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All About PDK’s “The Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools.” Annual Poll

The Annual PDK poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools typically provides insights into how a limited number of Americans think about a limited number of issues in public education. This is the famous poll that reveals how Americans grade their own schools (with most parents giving their own schools As & Bs, just like their Members of Congress).

Across the country, however, there are much bigger issues than polls plaguing our schools. More than sixty percent of US students are not proficient in any core subject. As we ponder the PDK survey results, be sure to acknowledge that without great schools for all students.

THE 49TH ANNUAL PDK POLL IS BEING RELEASED AUGUST 28TH, 2017 AT 7PM. CER WILL OFFER A SPECIAL REPORT ANALYSES AT THAT TIME.

IN THE MEANTIME, HERE ARE SOME OF OUR ANALYSES FROM YEARS PAST.


2013 – Poorly Designed Survey Misrepresents Public’s True Attitudes on Education Reform

Phi Delta Kappa International, in conjunction with Gallup released their 45th annual poll for 2013 on “The Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools.”

For years now, conductors of the PDK-Gallup poll have asked respondents an array of misleading questions, giving a false perception of how Americans view the many dimensions of public education.

Whereas other polls and surveys conducted over CER’s 20-year history demonstrate overwhelmingly positive support for programs that provide parents more choice and ensure schools are held to higher standards, PDK-Gallup polls have typically demonstrated lower support thresholds for the same programs.

So it came as no surprise that the 2013 PDK-Gallup poll again featured poorly designed questions, leading to a misrepresentation of how the public feels about school choice, charter schools and other issues related to education reform.

68 percent of those sampled favored the concept of charter schools, but other polls show even higher rates of support when respondents are given a full and accurate definition of how charters actually work.

Conversely, the poll recorded low support for school vouchers, which was likely to happen when respondents were asked the poorly crafted question: “Do you favor or oppose allowing students and parents to choose a private school to attend at public expense?”

This supposed low support comes at a time when between 85-89% of black voters on recently released state polls overwhelmingly support school choice and why more states are answering the call for Parent Power through legislation.

As CER President Jeanne Allen pointed out in 2012, the phrase “at public expense” creates the illusion that parents seeking more and better opportunities for their children are not part of the “public.”

“Gallup asked if respondents favor parents being able to choose a private school ‘at public expense,’” Allen said.

“But parents who use scholarships to move a child from a public school (failing to meet their needs) to a private school (that will meet those needs) are certainly part of the ‘public!’ They are targeting funds designated to educate their child to a school that will actually do so.”

Here are a few highlights of CER’s Analysis of PDK from just this past decade:

2012 – CER analysis of PDK-Gallup poll:

https://2024.edreform.com/2012/08/cer-president-jeanne-allen-released-the-following-analysis-of-todays-pdkgallup-poll/

2011 – PDK/Gallup Poll Call for Facts:

https://2024.edreform.com/2012/01/2011-jeanne-allen-memo-pdk-gallup-poll/

2006 – CER WEIGHS IN ON PDK: WE’RE SORRY WHAT WAS THE QUESTION

https://2024.edreform.com/2006/03/were-sorry-what-was-the-question/

2004 – PHI DELTA KAPPA/GALLUP ANNUAL EDUCATION POLL: SCHOOL CHOICE AGAIN FALLS VICTIM

https://2024.edreform.com/edreform-university/resource/phi-delta-kappagallup-annual-education-poll-school-choice-again-falls-victim-2004/

2001 – ANTI-REFORM GROUP RELEASES ANNUAL EDUCATION POLL

https://2024.edreform.com/edreform-university/resource/anti-reform-group-releases-annual-education-poll-2001/

Check out EdReform University’s library on Polls & Surveys for more information.

Daily Headlines for August 21, 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

ACT: Only quarter of grads ready for all subjects
Associated Press, August 21, 2013
Just a quarter of this year’s high school graduates who took the ACT tests have the reading, math, English and science skills they need to succeed in college or a career, according to data the testing company released Wednesday.

Poll: Most Americans unfamiliar with new Common Core teaching standards
Washington Post, August 21, 2013
Most Americans have never heard of the Common Core State Standards, the educational approach that is overhauling classroom instruction across most of the country and has triggered intensifying political and policy debate about the nation’s academic benchmarks, according to a national poll scheduled to be released Wednesday.

The Debate Over School Standards
Letters, New York Times, August 21, 2013
Re “Debut of School Standards Is Rocky, and the Critics Are Pouncing Left and Right” (news article, Aug. 16).

U.S. schools compete for smaller pots of state aid-S&P
Reuters, August 20, 2013
Most U.S. states, faced with a sluggish economic recovery and population growth, are still spending less on each public school student than they did before the recession, according to a Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services report on Tuesday. The rapid growth of charter schools is compounding the problem, pulling students away and putting some public school districts – urban ones in particular – open to credit risk.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Plan 2020 to improve education ‘looks like a winner’
Montgomery Advertiser, August 21, 2013
For those who need to hit the refresh key, Plan 2020 is state Superintendent Tommy Bice’s strategic plan for K-12 public education in Alabama, designed to replace the federal No Child Left Behind Act in assessing academic progress.

School ‘choice’ in Alabama is a cruel illusion
Opinion, August 21, 2013
What are your options if your child is in a failing school in Alabama? There are 78 public schools in the state that are classified as “failing,” so the question is certainly not just hypothetical.

ARKANSAS

New Ark. panel on charter schools to meet
KTBS, August 21, 2013
A committee created by Arkansas lawmakers earlier this year to review charter school applications is convening for its first meeting.

CALIFORNIA

Former Villaraigosa associate to challenge state Supt. Torlakson
Los Angeles Times, August 21, 2013
Marshall Tuck, who headed Mayor Villaraigosa’s education nonprofit, is also taking on the state teachers union, a powerful backer of Torlakson.

Use agreement remains sticking point: Charter school, district haggling continues via email
Los Altos Town Crier, August 20, 2013
After a week of email communications between the Los Altos School District and Bullis Charter School, face-to-face contact may finally be on the horizon.
COLORADO

Governor touts school-finance reform tax hike
Our Colorado News, August 20, 2013
Gov. John Hickenlooper gave a full-throated endorsement of a school-finance reform tax hike at a Lakewood rally on Aug. 15, marking the beginning of a campaign behind what’s expected to be the most significant ballot question voters will decide this fall.

CONNECTICUT

Widening achievement gap is the most troubling test result
Greenwich Times, August 21, 2013
The numbers have been in for a week now. They’ve been written about, and written about. They’ve been analyzed, discussed and explained.

FLORIDA

Majority of new students optin in from charter schools
Tallahassee Democrat, August 21, 2013
Leon County Schools Superintendent Jackie Pons confirmed Tuesday the district has 400 additional secondary school students, the majority of whom opted back into the district through the new School Choice for Charters program.

School district reconsiders how charter schools are funded
Herald Tribune, August 21, 2013
Following the Imagine School at North Port saga, Sarasota County School Board members said they have been too generous and want stricter rules over how some charter schools are funded.

INDIANA

Vouchers as constitutional as the Bill of Rights – as long as they are open to all people
Opinion, News-Sentinel, August 21, 2013
K-12 education is the largest component of Indiana’s state budget. Most Hoosier students go to public schools and probably always will.

LOUISIANA

Charter Schools Could be the NEwest Addistion in Lafayette Parish
KATC, August 20, 2013
Wednesday night, the Lafayette Parish School Board will vote on a proposal to bring five charter schools to the parish. The school board will consider partnering with two companies, . Like other charter schools, those with these companies would run on private donations and some public funds.

Teachers union urges action from Jindal on tenure law
Times-Picayune, August 20, 2013
Gov. Bobby Jindal should act to remove unlawful portions of a teacher tenure law passed in 2012, a Louisiana teachers union said Tuesday. The governor’s office said it will appeal a Friday district court ruling that said portions of the law violated teachers’ rights to property and due process.

MICHIGAN

Consensus for Change Think Tank talks Michigan school reform
Battle Creek Enquirer, August 20, 2013
If you could dismantle our state’s public education system — from the brick-and-mortar schoolhouses to the 37-year-old statute that funds them to the piles of administrative rules that govern them — how would you rebuild it?

NEVADA

A head start on higher ed: High school students earning college credit
Reno Gazette Journal, August 21, 2013
For Washoe County School District schools, letting high school students take college courses and earn both high school and college credits is a way to open higher education to more students, said Pedro Martinez, district superintendent. The district’s Signature Academy program, still in its early stages, is being built so that by the time a student is a senior, he or she can take college courses.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Charter school pitched for Seacoast to open in Derry
Portsmouth Herald, August 21, 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 MEXICO

Santa Fe confident in teacher evaluation changes
Opinion, Albuquerque Journal, August 21, 2013
According to a recent national study, two-thirds of teachers across this country feel that their schools’ evaluation systems do not adequately assess their work in the classroom. This observation appears to be consistent with what has historically occurred in New Mexico.

NEW YORK

P.S. I Love You: Why Downtown Parents Are Choosing Public School
New York Observer, August 20, 2013
With a looming budget crisis and massive public contracts overdue, it’s fair to expect that public school class sizes will continue to inflate even as classroom budgets will continue to be reduced. Still, it seems that an increasing number of parents who can afford private school are sending their kids to public school.

OHIO

Student growth aspect of new evaluations concerns educators
Newark Advocate, August 21, 2013
The portion of a teacher’s evaluation involving student growth measures, including value-added data, is one concern many administrators and teachers have with the new Ohio Teacher Evaluation System.

OREGON

Board approves charter cap increase
Lebanon Express, August 20, 2013
The Lebanon Community School District board approved an enrollment cap increase of 40 students for Sand Ridge Charter School at its Aug. 15 meeting, and renewed the school’s contract with the district.

PENNSYLVANIA

A Renaissance school provision raises concerns
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 21, 2013
A year and a half after signing the Urban Hope Act, designed to stimulate alternatives in urban education, Gov. Christie on Monday signed amendments to the law that potentially would put new financial burdens on urban districts that host “Renaissance school” projects.

State education associations applaud Pa.’s No Child Left Behind waiver
Patriot-News, August 20, 2013
Adequate Yearly Progress is a thing of the past in Pennsylvania schools after the U.S. Department of Education on Tuesday approved the state’s No Child Left Behind waiver request.

State Rep. Sims to Pa.: Put your money where your kids are
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 20, 2013
The lack of proper funding for education is not an issue of “poor finances,” as Governor Corbett has claimed. It is an issue of poor priorities.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Calhoun Falls Charter school aims for another ‘A’ rating
Greenwood Index Journal, AUgust 20, 2013
With Calhoun Falls Charter School maintaining an “A” rating among federal accountability standards, principal Deirdre McCullough said expectations are high for the 2013-14 school year.

TENNESSEE

Metro approves new charter school in East Nashville
The Tennessean, August 21, 2013
After hearing a passionate plea against sacrificing Nashville’s poorest children to budget woes, the Metro school board Tuesday approved a charter school for the east side of town.

TEXAS

Nacogdoches parents explain reasons 500 students have transferred
KTER-TV, August 20, 2013
During the 2011 and 2012 school year 500 students transferred out of the Nacogdoches Independent School District. With less than a week left before the upcoming school year superintendent Dr. Fred Hayes is giving parents the option to voice their concerns.

State report finds Houston charter school misspent $5.3 million in federal funds
Dallas Morning News, August 20, 2013
A Houston charter school misspent $5.3 million in federal funds on items ranging from first-class airline tickets to spa services, according to a state report released Tuesday.

WISCONSIN

Charter operator Rocketship opens in Milwaukee, hits enrollment target
Journal Sentinel, August 20, 2013
While the majority of the state’s students have at least two more weeks of summer vacation, a new elementary charter school on the south side opened its doors for the first time this week, bringing a new song and dance to the Milwaukee education scene.

ONLINE LEARNING

Clay County fears losing millions to out-of-county virtual schools
ActionNewsJax, August 20, 2013
A new way of counting virtual students is affecting how much Clay County Schools receives in funding from the state.

Cyber charter school to open on Octorara’s campus
Octorara News, August 20, 2013
The Exton-based 21st Century Cyber Charter School will open its first satellite location on the Octorara Area School District campus on Aug. 26.

Local families stand behind online school
Johnson City Press, August 20, 2013
For the second year in a row, Tennessee’s only online public school scored at the bottom level on standardized tests, but school administrators and local parents insist the alternative curriculum provides quality education opportunities.

Online learning, career prep gain popularity for high school students
Sentinel Source, August 20, 2013
Two popular trends in American education are converging to support the academic and career interests of high school students nationwide: online learning and Career Technical Education (CTE) courses.

Valle Catholic High School Will Go ‘Virtual’ With Online Learning
Ste. Genevieve Herald, August 20, 2013
Dr. Mark Gilligan, the principal of Valle Catholic High School, plans to steer his institution in a new direction in the spring of 2014 with a virtual learning environment.

Newswire: August 20, 2013

Volume 15, No. 32

PARENT POWER DEFICIENCY. The recently released Associated Press-NORC poll produced some troubling results concerning the role of parents in education. Just over half (54 percent) of Hispanic parents believe they have “a great deal or a lot of influence over their child’s education.” That figure only goes lower when applied to black parents (50) and white parents (34). These numbers reveal that Parent Power – regardless of race or socioeconomic status – is sorely lacking. It’s truly a sad commentary when so many parents feel they don’t have a say in the schools where their children attend. Lawmakers and school officials need to be making sure they are promoting the types of policies and transparency that engages parents directly in their children’s education. Be sure to check out the Parent Power Index to see how much power you really have in your state.

CHOICE FOR ALL. If AP-NORC only polled parents in Louisiana, there’s a good chance those percentages would’ve been higher. With its pilot Course Choice scholarship program, Louisiana continues to lead in providing more Parent Power than most states. John White announced last week that nearly 3,500 students in the Course Choice program would be able to receive a voucher. The program is designed for students in failing schools to take online and in-person courses with public and private providers. This innovative program does not siphon money from school budgets, but has nonetheless attracted opposition. Despite the critics, program advocates remain hopeful the funding will not dry up next year, and will be available for future students in need of better options.

DIVORCING PHILLY. On second thought, it’s possible many of those powerless parents can be found in Pennsylvania. Brian Hackford is one such parent, claiming he is ‘divorcing’ his hometown of Philadelphia mainly due to the state of public education. Hackford has decided to move his family out of the city in search of better educational opportunities for his three children. Local realtor Christopher Plant tries to create an image of Parent Power for prospective home buyers. But try as he might, seats in Philly’s charter schools are hard to come by with 30,000 students currently on waiting lists and not enough of other options to woo parents who want what’s best for their kids. Currently, the Philadelphia school district is experiencing a financial crisis, uncertain of where requested funds will come from, all the while negotiating a union contract that expires at the end of August. This is a chance for Keystone lawmakers to reflect on and examine the Philly situation, and realize these families are in need of more options. It may be too late for Brian Hackford, but not too late for parents who still call Philadelphia home to do something about it.

DON’T “WAIVER” ON PUSH FOR STANDARDS. Last week, the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waivers given to Washington State, Kansas and Oregon were placed on “high risk” status after the three state governments failed to develop teacher evaluation standards tied with student growth. By designating the waivers of all three states as “high risk,” the Department of Education revealed the glaring need for federal accountability standards. In a National Journal commentary piece, Center for Education Reform President Jeanne Allen points out how local school districts have embraced the lack of federal oversight with open arms, nostalgically enjoying the structure and authority they had prior to the NCLB era. Thanks to the recent missteps by Washington, Kansas and Oregon, it’s now abundantly clear that state and local entities need more oversight if they are going to spend federal funds.

15 YEARS OF FRIENDSHIP. Jeanne Allen is speaking today at the Friendship Public Charter School Convocation in Washington, DC to help commemorate Friendship’s 15 years of providing vision, commitment and service to its students. CER board member Donald Hense founded Friendship and over the last 15 years, the schools have grown to serve nearly 8,000 students and on average have boasted over 90% graduation rates since its first graduating class in 2003. In the spirit of looking back on past achievements and successes, Allen will discuss the launch of EdReform University, an exciting new resource that seeks to address the importance of understanding the history of past efforts, so reformers and policymakers can be successful for the future.

LESS THAN TWO MONTHS! There’s still time to RSVP for “CER at 20” Conference and Gala on October 9th, now less than two months away. Help CER celebrate 20 years of facilitating lasting, substantive and structural education reform in the US, honor the ed reform “pioneers” and see what lies ahead. There are also opportunities to become a sponsor for CER at 20, which promises a whole host of benefits. You can RSVP for “CER at 20’ here.

Daily Headlines for August 20, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Toward a Better Education System
National Review Online, August 19, 2013
The United States has become a global leader in education spending, while also becoming a global laggard in student achievement. Our students have fallen behind their international peers in math and science. The result is that only one quarter of the students who do earn a high-school diploma are prepared for college. Despite high unemployment, there are 3 million skilled jobs going unfilled because companies cannot find qualified applicants.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

School tax credits prompt lawsuit
Montgomery Advertiser, August 20, 2013
On the first day of school for many Alabama children, the Southern Poverty Law Center took aim at one of the most controversial measures to come out of the Alabama Legislature’s 2013 regular session.

CONNECTICUT

Persistence Key To Education Reform Effort
Opinion, Hartford Courant, August 19, 2013
Connecticut needs to do much more to help low-income children succeed in school.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. traditional public school teacher pay is higher than charters
Washington Post, August 19, 2013
Teachers in the District’s traditional public schools earn more than their counterparts at nearly every D.C. charter school, according to a Washington Post review of teacher salaries across the city, with many city teachers earning salaries that are thousands of dollars higher.

FLORIDA

Hillcrest charter school starts year in temporary location
Miami Herald, August 19, 2013
Florida Intercultural Academy’s new school building in Hollywood’s Hillcrest community was not ready for students Monday.

GEORGIA

State school superintendent weighing run for governor
Column, Macon Telegraph, August 20, 2013
If public education in Georgia doesn’t have enough problems, there is now a high-profile ruckus between Gov. Nathan Deal and State School Superintendent Dr. John Barge. It has gotten so peevish that there is talk the school superintendent may challenge Deal in the Republican gubernatorial primary next spring.

HAWAII

DOE releases first round of Strive HI test scores
Honolulu Star-Advertiser, August 19, 2013
Fourteen public schools racked up the most points on the Department of Education’s new performance scale that goes beyond standardized test scores and looks at, for example, a school’s attendance, graduation and college-going rates, and the achievement gap between a school’s high-needs students and their peers.

INDIANA

Proposed charter schools ays it wants to cooperate with D.205
NW Times, August 19, 2013
The operators of several Chicago charter schools wanting to expand to the south suburbs said Monday they see themselves as being in cooperation — rather than competition — with existing public schools.

ILLINOIS

335 schools lost teachers in CTU layoffs
Chicago Sun Times, August 20, 2013
About 400 Chicago Public Schools — a vast majority of the district — laid off teachers in July in the wake of budget cuts, even some schools projected to gain students from shuttered schools or neighborhood growth, a Chicago Sun-Times analysis has found.

Chicago Public School holds welcome events at schools like Haley
Chicago Tribune, August 19, 2013
The low turnout of children from West Pullman at Haley’s party late last week is an indication of the challenges CPS faces across the city as it attempts to shift students from 47 schools closed in June to new schools, often in different neighborhoods controlled by rival gangs.

LOUISIANA

Charter group’s application to take over failing school turned down
WAFB, August 19, 2013
J. K. Haynes Charter Elementary was one of the first to charter a school in the state 16 years ago. In that time, the school has been awarded by the state for being exemplary and increasing student performance. But when the group turned in an application to charter another school, they were surprised the state told them they did not have the experience.

Opponents, supporters speak up on proposal to allow up to 4 charter schools in Lafayette
The Advertiser, August 19, 2013
Local citizens and education stakeholders heard different views about what charter schools can mean for a school district during a Monday forum.

MASSACHUSETTS

Education Reform Group Backs Connolly For Mayor
WBUR, August 20, 2013
Stand for Children, a national education reform group known for its aggressive brand of politics, is poised to spend more than $500,000 backing City Councilor John Connolly in his campaign for mayor.

MICHIGAN

Even high-performing Michigan schools score poorly in new color-based ratings
Detroit Free Press, August 20, 2013
A new accountability system being launched today for Michigan schools shows many have a long way to go to meet ambitious goals set by the state — with most schools and districts earning a mark that indicates they’re in need of improvement. Few schools earned the best rating.

NEW JERSEY

Jersey City adding “ninth grade academies” at three more high schools
Jersey Journal, August 20, 2013
Jersey City’s public schools yesterday launched “ninth grade academies” at three high schools, a program officials say is an effort to create more of a “community atmosphere” among freshman students and boost the district’s graduation rate.

NEW MEXICO

Community voices opinion of proposed charter school
The Daily Times, August 19, 2013
Members of the Shiprock community came out Monday to voice their support for and opposition to a proposed charter school that would infuse its curriculum with the Diné heritage.

NORTH CAROLINA

Onslow’s first charter school opens its doors
The Daily News, August 19, 2013
Destinee Farrior and JaiKei Taylor were already competing for class president two hours into their first day of school at Onslow County’s first charter school.

OREGON

Measuring good teaching
Editorial, Register Guard, August 20, 2013
Last week, the U.S. Department of Education told Oregon to find a way to evaluate public school teachers’ performance, or the state will become subject to the federal No Child Left Behind law. But even crude tools can be useful. If the threat spurs Oregon to devise an evaluation system that actually helps students, the warning will have served a good purpose.

PENNSYLVANIA

PFT ready to file grievance for members recalled in violation of contract’s seniority rules
Philadelphia Daily News, August 20, 2013
THE TEACHERS’ union will file a grievance for each member recalled by the district in violation of seniority rules in the current contract, Jerry Jordan, president of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, announced last night during a phone call with thousands of members, sources said.

RHODE ISLAND

Contested Charter School to Open in Providence
Rhode Island Public Radio, August 19, 2013
Achievement First, a big box charter operator from Connecticut, opens its first school in Rhode Island this month. Plans for Achievement First in Rhode Island originally called for a network of public charter schools serving students in Kindergarten through the end of high school, but the proposal almost immediately ran into opposition from parents and teachers.

R.I. spends $44 million of Race to the TOp grant
Providence Journal, August 19, 2013
Three years ago, amid great fanfare, Rhode Island announced that it was one of 12 states to win a $75-million federal education grant called Race to the Top.

TENNESSEE

Fewer low-income TN schools on reward list
The Tennessean, August 20, 2013
Low-income schools tumbled from the top of Tennessee’s “reward schools” list this year as the state struggled with a widening performance gap between poor students and their wealthier peers.

VERMONT

Achievement Gap Holds Back Lower Income Students
Vermont Public Radio, August 19, 2013
The latest Adequate Yearly Progress Report for Vermont schools has been released and it shows that the majority of schools are still working on improvement.

ONLINE LEARNING

Alternative high school will mix online, in-person interaction
Duluth News Tribune, August 20, 2013
Students who enroll in the Duluth school district’s alternative high school are moving to a four-day, part online, part face-to-face instruction this fall.

Baldwin County school system gets green light for virtual high school; cap set at 30 students
Huntsville Times, August 19, 2013
The Baldwin County Board of Education has received approval from the State Board of Education to launch its Digital Renaissance Virtual High School, and has begun registering students for classes.

Online school growing in popularity with Arizona students, parents
Arizona Family, August 19, 2013
There are all kinds of schooling options in Arizona from traditional public and private schools to charter schools and even an online school.

H-H to incorporate ‘hybrid’ learning model
The Intelligencer, August 20, 2013
The Hatboro-Horsham School District will be incorporating a $238,000 “hybrid” learning model into its curriculum this year that utilizes computers more and blends digital instructions with face-to-face teaching.

Pioneer Valley collaboratives join to apply for virtual school certificate
The Republican, August 19, 2013
The Collaboration for Educational Services and the Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative are teaming up to apply for one of the two newly created certificates to become a virtual school in Massachusetts.

SCA signs with charter school alternative
The News Item, August 20, 2013
Southern Columbia Area School Board approved a contract Monday night with Behavioral Health Associates to provide online education services as an alternative to charter and cyber-charter schools.

Virtual schooling offers new options
Opinion, Lansing State Journal, August 20, 2013
Have you ever stopped to think about how many of life’s daily activities have changed in the past 10 to 20 years, and how technology has impacted those changes?

Daily Headlines for August 19, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

A civics lesson from AMerica’s education debate
Opinion, Summit Daily, August 18, 2013
Paradoxes come in all different forms, but here’s one that perfectly fits this Gilded Age: The most significant lesson from the ongoing debate about American education has little to do with schools and everything to do with money. This lesson comes from a series of recent scandals that expose the financial motives of the leaders of the so-called education “reform” movement — the one that is trying to privatize public schools.

AP-NORC Poll: demographics drive views of schools
Associated Press, August 19, 2013
Minority and low-income parents are more likely to see serious problems in their schools – from low expectations to bullying to out-of-date technology and textbooks – than those who are affluent or white, according to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research Poll.

AP-NORC Poll: Parents back high-stakes testing
Associated Press, August 17, 2013
Often criticized as too prescriptive and all-consuming, standardized tests have support among parents, who view them as a useful way to measure both students’ and schools’ performances, according to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll.

Five cheers for choice
Editorial, Washington Times, August 19, 2013
For many liberals, “choice” begins and ends with abortion. This inconsistency is where advocates of education reform should challenge the defenders of the status quo, which nearly everyone agrees has failed miserably.

War on the COre
Op-Ed, New York Times, August 19, 2013
I respect, really I do, the efforts by political scientists and pundits to make sense of the current Republican Party. There is intellectual virtue in the search for historical antecedents and philosophical underpinnings.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

School funding overhaul proposed
Arizona Daily Star, August 18, 2013
A state lawmaker wants to create a new funding structure that would eliminate school district override and bond elections.

ARKANSAS

Charter School Sector Growing In Northwest Arkansas
Northwest Arkansas Times, August 18, 2013
The number of students attending charter schools in Northwest Arkansas will increase by about 50 percent when two new schools open Monday.

State board rejects 5 school-choice appeals
Northwest Arkansas Times, August 17, 2013
The state Board of Education refused to overturn Friday the decisions of local school districts that had refused five families’ requests to transfer their children to other schools under the Arkansas Public School Choice Act of 2013.

CALIFORNIA

San Francisco’s Metro High charter school merges with another campus.
San Francisco Examiner, August 19, 2013
A charter school located in the Bayview-Hunters Point neighborhood quietly closed its doors this month and merged with another school 4 miles west to preserve money.

COLORADO

Eagle County Charter Academy opens new $12 million building
Vail Daily, August 18, 2013
She’s the Eagle County Charter Academy principal, and there are about 12 million things to do in the wild scramble to open their new building before school starts this week.

CONNECTICUT

Stamford schools struggle to close achievement gap
Stamford Advocate, August 17, 2013
In a city and state plagued by some of the nation’s widest disparities in educational achievement, Stamford schools made modest progress last year to close the significant gaps in reading and math scores between racial and ethnic groups, and between income and English language fluency levels.

FLORIDA

Florida teachers still waiting for first raise in a long time
Orlando Sentinel, August 18, 2013
Teachers welcomed the news earlier this year when Gov. Rick Scott called for $2,500 pay hikes and then kept up the raises-for-teachers drumbeat in the months that followed.

New wave of charter schools ‘reality of competition,’ Duval superintendent says
Florida Times Union, AUgust 18, 2013
Nicholas Tlulouse is trying something new this year. His grandparents home-schooled him for a while, and Nicholas also spent time in public schools. But on Monday, the 13-year-old will start classes in a charter school.

INDIANA

School accountability on the ropes
Journal and Courier, August 17, 2013
In the same week that the board of Fort Wayne Community Schools, the largest district in the state, rejected the notion of Indiana’s A-to-F grading system for schools, Tippecanoe County’s biggest district hedged its bets in a different way.

LOUISIANA

Teacher tenure law ruled unconstitutional, in part, by Louisiana judge
Times-Picayune, August 16, 2013
A north Louisiana judge on Friday declared part of a 2012 law overhauling teacher tenure in the state unconstitutional. State District Judge Benjamin Jones ruled in a lawsuit against the Monroe City School Board. He said the constitutional rights of a teacher facing dismissal were violated when the board followed an appeal process outlined in the law.

MARYLAND

Prince George’s starts academic year with initiative to transform struggling schools
Washington Post, August 18, 2013
For the first time in years, hundreds of Prince George’s County 4-year-olds will spend an entire day in a pre-kindergarten classroom when schools open Monday, part of coordinated county government and school system efforts to improve academic achievement.

MASSACHUSETTS

As charter caps are hit, House chair sees potential for ‘modest’ changes
Georgetown Record, August 17, 2013
As Boston opened its last allowable charter school on Monday and other communities bump up against limits, state lawmakers could be willing to lift the cap in some districts, a top lawmaker who steers education policy said Thursday.

Big changes in student rolls pose challenges
Boston Globe, August 17, 2013
It wasn’t dissatisfaction with Somerville schools that prompted Tony Pierantozzi’s next-door neighbor to move with his two children to a 2,000-square-foot condominium in neighboring Everett.

The next step in education reform
Editorial, Metro West Daily News, August 18, 2013
Massachusetts has learned a few things through 20 years of education reform: That failing schools can be turned around by empowering educators to do things differently and expect more of themselves and their student

MICHIGAN

Michigan to debut color-coded system for measuring school performance
Detroit Free Press, August 19, 2013
Parents, get ready for a brand new look at how well your child’s school is doing.

MISSOURI

Pupblic-provate debate
Letter, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 19, 2013
Reading your front page headline “A public-private debate” (Aug. 11) developed an question about “charter” schools and how they fit into the public/private debate. How, you ask? It was the concept of critics “bristling” at having transfer students apply for public education funding so they could attend a private school of their choice.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Time to put school voucher program out of its misery
Opinion, Portsmouth Herald, August 18, 2013
How is it that New Hampshire’s voucher tax credit program can find only 15 public school students who want vouchers? And plans to give them almost $11,000 apiece to leave their public schools and go to private schools!

NEW JERSEY

School districts prepare to implement new AchieveNJ evaluation standards
South Jersey Times, August 18, 2013
Besides bulletin boards, lesson plans and class rosters, local teachers have another task to check off their to-do list this September — get prepared for the new, statewide performance evaluation policy, AchieveNJ, formerly known as Excellent Educators for New Jersey, or EE4NJ.

NEW MEXICO

Bring APS innovation to teacher evaluations
ABQ Journal, August 19, 2013
Albuquerque Public Schools has moved closer to the head of the class when it comes to school options, responding to competition and offering its high school students more choices. If only it was as responsive recognizing and rewarding excellent teachers and identifying and mentoring struggling ones.

NEW YORK

For New York’s Next Mayor, a Plan for City Schools
Letter, New York Times, August 19, 2013
“In Mayoral Race, Looking for Substance in Schools Conversation” (Political Memo, Aug. 9) points out that the mayoral candidates have yet to put forward comprehensive plans for New York schools. But parents, teachers, students and community leaders have created a blueprint for how the next mayor can improve public education.

Schools for scandal
Editorial, New York Daily News, August 18, 2013
The colleges and universities that funnel people into the teaching profession have long maintained that they send graduates into the classroom confident they have been well prepared for the work, even as educational achievement has fallen.

Some new teachers may forego traditional pay model
Journal News, August 18, 2013
One of teaching’s most hallowed traditions may be on the way out under a new contract that is on the table in a northern Westchester County district.

NORTH CAROLINA

N.C. teacher pay stranded by shifts in education laws
Charlotte Observer, August 17, 2013
It’s a sentiment that’s been widely echoed since lawmakers passed the budget in July. North Carolina’s educators find themselves stranded between two compensation systems.

OHIO

Strapped for money and staff, hundreds of Ohio districts unprepared for third-grade reading guarantee
Akron Beacon Journal, August 17, 2013
With only days until many open their doors, at least 342 public school districts and charter schools have notified the Ohio Department of Education that they are not prepared for Ohio’s new third-grade reading guarantee, which takes effect this year.

Student growth key to teacher’s ratings
Columbus Dispatch, August 18, 2013
Ohio teachers are about to learn a lot more about how effective they are in the classroom.

OREGON

Oregon can turn ‘high-risk’ status of teacher evaluations into an advantage: Agenda 2013
Editorial, Oregonian, August 18, 2013
Some states have rushed to make student test scores a big part of their teacher evaluations. Not Oregon. This state has flown with its own wings, you might say, hoping to alight upon an evaluation system that could be useful for schools, embraced by teachers and acceptable to the reform-minded feds.

PENNSYLVANIA

Pittsburgh Public Schools 6th grade mentoring success brings expansion
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 19, 2013
It’s a time of emotional, academic, physical, social and psychological changes. And adult mentors can help.

School crisis drives families from city
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 18, 2013
Brian Hackford is divorcing Philadelphia, citing irreconcilable differences over public education.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Zais, educators remain at odds
Greenville News, August 17, 2013
Nobody expected a conventional management style when they elected a retired brigadier general as state superintendent of education.

TENNESSEE

Teacher Face License Loss
Wall Street Journal, August 16, 2013
Many states have begun to link teachers’ pay to their effectiveness in the classroom. On Friday, Tennessee joined a handful that are taking the idea further: pull the license of teachers whose students consistently fail to improve.

Northside School for Detained Juveniles Opens
Memphis Daily NEws, August 19, 2013
The charter school that opened for class Thursday, Aug. 15, in North Memphis is unique for several reasons.

TEXAS

Most charter schools meet new Texas standards
Dallas Morning News, August 17, 2013
Four out of five Texas charter schools passed academic muster under the state’s new rating system. As for the one in five that didn’t? A new charter school law promises to weed them out if they don’t improve.

WASHINGTON

Strengthen state law on teacher evaluations
Bellingham Herald, August 19, 2013
Washington state should take the warning from the U.S. Department of Education seriously: Get the state’s teacher evaluation system in line with federal standards or face some fairly dire consequences.

WISCONSIN

College applicant told charter school diploma is worthless
FOX 6 Now, August 18, 2013
Students are the ones returning to the classroom this fall, but with so many schools to choose from, its parents who need to do their homework.

School choice a contradiction in terms
Editorial, The Northwestern, August 18, 2013
School choice? Hardly. The expansion of school vouchers in Wisconsin represents a false choice, a point punctuated by the fact that a majority of the applicants for an expanded voucher program already attend private schools.

ONLINE LEARNING

3 new e-schools OK’d after state ban is lifted
Columbus Dispatch, August 19, 2013
For the first time in eight years, the number of Internet charter schools in Ohio will expand after the state legislature lifted a moratorium on creating new e-schools.

Academy is a success
Column, Port Huron Times Herald, August 18, 2013
The St. Clair County Virtual Learning Academy opened as a high school chartered by the St. Clair County Regional Educational Service Agency in September 2009 after being a pilot program for six months. After four years, its success can be clearly measured.

Collaborative joins ‘virtual’ school bid for Valley
New Hampshire Gazette, August 19, 2013
Another virtual school may come to the Pioneer Valley. The Northampton-based Collaborative for Educational Services, which serves public schools in Hampshire and Franklin counties, is working with the Lower Pioneer Valley Educational Collaborative on a joint application for a Commonwealth of Massachusetts Virtual School.

Online learning growing quick
Editorial, The Advocate, August 18, 2013
As another school year approaches, more students will be opting out of traditional classrooms in favor of online learning away from brick-and-mortar campuses. In that shifting environment, how will Louisiana’s colleges and universities compete?

Virtual Academy expands enrollment
Standard Speaker, August 18, 2013
The Hazleton Area Virtual Academy that accepted high school students the past four years will expand to grades seven and eight this year.

Daily Headlines for August 16, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

National teachers union wisely engages dissenters
Editorial, Seattle Times, August 15, 2013
The National Education Association engages the critics in its ranks, a strategy based on inclusion and survival.

School Standrads’ Debut Is Rocky, and Critics Pounce
New York Times, August 16, 2013
The Common Core, a set of standards for kindergarten through high school that has been ardently supported by the Obama administration and many business leaders and state legislatures, is facing growing opposition from both the right and the left even before it has been properly introduced into classrooms.

STATE COVERAGE

COLORADO

Coronado Pathways Charter, Not Your Parents’ High School
Coronado Eagle and Journal, August 15, 2013
Opening its doors for the first time this fall is Coronado Pathways Charter School. At the top of the school’s organizational chart is Director Kevin Nicolls, who describes the type of student who might benefit from the new high school. “It’s an alternative school for traditional students who are passionate about their sport, their art form, creative expression and cannot fully pursue a traditional high school schedule.”

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Va. governor says local control is key to school success
Washington Post, August 15, 2013
Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell (R) emphasized the central importance of locally controlled public schools Thursday during a visit to T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria.

FLORIDA

Florida school districts need more power to do their job
Opinion, Sun Sentinel, August 16, 2013
Since 1999, Florida public schools have been turned into the equivalent of laboratory rats in the name of sweeping education reform. Republican governors and their lapdog Legislatures have sworn that they know how to make good ones great and ailing ones healthy.

GEORGIA

Druid Hills charter cluster vote was neither fair nor legal
Atlanta Journal Constitution Blog, August 15, 2013
The Druid Hills High School charter cluster vote prompted this critical response from Georgia State University associate professor Henry F. “Chip” Carey, who has been an official observer of elections worldwide.

IDAHO

Commission approves charter school
Idaho Mountain Express, August 16, 2013
The Idaho Public Charter School Commission on Thursday approved an application for Syringa Mountain School to become a state-funded charter school.

ILLINOIS

Dist. 15 must offer choice to students at seven schools
Daily Herald, August 15, 2013
Due to benchmarks many officials consider arbitrary and practically impossible to attain, Palatine Township Elementary District 15 must offer students at seven of its schools the option of transferring.

INDIANA

IPS asks for state takeover records from Tony Bennett’s tenure
Indianapolis Star, August 16, 2013
Members of the Indianapolis Public Schools Board want to see former Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett’s emails, too.

IPS board member calls for one application process for district, charter schools
Indianapolis Star, August 16, 2013
Indianapolis Public School Board member Caitlin Hannon on Thursday called for one application process for district and charter schools in the city and said the district should consider sharing school building space and transportation with charters.

Let’s stop the religious debate over vouchers
Editorial, News-Sentinel, August 16, 2013
It’s time to focus on how well the program works for children.

More accountability put in place for Dunes charter school
NW Times, August 15, 2013
Gary Sen. Earline Rogers, D-Gary, a retired teacher and a strong proponent of traditional public schools, said she sees nothing wrong with a charter school that has lost its authorizer shopping around for a new one.

KANSAS

Kansas is at ‘high risk’ of losing its waiver from the No Child Left Behind Act
Kansas City Star, August 15, 2013
Kansas was one of three states put on notice Thursday that it is at “high risk” of losing its waiver from the No Child Left Behind Act.

LOUISIANA

Course Choice voucher program will serve all students who want it for 2013-14
Times-Picyune, August 16, 2013
Enrollment in Louisiana’s unique Course Choice pilot program will reach almost 3,500, after the state Department of Education found $1 million to clear the 1,000-plus student wait list.

EBR School Board agrees to let two existing charters expand
The Advocate, August 15, 2013
The East Baton Rouge School Board on Thursday agreed to let two charter school groups already running schools in Baton Rouge add second schools as early as 2014, but rejected seven other applicants.

MAINE

Portland charter school denied occupancy approval
Portland Press Herald, August 15, 2013
The charter school plans to fix building code violations and start year one on time.

MARYLAND

Newark Charter High School ready to open
Newark Post, August 16, 2013
In 2001, Newark Charter School opened with 450 students housed in two nondescript modular buildings on Barksdale Road.

University Of Md. Partnership Puts Baltimore KIPP Students On Fast Track To College
WJZ-13, August 15, 2013
A partnership between the University of Maryland and one city school is designed to put students on the fast track to college.

MASSACHUSETTS

Argosy school proponents confidend in second bid for Fall River charter
Herald News, August 15, 2013
Students at the proposed Argosy Collegiate Charter School wouldn’t be called students. Instead they would be referred to as “scholars.”

House Chair discusses school caps
Malden Observer, August 15, 2013
As Boston opened its last allowable charter school on Monday and other communities bump up against limits, state lawmakers could be willing to lift the cap in some districts, a top lawmaker who steers education policy said Thursday.

MISSISSIPPI

Charter schools a bad deal for Miss., public education
Opinion, Clarion Ledger, August 16, 2013
Just what fiscally strapped Mississippi needs: two state boards overseeing public schools. We’ve had the state Board of Education that was written into Mississippi’s Constitution in 1984 as a long-sought progressive reform.

MISSOURI

County-wide district would help fix Normandy, Riverview Gardens schools
Column, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 16, 2013
All four of Missouri’s Constitutions in our rich history have promised every student in our state access to a free quality public education. Indeed, for any child to not have access to effective, free public education is a dereliction of duty on the part of the citizens of Missouri.

NEW JERSEY

Jersey City has fired four teachers in year since tenure reform law signed
Jersey Journal, August 16, 2013
Jersey City public school teachers have not fared well under the state’s tenure overhaul, which Gov. Chris Christie signed into law one year ago this month.

NJ schools turn to familiar instrument to measure teacher performance
New Jersey Spotlight, August 16, 2013
Charlotte Danielson talks about the challenges as her “Frameworks for Teaching” is adopted by more than 300 public school districts.

NEW YORK

City Expands Acclaimed Tech Schools
Wall Street Journal, August 16, 2013
The city Department of Education plans to expand its early college and career technical education high school program—lauded by President Obama in his State of the Union speech—with three new schools next year.

Charter schools need more accountability, Expert panel agrees
WCPO, August 15, 2013
Ohio’s rapidly expanding voucher and charter schools funding lacks critical accountability testing and consequences for poorly performing schools, a bipartisan panel of educators and state legislators involved in education agreed Thursday.

PENNSYLVANIA

Chesco charter loses fight to remain open
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 16, 2013
A Coatesville-area charter school lost a last-ditch attempt to stay open Thursday after a Commonwealth Court judge declined to stay the revocation of its charter.

Court rules against Graystone Academy
Daily Local News, August 15, 2013
A Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court judge Thursday denied Graystone Academy’s request to open for the start of school on Aug. 26.

Philadelphia Schools to Open on Time
Wall Street Journal, August 16, 2013
Cash Infusion of $50 Million Will Help Close a Budget Hole; Mayor and City-Council President Disagree on Source of Funding.

School choice tipped sclaes with judge in Pocono Mountain Charter School case
Pocono Record, August 16, 2013
The educational choice of parents and students would have been imperiled if the Pocono Mountain Charter School closed before an appeal was resolved, a judge wrote in a decision that allowed the school to remain open.

SRC unanimously passes suspensions of state school codes
Philadelphia Daily News, August 16, 2013
IN THE FACE of a fed-up Philadelphia community carrying insulting signs, the School Reform Commission voted unanimously yesterday to suspend school codes that affect employees’ seniority rights and wage increases, as well as charter-school growth.

TENNESSEE

Former Memphis mayor opens 7 charter schools, shows detractors he’s still got it
Memphis Commercial Appeal, August 15, 2013
Former Memphis mayor Willie Herenton opened seven charter schools Thursday on three campuses, pulling off what detractors said was a pipe dream and launching himself on the road toward a second legacy.

Teach for America alum heads new charter school
The Tennessean, August 15, 2013
Nikki Miller never thought she’d open a school. But for the past year and half, she dreamed of nothing but opening the doors to KIPP Nashville College Prep — KIPP Academy’s second charter middle school in the city — located in the Whites Creek area.

WASHINGTON

State’s ‘No Child’ waiver in jeopardy
Bellingham Herald, August 16, 2013
US Department of Education places waiver request on ‘high-risk’ status because of teacher evaluation rules.

WISCONSIN

McDonell Area Catholic Schools gets into top 25 for state voucher program
Chippewa Herald, August 15, 2013
McDonell Area Catholic Schools will be able to participate in the state’s voucher program but St. Paul Parish Catholic Church in Bloomer fell just short of the top 25 cutoff set by the state.

ONLINE LEARNING

3 days into the school year, TN Cyber Academy still not approved
WBIR, August 14, 2013
Hundreds of students across the state are still waiting to learn if they will be able to attend East Tennessee’s second virtual school, based in Campbell County.

Learning outside the classroom offers different opportunities for students
KFDA, August 16, 2013
With the school year quickly approaching, more parents are looking into different ways of educating their children.

Parents upset over demise of Virtual School
Alexandria Town Talk, August 16, 2013
Parents whose children successfully completed courses under the Louisiana Virtual School are unhappy that Superintendent of Education John White killed the state-run program in favor of privatization.

USD 457 rolling out virtual school program
Garden City Telegram, August 16, 2013
Much has changed since Mark Ronn went to school. Ronn, principal of Garden City Alternate Education Center, said his generation’s idea of school was showing up at the building for eight hours, eating lunch and maybe attending a football game on Friday nights.

West Clermont adjusts online costs
Cincinnati Enquirer, August 15, 2013
However, the most significant change will be the cost for enrollment in the district’s Virtual Academy, which provides students with an opportunity to take all of their coursework online.

Making Waves

Education Next has a new report that details the positive role charter schools play in improving other public schools around them. The report compiled media accounts and school district initiatives that indicate traditional public school officials not only take notice of charter schools in their districts, but also become motivated to improve their own schools as a result.

This is a longstanding concept that echoes what CER has been saying all along about the lasting “ripple effect” that occurs as a result of introducing choice and competition to school districts. In 2007, award winning author and “Reformer Performer” Joe Williams collected stories from all 50 states that demonstrated the cause and effect relationship of introducing charter schools, and the steps taken by traditional public schools to keep up with the competition. For example, when San Carlos Learning Center in California soon became a model of success, schools nationwide soon adopted its learning techniques, including the very schools that had been railing against its opening. When a charter school for disabled students began to attract students on Long Island, NY, local schools responded by making available more resources for those students in need of them.

This past year, the Washington, DC public school system as a whole boasted the highest growth in reading and math proficiency since 2008 and 2009, respectively. The scores were part of a wider trend since 2007 that not only shows charter school students outperforming traditional public students, but also contributing to the overall improvement of DC Public Schools. DC Mayor Vincent Gray rightly viewed the 2013 DC-CAS scores as proof our nation’s capital is on the right track in transforming public education.

These anecdotes are not isolated incidents, and demonstrate the positive role charter schools play in shaking up the status quo and improving the educational landscape. We hope that these stories will serve as inspiration for more ripples that improve public education for students and parents.

Austin White: The Value of Hands On Learning

After taking my final morning commute, I sat down at my computer one last time with the daunting task of putting words to my DC experience. This morning’s rare but refreshing cool breeze was a faint reminder of home, almost as if it intended to make today’s finality more vivid. The California sun was soon to be a reality again, and this experience soon to be a memory. Staring at a blank word document, all I could think was, “Where to begin…”

I thought back to last spring when I decided to spend this summer in DC. I had actually recently returned from a semester abroad in Rome where I took a break from my political science coursework to study art history. Italy had shown me the value of hands-on learning, as I became completely inspired by the opportunity to physically visit the paintings, statues and architecture that we studied in class. When I then returned to UCSB, feeling a sense of urgency to get back on track with my major classes, I began to wonder how I could integrate that same feeling of tangibility to my interests in political science. So on my first day back on campus when I heard about the UCDC program, where I could earn academic units for interning in DC to gain real world experience, the decision to enroll seemed obvious.

After researching the multitude of internship opportunities this city offers, I realized that I really wanted to get involved with something education related. I had (and still have) tentative plans to study education in some form or another in graduate school, and figured substantiating the learning process with a hands-on internship experience could provide a similar inspiration to what I found in Rome. My time abroad had already sparked a deeper interest in education, as I began to wonder how all students could benefit from the alternative forms of instruction I had been exposed to. I have never been naïve enough to assume everyone has the opportunity to study art in Rome, but after reading further I saw parallels within the charter school movement that could give students options for different kinds of learning. I quickly found CER and saw that it was exactly what I was looking for: a non-profit research organization dedicated to advocating for diverse learning options. Fortunately they agreed to take me on as an intern, and three days after school ended I found myself in DC ready to start working.

Nine weeks later, and somehow it is already over. In some sense, just from the sheer quantity of newly digested information, it feels like I have been with CER for a lifetime. On the other hand, the fast moving pace of this remarkably active organization made the experience fly by. Not only did I learn about the substance of education issues—the wars being waged over charter policy in states around the country, the ongoing discussion of Common Core, the debates over online learning and technology in the classroom, and so much more—I learned what goes in to running a non-profit and how much a small team can accomplish. Never again will I see an envelope filled with informational pamphlets without remembering that someone has to fill them, a website without thinking of the whole team who daily manages it, a collection of research without wondering who gathered it, and most importantly, never again will I hear of an education policy development without knowing the incredible effort needed to produce it.

I emerge once more convinced that substantiating classroom instruction with real world experience has been vital for my own education, and feel compelled to help future generations to gain similar opportunities. With just one year left in college, this experience provided an incredible insight into what the future may hold for me. I will always remember this summer as one that confirmed my passion for education issues and inspired me to continue on a path towards a career in the field.

After graduating next spring, I plan to teach English abroad to gain yet another new educational perspective, and can only hope that I find as significant of a learning experience as my time in DC. I can never say it enough, but thank you to all the staff of CER enough for providing me with such a great opportunity and helping me to learn so much. It truly has been a fantastic summer.

School Choice a Big Winner in 2013 Legislative Session

By Dan Way
Asheville Tribune
August 14, 2013

School choice advocates won several high-profile battles this year over bills to expand and strengthen the charter school movement and to award private school vouchers to students struggling in public schools.

“The great news for families is that the charter school reforms approved by the legislature provide even more high-quality educational options for their children,” said Terry Stoops, director of research and education studies at the John Locke Foundation.

“The new charter school advisory board will ensure that only applicants with a sound financial and educational plan receive a charter from the state. For existing charter schools, laws that make grade expansion easier and virtually guarantee sibling admission provide much-needed stability and relief for families with multiple children,” Stoops said.

The General Assembly has done more to expand the availability of charter schools in the last three years than at any time since 1996, when charter schools first won legislative approval, he said.

“The bottom line is that there are more charter schools, and more open seats in those schools, as a result of the bold initiatives passed by the Republican-led state legislature,” Stoops said.

Senate Bill 337 establishes a Charter School Advisory Board designed to enhance oversight and speed approval of charter school applications. Initially, the bill gave the board policymaking powers, but the final version changed the board to advisory in nature after legal analysts noted that the state constitution says only the State Board of Education can set policy for public schools, including public charter schools.

“The bill would require the State Board of Education to establish charter fees of no less than $500 and no more than $1,000, require charter schools to comply with criminal background check policies of the [school district] in which they’re located, require that 50 percent of teachers in grades K-12 be certified,” Rep. Jon Hardister, RGuilford, said during debate on the final conference committee report.

House Bill 250 makes it easier for charter schools to expand. Charter schools now may increase enrollment as much as 20 percent from one school year to the next and add one grade more than they currently offer without having to gain approval from the State Board of Education.

Most of the education establishment’s rhetorical fireworks were reserved for the $20 million included in the budget over the next two years for House Bill 944, the Opportunity Scholarship Act, which drew immediate threats of lawsuits.

“You are placing a sign on each school’s door that says, ‘Quality educators need not apply,'” North Carolina Association of Educators President Rodney Ellis wrote in a two-page letter to lawmakers.

“We will now shift our focus on the judiciary, where we are confident that we will find yet another victory in our struggle to provide quality public schools for every child,” Ellis wrote.

The scholarships (aka vouchers) provide as much as $4,200 to help pay for private school education when a parent chooses to remove a child from public school. The scholarships expand on current state programs offering taxpayer subsidies for private prekindergarten and college students. North Carolina would become the 10th state to offer such K-12 scholarships.

“Opportunity scholarships will become a critical cornerstone in meeting the growing needs of children who show up at the schoolhouse doors each year still unable to read, write, and solve math problems at grade level,” said Darrell Allison, president of Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina.

“We believe the alleged constitutional challenges to opportunity scholarships are misguided at best, and, at worst, impede the progress of children who can’t wait another year to get the foundation they need to be successful in life. These scholarships are an additional tool to help the state meets its constitutional obligation to provide a ‘sound, basic education’ for every child,” Allison said.

Also passed was House Bill 269, Children with Disabilities Scholarships Grants, which replaces and expands the special needs tax credit, allowing more families to benefit from the program. Low-income families who paid no or very little state personal income tax were not able to take full advantage of the tax credit. The scholarships, however, will be open to children from all income levels.

“The scholarships will be awarded to reimburse tuition and special education and related services for eligible children entering kindergarten or first grade or children transferring from a public school to a nonpublic school or homeschool. The grants cannot exceed $3,000 per semester,” beginning in the 2014 spring semester, said sponsor Rep. Paul “Skip” Stam, R-Wake.

There are reports “from across the state from parents of children with special needs who have struggled in our current public school system now to get all of the services that are required,” said Julia Adams, assistant government relations director for The ARC of North Carolina.

Kara Kerwin, vice president of external affairs at the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Education Reform, applauded the school choice reforms. “States where parents have options to choose tend to yield higher growth rates in student achievement,” Kerwin said.

North Carolina currently ranks 21st nationally on the Parent Power Index, which measures the ability in each state of a parent to exercise choices no matter what their income or child’s level of academic achievement, engage with their local school and board, and have a voice in the systems that surround the child, according to the Center for Education Reform.

Daily Headlines for August 15, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

The Architect of School Reform Who Turned Against It
The Atlantic, August 14, 2013
The survival of the school-reform movement, as it’s known to champions and detractors alike, is no longer assured. Even a couple years ago, few would have predicted this turn of events for a crusade that began with the publication of A Nation at Risk in 1983, gathered momentum as charter schools and Teach for America took off in the 1990s, and surged into the spotlight with No Child Left Behind in 2001.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

AZ charter school doesn’t open, leaves parents scrambling
KPHO, August 14, 2013
The American Leadership Academy at Anthem in San Tan Valley was set to open its doors Tuesday to about 250 kids ranging from kindergarten to sixth grade, but the doors remained closed, leaving parents and kids scrambling.

CALIFORNIA

Charter school enrollment climbs in Sacramento region as private schools lost students
Merced Sun Star, August 15 2013
Dozens of private schools across the Sacramento region closed their doors in recent years as enrollment plummeted and students transferred to public schools.

County school board overrules rejection of Caliber charter school in Richmond
Contra Costa Times, August 14, 2013
With a few caveats, the Contra Costa County board of education on Wednesday unanimously approved a charter school petition that the West Contra Costa school board rejected unanimously in May.

‘We the Parents’ Chronicles L.A.’s Controversial Charter School Law
Daily Beast, August 15, 2013
A new documentary takes the side of activists who tried to use L.A.’s ‘parent trigger law’ to turn a public school into a charter. Eliza Shapiro on the education battle behind the movie.

COLORADO

Latino students in Colorado slowly closing gaps on achievement tests
Denver Post, August 15, 2013
Statewide test results released Wednesday show the achievement gap between Hispanic children and their white counterparts narrowing, but the slow pace of improvement suggests that shrinking the margin to single digits will take decades.

DELAWARE

Kinks in teacher evaluation system will work out
Editorial, News Journal, August 15, 2013
Every new system comes with kinks. Delaware’s new teacher evaluation system is no exception. So it is not surprising that a survey of teachers indicates a growing number of them are dissatisfied with the state’s assessment.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter Schools ‘Confident’ of Finances
Washington Informer, August 14, 2013
The D.C. Public Charter School Board (PCSB), Office of State Superintendent of Education and the Office of the Chief Financial Officer recently announced results from the annual financial analysis of District public charter schools, which show that their financial health significantly improved during the past year.

DCPS and union leaders strike collegial tone in welcoming new teachers
Washington Post, August 14, 2013
Chancellor Kaya Henderson and Elizabeth Davis, the new Washington Teachers Union president, struck a collegial and cooperative tone Wednesday morning at an orientation for new D.C. Public Schools teachers.

FLORIDA

Charter schools under perform public schools
Letter, St. Augustine Record, August 14, 2013
Meanwhile, another former Florida governor calls for the expansion of “school choice” for Florida’s students as a means to improving education, despite some big red flags that research provides us.

LOUISIANA

Potential Caddo charter schools win state approval
Shreveport Times, August 14, 2013
The state’s top education board cleared the way Wednesday for as many as six new Caddo Parish charter schools, with three potentially free to open as early as this fall.

School board to take up strategic plan, charter schools
The Advocate, August 14, 2013
The East Baton Rouge Parish School Board on Thursday is dusting off a long-dormant plan that recommends automatically firing a quarter of the poorest-performing teachers, sacking principals who don’t meet three-year goals and paying teachers more if they’ll work in struggling schools.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter plan conflicts with board member’s role
Letter, Eagle-Tribune, August 15, 2013
Regarding the story on the proposed charter school to be located in Andover, I am surprised and concerned that David Birnbach would be leading the application for it. I think that his role as a School Committee member should preclude his involvement. The inherent conflicts are so apparent, I am surprised that he has not resigned his seat. I would urge him to do so.

MICHIGAN

About a dozen schools expected to be added to state reform system next year
Detroit Free Press, August 14, 2013
The state school superintendent will decide in coming months which of about a dozen schools will be removed from their current districts and placed into the state reform school system in 2014.

MINNESOTA

University of Minnesota takes on school achievement gap — Community organizations collaborate on Northside research
Daily Planet, August 14, 2013
Last spring’s edition of Connect, a quarterly newsletter of the University of Minnesota’s College of Education and Human Development (CEHD), announced a major initiative to reduce the Black-White achievement gap in Minnesota.

MISSISSIPPI

Are Charter Schools a scheme?
Opinion, Sun Herald, August 14, 2013
This new board, formally called the Mississippi Charter School Authorizer Board, was created by Republicans now running state government to oversee what amounts to a new layer of public education. Charter schools are seen by the GOPers as a silver bullet to “fix the broken public school system.”

MISSOURI

Student transfer tuition could add millions to district budgets
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 15, 2013
When Ferguson-Florissant voters defeated a property tax increase last week, the blow came just as the district was firming up numbers on another source of potential revenue — tuition from transfer students.

NEW JERSEY

Charter school creating ‘real world’ environment set to open in Jersey City
Jersey Journal, August 14, 2013
After nearly three years of planning and fundraising, the Jersey City Global Charter School has been granted a charter by the state to open.

With NCLB in flux, superintendent says ‘practical’ student standards needed
Passaic Valley Today
The House of Representatives recently passed the Student Success Act, which is the legislation to reauthorize a revised Elementary and Secondary Education Act-No Child Left Behind (ESEA-NCLB).

NEW MEXICO

State PED needs to slow down, work with others
Letter, Albuquerque Journal, August 15, 2013
On July 22 the Journal editorialized that there was merit in my calling for “giving districts flexibility beyond the Standards-Based Assessment to measure student progress and providing a transparent and detailed method for decoding evaluations.” In my testimony on the original teacher evaluation proposed rule, I advocated that local school districts should be able to decide how best to measure student learning.

NEW YORK

Choosing Success
New York Daily News, August 14, 2013
Rather than spell out plans for raising achievement among New York’s public school children, the Democratic mayoral candidates decried the latest standardized test scores as evidence of education failure by Mayor Bloomberg.

Hebrew – in Harlem, it’s not just for Jews anymore, thanks to a new language academy
New York Daily News, August 14, 2013
Harlem Hebrew Language Academy is all about teaching the ancient tongue. But its founder also sees the charter school as a chance to create pro-Israel kids.

New York City Teacher-Training Programs Analyzed
Wall Street Journal, August 15, 2013
In what officials called a first-of-its-kind effort in the nation, the city Department of Education released reports Wednesday on colleges that educate the city’s public school teachers.

OHIO

School tops state charts for the arts
Toledo Blade, August 15, 2013
If you’re the top education official in Ohio, and you want to find a top-notch charter school, the Toledo School for the Arts is probably a good start.

State still unsure what this year’s high school freshmen will need to pass to graduate
Cleveland Plain Dealer, August 14, 2013
High school freshmen will soon start their high school careers without knowing what test – or tests – they will have to pass to graduate.

PENNSYLVANIA

Philadelphia charter school teachers rally for unionization
Peoples World, August 14, 2013
On August 13th, Olney Charter High School students and members from the community held a demonstration outside of ASIPRA for PA’s North Philadelphia headquarters – ASPIRA owns the charter of the school – in support of the teachers’ union drive.

Philadelphia School Budget Crisis: District Asking to Suspend Teacher Seniority Rule
NBC10, August 15, 2013
Just two days away from Philadelphia’s schools funding deadline, the district is preparing for ways to hire back laid off staff, should the money come.

Pennsylvania charter schools going directly to Corbett for $150 million funding increase
Morning Call, August 14, 2013
For years, local school district officials have tried to get state lawmakers to pass laws reducing the amount of tax dollars paid to charter schools.

SRC sets meeting on Hite’s plan to reopen schools
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 15, 2013
With less than 48 hours until the funding deadline set by Philadelphia’s schools chief, the School Reform Commission has called a meeting Thursday to consider actions he says will give him more flexibility to run schools whenever they open.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Charter schools deserve equitable funding
The State, August 14, 2013
Thanks to parent advocates’ hard work, S.C. students begin this school year with more choices than ever before. As a parent, a former teacher and the leader of a state and national parent organization, I have rallied alongside other parents all the way from the State House in Columbia to the Capitol in Washington in support of expanded options and fair funding. I feel immense pride at the results of South Carolinians’ hard work.

TENNESSEE

Charter exec gets reprieve on TCAP rules
Memphis Commercial Appeal, August 14, 2013
Tom Beazley, head of Promise Academy, has been teaching children for 30 years and has given his share of high-stakes (read high pressure) exams. He still gives them, but now he’s taking a stand that makes his K-5 charter school unusual. It also points to a larger difference bewteen public and charter schools.

TEA fights using student growth scores in teacher license renewal
The Tennessean, August 15, 2013
The Tennessee teachers union stopped short of threatening a lawsuit over proposed changes to the state’s licensing process Wednesday, but still had a lawyer do most of the talking during an announcement of the group’s opposition.

TEXAS

SBOE Will No Longer Approve Charter Applicants
Texas Tribune, August 15, 2013
A shift in power from the State Board of Education to the Texas Education Agency is among many changes brought by sweeping charter school legislation lawmakers passed in May.

WASHINGTON

Charter school opponents may win – for now
Commentary, Everett Daily Herald, August 15, 2013
On July 3, Washington state unions filed a complaint against charter schools and a request of injunction for protection from Initiative 1240. Ignoring the will of the people for more options and choice in public education, opponents of charter schools ran to the courts in a last ditch effort to maintain the status quo.

WEST VIRGINIA

WV teachers union says school board’s hiring policy confusing
Charleston Daily Mail, August 14, 2013
Groups representing West Virginia teachers say a portion of the education reform package originally seen as a win for teachers is vulnerable to misinterpretation by county school systems.

WISCONSIN

Republican leaders say law was supposed to give preference to public school students
Leader Telegram, August 14, 2013
Public school students will not get preference over those already in private school as they compete against one another for a limited number of taxpayer-subsidized vouchers available this fall. Republican leaders said Wednesday that was not their intent.

Republicans propose accountability system for private voucher schools
Wisconsin State Journal, August 14, 2013
Private schools receiving taxpayer-funded vouchers could be kicked out of the program for poor student performance under a Republican-backed proposal released Wednesday.

ONLINE LEARNING

Local group takes aim at virtual schools
Jackson City Press, August 14, 2013
Members of a local organization claim millions of dollars intended for Tennessee’s students is going to an out-of-state education company in return for substandard testing results, but corporate and school representatives say the performance measures gathered so far are inconclusive at best.

NC Court of Appeals weighs virtual charter school case
News & Observer, August 14, 2013
Three N.C. Court of Appeals judges had lots of questions Wednesday for lawyers arguing whether a controversial charter school that planned to only offer online classes should have been allowed to open last year.

Virginia classrooms prepare to go digital
WTOP-FM, August 15, 2013
As the world marketplace continues to go digital, high schools throughout Virginia are taking the plunge into virtual education.