Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

SLEEPY DON VS. SLEEPY JOE: THE GREAT AMERICAN NAP-OFF OF 2026

 

SLEEPY DON VS. SLEEPY JOE

THE GREAT AMERICAN NAP-OFF OF 2026 

In the grand theater of American politics, where every stumble is a scandal and every blink a referendum on fitness for office, we have reached peak farce. Donald J. Trump, the man who branded Joe BidenSleepy Joe” with the subtlety of a spray-tanned foghorn, now finds himself starring in his own recurring series: As the Eyelids Close. Old age, it turns out, is the ultimate bipartisan gotcha. It doesn’t care about your poll numbers, your Truth Social posting schedule, or how many times you’ve promised to make something great again. It just wants you horizontal. Preferably during a treaty signing.

The irony is thicker than Trump’s steak well-done. For years, Trump weaponized Biden’s occasional public pauses like a comedy prop comic. “Look at this guy!” he’d boom, mimicking a slow shuffle. Now the clip reels have flipped. Courtroom sketches from the Manhattan trial showed the former (and current) president in what journalists politely called “repose”—head tilted, jaw slack, eyes sealed tighter than a classified document. Trump’s response? Classic. “I was listening intently with my beautiful blue eyes closed. Very relaxing. The best listening. Nobody listens better.”

One almost expects him to claim the nap cured cancer.

The Greatest Hits of Presidential Dozing

Spring 2024: Trump on trial, allegedly catching more Z’s than a Swiss watch factory. Reporters swore they saw the head bob. Trump called it deep concentration.

December 2025: Bilateral treaty signing. Live cameras caught the commander-in-chief performing advanced eyelid maintenance right before the big pen flourish. The internet erupted. Late-night hosts dusted off their “Sleepy” jokes faster than you can say “hypocrisy.”

May 2026: Oval Office maternal health event. While HHS Secretary RFK Jr. and Senator Katie Britt spoke, Trump appeared to be stress-testing the “resting my eyes” defense. White House spokespeople clarified he was “blinking intensely.” Sure, and Biden was just “pausing for applause.”

Memorial Day: The optics were brutal. A solemn ceremony, fallen heroes, and viral footage of the president seemingly auditing the inside of his eyelids during the anthem. Outrage from opponents who, mere years ago, defended similar Biden moments as “cheap fakes.” Politics: the only field where selective blindness is a platform plank.

Medical Experts Weigh In (Sort Of)

Internet sleuths immediately diagnosed narcolepsy, because nothing says “rigorous analysis” like a Twitter thread from someone whose profile picture is a wolf. Actual sleep specialists, those buzzkills, point to more mundane culprits: the man famously boasts of surviving on four to five hours of sleep a night, many of them interrupted by late-night posting. That’s not narcolepsy; that’s self-inflicted sleep deprivation with extra Fox News.

Add the standard octogenarian package—Trump turned 80 in June 2026—and you get the full geriatric sampler: circadian rhythms doing the cha-cha, possible sleep apnea, and the body’s quiet rebellion against decades of Big Macs at 3 a.m. Medical experts note that sudden daytime drowsiness in the elderly is more often a UTI, dehydration, or “I stayed up owning the libs” than a rare neurological disorder. But nuance doesn’t go viral. “Sleepy Don” does.

Meanwhile, Back at the Double Standard Ranch

The media’s coverage has been a masterclass in partisan optics. When Biden drifted, it was a “serious question about capacity.” When Trump does it, it’s “Trump being Trump”—like the man invented napping in public the same way he invented the word “covfefe.” Trump benefits from the “chaos candidate” exemption: voters expect him to be loud, brash, and occasionally horizontal. Biden’s brand was “steady institutionalist,” so every pause looked like the ship taking on water.

It’s the loudness-as-vitality illusion. Trump paces rallies like a caged tiger on Red Bull. Biden spoke softly, and suddenly every teleprompter glance was early-onset whatever. Both men are in their sunset years. One sells the sunset as a hostile takeover; the other tried to sell it as competence. The press simply chose different frames for the same biological reality: gravity eventually wins.

Historical Perspective: It’s Not New, Just Better Documented

Presidents hiding ailments is an American tradition older than the filibuster. Woodrow Wilson’s wife basically ran the country after his stroke. FDR campaigned on sheer willpower while his heart was staging a quiet coup. JFK was on enough pharmaceuticals to stock a small pharmacy. Grover Cleveland had secret yacht surgery for jaw cancer and gaslit the press.

The 25th Amendment exists because our founders didn’t anticipate smartphones catching the leader of the free world mid-snore. Today, every micro-nap is content. No more dignified denial—just dueling press releases and AI deepfakes.

The Real Moral of the Story

Old age comes for everyone, even (especially) the most powerful. It brings wisdom, sure, but also afternoon lulls, mystery aches, and the sudden urge to close your eyes “just for a second” during important meetings. Trump isn’t uniquely afflicted; he’s just the latest high-profile exhibit in the Museum of Human Frailty.

The real satire isn’t that our leaders doze off. It’s that we pretend it’s disqualifying for one side and “resting his eyes” for the other. Perhaps the most presidential thing either man could do now is admit the obvious: governing is exhausting, sleep is necessary, and maybe—just maybe—we should stop electing people who remember the moon landing as current events.

Until then, grab the popcorn. The 2028 campaign promises more naps, more denials, and more viral clips set to lullabies. Sweet dreams, America. Try not to nod off while reading this.


BUELLER? BUELLER? THE LONG, STRANGE TRIP FROM PLAYING HOOKY TO CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM


BUELLER? BUELLER? THE LONG, STRANGE TRIP FROM PLAYING HOOKY TO CHRONIC ABSENTEEISM

In which we travel from a 1986 Ferrari 250 GT California to a Utah class B misdemeanor, and ask whether anyone is still taking attendance on the adults making the rules.

"Life moves pretty fast," Ferris Bueller famously advised. "If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."

The education policy apparatus has been moving pretty fast too — and what it has managed to miss, in its sprint toward automated truancy monitors and thousand-dollar parent fines, is almost everything that matters about why kids aren't in school in the first place.

Let's back up.

Before chronic absenteeism became a federal data metric, a state legislative priority, and the subject of more than 70 bills introduced across 24 states in a single legislative session, it was called something else. Something almost charming. You played hooky. You hooked it. You slipped the leash.

The etymology alone tells you something about how our relationship with school avoidance has curdled over the decades. In the early 1800s, to "hook it" meant to escape, run away, slip out of sight — a verb of agency and movement. By the late 1800s, school superintendents in New York were publishing stern warnings about children playing hooky down by the docks, which means that even then, the first instinct of administrators was to publish stern warnings. Some things are eternal. By 1986, John Hughes had transmuted the whole cultural archetype into a three-act comedy in which the hero's primary antagonist was a bureaucrat named Rooney, and the audience rooted for the kid. Every time.

Ferris Bueller's Day Off is not, despite its 98-minute runtime, a film about chronic absenteeism. Ferris is not chronically absent. Ferris is strategically absent — a distinction that turns out to matter quite a lot.

The 10 Percent Problem

Chronic absenteeism, as defined by every state in the union and codified into federal accountability frameworks, means missing 10 percent or more of the school year. In a standard 180-day calendar, that's 18 days. Two days a month. The threshold sounds mild until you understand that it isn't measuring defiance — it's measuring disruption. A kid who misses two days every month, for reasons entirely beyond her control, is as chronically absent as a kid who simply doesn't want to be there.

That definitional bluntness is feature and bug. It captures real educational harm — and it does cause real harm: reading proficiency stunted by kindergarten absences that compound year over year, math skills that never recover from gaps in sequential instruction, dropout rates in high school that correlate more strongly with absence patterns than with test scores. These are not hypothetical harms. The research is consistent and sobering.

But the definition also captures something else: poverty. Specifically, it captures the daily logistical impossibility of getting a child to school when you have no reliable transportation, an untreated asthma diagnosis, a younger sibling who is sick and no one else to watch her, a job with no flexibility, and a landlord who may be calling the sheriff by Thursday. In high-poverty schools, the chronic absenteeism rate hits 58 percent. Not because 58 percent of those families don't value education. Because 58 percent of those families are living on a margin of zero, where missing the bus isn't a choice — it's a consequence.

And yet. We have states that have responded to this crisis by automating the violation notices.

The Policy Landscape: A Field Guide to Missing the Point

The post-pandemic attendance emergency is real. Nationwide, chronic absenteeism spiked to 31 percent in 2021-22, settled only to 28 percent in 2022-23, and has proven stubbornly resistant to the usual interventions. Into this breach, legislators have charged with three broad strategies: transparency, intervention, and punishment. The third column of that table deserves particular scrutiny.

Utah passed a law in early 2026 establishing an automated attendance monitoring system. After five truancies, parents of kids in grades one through six receive a formal notice of violation. If they fail to meet with school officials to craft an intervention plan, they face a class B misdemeanor charge.

Vermont, apparently feeling that a thousand-dollar fine struck the right note, wrote it into statute. Parents whose children accumulate twenty or more unexcused absences can now face court petitions or penalties of up to a thousand dollars — which is, it bears saying, roughly two weeks of take-home pay for a minimum-wage worker, and a parking ticket for the families least likely to be generating chronic absenteeism through deliberate indifference.

Tennessee removed a cap on the community service hours a judge can order a parent to complete if their child racks up five or more unexcused absences.

All of these measures share an underlying theory: that the families of chronically absent students are not cooperating, and that the state's job is to compel compliance. It's an attractive theory if you have never had to choose between keeping your job and staying home with a sick kid. It's considerably less attractive if you have.

What Actually Works: The Boring, Relationship-Driven Truth

The most irritating thing about evidence-based practice is that it keeps confirming the same unsexy findings. When researchers look at what actually brings chronically absent students back to school, they find laundry.

Not metaphorical laundry. Literal laundry. Districts that partnered with Whirlpool's Care Counts program and installed washers and dryers in schools found that nearly 80 percent of students whose families used the program improved their attendance — and 61 percent were no longer classified as chronically absent by year's end. The barrier was not attitude. The barrier was clean clothes, and the shame of not having them.

San Francisco Unified went further. A K-8 school in the Mission converted its gymnasium into an overnight shelter for homeless families in the district. By putting families on campus, the program eliminated the morning transportation barrier entirely — and kept some of the city's most vulnerable students connected to the one institution most likely to help them.

School-based telehealth addresses the asthma problem: a nurse who can connect a student with an off-site specialist via videoconference, treat the flare-up in place, and send the kid back to class instead of home for three days. Relationship mapping — the low-tech practice of ensuring every single student has at least one adult in the building who will notice when they're gone — costs essentially nothing and produces measurable reductions in absence. Personalized text messages to parents, warm in tone rather than threatening, have been shown by the Institute of Education Sciences to outperform the cold bureaucratic truancy letter that essentially reads: your child has violated local education code. Failure to comply will result in court action.

None of these interventions are particularly glamorous. None of them generate press releases the way a misdemeanor statute does. What they share is a theory of the problem that is, on its face, accurate: students are absent because something is making it hard to be present, and the school's job is to remove that something.

A Special Note on IEPs, Because It Gets Worse

For students with disabilities, the calculus of absenteeism is not merely academic — it is legal. An Individualized Education Program is a binding federal contract. When a student with an IEP is absent, they are not just missing class. They are missing speech-language therapy, occupational therapy, physical therapy, behavioral counseling. They are missing services that cannot be replicated with a worksheet sent home. When they return, their therapists — who are booked back-to-back across multiple schools — may not be available to make up those minutes. The minutes may simply be lost.

The school district, meanwhile, is technically out of compliance with federal law. Protecting itself requires meticulous documentation that the therapist was present, that services were ready to be delivered, and that the student's absence was the sole reason they were not. If a parent can later demonstrate that the district failed to proactively address the barriers behind the absences — say, by not providing accessible transportation, or not accommodating a medical condition in the IEP — a court can order compensatory education, which means private, out-of-pocket therapy hours at the district's expense.

The punitive model, applied to a family whose child has a disability causing school refusal, may also be illegal. Under IDEA, if a student's chronic absenteeism is a direct manifestation of their disability, the district cannot pursue truancy measures. It must instead revisit the IEP, revise the accommodations, and restructure the educational environment. Fining these parents is not just ineffective. In some cases it is prohibited.

Ferris Bueller's Day Off: A Coda

Ferris Bueller is, it must be said, an almost offensively well-resourced student. He has a supportive home, a best friend with a garage full of antique automobiles, a sister whose antagonism is ultimately the antagonism of someone who wants the same freedoms and knows they are not equally available. His one day off school involves the Art Institute of Chicago, Wrigley Field, and a parade float. His primary obstacle is a bureaucrat whose investment in the rules has metastasized into something personal and a little pathetic.

The film is funny because we know, intuitively, that Rooney is wrong — not about the rules, necessarily, but about what matters. Ferris is not a problem to be solved. He is a person in search of a single unscheduled afternoon, and the school's apparatus, fixated on his absence, has entirely missed what is actually going on in his life.

There is, buried somewhere in that comedy, a policy parable. The students generating our nation's chronic absenteeism crisis are not Ferris Bueller. They are not charming, resourced, or maneuvering their way through a spring day on a parade float. They are kids who missed the bus, or have a toothache that has gone untreated for six weeks, or stayed home because their mother couldn't miss work and the baby was sick. They are kids for whom the school, in its most important function, should be the most welcoming place they know — the one institution that notices when they're gone and asks why, rather than reaching immediately for the violation notice.

Bueller? Bueller?

The principal lost. The kid was always going to win. But only because Ferris had the resources to outrun the institution. Most chronically absent students don't. And the institution needs to stop running after them with a summons, and start opening the door a little wider.


Sources: Attendance Works; National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP); Institute of Education Sciences; Whirlpool Care Counts program data; state legislative tracking, 2025-26 session.



Sources & Links: "Bueller? Bueller?"

National Data & Scope of the Crisis

Attendance Works / Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins University
"Continued High Levels of Chronic Absence, With Some Improvements, Require Action" (January 2025) — the primary source for the 31% (2021-22) and 28% (2022-23) national chronic absenteeism figures.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/continued-high-levels-of-chronic-absence-with-some-improvements-require-action/

Attendance Works — All Research Hub
Full library of absenteeism studies, including early literacy findings, poverty correlations, and the kindergarten-to-first-grade compounding data.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/research/

Attendance Works — Addressing Chronic Absence
Overview of data-driven, relationship-based intervention frameworks.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/chronic-absence/addressing-chronic-absence/

Attendance Works — Schoolwide Chronic Absence Affects All Students (March 2025)
Source for the classroom spillover effect and the finding that schools averaging 10+ absent days see proficiency rates drop below 20%.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/new-research-schoolwide-chronic-absence-affects-all-students/


State Legislation (Policy Landscape Section)

Stateline / States Newsroom — "States Try New Measures to Get Chronically Absent Students Back to Class" (July 2026)
Primary source for the Utah misdemeanor law, Vermont's $1,000 fine statute, Tennessee's community service expansion, Oregon's data transparency law, Mississippi's attendance officer mandate, and New Jersey's task force. Also confirms the FutureEd figure of 70+ bills across 24 states.
https://stateline.org/2026/07/08/states-try-new-measures-to-get-chronically-absent-students-back-to-class/

The 74 Million — "States Try New Measures to Get Chronically Absent Students Back to Class"
Republication with additional context.
https://www.the74million.org/article/states-try-new-measures-to-get-chronically-absent-students-back-to-class/

FutureEd (Georgetown University) — 2026 State Chronic Absenteeism Legislative Tracker
Tracks 64+ bills across 22 states; includes structural-barrier legislation, data dashboards, and enforcement-oriented proposals.
https://www.future-ed.org/legislative-tracker-2026-state-chronic-absenteeism-bills/

FutureEd — 2025 State Chronic Absenteeism Legislative Tracker
Prior session tracker; useful for legislative trend context.
https://www.future-ed.org/legislative-tracker-2025-student-chronic-absenteeism-bills-in-the-states/


Academic Impact (Literacy, Math, Dropout)

National Assessment Governing Board (NAGB) — "A Primer on Attendance and Absenteeism on the Nation's Report Card"
Source for NAEP absenteeism data: absenteeism associated with 27% of the 4th-grade math score drop and 16% of the 8th-grade math score drop between 2019 and 2022.
https://www.nagb.gov/naep/chronic-absenteeism.html

NAGB — 2025 Nation's Report Card Release
"The Nation's Report Card Shows Declines in Reading, Some Progress in 4th Grade Math" — confirms chronic absenteeism remains above pre-pandemic levels as of 2025 NAEP.
https://www.nagb.gov/news-and-events/news-releases/2025/nations-report-card-decline-in-reading-progress-in-math.html

Education Week — "Why Are Reading Scores Still Falling on the Nation's Report Card?" (February 2025)
Includes NCES Commissioner quote: "You have to come to school to learn."
https://www.edweek.org/leadership/why-are-reading-scores-still-falling-on-the-nations-report-card/2025/01

Swiderski, Fuller & Bastian — "The Relationship Between Student Attendance and Achievement, Pre- and Post-COVID" (2025, peer-reviewed)
Finds each day absent associated with a 0.0057 SD decline in math; confirms 16–27% of NAEP math decline linked to absenteeism.
https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584251371041

Harvard CEPR / Education Recovery Scorecard (February 2025)
"Chronic Absenteeism Played a Significant Role in Slowing Recovery and Widening Gaps Between High and Low Poverty Districts."
https://cepr.harvard.edu/news/education-recovery-scorecard


Poverty, Demographics & Root Causes

IES / REL Southwest — "Strategies to Address Chronic Absenteeism" (2025 guide)
Comprehensive practitioner review of research-based interventions, including transportation, health, and family stability barriers.
https://ies.ed.gov/rel-southwest/2025/01/handout-strategies-address-chronic-absenteeism

NC DPI — "Chronic Absenteeism: A Review of the Research" (March 2026)
Synthesizes current research on demographics, systemic barriers, and effective school-level responses.
https://www.dpi.nc.gov/districts-schools/office-research-promising-practices/attendnc-counts/chronic-absenteeism-review-research

IES — Chronic Absenteeism Resource Hub
Federal clearinghouse on absenteeism research and evidence-based practices, including text messaging and relationship-building strategies.
https://ies.ed.gov/use-work/supporting-recovery-with-evidence-based-practices/chronic-absenteeism


Solutions That Work

Whirlpool Corp — Care Counts Laundry Program (2023-24 data)
Source for the 80%+ attendance improvement figure among high-risk elementary students and the 61% no-longer-chronically-absent figure. Program active in 154 schools across 40 states.
https://www.whirlpoolcorp.com/latest-news/whirlpool-brand-increases-access-to-laundry-in-schools-through-its-care-counts-laundry-program.html

Whirlpool — Care Counts Program Statistics Page
Running data dashboard for the program.
https://www.whirlpool.com/care-counts/statistics.html

Hechinger Report — "A Shelter in a School Gym for Students Experiencing Homelessness Paid Off in Classrooms" (2022)
In-depth feature on the SFUSD Stay Over Program at Buena Vista Horace Mann.
https://hechingerreport.org/a-shelter-in-a-school-gym-for-students-experiencing-homelessness-paid-off-in-classrooms/

SF City Controller's Office — Evaluation of the Stay Over Program at Buena Vista Horace Mann (2020)
Official program evaluation; source for the "nearly two-thirds of families exiting to secure housing" finding.
https://sfcontroller.org/sites/default/files/Documents/Auditing/SOP%20Evaluation%20Report%20FINAL.pdf

SF Mayor's Office — "Report Finds SFUSD Stay Over Program Successful in Helping Homeless Families" (January 2020)
https://sfmayor.org/article/report-finds-sfusd-stay-over-program-successful-helping-homeless-families

IES — "Impact Evaluation of Parent Messaging Strategies on Student Attendance"
Source for the adaptive text messaging study; found chronic absence rate lowered by 2–7 percentage points depending on approach.
https://ies.ed.gov/use-work/evaluations/impact-evaluation-parent-messaging-strategies-student-attendance

IES — "How to Text Message Parents to Reduce Chronic Absence Using an Evidence-Based Approach"
Practitioner implementation guide based on the messaging study.
https://ies.ed.gov/use-work/resource-library/report/guide/how-text-message-parents-reduce-chronic-absence-using-evidence-based-approach

American Institutes for Research (AIR) — Press Release on Text Messaging Study (September 2020)
https://www.air.org/news/press-release/new-federal-study-finds-text-messages-parents-can-reduce-chronic-school-absences

Education Week — "Want to Tackle Chronic Absenteeism? Try Texting Parents" (January 2022)
Practical overview of the text nudge research and limitations.
https://www.edweek.org/leadership/want-to-tackle-chronic-absenteeism-try-texting-parents/2022/01


IDEA / Special Education Context

Attendance Works — 50% Chronic Absenteeism Challenge
Includes demographic breakdown by disability status and income.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/resources/the-50-chronic-absenteeism-challenge/

Attendance Works — Comprehensive District Response Strategy
Source for the 2021-22 demographic data: 2.7 million students with disabilities classified as chronically absent.
https://www.attendanceworks.org/todays-chronic-absenteeism-requires-a-comprehensive-district-response-and-strategy/



MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 14, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 14, 2026

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER


U.S. NEWS

  • Sen. Lindsey Graham's sudden death: The longtime South Carolina Republican senator and Trump ally died at age 71 from an aortic dissection. His sister, Darlene Graham Nordone, was sworn in as his temporary replacement.
  • Deadly ICE shootings spark scrutiny: Incidents in Maine and Houston involving federal agents have renewed debate over immigration enforcement tactics.
  • Severe storms and heat dome: A dangerous heat wave and storm systems threaten the South and much of the U.S., with extreme heat alerts for over 100 million people.
  • Supreme Court Justices Testify Before Congress: In a rare and highly anticipated public appearance, Supreme Court Justices Elena Kagan and Amy Coney Barrett are scheduled to testify before Congress today at 10 a.m. ET. The session is expected to address the judiciary's request for millions of dollars in additional funding to bolster security amid a sharp rise in threats.

  • Massive Payout in Trump Tariff Refunds: According to newly released Treasury Department budget figures, the U.S. government has been forced to pay back $81 billion in tariffs this fiscal year. The massive payout follows a Supreme Court ruling that struck down a significant portion of the extra import duties, reversing projected progress on the federal budget deficit.

  • Sister of the Late Sen. Lindsey Graham Appointed to Seat: Darline Graham Nordone has been officially appointed by South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster to fill the Senate seat left vacant by her late brother, Senator Lindsey Graham. She will serve until January 3, 2027, ahead of the upcoming November election.

  • Trump Modifies Utah National Monuments: President Trump signed an executive order slashing nearly 3 million acres from Utah's Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments. The move has immediately reignited intense regional land conservation and tribal rights debates.

POLITICS

  • Graham's death impacts Senate: His passing complicates Republican business and highlights tensions in the chamber amid Trump's agenda.
  • Trump escalates Iran actions: The president announced strikes, a naval blockade, and transit fees on the Strait of Hormuz, drawing congressional attention.
  • Immigration enforcement push: New guidance on bank lending risks for undocumented borrowers and monument size changes in Utah.
  • U.S. Navy Implements New Blockade on Iran: President Trump announced that the U.S. military will enforce a strict naval blockade on Iranian ports starting today at 4:00 p.m. ET. The administration also claimed it expects to be "reimbursed" a 20% fee for securing safe passage for international cargo ships, dramatically raising diplomatic and military stakes in the Middle East.

  • White House Welcomes New Iraqi Prime Minister: President Trump is welcoming Iraq's newly elected Prime Minister, Ali al-Zaidi, to the White House today. The meeting comes as the U.S. continues to press Baghdad to disarm regional Iran-backed militias following a series of military clashes.

  • Senate to Debate Judicial Nominees and Russia Sanctions: The Senate convenes today to resume consideration of Matthew A. Schwartz's nomination to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. Concurrently, bipartisan packages honoring the late Lindsey Graham with expanded sanctions against Russia are moving through legislative channels.

  • New York Imposes Data Center Moratorium: New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed an executive order establishing a strict moratorium on new data center approvals. The temporary freeze is designed to buy the state time to evaluate the intensive grid demands and environmental impact of rapid AI infrastructure expansion.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S.-Iran escalation: Multiple nights of U.S. strikes on Iran, Iranian retaliation, and threats to shipping in the Strait of Hormuz dominate headlines.
  • Europe supports Ukraine: Over 30 countries pledge defense aid; Ukraine orders French weapons and jets.
  • Other global incidents: Armed standoffs on India-Bangladesh border and a deadly Bangkok bar fire.
  • Ukraine Intercepts Ballistic Missiles Over Kyiv: Ukraine’s air force successfully shot down five Russian ballistic missiles over Kyiv overnight using U.S.-provided Patriot defense systems. Despite the interceptions, other drone strikes managed to damage a local school and warehouse facilities.

  • European Air Defense Coalition Announced at Bastille Day: While attending the annual Bastille Day parade in Paris, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy joined forces with nine other European nations to announce a brand-new joint coalition aimed at building a shared ballistic missile defense shield over Europe.

  • Death Toll Climbs to 30 in Bangkok Club Fire: Thai authorities confirmed that the death toll from Sunday night's devastating fire at a crowded music venue in northern Bangkok has reached 30, with dozens of others remaining in critical condition. Investigators are focusing on blocked exits, windowless floor plans, and safety code violations.

  • Google DeepMind CEO Calls for Global AI Watchdog: Demis Hassabis, the head of Google DeepMind, has publicly called for the creation of a U.S.-led global regulatory body to monitor frontier artificial intelligence systems, urging international coordination before capabilities outpace safety frameworks.

EDUCATION

  • Higher ed fraud summit: The U.S. Department of Education held its first summit on fraud, alongside flexibilities for states like Arkansas.
  • Title IX and transgender sports: Supreme Court upholds state bans; ongoing debates on equity and civil rights.
  • Chronic absenteeism and tech equity: States test new measures for attendance; early education grapples with AI and access.
  • Major Overhaul of Higher Education Regulations Unveiled: The U.S. Department of Education released its upcoming regulatory agenda, revealing plans to ease the creation of new college accrediting bodies, streamline college mergers, and alter the historic 90/10 funding rule for-profit colleges.

  • Title VI Used to Target Campus Diversity Programs: The Trump administration is preparing new August regulations utilizing Title VI civil rights enforcement to crack down on university diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives. The administration aims to clarify rules regarding race-based programs and potentially restrict federal funding to non-compliant campuses.

  • Working Families Tax Cuts Act Restructures Student Loans: Major components of the Working Families Tax Cuts Act went into effect, replacing several existing student loan repayment options with the new Repayment Assistance Program (RAP). The plan caps monthly payments at 1% to 10% of income, waives unpaid monthly interest, and offers matching federal principal payments.

  • States Mandate AI Standards and Math Deficit Screening: Significant new state education budgets (such as North Carolina's $15.6B allocation) are mandating early-grade math deficit screeners, banning "meals of shame" for students with cafeteria debt, and requiring state boards to draft and adopt official K-12 AI education standards.

ECONOMY

  • Inflation eases to 3.5%: June CPI fell 0.4% monthly (biggest drop since 2020) and rose 3.5% annually, below expectations, aided by lower gas prices.
  • Fed and markets watch: Data influences rate hike expectations; underlying pressures remain moderate.
  • Consumer Price Index (CPI) Plunges in June: The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Consumer Price Index for June decreased by 0.4%, marking the sharpest one-month decline in consumer prices since the start of the pandemic in April 2020.

  • Oil Prices Surge 9% Amid Hormuz Tension: Global oil markets experienced a major shock, with crude prices spiking 9% to roughly $83 per barrel following President Trump's declaration of a naval blockade on Iranian waters. The spike has sparked immediate concerns that retail gasoline prices could soon push past $4 per gallon.

  • Wall Street Volatility Spikes on Inflation and Geopolitics: The VIX volatility index jumped over 14% as investors reacted to escalating geopolitical risks in the Middle East and analyzed fresh corporate earnings reports from major banks to gauge if higher energy costs are beginning to eat into corporate profit margins.

  • Global Microchip Stocks Rebound After Historical Selloff: Major semiconductor and memory-chip manufacturers, including Samsung Electronics (+4.1%) and SK Hynix (+3.5%), posted a healthy rebound in Asian trading, recovering from a dramatic market rout driven by high AI valuations and energy supply fears.

TECHNOLOGY

  • AI in education and cheating: Teachers address AI homework issues; high-earning families opt for AI/life skills programs.
  • Broader tech equity: Early education focuses on access and flipping scripts on disparities.
  • Microchip Releases VectorBlox 3.0 for Edge AI: Microchip Technology announced the free release of its VectorBlox 3.0 SDK, which utilizes sparse neural network technology to skip zero-value operations. The breakthrough is aimed at deploying highly complex AI workloads on low-power devices in aerospace and defense sectors.

  • Pharma Plants Deploy AI-Driven Weapons Detection: Xtract One Technologies secured a major multi-state deal to deploy its advanced, AI-powered Gateway weapons detection systems across several pharmaceutical manufacturing and distribution facilities. The move replaces intrusive, legacy metal detectors to speed up high-volume shift changes.

  • Tech Industry Braces for ASML and TSMC Earnings: With the S&P 500 experiencing tech-driven fluctuations, the global technology sector is closely watching upcoming earnings releases from lithography giant ASML and chip manufacturer TSMC to establish the baseline trajectory for global AI hardware spending.

HEALTH

  • Heat safety for veterans: VA warns of extreme heat risks for homeless veterans and offers guidance.
  • Ebola and other alerts: Second U.S. case reported amid global concerns.
  • WHO Warns of Underestimated Ebola Outbreak in DRC: The World Health Organization stated that the ongoing Bundibugyo Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo is likely four times worse than official numbers suggest. While the DRC reports roughly 2,000 cases, the WHO warns that severe undercounting is masking the true scale of the epidemic.

  • U.S. Medicaid and Nutrition Program Enrollees Drop: Nonpartisan health policy trackers report that enrollment in Medicaid and critical food assistance programs has begun slipping across several states ahead of deeper federal funding cuts legislated to kick in after the November elections.

  • Vector Control Deploys West Nile Air Treatments: Public health departments in major East Coast metropolitan areas have begun truck-mounted chemical spraying in targeted public parks and residential zones after localized mosquito traps tested positive for carrying the West Nile virus.

SPORTS

  • Wimbledon and tennis: Jannik Sinner retains title; other major matches and British Open qualifiers.
  • World Cup soccer: Spain advances; England faces Argentina in semifinals with star performances.
  • NBA and MLB: Trail Blazers, Jazz updates; home run derby highlights.
  • Major NCAA Women’s Basketball Bracket Rules Changed: The NCAA announced that starting with next season's women's basketball tournament, the top 16 teams will be placed in the bracket strictly based on their true seed ranking, completely abandoning the historical practice of separating top teams from the same conference.

  • Junior Caminero Shines in Home Run Derby: Tampa Bay Rays sensation Junior Caminero captured the spotlight with an explosive performance in the first round of the Major League Baseball Home Run Derby, putting on a spectacular display of power.

  • All-Star Week Festivities Kick Off: As baseball's premier talent converges, legacy and rookie rosters alike are participating in modern community showcases and skills challenges designed to broaden the sport's global and digital reach.

These are the dominant stories as of July 14, 2026, based on major outlets. Categories are kept strictly separate.


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


Here is a breakdown of the defining headlines shaping the education landscape today, both across the United States and globally.

Top US Education News Today

1. Stricter Federal Student Loan Limits Take Effect

A major shift in federal student borrowing went live on July 1 under the provisions of the Working Families Tax Cuts Act. These rules introduce strict caps on borrowing limits, particularly impacting Parent PLUS and graduate loans:

  • Undergrad Parent PLUS Loans: Capped at $20,000 per year and a lifetime limit of $65,000 per student.

  • Graduate Loans: Capped at $100,000 overall, and new borrowers are blocked from taking out Graduate PLUS loans.

  • Repayment Consolidation: New borrowers are limited to just two repayment paths—the Tiered Standard Plan and a new income-driven Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP).

2. Department of Education Preps "Regulatory Sprint"

Following recent changes, the federal Department of Education has unveiled its regulatory agenda for the coming months:

  • Accreditation and Campus Policy: A proposed rule expected this month aims to make it easier for colleges to change accreditors, while expanding accrediting bodies' oversight to include "free speech and intellectual diversity".

  • 90/10 Rule and DEI Targeted: The administration is signaling upcoming efforts to ease the 90/10 rule for for-profit colleges and is preparing rules targeting race-based educational programs under Title VI.

3. Public Confidence in Higher Education Slips Again

A newly released Gallup poll reveals that public confidence in higher education has dropped back to 38%, down from 42% last year. The decline is most pronounced among Democrats, hitting a historic low of 50% within the demographic. Concerns over escalating tuition costs remain the primary driver of public skepticism.

4. State Policy Shifts: California and Texas

  • California: Governor Newsom signed Assembly Bill 181, a major reform designed to streamline TK-12 school governance by unifying state board policymaking and increasing coordination across early childhood and higher education.

  • Texas: The state is currently rolling out a sweeping $1 billion school voucher program alongside contentious curriculum changes, marking one of the most radical overhauls in modern Texas history.

Top World Education News Today

1. UNESCO Warns of Global Education Financing Crisis

At the Transforming Education Summit + 4 in Paris, UNESCO sounded the alarm on a deepening funding crisis:

  • Debt Over Classroom: An astonishing 113 countries are now spending more on servicing national debt than on educating their children.

  • Aid Plummet: Global aid to education has seen major cutbacks, with low- and middle-income nations projected to lose 30% of their education assistance between 2023 and 2027.

  • Solution: UNESCO is pushing international lenders to adopt "debt-for-education swaps"—a form of debt relief where forgiven interest is directly funneled into domestic schooling projects.

2. Global Teacher Shortage Framed as Gender Inequality Issue

A new report from the Education International Research Network highlights that the global shortage of 44 million teachers cannot be solved without addressing systemic gender inequalities. Because teaching remains a heavily feminized profession globally, poor pay, lack of administrative support, and unaddressed school-related gender violence continue to drive educators out of the classroom.

3. Education Unions Push Back Against Unregulated AI

Global teacher unions have mobilized to demand "human-centered AI" frameworks. Gathering to address the rapid integration of artificial intelligence in K-12 spaces, labor representatives argued that policy must protect the core teacher-student relationship and prevent AI from being used to justify staff cuts or the degradation of instructional quality.


These high schoolers show how 'majors' are not just for college - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-14/high-schoolers-show-how-majors-are-not-just-for-college-students 

California allocates dedicated funding to identify homeless students | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/california-schools-allocate-dedicated-funding-to-identify-homeless-students/762013 

‘Too cute by half’: Senators brush off Trump’s suggestions for honoring Graham - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/lindsey-graham-legacy-russia-sanctions-00995862

Trump’s America First allies are eyeing the hawkish void Graham leaves behind - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/trumps-america-first-allies-are-eyeing-the-hawkish-void-graham-leaves-behind-00995733 

Hochul to approve nation’s first state-level data center pause - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/hochul-to-approve-nations-first-state-level-data-center-pause-00995561 

Trump administration gives Tom Kean Jr. a new headache in tough midterm fight - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/14/trump-administration-gives-tom-kean-jr-a-new-headache-in-tough-midterm-fight-00995573 

A history of justices testifying before Congress | SCOTUSblog https://www.scotusblog.com/2026/07/a-history-of-justices-testifying-before-congress/