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Thursday, July 9, 2026

SCHOOLS STARVE SO INSURANCE COMPANIES CAN FEAST: THE CASE FOR MEDICARE FOR ALL



SCHOOLS STARVE SO INSURANCE COMPANIES CAN FEAST

THE CASE FOR MEDICARE FOR ALL

Why the AI revolution, the school budget crisis, and the implosion of ACA subsidies all point to the same exit ramp

There's a particular species of Washington logic that goes something like this: if a problem is complicated enough, we should solve it incrementally — meaning, we should make a modest tweak and then hold a press conference while the building continues to burn.

American healthcare is the building. The fire alarm has been going off since 1994. And right now, three accelerants are being added simultaneously: a robot revolution that is quietly vaporizing the payroll tax base, a public-sector budget crisis driven by insurance premiums eating school budgets like a particularly aggressive invasive species, and the political failure to extend the ACA subsidies that kept millions of middle-class families from choosing between insulin and the light bill.

Ladies and gentlemen, now would be a good time to talk about Medicare for All. Not as a utopian fantasy. As basic arithmetic.

The AI Problem Nobody Is Taxing

Let's start with the crisis hiding in plain sight: automation.

When Amazon replaces a warehouse worker with a robot, or when a law firm replaces three junior associates with a document-analysis AI, something happens to the tax base that is genuinely alarming. The displaced human beings — the ones who paid income taxes, payroll taxes, and bought enough lunch to generate sales tax — are gone. The robot pays nothing. The AI platform, typically domiciled in a convenient jurisdiction with an aggressive tax treaty, pays approximately the same.

The economic architecture of the American welfare state, including Medicare and Social Security, was built on the assumption that there would always be a large, stably-employed workforce writing premium checks and paying into the system. That assumption is decomposing in real time.

But here's the specific cruelty that doesn't get enough attention: our healthcare system is also built on the premise of stable employment. Employer-sponsored insurance, the dominant model for working-age adults, only works if people have employers. As automation hollows out middle-tier employment and converts full-time jobs into gig contracts that come without benefits, the "employer-sponsored" scaffolding collapses — and workers fall into the uninsured gap or onto increasingly stressed public programs.

The robot didn't just take your job. It took your health insurance.

The School Budget as a Case Study in Structural Absurdity

You want to understand why a school district can simultaneously receive "record state funding" and still lay off teachers? Welcome to the healthcare cost black hole.

School districts are labor-intensive organizations — typically 80 to 85 percent of spending goes to personnel costs. When your commercial insurance premiums spike 15 to 30 percent in a single year, that increase doesn't come from a magic budget line labeled "absorb insurance hike here." It comes directly out of what's left over for classroom supplies, reading specialists, and — eventually — staff positions.

The structural trap is elegant in its cruelty. State funding formulas were written against pre-inflation baselines. Federal pandemic relief money (ESSER) has dried up, leaving districts trying to absorb those positions into regular budgets. In states like California, enrollment declines are shrinking per-pupil funding while fixed operational costs stay fixed. And the natural fallback — raising local property taxes — runs into legally mandated caps that require referendums most voters are increasingly rejecting.

The result is a superintendent standing at a podium explaining that yes, the state gave us more money this year, and yes, we are still eliminating twenty-seven positions. This is not a mystery. This is what happens when you make school districts function as de facto insurance administrators.

Under Medicare for All, this changes structurally. Instead of paying $15,000 to $25,000 per employee per year in commercial premiums that gyrate with the insurance market's mood, a district would pay a statutory federal payroll tax — proposals have historically landed around 6 to 7.5 percent. A volatile, double-digit annual hike becomes a fixed, predictable cost set by law. The money currently absorbed by insurance brokers, claims departments, and shareholder dividends goes back to classrooms.

This is not a political argument. It is a budget argument. And the budget is losing, badly, under the current system.

The ACA Cliff: When the Safety Net Has an Expiration Date

Congress's failure to permanently extend the ACA's enhanced premium subsidies deserves its own category in the museum of foreseeable self-inflicted disasters.

The subsidies, which meaningfully expanded who could afford marketplace coverage, were enhanced through the American Rescue Plan and subsequently extended. But they were never made permanent. Every time they come up for reauthorization, they become a hostage to whatever else is happening in the legislative session — which, in recent years, has included a rotating series of crises, shutdowns, and ideological standoffs.

The consequence is that millions of people who bought into the idea that coverage was now genuinely affordable have discovered that their plans are contingent on Congress not having a particularly bad week. This is not a healthcare system. This is a healthcare system with an escape hatch built into the floor.

The for-profit insurance market, meanwhile, responds to any expansion of coverage with a characteristic pattern: premiums rise to match whatever subsidy level the government is providing, ensuring that the subsidy dollars flow through policyholders and into insurance company revenue rather than actually reducing the cost of care. It is a loop in which the government subsidizes the industry's ability to remain expensive.

The Math That No One Wants to Say Out Loud

The objection to Medicare for All that gets the most airtime is the sticker price: an estimated $1.5 trillion to $3 trillion in new annual federal revenue. The figure lands with the satisfying thud of apparent refutation, and most conversations stop there.

Here is what the same analyses show, which gets substantially less airtime: the total amount Americans spend on healthcare — adding up what individuals, employers, and governments already pay — would either stay approximately flat or decline by roughly 3 to 13 percent. The savings come from eliminating the 12 to 18 percent administrative overhead that private insurers spend on marketing, underwriting, billing, and profits. They come from the negotiating power of a single buyer — Medicare pays about half what commercial insurers pay for the same procedure — and from the ability to negotiate drug prices directly.

The federal budget line explodes. The national healthcare bill doesn't. The money moves from private ledgers to public ones. This is not a loophole or a trick; it is the definitional difference between a public utility and a private market.

Administrative savings alone are projected to reach $743 billion annually. That is not a rounding error. That is the GDP of a mid-sized country, currently being spent on determining who is eligible for care rather than on providing it.

Who Is Lined Up Where, and Who Is Paying Them

The single-payer camp is anchored by the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, National Nurses United, and a coalition of advocacy organizations that have correctly identified the structural nature of the problem. They argue that as long as healthcare is tied to employment, public entities like school districts will remain hostage to commercial premium cycles. The only durable fix is to remove healthcare from the employment relationship entirely.

The public option camp — currently represented by legislation like the Affordable CHOICE Act — argues for a government-administered plan competing on the ACA exchanges, giving employers and individuals an off-ramp from the commercial market without requiring the full restructuring. For school districts specifically, this would create an affordable alternative that doesn't require waiting for a federal single-payer transition.

California has taken the state-level route with SB 177, the Fair Share from Big Corporations Act, which claws back Medi-Cal costs from large employers who fail to provide adequate coverage and dump their workers onto public programs. It is a fiscal backstop, not a solution, but it is something.

And then there is the status quo coalition: the insurance industry lobbying through AHIP, PhRMA protecting its drug pricing prerogatives, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which has correctly identified that employer-sponsored insurance functions as a retention tool and is disinclined to give it up. The standard argument — that government intervention destroys innovation and creates rationing — largely elides the fact that the current system rations care extensively, it just does so through deductibles and denials rather than waiting lists.

The November Argument


Here is the through-line that connects the robot in the Amazon warehouse, the teacher who got laid off in a district that just received record state funding, and the family that lost their ACA plan when the subsidy lapsed:

All of these are downstream consequences of the same structural choice — tying healthcare to employment in a moment when employment is becoming less stable, less permanent, and less likely to come with benefits.

The AI revolution doesn't create this problem; it accelerates it. Every job that gets automated is a job that was paying into the system. Every gig worker replacing a salaried employee is another person without employer-sponsored coverage. Every school district cutting a counselor to cover premium increases is a district that has been conscripted into the insurance business against its will.

The argument for Medicare for All has never been purely ideological. It has always been, at its core, a budget argument — who holds the risk, who pays the administrative overhead, and who gets to negotiate prices. Right now, the answers are: school districts and individual workers hold the risk, insurance companies collect the overhead, and pharmaceutical companies name their price.

The robots are coming. They are not paying a dime in taxes. They are absolutely not offering health benefits.

This November, it would be worth asking every candidate on your ballot who they think should be on the hook for that gap. The answer will tell you a great deal about whose problem they think this is.

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER

Big Education Ape covers public education advocacy, school politics, and the economics of public school finance. Views expressed are editorial.


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 


SOURCES AND FURTHER READING: 

This chat was a synthesis of complex socio-economic issues. For detailed research, policy analysis, and financial data regarding the interactions between education funding, healthcare costs, and tax policy, please refer to the following institutions, reports, and primary documents.

Category 1: School District Funding and Economic Data

Organization: United States Census Bureau

Organization: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)

  • Focus: Consumer Price Index (CPI-U)

  • What it tracks: The definitive measure of inflation.

  • Link: bls.gov/cpi

Organization: National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO)

Category 2: Employer-Sponsored Healthcare Cost Drivers

Organization: Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF)

Organization: Milliman Medical Index (MMI)

Category 3: Single-Payer and Public Option Cost Analysis

Organization: Congressional Budget Office (CBO)

  • Focus: Cost Estimate of the Medicare for All Act

  • What it tracks: Non-partisan financial modeling of universal coverage.

  • Link: cbo.gov/publication/57018

Organization: Center for American Progress (CAP)

Organization: The Urban Institute

Category 4: Federal Legislation and Policy Positions

Primary Document: Medicare for All Act of 2023 (Senate Bill S.1655)

Primary Document: Affordable CHOICE Act (Senate Bill S.3188)

Category 5: State-Level Initiatives

Organization: California Governor’s Office (Office of Gavin Newsom)

  • Focus: Press Releases and Bill Signings

  • Specific Bill: SB-177 Health care: fair share

  • Link: gov.ca.gov/newsroom


THE AMERICAN SVENGALI: A FIELD GUIDE TO A NATION UNDER THE SPELL

 

THE AMERICAN SVENGALI
A FIELD GUIDE TO A NATION UNDER THE SPELL

By the Editorial Desk, Big Education Ape

Let's start with the vocabulary problem, because with this administration you always have to start with the vocabulary problem.

Svengali — noun, from the 1894 novel Trilby — a hypnotist who takes an unremarkable woman and, through sheer force of will and a menacing stare, turns her into a singing sensation who cannot function without him. The word has survived a century and change specifically so that, one day, somebody would need it to describe a reality-TV real-estate heir who cannot pronounce "anonymous" but has somehow convinced tens of millions of people that the 2020 election was stolen by a bipartisan army of election officials, judges, and his own hand-picked attorney general.

Is Donald Trump a Svengali? The scholars are torn. Some say he's the hypnotist. Some say he's just the mirror — a man who doesn't implant thoughts so much as he finds your fear, turns the volume up to eleven, and charges admission. Either way, the audience keeps showing up, and the show never, ever closes.

Truth Social: The Oxymoron That Pays Dividends

Somewhere a marketing executive is still being paid actual money for naming a social media platform built substantially on demonstrable falsehoods "Truth Social," and if that isn't the most honest dishonest thing this administration has ever produced, nothing is. It's less a platform than a confession dressed as a brand — the political equivalent of a diet company calling itself "Just Eat Whatever."

The Polymarket Proposition

Here is a business idea, free of charge, for the degenerate gamblers of the internet: a daily prediction market on the number of false or misleading claims made by the President of the United States before dinner. Call it the Falsehood Futures Index. You could hedge it against the stock market, honestly, because at this point they move on the same information: vibes, grievance, and whatever was said at 6:47 a.m. from a phone in Bedminster.

The tragedy is that this market would resolve up almost every single day, which means it would be one of the least volatile — and most depressing — instruments ever traded. Nobody gets rich betting on sunrise.

What the Audience Says About Us

Here's the part that should actually keep us up at night, and it isn't about him. It's about the crowd.

Psychologists will tell you, patiently, that believing a man who says false things over and over is not a symptom of stupidity. It's a symptom of belonging. Once a leader becomes part of your identity, doubting him stops being a factual exercise and starts feeling like self-harm. Admitting "he lied to me" requires first admitting "I let myself be lied to" — and the human ego will burn down entire cities of evidence before it accepts that particular verdict about itself.

So the lies aren't really the product. The product is relief. Certainty in an uncertain economy. A villain to blame for a shrinking paycheck. A "them" sturdy enough to hold up an "us." Trump doesn't need to convince anyone of anything, technically — he just needs to keep reflecting a feeling back at a volume no fact-checker can compete with. Repetition alone does the rest; the brain mistakes familiarity for truth roughly the way it mistakes a diner mirror for a window. You've heard it enough times that it now simply feels correct, the way a jingle feels correct at 2 a.m.

That's not a design flaw in the audience. That's a design flaw in being human. He just found the vulnerability first and monetized it, the way he's monetized everything else he's ever touched, including his own bankruptcies.

Calling It What It Is

There's a temptation, when writing about all this, to stay clinical — "rhetorical strategy," "narrative framing," "post-truth media ecosystem." Very tidy. Very academic. Also, frankly, a little bit of a dodge.

Because when one person tells another person a demonstrable falsehood, gets caught, denies ever saying it, and then attacks the person who noticed — that has a name in every therapist's office in America, and the name is not "messaging strategy." It's gaslighting. It's the oldest trick in the abuser's playbook: deny, deflect, exhaust, repeat, until the victim simply stops raising their hand.

Run that cycle on one person for years and you get a broken relationship. Run it on 340 million people for a decade and you get cable news ratings, a fundraising empire, and a country that flinches every time it hears the phrase "breaking news."

The rest of us — the ones who are, in fact, exhausted — are not "Trump Derangement Syndrome" patients, whatever that phrase is supposed to diagnose. We are the control group. We're the people standing in the kitchen saying "that's not what happened" while someone insists, calmly, that the stove was never on, even as the smoke alarm screams overhead.

The Closing Argument


Nobody is claiming Donald Trump hypnotized anyone in the literal, 19th-century-novel sense. He doesn't need a pocket watch. He has cable news, a captive party, an algorithm that rewards outrage, and an electorate that has been systematically taught not to trust the referee. That's a more efficient hypnosis than anything Svengali ever managed, and it doesn't require a single stage prop.

The good news, such as it is: spells like this only work as long as the room agrees to stay quiet. Naming the trick out loud — Svengali, gaslighter, bullshitter, abuser, whichever word fits the Tuesday — is not an act of hysteria. It's the first step of waking the room up.

The rest, as always, is turnout.

Big Education Ape will continue tracking the collision of authoritarian rhetoric, media literacy, and public education — because a citizenry that can't be lied to is a citizenry that can't be governed by liars.

REMEMBER IN NOVEMBER


MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 9 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 9, 2026


U.S. NEWS (Top stories as of July 9, 2026):

  • U.S. military conducted additional airstrikes on Iran early on July 9, targeting southern regions, following previous actions and amid a faltering ceasefire.
  • Family of a man fatally shot by an ICE agent in Houston calls for an independent inquiry; details of the encounter remain unclear.
  • Extreme heat events, including on Independence Day, are becoming America's new normal due to climate change, with experts noting impacts on infrastructure like roads.
  • Trump’s ambassador to the Vatican navigates high-level U.S. relations while prioritizing Washington priorities.
  • Reports of flexible work arrangements helping address worker shortages in manufacturing.
  • NYC High-Rise Stabilization: Normal activity slowly returns to the streets surrounding a heavily damaged New York City high-rise building as engineers complete structural stabilization efforts and outline next steps for permanent repairs.

  • Houston ICE Encounter Inquiry: Federal authorities are reviewing a fatal encounter in Houston where an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent shot and killed a Mexican immigrant during a targeted enforcement operation.

  • Charlie Kirk Killing Trial Developments: Prosecutors announced plans to introduce redacted statements from a key roommate in the high-profile trial involving the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

  • Drowning Outbreak Data: Public health officials released an alert regarding a severe multi-state outbreak of a waterborne, diarrhea-causing parasite that has now surged past 1,000 confirmed cases.

POLITICS:

  • President Trump declared the Iran ceasefire "over" and ordered renewed strikes, with ongoing developments at the NATO summit in Turkey.
  • Trump wraps up NATO summit with meetings, including with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy, amid mixed reactions and European defense shifts.
  • Developments around Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner, including calls to drop out amid allegations and campaign decisions.
  • Trump administration actions on regulations, including potential Supreme Court rehearing on citizenship issues and other policy moves.
  • Vice President JD Vance and other administration activities, including remarks and press conferences.
  • DOJ Election Warning: The Department of Justice issued a strict warning to more than a dozen state election officials, threatening immediate arrests if noncitizens are found voting or if systemic registration safeguards are bypassed.

  • E. Jean Carroll $5.8M Escrow Order: A federal judge ruled that E. Jean Carroll can collect $5.8 million held in escrow from a previous civil sex abuse and defamation suit against President Trump, despite ongoing legal appeals.

  • Maine Senate Candidate Withdrawal: Democrat Graham Platner announced intentions to withdraw from the high-stakes U.S. Senate race in Maine following an allegation of sexual assault, which he publicly denies.

  • Immigration Court Reshaping: The Trump administration faced criticism from legal circles after dismissing additional immigration judges as part of an aggressive effort to reshape the federal court system handling deportations.

WORLD AFFAIRS:

  • Escalating U.S.-Iran conflict with fresh strikes, Iranian retaliation targeting Gulf allies (Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar), and risks to regional stability/oil routes.
  • NATO summit developments in Turkey, with Trump’s presence, European defense discussions, and alliance dynamics.
  • Other global tensions, including potential tanker attacks and broader Middle East fallout.
  • International reactions and live updates on the Iran situation dominating headlines.
  • U.S.–Iran Military Strikes Escalate: The U.S. and Iran traded heavy retaliatory airstrikes overnight. U.S. Central Command struck 90 targets near the Strait of Hormuz after President Trump declared an interim ceasefire "over." Iran responded by targeting U.S. assets in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar.

  • Gaza "Peace Board" Pilot Project: A representative from President Trump's Board of Peace announced a new initiative to establish pilot humanitarian zones for displaced Gazans to restart stalled diplomatic talks.

  • Ukraine Given Patriot Production License: At the ongoing NATO Summit, the United States announced it will grant Ukraine a specific license to domestically produce Patriot air defense missiles to protect its infrastructure.

  • Venezuela Earthquake Recovery Swells: United Nations teams are rapidly scaling up emergency aid operations in Venezuela as structural damage assessments from the recent earthquake climb to an estimated $37 billion.

EDUCATION:

  • U.S. Department of Education issues flexibilities for states like Arkansas and releases regulatory agenda on accreditation, diversity, and civil rights.
  • National test results show mixed progress: improvements for 9-year-olds in reading/math, but stalls for youngest learners.
  • California debates over Department of Education overhaul and accusations of power grabs.
  • Broader higher ed news on regulations and initiatives.
  • Deloitte 2026 Back-to-School Economic Strain: A newly released national survey shows parents plan to spend $557 per student this year. While the dollar amount is steady, it represents a 6% drop when adjusted for inflation, forcing families into "hyper-value" shopping.

  • Parental Anxiety Over AI Overuse: The same education data reveals that 50% of K-12 parents are deeply concerned that their children are relying too heavily on generative AI tools inside and outside the classroom.

  • The "AI Tutoring" Market Pivot: Despite tightening budgets, 13% of parents surveyed stated they plan to pay for specialized out-of-pocket AI tutoring programs, camps, or ed-tech tools to keep their kids competitive.

  • UN Transforming Education Summit Prep: Ahead of tomorrow's major UN "Transforming Education Summit + 4," international delegates are warning that global public school funding is facing unprecedented pressure from fiscal constraints and rapid tech integration.

ECONOMY:

  • Markets react to U.S.-Iran tensions with mixed closes (Dow down, Nasdaq slightly up on tech/AI); oil prices volatile but pulling back slightly.
  • Strong corporate earnings optimism, especially in tech/AI, driving S&P 500 expectations higher (Q2 growth ~23%).
  • SK Hynix ADR listing oversubscribed amid chip sector interest.
  • U.S. trade deficit widened in May; GDP and personal income data in focus.
  • Broader concerns over profit growth sustainability, war impacts, and AI-driven sectors.
  • Markets Slump on War Escalation: Global stocks dropped sharply and crude oil prices surged following the collapse of the U.S.–Iran ceasefire and active conflict in the Strait of Hormuz.

  • Consumer Confidence Plummets: Economic indicators show 57% of consumers expect U.S. financial conditions to worsen over the next six months—the highest level of economic anxiety recorded since 2020.

  • John Deere "Right to Repair" Settlement: The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) finalized a sweeping settlement with John Deere, guaranteeing agricultural equipment owners the right to repair their own machinery without manufacturer lockouts.

  • Retirees Force Return to Workplace: Driven by a severe surge in the cost of living and rising health insurance premiums, federal employment data highlights a sharp uptick in retirees re-entering the workforce.

TECHNOLOGY:

  • AI developments: Meta's Zuckerberg notes slower-than-expected AI agent progress; China considers curbs on overseas AI models.
  • SK Hynix strong investor interest in U.S. listing amid memory chip demand.
  • Other tech/business moves, including startups and valuations (e.g., Wonder funding).
  • Ongoing AI infrastructure and innovation pushes in policy and industry.
  • UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance: UN delegates gathered in Geneva for a massive cross-border summit to establish global guardrails on artificial intelligence governance, specifically aiming to protect developing nations from corporate exploitation.

  • Tech Spend Drops for Back-to-School: Retail reports show a distinct consumer shift away from hardware upgrades; families are cutting tech hardware purchases by 16% this season, prioritizing basic clothing instead.

  • MIT Sports Analytics Breakthroughs: MIT computer scientists published data on new AI integration models designed to help Olympic and professional athletes analyze real-time biomechanics directly from the sidelines.

  • Ed-Tech Policy Void: New school year data reveals a significant institutional lag: while student AI use is ubiquitous, only 33% of parents report that their local public school districts have established clear guidelines for acceptable AI use.

HEALTH:

  • Limited breaking daily stories, but ongoing monitoring of issues like semaglutide (Ozempic/Wegovy) poison control calls, Alzheimer's research advances, and peptide therapies.
  • Trump administration cancels grants for teen pregnancy prevention.
  • Broader global health concerns including conflict impacts on systems and vaccination gaps.
  • Obamacare Premiums Skyrocket: A federal healthcare analysis reveals a massive surge in Affordable Care Act premiums this year, with health economists warning that further systemic spikes are locked in for the 2027 cycle.

  • Medicaid Funding Restored for Planned Parenthood: Federal health administrators resumed critical Medicaid funding allocations to Planned Parenthood affiliates after a nearly year-long block in several states.

  • Legionnaires' Disease Outbreak in NYC: Public health departments in New York City are tracing the source of a cluster of Legionnaires' disease cases that have hospitalized several residents.

  • Neurologic Disease Clinical Trials: Late-stage biotech reports highlighted significant progress in Phase 3 trials for oral therapies targeting relapsing multiple sclerosis, with final safety data expected by year-end.

SPORTS:

  • MLB ongoing: Various games and viewing info for teams like Cubs vs. Orioles, Guardians vs. Twins, etc. (July 9 schedule).
  • World Cup-related buzz, including halftime show mentions and tournament developments.
  • NBA/WNBA notes, such as items like Jalen Brunson jersey sale and All-Star mentions.
  • Other leagues and youth sports debates tied to international performances.
  • FIFA Suspends U.S. Soccer Staff Members: FIFA officially handed down immediate suspensions to two U.S. soccer team staff members just ahead of their critical World Cup matchup against Belgium.

  • Data-Driven Refeering Protocols: FIFA is partnering with top-tier sports data institutes to roll out an entirely new methodology for tracking ball physics and automated offside officiating.

  • Bucknell Football Criminal Charges: The parents of a deceased Bucknell University football player issued a statement expressing gratitude after criminal charges were formally brought against the team's coach.

  • San FermĆ­n Festival Casualties: The third running of the bulls at the historic San FermĆ­n festival in Pamplona, Spain, left multiple international revelers injured following dramatic falls in front of the fighting bulls.

News is fast-moving, especially around the Middle East; check reliable sources for live updates.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here is a breakdown of the top education news stories and trends making waves today, both in the United States and globally.

Top US Education News Today

1. "Peak EdTech Sprawl" Sparks Shift Toward Postsecondary Accountability

The U.S. Department of Education just held a first-of-its-kind Higher Education Fraud Summit, signaling a major regulatory crackdown on predatory postsecondary practices. Alongside this, the federal government officially rolled out the Student Tuition and Transparency System (STATS) and Earnings Accountability framework. This rule binds federal funding eligibility directly to measurable student employment outcomes, aiming to force transparency on tuition costs versus actual post-grad earnings.

2. The Great Federal Hand-Back: More States Grant Waivers

Following several other states earlier this year, the federal government officially approved Arkansas' and Vermont's "Returning Education to the States" waivers. These agreements grant state education departments unprecedented flexibility to bypass certain federal compliance requirements, giving local officials significantly more discretion over how they allocate and spend federal education dollars.

3. Record State Aid Fails to Close "Bare-Bones" District Budgets

Despite record-high education funding packages passed in states like New Jersey, local school superintendents are warning of impending staff and program cuts for the upcoming 2026–2027 academic year. The massive influx of state aid is completely being swallowed by double-digit hikes in employee health insurance premiums and skyrocketing operational costs. District leaders are publicly urging lawmakers to overhaul outdated state funding formulas, noting that caps on local property tax bases leave them unable to adapt to modern inflation.

4. Classroom Realism: High School Math and Cell Phone Bans

The conversation around structural K–12 changes has reached a tipping point this summer. Stricter, district-wide cell phone bans are sweeping the country as new data shows nearly 80% of teachers report "constantly competing" with social media for attention. Simultaneously, there is a growing national movement to reform high-school mathematics curricula, with policy advocates demanding a shift away from traditional rote micro-topics toward data literacy and algorithmic thinking that reflect an AI-driven workforce.

Top World Education News Today

1. Geneva Launches Global Coalition for Children's Rights in the AI Age

At the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance in Geneva, an international coalition launched a massive initiative to ensure children's safety and data privacy are legally protected as AI integrates into global schooling. Named The Coalition for Children's Rights and Protection in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, the group is anchored by UNICEF, UNESCO, and seventeen founding countries (including Japan, South Korea, Canada, France, and Brazil). The focus is creating strict guardrails to prevent corporate data-mining of students while maintaining equitable access to tech.

2. UNESCO Convenes "Transforming Education Summit + 4" (TES+4)

Global leaders, youth advocates, and education ministers are convening at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris for the TES+4 Summit. The primary objective is evaluating global progress toward Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4) for equitable education. With the 2030 deadline fast approaching, the committee has officially launched a three-year global consultation process to draft the international education agenda beyond 2030, focusing heavily on building resilient infrastructure in climate-vulnerable regions.

3. The Shift from "Novelty AI" to "Coherent Learning Platforms"

Globally, the conversation around AI in the classroom has fundamentally shifted from experimental tool adoption to system-wide infrastructure consolidation. International education analysts note that schools are suffering from "app fatigue." The current global trend is the rise of unified instructional operating systems—where localized AI doesn't just write a standalone lesson plan, but dynamically syncs a country’s specific curriculum, real-time student benchmarks, and targeted interventions into a single, cohesive interface.


University of California will consider using Smarter Balanced exam scores for admissions | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/uc-considers-smarter-balanced-exams/761765 

New 'do no harm' test targets low-earning college degrees : NPR https://www.npr.org/2026/06/30/nx-s1-5835631/turner-camhi-do-no-harm-college-loans 

A Puerto Rico Government Agency Exposed 1 Million Social Security Numbers — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/puerto-rico-crim-data-breach 

UC reconsidering SAT return after faculty complaints over math skills - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-09/uc-sat-act-return-admissions-math-skills 

Wall Street wants to change the rules for your 401(k) - Salon.com https://www.salon.com/2026/07/09/wall-street-wants-to-change-the-rules-for-your-401k/ 

The AI economy needs a break-the-glass plan. We don’t have one. | Vox https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/494579/artificial-intelligence-politics-policy-tax-inequality 

As Gary Lumpkin retires from Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, 6 apply for post https://nondoc.com/2026/07/09/as-gary-lumpkin-retires-from-oklahoma-court-of-criminal-appeals-6-apply-for-post/

How Maine Democrats will replace Graham Platner - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/graham-platner-maine-democrats-replacement-process-00991464

Inside the tense final hours of Graham Platner’s campaign - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/graham-platner-campaign-final-hours-00991485

1 year in, ICE’s mass detention policy is on the ropes - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/trump-immigration-detention-courts-judges-00990836

The administration has a new climate change office. It’s headed by a climate critic. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/the-administration-has-a-new-climate-change-office-its-headed-by-a-climate-critic-00990916

Why the House's Epstein investigation isn't going away - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/jeffrey-epstein-trump-house-investigation-00990996

Planned Parenthood to target GOP with $47 million midterm blitz - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/08/planned-parenthood-to-target-gop-with-47-million-midterm-blitz-00991419