Parenting and Learning Issues

Each child learns differently. Here we offer resources on learning styles and the classroom models that support them, expert advice on how to improve learning, and tips on parental involvement.

View the most popular articles in Parenting and Learning Issues:

Public School Funding 2025: What Families Should Know

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Public School Funding 2025: What Families Should Know
Essential insights on public school funding in 2025—how it works, what’s changing, and what families should know to stay ahead.

Public School Funding 2025: What Families Should Know

Navigating public school funding in 2025 can feel daunting for families, students, and educators alike. Understanding how funding is generated, allocated, and spent at the local and national level can empower you to ask the right questions, advocate for your school, and make informed decisions. This article explains how public school funding works in 2025, what changes are under way, and how families can engage meaningfully.

How Public School Funding Works

Major funding sources

Public school funding in the United States comes from three primary sources: local taxes, state revenues, and federal funds. These combine to support K-12 public schools across districts.

  • Local funding usually comes from property taxes, local levies, and sometimes local sales taxes.

  • State funding comes from state education budgets and formulas that allocate funds across districts.

  • Federal funding contributes a smaller but often critical portion—on average about 8 to 10 % of K-12 funding nationally.

Why the federal share matters

Even though federal funding is a relatively small portion, many of the federal programs target high-need students, special education, English learners, and after-school programs. That means that for many school districts what happens at the federal level has outsized impacts.

The basic flow

  1. Congress and federal agencies appropriate funds.

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Navigating Kindergarten Enrollment: What Parents Need to Know (2025)

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Navigating Kindergarten Enrollment: What Parents Need to Know (2025)
A step-by-step 2025 guide to kindergarten enrollment—deadlines, documents, readiness tips, and expert advice for parents.

How to Navigate Kindergarten Enrollment: What Parents Need to Know

Entering kindergarten is a major milestone for families. As we move into 2025, many districts have fine-tuned their enrollment procedures and deadlines. This article walks you through what parents need to know about kindergarten enrollment, from age cutoffs and required documents to readiness factors and expert tips for a smooth transition.

1. Why kindergarten enrollment matters early

Starting the process on time ensures you’ll secure a seat in your preferred school, meet deadlines, and avoid last-minute stress. With many districts opening registration early for the 2025-26 school year, it’s more important than ever for parents to act early.

For example, the Rochester Public Schools opened new-student enrollment for kindergarten for 2025-26 on December 1, 2024. rochesterschools.org Teachers, administrators and early-childhood experts agree that timely enrollment signals to families that the school is prepared and welcoming, and it allows time for transition activities such as screenings, orientation sessions and home visits.

2. Understand age eligibility and deadlines

One of the first tasks is confirming your child meets the age requirement for kindergarten in your area. Cut-off dates vary by state and district, so you’ll want to check the policy in your community. Here are common scenarios:

Location Age by Cut-off Notes
Modesto City Schools (California) Age 5 on or before Sept 1, 2025 to enter kindergarten for 2025-26. (mcs4kids.com) Also offers Transitional Kindergarten (TK) for
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Bullying, Name-Calling & Put-Downs: Parent Guide 2025

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Bullying, Name-Calling & Put-Downs: Parent Guide 2025
Practical tips for parents to address bullying, name-calling, and put-downs—with 2025 data, policies, and expert strategies.

Bullying, name-calling, and put-downs remain pervasive challenges in schools across the country—whether in person or online. As we move through 2025, shifting social dynamics, digital connectivity, and evolving school policies demand fresh understanding and strategies. This article offers parents current insights, best practices, and actionable steps to support children who face verbal or relational aggression at school or online.

Understanding the Scope in 2025

Prevalence and Patterns

Verbal and relational bullying—name-calling, insults, rumors, exclusion—are among the most common forms reported by students. According to the Anti-Bullying Alliance, about 40% of young people experienced bullying within the past year, with name-calling being the most frequent form (around 26%) anti-bullyingalliance.org.uk. In U.S. schools, data from the National Center for Education Statistics shows that in 2021–22, roughly 19 percent of students ages 12–18 reported being bullied at school.

The digital realm has only expanded the reach. As of 2025, about 26.5% of American adolescents report experiencing cyberbullying within the prior 30 days. Lifetime online harassment increases that share further: BroadbandSearch notes that lifetime cyberbullying victimization in the U.S. has risen to 58.2% BroadbandSearch.

Equally concerning, research linking bullying to mental health outcomes continues to grow. A large-scale study of over 95,000 students found that even mild bullying correlates with significantly elevated risk of anxiety, depression, poor sleep, PTSD symptoms, and behavioral issues—and the risk multiplies with severity arXiv.

Who Is At Risk—and Why It Matters

Certain

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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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Advocating for Your Child in Public School (Without Overstepping)

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Advocating for Your Child in Public School (Without Overstepping)
Learn respectful, effective strategies for advocating your child’s needs in public school without undermining teachers or crossing boundaries.

How to Advocate for Your Child in Public School Without Overstepping

Navigating public school systems can feel like walking a tightrope: you want to support and protect your child, but you also don’t want to alienate educators or create adversarial relationships. Advocating for your child in public school requires a balance of assertiveness, respect, and strategy. Below are evidence-grounded, up-to-date approaches (2025) to help you navigate this terrain effectively.

1. Start from curiosity, not accusation

Before raising concerns, gather facts. Review your child’s recent assignments, grades, reports, behavior logs, and any communications from teachers. Ask open questions:

  • “What strengths have you seen in my child this term?”

  • “Where do you think they struggle most, and how do you approach that challenge?”

  • “How do you track progress, and how can I help support you at home?”

Framing feedback as a request for insight encourages collaboration rather than defensiveness. Longtime parent advocates often emphasize: you’ll get farther when you’re seeking to solve problems together rather than pushing blame. the74million.org

2. Know the legal and policy framework

Understanding your rights and the school’s responsibilities gives you better footing. Some key frameworks:

  • FERPA (in the U.S.) protects your right to access your child’s educational records.

  • IDEA / 504 plans obligate schools (in applicable districts) to

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Parenting and Learning Issues

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.
PARENTAL INVOLVEMENT FROM K-12
Learn how direct involvement in your child’s education can impact school performance. Get expert advice on how to get involved, learn why and when you need to talk to a teacher and ways to make changes on campus.
BULLYING
An overview of bullying in schools, laws to protect students, and the impact on education. This section provides great tips on protecting your child from being bullied or becoming a bully. Learn about the latest anti-bullying laws and see how cyber-bullying effects your child’s school performance.
TYPES OF LEARNING
What type of learner is your child? Be in the know about different types of learning and which classrooms are best suited for each type. What is project-based learning? Cooperative Learning? Would your child benefit from a blended learning experience? Explore these teaching techniques and learn how they could improve your child’s performance.
KINDERGARTEN AND ELEMENTARY ISSUES
Weigh the pros and cons of preschool, full day kindergarten and other issues affecting our youngest learners. Learn what can be done to help your child prepare to enter school, boost confidence, and encourage reading at the grade school level.
HIGH SCHOOL ISSUES
Learn more about issues specific to high school students. Get an overview of high school graduation rates, college readiness, career choice and social issues impacting teenagers in public schools.