Education Department Dismantlement: $881M in Contracts Slashed, IES Eliminated, 50% Workforce Cut

The systematic dismantlement of the Department of Education began with DOGE slashing $881 million in research contracts and eliminating IES, followed by cutting half the workforce, and culminated in an executive order to shutter the entire department.

DOGE terminated 89 Education Department contracts totaling $881 million, gutting the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) — the nation's primary education research body. The Department then cut nearly 50% of its 4,100-person workforce, and President Trump signed an executive order to close the agency entirely.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • On February 10, 2025, DOGE announced termination of 89 Education Department contracts totaling $881 million. The vast majority targeted the Institute of Education Sciences (IES), the department's research arm.
  • IES was effectively eliminated — over 100 employees terminated, including research analysts specializing in K-12 studies, adult education, and career education. IES maintained the nation's largest database of education statistics.
  • In March 2025, the Department cut nearly 50% of its 4,100+ employees — approximately 1,700 positions — including staff in civil rights enforcement, student loan servicing, and special education oversight.
  • On March 20, 2025, Trump signed an executive order declaring the Department of Education should be closed and authority returned to states. Education Secretary Linda McMahon began transferring programs to other agencies.
  • Some of the terminated contracts were mandated by Congress or created in response to lawmakers' requests, raising questions about the legality of their cancellation.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. DOGE terminates $881 million in education contracts

    DOGE announces on X the termination of 89 Education Department contracts totaling $881 million. The bulk target the Institute of Education Sciences, including 29 contracts labeled as related to diversity, equity, and inclusion totaling $101 million.

  2. IES research arm gutted

    Over 100 IES employees are terminated, including research analysts specializing in K-12 studies and adult education. Chalkbeat and NPR report that the cuts eliminate the department's capacity to track national school performance, safety data, and science course completion.

  3. Cuts hit students with disabilities and literacy research

    Chalkbeat reports that DOGE education cuts directly impact students with disabilities and literacy research programs, eliminating contracts that supported evidence-based reading instruction and special education services.

  4. Department announces 50% workforce reduction

    CNN and Inside Higher Ed report the Education Department will reduce its staff by nearly half — approximately 1,700 of 4,100+ employees. Cuts include civil rights enforcement staff, student loan servicers, and special education oversight personnel.

  5. Trump signs executive order to close the department

    President Trump signs an executive order arguing that the Department of Education should be closed and authority over education returned to states and local communities. Legal experts note that actually closing the department requires an act of Congress.

  6. Department begins transferring programs to other agencies

    Education Secretary Linda McMahon announces plans to transfer billions in grant programs to other federal agencies, describing it as 'breaking up the federal education bureaucracy.' Employee reassignments to other agencies begin.

  7. Department continues diminished operation one year later

    A year after mass layoffs, the Education Department continues handing off programs to other agencies. It remains standing only because closure requires Congressional action that has not materialized.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

The dismantlement of the Department of Education proceeded in three waves across 2025, systematically eliminating the federal government's capacity to enforce educational civil rights, fund research, and oversee student loan programs.

Wave 1: Research Destruction (February 2025)

On February 10, 2025, DOGE announced the termination of 89 Education Department contracts totaling $881 million. The primary target was the Institute of Education Sciences (IES), the department's research arm and one of the country's largest funders of education research.

Over 100 IES employees were terminated, including research analysts specializing in K-12 studies, adult education, and career education. IES maintained a massive database of education statistics and contracted with scientists and education organizations to compile and publish data about school crime, safety, science course completion, and educational outcomes. ProPublica reported that DOGE "decimated" the arm of the Education Department that tracked national school performance.

The cuts included contracts that supported evidence-based literacy instruction and services for students with disabilities. Some of the terminated contracts had been mandated by Congress or created in response to lawmakers' requests, raising legal questions about whether the executive branch had authority to cancel them.

Wave 2: Workforce Gutting (March 2025)

On March 11, 2025, the Department announced it would cut nearly 50% of its workforce — approximately 1,700 of its 4,100+ employees. The cuts included staff responsible for civil rights enforcement, student loan servicing, and special education oversight. NPR documented what was being lost: the capacity to investigate discrimination in schools, manage $1.6 trillion in student loans, and ensure compliance with federal special education law.

Wave 3: Formal Closure Order (March 2025 Onward)

On March 20, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order declaring that the Department of Education should be closed. Education Secretary Linda McMahon began the process of transferring programs and staff to other federal agencies, describing it as "breaking up the federal education bureaucracy."

However, legal experts immediately noted that closing a Congressionally-created department requires an act of Congress — meaning the Trump administration needs majority support in both chambers and must overcome a Senate filibuster. As of March 2026, this legislation has not materialized, leaving the department in a diminished state but technically still in existence.

Why This Matters

The Department of Education exists because Congress determined that a federal role in education was necessary — to enforce civil rights in schools, to fund research that informs teaching, to manage student financial aid, and to ensure students with disabilities receive appropriate education. These are not discretionary functions; many are mandated by law.

The destruction of IES eliminates the nation's ability to collect and analyze education data at scale. Without this data, policymakers, researchers, and school administrators lose the evidence base needed to make informed decisions about instruction, safety, and resource allocation.

The 50% workforce cut directly degrades the Department's capacity to enforce civil rights law in the approximately 130,000 schools that receive federal funding, to process and manage student loans for tens of millions of borrowers, and to oversee special education compliance under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

International Law Implications

The right to education is among the most broadly recognized international human rights. The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (Article 13) requires states to ensure the full realization of the right to education. The Convention on the Rights of the Child (Article 28) establishes the right of every child to education. The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (Article 24) requires inclusive education with reasonable accommodations.

While dismantling a single department does not automatically violate these provisions, the systematic elimination of the federal government's capacity to enforce educational rights, fund research, and ensure equitable access represents a significant regression in the protection of these rights.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

  1. The Education Department is being cut in half. Here's what's being lost NPR
  2. Education Department cutting nearly half of workforce CNN
  3. DOGE Decimates Education Department Arm That Tracks National School Performance ProPublica
  4. $900M in Institute of Education Sciences contracts axed Inside Higher Ed
  5. Elon Musk's DOGE halts Education Department research Chalkbeat
  6. DOGE education cuts hit students with disabilities, literacy research Chalkbeat
  7. FAQs: Checking in on the Department of Education Brookings
  8. A year after mass layoffs, Education Dept keeps handing off its programs to other agencies Federal News Network

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