Sign up for our newsletter

School-takeover law staggers as Cuccinelli bows out of fight

by Kenric Ward
Watchdog.org
September 4, 2013

Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s decision not to defend Virginia’s school-takeover law signals its imminent demise.

Echoing constitutional concerns raised by the Norfolk School Board, the Republican attorney general said his office would not represent the state in taking over chronically failing campuses. With Norfolk preparing a lawsuit against the takeover law, Cuccinelli suggested that a special counsel be hired.

“It’s a purely legal issue,” the AG’s spokesman, Brian Gottstein, told the Associated Press. He said the Virginia Constitution stipulates that “supervision of public schools must remain with their local school districts.”

On the other hand, Cuccinelli’s gubernatorial campaign has touted several state-directed education reforms, including strengthening Virginia’s charter-school law to challenge local control.

The state Department of Education referred inquiries about the potential cost of special counsels to Gov. Bob McDonnell’s office.

Tucker Martin, McDonnell’s communications director, said state law specifically provides for situations in which outside counsel may be appointed. “This happens occasionally in Virginia,” he said.

State Sen. Chap Petersen, D-Fairfax, said Cuccinelli’s stand shows that the new school-takeover law is stillborn.

“This whole thing will collapse of its own weight. Neither of the candidates for governor likes it. Bob McDonnell can hire all the special counsels he wants, it’s not going anywhere,” Petersen told Watchdog.

Jeanne Allen, president of the Center for Education Reform, maintains that Richmond has a role to play in ensuring quality education.

“If we believe the state is supposed to provide for support on some level, then deferring exclusively to local boards and turning a blind eye to failure is incredibly irresponsible,” Allen told Watchdog from her Washington, D.C., office.

At McDonnell’s urging, the 2013 General Assembly narrowly approved a statewide Opportunity Education Institution, an 11-member board authorized to take over public schools that consistently fail to receive state accreditation. At least four campuses, including two in Norfolk, face takeover.

Louisiana has used a similar law for several years.

Daily Headlines for September 5, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

In defense of No Child Left Behind
Commentary, Baltimore Sun, September 4, 2013
Just weeks after the U.S. House Republicans made a purely symbolic move to dismantle No Child Left Behind, the law that forces schools to report standardized test scores, standardized testing season hit our household.

School-takeover law staggers as Cuccinelli bows out of fight
Watchdog.org, September 4, 2013
Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli’s decision not to defend Virginia’s school-takeover law signals its imminent demise.

Why Obama should drop U.S. suit opposing school choice
Opinion, Washington Post, September 4, 2013
While President Obama was publicly celebrating the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech last week, his administration took action behind the scenes in Louisiana that was a complete rejection of King’s dream.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Most Alabama Accountability Act transfers in-district
Dothan Eagle, September 4, 2013
Numbers released by the Alabama Department of Education show 789 students statewide are taking advantage of the Alabama Accountability Act to transfer out of failing schools, but only a handful of students choosing to leave public schools for private school.

ARIZONA

Legacy superintendent says school will be more careful about attendance
Arizona Daily Star, September 5, 2013
The superintendent of a statewide charter school district said he has taken measures to ensure students are not falsely reported missing.

CALIFORNIA

California accelerates shift in student testing
Los Angeles Times, September 5, 2013
The plan to hasten use of computerized exams would upend LAUSD effort to use scores to evaluate teachers.

Denair schools prep for possible state takeover
Modesto Bee, September 4, 2013
Denair Unified trustees will hold a special meeting at 6:30 p.m. Friday to receive a formal notice that moves the district one step closer to a state takeover.

Home-school charter offers alternative for families
Agoura Hills Acorn, September 5, 2013
At the end of every summer, Emily Wells spends several hours reviewing the state education standards and planning her curriculum for the coming school year.

COLORADO

$950 million Colorado school finance measure officially on ballot
Denver Post, September 4, 2013
It’s official: The proposed school finance restructuring known as Initiative 22 will appear on the November ballot, now under the title Amendment 66.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Eight D.C. schools receive planning grants to establish career academies
Washington Post, September 5, 2013
The District has allocated $2.8 million to help city high schools plan for nine new “career academies” meant to help students gain the skills they will need to enter the workforce after graduation, Mayor Vincent C. Gray announced Wednesday.

FLORIDA

Teachers air merit-pay concerns
Column, Florida Today, September 5, 2013
When the Brevard Federation of Teachers surveyed some of its members to get their input on the state merit pay plan, it found that most teachers support merit pay in theory. However, the majority has serious concerns with the current plan.

INDIANA

‘Achievement gap’ shown for at-risk students
Kokomo Tribune, September 5, 2013
More Indiana third-graders are passing the state’s reading proficiency test, but students who live in poverty or don’t speak English as their native language are failing the test at a higher rate than their counterparts.

LOUISIANA

Public school principals, counselors are evaluated in new grading system
Times-Picayune, September 4, 2013
Just as Louisiana public school teachers are being evaluated in a new way, so, too, are principals and school counselors. New data from the state Department of Education show that principals’ scores largely mirror those of teachers, but counselors’ results were more varied.

MAINE

LePage emphasizes Maine education autonomy
Morning Sentinel, September 4, 2013
The governor says there will be no federal overreach into Common Core State Standards.

MICHIGAN

Michigan recovery school district opens 2nd year in Detroit
Detroit News, September 5, 2013
Students in Michigan’s statewide turnaround school district returned to classes Wednesday at 15 buildings across Detroit.

State earning A in education reform
Opinion, Lansing State Journal, September 5, 2013
The truth is, as we head into a brand new school year, Gov. Rick Snyder and lawmakers in the House and Senate deserve a great deal of praise for getting so much right in the last year.

MISSOURI

Auditor bothered by social promotion in St. Louis schools
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, September 5, 2013
A state audit of St. Louis Public Schools says the district is violating the law by promoting thousands of students who cannot adequately read to the next grade level.

NEW JERSEY

School vouchers not dead yet, at least in Governor Christie’s eyes
New Jersey Spotlight, September 5, 2013
Teacher evaluation framework for tenure reform hardly a surprise as second priority for education agenda.

NEW MEXICO

Effort, not sour grapes, would advance APS
Editorial, Albuquerque Journal, September 3, 2013
When New Mexico lost out on a share of $133 million in 2012 federal Race to the Top education dollars, nobody in the education establishment cried foul, claimed the fix had been in for the nine winners or wasted time with a round of “poor me.”

NEW YORK

Bronx charter school named in whistleblower suit
New York Daily News, September 4, 2013
Alexis Riley, formerly a project manager at South Bronx Classical Charter, said she was fired for reporting financial and academic improprieties.

Catholic schools provide an outlet for city district
Opinion, Buffalo News, September 4, 2013
No other options seem to exist for these 2,200 children, 90 percent of whom can’t go anywhere this year to escape a failing school despite their parents’ expression of a need for choice.

Charter school probed over special-ed kids who might not exist
New York Post, September 4, 2013
Schools investigators are probing a Bronx charter school for allegedly billing the city hundreds of thousands of dollars for nonexistent special-education kids, The Post has learned.

Educators stunned by Cuomo’s school ‘death penalty’
Newsday, September 4, 2013
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s recent suggestion that failing schools on Long Island and elsewhere should face a swift operational “death penalty” if they don’t shape up has stunned local educators, who say meaningful reforms generally take years to achieve.

NORTH CAROLINA

Low-income parents can apply for private school vouchers next year
Fayetteville Observer, September 5, 2013
Beginning next year, low-income parents can apply for a voucher program that provides state dollars to cover private school costs.

McCrory asks for bonus pay for more master’s-seeking teachers
News & Observer, September 4, 2013
Gov. Pat McCrory asked his state Board of Education Wednesday to guarantee extra pay for all teachers now enrolled in master’s degree programs, something the board chairman said it could not do.

OHIO

Schiavoni wants to tighten charter school rules
Salem News, September 5, 2013
State Sen. Joe Schiavoni plans to introduce legislation to increase greater oversight of Ohio’s charter schools equivalent to what is found in traditional public districts.

PENNSYLVANIA

Can for-profit education rescue Camden’s kids?
Philadelphia Daily News, September 5, 2013
So Morales sees hope when he looks across narrow Pearl Street at the new Camden Community Charter School, its red buildings surrounded by freshly poured white sidewalks and black faux-iron fences. It used to be a vacant lot.

PFT releases new ads, poll on education issues
Philadelphia Daily News, September 4, 2013
THE PHILADELPHIA Federation of Teachers hasn’t just been busy at the negotiating table lately – today, the union is expected to release two new ads, one of which attacks Mayor Nutter and Gov. Corbett because they “failed to lead” in the school-funding crisis.

Schools chief opposes charter school for autistic children
Reading Eagle, September 5, 2013
A Lehigh County group outlined a plan to put a charter school for children with autism in the former Longswamp Elementary School at a recent public hearing in Brandywine Heights High School.

RHODE ISLAND

Please support new charter school
Letter, Valley Breeze, September 4, 2013
As a lifelong Valley Falls community member and the proud parent of one scholar (soon to be two) at Blackstone Valley Prep (BVP) Mayoral Academy, I am writing to support the approval of building a permanent home for BVP’s second elementary school at 52 Broad St., right here in our community.

UTAH

Utah charter schools grades no better than traditional schools
Deseret News, September 4, 2013
Charter schools fared about the same as traditional schools under Utah’s controversial new public school grading system.

Utah’s school grades are opportunity for real reform
Opinion, Deseret News, September 5, 2013
Some schools received F’s, a lot were deemed mediocre, and many children in low-income areas performed poorly.

VIRGINIA

Bedford County School Board to take up school takeover legislation
Roanoke News & Advance, September 5, 2013
The Bedford County School Board is considering giving its support to an effort to oppose new legislation enabling a state entity to take over academically failing schools.

McDonnell says he will vigorously defend school takeover law
Richmond Times-Dispatch, September 5, 2013
Gov. Bob McDonnell said Wednesday that he’s disappointed that Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli will not defend the statewide school division that McDonnell championed, but that he will vigorously defend the law.

WISCONSIN

Choice a positive in teacher evaluations
Editorial, Sheboygan Press, September 4, 2013
A new state law says school districts must evaluate the effectiveness of teachers and other educators, beginning in the 2014-15 school year. Most districts, however, will conduct pilot runs this year using one of two evaluation models.

Green Bay-area schools adjust to handful of voucher students
Green Bay Press Gazette, September 4, 2013
Most of the 41 students coming into the Green Bay Area Catholic Education system using private school vouchers already are part of the parochial school system.

ONLINE LEARNING

Evaluate virtual schools, don’t shut them down
Opinion, Daily Caller, September 4, 2013
The Kammann family received the letter in June. Just weeks after their daughter Sophia completed her first year in Virginia Virtual Academy as a sixth grader, Carroll County Public School District suddenly announced they would not be continuing their partnership with the online charter.

Fox Chapel Area expands into full-time cyber school
Pittsburgh Tribune-REview, September 4, 2013
Fox Chapel Area School District is putting muscle behind its motto of “anytime, anyplace learning.”

Online charter school helps my child achieve
Column, Orange County Register, September 4, 2013
When my daughter was in third grade, her math grades started to decline. An incredibly bright young lady, she was struggling in subjects she had previously excelled at, and my husband and I grew concerned.

‘Uncertainty’ hangs over virtual school contract delay
The Recorder, September 4, 2013
The Greenfield Commonwealth Virtual School is operating without a signed contract with curriculum provider K12 because state officials have not yet approved it — a delay the school’s officials call problematic.

Justice Department vouchers suit could threaten state’s school choice report card rank

by Danielle Dreilinger
NOLA.com
September 3, 2013

A national report continues to praise Louisiana’s school choice programs but warns the state’s fourth-in-the-nation ranking and parents’ power in their children’s education could be in jeopardy because of a federal lawsuit that could halt vouchers in districts under desegregation orders.

The Center for Education Reform issued its annual ranking of parent power in education Tuesday, measuring such factors as vouchers, charter school participation, parent access to information and the availability of online courses. Louisiana’s score didn’t change from an interim April ranking: 2.55 on a 4-point scale, or roughly 81 percent. However, the state fell from third to fourth in the nation because of advances Ohio made in school technology.

The Center for Education Reform says vouchers give parents more power in their children’s education. The Louisiana Scholarship Program allows low-income students in C, D or F schools to attend private schools at taxpayer expense.

However, the U.S. Department of Justice charges that the transferring of students out of public schools via vouchers has halted and even reversed desegregation in some areas.

Center founder Jeanne Allen condemned the lawsuit on Aug. 25, saying, “School choice programs ignore the artificial boundaries set by politicians and work for the good of all children. The resulting school options have been embraced by parents, not just because they work, but because they are the right thing to do.”

The effect of the Justice Department’s petition on Louisiana’s Parent Power Index score cannot be known yet, said Kara Kerwin, the center’s vice president of external affairs and incoming president: The score “is not affected by the lawsuit per se but if the eligibility of students is taken away, of course it would affect parent power,” she said.

A major state lawsuit didn’t hurt the parent power score because Gov. Bobby Jindal found new funding after the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled in May it was unconstitutional to divert money to private schools from the state’s per-pupil public school allotment. Kerwin said the center would have a problem if the new funding disappeared.

Beyond vouchers, Louisiana earned points for its new Compass teacher evaluation system, whose initial results were also released Tuesday. The metric draws 50 percent of its result from student growth on standardized tests and makes it much harder for teachers to earn and keep tenure.

The report card also praises New Orleans charter school participation but calls for efforts to encourage more charters outside the metro area, and commends the state education department’s website for offering “very parent-friendly data.”

Daily Headlines for September 4, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

Justice Department vouchers suit could threaten state’s school choice report card rank
Times Picayune, September 3, 2013
A national report continues to praise Louisiana’s school choice programs but warns the state’s fourth-in-the-nation ranking — and parents’ power in their children’s education — could be in jeopardy because of a federal lawsuit that could halt vouchers in districts under desegregation orders.

Holder in the schoolhouse door
Op-Ed, New York Post, September 4, 2013
Eric Holder is nothing if not creative. His Justice Department is asking a federal court to block a portion of a Louisiana voucher program that gives poor children a way out of failing public schools.

Michigan ranks 11th in education reform group’s list of ‘parent power’ state
Grand Rapids Press, September 3, 2013
Michigan placed just outside the top 10 on a national education reform group’s annual rankings of “parent power” for making educational choices.

School grading systems: a hot topic around the nation
Deseret News, September 4, 2013
Proponents say that giving public schools A to F grades makes them more accountable and gives parents clear choices. Detractors say the grades tell more about the prosperity of school neighborhoods than the quality of their instruction.

Using bad science to punish teachers
Opinion, Daily Progress, September 4, 2013
The new requirements for No Child Left Behind waivers from the Department of Education have some bad news for America’s teachers. The Obama administration wants states to use standardized tests to not only judge students and schools but now teachers as well lest we lose ground to China. Coincidentally, China this week banned standardized testing in early grades and reduced it thereafter. China, it seems, wants to be more like us.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

More school districts in L.A. County taking less punitive approach to truancy
Los Angeles Times, September 3, 2013
A growing number of school districts and public agencies in Los Angeles County have joined a campaign to take a less punitive and more holistic approach to truancy — and education officials insist it’s paying off.

FLORIDA

Gov. Scott Keeps Tripping Over Florida’s Teachers
Op-Ed, The Ledger, September 4, 2013
The last few weeks have been a debacle for Gov. Rick Scott, who has made winning over Florida’s teachers and parents an important component of his 2014 re-election strategy.

State tax credits helping more families pay for private schools
Daytona Beach News Journal, September 3, 2013
Private schools once were reserved mostly for the privileged few, but not anymore. About half of the students in Flagler County’s private schools use the state’s tax-credit scholarship to pay their tuition.

GEORGIA

Faison blasts DCSS officials over charter denial
Albany Herald, September 3, 2013
Late last month, the Dougherty County School Board voted 3-3 along racial lines to not support the creation of the proposed River School for Children STEM Academy (RSCSA).

School board fights against proposed charter school
WFXL FOX 31, September 3, 2013
A proposal for a locally-run charter school failed to get enough support in a 3-3 vote by the Dougherty County School Board in late August and those involved say they don’t feel like it was the right decision.

INDIANA

Catholic schools get boost from Indiana voucher, but critics remain
WBEZ, September 3, 2013

LOUISIANA

32 percent of teachers ‘highly effective’
The Advocate, September 4, 2013
Nearly one in three public school teachers got the top rating in the first year of Louisiana’s new job evaluations, while 4 percent were labeled as ineffective, officials said Tuesday.

Bossier tops state with 59 percent of its teachers ranking ‘highly effective’
Shreveport Times, September 4, 2014
Bossier Parish teachers are the highest performing in the state, according to data released Tuesday by the Louisiana Department of Education.

New questions raised about charter schools
The Advertiser, September 3, 2013
A Lafayette Parish School Board member is asking for more information about a state partnership involving charter schools.

Tie vote stops minority/majority schools transfers
Avoyelles Today, September 4, 2013
It was great news when the state announced no schools in the Avoyelles Parish system had earned an “F” School Performance Score based on the most recent test scores and none would have to offer the option of school choice.

MARYLAND

Charter school makes changes to lottery process
Maryland Gazette, September 4, 2013
Montgomery County’s only charter school began its second school year last week with new student lottery rules and continued efforts to close its funding gap.

MASSACHUSETTS

Same old charter wars
Editorial, Boston Herald, September 4, 2013
The good news? There are fewer children languishing on waiting lists for a spot at a charter public school in Massachusetts than previously believed.

NEW YORK

Bill de Blasio’s war on good schools
Op-Ed, New York Post, September 4, 2013
Bill de Blasio’s campaign theme is a “Tale of Two Cities.” Yet his pronouncements suggest that, as mayor, he’d create his own tale of two cities: one for families who made the same choice as he did for his child, a district-run public school, whom he’ll support; and another, for families who made a different choice, charter schools, whom he’ll undermine.

Cuomo signs alternative education school bill
The Register Star, September 4, 2013
Gov. Andrew Cuomo has signed a bill approving the creation of the Columbia-Greene Leadership Academy, the alternative learning program also known as the Bridge.

Mayor Announces Opening Of Truancy Center In Harlem
NY1, September 3, 2013
Instead of focusing on punishing the students for skipping school, the new center will focus on getting kids back on track.

Success Academy attempts to move into IS 59 in southeast Queens
New York Daily News, September 3, 2013
Top-performing charter school chain founded by Eva Moskowitz wants to have 100 schools in the city; Success Academy accused of pushing out poor-performing and special needs students

PENNSYLVANIA

Shaler parents scramble to find child care
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 4, 2013
The Northern Area Boys and Girls Club in Millvale expects to be filled today with students who were displaced from their schools because of the Shaler Area teachers strike.

TENNESSEE

Education funds not being spent wisely
Opinion, The Tennessean, September 4, 2013
These days, virtually every discussion about public education in Tennessee fixates on issues of funding. Tennesseans are continuously told that their schools are among the worst funded in the country and that all that is necessary to fix failing schools is to pour more money into them.

UTAH

Will Utah’s school grading system erode support for public schools?
Salt Lake Tribune, September 4, 2013
Opponents of letter grades for public schools fear privatization; supporters hail new transparency.

VIRGINIA

Cuccinelli declines to defend failing schools law
Washington Times, September 3, 2013
Attorney General Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II has declined to defend one of Gov. Bob McDonnell’s signature education reform laws in court, saying he agrees with critics that it is unconstitutional.

WASHINGTON

Seattle schools start Wednesday as teachers approve contract
Seattle Times, September 3, 2013
Seattle teachers approved a new two-year contract Tuesday, ending contentious contract negotiations that raised the possibility of the first teachers strike in the city in decades.

ONLINE LEARNING

70 Online offers learning options for all students
Pueblo Chieftain, September 4, 2013
Pueblo School District 70 students have another option for schooling if they’re looking for an alternative.

Indictment should be start of cyber school reform
Letter, Daily Review, September 4, 2013
When a federal grand jury issued an indictment last week against the founder of Pennsylvania’s largest publicly funded charter school, it also, in effect, indicted the Pennsylvania Legislature for ignoring charter school funding reform for years.

Pasco School Board targets cheating in online classes
Tampa Bay Times, September 3, 2013
Florida law now requires students to earn at least one credit online in order to receive a diploma. And Wiregrass Ranch, like most Pasco high schools, has set up a computer lab staffed with aides specifically for students to take virtual courses during the school day.

Indiana Continues to Rank #1 on Parent Power Index, a National Education Report Card

CER Press Release
Washington, DC
September 4, 2013

Indiana continues to rank number one in the country in meeting 21st century education needs and parent demands, according to the second annual Parent Power Index™ (PPI) released today by The Center for Education Reform (CER), the nation’s leading advocate for lasting, substantive and structural education reform in the US.

Indiana stands out for the foresight and practicality of its laws and regulations related to education reform, in stark contrast to most states which afford parents very little power and opportunity to get the best education possible for their child.

“Standards should not only apply to what happens in schools but to what happens in state legislative bodies and executive branches,” said CER President and Founder Jeanne Allen. “The bar needs to be high for lawmaking and rulemaking, and Indiana again surpasses that bar by demonstrating that policymakers know how their actions affect parents and students.”

Indiana’s score of 87 on its PPI leads a pack of five states with scores above 80. The median score of 66.2 (held by Texas) shows just how poorly most states have implemented policies to provide opportunities to access and find information about quality teaching and learning.

The PPI is an interactive, web-based tool based on CER’s evaluation of qualitative and proven state policies. States such as Indiana that ranked the highest give parents more opportunity to be engaged directly in the education of their children who have access to more and better learning opportunities.

A look at the education scorecard of the Parent Power Index™ reveals several improved rankings but also many states that have remained stagnant. The best, most promising and the worst states are highlighted in a brief Back to School report. The full state-by-state details, including Index methodology can be found at https://2024.edreform.com/in-the-states/parent-power-index/.

Michigan ranks 11th in education reform group’s list of ‘parent power’ states

by Brian Smith
MLive.com
September 3, 2013

Michigan placed just outside the top 10 on a national education reform group’s annual rankings of “parent power” for making educational choices.

The Center for Education Reform announced its 2013 “Parent Power Index” on Tuesday and Michigan narrowly trailed Utah for 10th place on the list. The rankings are based on the center’s assessment of each state’s laws on charter schools, school choice, teacher quality, transparency and online learning.

The group describes itself as a “leading advocate for structural and sustainable changes” in education policy and has drawn financial support from the Broad Foundation, the Gates Foundation and SABIS Educational Systems, a charter school operator, among other groups.

Michigan scored highly for having a charter school system with multiple school authorizers, including public universities, and for requiring high school students to complete at least one online course before graduation.

“Michigan’s charter school law is strong because it has all of the major high-quality components: a variety of independent authorizers, including model universities such as Central Michigan University; freedom for teachers from rules and regulations; and, fairly equitable funding for charters, to name a few,” the report states.

The state received some criticism for not uniformly conducting school board elections in November as part of general elections, and for maintaining a prohibition on public school funding being used to offer private school choices.

Indiana was the top-ranked state in the report, followed by Florida, Ohio, Louisiana and Arizona. The lowest-ranked states were Vermont, Kentucky, North Dakota, Nebraska and Montana.

The report does not directly correlate with student performance based on results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a federal test which allows for state-to-state comparisons.

Several of the lowest-ranked states consistently outperformed the highest-ranked states in both mathematics and reading on the NAEP, and Massachusetts, which led the NAEP in both subjects for grades 4 and 8 was ranked 29th by the Center for Education Reform.

Newswire: September 3, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 33

Newswire – Special Back-to-School Parent Power! Edition

IN SEARCH OF PARENT POWER! As more students head back to school this week as evident by the 300 or so alerts most of us have received or posted from Facebook “Friends,” more and more parents and lawmakers are questioning whether they have a say in their children’s education. Luckily there’s The Parent Power Index (PPI), an indispensable resource that ranks and measures state education policy across the US. Released yesterday, the PPI shows only 5 out of the 50 states plus Washington, DC actually made progress in delivering meaningful reforms allowing parents to get the best possible education for their children. In addition to the rankings, a new analysis of the PPI highlights which states in 2013 empowered parents with impactful reforms, which ones are showing signs of change, and which states have yet to move in the right direction. Click here to view the complete Parent Power Index. Here are some highlights of PPI coverage from around the country:

• Louisiana continues to rank high in Parent Power, but faces threats from outside sources.

Washington State experienced huge rankings jump, going from 38 to 22.

•Michigan ranked 11th, scoring highly for a variety of reasons, not limited to a strong charter school law, teacher freedoms and advancements in online learning.

The PPI is one of many bold and exciting initiatives that make up CER’s Campaign for Education Reform, a series of future efforts designed to raise awareness and support for sorely needed ed reform nationwide.

DON’T MISS OUT on being KING OF THE HILL/TOP OF THE LIST. Reserve your ad in CER’s 20th Anniversary gala program – ad deadline is SEPT 12TH. Email [email protected] to reserve your space today. See www.2024.edreform.com/20th for more information on tickets and table sponsor opportunities.

Daily Headlines for September 3, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

Education solutions from abraod for chronic U.S. school problems
Christian Science Monitor, September 1, 2012
From teach-to-test straitjacket to school disparity, chronic school problems that American schools face are being solved in different ways around the world.

Justice Department bids to trap poor, black children in ineffective schools
Editorial, Washington Post, September 1, 2013
NINE OF 10 Louisiana children who receive vouchers to attend private schools are black. All are poor and, if not for the state assistance, would be consigned to low-performing or failing schools with little chance of learning the skills they will need to succeed as adults.

Justice overreaches
Editorial, Boston Herald, August 31, 2013
Behold the presidential administration of Barack Obama, which can talk out of both sides of its mouth at the same time. In Washington, D.C., it spouts soaring rhetoric in celebration of a transformational moment 50 years ago in the struggle for civil rights for African-Americans; in New Orleans, it asks a federal judge to force black children to stay in failing schools.

Parents make better teachers
Opinion, Press of Atlantic City, September 3, 2013
A recent New York Times story described how some charter schools are now exclusively hiring teachers and principals in their early 20s who work for just two to three years before leaving education. Instead of deploring this trend, charter programs have embraced a pool of eager, young and idealistic college graduates who are willing to work long, grueling hours for low pay and with no promise of a sustained career path.

PAUL: It’s time to extend MLS’s dream to school schoice aspirants and nonviolent offenders
Commentary, Washington Times, August 30, 2013
This week, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington and Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech.King’s speech ranks alongside the Declaration of Independence and Emancipation Proclamation as one of the most important expressions of American values and aspirations in our history.

Public Education Gets a Revamp
Wall Street Journal, August 31, 2013
Millions of students heading back to school are finding significant changes in the curriculum and battles over how teachers are evaluated, as the biggest revamps of U.S. public education in a decade work their way into classrooms.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Charter schools, traditional public schools should be cooperating
Editorial, San Jose Mercury News, August 31, 2013
From the beginning, the charter school movement was touted as a proving ground for innovations that could eventually improve traditional public schools. But friction between the two types of schools in California has largely prevented that from happening.

Parents key partners at Hope Academy Charter School in Palm Desert
Desert Sun, September 2, 2013
Hope Academy Charter School has operated its main campus in Yucca Valley for three years, but it will now open new campuses in Beaumont, Bloomington and Palm Desert. The latter campus is at the former site of the St. Margaret’s Episcopal School along Highway 74.

School support staff must back charter under bill
San Mateo Daily Journal, August 31, 2013
Legislation that cleared the state Assembly on Friday could make it harder to create charter schools in California by requiring supporters to seek consent from at least some lower-level unionized school employees.

COLORADO

Greeley’s charter schools: Are they reall better for our kids?
Greeley Tribune, September 1, 2013
Which does a better job educating Greeley’s children: charter schools or traditional schools?

FLORIDA

Hillsborough officials say charter schools walk fine line between fees and donations
Tampa Bay Times, August 31, 2013
When it came time for the Hillsborough County School District to renew its charter for Trinity School for Children, officials did so with a list of recommendations.

Principal fulfills dream by starting Emma Jewel Charter Academy
Florida Today, September 2, 2013
Thomas Cole is the first person to greet students when their parents drop them off at school. He is there to initiate a new beginning with each one that attends the new charter school in the most economically depressed area of Cocoa.

GEORGIA

Who’s running Coastal Empire Montessori Charter School?
Savannah Morning News, August 31, 2013
Despite controversy, zealous supporters of the Montessori teaching method helped hasten the opening of the Coastal Empire Montessori Charter School in 2008. Six years later, controversy and impassioned parents are about the only things that have remained constant.

ILLINOIS

Controversy puts charter schools at crossroads
Chicago Sun Times, September 1, 2013
Students at the 21st Century Charter School and Gary Middle College begin the school year Tuesday, a little later than their peers but they’ll return to a freshly built $6.5 million 50,000-square-foot building. It will serve middle and high school students during the day and adults in the evening.

CPS ushering in new performance policy for schools
Chicago Tribune, August 30, 2013
After a dizzying and tumultuous year at Chicago Public Schools, a new performance policy intended to get more help for struggling schools could be the last major change for a while, district CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett assured her troops last week.

INDIANA

Indiana forgives charter school loans
NW Times, August 31, 2013
Many local educators and politicians are calling outrageous a recent law forgiving $91.2 million in loans to charter schools, in light of tight finances faced by public schools across the region and districts that have had to raise taxes to maintain programs and quality teachers. Moreover, they say, they must pay back any loans provided by the state’s Common School Fund.

KENTUCKY

Bill puts charter schools back in spotlight in Ky.
Cincinnati Enquirer, August 31, 2013
The controversial charter school discussion has boomeranged back to center stage in Kentucky.

LOUISIANA

Dyslexia focus of Louisiana Key Academy
The Advocate, September 2, 2013
Just a few steps away from a Piccadilly restaurant, Sarah Reling is working with her second-graders in a new kind of public school.

MAINE

Maine charter schools break new ground
Kennebec Journal, September 3, 2013
The state will have five of the schools when three more open this week, overcoming some continued opposition.

MICHIGAN

Michigan’s new school year brings changes for students, districts
Detroit News, September 2, 2013
More technology and security greet some returning kids; dozens of districts begin with budget deficits

Schools of choice: More than 2,000 Kent County students on the move again
Grand Rapids Press, September 2, 2013
More than 2,000 Kent County students – and the state aid money that follows them – are attending classes outside their home school district this year, according to schools of choice data from the Kent Intermediate School District.

MISSISSIPPI

Reeves nominates 3 for charter school board
Clarion Ledger, August 31, 2013
The final three members have been submitted to Mississippi’s new charter school board.

MISSOURI

Listen to what transferring students and parents say about the schools
Letter, St. Louis post-Dispatch, September 2, 2013
St. Louis has a big opportunity to change its future for the better in the next few months. Imagine what our future could be if there were excellent public schools throughout the metropolitan area — not just in a few St. Louis suburbs. Let’s not let this opportunity pass.

NEW YORK

Expecting the Best Yields Results in Massachusetts
New York Times, September 3, 2013
Conventional wisdom and popular perception hold that American students are falling further and further behind in science and math achievement. The statistics from this state tell a different story.

NORTH CAROLINA

NC teachers might get extension on master’s pay
News & Observer, August 31, 2013
Two Mecklenburg lawmakers say there’s a move afoot to give teachers more time to finish master’s degrees and get the 10 percent pay hike they expected when they enrolled in graduate school.

Voucher game plan
Opinion, News Observer, September 2, 2013
Darrell Allison is a true believer in Opportunity Scholarships, also more properly known as public vouchers for private schools. This is not now and never will be a good idea, and it will harm public education, which is the path the overwhelming majority of parents choose for their children.

OHIO

Charter school once run by Cleveland City Councilman T.J. Dow has court force city to let it stay open
Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 31, 2013
The charter school founded and once run by City Councilman T.J. Dow needed court intervention Friday to be able to open for school Tuesday after a permit dispute with the city.

Charter schools’ failed promise
Columbus Dispatch, September 1, 2013
Fed up with persistently poor student results in Ohio’s eight largest urban school districts, Republican state legislators enacted a law in 1997 allowing charter schools to locate exclusively within the boundaries of the “Big 8” systems.

I CAN charter schools directors work to show their model can turn out college-ready kids
Akron Beacon Journal, September 3, 2013
Entering the local arena of public education this fall is Cleveland-based I CAN SCHOOLS, a nonprofit charter school operator that manages five schools in Cleveland and has opened new ones in Canton and at the former Goodyear headquarters in East Akron.

New report card gets ‘F’ for clarity
Mansfield News Journal, September 1, 2013
Charter school critics and supporters alike agree the tough new Ohio report cards are a step in the right direction to raise the bar on charter school quality in the state.

Some inferior charter schools use loopholes to stay open
Columbus Dispatch, September 1, 2013
There is a rule about bad charter schools in Ohio: They can’t stay open if they don’t improve.

OREGON

More days for Oregon students, more pay for Oregon teachers: Agenda 2013
Editorial, The Oregonian, August 31, 2013
It’s not your imagination. Oregon students really do have a longer summer break, and more time off during the school year, than students in most other states.

PENNSYLVANIA

After crisis, Philly students head back to school
Associated Press, September 2, 2013
Such is life in the beleaguered Philadelphia School District, where the severity of layoffs and school closings have made this latest financial crunch unlike any other in recent memory as students get ready to go back to school.

Old Forge teachers strike today
Scranton Times-Tribune, September 3, 2013
Old Forge students’ summer vacation will last at least a day longer, with the Old Forge Education Association to start striking this morning.

Smucker sets sights on charter school reform
York Dispatch, August 31, 2013
State Sen. Lloyd Smucker will take another crack at reforming the charter school system in Pennsylvania – a task that has proven difficult in past years.

With contract expired, teachers’ union will continue talks
Philadelphia Daily News, September 3, 2013
LAST NIGHT’S meeting of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers was originally scheduled as a contract-ratification meeting.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Good plan for teacher merit pay
Editorial, Post & Courier, September 2, 2013
Most Charleston County teachers still get raises based on how long they’ve been teaching and whether or not they have advanced degrees.

More than one tax benefit for S.C.’s school-choice credit
Enquirer Herald, September 2, 2013
A new South Carolina tax credit created exclusively to give private-school grants to children with disabilities has another benefit for taxpayers.

Zais will run again, not yet ready to campaign
Morning News, September 2, 2013
Carolina Education Superintendent Dr. Mick Zais announced earlier this summer that he’ll run for re-election next year, but said on a trip to Florence this week that he’s not ready for a switch into candidate mode yet.

TENNESSEE

Gail Kerr: Charter schools need conversations, not conflict
Column, The Tennessean, September 2, 2013
It’s easy, if you’re like me and don’t have kids in Metro public schools, to cover your ears and close your eyes and ignore the tedious ongoing battle between charter school fans and foes.

TEXAS

Smaller districts in Texas counting on flexibility to make school reform succeed
Dallas Morning News, September 1, 2013
Smaller school districts in Texas have long lived by doing more with less, particularly in rural areas.

WASHINGTON

Extra state aid for kindergarten mixed blessing for districts
Seattle Times, September 2, 2013
State-funding for all-day kindergartens may have doubled this year, but finding space for the additional classes is proving a challenge for some districts.

WISCONSIN

State school districts piloting programs to assess teachers’ effectiveness in the classroom
Leader Telegram, September 2, 2013
School districts in Wisconsin, faced with a new mandate to evaluate the effectiveness of teachers and other educators, must make a choice.

ONLINE LEARNING

Cerf’s decision is a setback for virtual schools
Commentary, Courier Post, August 30, 2013
Throughout my years of helping desperate families who have retreated from Camden’s failing schools, where the dropout rate is close to 7 out of every 10 children, I have learned how vital it is for parents to have choices.

Clairton family’s struggle to stay in school
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 2, 2013
James, a high school junior, and Rebecca, an eighth-grader, initially started at Clairton’s cyber school largely because of the 2-mile distance between their residence and the Clairton Education Center.

Cyber school enrollment on rise in Schuylkill County
Republican Herald, September 3, 2013
While most Schuylkill County students went back to school last week, Danielle Sterner can’t wait to start another year of cyber school today.

Detroit area districts plug into digital era with iPads, laptops
Detroit News, September 3, 2013
She’s a student at the Michigan Technical Academy, whose message reverberates in Metro Detroit schools that are easing away from textbooks: There’s an app for that.

Donations from ex-cyber school raise concerns
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 1, 2013
Elected officials who received political contributions from former associates of cyber school pioneer Nick Trombetta — checks referenced in an indictment issued late last month — said last week that they hadn’t known the donations might not be legal.

Funding diverted to online schools
Arizona Republic, September 2, 2013
Less than 4 percent of Arizona students took an online class in the 2011-12 school year, but it’s enough for some school districts to lose millions of dollars in state funding.

In school iPad project, L.A. might need to tap funding for keyboards
Los Angeles Times, September 2, 2013
School district’s $1-billion tablet-for-every-student project could need a further outlay for keyboards.

More online schools on way
Boston Herald, September 2, 2013
Massachusetts is poised to open two more cyber public schools by this time next year, and districts statewide are clamoring to establish their own virtual academies — despite the failing test scores at the one online school we already have.

Some cyber school applicants more of a threat to Greenfield
The Recorder, September 2, 2013
Six groups, including two from western Massachusetts, met a state deadline earlier this month to seek permission to open virtual schools that could compete with Greenfield’s pioneering virtual school.

Teacher earns accolades for role in digital classroom
Desert Valley Times, September 1, 2013
Named the American Board Utah Teacher of the Year, Sara Layton is no stranger to the classroom, but she currently spends her days taking a different approach to teaching.

Tennessee Virtual Academy online school company failing students
Editorial, Knoxville News Sentinel, September 3, 2013
Tennessee’s experiment with online-only learning for grades K-12 is shaping up to be an abject failure.

‘Virtual school’ colud be education’s salvation
Opinion, Ocala Star Banner, September 1, 2013
The Marion County Virtual School is a modern technology the school system could use to introduce efficiency into the system and thus increase productivity.

Parent Power Index Scoring Rubric

Sept. 3, 2013

Download or print your PDF copy of the Parent Power Index Scoring Rubric

State Education Report Card Released

CER Press Release
Washington, DC
September 3, 2013

Indiana Leads Ranking; Montana Brings Up the Rear;
Past year saw little progress, according to CER

Only five states have shown above average progress in meeting 21st century education needs and parent demands, according to the second annual Parent Power Index released today by The Center for Education Reform (CER), the nation’s leading advocate for lasting, substantive and structural education reform in the US. Despite much progress over the course of the modern education reform movement, most states afford parents very little power and opportunity to get the best education possible for their child.

“Standards should not only apply to what happens in schools but what happens in legislative action,” said CER President and Founder Jeanne Allen. “The bar needs to be high for lawmaking and we set that bar with the Parent Power Index to ensure that policymakers know how their actions affect parent and students.”

A median score of 66.2 (Texas) shows just how poorly most states have implemented policies that provide a myriad of opportunities to access and find information about quality teaching and learning.

The PPI is an interactive, web-based tool based on CER’s evaluation of qualitative and proven state policies. States that ranked the highest give parents more opportunity to be engaged directly in the education of their children who have access to more and better learning opportunities.

A look at the education scorecard of the Parent Power Index reveals several improved rankings and many states that have remained stagnant. The best, the most promising and the worst states are highlighted in a brief Back to School report. The full state-by-state details, including Index methodology can be found at https://2024.edreform.com/in-the-states/parent-power-index/.

CER, since 1993, is the leading voice and advocate for lasting, substantive, and structural education reform in the U.S. This October 9th the organization will celebrate 20 years making schools work better for all children with a major conference and gala. Media registrations can be obtained through Patrick Burke, [email protected].