The Republican Party’s platform is more detailed on education. Politico’s Michael Stratford noted that it includes a direct rebuke of a recent White House directive urging states to uphold the civil rights of transgender students. (Republicans said they “salute the several states which have filed suit against it.”)

As Dana Goldstein wrote earlier this month for Slate, Hillary Clinton is reshaping the Democratic Party’s relationship with the so-called “school-reform” movement:

Following eight years of federally driven closures and turnarounds of schools with low test scores, which have put union jobs at risk, it was music to the [National Education Association’s] ears when the presumptive Democratic nominee promised to end “the education wars” and stop focusing only on quote, “failing schools.” Let’s focus on all our great schools, too.

At the same time, a common thread in media coverage of the National Education Association’s recent convention was the overall strong support for Clinton’s platform—and the boos that followed her brief, supportive remarks about charter schools.

For an update on where the two presidential candidates stand on education issues, check out Education Week’s cheat sheet. To be sure, Trump’s education platform hasn’t grown much since my Education Writers Association colleague Erik Robelen noted back in May that it could be summed up in 52 seconds.

There are gaps to be filled on the Democratic’ side, as well:

Fascinated to know more about what the Education Department will look like under Hillary Clinton... Bill's speech so heavy on her edu record — Caitlin Emma (@caitlinzemma) July 27, 2016

During her acceptance speech, Clinton reaffirmed her support for “debt-free college,” albeit with some caveats. But there is plenty of skepticism as to whether removing the financial burden will actually lead to more students earning degrees, according to Meredith Kolodner of The Hechinger Report. For another perspective, take a listen the interview by NPR’s Claudio Sanchez’s with college-finance expert Sandy Baum on whether the student loan debt crisis is fact or fiction.

This was an important pivot for Clinton on higher-education policy, and widely viewed as an olive branch extended to Senator Bernie Sanders, who campaigned heavily on this issue—and counted many younger voters among his fiercest supporters in his White House bid. She had previously called Sanders’ proposals too expensive to be viable.

Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign so far has been short on policy detail when it comes to K-12 education. (Some suggest this is likely because of the political tensions within the Democratic Party these days on key issues, such as accountability and charter schools.) Even so, during her speech last night, the former secretary of state, first lady, and U.S. senator, hearkened back to her own advocacy in this arena before holding any office.