Florida may become first state to accept a 'classical' alternative to the SAT and ACT

  • by:
  • 09/06/2023

Florida may become first state to accept a 'classical' alternative to the SAT and ACT

A new college entrance exam that has become popular among Christian schools and conservative political groups may soon expand its footprint to include Florida’s public universities — following a boost from the DeSantis administration. The Florida Board of Governors, which oversees the state’s public universities, is expected to vote at its August meeting on whether to accept Classic Learning Test scores for admissions, in addition to the SAT and the ACT. If the board approves it, Florida would become the first public university system in the country to accept the test. [Source: NBC News]

Black lawmakers seek changes to Florida education standards

Members of the Florida Legislative Black Caucus are asking state education officials to revise new African-American history standards that were approved last week. The standards have drawn criticism from the White House and prompted a defense from Gov. Ron DeSantis. The state Board of Education gave the new standards, designed to guide lessons from kindergarten through high school, the green light on July 19. [Source: WUSF]

Will Florida high schools offer AP psychology? It’s a definite maybe.

Close to 30,000 Florida high school students are registered for the Advanced Placement psychology course in the coming school year. Whether they’ll get to take it remains to be seen. Officials from districts throughout Florida said they were confused about the course status because of state-level actions that appeared to conflict. [Source: Tama Bay Times]

Students with 'math deficiency' eyed

The state Department of Education is proposing a rule that would help determine when students have a “substantial math deficiency,” which could lead to needing such things as individual education plans. The proposal, published Monday by the department, would apply to students in kindergarten through fourth grade. Under the proposal, students who meet certain criteria would be deemed to have a substantial math deficiency. [Source: News Service of Florida]

Most Florida school district budget hearings go quietly. Not in Sarasota.

It’s budget season for Florida school districts, with boards across the state adopting their tentative millage rates and spending plans. In many counties, including Pinellas and Pasco, the adoption goes largely unchallenged. Few members of the public speak at hearings or raise questions about how the millions of dollars are to be used. It went differently in Sarasota this week. More from the Tampa Bay Times and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.
Fountain pen and a notebook by Aaron Burden is licensed under Unsplash unsplash.com

Get latest news delivered daily!

We will send you breaking news right to your inbox

Copyright © 2024 floridaseastcoastvoice.com - All Rights Reserved
Powered by