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Parental school choice spurs surprising reactions from advocates of the poor

by John Kirtley
redefinEd
August 26, 2013

As a white person from Iowa, I am always hesitant to write about the racial aspects of ed reform and parental school choice. I feel it is always better to have others with more credibility speak of it. But this weekend I saw two things that compelled me to write.

On Saturday, I read that the U.S. Justice Department is suing the state of Louisiana to block vouchers for students in public school districts that are under old federal desegregation orders. The statewide voucher program, officially called the Louisiana Scholarship Program, lets low-income students in public schools graded C, D or F attend private schools at taxpayer expense. This year, 22 of the 34 school systems under desegregation orders are sending some students to private schools on vouchers.

The Justice Department’s primary argument is that letting students leave for private schools can disrupt the racial balance in public school systems that desegregation orders are meant to protect. Sounds like a good idea, right?

But here’s the thing: according to the Louisiana Department of Education, 86 percent of the children on the program are black. Only 9 percent are white.

If roughly 90 percent of the kids on the program are black, I don’t really understand how them moving to private schools that would better serve them would worsen segregation in the public schools. Are they leaving schools that are mostly white? If so, should they be forced to stay there even though they aren’t being well served? How would you explain that to their parents?

On the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s great speech, a black attorney general working for a black president filed a lawsuit to halt a program that is helping low-income black families in Louisiana choose a better school for their children. This law was not just backed by Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal, but was sponsored and supported by numerous black Democratic legislators. Half of the Senate Democratic caucus and a quarter of the House Democratic caucus in the Louisiana legislature backed the initial expansion of the program from its New Orleans origins.

I am especially mystified because the Obama administration has stood up to the teachers’ union on many occasions, especially in its strong support for charter schools. The only other time I have seen the administration do the wrong thing was in a situation sadly similar. It has more than once tried to eliminate the funding for the Washington D.C. voucher program. This program has had documented success, with a graduation rate of over 90 percent. More than 85 percent of the students on the program are black (and another 13 percent are Hispanic). Why would the president want to kill a program that helps poor children attend a school with his own children?

The president has been justly commended by the ed reform community for the many things he has done right in our cause. My hope is that my allies in ed reform and choice will also point out when he does something wrong.

The second thing that made me pause was when I checked the newspapers in Alabama, where there has been much controversy over a parental choice law that was recently passed by the state legislature (with only Republicans in favor). The law contains a tax credit scholarship program very similar to Florida’s, under which companies get a tax credit for donating to non-profits – which in turn give scholarships to low-income families to pay for private school tuition.

Last week, the Southern Poverty Law Center filed a lawsuit to stop to program. The rationale: Because the law cannot immediately help every poor child, it should not be allowed to operate at all. The Alabama Media Group, which operates the state’s three largest daily newspapers, published a column by SPLC president J. Richard Cohan that argued “while some students will be able to transfer, many will remain trapped in failing schools.”

To its credit, the Media Group offered space for a dissenting viewpoint. That column was submitted by Rev. H. K. Matthews, an icon of the Florida civil rights movement who now leads a church in Alabama. Rev. Matthews wrote: “They say if you can’t help all low-income kids at once, you shouldn’t help any. It’s a good thing we didn’t take that attitude towards civil rights – change didn’t happen overnight; we made progress one lunch counter at a time.”

So in this case you have an organization that, according to its website, is “seeking justice for the most vulnerable members of society” – and it wishes to stop a program that is helping the poorest families of Alabama find better schools for their children. Opposing its view is a man who nearly a half-century ago marched across the Selma bridge with Dr. King, and who was jailed 35 times in the cause of civil rights.

It will be fascinating to see how the issue of parental empowerment continues to motivate parties who are dedicated to social justice.

THE NEW CER: THE CAMPAIGN FOR EDUCATION REFORM™

CER Press Release
Washington, DC
August 26th, 2013

“Thirty years after A Nation at Risk, schools have improved only in some areas and for some children. We must do better and make it about ALL children. It’s time for a real campaign.”

-Jeanne Allen, founder and president, The Center for Education Reform (CER)

The Center for Education Reform (CER), the nation’s leading advocate for substantive and lasting school reform, today announced in concert with the start of the 2013-14 School Year that it will launch a new effort to grow awareness and support of the need of real education reform among the 280 million people whose lives are still untouched by that reform’s promise and reality.

The Campaign for Education Reform™ comes just weeks before CER celebrates its 20th Anniversary with an October 9 gala and the succession shortly thereafter of a new generation of leadership for the organization.

In announcing the new effort, CER Vice President of External Affairs Kara Kerwin, who will succeed Jeanne Allen as CER President, November 1, outlined the basis for the campaign. “While 300 million Americans today could benefit from direct participation in the development and activation of the core fundamentals of school reform, only 20 million – children and adults – are currently affected by various choice programs, the digital learning effort, real substantive efforts to ensure teacher quality, and the few district and state–based accountability efforts that exist,” said Kerwin. “The letters C.E.R. will take on new additional meaning in our 21st year – as the Campaign for Education Reform™ will reach the millions more whose future success depends on being directly engaged in throwing out the status quo and adopting solid education reform.”

The Campaign, which will be formally released as part of the Center’s 20-year celebration and subsequent succession will address the needs of the general public, bring pressure to bear on policymakers and galvanize American communities that are frequently ignored in today’s school reform debate. Efforts will include:

• A new national effort and survey to understand and address America’s attitudes toward reform;
• The release of a new Parent Power Index© that rates states on their access by parents to avenues of real education reform. The Parent Power Index© is shared with and used by millions of parents across the nation;
• A report card of progress on Governors and forecasts for the future; and
• Online history lessons for reformers and access to proprietary documents relating to the development of ed reform, through Education Reform University at www.2024.edreform.com.

Recent events accelerated the need for the campaign, according to CER President Allen. The US Justice Department suit against the Louisiana scholarship program, challenges to improved charter laws, and union opposition to standards and teacher evaluations are all threats to real progress for America’s schools.

The Center will catalogue in detail as part of the campaign for the public the nearly 20 million currently involved or directly impacted by school reform efforts. As of today, that figure includes nearly 3 million K-12 students who have access to charter schools and other school choice programs, online and blended learning, reform-minded school district options, new educator and leadership programs, and all adults involved in promoting such efforts – from leading to teaching to managing to legislating to funding.

“Until those numbers are 50 million students having access to quality options, and 50 states with charter school and other positive school choice laws, we will persist,” said Kerwin. “That’s why CER has consistently and will now with new tools consistently educate each new generation of parents about the condition of education in their states, communities and schools; the opportunities that exist for improvement and change; and the myriad of solutions that are succeeding in arresting the decline in education achievement.”

In the 2013-14 school year, CER will again utilize all forms of online and traditional media, engaging parents and interested citizens in becoming more informed, more active participants in the national conversation. While the organization’s tools are always very practical in their use and intent, they are also based on what CER calls the “first principles” of reform. These principles, described in detail in Ed Reform U and other sections of the CER web site, have proven useful to policymakers and reformers who are often barraged by random ideas masked in reform notions but which really are nothing more than a head feint to continue the status quo.

“As students and parents immerse themselves in the back-to-school season and their many aspirations for the new school year, it’s clear from the data, the policies and the politics surrounding education reform that far too many children who arrive with great hopes on the first day of school may never see their dreams turn into reality,” said Allen. “We resolve to make those hopes and dreams of success in school and life real for millions more.”

Additional program details and efforts are forthcoming.

Daily Headlines for August 26, 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

Alabama Accountability Act’s parental choice is an extension of the civil rights movement
Opinion, The Huntsville Times, August 25, 2013
In 1965 I marched with Dr. Martin Luther King in Selma. Forty five years later I marched with almost 6,000 low income parents in Tallahassee. How are these events related?

America’s kids need a better education law
Commentary, Washington Post, August 25, 2013
The nation’s most sweeping education law — the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, better known as No Child Left Behind — is outmoded and broken. Congress has gone home for its summer recess without passing a responsible replacement.

DIGITS: 8 in 10 rate their child’s teachers highly
Las Vegas Sun, August 25, 2013
Parents across the United States have a lot of love for their children’s teachers. So says a new survey of parents whose children completed kindergarten through 12th grade in the past school year.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Even odds (4 part series)
San Francisco Chronicle, August 24, 2013
African American boys in Oakland are more likely to miss school, be suspended, not graduate on time or be incarcerated than any other students.

When given choice, new trumps old
The Desert Sun, August 24, 2013
At neighboring schools, such as Cathedral City, the opening of Rancho Mirage High School has been met with apprehension. That’s in part because of the CIF’s “school of choice” policy, which creates situations comparable to opening Pandora’s Box.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DC charter school officials consider ranking preschools based on kids’ test scores
Washington Post, August 25, 2013
Charter school officials in the District of Columbia are proposing to rank preschools based largely on reading and math test scores for children as young as 3.

FLORIDA

Charter schools a growing trend
Herald Tribune, August 26, 2013
With charter school enrollment booming across Florida, nine groups are seeking to capitalize on the trend by opening new charters in Southwest Florida.

ILLINOIS

Rewarding success at CPS
Editorial, Chicago Tribune, August 26, 2013
Monday, the first day of classes, marks the close of an agonizing, frustrating summer for Chicago Public Schools. It has been a summer dominated by often-harsh clashes over spending cuts and closing schools. So it’s probably no surprise that something very good, very positive, didn’t get a lot of attention last week.

Some Rockford-area private schools buck fewer-students trend
Rockford Register Star, August 26, 2013
The largest private schools in the Rockford area lost about 850 students since 2008 and only a handful are seeing enrollment rebound in recent years.

INDIANA

Charters face same challenges traditional schools do
Opinion, Indianapolis Star, August 24, 2013
I would like to correct assertions made in Patrick J. Wiltshire’s letter about unfair advantages given to charter schools.

KENTUCKY

JCPS task force to tackle creation of Louisville’s 1st public boarding school
The Courier-Journal, August 25, 2013
Jefferson County Public Schools is embarking on what could be its most ambitious proposal yet for raising the academic levels of the district’s most disadvantaged students — the possibility of opening public boarding schools.

LOUISIANA

Parents not deterred by school’s F
The Advocate, August 25, 2013
Two weeks ago, parents at Career Academy in Baton Rouge received a three-page letter in the mail alerting them that their children were attending an F school, and consequently, would have the option of going elsewhere.

U.S. government sues to block vouchers in some Louisiana school systems
Times-Picayune, August 25, 2013
The U.S. Justice Department is suing Louisiana in New Orleans federal court to block 2014-15 vouchers for students in public school systems that are under federal desegregation orders. The first year of private school vouchers “impeded the desegregation process,” the federal government says.

MAINE

Percentage of students tested key to grades
Portland Press Herald, August 26, 2013
The state’s new A-F report card for schools gives undue weight to test participation, some educators say.

MASSACHUSETTS

The next step in education reform
Editorial, Swampscott Reporter, August 24, 2013
Massachusetts now leads the nation in public K-12 education, but there is more to be done, especially for the state’s neediest students in its toughest neighborhoods. By building on what we’ve already learned about turning around failing schools, we can bring quality public schools to every corner of the commonwealth.

NEVADA

Power of school choice
Opinion, Las Vegas Sun, August 26, 2013
With students across Nevada returning to school this month, it’s important to make sure that they are getting the best education possible, tailored to their needs and interests.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

It’s not a voucher program, but if offers NH parents real choice
Opinion, Nashua Telegraph, August 26, 2013
Advocates for putting the interests of the public school establishment ahead of the broader public goal of ensuring an educated populace continue to employ the tactics of propagandists. Case in point: Bill Duncan crows that “Lack of interest from public school families and from business results in a small voucher program.”

Scrap NH’s school vouchers
Opinion, Nashua Telegraph, August 26, 2013
How is it that New Hampshire’s voucher tax credit program can find only 15 public school students who want vouchers? And is giving them $164,000 – $11,000 apiece – to leave their public schools and go to private schools.

NEW JERSEY

Newark’s Merit-Pay Plan Begins
Wall Street Journal, August 26, 2013
Newark, in a first for a large New Jersey public-school system, has given out bonuses of up to $12,500 to its highest-rated teachers, inaugurating a controversial merit-pay program being watched across the nation.

NEW MEXICO

Plugging a knowledge gap
Albuquerque Journal, August 25, 2013
The report also shows that New Mexico high schools vary widely in the percentage of graduates who enroll in remedial classes.

NEW YORK

State to close Pinnacle Charter School less than two weeks before classes start
Buffalo News, August 25, 2013
Parents of 560 students in kindergarten through eighth grade are in the dark about where their children will attend school this fall after the state Education Department announced plans to close Buffalo’s Pinnacle Charter School less than two weeks before classes were scheduled to start.

Teachers, students, parents excited about charter school
Utica Observer Dispatch, August 25, 2013
Longer hours, a smaller salary and a six-day workweek. That might not seem like a dream job for some, but the 12 teachers hired for the Utica Academy of Science Charter School can’t wait to start.

OHIO

Charter schools’ state report cards: Failing
Canton Repository, August 24, 2013
Of the 40 letter grades awarded to local charter schools on the new state report cards, more than half were F’s.

New crop of charter schools opens doors
Columbus Dispatch, August 26, 2013
About a third of the new charter schools set to open this fall in Ohio are opening in Columbus.

OKLAHOMA

Debate over school standards gets serious
Norman Transcripts, August 26, 2013
Efforts are building to block tougher, nationally uniform academic standards from taking effect next year in Oklahoma’s public schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

$5M in tax credits to help fund York charter school expansion
York Dispatch, August 23, 2013
An award of $5 million in new market tax credits will help the York Academy Regional Charter School expand to educate students through eighth grade.

Bill would boost transparency for school labor contracts
The Tribune-Democrat, August 24, 2013
State Rep. Fred Keller, R-Union, is looking for support for a bill that would require school boards to be more open with the public about the terms of proposed union contracts before the labor agreements are finalized.

Crisis requires union action
Editorial, Philadelphia Inquirer, August 25, 2013
Other than the children, there are no innocents in this city’s inability to avert a funding disaster in its public schools.

Nicholas Trombetta’s unique charter school saved town of Midland
Pittsburgh POst-Gazette, August 24, 2013
Nicholas Trombetta’s frustration over having to bus high school students from Midland, Beaver County, to East Liverpool, Ohio, prompted the former Midland superintendent to create a cyber charter school.

School Lane questions charter school funding formulas
PhillyBurbs, August 26, 2013
As Gov. Tom Corbett renews his push for comprehensive charter school reform, charter school operators across the state are pursuing millions of federal dollars they say they should have been paid under state law.

RHODE ISLAND

R.I. school official: NECAP results won’t be used in grading teachers this year
Providence Journal, August 25, 2013
The state Department of Education has temporarily suspended the use of student progress on the NECAP test as part of its teacher evaluations, an education official confirmed Sunday.

TENNESSEE

MNPS attorney: Tennessee’s charter school law is unconstitutional
The Tennessean, August 24, 2013
An attorney for Metro Nashville Public Schools says the decade-old state law that allows charter schools to operate in Tennessee is unconstitutional, perhaps giving local school districts a basis for a major legal fight.

VIRGINIA

Held back: VA charter schools lag as other states move ahead
Watchdog.org, August 22, 2013
Republicans support them. Democrats like them. Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all embrace them. So why does Virginia keep getting F’s on charter schools?

WASHINGTON

Commission OKs rules on charter schools
The Olympian, August 26, 2013
Washington officials are preparing to solicit applications for the state’s first charter schools, issuing guidance this week on how schools will be authorized and evaluated.

WISCONSIN

Argument for vouchers is weak here
Editorial, Wausau Daily Herald, August 25, 2013
Wisconsin’s controversial school voucher program is being rolled out, and in the last week or so we have had our first look at the numbers of students applying from local schools.

Changes on horizon as Waupun charter school enters 2nd term
Font du Lac Reporter, August 24, 2013
With a year under their belt, Waupun school officials are hoping to build on the success of the state’s first agriculture/environmental-themed charter school.

ONLINE LEARNING

Cyberschools Grow, Fueling New Concerns
New York Times, August 25, 2013
The number of full-time cyberschools serving Texas public school students will double in the coming school year despite a history of lackluster performance and a new law limiting the number of online courses that public school students are allowed to take at the state’s expense.

(Cyber) school is in session Florida Virtual School, other online options benefit self-motivated students
Highlands Today, August 25, 2013
Online options for education are becoming more and more well-known in the digital age. While most higher learning institutions offer online classes and even fully online degrees, there are options for the K-12 segment as well.

Fed, state probes target largest charter schools
Philadelphia Inquirer blog, August 25, 2013
The founder of Pennsylvania’s largest cyber charter school was arrested by federal authorities for allegedly funneling millions through front companies into his personal bank account.

Few high school juniors on course to meet state mandates
News Press, August 26, 2013
Not enough juniors in Lee County public schools have completed an online course they need to graduate, which could create a bottleneck for the state-mandated courses.

Online Classes Begin for Hayfield Tomorrow
KAAL-TV, August 25, 2013
While many kids in the area are preparing for their first day of school tomorrow, a young Hayfield boy is preparing for a different type of school, and has an organization in his hands.

TN virtual school hits bottom, gets reprieve
WBIR-TV, August 25, 2013
Students at the Tennessee Virtual Academy, an online school run for profit, learned less than their peers anywhere else in Tennessee last year, data released by the state last week show, but efforts to crack down on the school have been delayed by heavy lobbying on its behalf.

Jeanne Allen Condemns DOJ Action Against Louisiana Vouchers


CER Statement
Washington, DC
August 25, 2013

Jeanne Allen, founder and president, The Center for Education Reform, today issued the following statement condemning the U.S. Department of Justice for its unprecedented Saturday motion seeking to prevent Louisiana from offering school vouchers to children in certain areas of the Bayou State, beginning in the 2014-2015 school year:

“The fact that Attorney General Eric Holder chose to file this motion on a day of festivities commemorating the March on Washington can only demonstrate one of two things. It either shows that he has a fundamental misunderstanding of the role of vouchers in creating education opportunities for children, or that he has a corrosive cynicism about the power of educational choice to improve educational performance and to meet parent demands for better outcomes.

Perhaps Mr. Holder will explain his actions in coming days, but for me one thing is clear: education is the civil rights issue of our day and equality should guide the manner in which we educate children, not their zip code. 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.”

Others who have condemned DOJ’s unprecedented action:

Louisiana Federation for Children:
http://louisiana4children.org/news-releases/obama-admin-files-suit-to-stop-louisiana-children-from-having-access-to-high-quality-educational-options

Bobby Jindal, Governor of Louisiana:
http://gov.louisiana.gov/index.cfm?md=newsroom&tmp=detail&articleID=4208

Jeanne Allen: Remembering Education Equity at the March

The commemoration of the March on Washington (Aug 28,1963) this weekend is cause to remember that while struggles in economic and educational equity did and do exist, there were people who for years had been working to integrate schools, even before the Brown v Board of Education ruling in 1954.

One such person was DC Archbishop and later Cardinal Patrick O’Boyle who led the integration of Catholic schools here before any mandate caused him to do so. O’Boyle believed that “we are all God’s children regardless of race.” That principle today may live  in most hearts but is sadly not always put to practice. Despite the clear superiority of equality as a principle that should guide the manner in which we educate children, our governments’ leaders in all but a handful of communities and states still assign children unequally to schools based on their zip code. While many religious and spiritual leaders joined the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr in calling for equality and indeed were like Archbishop O’Boyle welcoming all races to school together, too many of our current civil rights leaders reject publicly supported school choice programs that involve the same religious entities that once freed children. Many work to change their hearts and minds. We must do that, and more. To that end I share excerpts from D C’s Archbishop O’Boyle’s opening prayer on August 28, 1963 at the historic March on Washington:

“Bless this nation and all its people. May the warmth of Your love replace the coldness that springs from prejudice and bitterness. Send in our midst the Holy Spirit to open the eyes of all to the great truth that all men are equal in Your sight. Let us understand that simple justice demands that the rights of all be honored by every man…May we move forward without bitterness even when confronted with prejudice and discrimination…and live together as brothers in dignity, justice, charity and peace.”

Amen.

Daily Headlines for August 23, 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

As charter schools come of age, measuring their success is tricky
Hechinger Report, August 22, 2013
When the Minnesota New Country School opened two decades ago in Le Sueur, a rural town 60 miles southwest of Minneapolis, co-founder Dee Thomas and her teachers hoped to do education differently.

No Child Left Behind leaves behind independent tutors
Everett Daily Herald, August 22, 2013
To help pay his graduate school expenses, a friend of mine accepted a job as a tutor to a student who was struggling with an introductory course in economics. It paid well and didn’t sound too difficult, except for one thing: His pupil was the starting quarterback on the football team that was making a run at the national championship.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Lennox Middle School opens on hopeful note
Los Angeles times, August 23, 2013
Lennox Middle School parents used the prospect of the trigger law to work with administrators for sweeping changes at the low-performing campus.

LAUSD charged with violating union contract in teacher evaluation
Los Angeles Daily News, August 22, 2013
Los Angeles Unified’s teachers union has filed an unfair labor practice charge against the school district, saying administrators failed to negotiate key changes to a controversial performance evaluation system now being used to review educators.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter schools to give standardized tests to young children
Washington Post Blog, August 22, 2013
The use of standardized tests to measure very young students keeps expanding. Now public charter schools in Washington D.C. will soon be giving new standardized tests to very young children — aged 3, 4 and 5 — for the purposes of assessing their academic progress and ranking schools according to the results.

FLORIDA

Amid controversy, state education leaders to huddle
Miami Herald, August 22, 2013
Following a turbulent summer that saw the state education commissioner resign and angry parents call for a moratorium on school grades, Gov. Rick Scott will convene a group of educators, business leaders and lawmakers in Clearwater next week to hash out Florida’s education woes.

Flagler charter school bounces back from ‘F,’ leaders say
Daytona Beach News-Journal, August 22, 2013
A Palm Coast charter school that received an “F” grade from the state in 2012 is rebounding.

GEORGIA

Governor calls for review of Common Core
Gainesville Times, August 23, 2013
The Hall County school system will continue plans to review its social studies curriculum, in addition to Gov. Nathan Deal calling for social studies curriculum to be revised for the entire state.

IDAHO

North Star Charter School moves forward, keeps its charter
KIVI-TV, August 23, 2013
“Excited, thrilled, just really really happy.” Those are the relieved words of a parent – a parent who knows her daughter Marjorie will be able to put her books in her locker at North Star Charter School.

ILLINOIS

City commission to decide fate of shuttered public schools
Chicago Sun Times, August 23, 2013
Mayor Rahm Emanuel is appointing an advisory committee to decide what to do with nearly 50 shuttered Chicago Public Schools that residents fear could be turned into charter schools or sit vacant and become magnets for crime.

Math program helping bridge school’s achievement gap
WAND, August 23, 2013
It’s only been a week since students went back to class, but a Decatur high school is helping bridge the achievement gap in math class.

KENTUCKY

Rand Paul, Mitch McConnell Join Push for Kentucky Charter Schools
WFPL, August 23, 2013
A new push for Kentucky to have charter schools launched on Thursday with political leaders proclaiming their affinity for that particular type of school choice.

Kentucky Republicans seizing on charter school issue
The Courier-Journal, August 23, 2013
Republicans in Kentucky are pressing the state to allow charter schools, saying state policy on the issue could determine whether the next generation succeeds.

LOUISIANA

Charters still up for debate
The Advertiser, August 22, 2013
A marathon meeting of the Lafayette Parish School Board left unresolved a question many people thought would be answered this week: Will charter schools come to Lafayette Parish? Instead, following a board meeting that one state education leader called “embarrassing and frustrating,” a final decision remains weeks away.

Charter school organizations could get financial support
The Advocate, August 22, 2013
A recruiting and support group for new charter schools in Baton Rouge has identified six charter school organizations that it is likely to award millions of dollars to help offset startup and other costs.

MISSISSIPPI

New charter schools will offer hope to many students in Miss.
Column

Clarion Ledger, August 23, 2013
As a strong supporter of charter schools, the Black Alliance of Educational Options takes issue with Bill Minor’s opinion piece that suggests charter schools are schemes and that they can become segregated institutions.

MISSOURI

St. Louis schools fare poorly in first version of new education standards
St. Louis Beacon, August 23, 2013
Missouri educators were to use the first year of a new evaluation plan to classify school districts, St. Louis Public Schools would slide back into unaccredited territory, joining Normandy and Riverview Gardens, and other local districts would be downgraded to provisionally accredited.

Troubled school systems fall far from Missouri’s mark
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 23, 2013
When Superintendent Ty McNichols began leading the Normandy School District last month, he knew that regaining accreditation would be an uphill climb.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Next reform job: Teaching teachers
Opinion

Portsmouth Herald, August 23, 2013
The state Board of Education approved the application for a group that originally planned to open an arts-focused charter school in August 2014 on the Seacoast, but must locate in the Derry area.

NEW YORK


Next reform job: Teaching teachers
Opinion

New York Daily News, August 23, 2013
But there’s an equally important higher-education challenge that also demands our attention, because it directly affects the quality of education delivered in our K-12 public schools. Namely: the often abysmal state of the programs that prepare teachers for the classroom.


Public left in dark on school turnaround plans

Buffalo News, August 23, 2013
But there’s an equally important higher-education challenge that also demands our attention, because it directly affects the quality of education delivered in our K-12 public schools. Namely: the often abysmal state of the programs that prepare teachers for the classroom.

OHIO

Many central Ohio districts struggle with achievement gaps
Columbus Dispatch, August 23, 2013
No central Ohio school district earned all A’s or F’s on the revamped state report card this year. But many struggled in a grade that measures how well they are closing the achievement gaps among groups of children.

High-performing school districts face tough challenges on new state report cards
Akron Beacon Journal, August 22, 2013
The new state report cards on school district performance are out, and Barberton schools’ score for performance on standardized tests placed it lower than 89 percent of the public districts in Ohio.

OKLAHOMA

New Oklahoma City schools superintendent to oversee a complex district with diverse issues
The Oklahoman, August 23, 2013
Oklahoma City’s new school superintendent will oversee a diverse, complex school system that, in some ways, looks like several districts lumped together, the Oklahoma City School Board chairman said Thursday at the annual Greater Oklahoma City Chamber’s State of the Schools luncheon.

PENNSYLVANIA

Teachers union ads target Nutter
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 22, 2013
The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, asked to take a pay cut and accept other concessions to help solve the school funding crisis, launched a series of ads Wednesday targeting Mayor Nutter.

SRC approves agreements with five Renaissance charter schools
Philadelphia Daily Mail, August 23, 2013
THE SCHOOL REFORM Commission last night approved license agreements for five Renaissance charter schools, among other resolutions, during its last meeting before the school year begins.

Alternative schools are a good alternative for some kids
Courier Times, August 22, 2013
There are a number of non-traditional options available in Lower Bucks County for secondary students who struggle in traditional school settings, officials said.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Haley says state needs more “choice” in education
WHNS Greenville, August 22, 2013
Gov. Nikki Haley says it may be time to expand school choice. “We are going to continue to see more charter schools by the numbers that are trying to enroll, that want to come into the state,” says Haley.

TENNESSEE

Greater School Choice Means Greater Progress For More Tennessee Students
The Chattanoogan, August 22, 2013
A new school year is upon us – with new teachers, new textbooks, and, hopefully, many new educational opportunities, for more Tennessee families and students.

Should Jefferson-Houston Become a Charter School?
Virginia Connection Newspapers, August 21, 2013
Politicians love to talk about failing schools. As an abstract concept, they are an easy target. But when an actual school is identified as a failing school, the reality become a bit more complicated.

TEXAS

New charter school in Garland, Arlington says bienvenidos, huân yíng and welcome to families, teachers
Dallas Morning News, August 22, 2013
A new school year is upon us – with new teachers, new textbooks, and, hopefully, many new educational opportunities, for more Tennessee families and students.

WASHINGTON

Rules for charter schools approved
Everett Daily Herald, August 23, 2013
An independent panel Thursday approved the rules it will follow in authorizing Washington’s first charter schools early next year.

WISCONSIN

Shilling wants stricter standards for voucher schools
La Crosse Tribune, August 23, 2013
State legislators have started pitching ideas for holding Wisconsin’s voucher schools to higher standards now that they can receive public funds.

School voucher program will revolutionize our education system
Wisconsin Rapids Tribune, August 22, 2013
The Wisconsin Parental Choice Program has taken its first tiny baby steps toward full implementation. Assumption Catholic Schools had 109 applicants and Immanuel Lutheran School had 40. Both are ranked in the top 25 schools and will be participating in the state choice program.

ONLINE LEARNING

Charter, cyber schools a hot topic at meeting
Wilkes-Barre Times Leader, August 23, 2013
Charter and cyber schools topped a stream of topics on which area educational leaders quizzed Pennsylvania’s new acting secretary of education at town hall meeting on education Thursday at the Luzerne Intermediate Unit.

Digital Academy graded on different report card
Newark Advocate, August 22, 2013
After years of being evaluated by the same standards as a typical community school, the Newark Digital Academy received a different kind of state report card Thursday.

New Mexico Virtual Academy expansion tabled by Farmington school board
The Daily Times, August 22, 2013
Farmington Municipal Schools board of education on Thursday tabled a request from the New Mexico Virtual Academy to introduce two new grades and increase the school’s enrollment cap to handle an influx of new students.

Held back: VA charter schools lag as other states move ahead

by Kenric Ward
Watchdog.org
August 22, 2013

Republicans support them. Democrats like them. Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all embrace them.

So why does Virginia keep getting F’s on charter schools?

“Lack of leadership” in Richmond, says Jeanne Allen, president of the national Center for Education Reform, which grades states’ charter laws.

“This isn’t rocket science; it should be bipartisan,” said Allen, whose Washington, D.C.-based organization promotes publicly funded, locally operated charter schools.

The charter movement has surged in the past three decades. Today, 6,000 charter schools in 42 states and the District of Columbia enroll 2.3 million students, with another million pupils on waiting lists.

Yet Virginia remains a backwater, with just five charter campuses.

Still haunted by the days of “massive resistance” to school desegregation, Old Dominion politicians have been leery of charters. Lawmakers from both parties ritually cite Article VII, Section 7 of the state Constitution, which declares, “supervision of schools in each school division shall be vested in a school board.”

Local boards, unwilling to surrender their “vested” public-school monopoly, have all but barred the door to charters.

Ember Reichgott Junge, a former Minnesota legislator who helped pioneer charters in her state, says Virginia’s first goal should be to establish more authorizing bodies.

Like other charter-friendly states, Minnesota allows school boards, higher-education institutions and large nonprofits to approve charter-school applications.

“Virginia won’t have a robust charter program until you have more authorizers,” Junge said in an interview with Watchdog.

Junge’s book, “Zero Chance for Passage,” encapsulates the uphill battle in the commonwealth.

Christian Braunlich, a member of Virginia’s state Board of Education, says, “Even assuming there were multiple authorizers, there would then be the practical issue of funding. Because the state contribution to education is, on average, about $4,600, state funding alone would likely be inadequate to fund a quality charter.”

“And,” Braunlich predicts, “localities would likely fight hard to protect locally raised funds over which they would then have no control.”

Allen says it is “very disappointing to watch Republicans and a handful of Democrats who won’t even challenge” the status quo in Richmond.

“Legislative powers trump education powers,” she argues. “The Legislature has ability and authority to create new kinds of public schools and give others the authority to create them. Pass a bill, and let’s see.”

At the General Assembly this year, Sen. Mark Obenshain, R-Harrisonburg, proposed a constitutional amendment to grant the state board authority to establish charter schools. His resolution failed in the evenly split Senate, 20-19-1.

Republican gubernatorial candidate Ken Cuccinelli is ready to renew the fight.

“Virginia has one of the most useless charter-school laws in the country,” the attorney general says.

“While Virginia technically allows charter schools, any charter school has to be approved by the local school district within the boundaries it would be operating. This creates a conflict of interest. It’s like Pepsi having to get permission from the board of directors of Coca-Cola to sell a new product,” he says.

As part of his 12-point education plan, Cuccinelli would allow the option of converting chronically failing public schools into charters.

State Sen. Tom Garrett, R-Louisa, says parental choice — including more charters — is crucial.

“This is an idea that has succeeded in states as politically diverse as Massachusetts, Louisiana, Tennessee and Michigan. It’s not just all red states and blue states,” Garrett told WINA radio.

Cuccinelli’s Democratic rival, Terry McAuliffe, has been quiet on the subject. The state’s largest teachers’ union, the Virginia Education Association, opposes charters.

Other union leaders say it’s time to move forward.

Steve Greenburg, president of the Fairfax County Federation of Teachers, says his group is supporting a proposed charter high school called the Fairfax Leadership Academy.

“We support it because it’s teacher-directed and helps at-risk kids,” Greenburg said.

Demonstrating the bipartisan appeal of charters nationally, the late Albert Shanker, an unabashed liberal and founder of the American Federation of Teachers, observed that “school districts can take their customers for granted” when meaningful competition is lacking.

Shanker asserted that charters empower teachers to design more efficient and effective educational models, and prod conventional public schools to improve. They also facilitate desegregation.

The 13-year-old Capital City Public Charter School in Washington, D.C., is a top-rated Pre-K-8 campus with a student body that is 36 percent black, 32 percent white, 28 percent Hispanic and 4 percent Asian. Forty percent are eligible for free or reduced price lunches.

“Perhaps its demographics help to explain why Cap City was the very first school Barack and Michelle Obama visited after the president’s first inauguration,” says Michael Petrilli of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute.

Junge, whose Minnesota legislation won favor with Republicans and Democrats alike, discounts the shibboleth that charters — which accept students on a first-come, first-served basis, and often by lottery — are socio-economically elitist.

“Some of our strongest supporters were from communities of color,” recalled the Democrat, who noted that Minnesota’s 150 charter campuses are spread among the state’s urban, suburban and rural districts.

“Only about 5 percent of students in public schools attend charters — but 100 percent have the choice,” Junge said.

NEXT: Can charters lift Virginia schools out of Lake Wobegon?

Kenric Ward is a national reporter for Watchdog.org and chief of the Virginia Bureau. Contact him at [email protected] or at (571) 319-9824. @Kenricward

Americans Support Charters, Oppose Vouchers, Poll Finds

by Katie Ash
Ed Week
August 21, 2013

This year’s annual PDK/Gallup Poll on American attitudes toward public schools found that while charter schools enjoy broad support, many of those surveyed—70 percent—oppose vouchers for private school tuition.

The survey, which was based on responses from about 1,000 people, found that nearly 70 percent of those surveyed support public charter schools. And a little over half—52 percent—said they thought students in charter schools receive a better education than those in regular public schools.

But on the question of vouchers, 70 percent of those surveyed said they opposed allowing taxpayer dollars to cover families’ private tuition costs—the highest proportion of opposition to vouchers in the history of the survey and an increase of 15 percent points from last year alone.

The Friedman Foundation for Education Choice, which advocates for the use of vouchers, said in an email statement to Education Week that “compared with findings from other recent surveys on school vouchers, the PDK/Gallup poll is an outlier. Their particular school voucher question, which does not even explicitly say or define ‘voucher,’ has been criticized by respected researchers for its wording and for that omission.”

When it comes to homeschooling children, the majority of the survey participants (60 percent) support parents’ rights to homeschool their kids, and the vast majority feel that homeschooled children should be eligible for student services offered by their public school.

For instance, 90 percent agree that homeschooled children should be allowed to access special education courses, 75 percent think homeschooled children should be able to attend public school part-time, and 80 percent feel that homeschooled students should be able to participate in their public school’s athletic programs.

Before the survey was even officially released, the Center for Education Reform came out in opposition to the survey itself. In a statement the center’s president, Jeanne Allen, said she “expects that the 2013 poll will again feature poorly designed questions, potentially leading to a misrepresentation of how the public feels about school choice, charter schools, and other issues related to education reform.”

But some, such as the National Coalition for Public Education, which opposes vouchers, have praised the results of the survey. Sasha Pudelski, a co-chair of the coalition said in a press release, “These results tell us that the American public knows something that many politicians do not: taxpayer-funded vouchers are bad public policy.”

In addition to the results focused on school choice, the survey asked a broad range of questions about public education, including many about the Common Core State Standards. My colleague Lesli Maxwell has an in-depth take on the broader findings of the survey here.

Daily Headlines for August 22, 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

Americans Support Charters, Oppose Vouchers, Poll Finds
Education Week Blog, August 21, 2013
This year’s annual PDK/Gallup Poll on American attitudes toward public schools found that while charter schools enjoy broad support, many of those surveyed—70 percent—oppose vouchers for private school tuition.

An Exit Strategy for Bad Teachers
Review & Outlook, Wall Street Journal
Age and experience have much to recommend them over youth and enthusiasm but the advantages don’t always show up in teaching. That’s the finding of a new study, “Early Retirement Incentives and Student Achievement,” published by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

Public opposes use of test scores in teacher reviews, poll shows
Los Angeles Times, August 21, 2013
In a reversal of public opinion, a majority of Americans now oppose using student test scores to evaluate teachers and more believe that increased testing has hurt rather than helped improve public schools, a new survey shows.

The Common Core and the Common Good
Op-ed, New York Times, August 21, 2013
Our educational system is not keeping up with that of many other industrialized countries, even as the job market becomes more global and international competition for jobs becomes steeper.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Alabama School Choice Law Faces Legal Challenge
US News & World Report, August 22, 2013
A first-of-its-kind law in Alabama that awards tax credits to families who transfer students out of failing public schools is facing a legal challenge, as the Southern Poverty Law Center asked a federal court to block the law Monday alleging it will create a disadvantage for low-income students.

CALIFORNIA

State Supreme Court to decide charter school access to LAUSD campuses
Los Angeles Daily News, August 21, 2013
More than 12 years after California voters decreed that independent charters should have access to public school facilities, Los Angeles Unified remains embroiled in a legal battle over how to share its campus space with charters that request it.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter schools to give standardized tests to young children
Washington Post Blog, August 22, 2013
The use of standardized tests to measure very young students keeps expanding. Now public charter schools in Washington D.C. will soon be giving new standardized tests to very young children — aged 3, 4 and 5 — for the purposes of assessing their academic progress and ranking schools according to the results.

ILLINOIS

Teacher pensions have to take a hit
Editorial, Chicago Sun Times, August 22, 2013
The Civic Federation gets it right in a report due out Thursday when it points out a failure by the Chicago Public Schools to detail a plan for cutting Chicago teacher pension costs.

U46’s equity chief talks about closing gaps in race, social class, achievement — and excellence
Elgin Courier News, August 21, 2013
Ron Raglin has been there for the public comments over past year at School District U46 Board of Education meetings.

INDIANA

A charter for Ahmed? Why not?
Opinion, Muncie Star Press, August 22, 2013
K-12 education is the largest component of Indiana’s state budget. Most Hoosier students go to public schools and probably always will. Public schools receive support from the state government for general operations and from local property taxes for construction and transportation.

New Laf. school offers free classes
WLFI, August 21, 2013
Music soared in the streets of Lafayette Wednesday afternoon as faculty and students celebrate the first year of the Excel Center in Lafayette. The Excel Center is a new charter school which allows adults 18 years or older to obtain a Core 40 high school diploma for free.

KENTUCKY

Passing charter school law will widen opportunities
Op-Ed, The Courier-Journal, August 22, 2013
For too many Kentucky families, dreams don’t come true and the doors to opportunity remain closed. We all know a good education is critical, but we’ve let too many Kentucky schools fail parents and their children for far too long.

LOUISIANA

Charter decision deferred
The Advertiser, August 22, 2013
At nearly midnight Wednesday, the Lafayette Parish School Board voted 5-4 to defer a decision on whether to allow charter schools to operate in the district.

MAINE

Baxter Academy fails another inspection, but plans to open
Portland Press Herald, August 22, 2013
Charter school officials in Portland say they will get the work done in time to start classes on Sept. 4.

MICHIGAN

School improvement is color blind
Editorial, Lansing State Journal, August 21, 2013
Michigan’s new color-coded system of evaluating public school performance earned a lot of criticism this week. Among the complaints:

MISSISSIPPI

State’s graduation, dropout rates improve for second year
Hattiesburg America, August 22, 2013
For the second year in a row, Mississippi improved both its graduation and dropout rates, with the graduation rate measured at 75.5 percent based on a four-year attendance span, the highest ever for the state, Department of Education officials say.

MISSOURI

When school reform only makes it worse
Column, St. Louis American, August 21, 2013
Iatrogenic? Now, there’s a word we rarely hear. It essentially is a medical term that refers to the unfortunate condition in which the remedy causes more difficulty than the condition for which it was prescribed. A bit like using leeches for bleeding to rid the body of the disease.

NEVADA

Two of education reform’s biggest boosters have left Nevada, but that doesn’t mean the movement is slowing down
Las Vegas City Life, August 21, 2013
And they have. For a decade, education reform — that is, administrative and policy changes to public schools — has been a train barreling down the tracks, embraced by elected and appointed officials at all levels, across the political spectrum. Everybody loves reform!

NEW JERSEY

Newark Charter opens high school
Newark Post, August 22, 2013
Patrick Delaney knows he got lucky that Newark Charter School added a high school just as he was finishing eighth grade.

NEW YORK


Will Common Core Force Charters to Go Back to Their Roots?

Opinion, Huffington Post, August 21, 2013
Without some deep soul-searching, “No Excuses” charters and their excessive test prep will have no chance of meeting the Common Core standards.

OHIO

More students attended Cleveland Schools on the first day than expected
Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 21, 2013
With so many students moving in and out of the city and to and from charter schools, the total number of students attending Cleveland schools is harder to pin down than in more stable suburban districts.

New Ohio report cards for schools let you be the judge
Columbus Dispatch, August 22, 2013
The days of “continuous improvement” and “excellent with distinction” are over.

OREGON

Board should know all the facts before making decisions
Editorial, Lebanon-Express, August 21, 2013
The Lebanon Community School District approved an enrollment increase for Sand Ridge Charter School and renewed the school’s contract at the board’s Aug. 15 meeting.

PENNSYLVANIA

Agreement with charter school questioned in Penn Hills
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 22, 2013
Enrollment is rising at the first charter school authorized by the Penn Hills School District, but along with success have come some growing pains.

Audit alleges lease-reimbursement problems at Chester charter
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 22, 2013
Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said Wednesday that an audit of the Chester Community Charter School found that it had received more than $1.2 million in improper lease-reimbursement payments.

Parents demand answers, action
Pocono Record, August 22, 2013
The relationship between the Pocono Mountain Charter School and its landlord, the Shawnee Tabernacle Church, took another twist last week with a lawsuit filed against the church.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Charter schools putting down roots in Horry County
Myrtle Beach Sun, August 21, 2013
School officially opens Thursday at the white columned building on Fred Nash Boulevard, solving a mystery some drivers on nearby U.S. 17 Bypass have been pondering for the last 18 months.

State agencies prepare to roll out first school-choice program
The State, August 21, 2013
South Carolina Department of Revenue and education leaders told a Senate panel Wednesday that they are working on a smooth transition into the state’s first K-12 private-school choice program.

VIRGINIA

Opponents plan suit against school takeover decisions
Richmond Times-Dispatch, August 21, 2013
Opponents of a statewide school division championed by Gov. Bob McDonnell and created by the General Assembly plan to take their objections to court.

Should Jefferson-Houston Become a Charter School?
Virginia Connection Newspapers, August 21, 2013
Politicians love to talk about failing schools. As an abstract concept, they are an easy target. But when an actual school is identified as a failing school, the reality become a bit more complicated.

ONLINE LEARNING

Board hears report on new cyberschool
Reading Eagle, August 22, 2013
The Conrad Weiser School Board received an update on its new cyberschool during its meeting Wednesday.

Cyber program at Seneca Valley created out of necessity
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, August 21, 2013
More than 10 years of battles to keep local students from transferring to cyber charter schools has led Seneca Valley School District to fight back.

“Virtual high school” helps kids succeed
Press Enterprise, August 21, 2013
Jurupa Unified School District officials are describing their new “virtual high school” as a chance to succeed for students who have difficulty adjusting to traditional high schools.

Intriguing At Best, Rarely Accurate – Annual PDK Poll

The PDK annual poll on “The Public’s Attitudes Towards the Public Schools” is always intriguing but rarely an accurate assessment of what people think. Since I founded the Center for Education Reform, the poll has consistently defied commonly accepted polling practices that expect questions to be defined before they are asked. Thus year after year, while parents are clamoring for options and new innovations, and are frustrated with the status quo, the PDK-Gallup Poll reports support for convention and opposition to Parent Power. This is the first in many years the media has covered it!