Special Report
Leadership

5 Big Ideas That Will Define the Future of Education

It’s a moment for recalibration
By Elizabeth Rich — October 03, 2025 1 min read
A tangle of wires and missed connections among institutions.
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We know this year has been anything but typical for educators. It’s been marked by uncertainty, from massive changes at the federal level to economic disruptions to looming questions about artificial intelligence and instruction. With schools sitting at the nexus of all this, we also think it’s an important moment for recalibration. What might we be able to learn collectively from the upheaval? And how can these lessons drive education’s future?

The contributors to the 2025 Big Ideas special report offer both reported essays and opinion pieces detailing how political mechanisms might affect what happens in the classroom, key instructional considerations for AI, opportunities for immediate academic wins, the future of science education, and more. Many of the questions they raise are new, some perennial—but they all speak to the specific moment we are in.

We hope you’ll find this coverage helpful as you approach the challenges of a new school year and plan for the future.

🔎 About This Project

This project is part of a special report called Big Ideas in which EdWeek reporters, the EdWeek Research Center, and contributing researchers ask hard questions about K-12 education’s biggest challenges and offer insights based on their extensive coverage and expertise.

Explore Big Ideas >

📢 Let us know what you think by connecting with us on social using #K12BigIdeas or by emailing bigideas@educationweek.org.

1 How Trump Is Changing the Federal Government’s Role in Schools

The Department of Education logo with the central tree split open revealing infinity.

When Donald Trump waded into the fight over a high school mascot, it revealed a lot about his true education agenda.

Read this reported essay →


2 Science Is Losing the Battle for America’s Trust. How Schools Can Help (Opinion)

A diverse group of people building a hall of science using scientific tools, blocks, and symbols.

Amanda L. Townley grew up a creationist and became a science educator. Here’s what she knows about building trust in science.

Read this opinion essay →


3 Is There a Healthy Middle Ground on AI in Schools? Try Skeptical Optimism

Humans and AI work together to design curriculum.

How students and teachers can learn to put a human touch on everything AI produces.

Read this reported essay →


4 High-Quality Research Rarely Informs Classroom Practice. Why? (Opinion)

A tangle of wires and missed connections among institutions.

The connection between education research, policy, and practice is broken. Contributing researcher Thomas S. Dee shares what it would take to fix it.

Read this opinion essay →


5 Students Have Questions About Our Democracy. Is Civics Class Up to the Task?

The outside world seeps into a civics classroom.

How today’s messy political realities are crashing against traditional civics education.

Read this reported essay →


Before you go ...

Explore exclusive survey results from the EdWeek Research Center:

Educators' Political Preferences Don't Always Reveal Their K-12 Positions (in Charts)
Teachers and school and district leaders share their opinions on a host of hot-button issues.
Explore Survey Results

Reported essays in Big Ideas 2025 draw on findings from a research study supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, which underwrites coverage of post-high school pathways and overcoming polarization. Education Week retains sole editorial control over the content of this coverage.

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