About Us
What We Do. And Why We Do It.
Â鶹¾«Æ· is a nonprofit news organization covering America’s education system from early childhood through college and career.
Our schools are facing challenges unlike any they have seen before. Prior to COVID, fewer than half our students could read or do math at grade level. Now, after years of pandemic-related disruptions, trauma and upheaval, we risk losing a generation of students to learning loss, widening achievement gaps and fractured institutions. Yet even as more children are at risk of being left behind, the education debate is often dominated by partisanship, misinformation and political opportunism — not on student needs.
As a national news site, Â鶹¾«Æ· is dedicated to examining the issues impacting the education of America’s 74 million children — and the effectiveness of the system that delivers it. We center our reporting on the teachers, innovators, researchers, school leaders and politicians who shape that education, sometimes for the better, sometimes for the worse. But most importantly, we focus on the students, their parents and their achievement.
Our mission is to lead an honest, fact-based conversation about how to give American students the skills, support and social mobility they deserve. Backed by data, investigation, and expertise. Â鶹¾«Æ·â€™s journalists aim to challenge the status quo, expose corruption and inequality, spotlight solutions, confront the impact of systemic racism, and champion the heroes bringing positive change to our schools.
There are 74 million reasons we need to talk about education every day. Join the conversation.
Our Journalism
Latest News and Investigative Reporting
Our expert team of journalists cover the latest in K-12 education and uncover stories that are hidden from view.
Expert Opinion and Commentary
A provocative 360-degree view of education from top experts, advocates, educators, parents and students.
Â鶹¾«Æ· and Multimedia Journalism
Immersive visual reporting focused intently on education innovators and the parents and students who rely on them.