Improving Learning

A comprehensive look at the latest trends, expert advice and recent studies into improving student learning. Explore the latest studies into links between student performance, sleep and music. See why schools are opting for later start times and year round schedules.

View the most popular articles in Improving Learning:

How to Support Your Child’s Mental Health at School

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How to Support Your Child’s Mental Health at School
Practical guidance for parents and educators on supporting child mental health during the school year, with expert strategies and 2026 insights.

Supporting a child’s emotional well-being has become an essential part of academic success. In today’s school environment, students are managing academic pressure, social dynamics, digital exposure, and increasingly complex expectations. As a result, understanding how to support your child’s mental health during the school year is no longer optional for parents and educators. It is a core part of helping students thrive both inside and outside the classroom.

In 2026, schools across the United States continue to expand mental health services, including school-based counseling, telehealth partnerships, and social-emotional learning programs. However, the most effective support still begins at home, where children spend most of their time and develop their strongest emotional foundations.

This article explores practical, research-informed strategies parents and educators can use to recognize stress, build resilience, and connect children with the support they need.

Why Mental Health Support Matters in the School Year

Child and adolescent mental health directly affects learning outcomes, attendance, behavior, and long-term development. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, mental health conditions are among the most common health challenges affecting school-aged children, and early support significantly improves outcomes.

The school year introduces predictable stressors, including:

  • Academic testing and performance pressure
  • Social adjustment and peer relationships
  • Extracurricular demands and scheduling overload
  • Transitions between grade levels or schools
  • Increased screen time and digital comparison

In 2026, educators are also reporting greater awareness of “always-on stress,” where students feel pressure not just during school hours but throughout the day due to

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Multilingual Learner Growth Models & Accountability

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Multilingual Learner Growth Models & Accountability
Learn how multilingual learner growth models are reshaping school accountability systems and what it means for public schools in 2026.

As public schools across the United States continue to evolve, one of the most significant shifts in 2026 is the growing emphasis on multilingual learner growth models in accountability systems. With multilingual learners, often referred to as English Language Learners (ELLs), representing a rapidly expanding student population, states are refining how progress is measured and reported.

These changes are not just technical adjustments. They signal a broader move toward more equitable evaluation systems that better reflect student progress over time rather than relying solely on proficiency benchmarks.

Understanding Multilingual Learner Growth Models

Traditional accountability systems often focused on whether students reached a fixed level of English proficiency within a set timeframe. However, this approach has been widely criticized for failing to capture incremental progress, especially for students entering school with limited English skills.

Multilingual learner growth models shift the focus to:

  • Year-over-year language development
  • Academic progress alongside language acquisition
  • Individualized growth trajectories

Rather than asking whether a student has “arrived,” these models evaluate how far a student has progressed.

According to the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of English Language Acquisition, this approach provides a more accurate and fair assessment of both student performance and school effectiveness.

Why Accountability Systems Are Changing

Several factors are driving these changes in accountability frameworks:

1. Federal Flexibility Under ESSA

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) gave states greater autonomy in designing accountability systems. Many states are now incorporating English language proficiency growth as a key indicator.

The Every Student

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Is Your Child Ready for the Next Grade? Spring Signs

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Is Your Child Ready for the Next Grade? Spring Signs
Is Your Child Ready for the Next Grade? Signs to Watch This Spring, plus expert tips and 2026 academic benchmarks for parents.

Is Your Child Ready for the Next Grade? Signs to Watch This Spring

Spring is more than testing season. It is the time of year when report cards, benchmark assessments, and teacher conferences converge to answer a pivotal question for families: Is Your Child Ready for the Next Grade? Signs to Watch This Spring can help parents evaluate both academic and developmental readiness before summer arrives.

Promotion decisions are rarely based on a single test score. In 2026, many public schools use a combination of classroom performance, district benchmarks, attendance records, and social-emotional indicators to determine whether a student is prepared for the next academic level. Understanding what schools look for and what parents can observe at home allows families to act early rather than react in August.

Below, we outline the most important academic, social, and behavioral signs to watch, along with practical steps parents can take this spring.

Academic Readiness: Beyond the Report Card

Grades provide helpful information, but they do not always tell the full story. Schools often rely on state standards and district assessments aligned with grade-level expectations.

The National Center for Education Statistics reports that academic performance trends remain uneven post-pandemic, with continued gaps in math and reading proficiency in many districts. Parents can explore national benchmarks through the NCES website at the U.S. Department of Education: nces.ed.gov

When evaluating academic readiness this spring, consider the following:

1. Consistent Mastery of Grade-Level

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Special-Program Registration Deadlines Explained

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Special-Program Registration Deadlines Explained
Learn what to know about special-program registration deadlines for magnet, CTE, and dual-enrollment options in public schools.

What to Know About Special-Program Registration Deadlines (Magnet, CTE, Dual-Enrollment)

Families exploring public school options are increasingly drawn to special academic programs that offer focused coursework, career preparation, or early college credit. Magnet schools, Career and Technical Education programs, and dual-enrollment opportunities can significantly shape a student’s educational path. However, these programs often operate on timelines that differ from standard public school enrollment.

Understanding what to know about special-program registration deadlines (Magnet, CTE, Dual-Enrollment) is critical. Missing a deadline can mean waiting an entire year, even if a student is otherwise qualified. As districts refine enrollment systems and expand choice options in 2026, families must stay informed and proactive.

This guide explains how these deadlines work, why they vary, and how parents and students can plan effectively.

Why Special-Program Deadlines Are Different

Unlike traditional neighborhood school enrollment, special programs require additional planning, staffing, and often selective admissions. Districts must coordinate transportation, specialized instructors, equipment, and partnerships with colleges or employers. As a result, applications typically open earlier and close faster.

Common reasons for earlier deadlines include:

• Limited seats or capped cohorts
• Application reviews, lotteries, or auditions
• Alignment with college or industry calendars
• State reporting and funding requirements

Districts increasingly use centralized choice portals, but deadlines still vary widely by program type and region.

Magnet School Registration Timelines

Magnet schools offer specialized themes such as STEM, performing arts, language immersion, or International Baccalaureate programs. These schools

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Understanding Standardized Testing Changes 2025

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Understanding Standardized Testing Changes 2025
Explore what’s new in standardized testing for 2025 and how parents can help students prepare effectively.

Understanding Standardized Testing: What’s Changing in 2025 and How to Help Your Child Prepare

Standardized testing has long shaped how schools, colleges, and parents measure student achievement. Yet in 2025, testing looks very different from even a few years ago. With the shift to digital exams, evolving admission policies, and new adaptive scoring systems, families are navigating unfamiliar territory.

This guide explains what’s changing, why it matters, and how you can help your child prepare for success.

1. The Big Picture: How Standardized Testing Is Evolving Digital delivery becomes the default

The SAT is now fully digital worldwide, following the U.S. rollout in 2024. Students take the exam on laptops or tablets using secure testing software. The test’s adaptive design adjusts question difficulty based on performance, offering a faster and more individualized experience.
→ College Board reports that the digital SAT takes about two hours—nearly an hour shorter than the paper version.

The ACT is also moving toward digital testing, offering computer-based options in select states and planning full adoption by 2026. These adaptive exams aim to make assessments more precise and accessible.

Shorter, more focused tests

Students will notice leaner assessments across grade levels. The new SAT’s reading and writing sections are combined, with shorter passages and fewer questions. Similarly, the ACT is piloting reduced-length versions for school-day testing.

State K–12 tests are following suit. Many districts are trimming redundant assessments or integrating them into online

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AI Report Cards: Should Schools Evaluate AI Use?
AI Report Cards: Should Schools Evaluate AI Use?
Explore whether schools should assess student AI use, the benefits, risks, and what responsible AI report cards could look like in 2026.
The Parent’s Guide to School Cell Phone Bans in 2026
The Parent’s Guide to School Cell Phone Bans in 2026
Learn how school cell phone bans work in 2026, why districts are adopting them, and what parents should expect.
Parental Involvement in Public Schools: 2026 Update
Parental Involvement in Public Schools: 2026 Update
Explore the latest 2026 trends, research, and strategies shaping parental involvement in public schools and student success.

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