Latest News and Comment from Education

Sunday, July 12, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 12, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 12, 2026

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER

U.S. NEWS (top stories as of July 12, 2026):

  • Senator Lindsey Graham dies at 71: The longtime Republican senator from South Carolina passed away after a brief and sudden illness. His office confirmed the news, prompting tributes for his foreign policy work, including support for Ukraine, Israel, and trans-Atlantic ties.
  • Severe weather and flooding: Flash flooding in Missouri led to a state of emergency with hundreds of rescues; additional flood risks in the South and Midwest, alongside storms.
  • Justice Department subpoenas New York Times reporters: Over Air Force One reporting, with federal agents visiting journalists' homes.
  • Other domestic incidents: Legionnaires' disease outbreak affecting buildings like the Guggenheim Museum in NYC; ongoing questions around alerts before Texas floods and a fatal ICE shooting.
  • Extreme Fire Risks Trigger Red Flag Warnings: The National Weather Service issued a critical Red Flag Warning across several counties in the Upper Midwest due to near-record hot temperatures, shifting gusty winds, and low relative humidity. State officials have enacted enhanced emergency burning and backcountry campfire bans on public lands to mitigate fast-spreading blazes.

  • Trump Administration Launches "PURSUE" UAP Portal: The Department of War, alongside the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), has officially rolled out the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters. The newly launched public database will house tranches of declassified, unresolved records concerning unidentified anomalous phenomena on a rolling basis.

  • Mid-Atlantic Heatwave Impacts Critical Infrastructure: A sustained heat spike across the Eastern and Mid-Atlantic regions continues to test regional power grids. Utilities are urging consumer conservation during peak hours as temperatures soar into triple digits, driving up aggregate residential electricity demands.

POLITICS:

  • Lindsey Graham's death and tributes: Major political impact, with reactions focusing on his legacy as a key Republican figure and ally to President Trump.
  • Trump administration actions: Threats of new tariffs (e.g., 30% on EU and Mexico), wildlife protection rollbacks, and developments around Air Force One usage amid security concerns.
  • 2026 election/midterm developments: Updates on races (e.g., Maine Senate), primaries (Michigan), and broader campaign news.
  • Other: Pressure on investigations (e.g., Epstein-related), and ongoing Trump statements on Iran and domestic issues.
  • Senator Lindsey Graham Passes Away at 71: The longtime South Carolina Senator, who was seeking reelection this year, has died following a brief and sudden illness. Political leaders from both sides of the aisle are issuing statements honoring his multi-decade legislative legacy in the House and Senate.

  • Elections Assistance Commission Overhaul: President Trump shook up the bipartisan federal panel by firing two Democratic members of the Election Assistance Commission, closely following the formal resignation of a Republican member on the board.

  • Pentagon Incurs Scrutiny Over Maneuver Interventions: Secretary of War Pete Hegseth stepped in to clear suspended military pilots following a highly controversial beach flyover. This marks the latest push by the administration to shield active service members under heightened regulatory review.

WORLD AFFAIRS:

  • US-Iran conflict escalation: US launches major strikes on IRGC targets after Iranian attacks on shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and on Gulf states (Qatar, UAE, etc.). Iran closes the Strait, threatens revenge; Trump warns of "decimating" Iran. Tensions include assassination threats against Trump and broader regional risks.
  • Ongoing Ukraine developments: Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian targets; broader war context.
  • Other international: Taliban actions in Afghanistan; Russia-related espionage in Japan; various Middle East and global fallout from Iran conflict.
  • MF Warns of Global "Crosscurrents": The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released its July 2026 World Economic Outlook Update, projecting global growth at 3.0%. The report highlights a sharply bifurcated international landscape, where ongoing regional war shocks severely compress energy-importing nations while AI infrastructure expansion buoys tech-integrated economies.

  • Global Disinflation Halts Due to Geopolitical Friction: The IMF confirmed that global efforts to bring down baseline inflation have effectively stalled out. Analysts cite prolonged maritime logistics blockades, trade routing re-alignments, and regional conflicts as persistent upside risks to global consumer pricing.

  • Multilateral Trade Framework Strains: Discussions regarding cross-border tech tariffs and data-sovereignty restrictions have intensified among major trading blocs, as countries race to localize digital infrastructure supply chains and curb foreign network monopolies.

EDUCATION:

  • Federal initiatives: U.S. Department of Education launches K-12 crackdown on sexual predators in schools and celebrates civics program success.
  • State/local updates: California districts (e.g., Inglewood) regaining control post-takeover; bond measures and special education concerns.
  • Policy and tech: Discussions on student loans changes, SAT/ACT in admissions, AI for social-emotional learning, and school safety/back-to-school preparations.
  • Federal Student Loan "RAP" Restructuring Takes Effect: Under provisions of the Working Families Tax Cuts Act, the U.S. Department of Education has initiated its new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP). The program promises to waive accumulated, unpaid monthly interest for on-time borrowers and is prompting immediate institutional shifts, with several major universities cutting tuition or tapping endowments for lower-interest internal loans.

  • Massive Higher Education Regulatory Wave Unveiled: The Trump administration published its sweeping upcoming regulatory timeline. Key agenda items slated for this summer include reshaping college accreditation boards to police campus free-speech policies, streamlining college closures or mergers, and altering the long-standing 90/10 funding rule for for-profit colleges.

  • California Overhauls TK-12 Governance: Governor Gavin Newsom signed landmark legislation (AB 181) restructuring California's public school governance layout. The bill expands the State Superintendent's direct voting authority across higher education boards to align early childhood through postsecondary policy, backed by a record $151.4 billion state education budget allocation.

ECONOMY:

  • IMF World Economic Outlook: Global growth slowing to ~3% in 2026 due to Iran war disruptions, energy supply issues, inflation, and commodity prices. US and global resilience noted but risks elevated.
  • Tariffs and trade: Trump threats of new tariffs on major partners like the EU and Mexico.
  • Broader context: Earnings season, Fed policy expectations, and geopolitical impacts on markets.
  • AI Infrastructure Demand Drives Capex Surge: Corporate capital expenditure indexes hit fresh highs this quarter, fueled entirely by intense corporate and institutional spending on massive data center buildouts, advanced semiconductor fabrication, and automated network scaling.

  • Sustained Energy Costs Impact Small Businesses: Volatile fuel and wholesale power pricing linked to global distribution grid pressures are driving up operational overhead, presenting a persistent headwind for service sectors and manufacturing margins.

  • Labor Markets Navigate Automated Shifts: The latest employment data aggregates indicate strong demand for technical project management and system engineering, contrasting with a contraction in routine clerical and administrative tasks across automated financial firms.

TECHNOLOGY:

  • Apple sues OpenAI: Alleged trade secrets theft involving former employees.
  • AI developments: Tata Consultancy Services planning AI engineers/acquisitions; White House executive actions promoting AI innovation and security.
  • Ongoing tech sector news: General AI and innovation focus amid broader geopolitical tensions.
  • Anthropic and OpenAI Roll Out Advanced Reasoning Iterations: Top-tier artificial intelligence laboratories have deployed updated model frameworks focusing heavily on systemic multi-step deduction, verifiable source integration, and complex software-engineering task automation.

  • Global Silicon Value Chains Face Tight Restrictions: Antitrust bodies and trade regulators are escalating investigations into the primary network effects of foundational chip architectures, seeking to preserve market competition amidst intense hardware scarcity.

  • Data Portability and Sovereign Cloud Standards Tighten: Technical infrastructure frameworks are being rewritten as national regulators enforce strict localization laws, forcing digital platforms to isolate domestic data processing clusters from international servers.

HEALTH:

  • Disease outbreaks: Legionnaires' disease in NYC buildings (including Guggenheim); 2026 US measles tracking and outbreaks; Ebola case involving a US citizen in Congo.
  • Research and policy: mRNA cancer vaccine advances, gut health/fermented foods trends, and public health safety guides (e.g., fireworks/heat).
  • Other: Medical debt forgiveness efforts and physician/immigrant visa concerns.
  • Hospitals Deploy Predictive Clinical AI Systems: Major healthcare networks are scaling up internal automation software to track real-time patient biometric updates, aiming to flag acute cardiovascular anomalies or onset sepsis before physical symptoms emerge.

  • Surge in Heat-Related Clinical Admissions: Emergency medical systems along the West Coast and Northeast report elevated caseloads tied to systemic heat exhaustion, prompting local public health departments to issue localized cooling center guidelines.

  • Regulatory Focus Shifts to Out-of-Pocket Pricing Disclosures: Federal oversight bodies are stepping up audits on medical billing networks, demanding transparent, pre-procedure cost metrics for diagnostic imaging and outpatient surgeries.

SPORTS:

  • 2026 FIFA World Cup: Spain advances to semifinals after Belgium win; other quarterfinal matches (e.g., England vs. Norway) and European/South American action.
  • MLB and US sports: Games involving Phillies, Tigers, Hawks, Pelicans, etc.; college football media days (Big 12).
  • Other: Badminton tournaments, NBA summer/league action, and local pro/college updates.
  • Wimbledon Championships Head into Finals Weekend: The grass-court tennis majors in London are reaching their climax, with top-seeded players navigating heavy conditional shifts and tactical adjustments under the center court roof.

  • Pre-Season Training Camps Commence: Elite athletic organizations and major domestic leagues are kicking off initial summer training regimens, with medical staff prioritizing advanced hydration and thermal-strain biometric tracking.

  • International Athletics Focus Shifting to Regional Qualifiers: Track, field, and swimming organizations are recording notable early-season times as athletes gear up for upcoming international championship cycles and continental tournaments.

News evolves quickly, especially with the Iran situation and Graham's passing dominating headlines today. These are curated from prominent reports as of July 12, 2026.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY


Here is a roundup of the top headlines in public education policy and finance making news today.

Top US Education News

1. Federal Deregulation Sprint: New Higher Ed & Title VI Rules Announced

The U.S. Department of Education unveiled its upcoming regulatory timeline, following the sweeping structural mandates of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act that took effect July 1. Key initiatives include:

  • Accreditation Overhaul: A proposed rule expected this month aims to make it significantly easier for colleges to switch accrediting bodies or establish new ones. Crucially, the rule plans to expand accreditors' duties to include federal oversight of campus policies regarding free speech and "intellectual diversity."

  • Targeting DEI & Title VI: The Department plans to issue rules in August redefining how Title VI protections apply to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives, effectively aiming to restrict race-conscious programs and race-based eligibility requirements in federally funded higher education.

  • For-Profit 90/10 Rule: The agency is seeking to roll back aspects of the decades-old 90/10 rule—which requires for-profit colleges to pull at least 10% of revenue from non-federal aid sources—arguing the current setup gives public and non-profit schools an unfair competitive advantage.

2. House Lawmakers Push to Codify Outsourcing of Federal Programs

House Education and Workforce Committee Chair Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) introduced a package of 10 bills on July 9 designed to codify the ongoing transfer of core Department of Education programs to other federal agencies. Over the last few months, the Department has entered into 14 interagency agreements—unilaterally shifting key special education and civil rights functions. Proponents argue the legislation "right-sizes" the federal footprint, while public school advocates warn the legal restructuring is causing funding delays, compliance confusion, and a severe lack of programmatic oversight.

3. Civil Rights Crackdown on K-12 "Passing the Trash"

The Department's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) launched a national K-12 enforcement initiative targeting districts that fail to investigate credible reports of sexual abuse and harassment by adult staff. The federal crackdown aims to eliminate the practice of "passing the trash"—where school administrators allow accused school employees to quietly transfer to other districts or roles without facing meaningful consequences or accurate data reporting.

4. California Enacts Historic $151.4 Billion TK-12 Budget

Governor Gavin Newsom signed a major school governance and legislative package backed by a historic $151.4 billion in total TK-12 education funding. The 2026 Budget Act expands California's universal transitional kindergarten for four-year-olds, bolsters special education investments, and infuses $1 billion in ongoing funds to expand the "community schools" model across an additional 3,700 campus sites serving high concentrations of low-income families and English learners.

Top World Education News

1. UNESCO Rings Alarm on Global Education Financing Crisis

At the Transforming Education Summit +4 in Paris, UNESCO released its sobering Counting the Loss report, warning that international development assistance to education is in a steep downward spiral.

  • Aid Plummet: Global aid to education fell 8% over the last fiscal year, while funding explicitly for basic education dropped 15%. This comes as major donors heavily scale back foreign aid allocations to prioritize domestic debt servicing and military expenditures.

  • The Hardest Hit: Low- and lower-middle-income countries have lost an average of 21% of their education aid since 2023, with crisis-impacted nations like Afghanistan, Mauritania, Nicaragua, and Mali experiencing funding drops exceeding 40%.

2. The Debt Burden vs. Public Schooling

UNESCO’s data revealed that 113 countries (home to 6.1 billion people) now spend more money on servicing external sovereign debt than on educating their children. In low-income countries, debt payments outpace education budgets nearly four to one.

In response, UNESCO Director-General Khaled El-Enany urged international lenders and governments to rapidly scale up "debt-for-education swaps." This mechanism allows developing nations to have a portion of their foreign debt forgiven or restructured in direct exchange for binding investments in local schools, teacher training, and foundational literacy. The World Bank has recently begun backing these arrangements, pointing to successful bilateral frameworks in CƓte d'Ivoire, Peru, and Egypt.

3. "Education Cannot Wait" Warns of Generational Learning Losses

A new global emergency report titled Breaking Barriers reveals that conflict, climate displacement, and economic shocks are currently disrupting education for 258 million children worldwide, with 93 million completely locked out of school. The UN global fund notes that systemic exclusion is becoming dangerously concentrated: in the 20 highest-severity crisis zones, less than 1 in 10 children demonstrate basic reading proficiency in early grades, creating a permanent barrier to future economic mobility.


As college graduates fret over jobs, what’s actually coming is a record shortage of workers https://hechingerreport.org/as-college-graduates-fret-over-jobs-a-record-shortage-of-workers-is-projected/ 

Despite U.S. loss to Belgium, World Cup still half full https://nondoc.com/2026/07/12/despite-u-s-loss-to-belgium-world-cup-still-half-full/ 

LAPD suspends use of Flock surveillance cameras over privacy issues - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-11/lapd-suspends-use-of-flock-surveillance-cameras-over-privacy-issues 

Lindsey Graham dies at 71 after ‘brief and sudden illness,’ his office says - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/12/lindsey-graham-dies-republican-us-senator-south-carolina-00994070 

The Last Time America Got It Right, According to MAGA’s Next Generation - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/07/12/make-america-the-90s-again-00987696 

Trump’s personal law firm has a pipeline to top DOJ jobs - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/12/trump-doj-sullivan-cromwell-00993916 

Scientists Ponder a New Climate Defense Tactic: Throwing Shade at El NiƱo – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/el-nino-havoc-climate-disasters-flooding-drought-cloud-brightening-mcb-geoengineering-study/ 


LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW 6-28-26 TO 7-4-26


LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW

 7-5-26 TO 7-11-26

"REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER"

BIG EDUCATION APE
ANALYSIS: WEEK OF 7-5-26 TO 7-11-26

Here is a breakdown and analysis of the activity on "BIG EDUCATION APE" (curated by Mike Simpson) for the week of July 5, 2026, to July 11, 2026.

True to its long-standing reputation as an aggressive public education watchdog, the blog focused heavily this week on state-level policy critiques and political accountability as the midyear legislative sessions wrap up and the upcoming election season begins to crystallize.

šŸ“Œ Core Themes & Major Posts This Week

1. The Spotlight on California’s Systemic Issues

2. Media Curation & Cross-Blog Synergy

  • Featured Post: "TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 10, 2026"

  • Analysis: A cornerstone of Big Education Ape is its role as an aggregator for the anti-corporatization movement. This week, the daily and weekly roundups filtered critical national education headlines and amplified voices from across the progressive education blogosphere (such as Diane Ravitch, Curmudgucation, and Nancy Bailey). These digests consistently covered data privacy issues (such as recent class-action settlements involving massive student data miners like PowerSchool/Naviance) and grassroots teacher pushback against rigid AI mandates in major metropolitan districts.

3. Political Call-to-Action: "REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER"

  • Analysis: Woven throughout the weekly summaries was the explicitly capitalized tagline "REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER." With the 2026 midterm elections fast approaching, Simpson is using this window to track local and state school board candidates, policy rollbacks, and budget allocations. The blog acts as a voter guide for public school advocates, exposing politicians or candidates who favor privatization or deep budget cuts, warning educators and parents that policy changes at the ballot box are the only real antidote to the "planned destruction" of local schools.

šŸ”‘ The Takeaway

This week, Big Education Ape functioned less as an objective news desk and more as a passionate digital war room for public school defense. By connecting localized policy fights (like those in California) with a broader national critique of data privacy violations and the continuous push toward privatization, the blog remains a vital, unified repository for grassroots educators looking to keep tabs on the corporate reform movement ahead of the fall elections.


Big Education Ape: THUGS OF THE WORLD, UNITE! A DISPATCH FROM THE AXIS OF IMPUNITY https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/thugs-of-world-unite-dispatch-from-axis.html 





Big Education Ape: MCCARTHYISM WITH A RED TIE: AMERICA'S THIRD RED SCARE - HOW THE MAN WHO SCREAMS "COMMUNIST" GOVERNS LIKE ONE https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/mccarthyism-with-red-tie-americas-third.html 





Big Education Ape: THE TOP NEWS STORIES THIS WEEK 7-5-26 TO 7-11-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-top-news-stories-this-week-7-5-26.html 






Big Education Ape: THE ESTABLISHMENT STRIKES BACK: HOW MAINE BECAME THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY'S UGLIEST MIRROR https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-establishment-strikes-back-how.html 





Big Education Ape: CALIFORNIA EDUCATION: PLANNED DESTRUCTION IN THE 4TH LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/california-education-planned.html 





Big Education Ape: SCHOOLS STARVE SO INSURANCE COMPANIES CAN FEAST: THE CASE FOR MEDICARE FOR ALL https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/schools-starve-so-insurance-companies.html 





Big Education Ape: THE AMERICAN SVENGALI: A FIELD GUIDE TO A NATION UNDER THE SPELL https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-american-svengali-field-guide-to.html 






Big Education Ape: THE BOTS ARE COMING, THE BOTS ARE COMING (AND THEY'RE NOT PAYING A DIME IN TAXES) https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-bots-are-coming-bots-are-coming-and.html 





Big Education Ape: STOP THE PRESSES: THE REST OF THE WORLD JUST BROKE UP WITH CLASSROOM SCREENS. AMERICA IS PROPOSING MARRIAGE. https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/stop-presses-rest-of-world-just-broke.html 





Big Education Ape: THE NEW EDUCATION CULTURE WAR ISN'T ABOUT DEI. IT'S ABOUT WHETHER CIVIL RIGHTS STILL HAVE A REFEREE https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-new-education-culture-war-isnt.html 





Big Education Ape: THE STEPHEN MILLER PARLOR GAME: RASPUTIN, HEYDRICH, OR JUST THE GUY WHO ATE PASTE IN THE BACK OF HOMEROOM? https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-stephen-miller-parlor-game-rasputin.html 





Big Education Ape: THE VOODOO LOGIC OF SUPREME COURT TEXTUALISM: HOW BLACK-ROBE WORD MAGIC HELPED BUILD AN AUTHORITARIAN DEMOCRACY https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-voodoo-logic-of-supreme-court.html 





Big Education Ape: BITCOINS AND BLOCKCHAINS FOR DUMMIES AND OLD ORANGUTANS https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/bitcoins-and-blockchains-for-dummies.html 





Big Education Ape: THE GREAT GLOBAL SCHOOLYARD HEIST: HOW THE WEST PUT EDUCATION ON CLEARANCE RACK PRICING WHILE CHINA BOUGHT THE WHOLE SUPPLY CHAIN https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-great-global-schoolyard-heist-how.html 




Big Education Ape: THE EMPEROR'S NEW DIPLOMA: HOW "POORLY EDUCATED" BECAME A POLICY GOAL https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-emperors-new-diploma-how-poorly.html 





Big Education Ape: AMERICAN CARNAGE 2.0: HOW TRUMP WEAPONIZED YOUR ANXIETY AND WHY THIS NOVEMBER IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO STOP IT https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/american-carnage-20-how-trump.html 





Big Education Ape: THE REAL MEN OF MAGA GO DOWN THE POTOMAC https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/the-real-men-of-maga-go-down-potomic.html 






Big Education Ape: LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW 6-28-26 TO 7-4-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/looking-back-week-in-review-6-28-26-to.html 








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

7-5-26 TO 7-11-26 


SUNDAY, JULY 5, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 5, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_0620517167.html 

Big Education Ape: LOOKING BACK: THE WEEK IN REVIEW 6-28-26 TO 7-4-26 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/looking-back-week-in-review-6-28-26-to.html 

MONDAY, JULY 6, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 6 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_01887739313.html 

TUESDAY, JULY 7, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 7, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_01733195346.html 

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 8, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_02093646793.html 

THURSDAY, JULY 9, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 9, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_0564571420.html 

FRIDAY, JULY 10, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 10, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_02099644542.html  

SATURDAY, JULY 11, 2026

Big Education Ape: TODAY'S TOP NEWS - YESTERDAY'S BEST BLOG POSTS JULY 11, 2026 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2026/07/todays-top-news-yesterdays-best-blog_02089375524.html
 

EDUCATION SPECIAL
TOP 10 US EDUCATION NEWS 
TOP 10 WORLD EDUCATION 
 
7-5-26 TO 7-11-26


Here is a comprehensive breakdown of the major education policy shifts, regulatory updates, and global developments dominating the headlines for the week of July 5 to July 11, 2026.

## Top 10 U.S. Education News Stories

1. Education Department Unveils Massive Fall Regulatory Agenda

On July 8, the U.S. Department of Education released a sweeping unified regulatory agenda targeted at higher education. Key proposals slated for later this summer include making it easier for colleges to merge or close, dismantling race-conscious eligibility for the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate program, and overhauling the historic 90/10 rule that governs revenue limits for for-profit colleges.

2. National K-12 Initiative Launched to Combat "Passing the Trash"

The Office for Civil Rights (OCR) launched a national enforcement initiative on July 10 aimed at stopping school districts from quietly transferring employees suspected of sexual misconduct to other districts—a practice known as "passing the trash." The department will aggressively audit districts to ensure compliance with Title IX and ESEA reporting mandates.

3. House Lawmakers Introduce 10 Bills to Codify Federal Outsourcing

House Education and Workforce Committee Chair Tim Walberg (R-Mich.) introduced a package of 10 bills on July 9 designed to legally codify the Department of Education's recent interagency agreements. The proposals seek to permanently transition various adult literacy, career-technical, and administrative functions over to the Department of Labor and other agencies.

4. California Power Shift: Governor Takes Direct Control of Education Dept

A massive governance shift has taken effect in California following legislative changes and executive actions. Control of the California Department of Education is shifting directly under the governor's purview rather than the state superintendent of public instruction. Policymakers are debating how this administrative streamlining will disrupt or alter the upcoming school year.

5. Higher Education Fraud Summit Convenes in Washington

On July 8, Under Secretary of Education Nicholas Kent hosted the first-of-its-kind Higher Education Fraud Summit. The federal convening focused heavily on tracking deceptive marketing practices, handling student loan program abuses, and establishing tougher compliance oversight for online program managers (OPMs).

6. Arkansas "Returning Education to the States" Waiver Approved

The federal government approved a comprehensive waiver for Arkansas on July 7 under the "Returning Education to the States" initiative. The waiver grants the state unprecedented flexibility to manage federal K-12 funding blocks with minimal federal strings attached, marking a victory for local-control advocates.

7. Massive Private University Donations Hit New Highs in 2026

A mid-year tracking recap published this week highlighted skyrocketing private philanthropy in higher education. Notably, Drexel University secured a massive $112.6 million gift from a trustee family to expand its engineering and computer science colleges, underscoring a widening funding gap between elite private programs and struggling public systems.

8. Private College Tuition Discount Rates Leap to 57%

The National Association of College and University Business Officers (NACUBO) released data showing that the average tuition discount rate for first-time, full-time students at private nonprofit institutions has climbed to a historic 57%. Experts note this shows intense competition for a shrinking pool of traditional college-aged students.

9. "Presidential 1776 Award" Draws Over 1.6 Million Live Viewers

The Department of Education celebrated the broadcast success of its "Presidential 1776 Award: The Ultimate Civics Showdown." The national K-12 civics competition aired on prime-time television, drawing 1.63 million live viewers and fueling ongoing national debates surrounding conservative-led civics curricula.

10. Private K-12 Voucher Expansion Takes Center Stage at National Forum

At the 2026 National Forum on Education Policy, governors and state legislators gathered to discuss "The Compact Renewed." A primary topic of debate centered on optimizing and expanding state-level ESA (Education Savings Account) and private school voucher programs while maintaining fiscal transparency.

## Top 10 World Education News Stories

1. UNESCO High-Level Summit Tackles Worsening Global Finance Crisis

Nearly 40 global leaders gathered at UNESCO headquarters this week for the Transforming Education Summit +4. The meeting served as a crucial mid-way stocktake before the 2030 Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) deadline, with leaders warning that global education systems face unprecedented fiscal pressure.

2. UN Demands Massive Expansion of "Debt-for-Education" Swaps

In tandem with the Paris summit, UNESCO officially urged international lenders to implement debt-for-education swaps. The mechanism allows heavily indebted developing nations to restructure expensive loans and channel the preserved capital directly into school construction, teacher training, and local student resources.

3. Alarm Sounded: 113 Countries Spend More on Debt Than Schools

A startling UNESCO report released this week revealed that 113 countries—representing 6.1 billion people—now spend more money servicing national debt than they do on public education. In the 18 most heavily indebted nations, debt payments surpass entire education budgets by a factor of five.

4. International Education Aid Projected to Drop 30% by 2027

The Global Education Monitoring Report issued a stern warning that international financial aid for education is rapidly drying up. Projections indicate global education aid could plummet by 30% between 2023 and 2027, with funding for basic primary literacy already down 15% year-over-year.

5. AI in the Classroom Takes Focus Ahead of World Congress of Education

Pre-convening briefs released this week for the upcoming 8th World Congress of Education in Helsinki, Finland, highlighted a coordinated focus on integrating artificial intelligence into diverse classrooms. International researchers are finalizing frameworks to protect student data privacy across EU schools.

6. Sub-Saharan Africa Confronts a Four-Fold Education Funding Gap

Data presented at the SDG 4 High-Level Steering Committee detailed the widening crisis in low-income regions, specifically across Sub-Saharan Africa. Because debt service obligations are nearly four times higher than domestic education investments, regional leaders warned of a generation-defining regression in basic literacy.

7. Global Cross-Policy Dialogues Target Climate and Agriculture Education

On July 10, the AI4SoilHealth initiative held a cross-policy dialogue linking climate science directly to agricultural education programs. International teams are coordinating new standard learning modules across European vocational institutions to teach advanced carbon and soil tracking metrics.

8. UK Higher Education Adjusts to Shift in International Student Visas

University groups in the United Kingdom spent the week evaluating the latest quarterly enrollment metrics following tighter immigration and dependent visa rules. Early figures point to a sharp drop in international applications, driving deep concerns regarding revenue losses for major research institutions.

9. Transnational University Mergers Gain Traction in East Asia

Faced with steep demographic declines and shrinking birth rates, education ministries across South Korea and Japan passed new frameworks this week to make cross-border and regional university mergers easier. The policy shifts aim to prevent the outright closure of rural and specialized colleges.

10. Latin American Advocacy Groups Sue to Reclaim Research Funds

A coalition of education advocates and regional university groups filed formal legal actions this week to force the release of nearly $2 billion in frozen public research and scientific funding, challenging austerity budgets that have directly stalled regional academic modernization.