Education in New Jersey

New Jersey Education Intel

Sunday, May 24, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on education developments in New Jersey. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on new jersey education headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

New Jersey Education Headlines

1 story

1.1

NJ School District Per-Pupil Spending Data: New 2023/24 Figures Released.

New data reveals New Jersey schools budgeted about $20,000 per student on average for the 2023/24 school year, with some districts planning to spend $80,000 or more per pupil.

Why It Matters

Education professionals can benchmark their district's fiscal efficiency and resource allocation against state averages and peer institutions.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Charter renewal happens in years three and four, not year five.

Most charter authorizers begin gathering renewal evidence 18-24 months before the formal renewal vote — meaning a school in a 5-year cycle is being evaluated on years three and four academic data, not year five. Schools that ramp interventions in year five are improving on data the authorizer never sees.

Why It Matters

Renewal denials are typically locked in by data the school never realized was being counted. The performance ramp has to align with the lookback window.

2.2

E-Rate Category One and Category Two have different rules.

Category One (telecommunications and internet access) has higher discount rates and is essentially uncapped; Category Two (internal connections, managed services) has a five-year per-student budget cap. Mixing the categories on a single application typically delays funding by a full cycle.

Why It Matters

Schools that misclassify equipment requests get bumped to the wrong queue and miss the funding-year window. The discount can be 20-90% depending on poverty rate, so the stakes are substantial.

2.3

Directory information disclosures that are FERPA-compliant in form but not in spirit.

FERPA permits disclosure of "directory information" without consent if the institution has noticed students of the categories and the right to opt out. The defect: many institutions treat the categories as broad (full address, full schedule) when narrower defaults would meet operational needs. A student suing on a directory disclosure typically wins on overbreadth, not technical violation.

Why It Matters

Tightening directory-information defaults is free, low-risk, and removes a category of avoidable complaints. Most institutions inherited their lists from a prior generation of administrators.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 24, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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