal pandemic reimbursement funds #MichiganEducation #PandemicRelief #FederalFunding

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Michigan's K-12 schools need $22.8B in repairs, statewide facilities study says Michigan's K-12 school buildings need $22.8 billion in repairs, renovations or replacement, according to the state's first school facilities study released this week. The nonprofit School Finance Research Foundation, a coalition of 12 regional superintendents who launched the study, announced the figure on Thursday during a virtual media roundtable where they discussed results of an 18-month comprehensive look at the state's 2,534 school buildings. According to the study, 26 schools need to be replaced at a construction cost of $208 million. For 2,508 buildings, the analysis determined that repairing the facilities was the most cost-effectivesolution to bring them to a common health, safety and wellness standard. That cost is $22.6 billion. Of the 26 schools, 6 are in Metro Detroit, 16 are outstate in the Lower Peninsula and four in the Upper Peninsula. The report did not break down suggested repair or replacement status for specific schools; that data will be released to local districts, according to Christopher Behnan, a spokesman for the foundation. The largest drivers of repair costs are HVAC ($7.5 billion), roofing ($3.4 billion), and electrical improvements ($2.8 billion). Of the repairs, 23.3% ($5.3 billion) are needed in the next three years, 30.5% ($6.9 billion) are needed in the next four to six years and 46.2% ($10.5 billion) are needed within the next seven to nine years, the study says. Ken Gutman, Oakland Schools superintendent, said students deserve to learn in schools that meet safety, health and wellness standards. "The SFRF comprehensive facility assessment illustrates there is much work to do to ensure every student in Michigan has access to a facility that helps them learn, grow and achieve," Gutman said. Officials said 552 districts were included in the study, which represents 93% of traditional public schools. Charter schools were not included, official said, because their buildings are not publicly owned. From a geographic perspective, the total cost repairing and replacing is centered aroundmajor metro areas where there is a higher concentration of students and schools, most notably Metro Detroit. However, the cost per student is spread throughout the state, with many districts in northern Michigan having the highest need per student. Across Michigan, 243 million square feet of school building space was assessed by 1,500 people from 33 engineering teams that walked through every school building to identify aging or unsafe infrastructure, needed safety or security upgrades, and unused space that could be repurposed. Only instructional space was included. Athletic fields, playgrounds and other non-learning areas were not, officials said. Engineers inspected and collected data on in every participating building. They looked at HVAC, including boilers, ventilation, piping and temperature controls; roofing; electrical, including emergency lighting, exterior building lighting, fire alarms, security cameras and emergency generators; and plumbing, including toilets, sinks, faucets and water heaters. The review also included exterior closures, including exterior walls, windows, exterior doors, overhead doors, and secure entry points; interior construction; fire protection; site improvements; and floor construction framing, roof construction framing and canopies. Other building components, including foundations, tunnels, staircases, elevators, window treatments, auditoriums and kitchens were also included. "This study will help educate the policymakers, school community and general public about the critical infrastructure needs facing so many of our schools," said Steven Ezikian, executive director of the foundation. "We look forward to working with school leaders across Michigan to make school facilities an important part of the school funding conversation in 2025 and beyond. We encourage policymakers, school leaders, members of the media and the public to use this groundbreaking study as a resource for shaping important public policy discussions that affect our students for generations to come." In 2023, the Michigan Legislature approved $20 million for the study. Michigan is one of a dozen states that provide no state aid for facilities, according to a Michigan State University report on school finance. Building repairs for local school district facilities are the responsibility of each local district. School districts, with voter approval, can levy debt or sinking fund property taxes to pay for facilities and capital improvements. Charter schools, which are independent public schools, can't levy property taxes for their buildings. Foundation officials said the facilities study builds on the findings of the 2018 School Finance Research Collaborative study, which determined the true cost to educate a child in Michigan. Superintendents said they hope the study's results will give state lawmakers, state education officials and the public a better understanding of the condition of school infrastructure in Michigan and the need for improvements. "While this data gives us an invaluable look into the condition of Michigan’s schools, there is more work to be done," said Nick Ceglarek, Northwest Education Services superintendent. "It will take a collective effort from legislators, school officials and community leaders to make the investment needed to ensure facilities are maintained to a standard suitable for the health, safety and well-being of our students and staff." The goal is to improve in-person learning environments for students and staff across the state — especially after the pandemic, the Flint water contamination crisis and recent school safety incidents have raised concerns about protecting children and adults in buildings, officials said. "The health, safety and wellness of our students is our top priority,” said Daveda Colbert, Wayne RESA superintendent. “We know from experience and research that the condition of our schools and facilities, things like temperature, ventilation and air quality just to name a few, are key factors in health and morale, which lead to educational success." The study aligns with recommendations in the School Finance Research Collaborative's study of Michigan's school finances in 2018, along with its 2021 update, officials said. Detroit schools is spending $700 million in federal COVID funds on repairing aging school facilities and building new schools as part of its 20-year facilities master plan, an effort that aims to chip away at $2.1 billion in infrastructure needs there. jchambers@detroitnews.com This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Michigan's K-12 schools need $22.8B in repairs, statewide facilities study says

Michigan's K-12 schools need $22.8B in repairs, statewide facilities study says #MichiganEducation #K12Schools #SchoolRepairs

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Michigan educators, parents brace for federal education changes The proposed dissolution of the U.S. Department of Education is likely to touch every level of public education in Michigan, education experts said, from preschoolers to high schoolers to college borrowers. The specific effects of gutting the federal department that distributes billions in federal dollars to schools and colleges and manages the federal student loan portfolio may not be known for weeks or months as the changes work their way through Michigan schools and communities. President Donald Trump ordered his education secretary on Thursday to close the department and return the authority of education to the states. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters that the department will not be fully closed, which would require congressional approval, but said a smaller version will continue to administer “critical functions," according to the Washington Post. More: Trump orders plan to dismantle Education Department while keeping some core functions "Instead of maintaining the status quo that is failing American students, the Trump Administration’s bold plan will return education where it belongs — with individual states, which are best positioned to administer effective programs and services that benefit their own unique populations and needs," according to a Thursday White House statement. The order directs Education Secretary Linda McMahon to continue to deliver services, programs and benefits "uninterrupted" and requires that any programs or activities receiving any remaining federal education funds not advance diversity, equity and inclusion or gender ideology. The move follows the layoffs of half of the department's 4,133-member staff on March 11. Education observers in Michigan said preschoolers in Head Start, summer schoolers trying to make up pandemic learning losses, English language learners and high school seniors trying to access college and career education are expected to feel the pain of changes coming from cuts to the department that was created to ensure equal access to education. On Wednesday, about 40 educators and community members gathered outside a Warren elementary school wearing red and holding signs for passersby to protest the cuts and ask the public to support preserving the U.S. Department of Education and protect students and schools. Bob Callendar, president of the Warren Education Association, said cuts to federal grant programs through colleges have already taken away training opportunities for teachers who work with students whose first language is not English. "We are here to protect our students and our families, because that's really what it's all about as educators," Callendar said. "We deal with a large at-risk population, we deal with poverty, we deal with special education students, and there's a lot of supports and and things that come through federal funding." Nikolai Vitti, superintendent of Detroit Public Schools Community District, told The Detroit News that special student programming and services will remain untouched by the changes for the rest of the school year. But proposed federal cuts to Medicaid — which reimburses districts for special education services and other K-12 education funding — might lead to larger class sizes, reduced transportation and less staffing, Vitti said. It could also mean fewer programs for early childhood, after school and summer school students, Vitti said. "The district will do everything it can to protect staffing and student programming for all K-12 students, including those with special needs, for at least a year (next year) through our fund balance (rainy day fund)," Vitti said in an email. "However, we would need to be better supported through state funding and eventually see federal funding levels restored (possibly after mid-term elections) for us to protect staffing levels and student programming beyond a year." Michigan House Speaker Matt Hall, R-Richland Township, told reporters Wednesday that the state would be better served by removing decision-making on education issues from the federal level and putting it in the hands of local and state officials. "We should all support bringing those decisions down to the local level and the state level," Hall said. "What a great opportunity we would have for the state of Michigan if they eliminate the federal Department of Education and they take that money and they bring it down to states and they give states’ discretion on how to use that money." The Republican-controlled Michigan House adopted a resolution Thursday by voice vote that supports "the devolution of power from the United States Department of Education" and asks Congress to cooperate with those efforts. Waiting on Congress Federal education budget cuts would have an impact on all students, not just those for whom the funds are dedicated, said Glenn Maleyko, former president of the Michigan Association of Superintendents and Administrators and current superintendent of Dearborn Public Schools. "I was just at a special education facility today. There are students with great needs," Maleyko said Tuesday. "What will happen is this — there's certain laws on the books we have to continue to provide services for special ed students. So students that are not special ed also lose services because now you're going be required to use general funding dollars from the state to make up the difference. So it's really going to be an unfunded mandate by the federal government if they do make these cuts." It is difficult to predict the exact changes coming for students and schools after half the federal education workforce was fired, said Molly Macek, education policy director at the fiscally conservative Mackinac Center for Public Policy in Midland. But she said it is important for K-12 districts and colleges to understand the Trump administration does not have the power to close or dismantle the department. "This reduction in workforce does not doesn't equate to a change in a funding — that's available for the programs that are in our schools," Macek said. "Congress has not made a decision yet about the department's budget and how those programs are funded. We're not we're not seeing any changes in how programs can be administered at the district level." Laws passed by Congress, including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, remain in place and will still protect students, the Mackinac Center expert said. Enforcement of that law could be handled by another federal department. "There's a civil rights law in place that prevents schools from discriminating against students with disabilities, so that law is still in place that hasn't been changed," Macek said. "By the law, they must still have their IEP's and be receive those accommodations that are in it." The changes being made by the Trump administration will lead to a more decentralized education system, giving the states more control over their own students, she said. "So the positive of limiting the control of the federal government is that states have greater control over the policies or even individual districts have greater control over the policies that they're able to implement," Macek said. "This gives greater autonomy to determine policies and implement policies that work best for their student population." Special education worries About 212,000 students with disabilities and 681,000 students from low-income families in Michigan are among the primary beneficiaries of federal education services and funding, according to Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel, who is among 21 attorneys general from across the nation challenging the dismantling of the federal education department through a lawsuit filed March 13. Federal funds for special education include support for assistive technology for students with disabilities, teacher salaries and benefits, transportation to help children receive services and programming, physical therapy and speech therapy services, and social workers to help manage students’ educational experience, Nessel said. The federal education department also supports students in rural communities by offering programs to help school districts that often lack the personnel and resources needed to compete for competitive grants. Nessel called Trump's executive order illegal, dangerous and reckless. Rochester parent Stephanie Onyx knows what the removal of special education services and support for her two children, Alexa and Drew, who have multiple disabilities, would mean for her family: regression. Both children get support from a host of services at school, from occupational therapy to speech therapy to specialized stander for her son and a special chair for her daughter to support their physical needs during the school day. They have one-on-one aides in their school districts, Troy and Rochester. "I'm just scared of what the future looks like for them," Onyx told The News this week. "I do the best I can as a parent, but I'm definitely not a professional and you know they have goals at school by trained professionals. I can't give that to them. They need that routine. They need the interaction." Diana Wright, who has nine adopted children who all require special education services or accommodations under federal law, says she fearful of what is to come for the education of all children with disabilities or special needs. Wright's children attend Wyandotte Public Schools, which she complimented as collaborative with her over her childrens' special education needs. She has called the superintendent to better understand what could be coming under the changes. Her children range from preschoolers to middle school students. "(The superintendent) said we're just going to keep doing what we do, providing what we provide," right said. "But we all know that once guidelines come down from the state to the county to the district, who knows. I believe that our special education staff as well as administration want do the right thing, but sometimes their hands are tied." Michael Rice, Michigan's state superintendent of instruction, wrote a letter to superintendents in mid-March saying the U.S. Department of Education staffing reductions foreshadow efforts to reduce federal funding to local schools and districts and that the downsizing is an effort to circumvent Congress's authority. "Funding and support from the U.S. Department of Education primarily benefit children who have greater needs and thus require more funding to educate," Rice said after the March 11 cuts. 'It's going to be the Wild West' It's not clear how the department's regulatory role in services for millions of students with disabilities, low-income kids and homeless children will be carried out with less staff. Some theorize the states will have to step in and carry out those duties including enforcement of civil rights issues in education. Vitti says the staffing cuts will mean less guidance and monitoring from the federal government. "This will likely mean that complaints filed by parents will be resolved more frequently at the state and district level without the federal government monitoring and involvement," Vitti said. Marcie Lipsitt, a special education advocate in Michigan who has filed hundreds of civil rights complaints with the federal education department on behalf of Michigan families, said she learned last week from an attorney that the entire staff of the U.S. Office of Civil Rights in Cleveland was fired. That office handled complaints for Michigan students. Lipsitt said staffers there told her no one could send external emails or contact parents and families. With the Cleveland office closed, and half the staff from the federal education department gone, Lipsitt said the future of any pending complaints remains uncertain. "The local impact is going to be and it's already starting — a lack of accountability. Parents are going to have to fight harder than they have had to fight in 60 years for their children and they are not prepared for that," Lipsitt said. Dismantling the federal department and sending control over special education enforcement to the 50 states will result in different rules state to state, Lipsitt predicts. And students with disabilities and children who are economically disadvantaged will see their public school supports destroyed, she said. "It's going to be a total free for all," she said. "It's going to be the Wild West and can you imagine if 50 states have authority? You'll have 50 states of education in America." 'Hundreds of millions' at risk in Michigan White House officials said the department of education will continue to deliver on all statutory programs that fall under the agency’s purview, including student loans, Pell Grants, funding for special needs students and competitive grantmaking. The University of Michigan and Grand Valley State University are among more than 50 universities nationwide that are being investigated for alleged racial discrimination as part of Trump’s campaign to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs that his officials say exclude White and Asian American students. The Education Department announced the new investigations on March 14, one month after issuing a memo warning America’s schools and colleges that they could lose federal money over “race-based preferences” in admissions, scholarships or any aspect of student life. “Students must be assessed according to merit and accomplishment, not prejudged by the color of their skin,” McMahon said in a statement. “We will not yield on this commitment.” Josh Cowen, professor of education policy at Michigan State University’s College of Education, says he sees Trump’s latest actions as a sign he intends to make good on his campaign promise to abolish the department and to issues executive orders that create legal and policy uncertainty around funding for children in local schools and communities. Cowen said the draft order directs McMahon to create a plan for eliminating whatever the administration can do on its own. McMahon is to pay special attention to any programs that might fall afoul of the administration’s earlier orders on diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, initiatives, Cowen said. "In Michigan, hundreds of millions of dollars may be at risk. Whether the U.S. Department of Education still technically exists, it will be a shell of itself," Cowen said in a statement. "Once regional offices close and jobs are cut, supports and services are no longer guaranteed in a timely manner. How these changes ripple through Michigan schools and communities will be a developing and ongoing story over the coming weeks and months." Staff Writer Beth LeBlanc contributed. jchambers@detroitnews.com This article originally appeared on The Detroit News: Michigan educators, parents brace for federal education changes

Michigan educators, parents brace for federal education changes #MichiganEducation #FederalEducationChanges #PublicEducation

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Michigan reports record high school graduation rate Michigan's high school graduation rate in 2024 increased to a record high of nearly 83%, according to data released Friday by the state Department of Education. The Center for Educational Performance and Information reported a four-year graduation rate…

Michigan's high school graduation rate in 2024 increased to a record high of nearly 83%, according to data released Friday by the state Department of Education.


The Center for Educational Performance and Information reported a four-year… #MichiganEducation #GraduationRate #HighSchoolGraduation

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Trump administration order to ax DEI programs in schools has Michigan educators scrambling A Trump administration order giving Michigan schools and universities until the end of the month to dump diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money is creating confusion and prompting some applause from conservatives as educators scramble to…

A Trump administration order giving Michigan schools and universities until the end of the month to dump diversity initiatives or risk losing federal money is creating confusion and prompting some applause from conservatives as educators scramble… #TrumpAdministration #DEIPrograms #MichiganEducation

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Michigan drops in national reading ranking, improves in 4th grade math Michigan reflected a nationwide trend when it saw student test scores decline for fourth- and eighth-graders in reading and for eighth-graders in math between 2022 and 2024, according to national test results released Wednesday. The only bright spot…

Michigan reflected a nationwide trend when it saw student test scores decline for fourth- and eighth-graders in reading and for eighth-graders in math between 2022 and 2024, according to national test results released Wednesday.


The… #MichiganEducation #NationalAssessment #EducationStatistics

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Finley: Michigan fights for right to cheat special ed kids Nowhere is Michigan's education failure more pronounced than in its disregard of special education students. The four-year graduation rate for Michigan students with disabilities is 56%, a full 15 percentage points below the national average.…

Nowhere is Michigan's education failure more pronounced than in its disregard of special education students.


The four-year graduation rate for Michigan students with disabilities is 56%, a full 15 percentage points below the national average.… #SpecialEducation #EducationReform #MichiganEducation

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How Charter Schools Are Reshaping Michigan’s Public School Landscape Charter schools now educate nearly half of Detroit’s students, prompting debates on funding, accountability, and educational quality compared to traditional public schools in Michigan.

Charter schools now educate nearly half of Detroit's students, but at what cost to Michigan's public schools? Dive into the debate over funding, equity, and the future of education in the Great Lakes State.

#MichiganEducation #CharterSchools #PublicSchools

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