Federal
Federal Support for Systemic Approaches to Educator Workforce Development & Design
To address chronic teacher shortages, long-term sustainability gaps in preparation programs, and weakening federal accountability structures, AACTE has developed reform framework, A Call to Action: Federal Support for Systemic Approaches for Educator Workforce Development and Design, which outlines four specific federal levers for change and is endorsed by major national organizations.
Federal Policy
AACTE maintains a constant presence on Capitol Hill and with the administration to advocate on behalf of educator preparation. See AACTE’s current federal policy priorities. For updates on federal policy and AACTE’s advocacy efforts, read AACTE Talks Policy, our biweekly members-only newsletter.
AACTE Talks Policy
The latest policy newsletter covers an emerging bipartisan deal that will fund education for FY26, release of the “Professional Student” regulation for public comment, and news that the Administration has dropped its legal fight regarding anti-DEI guidance. Read the full newsletter.
- AACTE Talks Policy: Kids Online Safety, More Efforts to Restrict DEI, March 13
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AACTE Talks Policy: Teaching in the AI Age, New Grant Opportunities, February 27
- AACTE Talks Policy: Appropriations Updates, Department of Ed Drops DEI Case, February 3
- AACTE Talks Policy: Appropriations Updates, Department of Ed Drops DEI Case, January 30
- AACTE Talks Policy: Spending Deal Negotiations, Child Care Freezes, January 16
- AACTE Talks Policy Archive
ADVOCACY UPDATE: Professional Student Definition
On January 30, the U.S. Department of Education published draft regulations to implement student loan provisions in the budget reconciliation bill passed last July (the “One Big Beautiful Bill” or OB3). For more information on the student loan provisions of OB3 and their likely impact on education students, see our “Explainer.”
The proposed regulations exclude education students from a newly created “professional student” category. The exclusion of education students from the “professional student” category has profound symbolic and practical implications. It signals that the federal government does not consider educators to be professionals. And, crucially, it cuts off education students from needed access to federal student loans, threatening their ability to enroll or remain in post-baccalaureate programs.
Public comments on the proposed regulations closed on March 2, 2026. AACTE submitted these comments on behalf of 13 partner organizations, and many AACTE members and others in education community submitted comments as well. In total, the Department of Education received more than 100,000 comments on the regulations. The Department is legally obligated to read and respond to all unique comments as it prepares to publish a final regulation.
As we await the final regulation, AACTE has shifted its attention to advocating on behalf of several bills that would mandate inclusion of education students in the professional category, most notably legislation introduced by Representatives Mike Lawler (H.R. 6718) and Timothy Kennedy (H.R. 6574).
Next Steps: Soon, AACTE will ask its members — and the broader education community — to contact their members of Congress about the Kennedy and Lawler bills. To keep up to date on this issue – and all the federal policy news affecting educator preparation – subscribe to AACTE Talks Policy.
AACTE Responds to U.S. Department of Education Grant Cancellations
AACTE is partnering with the National Center for Teacher Residencies (NCTR) and several other organizations to address the cancellation of federal grants that directly affect our members. These vital grants support the essential work of our member institutions, ensuring a well-prepared educator workforce in classrooms across the nation. These actions include the following:
AACTE, NCTR Joint LawsuitLetter to Congress
Federal Regulations for Programs Leading to State Licensure or Certification
On July 1, 2024, new federal regulations took effect for all institutions that participate in Title IV student aid programs and offer programs leading to state professional licensure or certification.
AACTE has prepared a detailed FAQ to help members prepare for these new regulations.
In addition, on May 20, the Department of Education released its own FAQ document and a helpful flow chart on the new regulations.
Resources
Advocacy News
From: Ed Prep Matters
Federal
- AACTE Talks Policy: Kids Online Safety, More Efforts to Restrict DEI, March 13
- AACTE Talks Policy: Teaching in the AI Age, New Grant Opportunities, February 27
- AACTE Talks Policy: Appropriations Updates, Department of Ed Drops DEI Case, February 3
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AACTE Talks Policy: Appropriations Updates, Department of Ed Drops DEI Case, January 30
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AACTE Talks Policy: Spending Deal Negotiations, Child Care Freezes, January 16
State
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Jacqueline E. King, Ph.D.
AACTE Consultant, Research, Policy, & Advocacy

