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Sunday, June 14, 2026

LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2026


LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW

6-7-26 TO 6-13-26


BIG EDUCATION APE — WEEKLY ANALYSIS: JUNE 7–13, 2026
bigeducationape.blogspot.com

THE BLOG & ITS VOICE

Run by Mike Simpson, Big Education Ape is one of the most prolific and unapologetically progressive aggregators in the edublogosphere. It functions as a megaphone for grassroots public school advocacy, routinely amplifying content from allied platforms — Class Size Matters, the Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, Nancy Bailey's Education Website, Cloaking Inequity, Schools Matter, Glen Brown, and Nancy Flanagan, among others. The tone is sharp, satirical, and unsparing toward what the blog frames as the core enemies of public education: billionaire "vulture philanthropy," corporate ed-reform, privatization, and the dark-money networks that fund them. Education battles are never treated in isolation here — they're consistently linked to broader struggles over democracy, inequality, and who actually holds power.

THIS WEEK'S ORIGINAL POSTS

"The Emperor's New Cheers: A Field Guide to Selective Hearing" (June 13)
The week's most elaborate piece uses Donald Trump's appearance at a Knicks NBA Finals game at Madison Square Garden (June 8) as a launching pad for extended satire. The blog frames the crowd's audible boos — and Trump's apparent indifference to them from a luxury suite — as a master class in what it calls "acoustic faith": the powerful elite's practiced ability to reinterpret any public disapproval, whether boos, protests, or poll numbers, as validation. The security theater surrounding the event, the disruptions, and the insulated comfort of the suite are all woven into a critique of oligarchy, the privatization of public spaces, and the feedback-denial that lets elite decision-makers remain immune to accountability. The education tie-in is structural rather than explicit: the same dynamic, the blog argues, governs how billionaire reformers and policy insiders ignore community opposition to school privatization and top-down mandates.

"Cool Schools Rule: The Post-Pandemic School Attendance Crisis" (June 12)
This is the week's most substantive straight education-policy piece. Chronic absenteeism remains roughly double its pre-pandemic levels, with approximately one in five students missing 10% or more of the school year. The post forcefully rejects purely punitive responses — truancy courts, fines, legal pressure on families — and pivots toward root causes: habits disrupted by years of remote learning, ongoing family economic stress, mental health struggles, transportation barriers, and critically, deteriorating school building conditions. Heat, poor ventilation, and bad air quality are treated not as minor inconveniences but as genuine drivers of avoidance. The "cool schools" framework advocated here — climate-resilient buildings with upgraded HVAC systems — is positioned as both an equity issue and a practical attendance strategy. The piece also makes the systemic argument: chronic absenteeism doesn't just harm absent students, it destabilizes entire classrooms and renders every other reform effort less effective.

"When Billionaires Play God: A Twenty-Year Education in Vulture Philanthropy" (~June 11–12)
Timed to Bill Gates' June 10 congressional testimony — which touched on his connections to Jeffrey Epstein — this post broadens the lens to interrogate the entire model of billionaire intervention in public education and public goods. The blog characterizes decades of venture philanthropy not as generosity but as a "slow-motion heist," using private wealth to reshape public systems according to donor preferences rather than democratic input. It's a signature Big Education Ape frame: the problem isn't just Gates, it's the structural power that allows any billionaire to act as unelected education policymaker.

Other Posts This Week:

  • "Ghost of California..." (June 9) — California political commentary, focusing on Xavier Becerra's potential historic gubernatorial run.
  • "Will Trump Bring the Curse..." (June 8) — Satirical piece on Trump's MSG appearance, a precursor to the June 13 "Emperor's New Cheers" essay.
  • "Feedly, Flies, and the Fine Art of Dark Money Journalism" — Aggregation post surfacing dark-money investigative journalism.

THE THREE NATIONAL BATTLES DOMINATING THE FEED

Beyond original posts, the blog's aggregation activity this week concentrated heavily around three flashpoint issues:

1. The AI Moratorium & NYC Public Schools Backlash
A major thread running through syndicated content this week is the intensifying coalition pushback against Generative AI in K–12 classrooms. The blog has been amplifying activist criticism of the Department of Education's recently released AI guidance, which organizers are calling an "ineffective, contradictory check-the-box exercise." The demand being pushed through the feed: a formal two-year moratorium on AI tools in public schools, grounded in concerns about student cognitive development and data privacy. Schools Matter's call for a pause received prominent placement.

2. The PowerSchool / Naviance Settlement Fallout
Following the $17.25 million class-action settlement involving PowerSchool, Naviance, and Chicago Public Schools — centered on allegations of illegal ad-tracking and data-mining of student profiles — the blog has remained highly active on the story. This week's coverage focuses on the June claim-filing deadlines for affected families, with accompanying warnings about PowerSchool's new AI-powered chatbot, "PowerBuddy," framed as a continuation of the same data-exploitation model under a friendlier interface.

3. Pushback Against "Good Old Days" Testing Narratives
The blog is also syndicating sharp criticism of what it sees as a media-driven rehabilitation of No Child Left Behind–style standardized testing. As policymakers and some mainstream outlets (including the New York Times, in pieces the blog has targeted) point to recent drops in national test scores as justification for returning to NCLB-era accountability frameworks, Big Education Ape is amplifying counter-voices who argue this is historical revisionism in service of the same failed punitive model.

THEMES & ASSESSMENT

This week's output is characteristic of the blog at its most engaged. The throughline connecting original satire, policy analysis, and aggregated content is consistent: public schools are under sustained assault from billionaire influence, corporate data extraction, AI hype, and political theater — and the response must be community-based, democratically accountable, and grounded in the actual conditions students and teachers face daily. The infrastructure/attendance piece and the AI moratorium push both reflect this: before any reform conversation happens, kids need buildings that aren't making them sick, and systems that aren't surveilling them.

No major stylistic shifts this week. The blog remains what it has long been — relentlessly critical of market-driven education reform, attentive to on-the-ground realities, and willing to use satire as a serious analytical tool.


Big Education Ape: THE EMPEROR'S NEW CHEERS: A FIELD GUIDE TO SELECTIVE HEARING https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-emperors-new-cheers-field-guide-to.html 





Big Education Ape: THE TOP NEWS STORIES THIS WEEK 6-7-26 TO 6-13-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-top-news-stories-this-week-6-7-26.html 







Big Education Ape: COOL SCHOOLS RULE: THE POST-PANDEMIC SCHOOL ATTENDANCE CRISIS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/cool-schools-rule-post-pandemic-school.html




Big Education Ape: FEEDLY, FLIES, AND THE FINE ART OF DARK MONEY JOURNALISM https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/feedly-flies-and-fine-art-of-dark-money.html 






Big Education Ape: DONALD TRUMP, THE NEO-UGLY AMERICAN: BIGGER, LOUDER, AND SOMEHOW WORSE THAN EVER https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/donald-trump-neo-ugly-american-bigger.html 





Big Education Ape: WHEN BILLIONAIRES PLAY GOD: A TWENTY-YEAR EDUCATION IN VULTURE PHILANTHROPY, EPSTEIN ETHICS, AND THE SLOW-MOTION HEIST OF THE AMERICAN PUBLIC GOOD https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/when-billionaires-play-god-twenty-year.html 




Big Education Ape: HOW BILLIONAIRES BROKE AMERICAN SCHOOLS — AND ARE NOW SELLING YOU THE REPAIR KIT https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/how-billionaires-broke-american-schools.html 





Big Education Ape: GHOST OF CALIFORNIA: THE 180-YEAR WAIT IS ALMOST OVER https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/ghost-of-california-180-year-wait-is.html 






Big Education Ape: EL FANTASMA DE CALIFORNIA: LA ESPERA DE 180 AÑOS CASI TERMINA https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/el-fantasma-de-california-la-espera-de.html 





Big Education Ape: THE ROBOTS ARE COMING FOR YOUR DESK JOB (AND YOUR GOVERNMENT STILL HASN'T NOTICED) https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-robots-are-coming-for-your-desk-job.html 





Big Education Ape: WILL TRUMP BRING THE CURSE TO MSG TONIGHT? #GOKNICKS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/will-trump-bring-curse-to-msg-tonight.html 






Big Education Ape: SPEAK UP AND GET OUT: THE GREAT AMERICAN PURGE IN THE NATION'S 250TH YEAR https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/speak-up-and-get-out-great-american.html 





Big Education Ape: THE CALIFORNIA PRIMARY, THE BARN ROOF, AND THE VERY STABLE GENIUS OF ELECTION MELTDOWNS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/the-california-primary-barn-roof-and.html 





Big Education Ape: A COURT THAT DEFIES ITS OWN RULINGS HAS NO BUSINESS CALLING ITSELF SUPREME https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/a-court-that-defies-its-own-rulings-has.html 





Big Education Ape: LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/06/looking-back-week-in-review-sunday-june.html 







TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS
THE WEEK IN REVIEW

RETURNING SOON


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP 10 US EDUCATION NEWS
TOP 10 WORLD EDUCATION
6-7-26 TO 6-13-26

Here is a curated roundup of the major policy shifts, funding announcements, and systemic reports dominating domestic and global education discussions for the week of June 7, 2026, to June 13, 2026.

10 Major Developments in US Education News

  • U.S. Treasury Previews Federal Tax-Credit Scholarship Rules

    The U.S. Department of the Treasury dropped a highly anticipated regulatory preview for the federal choice program authorized by last summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The rules indicate that participating states will have very limited authority to place additional guardrails or operational requirements on the scholarship groups funding private tuition, delivering a significant win for school choice advocates.

  • Governors Clash Over Federal Choice Opt-Ins

    Tensions are mounting as the Treasury confirms that the new dollar-for-dollar tax-credit scholarships are only accessible if a state’s governor explicitly opts in. Currently, 19 governors have outright refused or withheld their intent (18 of whom are Democrats), arguing that the program—estimated to reach an annual cost of $4.4 billion by 2034—drains critical revenue from public school coffers.

  • House Committee Targets Parental Rights & School Content

    On June 10, the House Education and Workforce Committee, led by Representative Tim Walberg (R-MI), held a contentious hearing titled “Breaking Trust: Attacks on Parental Rights, Inappropriate Content, and Legal Abuses in America's Schools.” The hearing focused on expanding parental notification mandates, classroom curriculum boundaries, and legal accountability for local school boards.

  • Department of Education Outlines "Return to States" Bureaucracy Split

    The U.S. Department of Education unveiled structural changes aimed at reducing federal footprint by partnering with other agencies. Notably, the Department of Labor will assume an expanded role in administering federal K-12 programs to emphasize workforce alignment, while the Department of Treasury is taking over heavier components of student loan portfolio oversight.

  • Federal Charter School Funding Hits a Record $500 Million

    As part of the current administration's revised discretionary grant priorities under Secretary McMahon, the federal government officially authorized a record-high $500 million investment into the Charter Schools Program, specifically favoring state applicants and emphasizing expanded choice parameters.

  • Arizona House GOP Proposes ESA Voucher Spending Limits

    Facing a massive $1 billion price tag and swelling to over 100,000 enrolled students, Arizona House Republicans introduced a ballot-blocking proposal to curb unexpected spending on the state's universal Empowerment Scholarship Account (ESA) voucher program. The proposed measure would place a $24,000 cap on the amount of unspent voucher funds families can roll over or "bank" for future college expenses.

  • Illinois State Board Formally Adopts Comprehensive Numeracy Plan

    On June 10, the Illinois State Board of Education officially approved its final draft of the Illinois Comprehensive Numeracy Plan. The multi-year framework alters statewide math instruction, focusing on professional development and foundational structural strategies to reverse declining math proficiency scores.

  • California Opens 2026–27 Charter School Start-Up Subgrant Pipeline

    The California Department of Education broadcasted its funding matrix for the upcoming 2026–27 Public Charter Schools Grant Program. The state plans to distribute 26 distinct subgrants covering planning, replication, and physical facility expansions, with initial intent forms due by mid-July.

  • Federal Push for "Evidence-Based Literacy" in Discretionary Grants

    The federal Department of Education officially adjusted its competitive grant rubric to formally mandate the "Science of Reading" and phonics-centered evidence-based literacy instruction across all incoming state discretionary grant applications.

  • The Rise of AI Implementation and "Patriotic Education" Directives

    New grant compliance documents released this week highlight two new administrative priority anchors for local districts utilizing federal funds: the active integration of artificial intelligence (AI) to minimize administrative teacher burdens, and the implementation of civic curricula focused strictly on traditional American founding principles.

10 Major Developments in World Education News

  • Global Education Summit Convenes in Rome to Mobilize Billions

    Co-hosted by the governments of Italy and Nigeria alongside the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), the Multiply Possibility – Global Education Summit 2026 kicked off on June 9 in Rome. The baseline campaign aims to secure a core $5 billion investment from international leaders, philanthropists, and corporate partners to catalyze an additional $10 billion in domestic co-financing by 2030, targeting learning improvements for 750 million children globally.

  • Canada Commits $5 Million to Global Play-Based Education

    Coinciding with the International Day of Play, Canada’s Global Affairs branch announced a $5 million investment over four years to Right To Play International and Global Citizen. The initiative, dubbed "No Child on the Sidelines," will scale localized sports- and play-based educational programs for 60,000 vulnerable, displaced, and conflict-affected youths across Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia.

  • Balkans History Initiative Wins 2026 Max van der Stoel Award

    On June 10 in The Hague, the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities awarded the biennial €50,000 prize to the Serbian non-governmental organization “Education for the 21st Century.” The NGO was recognized for its long-standing efforts to reform history textbooks and education models across the Western Balkans, replacing divisive historical narratives with multicultural dialogue and critical-thinking tools.

  • South Korea Restructures Exam System to Address Student Stress

    As global comparison profiles highlight South Korea's academic dominance, the nation's Ministry of Education released a progress report on its 2026 structural reforms. The policy scales back high-stakes secondary exam weights and targets a reduction in hyper-competitive private tutoring reliance to lower youth stress indexes without sacrificing the nation's top-tier international performance metrics.

  • Finland Defends "No High-Stakes Testing" Model Amid Growing PISA Pressure

    Faced with catching up to East Asian systems on recent PISA score metrics, Finnish education authorities issued a policy defense reaffirming their commitment to educational equity over standard testing. The government doubled down on funding its mandatory Master's-degree threshold for teachers, securing its K-12 system as a model for policy autonomy and high professional standards.

  • TIME Releases "World’s Top Universities of 2026" Rankings

    TIME published its updated analytical roster of global higher education institutions. The UK’s University of Oxford held onto the #1 global spot, heavily buoyed by its global engagement and academic capacity metrics, closely followed by Yale, Stanford, MIT, and the University of Chicago.

  • Princeton Reaches Highest Position Ever in Global Rankings

    Simultaneously, the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings 2026 highlighted a major shakeup in the global elite tier. While the US claimed seven of the top ten spots, Princeton University surged to a historic joint third-place ranking globally, driven by a dramatic spike in its international research output and instructional quality scores.

  • Bilingual and STEM Mandates Solidify Hong Kong's Position

    A regional evaluation of East Asian school infrastructures documented Hong Kong’s success in balancing dual-language fluency (English and Chinese) with specialized STEM career tracks. The curriculum continues to position Hong Kong students among the top five globally for mathematical adaptability and placement in global universities.

  • European Systems Shift Focus to Vocational and Multilingual Pathways

    In structural comparisons published this week by Global Citizen Solutions, European nations like Switzerland and the Netherlands have advanced to the top of systemic rankings by integrating early secondary vocational paths directly with higher education tracks, bypassing traditional rigid academic pipelines.

  • Sub-Saharan Civil Society Scaling Network Launched

    A direct offshoot of the GPE summit in Rome saw the creation of an expansive subgrant network designed to funnel capital straight to localized, civil society organizations in sub-Saharan Africa. The objective is to circumvent heavy state-level distribution bottlenecks and scale community-designed, crisis-resilient school facilities.