The press release of the education department said there was no comment beyond what was revealed in the legitimate short one.
The education researchers who are suing the Trump administration to restore all their previous research and statistical activities were not happy.
Elizabeth Tipton, President of the Educational Efficiency Studies (SREE), said the limited recovery was “upset”. “They are trying to make IES as small as possible,” she said, citing the Institute of Sciences of Education, Research and Shoulder.
SREE and the American Association for Educational Research (AERA) are sued by McMahon by the Maryland Education Department. The claim seeks a temporary reimbursement of all contracts and the re -execution of IES employees, while the courts consider the broader constitutional question whether the Trump administration violates the Congress Statute and exceeds its executive body.
The 20 restorations were not ordered by the court, and in some cases the educational department voluntarily restarts only a small part of research, which makes it impossible to create something meaningful for the public. For example, the department said it was restoring a contract to operate Clearinghouse What Works, a website that informs schools of evidence -based teaching practices. But in legitimateThe department revealed that it did not plan to reimburse any of the contracts for the production of new content for the site.
In shortThe administration acknowledged that the statues of Congress mention a number of research and data collection activities. But lawyers say the legislative language often uses the word instead of having to, or notes that educational programs assessments should be made “as time and resources allow.”
“Read together, the department has a broad freedom of judgment on whether and which estimates to take,” the administration’s attorneys wrote.
The Trump administration claims that while there is at least one contract, it technically performs a congress mandate. For example, Congress requires the education department to participate in international assessments. That is why it is now restarting the Treaty of Administration of the International Student Assessment Program (PISA), but not other international assessments in which the country has participated, with trends in international mathematics and scientific research (TIMSS).
The administration claims that the researchers have not made a convincing case that there will be irreparable damage if many contracts are not restarted. “There is no harm that is alleged that there is no access to still undisclosed data,” lawyers wrote.
One of the terminated contracts had to help state education agencies create longitudinal data for tracking students from PRE-K to the workforce. The brief of the department says that countries, not professional associations of researchers, must judge for the restoration of these contracts.
In six cases, the administration said it evaluated whether to restart a survey. For example, a legal blow says that since Congress requires the evaluation of literacy programs, the department is considering a restoration of a study of the String Cheaders’s extensive literacy program. But the lawyers said there was no emergency to restart it, since there is no deadline for assessments in the legislative language.
In four other cases, the Trump administration said it was not possible to restart a study, despite the requirements of the congress. For example, Congress requires education to identify and evaluate promising adult education strategies. But after terminating such a study in February, the education department admitted that it was too difficult to restart it now. The department also stated that it could not easily restart two studies on Mathematics Mathematics curricula in low performance schools. One of the studies calls for the mathematical program to be implemented in the first year and to be studied in the second year, which makes it difficult to restart. The fourth survey of the department said it could not restart the efficiency of additional services to help teenagers transition from high school disability to college or work. When Dodge pulls the plug of this study, these Teens lost these services also.