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Bill Gates Should Not Go to Spam

Bill Gates was in my spam. He shouldn’t have been. His letter is powerful, his message is powerful, and unlike way too many funders, he actually knows that we are all in this for the long haul!

The Gates Foundation was forward thinking enough to fund the Center’s bold media outreach work, and the Media Bullpen to help improve the discourse in the media and the grassroots, particularly in our target states of FL, GA, NC, TN and PA. Detractors think the Gates Fdn is part of some conspiracy to undo public education. Actually, they funded what we wanted to do, and they had nothing to do with creating it! Gates is putting his money where his mouth is — and the operative word here is “his”. America allows us to prosper, paves the way for many, and gives those that succeed incentives to spread their wealth. What a great innovation.

Read his letter here, join the conversation at #billsletter and think about measurement the next time you want to launch a career in ed reform!

by Jeanne Allen

Did You Know? 10 Fast Facts on School Choice

The Education and the Workforce Committee put together these 10 fast facts on school choice in honor of National School Choice Week 2013. For more on education options and school choice programs across the U.S., check out “Improving American Education with School Choice“.

State and local school choice initiatives continue to boost academic achievement and strengthen the nation’s education system. In honor of National School Choice Week (January 27 – February 2), the House Education and the Workforce Committee compiled the following facts on a variety of innovative programs and policies that are expanding choice and options in education:

FACT #1: Demand and support for charter schools continues to grow. More than 2 million students are enrolled at 5,618 charter schools in America. An additional 610,000 students are currently on charter school waiting lists.

FACT # 2: Eighty percent of states have embraced charter schools.Forty-one states and the District of Columbia have laws that support the funding and authorizing of public charter schools.

FACT #3: Magnet schools educate millions of students every year. In the 2010-2011 academic year, more than 2 million students were enrolled at 2,722 magnet schools in 31 states. These public schools often have a specific focus, such as science and technology, math, or the humanities, and help prepare students for in-demand jobs.

FACT #4: States are expanding private school choice programs. In 2012, 16 states, the District of Columbia, and Douglas County, Colorado offered private school choice programs. More than 210,000 students participated in these programs in 2011-2012 academic year.

FACT #5: Private school choice programs can help increase college enrollment. According to a 2012 study, disadvantaged African American students who received private school vouchers in New York City were 24 percent more likely to attend college.

FACT #6: Private scholarship programs can help raise high school graduation rates. In the 2010-2011 academic year, the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program had a 94 percent high school graduation rate. Nearly 90 percent of participating students went on to pursue a postsecondary degree.

FACT #7: A growing number of states and students are taking advantage of virtual schools. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia allow full time online schools and approximately 275,000 students were enrolled during the 2011-2012 school year. These online schools improve access to education for rural students who would otherwise be forced to commute long distances to attend school.

FACT #8: An estimated two-thirds of school districts now offer blended learning programs, a combination of traditional and online schooling. These fast-growing programs allow parents to select more personalized curriculum for their students, while also incorporating the benefits of a traditional classroom setting.

FACT #9: Since 1999, the popularity of homeschooling has grown significantly. From 1999 to 2007, the number of homeschooled students increased by 74 percent. There were approximately 2 million home school students in the U.S. in 2010.

FACT #10: In 2011, 46 states offered open enrollment to students. Open enrollment policies allow students to transfer to a different public school within the district or state, helping children escape low-performing schools.

School choice has helped Michigan’s children

Opinion
by Michael Van Beek
The Detroit News
January 31, 2013

A new study by researchers at Stanford University shows superb positive effects for students attending charter schools in Michigan. It is the most rigorous study of charter schools ever done in this state and positions Michigan as one of the nation’s leaders in charter school policy and performance.

No other study of Michigan’s charter schools comes close to matching the sophistication or comprehensiveness used by Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO). This study compared students in charters to their peers in local public schools who were identical in terms of race, gender, socioeconomic status, prior academic achievement and more.

Researchers measured annual learning gains for about 85,000 charter school students over a five-year period and compared them to their “virtual twins” in conventional schools.

The findings were almost wholly positive for charter school students, and most impressive in Detroit. The typical charter school student made gains worth about two months of learning in reading and math. For a charter school student in Detroit, it was more than three months. Forty-two percent of charters outperformed conventional public schools in math and 35 percent did the same in reading. In Detroit, those numbers are 49 and 47 percent, respectively.

CREDO has evaluated charter school performance in 19 states using this same methodology. Of those, only Louisiana and New Jersey can hold a candle to Michigan. Louisiana charter school students also demonstrated learning gains of about two months when compared to their peers. In New Jersey, the average student in a charter made gains of about two months in reading and about three months in math.

Michigan’s results were more consistent, though. Unlike Louisiana, students in Michigan charters demonstrated increased learning gains the longer they were enrolled. And while the New Jersey study found positive results for 44 of 54 of subgroups of student and schools, CREDO found a charter school advantage in 52 of 56 cases studied in Michigan.

What accounts for Michigan’s success is hard to pinpoint, but certainly the state’s charter school law and policies have a lot to do with it. In fact, a just-released analysis of such policies by the Center for Education Reform gave Michigan’s policies one of only four “A’s,” ranking it fourth overall in the country.

Michigan is unique in the number of charter school authorizers it allows — such as public universities and community colleges — and the amount of autonomy it grants these authorizers.

These authorizers are not concerned with protecting existing K-12 institutions, which comes at the expense of denying quality charter school options for parents.

Michigan has historically allowed more charter schools than other states. The new CREDO study suggests that Michigan has a “highly dynamic market … creating a new positive stock of charter schools.”

In time, the cap on charter schools will sunset. More net-positive competition will occur.

The typical Michigan student is better off for having enrolled in a charter school. Expanding school choice options in this state seems prudent.

Neither this recommendation, nor CREDO’s findings, is a condemnation of conventional public schools. They are rather merely an affirmation that Michigan’s 20-year-old charter school experiment is working and a compliment to the policymakers responsible for creating charter school laws and to the work of charter school authorizers, boards, principals and teachers.

Michael Van Beek is the education policy director at the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.

Daily Headlines for January 31, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

We Choose Everything – Why Not Our Schools?
Detroit News, MI, January 31, 2013

Being able to choose these goods and services is the essential first step to being an educated consumer, and being an educated consumer is an essential right of the American experience. It is truly awful, then, that many Americans are not permitted to choose the school where their children receive their education — a product more vital than any iPhone or brand of milk, and moreover, a product guaranteed to them by their states.

E-Mails Link Bush Foundation, Corporations And Education Officials
Washington Post Blog, DC, January 30, 2013

A nonprofit group released thousands of e-mails today and said they show how a foundation begun by Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and national education reform leader, is working with public officials in states to write education laws that could benefit some of its corporate funders.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Give School Systems The Opportunity To Innovate, Be Flexible
Birmingham News, AL, January 30, 2013

Who in the world would argue against giving Alabama public schools more flexibility and an opportunity to be innovative?

ARKANSAS

Arkansas Educators React To Charter School Rally, Legislation
KUAR, AR, January 30, 2013

One day after a rally to push for more public charter schools in Arkansas, various groups of state educators gathered together at the Capitol on Wednesday to say current legislation that would create an independent commission to approve new charter schools would be an overreach into the state’s education system.

CALIFORNIA

Manzanita Backers Show Their Support
Lompoc Record, CA, January 30, 2013

With dozens of bright yellow balloons hovering above, a wide range of speakers took to the podium at Tuesday night’s Lompoc Unified School District board meeting, many of them with a clear and united message: Keep Manzanita Charter School in this community.

COLORADO

Stone Creek Tops State’s Independent Schools
Vail Daily News, CO, January 30, 2013

A local independent charter school earned some of the state’s best marks in independent rankings.

DELAWARE

Families, Children Benefit From School Choice
News Journal, DE, January 31, 2013

School choice is important. It’s important because it can literally change the trajectory of a child’s life. Where one child flourishes, another will fall behind. Each child is different, with unique strengths and needs. How well a child performs in a school depends on how well that child’s learning needs are met by the school.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Can Traditional School Systems Be Replaced By Charters?
Washington Post Blog, DC, January 30, 2013

When activists from the District and across the country gathered Tuesday at the U.S. Education Department to call for an end to school closures, American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten issued a statement in solidarity: “It’s time to fix, not close, our schools,” she said.

FLORIDA

Concerns Mounting Over Teacher Evaluations
Sunshine State News, FL, January 31, 2013

Questions are continuing to mount about the future of Florida’s new teacher evaluation system, with Senate President Don Gaetz becoming the latest state official to wonder if the system needs to be overhauled.

Forsyth Academy Weighs Change From Charter To Program
Gainesville Times, FL, January 30, 2013

New opportunities could be heading to the Forsyth Academy if the local school district decides to convert it from a charter format to a program.

1,100-Student Charter School Proposed In Palm Beach Gardens
Palm Beach Post, FL, January 30, 2013

A charter school that will create about 75 jobs and bring about 1,100 students to a vacant warehouse has been proposed for Hiatt Drive.

Scott Wants $1.2B for K-12
Hernando Today, FL, January 31, 2013

When Gov. Rick Scott announced Wednesday that he will propose an increase of $1.2 billion in the state’s K-12 education budget, or an increase of roughly $400 per student, some in the school district reacted to the news with a similar wave of curiosity that makes a person halt next to one of those plastic “Win a free cruise!” boxes full of business cards.

GEORGIA

Charter-School Commission Holds First Meeting
Rome News-Tribune, GA, January 31, 2013

The commission at the heart of last year’s controversial charter-school constitutional amendment held its organizational meeting Wednesday.

Charter Schools Commission Holds First Meeting Since Its Rebirth
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, January 30, 2013

It’s back. The State Charter Schools Commission, brought back to life with the passage of the charter schools constitutional amendment in November, held its first meeting Wednesday.

IDAHO

Report: Idaho Lags in Charter School Growth
Magic Valley Times-News, ID, January 31, 2013

Idaho lags behind other states in charter school growth, according to a new report from the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation.

IOWA

Iowa Senate OKs Basic Aid To Schools, Setting Up Showdown With House
Des Moines Register, IA, January 31, 2013

A showdown is brewing after the Iowa Senate approved a $187 million school aid spending package Wednesday that will be sent to the House, which is being urged by Gov. Terry Branstad to delay action until it develops a plan to reform the state’s education system.

KANSAS

Battle Begins In House Over Public Unions
The Lawrence Journal-World, KS, January 30, 2013

A bill that opponents and supporters agreed would weaken the ability of public employee unions to participate in politics won preliminary approval on Wednesday.

LOUISIANA

Education Laws Topic Of Forum
The Advocate, LA, January 31, 2013

Louisiana legislators need to rework the education accountability and choice laws that siphon resources from public schools, punish teachers based on faulty measuring tools and disproportionately affect at-risk students, a panel of Tangipahoa Parish educators and elected officials said.

MAINE

Democratic Majority On Education Panel Wants Charter School To Share In Cuts
Bangor Daily News, ME, January 30, 2013

The Legislature’s Education Committee voted 8-5 along party lines Wednesday to include charter schools in $12.6 million in cuts to education aid, sparking the latest partisan battle on education reforms.

If Current Charter School Problems Not Solved, Movement Will Fail
Morning Sentinel, ME, January 31, 2013

An advertisement airing on local television, sponsored by the National Alliance of Public Charter Schools, gives the impression the charter school movement has no downside.

Charter Schools Are Not Free
Bangor Daily News, ME, January 30, 2013

There is an advertisement airing on local television sponsored by the National Alliance of Public Charter Schools. As with a lot of the political-type advertisements, it gives the impression that there is no downside to the charter school movement. They say it’s free, open to all and implies that parents will be able to work better with teachers in a charter school setting.

MARYLAND

Independently Operated Schools Sound Off On Contract Recommendations
Baltimore Sun, MD, January 31, 2013

In a public forum packed with emotion as well as people, the Baltimore school board heard Wednesday from independently operated schools fighting for contract extensions as some presented narratives describing their strengths and weaknesses.

Heavy Load Puts Teacher Retention At Risk In Prince George’s
Maryland Gazette, MD, January 31, 2013

Considering all the positive outcomes arising from our public schools in recent years, it is somewhat disheartening to see the issue of turnover rearing its ugly head in Prince George’s County once more. All our advances will be for naught if this community fails to entice educators to spend their careers right here.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter School Site Offers Opportunities For City, Schools
Gloucester Daily Times, MA, January 31, 2013

The issue confronting Mick Lafata — who owns what, until a few weeks ago, had been a bustling Gloucester Community Arts Charter School – is purely a business matter.

MICHIGAN

School Choice Has Helped Michigan’s Children
Detroit News, MI, January 31, 2013

A new study by researchers at Stanford University shows superb positive effects for students attending charter schools in Michigan. It is the most rigorous study of charter schools ever done in this state and positions Michigan as one of the nation’s leaders in charter school policy and performance.

MISSISSIPPI

High-Risk Students Key For Charter School
Jackson Magazine, MS, January 30, 2013

The crisis in American and Mississippi education is with our high-risk children, those living in profound poverty or those who have learning disabilities. Though we must do better by all children, in Mississippi, as in the rest of America, we fail most our high-risk students.

MONTANA

Bill Calls For Charter Schools In Montana
Beartooth NBC, MT, January 30, 2013

Today a bill was heard in the house that could bring charter schools to the state of Montana.

NEVADA

Charter Schools, Vouchers On Education Leaders’ Wish List
Las Vegas Sun, NV, January 31, 2013

Nevada’s education leaders called for the expansion of charter schools and vouchers during a panel discussion highlighting School Choice Week.

NEW JERSEY

Most N.J. Charter School Facilities Outdated, Analysis Finds
Star-Ledger, NJ, January 30, 2013

Almost three-quarters of New Jersey’s charter schools that participated in a recent survey were built before 1970, and a third are housed in buildings not originally built as schools, according to an analysis released today.

N.J. Limitations On School Choice Blocks Opportunities For Students
Times of Trenton, NJ, January 31, 2013

If, as a nation, we choose our presidents, then why not our schools? Why, as parents, are we subjected to the dictates and mandates of an American education system gone awry, one that’s been hijacked by interests and decisions not of our choosing?

NEW YORK

Cuomo: State Might Impose Evaluations
Wall Street Journal, January 31, 2013

State officials will impose their own job evaluation system on New York City’s teachers if a deal isn’t reached soon between the union and the city, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday.

Gov’s Teacher-Eval Ultimatum To Mike
New York Post, NY, January 31, 2013

If Mayor Bloomberg and the city teachers union can’t come up with their own teacher-evaluation plan, Albany will step in and do it for them, Gov. Cuomo and legislative leaders warned yesterday.

OHIO

Kasich Rolling Out His Plan For Schools
Columbus Dispatch, OH, January 31, 2013

Gov. John Kasich will unveil his long-promised school-funding plan today, in which he’ll propose creating a $300 million “innovation fund” to support school initiatives to improve teaching and learning, sources said. Kasich also is expected to seek expansion of tax-funded tuition vouchers and an increase in state aid for tutoring and intervention services for struggling readers.

PENNSYLVANIA

Former Official Of Charter School Network Reportedly Will Plead Guilty
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 31, 2013

The former business manager of Dorothy June Brown’s charter school network has signaled that he intends to change his plea and admit that he played a role in Brown’s alleged scheme to defraud the schools of $6.7 million.

Look At The Effective Work By Charter Schools
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 31, 2013

Using a headline to imply that charter schools as “a class” are “sub-par” does a great disservice to the educators, parents and students who support charters as a viable educational option, particularly for traditionally underserved students (“Sub-Par Options: Charter Schools as a Class Don’t Measure Up,” Jan. 27 editorial).

Money, Charter Schools Main Focus Of First York City Schools’ Recovery Plan Meeting
York Daily Record, PA, January 30, 2013

The advisory committee charged with creating a recovery plan for the York City School District heard an overview of the district at its first meeting Wednesday night. The 20 members also shared some of their hopes and concerns for the committee, with concerns about money and charter schools being a main focus.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Choice Leads To Child-Centered Education
Aiken Standard, SC, January 30, 2013

In the S.C. House of Representatives we deal with a lot of issues. None are more important to families than education.

How Should We Measure Teacher Success?
Myrtle Beach Sun News, SC, January 30, 2013

Browsing the S.C. Department of Education’s proposed “Educator Evaluation and Support Guidelines,” the model proposed to overhaul the state’s system for measuring teacher success, two conclusions present themselves.

TEXAS

Higher Learning: Ignite Offers Flexible Schedules For Students
Valley Morning Star, TX, January 30, 2013

Located in Raymondville, it is one of six charter schools in the Ignite Public School District. The schools have flexible schedules to accommodate students in different circumstances.

Charter School Network Gets $5 Million Pledge
Dallas Morning News, TX, January 30, 2013

The Harold Simmons Foundation will give $5 million over four years to Uplift Education, North Texas’ largest charter school network.

VIRGINIA

Va. Panel Backs A’s -To-F’s For Schools
Washington Times, DC, January 30, 2013

Virginia public schools will get the same kind of report cards their students take home if legislation endorsed Wednesday by a House of Delegates committee becomes law.

WISCONSIN

Tough Decisions Lie Ahead For Wisconsin’s School Voucher Program
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, January 30, 2013

A gathering sponsored by a national school choice group Wednesday in Milwaukee played to the theme of support for quality educational options for all children. Gov. Scott Walker, Milwaukee Public Schools Superintendent Gregory Thornton and Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett – all in attendance – endorsed that sentiment.

Vouchers Hurt Public Schools
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, January 31, 2013

With voucher advocates trumpeting “National School Choice Week,” it is a fitting time to examine the proposed expansion of private school vouchers in Wisconsin. Some politicians are intent on slowly doing away with our public education system in favor of privatized education paid for with taxpayer money.

ONLINE LEARNING

Jeb Bush: Students Should Have The Choice Of Digital Schools
CNN, January 31, 2013

The Fair sisters graduated from Nevada Virtual Academy last spring and enrolled at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. After all the time she spent at the doctor’s office, Kaleigh is pursuing a degree in nursing – through online courses, of course.

Erie-Area Home-School Families Shifting To Online Programs
Erie Times News, PA, January 31, 2013

Harborcreek Township resident Dianne Jackson knew she had to make a change when she saw her daughter struggling in both public and private schools.

Our View: Too Soon To Call Virtual Schools A Failed Idea
Jackson Sun, TN, January 31, 2013

The Tennessee General Assembly approved what have come to be known as “virtual schools” in Tennessee. The state’s first, and only, online virtual school opened in 2011 in Union County.

Franklin School Board Plans For More Virtual Learning
Anderson Mail Independent, SC, January 30, 2013

Franklin County school superintendent Ruth O’Dell this week outlined the school system’s main objectives.

Idaho’s Largest Charter School Escapes Much Of The Criticism Aimed At Corporate Partner
Boise State Public Radio, ID, January 30, 2013

Wyatt’s mom, Jenifer Bell laughs at that. She says she turned to online education when her oldest child, Alexa reached school age. Her daughter was too sick to go to traditional school.

Daily Headlines for January 30, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Grade Our Teachers, Help Our Students
CNN, January 30, 2013

Knowing how to identify and measure great teaching is a huge step toward providing better feedback and support for teachers and building a better education system for all our children — but it’s just one step. The challenge now is to use this information to give teachers the tools, resources and support they need to do their best work.

Activists to U.S. Education Department: Stop School Closings Now
Washington Post, DC, January 29, 2013

Activists fighting school closings across the country converged at the U.S. Education Department on Tuesday to demand federal action to stop the shutdowns, which they say disproportionately affect poor and minority students.

Making the Grade
Washington Times, DC, January 29, 2013

More than 200 organizations across the country are staging some 3,600 events to mark School Choice Week. Many grateful parents, however, have reason to celebrate every week.

Offer More Options For Students
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 30, 2013

It is no secret that our education system needs reform, but what direction to take and how to get there present a formidable challenge. Countless studies have shown that our children’s math and science skills are dangerously below average.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

State Positioned To Exit No Child Left Behind Act
Tuscaloosa News, AL, January 30, 2013

It’s a new day for public education in Alabama, Thomas Bice, superintendent of the state Department of Education, said Tuesday in Tuscaloosa.

ARKANSAS

Former Florida Governor Pushes For Charter Schools In Ark.
KUAR, AR, January 29, 2013

As lawmakers consider proposals to expand charter schools in the state, the former Governor of Florida, Jeb Bush, spoke at the state Capitol Tuesday as part of rally by a group that advocates for charter schools.

ARIZONA

Arizona Charter-School Safety A Concern
Arizona Republic, AZ, January 30, 2013

As schools examine their safety plans in the wake of the Newtown shooting, many of the Valley’s charter and private schools are not as prepared to defend against internal and external threats as their traditional public-school counterparts, police and school officials say.

CALIFORNIA

Proposed Charter School Plan From Former Mayor Yunits Does Little For Brockton
Enterprise News, CA, January 29, 2013

Regarding “SABIS charter school will help Brockton fulfill promise” commentary by John T. Yunits on Jan. 20:

School Choice Is Expanding Across U.S.
Orange County Register, CA, January 29, 2013

All of us can choose from among dozens of brands of automobiles. But when it comes to something more precious, parents generally have little choice in their children’s public schools. The educational bureaucracy makes the decision.

Private Money And Public Schools
Sacramento Press, CA, January 29, 2013

Last December 3, the California Fair Political Practices Commission recommended fining Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, a Democrat, $37,500 for improperly reporting donations to his multiple nonprofit groups.

5 Keys Charter School Helps S.F. Inmates
San Francisco Chronicle, CA, January 29, 2013

Latrice Alexander beamed and cheered as her son walked across the Hall of Justice stage to accept his high school diploma Tuesday.

CONNECTICUT

Advocates For Charter Schools As Answer To Achievement Gap
Danbury News Times, CT, January 29, 2013

Connecticut has an opportunity — despite historic fiscal woes — to accelerate the groundbreaking progress made by Connecticut’s charter schools. The 27 letters of interest, one from Danbury, submitted to the state by educators, officials and clergy leaders, all of whom want to create new, public charters schools, offer proof that a growing corps of leaders are lining up to change the status quo and meet the huge parent demand for great public school choices.

FLORIDA

Education Commissioner Praises Hillsborough School Choice
Tampa Bay Tribune, FL, January 30, 2013

New Education Commissioner Tony Bennett, an ardent supporter of school choice, visited a Tampa showcase and panel discussion on Tuesday to laud the local district for what he called its innovative offerings.

Decision Delayed On St. Petersburg Charter School’s Fate
Tampa Bay Times, FL, January 30, 2013

It’s a question of survival for Imagine St. Petersburg, but one whose answer will have to wait another month.

Lawmakers Work To Clamp Down On Charter Schools
WFTV, FL, January 29, 2013

State lawmakers are working to clamp down on charter schools after the principal of a failed Orange County charter school left her job with a half-million dollar payout.

GEORGIA

‘Trigger’ Bill Would Let Parents, Staff Petition To Change Schools To Charters
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, January 29, 2013

Hoping to capitalize on the momentum of November’s positive charter school vote, a leader in the Georgia House introduced legislation Tuesday to give parents the right to petition to turn their low-performing public schools into independent charter schools.

Lindsey: Plan Means Parents Would Get Involved In Charters
Reporter Newspaper, GA, January 30, 2013

State Rep. Edward Lindsey, a Buckhead Republican, says his proposal making it easier to convert an existing school into a charter school is about getting parents involved in education.

Details About Charter High School Under Wraps
Cherokee Ledger News, GA, January 30, 2013

Cherokee Charter Academy officials are jubilant about a five-year renewal of their petition, with permission to begin offering a high school, issued earlier this month by the state Department of Education.

We Bought The Charter Hype
Covington News, GA, January 29, 2013

An article in the AJC last week noted that $2.7 million was spent by proponents of the charter school amendment as compared with $262,822 spent by those who opposed the amendment. Among those who contributed to the proponent campaign were K12 Inc. and Charter Schools USA, both for profit companies that manage charter schools.

ILLINOIS

Charter Advocates Rally As School-Closing Critics Pack Meetings
Chicago Tribune, IL, January 30, 2013

As opponents of school closings in Chicago pack community meetings this week to make their voice heard, charter school advocates took part in a rally Tuesday at Union Station to draw attention to their call for greater school choice.

INDIANA

3rd Charter Set To Appeal To Ball State
The Journal Gazette, IN, January 30, 2013

Timothy L. Johnson Academy has joined two other Fort Wayne charter schools that will appeal Ball State University’s decision not to renew their charters.

LOUISIANA

Group Lauds La. Charter Schools
The Advocate, LA, January 30, 2013

Louisiana won high marks Tuesday from a charter school advocacy group, including the state’s lack of any cap on the number of charter schools and the transparency of its application and review process.

MASSACHUSETTS

Framingham’s McAuliffe Charter Gets State’s OK To Expand
MetroWest Daily News, MA, January 30, 2013

The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education on Tuesday unanimously granted Christa McAuliffe Charter School’s request to increase its student population nearly 33 percent over the next few years, an expansion that will lead to the hiring of more teachers and a move to a new facility.

Charter’s Landlord Out $1 Million-Plus
Gloucester Times, MA, January 30, 2013

Three weeks after the Gloucester Community Arts Charter School’s early and unexpected closure, the landlord of the former school building in Blackburn Industrial Park estimates he is out more than $1 million in rent as he begins the search for a new tenant.

Group Eyes Charter School With Multi-Age Classes
Cape Cod Times, MA, January 30, 2013

A group of educators and parents are setting a course for a new regional charter school on Cape Cod with multi-age classrooms.

MICHIGAN

Inkster District Could Convert High School Into A Charter School
Detroit Free Press, MI, January 30, 2013

Under a radical plan to deal with a $12-million deficit, Inkster Public Schools would turn its high school over to a charter school management company to run and become a K-8 district.

MISSOURI

Missouri Could Speed Up Its Takeover Of KC School District
Kansas City Star, MO, January 29, 2013

Proposal working its way through the Senate could bring state control before start of the new school year this fall.

NEVADA

Nevada Needs More Education Competition
Las Vegas Review-Journal, NV, January 30, 2013

Gov. Brian Sandoval on Sunday joined more than 20 other governors in signing a proclamation recognizing School Choice Week. Twenty-nine events are scheduled around the state this week to celebrate educational choice. That’s great. What would be even better? If Nevada already had more school choice.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Educational Opportunity Is Under Attack On Many Fronts
Union Leader, NH, January 30, 2013

Educational opportunity is something we all want for our children. But it is under threat in New Hampshire. While the wealthy can choose among many options to find the best education for their children, two small programs that increase options for poor people in New Hampshire are under attack.

NEW YORK

Mayor Bloomberg Plans To Slash 1,800 Teaching Positions Through Attrition In Proposed New $70.1 Billion Budget
New York Daily News, NY, January 30, 2013

Mayor Bloomberg gave his final budget address as mayor on Tuesday, proposing a $70.1 billion plan that slashes up to 1,800 teaching positions through attrition.

Mulgrew’s End Game
New York Daily News, NY, January 30, 2013

Under surprisingly aggressive questioning at a legislative budget hearing Tuesday, United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew revealed his true heart’s desire for the nation’s largest school system. He wants a patsy to take over.

Tour Aimed At Promoting Charter Schools Coming Here
Buffalo News, NY, January 30, 2013

A cross-country “whistle-stop” train tour aimed at promoting alternative choices for public education – mainly charter schools – will bring its message to Buffalo during a breakfast reception at 8 a.m. Friday in Statler City, 107 Delaware Ave.

OKLAHOMA

State School Superintendent Asks For $2.6 Billion For Oklahoma Education
The Oklahoman, OK, January 30, 2013

State schools superintendent Janet Barresi asked the joint Budget and Appropriations Committee on Tuesday morning to increase the state education budget by nearly $300 million compared to last year.

PENNSYLVANIA

Truth Revealed About Charters
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 30, 2013

The latest numbers on charter school performance in Pennsylvania give new meaning to the term fuzzy math.

Harrisburg Schools Saddled With Debt And Growing Exodus To Charter Schools, Says Veno
Patriot News, PA, January 29, 2013

Two trends threaten Harrisburg School District’s future financial success, said state-appointed chief recovery officer Gene Veno: increasing payments for past debt and a growing exodus of students to charter schools.

Bethlehem Area School District Premieres Video Series ‘Come Join Us’
Leigh Valley Express-Times, PA, January 29, 2013

The message to parents considering private or charter schools was clear: give Bethlehem Area a chance.

Reading Superintendent Against I-lead Middle-school Proposal
Reading Eagle, PA, January 30, 2013

Dr. Carlinda Purcell believes that, when it comes to education, choice can be a good thing.

New Hope Best Choice For Me
York Daily Record, PA, January 29, 2013

If you had a gifted child, wouldn’t you want them to be taking classes that challenged them? This is how my parents felt when making the decision to send me to New Hope Academy Charter School. School choice is important to me because it provides me with the level of education I need and am capable of doing.

TENNESSEE

Voucher Legislation Includes Caps, Private School Restrictions
Nashville Public Radio, TN, January 29, 2013

A proposed voucher program would be restricted to students poor enough to get free or reduced lunch and attending a school in the bottom five percent in the state. School voucher legislation from the Haslam Administration has been filed for consideration by the General Assembly.

UTAH

Tax Transparency
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, January 30, 2013

Many Utahns are still just a bit in the dark about charter schools. These non-traditional public schools are relatively new, but over the past decade the number of charters has risen consistently until now there are 85 in the Beehive State.

VIRGINIA

Defying Obama, Virginia Democrats Kill Charter School Bill
Watchdog blog, January 29, 2013

Snubbing their national party’s position, Virginia Democrats killed a charter-school bill in the state Senate and threaten to quash similar reform measures.

WASHINGTON

Teachers Should End Boycott Of MAP Assessment Test
Seattle Times, WA, January 29, 2013

Seattle Public Schools teachers boycotting the MAP test should stop. There is value in a local assessment.

WEST VIRGINIA

Bureaucracy Keeping Schools From Thriving
Journal-News, WV, January 30, 2013

It’s all about change. The recent firing of the State Superintendent of Schools is all about change. The State Board of Education decided to fire the Superintendent without following proper legal procedures.

ONLINE LEARNING

Cyber Charter School Applications Denied
Delaware County Times, PA, January 29, 2013

Pennsylvania Secretary of Education Ronald Tomalis denied applications for eight proposed cyber charter schools Monday, including one based in Springfield.

Cybernots – The Schools That Boldly Went Nowhere
Wilkes Barre Times-Leader, PA, January 29, 2013

Call them Cybernots, exploring the new world of Pennsylvania public education.

Virtual Academy Contrite About Poor Math Scores
Nashville Public Radio, TN, January 30, 2013

An online public school enrolling thousands of students across Tennessee once again faced scrutiny from state lawmakers yesterday (Tuesday). The virtual school, based in Union County, uses curriculum developed by a for-profit company called K12 Inc. The school’s standardized test scores have been some of the lowest in the state.

TN Lawmakers Blast Online K12 School
The Tennessean, TN, January 29, 2013

Top officials from Tennessee’s embattled publicly funded online virtual school faced sharp criticism from members of the state House Education Committee Tuesday over its abysmal test results, with lawmakers delivering a clear message: You’re on notice.

Newswire: January 29, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 4

SCHOOL CHOICE WEEK. From coast to coast, tens of thousands have cast a net and joined the call to celebrate “school choice,” the term that encompasses the opportunity for parents to make a wide array of choices in pursuit of the best fit for education, for their own child. What a concept. In no other industry is the case for freedom and opportunity so controversial as education, but that is changing, thanks to those who conceived National School Choice Week and those who move mountains to create those opportunities every day. Here’s just a smattering of those voices from among countless Twitter feeds. It’s a great sight. Do a search on Twitter for #schoolchoice or @schoolchoicewk and you’ll be astounded how many and how smart the tweets are. Yes there are cranky, antagonistic and oppositional ones, too, but of course, those are from the interest groups who choice threatens. Their days of complaining are numbered.

• From Cesar Chavez school: Our beautiful #Parkside #ChavezScholars celebrating National School Choice Week! (cc: @schoolchoicewk)

Jeff Atwater: ‏We MUST ensure that every student has the opportunity to receive a quality education. @schoolchoicewk is this week.

•”Without equal education there is no such thing as equality” Jeb Bush. #schoolchoice #arscw http://twitpic.com/bzahkz

• Republican Gov Walker & Democrat Mayor Barrett join @DFER_News, @GreatSchools + in Milwaukee to celebrate @schoolchoicewk: http://ow.ly/he8sS

Johan Perez : Join me in supporting @schoolchoicewk — because parents have a right to make the best educational choices for their kids…

• The new civil rights issue of our time is School Choice & Education Reform. Delighted to support @schoolchoicewk. Learn more. #TGDN #tcot MattMackowiak

•  From Missouri’s RyanCStauffer: It is great to see @MOStudentsFirst members in the fired up crowd in Kansas City for @schoolchoicewk pic.twitter.com/3SpzdTSW

STATE OF THE STATES One by one they step up to the plate, address their respective assemblies, and talk of their plans for the year. Often they are ambitious, sometimes guarded, and almost always politically crafted not to offend. Welcome to the season of state of the states. Lest you think watching reruns of West Wing or the latest season of The Bachelor is a good thing, you might want to consider tuning into your Gov’s annual address to see what’s in store for you — or if he/she is bold enough to be out there on education reform. Governors are key to advancing school choice and education reform. That’s why we score them annually and watch for their walk to match their talk. You should too. Here are some quotes and a couple of examples from recent addresses, and our take on what we heard:

JAN BREWER, Arizona, Jan 14 – Thumbs Up.
“We’ve already injected competition into our education system, and Arizona’s growing charter school sector has produced several of the top-performing models in the nation.”

SCOTT WALKER, Wisconsin, Jan 15 – Thumbs Up.
“Part of the long-term strategy to develop our workforce is to continue to transform education in our state. The reforms we enacted over the past two years saved school districts hundreds of millions of dollars and allowed each district to hire based on merit and pay based on performance….Going forward, our educational efforts must be focused on performance…in our budget, we will lay out plans to provide a financial incentive for high-performing and rapidly improving schools. We want to reward and replicate success—all across the state.”

MIKE BEEBE, Arkansas, Jan 15 – Thumbs Down.
“We’ve come from consistently settling among the bottom few states in the nation…We’re now sixth: the highest ranking our state has ever seen.” (Ahem – not on achievement, on Ed Week inputs!) “While this ranking is unprecedented…it does not signal an end to our work…we still lag behind much of the country in the results that system produces. We will tackle this issue through more than increased student funding…My office is working …to push more of that funding into active efforts to help our students.”

NATHAN DEAL, Georgia, Jan 17 – Platitudes. No Thumbs.
“Let’s talk about our earliest learners, who build upon what they learn today for the rest of their lives. We have an outstanding pre-K program.”

JAY NIXON, Missouri, Jan 28 – No Reform, No Thumbs.
“Of course, with increased funding, come higher expectations. We expect better test scores, better graduation rates, more college degrees and more Missourians ready to compete for the best jobs in a global economy. We’ve all got to do better, and that means everybody: students and teachers; parents and principals; coaches and college presidents. Increased funding means increased accountability.’

More to come…and more news is available daily here.

Happy School Choice Week! Be sure to thank a legislator that helped give your kids a choice and write those who haven’t – yet.

TN Governor Touts Vouchers

“Gov. Haslam touts limited school vouchers”
by Andy Sher
Chattanooga Times Free Press
January 29, 2013

Republican Gov. Bill Haslam used his annual State of the State address Monday night to defend his plan to implement a limited school voucher program next fall that would allow impoverished children in 83 low-performing public schools to use tax dollars to attend private institutions.

“Some have said that this administration and General Assembly aren’t committed to public education, but that could not be further from the truth,” Haslam told members of the Republican-run House and Senate meeting in a joint convention.

Noting his administration has been “literally putting our money where our mouth is, even when other states haven’t done so through tough budget times,” Haslam added the state’s education funding formula has been fully funded in his three budgets.

Noting various initiatives his administration has implemented including expansions of publicly funded but privately operated charter schools, Haslam said, “This year we’re proposing to offer another option for school choice” through vouchers. “If we can help our lowest-income students in our lowest-performing schools, why wouldn’t we?

“I’ve heard the argument that this kind of program will drain resources in the schools that need them the most, but we’re focusing on those schools,” said Haslam, who pointed out the state is providing $38 million to the 83 worst-performing schools over a three-year period.

The bill, called the “Tennessee Choice & Opportunity Scholarship Act,” is sponsored by House Majority Leader Gerald McCormick, R-Chattanooga, and Senate Majority Leader Mark Norris, R-Collierville, who carry the governor’s package of bills.

Enrollment would be limited in its first year to 5,000 students whose family income makes them eligible for free or reduced-price lunch programs. That would grow to 20,000 by the 2016-17 school year.

House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh, D-Ripley, charged the administration is “putting forward a radical, unfunded mandate in the form of a school voucher proposal designed to rip millions of dollars from public education.”

He said it “will almost certainly mean a tax increase for our local governments, a dramatic decline in public school funding and, most importantly, it will leave thousands of students behind in failing schools.”

During his address, in which he unveiled a $32.7 billion budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year that starts July 1, Haslam urged lawmakers to keep an open mind about expanding its Medicaid program to more than 100,000 Tennesseans under the Affordable Care Act.

Haslam said he remains undecided about the expansion, which is expected to have a tough time in the GOP-run Legislature.

“Most of us in this room don’t like the Affordable Care Act, but the decision to expand Medicaid isn’t as basic as saying, ‘No Obamacare, no expansion,”‘ Haslam said, noting that hospitals, many of them in rural areas, will suffer, and some could shut down.

Under the law, the federal government would pay 100 percent of the expansion in its first three years and 90 percent after 2019. A number of Republicans are philosophically opposed and also cite concerns that the federal government will eventually cut back on its commitments given federal deficits.

Two freshman lawmakers from Hamilton County found the voucher proposal appealing.

“I like vouchers; I’ve liked them a long time,” said Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanooga, noting he’s supported them since the 1970s. “You know, you got to look out for the kids first, let them choose, let the parents choose, and then the market will take care of itself.”

Rep. Mike Carter, R-Ooltewah, said he hasn’t seen details, “but in concept I completely support the governor’s position. And I’m extremely pleased we’re focusing on the under-privileged, under-performing children. Where else would you put your dollars but there?”

Opinion: Education Reform – School choice would benefit all Montanans

Opinion
by Joe Balyeat
Helena Independent Record
January 29, 2013

“There is no respect in which inhabitants of a low-income neighborhood are so disadvantaged as in the kind of schooling they can get for their children.” Economist Milton Friedman

Given the fact that Montana continuously ranks near dead last in the country in average wages and our “low-income neighborhoods” arguably encompass our whole state, it should not go un-noticed that Montana also ranks dead last nationally in educational choice reforms as well. The Center for Education Reform ranks Montana 51st (even behind Washington D.C.) in its Parent Power Index. And Friedman’s economic analysis is spot on: There may be a direct connection between Montana’s failure to provide educational freedom to our impoverished families and the continued multi-generational stagnation of economic opportunity in Montana.

Of course it is the entrenched special interests such as government union bosses and bureaucrats who block any and all attempts at true reform, insisting that the only answer is to throw more money at a system that al-ready spends $11,530 per student statewide. This means the average Montana worker’s entire annual salary is devoured educating just 3 kids for nine months. This tired “increase spending” non-solution is repeated despite the fact that there are at least 138 studies nationwide which prove that level of funding bears no statistical corre-lation to quality of education.

To the contrary, numerous studies reveal real education reform which does work – and the key ingredient is true educational choice. Even think tanks like the Brookings Institution concur that both public and private schools do a better job educating kids in “market” environments where there is true competition on a level play-ing field, as opposed to monopoly areas (such as Montana) where public schools have no real competition.

Even Democrat researchers John Chubb and Terry Moe concluded: “Conventional education reforms have been generally unsuccessful in halting the decline in [school] performance and have little potential for doing so… The key to better schools is …greater school autonomy… competition and parental choice. …Although the goal of educational choice is to give our children a better education, it would also eliminate stultifying and expensive educational bureaucracies and may yield significant savings.”

Montana has the OPI bureaucracy, the MSBA bureaucracy, Board of Education bureaucracy, MEA bureauc-racy, MHSA bureaucracy, MASA bureaucracy, MQEC bureaucracy, local superintendents bureaucracy, and county superintendents bureaucracy – each with their own fleet of lobbyists to intimidate and indoctrinate your legislators; all paid directly or indirectly at taxpayer expense, all claiming that increased spending is necessary “for the sake of the children,” despite scores of studies proving otherwise.

If the last third of a century of world history taught us anything, it taught that government-run monopolies don’t work. Free market competition produces a better product at lower cost. Yet, when it comes to education, strangely Montana remains in the dark ages of government-run monopoly with no form of publicly-funded educational choice whatsoever. Because legislators and governors alike fear the political power of these en-trenched educratic special interests, past legislatures refused to give Montana parents the consumer power needed to dent Montana’s monolithic, monopolistic, non-responsive, inefficient education bureaucracy. So Montana is left in the dust of educational reform as the only western jurisdiction in the U.S. or Canada with no school choice of any kind. (Longstanding successful Alberta and British Columbia school choice plans both dis-prove the old canard that school choice can’t work in low-population rural states).

This is National School Choice Week. To counteract the stagnating weight of these entrenched special-interests, Montana parents and taxpayers need to rise up. Contact your legislators. Urge them to support true education reform bills like SB81 (Scholarship Tax Credit) and HB213 (Tuition Tax Credit), which will enable low and moderate income Montana families to have the same freedom as the rich to choose education options for their children. Not only will this give parents and kids more choices to find the educational setting which is best for them; it will also improve public school effectiveness and efficiency… because Milton Friedman was right – free market competition always leads to better service at better cost.

Former State Senator Joe Balyeat now serves as State Director of Americans for Prosperity – Montana. He is a Na-tional Merit Scholar UM graduate, (in 2 ½ years, straight A’s)… entirely a product of Montana’s public and private schools.

Presenting the Case for School Choice

by Jason Stverak
Roll Call
January 28, 2013

Year after year, studies release details how America’s education system is floundering. Test scores are on the decline, and math and science programs are failing. Despite an abundance of research and strong indicators for options that can help heal education in the United States, our government — at the state and federal levels — unfortunately continues to pour taxpayer money into a deteriorating infrastructure.

Sadly, Congress is sitting idly by, afraid to disrupt the status quo for fear of political retribution. A 2009 survey found that at least 44 percent of senators and 36 percent of representatives sent their children to private schools, and close to 20 percent of the members themselves attended private high schools. Unfortunately, many of them argued against giving the same opportunity to their constituents.

Now, with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and the Carl D. Perkins Career and Technical Education Act up for reauthorization, Congress has the opportunity to revolutionize how we approach education and invest in methods that work, as opposed to pursuing the same policies and simply throwing more resources at the problem.

Forcing parents to send their children to schools that fail to provide the tools they need to excel and denying them the option to choose which educational program is best suited for a child’s specific learning needs is the chief reason our children suffer. Let’s offer them a choice.

National School Choice Week, from Jan. 27 to Feb. 2, promotes a common-sense notion that gives parents the freedom to choose their child’s educational environment, regardless of where they live or how much money they have.

By using public funds already set aside for education and allowing parents to choose the best option for their child, each student can receive a unique educational approach that is tailored to his or her needs. There are a variety of approaches that offer parents the option to send their children to any school, whether it is public or private, religious or secular, or brick-and-mortar or online.

Research shows that school choice programs are creating positive results. A report from The Heritage Foundation revealed that students in school choice programs graduate at significantly higher rates than their public school peers. In fact, researchers have found that 9 in 10 studies show positive academic gains for school choice students.

Not only do these programs create positive student outcomes, parents are increasingly satisfied with their children’s schools when they have the freedom to make a choice. More than 90 percent of parents whose children participated in the McKay Scholarship program — a program for special-needs children in Florida — reported they were content with their children’s schools in comparison with only 33 percent of parents whose special-needs children attended public schools.

The majority of today’s school districts dictate the conditions of education for students and schools, while taxpayers settle the bill. But even public school students have something to gain from school choice programs. As more private schools began participating, researchers found an increase in public school achievement as a result of the competitive pressure.

K-12 education is the top spending item in nearly every state budget and per-pupil spending has increased more than 65 percent over the past 25 years, according to the Digest of Education Statistics. The Cato Institute reports public schools are spending 93 percent more than the estimated median private school.

School choice has helped struggling state budgets and saved taxpayers millions. The Commonwealth Foundation reported that virtual school programs saved Pennsylvania taxpayers more than $146 million in a year by preventing school overcrowding and lessening costly construction projects.

Currently, each state’s school choice program differs, and while some have offered multiple options for parents, others have refused parents these programs entirely — effectively taking away their freedom of choice.

This session, as Congress re-examines our education policies, let’s leave everything on the table. Instead of providing grants that only benefit the public school system, Congress needs to expand funding incentives to charter schools and vouchers for private schools. Our one-size-fits-all approach to education at the federal level is falling flat, and our situation will only improve if we stop pumping resources into a broken system and invest in options with proven results and unlimited potential.

Offering parents the opportunity to choose an educational program that is committed to the success of their child is the key to creating a positive and thriving learning environment around the country.

Jason Stverak is president of the Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity.

Daily Headlines for January 29, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

School Choice: Spreading Like A Prairie Fire
Daily Caller, DC, January 28, 2013

The school choice movement is extraordinary because it’s not inspired by any political figure. Instead, it’s an organic, grassroots parent movement inspired by extreme dissatisfaction with the status quo.

FROM THE STATES

ALASKA

Don’t Open The Floodgates: Public Money Belongs In Public Schools
Alaska Dispatch, AK, January 28, 2013

National School Choice Week started Jan. 27 as part of a national campaign to inform the public about the educational choices available to students and families.

ARKANSAS

Bill Adds Poverty To School Choice Debate
Arkansas News, AR, January 28, 2013

A second school choice bill intended to remove race as a factor in student transfers was filed Monday. House Bill 1181 by Rep. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, also takes into account the numbers of students in districts who are eligible for free and reduced-price lunches.

ARIZONA

State Funding Error Could Mean Bonus For Teachers
KVOA Tucson New, AZ, January 28, 2013

A huge error in calculating education funding could mean big money for some Arizona school districts. But it could also cost a number of Arizona public and charter schools.

CALIFORNIA

A Multiple-Choice Test For Parents
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, January 28, 2013

Sending a child to school has never required so many decisions. Will it be a Chinese-language program or one that pushes the performing arts? A high-tech charter school or an intimate private institution? What about a campus with stellar test scores across town, or even the familiar school down the street?

Phillips Charter Told To Upgrade Program
Napa Valley Register, CA, January 28, 2013

School district administrators say they can’t recommend a renewal for Phillips Charter School unless the Napa elementary school changes its “game plan.”

Crenshaw High Group Opposes Reform Plan And School Closings
Los Angeles Times Blog, CA, January 28, 2013

Parents, students and teachers rallied Monday in front of Crenshaw High School to protest a plan to restructure the low-performing campus and require teachers to reapply for their jobs.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Tough-Love Education Reforms Produce Results
Washington Times, DC, January 28, 2013

Last year didn’t hold great news for District of Columbia public schools. Less than 20 percent of eighth-graders were proficient in either math or reading. Only 61 percent of District high school students made it to graduation.

Keeping The Doors Open At D.C. Charters
Washington Examiner, DC, January 28, 2013

Whether a charter school gets to keep its doors open in the District depends on a combination of its finances and its academic performance.

IDAHO

Idaho Senate To Debate 4 New Teacher Union Bills
Idaho Statesman, ID, January 28, 2013

The Senate Education Committee has agreed to debate a series of bills designed to restrict the power teachers unions have in negotiating multi-year contract agreements and fighting salary cuts, setting the stage for another potentially corrosive battle with public school teachers across the state.

INDIANA

Broadway Imagine Cites Higher Test Scores
The Journal Gazette, IN, January 29, 2013

Imagine Schools on Broadway Principal Ra’Chelle Spearman said the school is more motivated than ever to finish out this year strong.

House Approves Plan Speeding Sales Of Vacant School Buildings
Northwest Times, IN, January 28, 2013

School corporations could dispose of their vacant buildings quicker under legislation approved 98-0 by the Indiana House on Monday.

IOWA

Education Reform Plan Details Queried
Des Moines Register, IA, January 29, 2013

Iowa lawmakers took their closest look yet under the hood of Gov. Terry Branstad’s top priority education reform proposal on Monday.

High Pay Gives Districts Flexibility
Des Moines Register, IA, January 29, 2013

Iowa school districts that have previously boosted teacher pay would be better positioned to hire additional staff under a legislative proposal that calls for more veteran educators to take on duties outside the classroom, data released Monday shows.

LOUISIANA

John White Counters Claim That Teacher Evaluation Is Spiking Retirement Rate
Times-Picayune, LA, January 28, 2013

State Education Superintendent John White rebutted charges that new teacher evaluation rules are causing Louisiana teachers to retire at higher rates. He said the data don’t support the claim and that on the whole, it’s the better teachers who are sticking around.

MAINE

Maine Teachers Don’t Want Student Achievement To Play Big Part In Their Evaluations
Bangor Daily News, ME, January 28, 2013

Representatives of public school teachers and administrators told the Maine Department of Education on Monday that they don’t want standardized tests to play too great a role in determining whether they’re doing a good job.

MASSACHUSETTS

School Plans Tweak Status Quo, But Bold Change Is Needed
Boston Globe, MA, January 29, 2013

WHAT BEGAN last January with Mayor Menino’s dramatic call for Boston students to be given seats in schools close to their homes, with meaningful alternatives for those in areas with underperforming schools, has morphed into something more like an effort to improve the current system of wide geographic zones, multiple choices, and luck of the draw.

Foxborough Regional Charter School Earns Charter Renewal
Bellingham County Gazette, MA, January 28, 2013

Dr. Mark Logan, executive director of the Foxborough Regional Charter School, recently announced the school has earned an unconditional renewal of its charge from the state for another five-year term.

MICHIGAN

Charter School Leaders: Stanford Study Shows Michigan Charter Students Closing Achievement Gaps
Grand Rapids Press, MI, January 29, 2013

Michigan’s charter public school students are making larger learning gains than their peers in traditional public schools, according to a new study.

MONTANA

Education Reform – School Choice Would Benefit All Montanans
Helena Independent Record, MT, January 29, 2013

Given the fact that Montana continuously ranks near dead last in the country in average wages and our “low-income neighborhoods” arguably encompass our whole state, it should not go un-noticed that Montana also ranks dead last nationally in educational choice reforms as well.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Public Schools: Vs. Public Education
Union Leader, NH, January 29, 2013

One of the reasons New Hampshire has to continue debating school choice year after year is that self-proclaimed supporters of public education do not support public education. They support public schools.

NEW JERSEY

Schools Call For More Parent Involvement
Asbury Park Press, NJ, January 29, 2013

Ask Ocean Township social worker Debbie Schisler and she’ll tell you bluntly enough: a child’s education begins at home.

Let’s Offer Families School Choice: Opinion
Star-Ledger, NJ, January 29, 2013

As parents, we would do anything for our children in their time of need, no matter what illness, injury, trouble or danger they face.

NEW YORK

Mayor Warns of School Cuts
Wall Street Journal, January 29, 2013

Mayor Michael Bloomberg on Monday called on state lawmakers to restore nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars wiped out by New York City’s failure to launch a new teacher-evaluation system, saying 2,500 teachers would be lost and predicting a host of “calamitous” cuts.

Mike Bares UFT’s $1B Blow To City
New York Post, NY, January 29, 2013

A sham teacher-evaluation process that rewarded union foot-dragging will cost the city more than a billion dollars in school aid and 2,500 teachers, Mayor Bloomberg charged in explosive testimony to state lawmakers yesterday.

School Closures Challenged
Wall Street Journal, January 29, 2013

The U.S. Department of Education will investigate a claim that the Bloomberg administration’s plan to close 26 low-performing public schools this year discriminates against minority and special-education students.

OKLAHOMA

Education Experiment In Wisconsin Worth Watching Here In Oklahoma
Oklahoman, OK, January 29, 2013

WHAT has historically been thought of as education is changing every passing day. Many facets of the classroom haven’t changed much over the years, but the questions of what comprises an education and whether a classroom must be part of that education have never been so present.

PENNSYLVANIA

Nutter To Name Parent Advocate To School Reform Commission
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 29, 2013

In a shake-up, Mayor Nutter is appointing a parent advocate and former Philadelphia School District bus aide to the School Reform Commission.

Charters Need Time To Correct Traditional Schools’ Failed Approaches
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 29, 2013

I am writing in response to the Jan. 27 editorial “Sub-Par Options: Charter Schools as a Class Don’t Measure Up.” Parents don’t select charter schools because their children are doing great at their public school district. They send them to charter schools because of special needs or, even more important, because the district is failing them.

City School Closings Target Vulnerable Students, Critics Say
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 29, 2013

Ramping up their fight against 37 planned public school closings, a coalition including the city teachers’ union, politicians, a pastor, and the head of the local NAACP chapter said Monday that the Philadelphia School District was targeting the city’s most vulnerable students.

TENNESSEE

Gov. Haslam Touts Limited School Vouchers
Chattanooga Times Free Press, TN, January 29, 2013

Republican Gov. Bill Haslam used his annual State of the State address Monday night to defend his plan to implement a limited school voucher program next fall that would allow impoverished children in 83 low-performing public schools to use tax dollars to attend private institutions.

Giving Parents A Say
Commercial Appeal, TN, January 29, 2013

State Rep. John DeBerry’s proposal to adjust Tennessee’s so-called “parent trigger,” making it easier for parents to force education reforms at their children’s schools, appears to be in step with giving parents a greater voice in their children’s education.

TEXAS

Charter School Denies They Are Cherry Picking Students
Valley Morning Star, TX, January 28, 2013

IDEA Public Schools’ founder on Monday refuted a charge that the charter school recruits the best students from public school districts that lose state funding for each student who transfers.

Charter Schools Say Their Smaller Share Of State Aid Is Unconstitutional
Austin American Statesman, TX, January 28, 2013

For the first time in Texas’ protracted legal wrangling over how to fund public education, charter schools Monday added their voices to the fray.

UTAH

Legislative Bill Proposed To Add Transparency To Charter School Funding
KSL, UT, January 28, 2013

The first day of the Legislative Session on Utah’s Capitol Hill began Monday. One of the bills being introduced would add taxes to support local charter schools.

VIRGINIA

Republican’s Legislation Would Allow State To Place Charter Schools
Richmond Times Dispatch, VA, January 28, 2013

A House subcommittee today backed a proposal by Del. L. Scott Lingamfelter, R-Prince William, that would amend the Virginia Constitution to allow the state Board of Education to establish charter schools in local school divisions.

Virginia Senate Kills Right-To-Work, Charter School Amendments
Washington Examiner, DC, January 28, 2013

The Virginia Senate narrowly killed a pair of constitutional amendments dealing with two perennial Republican favorites: right-to-work and charter schools.

WASHINGTON

Students Come First Back On Agenda
Spokesman-Review, WA, January 29, 2013

Idaho lawmakers on Monday took steps to reinstate parts of the controversial Students Come First school reform laws less than three months after voters overwhelmingly repealed them.

Seattle’s Boycotting Teachers Start Crusade Against Standardized Tests
Washington Times, DC, January 28, 2013

By refusing to administer a district-mandated test to their students, teachers at a Seattle high school have sparked an “anti-testing movement” that is picking up steam by the day.

WISCONSIN

Giving Students Choices: A Look At Charter Schools
WEAU, WI, January 28, 2013

As part of National School Choice week more than 3,000 events will be held this across the country to encourage states to offer more education choices to students.

Achievement Gap Factors Transcend Boundaries
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, January 29, 2013

State Journal columnist Chris Rickert’s Sunday piece was titled “Achievement gap owned by Madison.” The gap refers to the difference in average measured scores of achievement of two groups, A and B for simplicity.

ONLINE LEARNING

Maine Democrats Take Aim At Virtual Charter Schools
Morning Sentinel, ME, January 29, 2013

The push represents a significant challenge to the taxpayer-financed institutions, which Gov. LePage has championed vehemently.

Pennsylvania Withholds OK For 8 Cyber Charter Schools
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 29, 2013

All eight statewide cyber charter school applications have been rejected, a decision that comes as legislators debate charter school funding and existing cyber schools have taken a hit for missing state academic goals.

A Growth Industry Funded By Taxpayers…
Towanda Daily Review, PA, January 29, 2013

Charter schools in Pennsylvania are a growth industry funded by taxpayers. More than 105,000 students attend 157 charter schools at physical locations, and 16 “cyber” charter schools that operate over the Internet.

Bills Chart Fairer Funding
Scranton Times-Tribune, PA, January 29, 2013

Charter schools in Pennsylvania are a growth industry funded by taxpayers. More than 105,000 students attend 157 charter schools at physical locations and 16 “cyber” charter schools that operate over the Internet.

Schools Moving Toward Digital Learning
Central Florida News 13, FL, January 28, 2013

Central Florida education is going high-tech, and bulky backpacks will soon be a thing of the past. We spoke with Pearson, a learning sponsor of a forum held in Orlando on Monday.

Events Celebrate School Options
Monroe News Star, LA, January 29, 2013

This is National School Choice Week, which attempts to shine a spotlight on all the public school options now available to students and their families. Immediately following that week is Digital Learning Day on Feb. 6.