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Expert: Legislature’s contentment with status quo hinders student success

By Kathryn Watson
Watchdog.org Virginia Bureau
April 23, 2013

A culture of complacency is keeping Virginia from furthering student success, one educational expert says.

Virginia parents are practically powerless in determining the course of their children’s education, and student success is urgently low.

If, that is, Virginia’s fall this month to 39th nationally in the Center for Education Reform’s Parent Power Index and eighth-grade reading proficiency of less than 36 percent mean anything.

But contentment with the status quo within the Virginia General Assembly perpetuates those failures, said Kara Kerwin, vice president of external affairs for the D.C.-based nonprofit Center for Education Reform.

Virginia scores well on some national reports, such as the 2012 national report card by Education Week, which ranked Old Dominion schools fourth in the nation. But instead of relying on results such as reading proficiency, lawmakers look to reports like Education Week’s, which rely heavily on investments rather than outcomes to say Virginia schools are A-OK, Kerwin said.

“Really, the Legislature just failed to act on anything because they just said, ‘We’re fine, we’re number four.’”

That’s about what Delegate Bob Tata, retiring from the General Assembly after 30 years and thus, from his post as House Education Committee chair, told Watchdog.org.

“We have a pretty decent school system. One survey has us ranked fourth in the country,” Tata said.

But Kerwin said something is clearly awry when only one-third of eighth graders master reading proficiency.

CER’s Parent Power Index grades states on how much freedom they afford parents in the categories of school choice, charter schools, online learning, teacher quality and transparency. Virginia was ranked 35th in January of this year, but other states’ improvements have laid bare Old Dominion stagnation.

“Other states might have improved. Virginia hasn’t done anything,” Kerwin said.

The Virginia Association of School Boards did not return a request for comment on the Parent Power Index.

Virginia — with some of the strictest charter school laws in the nation and just four charter schools to serve the commonwealth’s 1.3 million K-12 students — almost automatically earns a poor ranking from CER, Kerwin said.

Parents’ ability to choose, Kerwin said, is one of the most important factors in student success.

“When parents can vote with their feet … we see all schools improve,” Kerwin said. “Without the power to make choices, parent involvement is meaningless.”

But, Tata said, parents’ ability to determine the course of their children’s educations isn’t the most crucial factor in academic success.

“Like everything else, it depends pretty much on money and where you live,” Tata said. “If you live in Fairfax County, I’d imagine the schools are pretty much excellent. … I think you could probably trace the education system pretty close to the dollar average that the parents make.”

But is it fair for a student’s relative success to depend on parental wealth and how much those parents are willing to pay in property taxes?

“Life is not fair,” Tata said. “I guess that’s a start. People are willing to pay more taxes in those areas,” like Fairfax County, he said.

But Kerwin said that line of thought is perpetuated by reports, like Education Week’s, which tend to rely on investments over results.

“It’s really based on inputs not outputs,” Kerwin said. “Virginia spends a lot of money — for what?”

Kerwin said case studies shatter the perception that more money directly translates to better schools.

“It’s not about how much money,” Kerwin said.

A study of Tennessee’s schools by the University of Memphis, published March 2012, concluded, “This research revealed that per pupil expenditure did not have a significant relationship to ACT scores or to the TCAP (Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program) writing assessment scores. An implication is that giving schools more money does not necessarily raise student achievement, but rather how the money is spent can raise student achievement.”

And University of Arkansas researchers in a yet-to-be-released report commissioned by the Walton Family Foundation found that District of Columbia Public Schools, which make up more than 40 percent of the District’s schools, receive 46 percent less funding than the District’s public schools.

What does make for effective schools, Kerwin argued, is parents’ ability to choose.

“What’s interesting about that though is that charter schools in the district are completely outperforming DCPS schools,” Kerwin said. “And it’s not about money. It’s about giving choice for quality schools.”

A Nation At Risk — 30 Years Later

A NATION AT RISK NO MORE – BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY
a manifesto by CER President Jeanne Allen

April 26, 2013 marks the 30 year anniversary of one of the education reform movement’s most influential reports, A Nation At Risk. With an unprecedented urgency, the 1983 report called for Americans to reverse the course of a crumbling U.S. education system plagued by “a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people. If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.”

Now, thirty years after this grave warning, we still have an education system where students graduate without even basic literacy skills. So where do we go from here?

The commission that wrote A Nation At Risk believed our educational woes could be solved if the “people of our country, together
with those who have public responsibility in the matter, care enough and are courageous enough to do what is required.” Education reform has become a commonplace term in American society, but what’s needed is for it to become a commonplace action. Let’s take action and answer this wake-up call poised to us in A Nation At Risk by vowing to no longer accept mediocrity in our schools, and together we can accelerate the pace of education reform.

In the News

‘Nation at Risk’ warnings about shortcomings in US education 30 years ago still resonate today
Washington Post, April 24, 2013

Quotables

“If there’s a bottom line, it’s that we’re spending twice as much money on education as we did in ‘83 and the results haven’t changed all that much.” —William Bennett

It Could Have Been My Boy

Founder and President of the Center for Education Reform reflects on the Boston tragedy in a Huffington Post piece:

The events of recent months tell us we must all do that, no matter how incorrect the social scientists believe such behavior to be. Every mother must ask herself — do I really know my child? Do I understand how he spends his time, what he needs, whether he is masking some hidden hurt? Do I know what the cause of his joy or sorrow is? Can I impact him now at 16, 18, or even 25? Am I willing to intervene to protect the other people around me, regardless of whether he’s my son or not? Mothers must take charge of the chaos our boys are creating around us.

Read the whole story here.

Funding Inequality for Students in Nation’s Capital

Report Emphasizes Persistent Funding Gap for D.C. Charter School Students

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
April 23, 2013

Students attending public charter schools in the nation’s capital are funded at almost 44 percent less than students in the District of Columbia Public Schools (DCPS) according to a recent report by the University of Arkansas.

The study, “Education’s Fiscal Cliff, Real or Perceived?” by leading researcher Larry Maloney, compares funding at traditional public schools to charter schools between 2007-2011. The data reveal a significant and persistent gap in per pupil funding for charter schools from federal, state and local sources.

The Center for Education Reform’s Annual Survey of America’s Charter Schools has found the same results since the 1998-1999 Academic Year. Most recent data prove that on average nationally, charter schools are funded at 68 percent of their traditional district public school counterparts. This figure does not include the capital funds for facilities that charters do not receive either.

“With 43 percent of DC’s students in these innovative public schools, demonstrating overwhelmingly better academic achievement, you’d think the nation’s leaders would demand equity,” said Jeanne Allen, president of the Center for Education Reform. “Instead these students, whose families chose to find a better alternative, are being penalized for seeking the American dream for their children.”

University of Arkansas looked at four other of the nation’s largest school districts -Newark, Milwaukee, Denver and Los Angeles – and found widespread inequity across the board. Their final report is expected to be released in the spring of 2014.

Newswire: April 23, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 16

BING. Two significant developments in the cause for equity and justice for kids happened over the past few days. First, a major report by the non-partisan University of Arkansas found that students in Washington, DC charter schools are treated to almost 44% less in funding than the traditional public school system receives. We’ve known this, of course, and have reported on it numerous times. Indeed the funding gap between charters and traditional public schools averages 30-40% nationwide, and that’s before you count the lack of facilities funds! With 43% of DC’s students in these innovative public schools, and overwhelmingly better academic achievement, you’d think the nation’s leaders would demand equity so that these students, whose families chose to find a better alternative to the traditional public schools, would not be penalized for seeking the American dream for their children.

BANG. Then comes the revelation (not to most of us toiling in the ed-reform vineyards for years) that African-American students benefit the most from school choice, as evidenced by their progress in college. The report by Harvard’s Paul Peterson says that African-American students in NYC who used the voucher to attend private schools are 24% more likely to go to college.

BOOM. Idaho Governor Butch Otter was not happy with the outcome of last fall’s ballot initiatives, which the union led to repeal his signature school improvement laws that would have paid teachers based on performance, phased out tenure, limited collective-bargaining, and expanded online learning opportunities. As a strong governor does, he worked with the legislature to revisit the issues and a new package was introduced and passed this week that requires a majority of teachers in support to open negotiations, limits teacher negotiations to one year and permits districts to address pay in emergency situations, two things not permitted under traditional collective bargaining contracts.

MUSIC TO OUR EARS. From the latest issue of Philanthropy Magazine comes tales of accomplishment from amidst the philanthropic community; a profile of the man who led Florida to bolster choices for tens of thousands of needy families; the story of where advocacy efforts first started (though some, like ours, were inadvertently left out of the narrative!); an introduction to a real users guide for Blended learning, insights into the thinking of major reform philanthropists and thoughts about what we are still missing from the funding spectrum. Engaging, thoughtful analysis, all of it, to be sure.

CORE-CONSPIRACY? A funny, tongue-in-cheek blog takes aim at those who believe that the Common Core State Standards are part of a vast government/corporate conspiracy to get into our children’s brains and dumb down America. Some of us have been doing this a long time and never ever seen an education conspiracy by left or right, other than the often unintentional but thoughtless conspiracy by the Education Blob to prevent school choice, accountability, and teacher quality measures to happen and bad schools to close. Those are conspiracies of long-seeded alliances, who think and act the same way because their power structure gave them the right to do so. One need not be a cynic to recognize how education has fallen apart under the “careful” hands of governments over the years. But that’s a side issue. The real important questions being raised in very intelligent and thoughtful circles are whether Common Core will have any effect on our schools, given that those who don’t like high standards to start — or consequences for failing to meet them — remain in charge of the very large education cartel that we have in this country. And if they result in everyone changing the materials they use but no one really rigorously following them, will we have wasted time and money that could have been spent on, let’s say, more flexibility for teachers in the classroom, teacher quality initiatives and school choice? Time will tell whether that — or infinitely low cut scores — will be the demise of the Common Core. It’s not a panacea, after all, and often the best-intentioned efforts are doomed in this system.

WE’RE HAVING A PARTY. Plan to join us for CER’s 20th Anniversary Conference and Gala Celebration in Washington, DC, October 9th. The conference theme, EDUCATION REFORM: BEFORE IT WAS COOL, will reintroduce to most and introduce to many the china-breakers and their efforts that paved the way for the cool kids of today. You won’t want to miss it. Details at https://2024.edreform.com/about/20th-anniversary/.

Daily Headlines for April 23, 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

When Schools Cheat, Don’t Blame Tests: Our View
USA Today, April 22, 2013

The cheating scandal in Atlanta, which led to the indictment of 35 teachers and school officials last month, is breathtaking in its scope.

The False Promise Of ‘Education Reform’
Everett Daily Herald, WA, April 23, 2013

Since her time as District of Columbia schools chancellor, Michelle Rhee has been the face of “education reform.” Regimenting testing for D.C. kids, she fired 241 teachers in one day alone in 2010 for low test scores. She fired a principal on camera. In turn, D.C. voters fired her mayoral patron in 2010 and she resigned.

STATE COVERAGE

CONNECTICUT

School Board Considers Charter School Plan
CT Post, CT, April 23, 2013

The public will have to wait until May 7 to weigh in on a plan to create a district-run charter school, but the city school board got to sound off Monday on the plan for a Montessori elementary school on the West End of town.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C., Montgomery Schools Named National Green Ribbon Schools
Washington Post, DC, April 23, 2013

U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan on Monday honored five Washington-area schools and the Montgomery County school system as National Green Ribbon Schools for their exemplary environmental education programs and sustainable facilities.

Evidence Of Widespread Cheating Leads To Probe At D.C. Charter School
Washington Examiner, DC, April 22, 2013

Meridian Public Charter School has begun an internal investigation into cheating on standardized tests after a District investigation found “strong circumstantial evidence” that cheating efforts were orchestrated throughout the school, officials announced Monday.

Council Questions Push For Special-Ed Students In D.C. Public Schools
Washington Post, DC, April 22, 2013

D.C. Council members, advocates and parents raised questions Monday about Mayor Vincent C. Gray’s push to reduce the number of special-education students who attend private schools at public expense.

FLORIDA

Hernando Teacher Of Year Illustrates Flaws In Evaluation System
Tampa Bay Times, FL, April 23, 2013

So, it seems, the teachers unions have found the ideal poster person to illustrate the craziness of the state’s new teacher evaluation system.

US Education Secretary Urges Fla. To Work On Teacher Evals
Tallahassee Democrat, FL, April 23, 2013

U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan is urging Florida to quickly address any problems with its new teacher evaluation system, which grades instructors in large part on students’ standardized test scores.

Parent Trigger: Who’s For It And Who’s Against It Tells The Story
Washington Post Blog, DC, April 23, 2013

You can learn pretty much everything you need to know about the controversial “parent trigger” legislation now before the Florida Legislature by looking at who is for it and who is against it.

Lawmakers Want Teacher Raises Based On Merit; Not Scott’s $2,500 Plan
ActionNewsJax, FL, April 22, 2013

Fla. Gov. Rick Scott isn’t going to succeed in getting $2,500 pay raises for the state’s teachers. Florida legislators meeting over the weekend have settled on setting aside nearly $500 million to boost teacher pay. But House and Senate budget negotiators made it clear they will not hand out raises the way Scott wanted.

Scott Signs Bill Revamping Schools, Universities
Miami Herald, FL, April 22, 2013

On Monday, Gov. Rick Scott signed a sweeping education bill that will revamp the state’s high school graduation requirements and place new emphasis on coursework that prepares students for high-tech careers.

ILLINOIS

Charter School Parents Form Advocacy Group
Chicago Tribune, IL, April 23, 2013

Cast by critics including the Chicago Teachers Union as villains in the ongoing school closings controversy, privately run charter schools and their advocates are fighting back with efforts that include plans for a downtown rally by a newly formed parents group.

Chicago Charter School Teachers Push To Form Union
CBS2 Chicago, IL, April 22, 2013

One of the things that makes charter schools different may be starting to change.

INDIANA

Bill Easing School Chief Rules Passes
Journal Gazette, IN, April 23, 2013

A bill allowing school districts to hire superintendents without an educator’s license is headed to Gov. Mike Pence for his signature.

Revoked Charter Schools In Indiana Could Be Forgiven
Courier Journal, IN, April 22, 2013

Indiana lawmakers are considering forgiving $12 million in loans that “failing” charter schools accepted from the state, as part of a broader package of state aid for charters.

KANSAS

Kansas Flunks School Choice Study
Kansas Watchdog, KS, April 22, 2013

When it comes to school choice and giving parents the power to control their child’s education, Kansas earns a failing grade.

LOUISIANA

Education Groups Join To Oppose Jindal-Backed Bills
News Star, LA, April 23, 2013

Five education groups are joining to present unified opposition to the Legislature trying to re-approve elements of Gov. Bobby Jindal’s 2012 education package that ran into problems in court.

MICHIGAN

Michigan School Chief: End Project By Secret Group
Detroit News, MI, April 23, 2013

Michigan’s school chief on Monday urged the disbanding of a work group that has been secretly developing ways to lower the cost of public education through technology and a funding mechanism that resembles vouchers.

Eastern Michigan University Regents Authorize 5-Year Contracts With 3 New Charter Schools
Ann Arbor, MI, April 22, 2013

The Eastern Michigan University Board of Regents recently voted to enter a five-year contract with new Ypsilanti-based charter school Global Tech Academy.

MINNESOTA

Higher Ground Academy In St. Paul: Succeeding At Math And Reading, Tackling Science And Art
Twin Cities Daily Planet, MN, April 22, 2013

Here’s an unusual high school graduation requirement: students must be accepted into college before they are allowed to graduate. That’s the rule at St. Paul’s Higher Ground Academy, according to Executive Director Bill Wilson.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Great Bay Charter School Expands, Adds Grade 7
Portsmouth Herald, NH, April 23, 2013

The New Hampshire Board of Education approved the Great Bay Charter School’s request to expand to include Grade 7 for the 2013—14 school year. This award-winning school is located on the Tuck Learning Campus in Exeter. Charter schools are public schools of choice and all students in New Hampshire are eligible for admission.

Something Which Is Well Worth The Fight
Fosters Daily Democrat, NH, April 23, 2013

Last week the New Hampshire Senate, by a vote of 13-11, decided to let stand a school voucher bill that allows businesses to take a tax credit if they donate to a school education fund. In turn the money is used for school vouchers that can be used at private and parochial schools.

NEW MEXICO

Charter Money Flow Is Clarified
Albuquerque Journal, NM, April 23, 2013

In my two previous monthly columns, I discussed a number of myths about public charter schools. Those myths included charters “cherry-picking” students; operating without proper oversight; not servicing special needs students and not being accountable for results

NEW YORK

New, More Demanding State Tests Aren’t The Problem For School Kids
New York Daily News, NY, April 22, 2013

All over New York, parents — some of them — are up in arms over the new state English exam students took last week. The most outraged of the lot had their children boycott the test.

The Teacher-Rating Charade
New York Post, NY, April 23, 2013

Gov. Cuomo likes to boast that “99 percent” of state school districts struck teacher-evaluation deals with their unions, attributing it to funding he offered if they did. A report yesterday suggests a different reason: The deals are shams.

NORTH CAROLINA

Advocate For Rural Public Charter Schools
Daily Tar Heel, NC, April 23, 2013

Public charter schools in rural North Carolina present an opportunity for more school choice options and economic development in the state’s 85 rural counties.

Ending Teacher Tenure: An Invitation To Control Young NC Minds
News & Observer, NC, April 22, 2013

Teachers and professors in all grade levels and types of learning institutions are charged to develop critical thinking skills in their students.

Ending Teacher Tenure: A Chance To Raise Standards In NC
News & Observer, NC, April 22, 2013

There is little doubt that teacher quality is important. High-quality teachers produce superior academic outcomes for students, regardless of a child’s challenges and circumstances. Like most states, the quality of North Carolina’s teacher work force varies from school to school and district to district, but the overall quality of the state’s teacher work force is alarmingly low.

OHIO

Boardman Schools Oppose State Expansion Of Voucher Program
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, April 23, 2013

The board of education approved a resolution Monday in opposition to two voucher programs included in Gov. John Kasich’s biennial budget.

PENNSYLVANIA

Shouting Match Interrupts MWCDC Forum On Possible Charter School
South Pittsburgh Reporter, PA, April 23, 2013

The Mount Washington Community Development Corporation (MWCDC) held its regular monthly forum meeting last Thursday, where the topics of energy efficiency and public education were not the only things raised; several voices were raised, too.

Founder Of Two Area Arts Charter Schools Creating Autism Charter Facility
Lehigh Valley Express-Times, PA, April 22, 2013

There are about 13 charter schools for children diagnosed with autism nationally but none have a curriculum that blends applied behavioral analysis with Montesorri techniques like the charter proposal does, Hickey said.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Interest In Charter Schools In South Carolina Spikes Despite Challenges
Myrtle Beach Sun News, SC, April 22, 2013

Charter school families in Horry County will rejoice in August when Coastal Leadership Academy opens its doors, providing a charter high school option for students who now attend charter schools that only provide instruction through grade eight.

TENNESSEE

How Tennessee Voucher Momentum Splintered
Heartland Institute, April 23, 2013

Years of voucher proposals, polls showing parent support for vouchers, and a governor-sponsored voucher bill did not culminate in a new Tennessee voucher law this spring.

Charter School Applications Decline
The Tennessean, TN, April 23, 2013

Applications to start new charter schools in Metro are at their lowest level in three years, and a school board member believes charter operators may be stepping back and reassessing their place in the Nashville market.

WISCONSIN

Wisconsin Voucher Students Lag In Latest State Test
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, April 23, 2013

Students attending private voucher schools in Milwaukee and Racine scored lower than their public-school counterparts in Milwaukee Public Schools and the Racine Unified School District on the latest state standardized achievement test, according to results released by the state Tuesday.

ONLINE LEARNING

All Fox Valley-Area Districts Nix Virtual Charter School Plan
Chicago Tribune, IL, April 22, 2013

All 18 districts affected by a proposed Fox Valley-area virtual charter school have denied the concept and now await an appeal process.

Dubois School District Loses $2.7 Million With Cyber Schools
Courier Express, PA, April 22, 2013

The DuBois Area School District has lost more than $2.7 million in basic education money over the last five years and directors plan to consider a resolution that calls for the reform of the state’s funding formula at Wednesday’s regular board meeting.

Postcards from the Past — No. 1

April 22, 2013

Postcards from the Past 
A new, occasional blog post by CER President Jeanne Allen in commemoration of CER’s 20th Anniversary in business and the historical events that have taken place during our history.

Ohio, 1994

So many people start a sentence with “it seems like yesterday,” but you know, that phrase has never tired me. When history is so critical to who we are individually or collectively, what has happened before is almost always interesting. I think that’s particularly so today for education reformers, who just a short time ago launched a movement that has shattered myths, broken down conventional barriers to real education for children, and upset an establishment that continues to plague our schools.

“It seems like yesterday…” that I got this letter, and went to work to help State Senator Cooper Snyder eventually succeed with his legislation authorizing a pilot school choice program for poor children in Cleveland, eg, vouchers. It was a bill which eventually got through the entire legislature, was litigated all the way to the US Supreme Court and affirmed the constitutionality of vouchers and most important, the parents’ right to direct the flow of dollars allocated to educate their child.

The outcry from The Blob was, as expected, fierce and negative.

Today, more opportunities are opened up to children thanks to a few people like Senator Snyder, who is now retired and keeps up with us on the day’s trends. We owe this pioneer of school choice a great deal of gratitude — and the critical recognition that too many of us forget to give — for fighting the early battles so we could all benefit.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this first Postcard from the Past!

Financial Literacy: Part of the Fabric of What We Teach

by Jeanne Allen
response to “What Is Financial Literacy?”, National Journal
April 22, 2013

I don’t remember anyone explicitly teaching me financial literacy, but ever since I was a working teenager, I’ve known how to manage my money and what it means to have debt, to pay interest, and the basics. Part of that was because my parents were small business people (I guess) but also part of it was because my peers were similarly inclined. I remember one high school math teacher talking about saving and I certainly remember when I had to get student loans and read the info that I was given. Later, I just knew I had to pay my bills.

Yet no one in high school ever really touched the subject of the economy, and the idea of capitalism was simply a footnote in the textbooks. Most people today don’t understand how business works, which is the primary reason that everyone assumes when enterprises fail it must be because of greed. There is more written about the evils of business than discussing what commerce really is, so if we’re not actually being factual and honest about how money flows and why it’s important, I’m not sure we can expect anything other than financial illiteracy. This isn’t a job, however, for a dedicated course, but should be part of the fabric of what we teach and how we teach everything from history to government to economics to basic math! Consider that even when we talk about businesses managing schools today, the entire education establishment protests, as if doing such a thing were not a natural or important part of the general fabric of our basic economic foundation.

Ironically, the same president who has been highly critical of American business and whose administration is working hard to banish for-profit education companies has declared April to be Financial Literacy Month. We should perhaps begin with first things — teaching our young people from their earliest years with content that recognizes the important of American commerce, business models, currency and how people’s monetary habits —- or dependence on it — can either aid or harm the economy.

The student loan crisis isn’t about financial illiteracy. It’s about the corresponding values we as a society place on debt, and right now, our leaders aren’t exactly role models on that score. Solve the education problem, teach students about their nation’s founding, its economic model and what we should and shouldn’t expect government to do for us, and you achieve financial literacy. And maybe you get people who start voting for people who don’t expect debt to manage the economy, too.

Daily Headlines for April 22, 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 First Race to the Top
New York Times, NY, April 21, 2013

We have come a long way since the summer of 1845. Public education, then in its infancy, is now universal. Testing yields essential, valuable knowledge about school performance, but its exaggerated use distorts teaching and ignores the broader purpose of education. As Howe’s committee insisted, test results should not be the full and final judgment on schools and their teachers. There is more to a child’s education than “positive information, in black and white.”

Is Common Core Cutting-Edge Education Or Just Use Of A Dull Blade?
Denver Post, CO, April 22, 2013

Talk to Melissa Colsman and you know she’s a teacher, even before she tells you she once taught math. The executive director of the Colorado Department of Education’s Teaching and Learning Unit makes a compelling case for what public schools need.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

In L.A. School Board Race, Sky-High Spending Continues
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 21, 2013

The contest between Antonio Sanchez, a former mayoral aide, and Monica Ratliff, a teacher, will be decided in May’s runoff. Money pours in for their campaigns.

COLORADO

Why Are So Few Students Ready For College Classes?
Denver Post, CO, April 20, 2013

Startlingly, 40 percent of Colorado high school grads — and far higher numbers among minorities — need remedial education.

CONNECTICUT

Fey’s View from the Right: We can learn from Charter Schools
Norwich Bulletin, CT, April 20, 2013

Here’s a multiple choice question that you won’t find on the Connecticut Mastery Test: When anything is proposed that might nudge the state’s education system away from the status quo, the stock response from the state’s teachers unions is…

School Advocate Groups Clash Over Election
CT Post, CT, April 22, 2013

The city school district’s deeply divided parent organization will hold a second election for officers next month, after the first election was deemed so tainted the results were thrown out.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter Schools Deserve Fair Funding
Washington Post, DC, April 20, 2013

One of the arguments that has been used to justify the shortchanging of D.C. charter schools for public dollars is that they have the advantage of being able to draw on more private funds. The findings of a new study shatter that defense and underscore the need for the District to come up with a funding scheme that ensures equity for all of its public school students.

Mike Peabody’s Focus On City Schools Led Him To Help Establish D.C. Charters
Washington Post, DC, April 20, 2013

Malcolm E. “Mike” Peabody began lobbying to establish charter schools in the District nearly two decades ago. At the time, D.C. charters were just a concept; now they are a thriving part of the city’s education landscape, serving nearly half the children in D.C. schools.

FLORIDA

Parents Oppose Closing Of Bradenton Charter School
Herald Tribune, FL, April 21, 2013

Before August, Christopher Oliver struggled with bullies as much as he did with classwork. He says that changed when he found refuge at Bradenton Charter School, which instructs many children with special learning needs.

Historic Visible Men Academy To Mold Young Manatee Students
Bradenton Herald, FL, April 22, 2013

A historic new charter school will open this fall to teach boys to become responsible young men by offering an environment geared toward the way they learn.

House, Senate Agree On Merit Pay Raises For Teachers
Miami Herald, FL, April 21, 2013

The House and the Senate aligned their position on teacher pay raises Sunday, putting the Florida Legislature on a collision course with Gov. Rick Scott.

INDIANA

Voucher Proponents Showed True Colors
NW Times, IN, April 20, 2013

Two years ago, when the voucher system was first proposed, the proponents pledged vouchers would be available only to those students who had first attended a public school and found it didn’t adequately meet their needs. They also vowed vouchers would only be awarded to low-income students who couldn’t afford another choice and that the number of vouchers would be capped.

KANSAS

Sen. Wagle To Push For Charter Schools
Wichita Eagle, KS, April 20, 2013

State Senate President Susan Wagle told a Wichita Republican club Friday that she wants to push ahead with expanding charter schools in the state after the Supreme Court rules on a pending school-finance lawsuit.

LOUISIANA

More Than 500 Apply For About 85 Charter School Positions At Crescent City Schools
The Lens, LA, April 19, 2013

During a 50-minute Crescent City Schools April board meeting Wednesday, board members discussed hiring updates and board fundraising, among other topics.

Louisiana Education Chief Will Consider Changes To Teacher Evaluations
Alexandria Town Talk, LA, April 21, 2013

Louisiana Superintendent of Education John C. White said Friday he is open to changes in how public school teachers are evaluated, including a possible delay in when educators will face major consequences.

High Schools Showing Gains
The Advocate, LA, April 21, 2013

If the good news about increased graduation rates from high school does not take us out of the bottom tier of the states, there is still reason for optimism about the direction of Louisiana public schools.

MAINE

Charter School Funding Creates System Of Winners, Losers
Morning Sentinel, ME, April 22, 2013

We try to teach our children to be fair and kind from an early age. My preschool-age son talks about such lessons each day. My first-grade daughter recently brought home a kindness award for her willingness to help others without being asked. So why is it that the Legislature has created a system that creates winners and losers when it comes to funding charter schools?

MARYLAND

Montgomery County To Announce Program Aimed At Helping Low-Performing Schools
Washington Post, DC, April 20, 2013

Montgomery County education officials will identify about 10 schools in the district for extra support and resources under a new program that aims to help individual campuses boost performance.

Montgomery County Lawmakers: Teacher Raises Won’t Narrow Student Achievement Gap
Washington Examiner, DC, April 22, 2013

Montgomery County lawmakers say the county school system should spend more of its limited funds to close a troubling gap between white and Asian students and their black and Latino counterparts.

MICHIGAN

Snyder Defends Secret Project To Reform Education System
Detroit News, MI, April 20, 2013

Gov. Rick Snyder on Friday defended his administration’s involvement in a secret project that is trying to develop a cheaper way to deliver public education through a voucher-like funding system.

MINNESOTA

Support Pre-K Funding To Help Narrow Achievement Gap
Star News, MN, April 22, 2013

A growing number of scientific findings on early brain development and the ability of children to learn more earlier is leading educational and business leaders to push for more state funding to educate 3-and 4-year-old children, particularly from communities with concentrations of poor families.

MISSOURI

De Smet vs. CBC: How Catholic Schools Compete For Recruits
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, April 21, 2013

During the last decade, Catholic schools in the St. Louis Archdiocese have lost about 14,000 students — a drop attributed to the poor economy, defections to public schools and fewer baptisms. All that means fewer eighth-graders to feed into Catholic high schools.

MONTANA

Adding Teeth To Truancy Laws
Great Falls Tribune, MT, April 21, 2013

School Resource Officer Cory Reeves has one student at Great Falls High this year with 501 unexcused absences from class and no authority to really rectify the situation — until now.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Petition Asks State Board To Consider New Charter School Applications
New Hampshire Sentinel, NH, April 21, 2013

An online petition asking the state Board of Education to consider applications for new charter schools, despite a funding battle, has gained more than 150 signatures the past few days.

NEW JERSEY

Parents, Students Seek Coveted Entry To Prestigious Bergen Charter School
The Record, NJ, April 21, 2013

Parents leaned in, eyes wide, to read the names flashing on the screen of the children who had made it into kindergarten at the Bergen Arts and Science Charter School through a lottery.

NEW YORK

Quiet Agreements On Teacher Evaluations Imperil Funds, Commissioner Says
Buffalo News, NY, April 21, 2013

The teacher evaluation battles are not over yet. Hundreds of school districts across New York pushed to get their teacher evaluation plans approved in time to meet Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo’s Jan. 17 deadline, so that they didn’t lose their increase in state aid.

NORTH CAROLINA

N.C. Bill Would Block School Boards From Suing County Commissioners For More Money
News & Observer, NC, April 21, 2013

North Carolina’s 115 public school systems would lose the right to take their local board of county commissioners to court for more funding under a bill filed in the state Senate.

OHIO

Cleveland School District Considers Using Money From Sale Of Headquarters To Offer More School Options Downtown
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, April 20, 2013

Although the Cleveland School District is leaving its longtime offices on East Sixth Street this summer, school board member Eric Wobser wants the district to increase its presence downtown.

CPS Goes Outside The Box To Sponsor A Charter School At Aiken
WVXU, OH, April 22, 2013

It’s unusual for a public school district to partner with a charter school, but that will happen this fall when Carpe Diem opens inside the new Aiken High School in College Hill. It is one of two schools at Aiken. The other is New-Tech, focused on project-based learning.

PENNSYLVANIA

POWER Play
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 22, 2013

AT THE SITE where Connie Mack Stadium once stood, thousands rallied together Sunday, chanted “We are POWER!” and tried to hold their highest players accountable.

York City Schools: Community Members Must Help Turnaround, But Are They Willing?
York Daily Record, PA, April 20, 2013

In the last three months of 2012, three York City School Board members left their posts. The May primary has drawn only four candidates — all sitting board members — for five open seats. Parents of nearly one-third of the district’s students have sent them charters.

Are High-Stakes Tests Counterproductive?
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, April 22, 2013

A group of parents across the country are rejecting the idea of high-stakes testing as a means of judging both schools and educators, choosing to have their children opt out of standardized high-stakes tests like the PSSAs that public school children in Pennsylvania are taking right now.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Say No To School Choice Bill
The Herald, SC, April 22, 2013

Say this for state lawmakers promoting a bill to give tax credits to families who send their children to private schools: they’re tenacious. But that doesn’t mean they deserve to succeed.

TENNESSEE

GOP ‘Supermajority’ Rolls, But Friction Derails Pet Projects
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, April 20, 2013

Commenting on one of several pieces of legislation to gain national attention during the 2013 session of the Tennessee General Assembly, Gov. Bill Haslam blamed the failure of his education reform priority of the year on “infighting among advocates.”

Failed Education Bills To Be Revived In Next Legislative Session
The Tennessean, TN, April 21, 2013

In the last few years, Tennessee hasn’t shied away from contentious initiatives as it seeks to remain at the forefront of education reform in the nation.

New School A Major Change For Charter District
San Antonio Express, TX, April 21, 2013

The John H. Wood Jr. charter school district was created to educate troubled students, and it does so in juvenile detention centers and residential treatment facilities across the state.

More Charter Schools in Texas?
Amarillo Globe-News, TX, April 21, 2013

For David Dunn, charter schools have blossomed in Texas since the first campuses opened in 1996 for a simple reason.

Teacher Groups Fail Bills Tied To New Evaluations
San Antonio Express, TX, April 22, 2013

While many states in recent years have started to change the way they evaluate teachers, Texas has largely avoided that controversy.

ONLINE LEARNING

Pittsburgh CyberSchool Making Tweaks Amid Turnover
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, April 22, 2013

In their first year of operating their own online school, Pittsburgh Public Schools officials learned what many cyber charter school operators already know: There is lots of student turnover.

Don’t Cut Cyber School Funding
Courier Times, PA, April 22, 2013

I’ve been at Pennsylvania Virtual Charter Schools since kindergarten, and now I’m in ninth grade. My school is considered a public cyber charter school, which is different than homeschooling.

Mount Clemens To Replace Teachers With Cyber Learning
Macomb Daily, MI, April 21, 2013

Mount Clemens schools officials plan to introduce online classes for high school students to make up for the loss of 16 teachers scheduled to be laid off over the summer due to the district’s financial problems.

Online Charter School To Appeal Denials From 18 Districts
Courier News, IL, April 19, 2013

It’s unanimous: All 18 area school districts have denied a charter to the Illinois Virtual Charter School @ Fox River Valley.

Daily Headlines for April 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

Criminalizing Children at School
New York Times, NY, April 19, 2013
The National Rifle Association and President Obama responded to the Newtown, Conn., shootings by recommending that more police officers be placed in the nation’s schools.

Common Core Standards Attacked By Republicans
Washington Post, DC, April 19, 2013
Republicans have launched an attack on the Common Core State Standards, an initiative that more than 45 states and the District of Columbia signed onto but that has been facing increasing opposition in recent months from both right and left.

Governors Like Talking About Education. A Lot.
Washington Post Blog, DC, April 18, 2013
As lawmakers in Washington have been wrestling over guns, immigration and sequestration, the nation’s governors have their sights on a different issue: Education.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Misspent School Money
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 18, 2013
Our schools need to do better, but you can’t blame teachers for being paranoid when they see some of the people lined up against them: members of the Walton family, who are rabidly against unions, or Republicans whose colleagues in state after state are trying to destroy teachers unions.

CONNECTICUT

Parents Turn Out To Support Elm City Montessori Charter School
New Haven Register, CT, April 18, 2013
Supporters of the proposed Elm City Montessori charter school spoke out Thursday night at a Board of Education public hearing.

FLORIDA

The Parent Trigger Bill: A Shot At Privatization
Cape Coral Daily Breeze, FL, April 19, 2013
The current legislation being considered by the Florida legislature (known as the Parent Trigger Bill) is the latest assault on the public education system. Promoted as a means of parent empowerment, (nothing about turning a profit) the Parent Trigger Bill allows parents to petition for dramatic changes at failing public schools.

ILLINOIS

Kadner: Parents Battle For Slice Of School Pie
Southtown Star, IL, April 19, 2013
A terrific charter high school for children in the south suburbs is creating a financial dilemma.

INDIANA

Deal Nears On Voucher Expansion
Journal Gazette, IN, April 19, 2013
Lawmakers seeking a compromise on a voucher expansion seemed close Thursday, with House Republicans seeking only three small changes in the proposed bill.

IOWA

Parties Split Over Teacher Evaluations
Mason City Globe Gazette, IA, April 19, 2013
Teacher evaluations have emerged as one of key divisions between Republican and Democratic lawmakers looking to make a deal on education reform.

Education Reform Sees Progress After Rocky Few Days
Des Moines Registers, IA, April 19, 2013
An education reform plan that faced an uncertain fate in the Iowa Legislature earlier this week took positive steps forward on Thursday, when Democratic and Republican lawmakers engaged in earnest negotiation after several days of acrimony.

LOUISIANA

EBR Board To Shift Gifted Students, Create Magnet School
The Advocate, LA, April 19, 2013
The East Baton Rouge Parish School Board on Thursday put off for two weeks a decision on changing how it provides health insurance to retirees as well as setting the 2014 premium rates of all employees.

MICHIGAN

Education Reform Group Forges Voucher-Like Plan For Michigan
Detroit News, MI, April 19, 2013
A secret work group that includes top aides to Gov. Rick Snyder has been meeting since December to develop a lower-cost model for K-12 public education with a funding mechanism that resembles school vouchers.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Senate Rejects Repeal Of School Vouchers
Exeter News-Letter, NH, April 19, 2013
Repealing New Hampshire’s controversial business education tax credit, a legislative priority for Gov. Maggie Hassan and fellow Democrats, ran headlong into the resistance of Senate Republicans who used their slim majority Thursday to block those efforts.

NEW JERSEY

Camden Schools Chief Hopes Takeover Will Help
Courier-Post, NJ, April 19, 2013
Education Commissioner Chris Cerf Thursday likened the state takeover of Camden schools to President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, saying officials will take “new and bold” steps to enact change.

NEW YORK

State Tests Spark Ire, Analysis
Wall Street Journal, April 18, 2013
New York state education officials have already begun to weigh the fallout from tougher standardized tests tied to new academic standards after schools and parents complained this week that children ran out of time, collapsed in tears or froze up.

Irate Parents, Teachers Say Brooklyn Public Schools Received Meager Improvements As Charter School In Same Building Enjoyed Big Makeover
New York Daily News, NY, April 18, 2013
The Department of Education counters that it invested more than $2.1 million in upgrades to the public schools and spent $350,000 on charter school Success Academy Cobble Hill on Baltic Street. The law requires the department to spend at least as much on the public schools, the Brooklyn School for Global Studies, the School for International Studies and Public School 368K.

NORTH CAROLINA

Why School Vouchers Are Wrong For NC
News & Observer, NC, April 18, 2013
House Bill 944, a school voucher bill, aims to spend $90 million of taxpayer money over the next two years to subsidize private school tuition, takes money away from already underfunded public schools and offers little accountability to taxpayers.

OREGON

Corbett School Board Election Puts District Charter School On Trial
Oregonian, OR, April 18, 2013
Corbett students boast some of the better test scores in Oregon, and the district has made top 10 lists in Newsweek and The Washington Post for having so many students taking tough, college-level classes.

PENNSYLVANIA

Districts Launch Teacher-Retention Program
Philadelphia Tribune, PA, April 18, 2013
Officials responsible for the Philadelphia Great Schools Compact – an education reform agreement signed by the School District of Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania Coalition of Charter Schools, the Mayor’s Office on Education, the Pennsylvania Department of Education and the Archdiocese of Philadelphia – have recently publicized a new program to attract and retain high-quality teachers for each district.

‘Catastrophic’ Budget Laid Out By Philly Schools
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 19, 2013
If the “catastrophic” budget picture Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. laid out Thursday comes to pass, Philadelphia schools would be virtually unrecognizable come September.

‘No Child’ Crowding Out Curriculum
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 19, 2013
Thank you to Joel L. Naroff for his article about the need for better tools to evaluate charter schools and, indeed, every school in our educational system (“Are charter schools working? It’s anybody’s guess,” April 7).

SRC Votes To Close Stanton School
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 19, 2013
The Philadelphia School Reform Commission on Thursday night ordered another city school to shut in June.

TENNESSEE

TN To Vote On Merit Pay For Teachers
The Tennessean, TN, April 19, 2013
State officials are expected to give preliminary approval this morning to a teacher pay policy that forces each district to create a merit pay system for the 2014-15 school year .

Authorizer Bill Enlarging State’s Power Over New Charter Schools Advances
Memphis Flyer, TN, April 18, 2013
For diehard determination in the face of intractable and hostile and inevitable fate, General Custer had nothing on the few Democrats, mainly from Nashville, who spent a futile but valiant hour in the state House of Representatives on Thursday, the next to last day of the 2013 legislative session, trying to turn back, or at least amend, a charter-authorizer bill that basically gives state government unlimited veto power over local school boards.

Tennessee Is Moving Ahead on Effective School Reform
Wall Street Journal, April 19, 2013
Your claim that the School Boards Association or teachers unions influenced this decision in any way is just plain wrong. Both groups oppose vouchers in any form and never supported my bill.

ONLINE LEARNING

Bethel Park Calling For Cyber And Charter School Funding Reform
McMurray Almanac, PA, April 18, 2013
Bethel Park School Board members are expected to vote April 23 to approve a resolution calling for the reform of the commonwealth’s charter and cyber school funding.

Bradley County Virtual School Growing
Times Free Press, TN, April 19, 2013
Officials with the Bradley County Virtual School are requesting more teachers and expanded Internet access to meet the needs of a growing student body.

Virtual Reality Check
Chicago Tribune, IL, April 19, 2013
Local educators in the Fox River Valley have rejected a proposal to start an online charter school that would serve students in their area. They argue that there are too many concerns about cost, curriculum, accountability and teacher quality in the bid by the nonprofit firm Virtual Learning Solutions.