Latest News and Comment from Education

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 15 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 15, 2026

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER


U.S. NEWS

  • Ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict escalates with fresh American strikes on Iranian military targets, including coastal defenses, barracks, and sites near the Strait of Hormuz; Iran retaliates with attacks on U.S. bases in the region.
  • Northeast heatwave and energy bill concerns; local incidents like a double homicide in Connecticut and a Maine ICE shooting reported.
  • House passes bipartisan daylight saving time bill; Reflecting Pool in D.C. drained again.
  • Parasite (Cyclospora) outbreak linked possibly to lettuce/salad greens causing widespread diarrhea.
  • Federal Register updates and ongoing Trump administration actions on federal employees.
  • Daylight Saving Time Debate Reaches House Floor: The U.S. House Committee voted to advance the Sunshine Protection Act to the full House floor this week. Backed by President Trump, the bipartisan bill aims to make Daylight Saving Time permanent nationwide, ending the twice-yearly clock changes, though critics note it will result in significantly darker winter mornings for northern states.

  • Minnesota Wildfire Emergency Extension: Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and the Executive Council are voting today on a critical 30-day extension of the state's peacetime emergency. Lightning-sparked wildfires have burned thousands of acres since early July, forcing evacuations east of Ely and completely closing the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.

  • Multistate 23andMe Data Breach Settlement: Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced the state will receive its share of an $18 million multistate settlement with the bankrupt genetic testing company 23andMe. The settlement follows an investigation revealing the company lacked key safeguards before a breach exposed data belonging to nearly 7 million people.

  • Fatal Incident Following Mental Health Crisis in Burnsville: A major public safety response in Burnsville, Minnesota turned fatal after tactical teams attempted to negotiate with an armed individual experiencing a mental health crisis. After police pulled back to de-escalate, a house fire broke out, resulting in one fatality that is currently under investigation.

POLITICS

  • Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) dies suddenly at 71 from aortic dissection after brief illness; triggers special primary, interim appointment (his sister mentioned), and conspiracy theories online. Tributes from Trump and others.
  • Trump administration escalates Iran strikes and reimposes naval blockade; notifies Congress under War Powers Resolution.
  • Trump hosts IndyCar racers; reshapes federal employee rules; Maine Democrats navigate post-Graham dynamics.
  • Rubio hosts summit on political violence; education department regulatory agenda advances.
  • GOP Unveils Legislation to Dismantle Federal Education Roles: House Republicans unveiled a sweeping series of bills aimed at shifting the Department of labor and Education responsibilities to various state and alternative agencies. The legislative package is a long-shot effort to drastically alter federal oversight and return targeted education funding frameworks entirely to the states.

  • House Marks Up "Less Bureaucracy, Better Education" Package: The House Committee on Education and the Workforce, chaired by Rep. Tim Walberg (R-MI), is officially marking up a 10-bill legislative package today. The package includes specific acts aimed at K-12, higher education, and workforce development to begin the statutory process of codifying the administration's platform of decentralizing federal education policy.

  • Bipartisan Senate Duo Introduces Prior Learning Aid Bill: Senators introduced the Credit for Prior Learning Act, a rare bipartisan push in higher education policy. The bill would allow students to utilize a set portion of federal financial aid to cover testing fees and assessments for learning acquired outside traditional college classrooms.

  • States Push for Alternative College Accreditation: A coalition of conservative states is actively advancing proposals to establish a brand-new regional college accreditation agency. The push stems from ongoing political friction over diversity criteria and curricula standards set by traditional, established accreditors.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S.-Iran war intensifies: Strikes, naval blockade of Iranian ports, threats to energy exports via Strait of Hormuz; Iran attacks shipping and U.S. bases.
  • Ongoing Middle East tensions, including potential impacts on global energy and shipping.
  • International reactions to Graham's death and U.S. policy shifts.
  • U.S. Reimposes Naval Blockade on Iran: The U.S. military has officially reimposed a strict naval blockade on Iran and intensified its airstrike campaign following renewed Iranian attacks on commercial vessels. Overnight and daytime strikes hit defense infrastructure, missile sites, and a mechanized infantry brigade barracks, killing at least seven troops.

  • Iran Threatens Global Energy Exports: In response to the U.S. naval blockade, Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard issued a stark warning that it could halt all energy exports from the Middle East, stating oil and gas exports will be "either for everyone or for no one". The escalating conflict has already driven international Brent crude oil prices past $85 a barrel.

  • Missile Alerts Dynamic in the Gulf: Regional defense systems were heavily engaged as missile alert warnings sounded across Bahrain and Kuwait due to incoming Iranian fire targeting nations hosting U.S. forces. Meanwhile, Jordan confirmed its military successfully shot down three incoming Iranian missiles traversing its airspace.

  • Germany and Japan Arrange Security Summit: Diplomatic sources confirmed that Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi are finalizing a high-level summit in Tokyo for late October. The talks are expected to center on joint military drone development and deeper defensive alignment against maritime pressures from China and Russia's ongoing operations.

  • Japan Enacts Strict Sewer Infrastructure Law: The Japanese parliament formally adopted a revised Sewerage Act to mandate aggressive inspections and public disclosure of pipe conditions. The unified federal standards follow a fatal, high-profile sinkhole accident caused by severe underground pipe corrosion.

EDUCATION

  • CBSE (India) three-language policy: Students must pass third-language assessment for Class 10 certificates from 2027–28; aligns with NEP and Supreme Court.
  • U.S. Department of Education regulatory agenda: Changes to accreditation, diversity initiatives, Title VI; higher ed fraud summit and flexibilities for states.
  • House GOP efforts to unwind Education Department; debates on teachers' pay/summer breaks.
  • University of Chicago Law School Bans Tech in Classrooms: In a direct counter-strategy to the proliferation of generative artificial intelligence software, the University of Chicago Law School has taken the strict step of completely prohibiting laptops, tablets, and phones in several core classrooms to preserve traditional analytical writing and thinking.

  • Mass Exodus from SAVE Student Loan Program: New financial sector data shows nearly one million federal student loan borrowers have officially exited the administration's SAVE repayment program over the last few months. The migration comes as borrowers seek alternative, stable repayment structures amidst intense, unresolved federal court litigation over the program's legality.

  • Higher Education Warns Against Political Control of Grants: The American Council on Education (ACE) and several university groups issued formal warnings regarding a White House proposal updating uniform research grant guidance. Experts argue the rules could drastically weaken U.S. research infrastructure by introducing political control mechanisms over federal scientific grants.

  • International Student Applications Plummet: A newly released report by the Institute of International Education (IIE) indicates that over 60% of U.S. colleges and universities are experiencing a noticeable drop in international student applications. The decline is forcing institutions to rapidly recalibrate their global recruitment and enrollment funding strategies.

  • Friction Over Graduate Student Loan Caps: The Department of Education has urged universities to begin voluntarily implementing strict new cap limits on federal graduate student loans when distributing financial aid. However, major college associations are pushing back, calling the current list of affected "professional" degrees incomplete and financially disruptive.

ECONOMY

  • Stocks higher on easing June CPI/PPI inflation data; bank earnings strong; focus on Fed testimony and upcoming reports.
  • Iran conflict impacts: Rising oil/gas prices, threats to Hormuz shipping/energy exports.
  • India-UK trade deal effective; wholesale inflation notes; global market reactions to geopolitics.
  • China's Q2 GDP Growth Stalls Below Target: China’s real economic growth rate decelerated to 4.3% year-on-year for the April-June quarter, dropping below Beijing's official 2026 economic target of 4.5% to 5%. The slowdown represents the nation's weakest economic expansion since the end of 2022, driven primarily by stubbornly weak domestic consumer consumption.

  • Oil Prices Surge Amid Strait of Hormuz Blockade: International energy markets reacted sharply to the military escalation in the Middle East, with Brent crude climbing well past 15% higher than pre-war baselines. Economists warn that global spare oil capacity is shrinking fast as inventories are drawn down to compensate for the choked shipping corridor.

  • Unreported Business Funds Spark Felony Tax Fraud Charges: An investigation by the Minnesota Department of Revenue culminated in felony tax fraud charges against four business operators. Prosecutors allege that over $10 million moved through a complex network of family-controlled accounts, concealing income while drawing from public childcare and nutrition funds.

  • Historical BOJ Negative Rate Minutes Released: The Bank of Japan released highly anticipated historical policy minutes detailing the internal friction behind its famous 2016 negative interest rate rollout. The records show a fierce 5-4 split, exposing deep early warnings from policymakers who argued the unorthodox easing could signal that central bank options had hit a dead end.

TECHNOLOGY

  • ASML (tech/chips) in focus amid earnings and market moves; broader chip sector optimism (e.g., SK Hynix).
  • AI-driven cyber defense events and regulations; Education Dept. using AI in pilots (with issues).
  • Ongoing tech stock influences from inflation data and geopolitics.
  • AI Training Delivers Measurable Economic Mobility: On World Youth Skills Day, global data partners released new tracking metrics showing that structured, skills-based digital training programs are successfully driving long-term earnings and employment stability for younger workers. The data indicates these targeted programs give young workers a distinct edge even as automation changes entry-level structures.

  • HR Leaders Project Total Evolution of Entry-Level Work: A comprehensive labor study conducted by Cognizant and Pearson reveals that 94% of human resources leaders expect AI to continuously invent entirely new junior roles. Rather than executing routine data tasks, incoming professionals are increasingly expected to focus on supervising, auditing, and collaborating directly with automated AI systems.

  • Corporate Upskilling Initiatives Expand to Meet Shortfalls: Due to a growing disconnect between existing workforce skills and the technical demands of new enterprise infrastructure, major technology firms are doubling down on community giving and educational partnerships. The Synapse initiative announced it has expanded its baseline goal, aiming to technically upskill 2 million people globally by 2030.

HEALTH

  • Nationwide Cyclospora parasite outbreak possibly tied to lettuce/salad greens, causing severe diarrhea.
  • Blue Cross regains NC state health plan contract; CMS actions on AI in Medicare prior auth.
  • Cultural activities (museums, etc.) linked to healthier aging in older adults.
  • Infant Abuse Prevention Initiative Rolled Out: The Minnesota Department of Health launched an aggressive educational resource campaign tailored for parents and caregivers. The medical and public health program provides specialized training to help identify and prevent subtle signs of physical abuse in infants six months old and younger.

  • Department of Labor Floods Millions Into Healthcare Apprenticeships: Seeking to counter severe nationwide nursing and clinical staff shortages, the federal government directed fresh multi-million dollar grants toward specialized healthcare apprenticeship models. The programs allow clinical learners to earn wages while satisfying certification parameters outside standard tuition-heavy frameworks.

  • Extreme Heat Warning and Utility Safety Regulations: With historic heat domes settling across parts of the Midwest, public health departments issued severe heat advisories. State commerce departments activated emergency "hot weather rules," legally blocking utilities from disconnecting electricity or air conditioning services for nonpayment during life-threatening temperature spikes.

SPORTS

  • MLB: Japan vs. USA in World Collegiate Baseball; All-Star Game highlights, Home Run Derby (Jordan Walker winner).
  • ESPY Awards; Tour de France, Open Championship golf coverage.
  • WNBA and other league action; World Cup mentions in broader coverage.
  • WVU President Reflects on Historic College World Series Run: Marking his first anniversary in office, West Virginia University President Michael T. Benson published a prominent editorial tracking the university's major milestone year. Highlighting the institution's cultural momentum, he pointed specifically to the baseball team's historic, deep run at the Men’s College World Series in Omaha as a defining moment for the community.

  • Global Anticipation Builds Around Soccer Lineups: As regional and international soccer competitions heat up under various flags this summer, managers are finalizing tactical updates ahead of the next round of qualifying stages, drawing massive global media traffic and driving high engagement across sports networks.

News is fast-moving, especially around the Iran conflict and Graham's death—check reliable sources for latest updates.

EDUCATION SPECIAL
TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY
TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY


Top US Education News

  • Major Regulatory Push from the Department of Education: The U.S. Department of Education unveiled a comprehensive regulatory agenda outlining major policy overhauls. Key updates include plans to restructure college accreditation to allow new accrediting bodies to form, expand federal oversight concerning campus free speech and intellectual diversity, and relax the long-standing "90/10 rule" that caps federal revenue percentages for for-profit colleges.

  • Civil Rights Revisions Target Diversity Initiatives: The administration is leveraging Title VI regulations to target race-conscious and diversity-focused educational programs. Upcoming August rule changes aim to clarify the definition of discrimination to limit diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, alongside a plan to completely strip race-based eligibility requirements from the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program.

  • National Initiative Launching to Combat "Passing the Trash": The Office for Civil Rights launched a new national K-12 initiative targeted at adult sexual predators in schools. The legal guidance warns districts against the practice of "passing the trash"—allowing school employees accused of misconduct to quietly transfer to other schools or roles without full investigations or consequences.

  • Funding Shifts for Short-Term Credentials and K-12 Waivers: New provisions under the Working Families Tax Cuts Act went into effect, allowing federal funding eligibility to expand to short-term credential programs (such as EMT and automotive mechanics training). Concurrently, the federal government approved the "Returning Education to the States" waiver program, granting states like Arkansas increased flexibility over how they bundle and use federal education resources.

Top World Education News

  • UNESCO Sounds Alarm on Global Education Financing Crisis: At the Transforming Education Summit+4 in Paris, UNESCO revealed that 113 countries (representing over 6 billion people) are now spending more on international debt servicing than on their own national education budgets. In lower-income countries, interest and debt payments outpace school spending by nearly fourfold, creating severe underfunding for basic infrastructure and teacher pay.

  • Push for "Debt-for-Education" Swaps: In response to the funding crisis, UNESCO, with backing from the World Bank, urged global lenders to scale up debt-for-education swap mechanisms. These programs allow heavily indebted nations to refinance high-interest loans on the condition that the savings are directly funneled into building schools, funding teacher training, and supporting students.

  • Global Aid to Basic Education Drops Precipitously: UNESCO's Global Education Monitoring Report projects that international aid to education could plummet by up to 30% through 2027. Basic education aid fell 15% in the last measured cycle, with vulnerable nations like Afghanistan, Liberia, Mali, and Niger facing aid budget drops exceeding 40%.

  • Global Teacher Unions Demanding "Human-Centered" AI Frameworks: Meeting via the Education International network, international teacher unions and civil society groups issued a unified demand for binding global frameworks around generative artificial intelligence in the classroom. The coalitions warn that rapid tech adoption risks treating educators as administrative monitors rather than pedagogical guides, emphasizing that AI must support, rather than disrupt, core student-teacher relationships.



Arkansas Knew This Private School Harmed Students but Kept Sending Funds — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/arksansas-private-schools-vouchers-delta-institute-developing-brain-autism-harm 

FCC Officials Took Gifts From Paramount While It Had Business Before Them — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/paramount-mergers-fcc-kennedy-center-gala 

Should Epstein’s Friends Be Punished? An Elite Harvard Club Is Torn. - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/15/us/epstein-andrew-farkas-hasty-pudding-harvard.html 

Questions about spy agency loom over Jay Clayton hearing - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/15/jay-clayton-hearing-odni-00998294 

‘I’m staying out of Maine’: Chuck Schumer sidelines himself with the Senate majority on the line - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/15/chuck-schumer-maine-senate-platner-00998418 

Inside Anthropic’s state-by-state plan to ratchet up AI rules - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/15/inside-anthropics-state-by-state-plan-to-ratchet-up-ai-rules-00998415 

Newsom’s populist turn on tech - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/15/newsoms-populist-turn-on-tech-00997048 

Trump-promoted Freedom Fuel stations linked to Ravens coach and commodities trader - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/15/trump-promoted-freedom-fuel-stations-linked-to-ravens-coach-and-commodities-trader-00998334 

The People Fighting Back: Inside Maine’s Immigrant Defnse Movement - In These Times https://inthesetimes.com/article/the-people-fighting-back-inside-maines-immigrant-defense-movemente 

The Race to Stop AI’s Threats to Democracy – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/openai-chatgpt-sam-altman-artificial-intelligence-karen-hao-2026/ 

Nation’s Biggest Public Utility Just Doubled Down on Coal, Gas, and Nuclear – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/tennessee-valley-authority-public-utility-coal-gas-nuclear-power/ 


TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 15, 2026

TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS

JULY 15, 2026

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER


Here is a breakdown of the top news stories for July 15, 2026, organized strictly by your requested categories.

U.S. NEWS

  • U.S. Reimposes Iranian Port Blockade Amid Escalating Hostilities: Following intense overnight military exchanges, the United States has officially reinstated a maritime blockade on Iranian oil ports. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) confirmed a fresh wave of airstrikes targeting coastal surveillance, drone sites, and missile systems, with over 50,000 U.S. service members currently deployed across the Middle East theater.

  • New York Imposes Historic One-Year Ban on Large Data Centers: In a landmark environmental move, New York State has enacted a first-of-its-kind, twelve-month moratorium on the development of large-scale data centers. State legislators cited severe concerns over the localized energy grid capacity and water usage required to cool the rapidly expanding footprint of artificial intelligence infrastructure.

  • White House Launches "Gold Eagle" Cyber Initiative: The Biden administration officially launched the Gold Eagle Initiative, a new federal framework designed to coordinate cybersecurity vulnerability reporting and response across private sector infrastructure and government agencies.

  • Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante Monuments Modified: In a series of sweeping executive actions, the White House has issued new proclamations modifying the boundaries and land management rules of the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments in Utah, aiming to implement what the administration calls more "sensible land management".

  • Severe Summer Heat Alerts Blanket the Northeast and Midwest: Local health authorities, including in major metro areas like Baltimore, have declared urgent "Code Red" extreme heat warnings as a high-humidity dome pushes the heat index past 105 degrees Fahrenheit.

POLITICS

  • Blanche Formally Nominated for Attorney General with Law Enforcement Backing: Todd Blanche has been formally nominated to serve as the United States Attorney General, receiving public backing from a wide coalition of law enforcement organizations as his nomination heads to the U.S. Senate.

  • Senate Democrats Block Defense Bill Over Iran Escalation: Senate Democrats have blocked progress on a major defense authorization bill, voicing sharp concerns over the scale of U.S. military strikes in Iran and the legal framework for the ongoing operations.

  • House Panel Targets "DEI in Medical Schools": The House Committee on Education and the Workforce, alongside the Task Force on Defending Constitutional Rights, held a heated hearing titled "Training Activists, Not Physicians: The Impact of DEI on Medical Schools," as part of a broader congressional campaign targeting diversity initiatives in public and private institutions.

  • Federal Research Security Under Scrutiny in House Hearing: The House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) convened a major hearing on protecting American innovation, questioning officials from the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy, and National Institutes of Health about foreign espionage risks in federal research.

  • Mexico Initiates U.S. Legal Actions Over ICE Custody Deaths: The Mexican government has filed multiple formal complaints and issued cease-and-desist letters to U.S. authorities following the recent deaths of 17 Mexican citizens while in the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or during agency raids.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • Strait of Hormuz Fee Plan Shelved: The U.S. administration has walked back a highly controversial proposal to charge a 20% transit fee on commercial cargo moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Officials stated they will instead pursue direct economic and defense investment agreements with regional allies in exchange for maritime protection.

  • Ebola Outbreak in the DRC Threatens Region: The World Health Organization (WHO) issued a stark warning that the current Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is the fastest-growing ever recorded, cautioning that a majority of new infections are originating from untraceable chains of transmission.

  • Cuba Suffers Fifth Nationwide Power Grid Collapse of 2026: Cuba's energy grid has collapsed yet again, causing millions to lose power in the island's fifth major blackout this year. Cuban officials blamed a lack of fuel imports tied to a U.S. oil blockade on the country.

  • Resignations and Leadership Shifts in Ukraine and Lithuania: Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko has officially submitted her resignation to parliament. Meanwhile, in Lithuania, the newly appointed Prime Minister Mindaugas Sinkevicius and his 14-member cabinet officially took their oaths of office.

  • EU Approves Landmark Trade and Territorial Agreements: The Council of the European Union finalized an Interim Agreement on Trade with Mexico. Concurrently, the EU, Britain, and Spain signed a major treaty regulating Gibraltar’s post-Brexit status, which will officially remove routine border checks between Spain and Gibraltar.

EDUCATION

  • Sweeping Federal Education Deregulation Bills Fast-Tracked: The House Committee on Education and the Workforce is advancing a package of 10 major bills designed to drastically downsize the federal role in education. This package includes the Less Bureaucracy, Better K-12 Education Act and the Less Bureaucracy, Better Student Aid Act, which seek to transfer oversight of federal funding, workforce development, and student financial assistance directly to states and local districts.

  • Strict New Graduate and Parent PLUS Student Loan Limits Take Effect: Provisions from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act have officially taken effect, putting hard caps on federal borrowing. Graduate student borrowing is now restricted to $20,500 annually ($50,000 for specific professional programs), while Parent PLUS loans are now capped at $20,000 per year per student.

  • Loan Borrowing Now Prorated Based on "Enrollment Intensity": For the first time, federal student loan limits are being dynamically prorated for students enrolled less than full-time. Under the new rules, part-time students will only be eligible for a fraction of standard federal borrowing caps.

  • Federal Campaign Against Foreign Influence on College Campuses Escalates: House education committees are advancing bills targeting foreign money in higher education. The Less Bureaucracy, Better International Foreign Gift Transparency Act aims to tighten compliance and enforcement of Section 117, which tracks foreign donations and academic partnerships.

  • Department of Education Pauses Collections and Launches Auto-Pay Incentive: To help transition the estimated 9 million student loan borrowers currently in default, the Department of Education announced a 1% interest rate reduction for any borrowers who sign up for auto-pay before September 30, while maintaining a temporary freeze on wage garnishments.

ECONOMY

  • CPI Data Beats Expectations with Sharp Decline in Core Inflation: June's Consumer Price Index (CPI) report brought a sigh of relief to Wall Street. Annual headline inflation dropped sharply to 3.5% (down from May's 4.2%), while core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy, fell to 2.6%.

  • Crude Oil Spikes Above $80 on Re-established Iran Blockade: Despite the cooling CPI data, crude oil prices jumped over 3% to top $80 a barrel. Traders are reacting to the freshly re-imposed U.S. blockade on Iranian shipping, stoking fears of renewed energy-driven inflation.

  • Fed Chair Kevin Warsh Testifies Before Congress: In his highly anticipated semi-annual monetary policy address to Congress, Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh stated that the U.S. economy remains resilient and is expanding at a "solid pace". However, analysts believe the core CPI dip will allow the Fed to keep rates steady for now.

  • JPMorgan Chase Warns of Geopolitical Shocks and Sticky Inflation: Despite reporting solid quarterly earnings driven by investment banking and a 10% jump in net interest income, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon issued a stern warning about the persistent threat of geopolitical instability and "sticky" underlying inflation.

  • South Korea Boosts Growth Forecast on Semiconductor Boom: The South Korean government has officially upgraded its 2026 economic growth forecast to 3.0%, fueled by an unprecedented global export surge in memory chips. Concurrently, Samsung is reportedly exploring a potential secondary U.S. stock listing.

TECHNOLOGY

  • New England Fisheries Win $15 Million NSF "Seafood Engine" Tech Grant: The National Science Foundation awarded a major $15 million Regional Innovation Engine grant to the Northeastern Regional Association of Coastal Ocean Observing Systems (NERACOOS). The initiative aims to integrate artificial intelligence, advanced ocean sensors, robotics, and biotechnology into New England's historical commercial fishing sector to modernize the supply chain and reclaim U.S. competitiveness.

  • Pennsylvania Defense and Innovation Summit Convenes: Senator Dave McCormick opened the two-day summit at the U.S. Army War College, bringing together top military officials and tech executives. The summit's core focus is accelerating domestic production, advanced manufacturing, and robotics to fortify the U.S. defense industrial base.

  • House Explores "AI on Main Street" for Small Businesses: The House Committee on Small Business held a dedicated hearing mapping out how small-to-medium-sized businesses are integrating generative AI into daily workflows. The panel examined policies to bridge the technical divide so local enterprises can leverage automation.

  • Federal Patent Debate Focuses on "Genes to Machines": The U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary held a pivotal tech and medical hearing examining intellectual property rights and patent eligibility limits for AI-designed synthetic biology and machine learning code.

  • US-Russian Space Crew Launches successfully: In a rare display of bilateral cooperation amidst geopolitical tension, a joint NASA-Roscosmos space mission successfully launched a combined crew of U.S. and Russian astronauts into orbit from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.

HEALTH

  • HHS Issues Proposed 2027 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule: The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) released its highly anticipated proposed rule for calendar year 2027. The proposal seeks structural adjustments to Medicare payments, aiming to rebalance professional vs. technical payment components to optimize billing efficiency across physician offices and outpatient departments.

  • Senate Scrutinizes Foreign Ownership in Drug Supply Chain: The Senate Special Committee on Aging convened a hearing titled "Behind the Label: Foreign Ownership and Control in America's Drug Supply Chain," focusing on national security risks and quality control vulnerabilities in active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) imported from abroad.

  • Senate Evaluates New CDC and ASPR Nominations: The Senate HELP Committee held critical hearings to evaluate the nominations of Dr. Erica Schwartz to lead the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Sean Kaufman to serve as the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response (ASPR).

  • FDA's Biomedical Innovation Leadership Under Congressional Review: The House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Health is reviewing the FDA's administrative role in drug development, examining how the agency can streamline the approval of life-saving therapies ahead of upcoming drug user fee reauthorizations.

  • Code Red Heat Declarations Trigger Public Health Emergencies: City health commissioners in major urban centers have officially declared Code Red alerts, opening cooling centers and warning that high-humidity heat indexes exceeding 105°F present immediate cardiovascular and heat-stroke risks to vulnerable populations.

SPORTS

  • Spain Defeats France 2-0 to Advance to World Cup Final: Spain delivered a masterclass performance to defeat France 2-0 in the first semifinal match of the historic 2026 FIFA World Cup, securing their place in the final. Lamine Yamal and the Spanish squad shut down Kylian MbappĆ© and the French attack in front of a packed stadium.

  • England and Argentina Face Off in Blockbuster Second Semifinal: The second semifinal matchup of the 2026 World Cup features Harry Kane and England taking on Lionel Messi and defending champion Argentina in Atlanta. The match represents the first time the top four teams in the official FIFA rankings have filled all four semifinal spots.

  • FOX Sports Pulls Record Ratings for World Cup Broadcasts: Fox Sports announced that the 2026 World Cup is tracking toward historic viewership milestones, including drawing 21.7 million viewers for the England-Mexico Round of 16 match.

  • MLB Unveils All-Star Game Roster Selection: Major League Baseball officially released its final rosters for the 96th MLB Midsummer Classic, generating massive fan engagement and driving high sports-media ratings.

  • PGA Tour Prep Underway for Open Championship: Major contenders are arriving in the UK to begin their official practice rounds, adjusting to local links-style conditions ahead of the highly anticipated weekend tournament start.





Dan Froomkin: Trump Makes Crackpot Announcement, Then Backs Down https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/14/dan-froomkin-trump-makes-crackpot-announcement-then-backs-down/ via @dianeravitch 







Heather Cox Richardson: The Story of the 14th Amendment https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/14/heather-cox-richardson-the-story-of-the-14th-amendment/ via @dianeravitch 





Texas Tech Professors' Group Sues to Overturn Restrictions on Academic Freedom https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/14/texas-tech-professors-group-sues-to-overturn-restrictions-on-academic-freedom/ via @dianeravitch 





The Hartmann Report: Are We Living in a Police State Yet? https://dianeravitch.net/2026/07/14/the-hartmann-report-are-we-living-in-a-police-state-yet/ via @dianeravitch 





Big Education Ape: SLEEPY DON VS. SLEEPY JOE: THE GREAT AMERICAN NAP-OFF OF 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/sleepy-don-vs-sleepy-joe-great-american.html 






Big Education Ape: BUELLER? BUELLER? THE LONG, STRANGE TRIP FROM PLAYING HOOKY TO CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/bueller-bueller-long-strange-trip-from.html 






Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 14, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_01028142007.html




Big Education Ape: MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 14, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/morning-news-update-july-14-2026.html 






Trump's Budget Office Proposes New Rules to Block Grants Congress Has Already Funded https://janresseger.wordpress.com/2026/07/14/49163/ via @janresseger 






Vaping or smoking found to reduce fitness in young people by 15%      Education Research Report https://educationresearchreport.blogspot.com/ 






The Education Report  Does Anyone Who Lives in Tennessee Support Marsha Blackburn's Campaign? 72% of funds spent to help elect Blackburn come from out-of-state ANDY SPEARS https://theeducationreport.substack.com/p/does-anyone-who-lives-in-tennessee 





We All Know FIFA Is Completely Corrupt, But It Is Good To Hear That The World Cup Final Halftime Show Will Benefit Education & Literacy     Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007 https://larryferlazzo.edublogs.org/ 





Rest in Peace, Wai Ching Ho https://blog.angryasianman.com/2026/07/rest-in-peace-wai-ching-ho.html 










Second Breakfast: That Damned LMS Dependency | National Education Policy Center https://nepc.colorado.edu/blog/damned-lms-dependency 



















Union Matters     How Mulgrew and Unity Betrayed Retirees AND Paraprofessionals Let me count the ways. ARTHUR GOLDSTEIN https://arthurgoldstein.substack.com/p/how-mulgrew-and-unity-betrayed-retirees 








glen brown: "...It's a $1.776 Billion Fraud on the Court, and on Every American Taxpayer!" https://teacherpoetmusicianglenbrown.blogspot.com/2026/07/its-1776-billion-fraud-on-court-and-on.html 










Hargett Pitches 3-year, “Focused Bachelor’s Degrees” – Tennessee Education Report https://tnedreport.com/2026/07/hargett-pitches-3-year-focused-bachelors-degrees/ 









Dismantling the Dept of Ed: Ten Bills That Ask Zero Questions About What Happens to Kids Ten bills up for a vote this week would give school districts four federal agencies to deal with instead of one and eliminate the only Cabinet seat focused on children https://brucelesley.substack.com/p/dismantling-the-department-of-education 





Schools Matter: Tennessee, Exemplar for Meritocratic Rot http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2026/07/tennessee-exemplar-for-meritocratic-rot.html 










TRUMP IN THE NEWS TODAY
REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER


Top US Education News

  • House Committee Set to Vote on "Less Bureaucracy, Better Education" Package

    The House Committee on Education and the Workforce is holding a major markup session to consider a package of 10 bills designed to codify the transfer of federal education programs to other agencies. The legislative push includes bills like the Less Bureaucracy, Better K-12 Education Act and the Less Bureaucracy, Better Higher Education Act, aligning with broader administrative goals to ultimately dismantle or severely limit the U.S. Department of Education by outsourcing its responsibilities to the state level.

  • Backlash Grows Over Special Education Outsourcing

    A group of former federal officials who previously managed the implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) have sent a formal letter to Congress strongly opposing a new interagency agreement. The agreement shifts federal special education compliance, enforcement, and monitoring duties from the Department of Education to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Critics warn that the move threatens to fragment five decades of specialized infrastructure built to protect students with disabilities.

  • Multistate Lawsuit Filed Over Canceled Mental Health Grants

    A coalition of 15 states has filed a lawsuit targeting the sudden cancellation of federal school mental health grants. The legal challenge comes at a critical time as local school districts continue to grapple with high rates of chronic absenteeism and student wellness challenges stemming from post-pandemic recovery friction.

  • Title IX Implementation Frustrations Build

    With the August implementation deadline fast approaching, K-12 school districts across the country report mounting exhaustion and confusion over conflicting legal injunctions and a lack of clear operational guidance regarding compliance with the revised Title IX regulations.

Top World Education News

  • UNESCO Sounds Alarm Over Global "Debt-for-Education" Crisis

    At the Transforming Education Summit +4 in Paris, UNESCO issued an urgent call for international lenders to scale up "debt-for-education" swaps. New data reveals a severe global financing emergency: 113 countries—home to 6.1 billion people—now spend more money on servicing external debt than on funding public education for their populations. In the most heavily indebted low-income nations, debt payments outpace school spending fivefold.

  • Global Aid to Education Projected to Plunge 30%

    Compounding the financing crisis, UNESCO’s Global Education Monitoring Report projects that international development aid designated for education could drop by as much as 30% over the next two years. Funding for basic primary education has already cratered, with conflict-affected regions like Afghanistan, Mali, and Niger seeing aid drops exceeding 40%.

  • Education Unions Demand "Human-Centered" Guardrails for AI

    During international labor network sessions, global teacher unions formally petitioned international bodies to institute strict frameworks for Artificial Intelligence in the classroom. The unions argue that rapid, unregulated commercial AI deployment threatens pedagogical quality, asserting that any integration must keep the human teacher-student relationship at the foundational core rather than automating instructional delivery.

  • Gendered Inequity Fueling Global Teacher Shortages

    A new study presented by the Education International Research Network highlights that the severe global teacher shortage cannot be solved without addressing deeply entrenched systemic gender inequities. Researchers note that declining working conditions, stagnant pay structures, and unaddressed safety hazards disproportionately impact female educators, driving massive attrition rates worldwide.


How 7 young people feel about artificial intelligence : NPR https://www.npr.org/2026/07/14/nx-s1-5863025/teens-artificial-intelligence-ai-school 

Attack Ad Calls Climate Activist an Oil Investor Because of His 401(k) – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/william-lawrence-sunrise-climate-fossil-fuel-retirement-401k-attack-ad-pac/ 

“Huge Wave” of Carbon Storage Projects Sets off Alarms in Rural Indiana – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2026/07/carbon-capture-storage-projects-rural-clymers-indiana-opposition-risks-health-environment/

Executive power and its limits | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/executive-power-and-its-limits/ 

The biggest Supreme Court surprises this term | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/the-biggest-supreme-court-surprises-this-term/ 

K-12 California Educators Skeptical of Push to Bring Back SAT/ACT | LA School Report https://www.laschoolreport.com/k-12-california-educators-skeptical-of-push-to-bring-back-sat-act/

Inflation eased in June, helping Fed's Warsh delay potential rate hikes - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/inflation-fed-warsh-rates-iran-00995912 

Two cheers – but not three – for Roberts and Barrett | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/two-cheers-but-not-three-for-roberts-and-barrett/ 

Trump backtracks on plan to charge 20 percent fee for ships traveling through Strait of Hormuz - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/donald-trump-strait-of-hormuz-fee-backtrack-00996551 

Trump Administration Launches Crackdown on Teacher Sexual Misconduct — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-teacher-sexual-misconduct-crackdown-linda-mcmahon 

Don’t Look Away from Cuba - In These Times https://inthesetimes.com/article/cuba-raul-castro-trump-sanctions-invasion 

E. Jean Carroll receives the first of Trump’s millions - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/e-jean-carroll-donald-trump-payment-00996728 

Anthropic Introduces Claude for Teachers. https://edsurge.com/news/anthropic-introduces-claude-for-teachers?utm_campaign=site&utm_content=share-IMv4oMUCQeWnsk42JdAej via @EdSurge

Americans in Congo barred from immediately returning home - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/american-ebola-relief-workers-barred-from-returning-home-immediately-00997100 

Senate Dems block defense bill in protest of Iran war - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/senate-dems-block-defense-bill-protest-iran-war-00997134

Judges grow skeptical about DOJ’s use of grand juries - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/judges-grow-skeptical-about-doj-s-use-of-grand-juries 

The Ceasefire That Redrew Gaza - Progressive.org https://progressive.org/latest/the-ceasefire-that-redrew-gaza-salah-20260714/ 

Anthropic announces a new platform for teachers with free access... https://www.arabictrader.com/en/news/stock-market/223243/anthropic-announces-a-new-platform-for-teachers-with-free-access-for-a-year

Lawsuit: Meta Used AI For Discriminatory Layoffs – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/meta-lawsuit-ai-layoffs-medical-leave-disability-tech-termination/ 

Top Homeland Security Democrat Demands Cancellation of Massive DHS Self-Deportation Contract – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/bennie-thompson-demands-cancellation-of-massive-department-homeland-security-ice-self-deportation-contract-salus-worldwide/ 

Justices Kagan and Barrett testify before Congress | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/justices-kagan-and-barrett-testify-before-congress/ 

No end in sight for new Iran war - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/iran-war-strait-hormuz-00997750 

An Elite N.Y.C. Public School Admitted 777 Students. Only 3 Were Black. - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/14/nyregion/nyc-specialized-schools-black-hispanic.html 

Mahmoud Khalil Is Suing the White House and Heritage Foundation – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/mahmoud-khalil-lawsuit-conspiracy-heritage-betar-trump-canary/ 

What's in store for Todd Blanche’s confirmation hearing - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/todd-blanche-confirmation-hearing-attorney-general-00998340