Ensuring Young are Ready to Learn Tops States' Education Concerns for 2015

LEXINGTON, Ky.--Making sure all of a state's youngest students enter school ready to learn will be one of the top education concerns for state policymakers during the new legislative session.

"In 2015 state policymakers will look to target practices that ensure students enter school ready to learn and are engaged in an environment with high expectations for success for all students," said Pam Goins, director of education policy for The Council of State Governments. "Flexibility in instructional strategies, continuous assessment and accountability are vital to achievement and preparation for college and careers. State policy must set the foundation for these innovations to occur."

Being ready to learn, however, is not a simple target. To make the most of their time in the classroom, children should have mastered developmentally appropriate levels of language, literacy, motor skills, socialization, and scientific and mathematical thinking. As states look to measure and adequately prepare students for school, they will be looking at policies and practices that can be put in place for effective child care, Head Start and pre-kindergarten programs that promote high quality and efficient early learning programs for all children.

Goins said other issues will vie for a legislator's attention this year as they try to improve their state's economic future by ensuring workers have the skills required by local industries and businesses for growth. Those issues include ensuring students have the opportunity to explore experiential and work-based learning, creating effective strategies to help students at risk of failure, ensuring more students get a postsecondary degree or credential and creating an accountability system that accurately measures how well a state's schools and teachers are educating youth.

The Council of State Governments this week released its annual listing of top 5 issues legislators will face this year in education, energy and the environment, federal affairs, fiscal and economic development, health, international affairs, interstate compacts, transportation and workforce development.

Learn more about the Top 5 issues in education. For more information about these or any other topics, visit the CSG Knowledge Center.

Featured

  • ECM Technologies Wins ‘Most Innovative Business of the Year’ Award

    HVAC preventative maintenance and efficiency solutions provider ECM Technologies was recently named the “Most Innovative Business of the Year” at the 2025 Champions of Change Awards, according to a news release. The program recognizes Arizona business leaders and organizations taking steps to make a positive impact on the state through innovative thinking and philanthropy.

  • Nonprofit Launches Center to Boost Data-Driven Student Success Strategies

    National nonprofit Complete College America (CCA) recently launched the Center for Leadership, Institutional Metrics, and Best Practices (CLIMB), according to a news release. CLIMB’s ultimate purpose is to help higher-education institutions use data-driven strategies to improve student outcomes by providing tools, frameworks, and support.

  • Dallas ISD Debuts New Peabody Elementary School

    The Dallas Independent School District in Dallas, Texas, recently announced the completion of the new facility for George Peabody Elementary School, according to a news release. The district partnered with Pfluger Architects and REEDER Construction on the 70,807-square-foot replacement campus, which has the capacity for 550 students.

  • dormitory with green roofs, solar panels, balconies, and labeled architectural annotations

    2025 Residence Hall Design Trends Focus on Sustainability, Flexibility, Community, Technology, and Well-Being

    With the most technically advanced Gen Z (born between 1997 and 2012) at the helm, residence hall design trends for 2025 look to focus on flexible spaces, health and wellness, sustainability, community, and digital technology.

Digital Edition