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Is Your Child’s School Forcing Kids to Diet?
Learn about the dieting programs public schools are implementing in an effort to reduce childhood obesity, and whether or not these efforts are healthy or detrimental to your children.

With the startling rise in obesity among young children, many schools are striving to combat issues of weight and poor health by enforcing new dietary restrictions. For example, some schools are creating workout and wellness plans that help students lose weight through fun activities. Similarly, some schools are prohibiting their cafeterias from selling certain types of foods to prevent poor eating habits.

Ultimately, while all can agree that children are best served when they are at their optimal health and physical size, many individuals assert that the schools’ new focus on weight can lead to an array of mental and personal issues in young kids.

The Obesity Issue

According to reports, approximately 1 in 3 kids is considered to be overweight or obese. As the percentage of overweight children continues to rise at a startling rate, leaders are striving to seek out solutions to this serious crisis. According to Kids Health, children today are spending less time playing outdoors and engaging in physical activities due to the new appeals of technology, video games, and television. Subsequently, children are becoming lethargic, lazy, and large. Adding to the change in children’s activities, Kids Health further asserts that busy parents no longer have the time to prepare healthy and balanced meals: “From fast food to electronics, quick and easy is the reality for many people in the new millennium.”

This video suggests that school lunches and too much TV time play a role in childhood

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Do Mandatory Vaccines Hurt or Help Public School Children?

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Do Mandatory Vaccines Hurt or Help Public School Children?
Learn about the benefits of mandatory vaccines, as well as why some parents are arguing against vaccines for public school children.

Depending on your child’s school and state policies, your son or daughter may not be able to attend their first day of class until they’re fully vaccinated. In an attempt to reduce common illnesses and eliminate potentially fatal or harmful diseases, medical leaders have created mandates that command all kids to be vaccinated. According to many experts, students who are not vaccinated are susceptible to an array of prospective health issues.

While these regulations were created to help protect all children, many parents argue that the vaccines pose too many unknown risks. Ultimately, a new debate has emerged: are these mandatory vaccines helping or hurting our children?

Why Vaccinate?

According to CNN News, by the time a child is 2 years old, he or she has most likely been injected with over 20 vaccines to prevent various health problems. Aligning with this early treatment method, most public schools demand that all children are vaccinated for common child-related sicknesses, including vaccines to prevent illnesses such as:

  • Mumps
  • Measles
  • Chickenpox
  • Flu
  • Meningitis
  • Tetanus

In addition to a wide spectrum of other potential preventative vaccines, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP) asserts that immunization regulations must be enforced to protect all children in society. Ultimately, with the support of vaccinations, medical leaders, along with CDCP, believe that optimal immunization against illnesses is the best way to prevent a widespread breakout of common contagious diseases. Since children are forced into a small classroom area with countless physical interactions in a given

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Inclusion or Exclusion? The ESL Education Debate

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Inclusion or Exclusion?  The ESL Education Debate
The debate over the best approach to ESL education continues to evolve with new trends and technological advancements. This article explores the pros and cons of full inclusion vs. specialized support programs for ESL students, providing insights into how schools can balance educational needs and budget constraints.

With classrooms becoming more diverse, public schools are experimenting with new language programs to enhance ESL student learning.

ESL students, standing for English as a Second Language, typically need additional resources and support to adjust to the various linguistic complications of learning a new language. As a result, ESL students typically require additional funding.

However, as public schools are coping with reduced funding due to the economic recession, educational experts debate the best approach to balancing school budgets while caring for each child’s language development. To save costs, some schools and states have created mandatory full inclusion programs, where ESL students are immersed in a regular-paced English class with fluent English speakers. This strategy will reduce the costs of ESL specialists while still engaging ESL students in an atmosphere for learning.

While this approach helps balance school budgets, many educators and parents argue that the full-inclusion classroom is ineffective for both fluent and ESL children.

Public Schools and ESL Programs

As The Multicultural Education Journal explains, the 2001 national mandate, No Child Left Behind, required all public schools to help ESL students become proficient in English, as both fluent and ESL students are mandated to meet state and national achievement standards. While public schools are legally required to provide educational support for ESL kids, many experts assert that the current approach is ineffective and flawed. As the number of minority students is rising each year in the United States, experts predict that by the

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How is Your Child’s School Using its Stimulus Check?

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How is Your Child’s School Using its Stimulus Check?
Learn more about how your local public school will use the new stimulus funds. Will the funding be allocated to teacher retention, special needs, or after school programs?

Federal stimulus funding has influenced public education for more than a decade. Programs first introduced during the Obama administration helped stabilize school budgets after the 2008 recession. More recently, large federal relief programs during the COVID-19 pandemic provided historic funding for K-12 education. In 2026, districts are evaluating how these funds were spent and which initiatives should continue as stimulus programs phase out. According to national reports, many schools are choosing to spend their stimulus money in unique and much-needed ways.

Public Education Stimulus Package

Federal stimulus funding has been distributed to public schools during several major national crises. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 provided billions in funding to stabilize school budgets and support academic reform initiatives such as Race to the Top. Specifically, the new public school stimulus package is designed to provide specialized support and assistance to schools serving special education students, homeless children, and lower-income families with children.

While the 2009 stimulus included hundreds of millions in targeted education investments, more recent relief programs have been significantly larger. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress approved nearly $190 billion in education funding through the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) program to help schools address learning loss, expand technology access, and stabilize operations.

As schools debate ways to most effectively use the funds, the United States Education Secretary, Arne Duncan, asserts that school leaders should strive to think in new, different, and creative ways. For example,

. . .read more

How to Save Money When Preparing for Prom

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How to Save Money When Preparing for Prom
Parents and students can save money while preparing for prom with these savvy tips. Learn about what schools across the country are also implementing to help ease the burden of prom.

Whether our economy is growing or declining, high school prom is almost always guaranteed to be a costly event. With the price of tickets, the cost of renting a suit, buying a dress, paying for hair appointments, and even hiring fancy transportation, students often shell out hundreds of dollars for this ultimate high school dancing celebration.

To provide students who are struggling to scrounge up the cash for all of the prom’s accouterments, many schools and leaders are creating programs and groups to stimulate community-wide support. As prom allows soon to be graduates to celebrate their long paths of education, many school leaders assert that the students should be rewarded for their efforts without worrying over how to pay for all of the costs.

This video offers suggestions on how to save money prom expenses.

The Price for Prom

As proms have become increasingly more extravagant over the years, the price for students desiring to attend has similarly soared to often outrageous heights. As USA Today reports in their article, “Prom Costs HOW Much?”, many families are struggling to afford all of prom’s “necessities.” According to USA Today, a single night of prom can cost around $400 to even $3,000 and up! According to the report, students tend to add items to the prom tab that include:

  • $90 to $150 for transportation
  • $10 to $125 (and up) for prom tickets
  • $25 to $100 on cameras and photography
  • $70 to $250 on a rental tuxedo
  • $150 to $500 (and up) for
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