Sources & Methodology

Sources & Methodology

The Six-Tier Source Hierarchy Behind Every Page

Every state walkthrough on boardofeducations.org/ is built from the same evidence stack — federal agencies first, state agencies second, statutes third, association sources fourth, government-data sources fifth, reputable press and research sixth. This page names the actual sources and explains how each tier is used.

Last reviewed: April 2026
Tiers: 6
Verification: Manual + quarterly

1. Why We Publish a Hierarchy

U.S. K-12 education sits at the intersection of federal civil-rights law, federal funding programs, state constitutional duties to provide public education, and local district governance under state law. Information appears on hundreds of different official sites, with hundreds more adjacent association and policy sources. Without a clear hierarchy, it’s easy to publish content that sounds authoritative but is sourced from a third-party summary that itself misread the agency page.

The six-tier hierarchy below is how we decide what to trust as the source of truth. Tier 1 always wins for portal URLs, current procedures, current contacts, and complaint forms. Lower tiers are useful for context but are never the sole basis for a current portal URL or procedure.

TIER 1

Federal and State Agencies — Source of Truth

The official .gov portals run by the agencies that actually administer K-12 education. These are the source of truth for portal URLs, current commissioners and chairs, current procedures, complaint forms, and statutory citations.

SourceWhat we use it forURL
U.S. Department of EducationFederal K-12 framework, ESSA implementation, federal funding programsed.gov
Office for Civil Rights (OCR)Civil-rights complaints under Title VI, Title IX, Section 504, ADA Title II, Age Discrimination Acted.gov/about/offices/list/ocr
OCR Complaint SystemDirect complaint filing portalocrcas.ed.gov
Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP)IDEA Part B and Part C administration; state-level monitoringed.gov — OSEP
Student Privacy Policy Office (SPPO / FPCO)FERPA enforcement, complaints, technical assistancestudentprivacy.ed.gov
ED State Contacts directoryState-by-state federal contact directoryed.gov/about/contacts/state
State Boards of Education (50 states + DC)State academic standards, graduation requirements, member composition, meeting agendasLinked on each state page
State Departments of Education / State Education AgenciesDay-to-day administration, accountability frameworks, special-education divisions, educator licensingLinked on each state page
TIER 2

Federal Statutes and Regulations

The federal legal framework that governs K-12 public education across all states.

AuthoritySubjectCitation
FERPAStudent-records privacy20 U.S.C. §1232g; 34 C.F.R. Part 99
IDEASpecial education — free appropriate public education (FAPE)20 U.S.C. §1400 et seq.; 34 C.F.R. Part 300 (Part B)
ESSAFederal K-12 funding and accountability frameworkPub. L. 114-95 (reauthorizing the Elementary and Secondary Education Act)
Title VI of Civil Rights Act of 1964Race, color, national-origin discrimination42 U.S.C. §2000d; 34 C.F.R. Part 100
Title IXSex discrimination in education20 U.S.C. §1681; 34 C.F.R. Part 106
Section 504 of Rehabilitation ActDisability discrimination in federally funded programs29 U.S.C. §794; 34 C.F.R. Part 104
Title II of ADADisability access to state and local government services, including public schools42 U.S.C. §12131 et seq.
Age Discrimination Act of 1975Age discrimination in federally funded programs42 U.S.C. §6101 et seq.
COPPAOnline services collecting data from children under 1315 U.S.C. §§6501–6506; 16 C.F.R. Part 312
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance ActEducational rights of homeless children and youth42 U.S.C. §11431 et seq.
TIER 3

State Statutes — Education Code, Open Meetings, Public Records, Special Ed

The state-law framework that governs each state’s K-12 system. Every state has its own education code, open-meetings act, public-records statute, and special-education regulations.

State public-records statutes — applicable to school district records:

StatePublic-records statute
TexasTexas Public Information Act — Tex. Gov’t Code Ch. 552
CaliforniaCalifornia Public Records Act — Cal. Gov’t Code §7920 et seq.
FloridaFlorida Public Records Law — F.S. Ch. 119
New YorkNew York Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) — N.Y. Pub. Off. Law §§84–90
IllinoisIllinois Freedom of Information Act — 5 ILCS 140
PennsylvaniaPennsylvania Right-to-Know Law — 65 Pa. Cons. Stat. §67.101 et seq.
OhioOhio Public Records Act — Ohio Rev. Code §149.43
GeorgiaGeorgia Open Records Act — O.C.G.A. §50-18-70 et seq.
North CarolinaNorth Carolina Public Records Act — N.C.G.S. Ch. 132
MichiganMichigan Freedom of Information Act — Mich. Comp. Laws §15.231 et seq.
TIER 4

Education Associations

National associations that aggregate state-level information, publish governance trends, and train state board and district leaders. Useful for cross-state comparison and historical context — never used as the sole source for a current portal URL or current procedure.

AssociationWhat it coversURL
NASBENational Association of State Boards of Education — state board governance, training, cross-state comparisonsnasbe.org
CCSSOCouncil of Chief State School Officers — state superintendents and commissionersccsso.org
NSBANational School Boards Association — local school board governancensba.org
ECSEducation Commission of the States — comparative state-policy databaseecs.org
COPAACouncil of Parent Attorneys and Advocates — special-education advocacycopaa.org
TIER 5

Government Data and Oversight Sources

Data publishers and oversight bodies. Used for school-level statistics, public-records access trends, and federal-program oversight context.

SourceWhat it coversURL
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)School-level and district-level data; the official school directorynces.ed.gov
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the PressState open-government law guides and trendsrcfp.org
U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO)Federal-program oversight reports on educationgao.gov
Congressional Research Service (CRS)Background reports on federal education lawcrsreports.congress.gov
TIER 6

Reputable Press and Peer-Reviewed Research

Used for context and background. Never the sole source for a current portal URL or procedure.

  • Reputable U.S. legal and education trade press
  • State-bar journals’ education-law sections
  • Peer-reviewed education-policy research
  • State-level press for school district reporting

Open-Meetings Statutes by State (Selected)

Every U.S. state has an open-meetings act that applies to school board meetings. The exceptions for closed sessions vary, but the statutes broadly require advance notice, posted agendas, and an opportunity for public comment in most cases.

StateOpen-meetings statute
CaliforniaRalph M. Brown Act — Cal. Gov’t Code §54950 et seq.
TexasTexas Open Meetings Act — Tex. Gov’t Code Ch. 551
FloridaSunshine Law — F.S. Ch. 286
New YorkOpen Meetings Law — N.Y. Pub. Off. Law Art. 7
IllinoisOpen Meetings Act — 5 ILCS 120
PennsylvaniaSunshine Act — 65 Pa. Cons. Stat. §701 et seq.
OhioOpen Meetings Act — Ohio Rev. Code §121.22
GeorgiaOpen Meetings Act — O.C.G.A. §50-14-1 et seq.
MichiganOpen Meetings Act — Mich. Comp. Laws §15.261 et seq.
North CarolinaOpen Meetings Law — N.C.G.S. Ch. 143, Art. 33C

Federal Regulations Most Frequently Cited

CitationSubject
34 C.F.R. Part 99FERPA implementing regulations
34 C.F.R. Part 100Title VI implementing regulations
34 C.F.R. Part 104Section 504 implementing regulations
34 C.F.R. Part 106Title IX implementing regulations
34 C.F.R. Part 300IDEA Part B implementing regulations
34 C.F.R. Part 303IDEA Part C (early intervention) implementing regulations
16 C.F.R. Part 312COPPA implementing regulations

Update Cycle

ContentReview interval
State Board of Education URLs and meeting schedulesQuarterly
State Department of Education URLs and named commissioners/state superintendentsQuarterly
State open-meetings & public-records statutesAnnually + on legislative session
Federal regulationsOn Federal Register update
OCR regional office assignmentsAnnually
External links sitewideQuarterly

Quality Assurance

  • Two-editor sign-off before publication for every state page
  • Quarterly link-rot check across all external links
  • Annual statute citation re-verification on legislative session
  • Reader-reported corrections logged and addressed within seven business days
  • “Last reviewed” date on every page reflects most recent verification

Corrections

If a source on this page is wrong, outdated, or missing, please email info@boardofeducations.org with the subject line “Sources correction” and what you believe should be changed.

Read the Full Editorial Methodology

The seven-step verification process, AI policy, and corrections workflow are on the Editorial Policy.

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