Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Florida state-funded vouchers draining billions from public schools

Welcome to Florida…” The Education State’…

Our funding for a strong public education here in Florida is being attacked consistently…It truly is critical that we not accept this fate…

Many of Florida’s precious children suffer through this extremely divisive political climate…

Why Florida school vouchers can pay for Disney tickets, TVs while draining billions from public schools…


WESH 2 Investigates uncovers how many families paid for theme park tickets with state-funded vouchers…

Justin Schecker
Investigative Reporter
News Team

With billions of Florida taxpayer dollars flowing into the state’s pricy private schools and the pockets of families opting to homeschool their children, WESH 2 Investigates is taking a closer look at the guidelines for how that scholarship money can be spent.

Families of students receiving school choice scholarships – regardless of their income – can purchase TVs up to 55 inches, the Nintendo Wii and in-home internet.

Tickets to Central Florida’s theme parks – Disney World, Universal Studios and Sea World – can also be reimbursed, according to purchasing guides from Step Up For Students, the nonprofit that administers nearly all the scholarships.

For families who already sent their children to private school or they’re making the switch from public school, the roughly $8,000 scholarship will only cover a fraction of the tuition for the more expensive private schools in Central Florida.

Homeschooling families have more flexibility in how to spend the state voucher.

Step Up is sharing new data with WESH 2 Investigates on how many students had theme park tickets reimbursed this school year.

‘You don’t get that in traditional public schools’
“If we do decide to do a theme park or anything, we use our own personal money,” Alli Gladden, a Seminole County mother, said.

Gladden decided to homeschool her 7-year-old daughter, Harper, for first grade.

“With the way kids are, like, aging so quickly, now it’s a good opportunity to spend a lot more time with them and have a lot more control over what they’re learning,” she said.

She showed WESH 2 Investigates how she’s transformed a room in her family’s Longwood home into Harper’s classroom for math, reading and language arts lessons.

“Describe Christ,” Gladden told her daughter during a vocabulary activity. “So, you don’t get that in traditional public schools.”

Gladden said she’s spent about $6,000 of her daughter’s $8,200 state scholarship on a Christian-based curriculum, books, art supplies and a once-a-week outdoor activity co-op program with other children.

“We’re utilizing those funds ourselves, instead of the public school deciding what to do with that money,” Gladden said. “And to us, it’s just been a better opportunity for her.”

A closer look at the purchasing guides’ rules for Florida theme parks
Step Up administered half a million scholarships this school year.

According to Step Up’s purchasing guides, “funds must be used to meet the educational needs of an eligible student. Using a student’s scholarship funds for other purposes may violate Florida Statutes and may be a crime.”

One theme park ticket or pass per student can be reimbursed up to $299, plus tax. However, families must fill out a form with a simple question: What is the Educational Benefit of this item?

“Only the actual cost of the basic admission for the student will be covered,” the Step Up purchasing guides for the 24-25 school year said. “Additional services (such as parking, food and beverage packages, photographs or souvenirs, or premium access) are not eligible expenses.”

WESH 2 Investigates has learned from Step Up more than 8,400 students had theme park ticket reimbursements paid or approved for this school year.

The majority – nearly 6,000 – have Personalized Education Plan (PEP) scholarships for homeschooling.

More than 5,400 reimbursements for Florida theme parks are in another status, Step Up’s Strategic Communications Director Scott Kent said. They’re either submitted, denied or on hold.

“The family did not submit an education benefit form or some other necessary documentation, or they tried to submit a reimbursement for an unapproved theme park, such as a water park,” Kent said in an email.

‘We would not allow that to occur’ in public school
The Florida Policy Institute is tracking the financial impact on Florida’s 67 public school districts since the passage of HB1 in 2023.

“I really feel as if schools were spending their money on some of the things that are allowable under these guidelines, furniture, TVs, Park passes, we would not allow that to occur,” Dr. Norín Dollard told WESH 2 Investigates.

Dollard said Florida’s universal school choice scholarships are draining billions of dollars away from traditional public schools.

“Parents have been homeschooling their children in Florida for a very long time, and managed it without public funding,” she said.

‘If they’re doing marine biology, they go to Sea World’
Last year, Florida lawmakers considered more restrictions on scholarship money spending, but those changes were not approved.

Kent told WESH 2 Investigates many families contacted lawmakers to argue that restrictions on education savings accounts “would limit their ability to provide arts and other enrichment opportunities to their children.”

“In addition, families provided Step Up with numerous examples of how theme parks contribute to their students’ customized learning plans, such as a homeschool family who incorporates all the different history and culture lessons available at Disney World, including art and music festivals,” Kent said in an email to WESH 2 Investigates. “Parents point to how the parks tie directly into curriculum: If they’re doing zoology, they go to Animal Kingdom; if they’re doing marine biology, they go to Sea World, etc.”

Step Up’s 2025-26 purchasing guides will be released on July 1.

While theme park tickets aren’t part of her homeschooling spending plan, Gladden said she will be applying for additional state scholarships in the coming years.

She said she hopes to homeschool all five of her children.

“I’m going to have to upgrade a little bit,” Gladden said. “I mean, I’ve got enough chairs.”

https://www.wesh.com/article/florida-vouchers-cover-disney-tickets-tvs-drain-billions-public-schools/64829213

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

June’sHope…Remembering Pope Francis…Our Precious Children’s Future…

#FloridaTeacher❤️🍎 #TeacherLove #ProtectOurKids


Rivers do not drink
their own water; trees
do not eat their own
fruit; the sun does not
shine on itself and
flowers do not spread
their fragrance for
themselves. Living for
others is a rule of
nature. We are all born
to help each other. No
matter how difficult it
is…Life is good when
you are happy; but
much better when
others are happy
because of you…


~Pope Francis
Diocese of Hndeg
/TandagDlocese

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

On Teacher Appreciation Day, Trump cuts affecting profession in a ‘huge way’ – ABC News

The Trump administration has made dozens of cuts that some teachers say could impact their profession in a “huge way,” according to educators in terminated programs who spoke with ABC News.

Before Teacher Appreciation Day, which is celebrated on Tuesday as part of Teacher Appreciation Week, the administration has slashed professional development initiatives, preparation programs, and other federally funded education projects that the administration has deemed as divisive and run afoul of its priorities.

Cuts are affecting the experiences that ’empower teachers’…


Melissa Collins, who was Tennessee’s Teacher of the Year in 2023, said professional learning grants through the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) made her a better teacher. Collins told ABC News the opportunity to attend programs at museums or colleges allowed her to enhance her skills. At the Japanese American National Museum (JANM) last summer, Collins participated in the Landmarks of American History and Culture workshop entitled “Little Tokyo: How History Shapes a Community Across Generations.”

“I have received the best professional learning experience that I could ever receive that is going to impact my classroom and so many others,” Collins said in a video by JANM.

However — like many federal education awards — the NEH grant was terminated by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the programming is no longer offered due to the administration’s “shifting priorities,” according to a termination notice reviewed by ABC News.

“As teachers, we strive to improve for our students, but currently, budget cuts are affecting the experiences that empower teachers to serve their schools and communities effectively,” Collins wrote in a statement to ABC.

Former teacher Dani Pierce was educator liaison at the department of education before losing her job this spring under the agency’s reduction in force efforts as Trump hopes to abolish the department completely. Pierce stressed the work teachers do in the classroom each day is “immeasurable” and often goes unseen. But during Teacher Appreciation Week this year many in the education community, including Pierce, grapple with the prospect of a shuttered department.

“It pains me deeply not to be at the Department right now, leading our teacher appreciation efforts or ensuring teachers have a voice in the policies that affect your schools and students,” Pierce wrote in an open letter to the teachers of America.

“I may be RIFed from my role as your liaison to the Department, but I will never stop working to ensure your voices are heard and your contributions receive the recognition and support they deserve,” Pierce added.

Teachers across the country tell ABC News they continue to face major hurdles in the classroom — including staffing shortages, the pinch of low pay and addressing students’ mental health — many of which stem from closures during the COVID-19 pandemic…

The Trump administration has made dozens of cuts that some teachers say could impact their profession in a “huge way,” according to educators in terminated programs who spoke with ABC News.

MORE: Collections on defaulted student loans may affect millions of people’s credit scores
“I have received the best professional learning experience that I could ever receive that is going to impact my classroom and so many others,” Collins said in a video …

However — like many federal education awards — the NEH grant was terminated by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and the programming is no longer offered due to the administration’s “shifting priorities,” according to a termination notice reviewed by ABC News.

MORE: 2 federal judges block Trump’s effort to ban DEI from K-12 education
“It pains me deeply not to be at the Department right now, leading our teacher appreciation efforts or ensuring teachers have a voice in the policies that affect your schools and students,” Pierce wrote in an open letter to the teachers of America..

DEI initiatives “inconsistent” with fairness and excellence in education…


On the other hand, the next generation of teachers are also affected by the administration’s cuts.

One of Trump’s top pledges is to root out diversity, equity and inclusion programs and any practices that discriminate on the basis of race. Some of the most recent actions taken by the education department include cutting grants that contribute directly to educator diversity.

The agency terminated the CREATE project, formerly at Georgia State University, because the program conflicted with the department’s policy of prioritizing merit, fairness and excellence in education, according to a termination letter obtained by ABC News.

The federal funding was deemed “inconsistent” with the department’s objectives because the program promoted DEI initiatives or unlawful discrimination practices. But former employees said the organization contributed hundreds of millions of dollars toward promoting novice teachers. They told ABC News the teacher residency program helped place the majority of its student teachers into underserved schools in the Atlanta Public School system and called the administration’s termination notice “dismissive.”

“It was very disrespectful to the work that we have put our blood, sweat and tears into — ensuring that this community that we are serving in has quality educators,” an educator said….

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/teacher-appreciation-day-trump-cuts-affecting-profession-huge/story?id=121482055

Memories… 2014                         #FloridaTeacher ❤️🍎        #TeacherLove…                                 #TeacherAppreciationWeek …  

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

“May” My Teacher Memories…

#FloridaTeacher♥️🍎
Memories…

A child can teach an adult three things:

To be happy for no reason
To always be curious
To fight tirelessly for something…
❤️- Paulo Coelho
heartmath.org

#TEACHers
#TeacherAppreciationWeek
💜🪄💫✨🦋🌈🍎📚

Mother’s Day…
Teacher Appreciation…
The journey…
Our precious children…
#memories
#MothersDay
#TeacherAppreciationWeek
💜🪄💫✨🌞🌟💐🍎📚

Our joy!!!💜🪄🌟🍎📚
Posted in Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Remember our precious children…

My May Wish…

For all…

At the end of each day before you close your eyes, be content with what you’ve done, Be grateful for what you have And be proud of who you are…

#memories
#MothersDay
#TeacherAppreciationWeek
💜🪄💫✨🌞🌟💐🍎📚

Our Precious Children…

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Trump AdministrationA Gutted Education Department’s New Agenda: Roll Back Civil Rights Cases, Target Transgender Students…

by Jennifer Smith Richards and Jodi S. Cohen
May 2, 2025,

ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

Reporting Highlights
Hollowed Out: The administration has closed Education Department civil rights offices and fired workers. Now, investigating discrimination in schools is practically “impossible.”

New Priorities: The civil rights office has abandoned its traditional priorities. Instead, it is trying to limit the rights of transgender students and rid schools of diversity efforts.

Pushing Back: Advocates, school districts and others are filing lawsuits and trying other methods to halt the administration’s efforts…

https://www.propublica.org/article/education-department-civil-rights-donald-trump-discrimination

AFT President Weingarten rallies educators to defend public schools and democracy

In a passionate address Friday, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten told delegates, “We have a fight on our hands.”

https://www.nysut.org/resources/special-resources-sites/representative-assembly/blog-2025/randi-weingarten

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Three judges, including two Trump appointees, rule against the Department of Education’s anti-DEI policy | CNN Politics

By Tierney Sneed, Kristin Chapman and Shania Shelton, CNN


Our Classroom is a Rainbow…
Quote• Posted on December 18, 2013

Our Classroom is a Rainbow…

DEI stands for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. It’s a framework that promotes fair treatment and full participation for all people, particularly those who have been historically underrepresented or discriminated against.

DEI initiatives aim to create workplaces and communities that are more inclusive, equitable, and representative of the diverse world around us. They often involve policies, training, and programs designed to address biases, promote understanding, and ensure that everyone has a voice and a chance to succeed…

President Donald Trump’s efforts to crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion programs suffered a major legal blow Thursday as three separate judges – two of them appointed by the president – ruled against a Department of Education policy that threatened to withhold federal funding for schools engaging in DEI or incorporating race in certain ways in many other aspects of student life.

The policy was first laid out in a so-called Dear Colleague letter sent to schools in February. Starting this month, schools receiving federal funding would be subject to certain certification mandates requiring that they turn over information regarding their compliance with the Trump administration’s prohibitions.

US District Judge Landya McCafferty said in a scathing opinion that the administration’s policy, was “textbook viewpoint discrimination,” likely violating the First Amendment’s free speech protections. She and another judge, US District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump appointee, also concluded that the policy was likely unconstitutionally vague.

She also concluded that the National Education Association, the administration’s opponent in the case, was likely to succeed in its arguments that the policy was unconstitutionally vague and that the agency ran afoul of procedural steps required by law in how it implemented the policy.

“The ban on DEI embodied in the 2025 Letter leaves teachers with a Hobson’s Choice,” McCafferty, a Barack Obama appointee who sits in New Hampshire, wrote, noting that the educators must choose between teaching curricula that invites penalty from the federal government or risking their professional credentials by aiding the Trump policy.

“The Constitution requires more,” she wrote.

Friedrich, a Trump appointee who announced her ruling after a hearing Thursday in Washington DC, said that the letter failed to “delineate between a lawful DEI practice and an unlawful one,” making the task of reviewing compliance too difficult.

The third ruling against the policy came from Judge Stephanie Gallagher, a Trump appointee who sits in Baltimore. She found that the Dear Colleague letter ran afoul of procedural requirements required by law for implementing new agency policy.

“This Court takes no view as to whether the policies at issue here are good or bad, prudent or foolish, fair or unfair,” Gallagher said in her ruling. “But this Court is constitutionally required to closely scrutinize whether the government went about creating and implementing them in the manner the law requires. The government did not.”

The rulings come after the Trump administration reached a short-term agreement with the challengers in the New Hampshire case to pause enforcement of the policy while the judge considered whether to issue a preliminary injunction. That agreement was set to expire on Thursday.

Trump has waged war on DEI efforts since the start of his second term and has taken action against several elite universities, demanding changes to their DEI programs. The administration has already rolled back DEI programs, arrested international students and revoked their visas, and frozen federal funding for schools that have refused to submit to its demands.

The administration froze over $2 billion in multi-year grants and contracts at Harvard University after its leaders refused to make key policy changes, including eliminating DEI programs, resulting in a clash over academic freedom, federal funding and campus oversight as Harvard sued the federal government.

Policy changes were also demanded of Columbia University, though the school later announced several changes to address the Trump administration’s demands, an apparent concession to the federal government.

The NAACP, which filed the case in DC’s federal court, said Friedrich’s ruling “is a victory for Black and Brown students across the country, whose right to an equal education has been directly threatened by this Administration’s corrosive actions and misinterpretations of civil rights law.”

The group representing the teachers’ associations and public school district that sued over the policy in Baltimore also celebrated the ruling there.

“This ruling is a win for educators, students and communities across the nation,” Democracy Forward President and CEO Skye Perryman said. “The nationwide injunction will pause at least part of the chaos the Trump administration is unleashing in classrooms and learning communities throughout the country.”

This story has been updated with additional developments.

CNN’s Sunlen Serfaty and Emily R. Condon contributed to this report.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/24/politics/education-dei-policy-blocked/index.html

Posted in Mission, Reflections, Thoughts About Children

Linda McMahon says ‘A.1.’ instead of AI during education panel…🙏🏼💔🍎📚🇺🇲

#FloridaTeacher ♥️🍎            #ProtectOurKids 🙏🏼♥️🍎📚🇺🇲  

Trump’s pick for our precious Children’s  Secretary of Education is an absolute disgrace…  He is making a mockery of quality of their future’s success …

Linda McMahon as the Secretary of Education makes Betsy DeVos almost capable…

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon may have had a juicy steak in mind while speaking at a panel earlier this week because she confused artificial intelligence, also known as AI, with A1, the same name as the popular sauce brand.

McMahon, 76, made the mix-up on April 8 while speaking at the ASU+GSV Summit, an event focusing on educational innovation. The former CEO of World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) initially referred to the acronym for artificial intelligence correctly, saying, “You know, AI development – I mean, how can we educate at the speed of light if we don’t have the best technology around to do that?”

Things got sticky as McMahon’s speech continued: “A school system that’s going to start making sure that first graders, or even pre-Ks, have A1 teaching in every year. That’s a wonderful thing!”

“Kids are sponges. They just absorb everything,” she added. “It wasn’t all that long ago that it was, ‘We’re going to have internet in our schools!’ Now let’s see A1 and how can that be helpful.”

‘Every school should have access to A.1.’
A.1. Sauce capitalized on McMahon’s blunder by posting an Instagram post on their verified account saying, “You heard her. Every school should have access to A.1.”

Agree, best to start them early,” the picture attached to the post reads.

Other Instagram users loved the response from the Kraft Heinz-owned brand. One user even commented, “I will be buying a bottle or two because of this post.”

People online have even joined in on poking fun at McMahon, with one X user saying, “Education Secretary Linda McMahon keeps referring to AI as A1 and talking about how it will help ‘students at all levels.’ But how can we get those kids to drink it? Linda added, ‘The smarter kids can move up to Thousand Island Dressing'”

USA TODAY contacted Kraft Heinz and the U.S. Department of Education on Saturday but has not received a response…

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/04/12/linda-mcmahon-a1-instead-of-ai/83059797007/

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

Trump-Stronghold The Villages in Florida Holds Large ‘Hands Off!’ Rally – Newsweek

Published Apr 05, 2025…

https://www.newsweek.com/trump-stronghold-villages-florida-holds-large-hands-off-rally-2055912

NikkiFried
@FlaDems
#FloridaTeacher ♥️🍎
#ProtectOurKids 🙏🏼♥️🍎📚
Maga World…
Nearly “2,000 “residents of the retirement community known as The Villages, 20 miles south of Ocala, Florida, joined thousands across the United States in a “Hands Off!” protest against President Donald Trump and one of his top advisers,billionaire Elon Musk, a spokesperson for the mobilizing coalition told Newsweek on Saturday…

https://x.com/janisexton/status/1908865123520852429?t=XiQN14129b_FEFrJjMczIw&s=19

Posted in Mission, Thoughts About Children

National Education Association…

#FloridaTeacher ❤️🍎#ProtectOurKids

Donald Trump just issued an executive order calling for the U.S. Department of Education to be dismantled and ceasing many of its activities.

Please email your elected officials in Congress right now and urge them to stop the destruction of the Education Department.

The consequences are real, and it’s students who will be harmed most.

Students in every community of our country—in rural, suburban, and urban areas—benefit from programs run by the Department of Education.

Dismantling the department will:

increase class sizes,
steal resources from our most vulnerable students,
take away services for students with ADHD, dyslexia, and other disabilities,
cut job training programs,
make higher education more expensive and out of reach, and
gut student civil rights protections.
We need your help to stop this power sieze so we can protect the incredible programs run by the Department of Education.

We can’t let billionaires take a wrecking ball to public education. Please write your lawmakers right now.

It is very clear these measures do nothing to support our students or equip them for their futures. This is an orchestrated plan to strip vital resources and federal funding from public schools and give them to private schools.

We won’t be silent as anti-public education politicians hurt our students, our families, and our communities across America.

Together, we will continue to organize, advocate, and mobilize so that all students have well-resourced schools that provide an honest, accurate, and inclusive curriculum that prepares them for the future.

In solidarity,

Becky Pringle
President
National Education Association

Take Action ➤

“Stop the Destruction of the Department of Education…

https://www.nea.org/advocating-for-change/action-center/take-action/tell-congress-stop-destruction-department-education#:~:text=Jati%20Lindsay-,SHARE,-TAKE%20ACTION

https://x.com/janisexton/status/1903097610438598763?t=zoKSJPs31tkIbF1k2eCGqA&s=19





NEA
1201 16th Street NW
Washington, DC 20036
United States