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Presenting the Case for School Choice

by Jason Stverak
Roll Call
January 28, 2013

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Daily Headlines for January 29, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

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

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

FROM THE STATES

ALASKA

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

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

ARKANSAS

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

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

ARIZONA

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

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

CALIFORNIA

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

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

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

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

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

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

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

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

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

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

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

IDAHO

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

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

INDIANA

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

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

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

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

IOWA

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

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

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

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

LOUISIANA

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

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

MAINE

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

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

MASSACHUSETTS

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

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

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

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

MICHIGAN

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

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

MONTANA

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

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

NEW HAMPSHIRE

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

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

NEW JERSEY

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

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

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

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

NEW YORK

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

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

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

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

School Closures Challenged
Wall Street Journal, January 29, 2013

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

OKLAHOMA

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

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

PENNSYLVANIA

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

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

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

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

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

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

TENNESSEE

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

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

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

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

TEXAS

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

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

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

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

UTAH

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

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

VIRGINIA

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

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

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

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

WASHINGTON

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

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

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

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

WISCONSIN

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

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

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

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

ONLINE LEARNING

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Pa. gets good grades in education reform ranking

by Damon C. Williams
Philadelphia Tribune
January 26, 2013

The Center for Education Reform, a national non-profit tasked with improving public education, has released an encompassing report that grades parental empowerment, solid educational choices, teacher quality and access to digital learning, among other factors. That Pennsylvania ranks in the top ten of all states can be viewed as proof educational reforms in the commonwealth are beginning to take hold.

According to the annual findings released in the Parent Power Index, Pennsylvania trails Indiana, which ranks first; Florida; Ohio; Arizona; Washington, D.C.; Louisiana and Minnesota. Wisconsin and Utah round out the top ten.

The PPI is an interactive, accessible online tool that collects and itemizes data critical to judging the gains and deficiencies in a parent’s control of their child’s education. The index is designed to provide in-depth information to not only parents, but to stakeholders, politicians and education policymakers as well.

“All across America, parents are demanding more power over their children’s education, but the task of sorting through all the information out there is daunting,” said Center for Education Reform President Jeanne Allen. “There are a variety of resources available to evaluate how students are achieving, but there is widespread disagreement about what constitutes sound education reform policy.

As the mother of college students, I liken the PPI to a cumulative GPA, which is a composite of grades from varying professors,” Allen continued. “In this case, these professors are among the nation’s leading authorities and critical evaluators of education policy.”

Each state is graded on five broad categories: school choice, charter schools, online learning, teacher quality and transparency, and the findings related to Pennsylvania are interesting.

For example, the state received points for having a pro-education reform governor in Tom Corbett, but suffered due to limitations in the so-called parent-trigger law, which allows parents to force a change of district leadership if said district doesn’t meet the parents’ standards. The state also received credit for the number and quality of charter schools, for providing school choice and supporting a performance-based pay structure.

Pennsylvania’s overall PPI grade is 74.5 percent.

“A high number of digital learning options prevail alongside charter schools that serve a significant number of students throughout the state. The state affords parents many good information sources and allows them to vote for their elected school boards in traditionally-timed elections,” read PPI’s Pennsylvania summary. “The state’s teacher quality measures are weak, however, and more and better options across all schooling structures are needed and much in demand.”

Pennsylvania was shown to be slightly deficient is several areas, however. On the matter of school choice, the index found that Pennsylvania has two private school choice programs, and that the commonwealth does have a charter school law. Pennsylvania enables public virtual schooling, but needs to address its limited open enrollment policies.

In terms of transparency, the index singled out the School District of Philadelphia and the School Reform Commission for their openness; however, improvements must be made in terms of educating parents about other, less traditional modes of education.

“Pennsylvania’s department of education website is parent-friendly and school report cards are accessible. It is next to impossible, however, to find information on charter or cyber school options. Generally, elections for the 501 local school boards in Pennsylvania are held in November of odd-numbered years,” read the index. “Philadelphia’s School Reform Commission is governed by an appointed panel. Harrisburg and Chester Upland are governed by state appointed boards of control, although their local boards still operate with limited authority.”

The index also shows that Pennsylvania graduates 80.5 percent of its high school students, while the average SAT score is 1473 and the average ACT score is 22.3; of import, Pennsylvania spends an average of $12,418 on per-pupil funding.

“The index’s ‘Top Ten’ prove that when parents have access to options and good information, all children can succeed,” Allen said. “Lawmakers need to look to these exemplars and the policies that have afforded parents greater power elsewhere and act as fast to bring real education reform to their respective states.

“Parents and voters have declared that mediocrity is no longer acceptable,” Allen added, “and our elected officials have a mandate to fix out educational and economic problems for good.”

Daily Headlines for January 28, 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

Transforming Culture, Education Key To A New Birth Of Freedom
Human Events, January 28, 2013

American history is filled with examples of political parties rising and falling, reaching the pinnacles of success just years before ultimate extinction and rising reborn from the ashes of political movements and principles of the past.

With Parents Making Choices, Bad Schools Left Behind
Washington Times, DC, January 27, 2013

Now is the time for all good education advocates to come to the aid of school choice. It’s National School Choice Week, so pay attention if you truly want a way forward.

State-Level Education Reform Key To Kids’ Future
Washington Times, DC, January 27, 2013

Our children represent our hopes and dreams for tomorrow, and in the eyes of a parent, there’s nothing more important. Unfortunately, today the troubles in our education system hang like a dark cloud over our children’s bright future.

FROM THE STATES

ARKANSAS

Arkansas Republican House Caucus Pushes for Charter Schools
KARK, AR, January 27, 2013

A battle shaping up in the legislature over your child’s education.
The Arkansas Republican house caucus is pushing for the creation of a charter school commission.

ARIZONA

Error Shorts Ariz. Schools $38 Million
Arizona Republic, AZ, January 28, 2013

An error in calculating classroom funding since 2006 has shortchanged hundreds of Arizona public and charter schools while causing others to be overpaid.

Traditional Public School Is A Legitimate Choice, Too
Arizona Republic, AZ, January 27, 2013

However, what may get lost in the celebration this week is that after nearly two decades of expanding choice options in our state, traditional public schools continue to be the choice for nearly nine out of 10 Arizona students. Like my family, hundreds of thousands of Arizona families make the informed and conscious choice to send our children to our traditional public schools.

Range Of School Options Allows Children To Thrive
Arizona Republic, AZ, January 27, 2013

It was 1993 and my first year in the Arizona Senate. I was one of a handful of legislators who were enthusiastically committed to reforming education in Arizona.

CALIFORNIA

Rating Districts On School Choice
Victorville Daily Press, CA, January 28, 2013

As our nation marks National School Choice Week, through Feb. 2., it is intriguing for Californians to reflect on exactly what is meant by “choice” in public education, and how well California schools fare in offering choice options and policies to parents.

Bill Aims To Limit Schools’ Use Of Expensive Bonds
Los Angeles Times, CA, January 28, 2013

To build classrooms and sports facilities, many districts have been relying on bonds that can require as much as $20 in payments for every $1 borrowed.

CONNECTICUT

Revisiting Charter School ‘Successes’
Stamford Advocate, CT, January 25, 2013

Every legislative session, charter school lobbyists proclaim how successful privately run charter schools are compared to “failing” public schools, and that charters should get a share of public money disproportionate to the 1 percent of public school children they serve. In order to illustrate the murky world of charter school statistics, here is a follow-up to two of my columns on Connecticut charters.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Council Member David Catania Takes Charge Of New Education Committee
Washington Post, DC, January 27, 2013

Two weeks after taking the helm of the D.C. Council’s new Education Committee, David A. Catania walked through the front door of Burrville Elementary School and started asking questions.

FLORIDA

Palm Coast Charter School Battling Back From ‘F’
Daytona Beach News-Journal, FL, January 27, 2013

As many young schoolchildren pack up each day, Palm Harbor Academy students gear up for an extra hour of reading. While their peers are boarding buses, the charter school students are breaking into small groups for individual instruction.

Pines Charters Want Share Of Broward Dollars
Miami Herald, FL, January 26, 2013

The Pembroke Pines Charter school system has a stellar reputation, top-notch students and well-maintained buildings. But it needs more money to keep going, school officials say.

Legislators On the Spot With Rick Scott’s Teacher Pay-Hike Proposal
Sunshine State News, FL, January 28, 2013

The past two years, Gov. Rick Scott and the majority in the state Legislature have been mostly on the same conservative, pro-business page regarding education, reforming insurance, slashing the budget and repealing government regulations.

Gov. Scott’s Teacher Pay Raise Plan Met With Skepticism
Tampa Bay Tribune, FL, January 28, 2013

The governor wants teachers to have $2,500 raises next school year.Teachers say the raises are long overdue. It sounds like a great idea, but whether it comes to fruition might be another thing.

GEORGIA

Education Group Claims Tax Credit Program Is Widely Abused
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, January 27, 2013

A 2008 law that allows Georgians to claim a tax credit after making a charitable contribution to a student scholarship organization has been widely abused, an education policy group alleges in a complaint that will be filed Monday with the state Department of Revenue.

INDIANA

Charters’ Test Scores Miss Mark
The Journal Gazette, IN, January 27, 2013

At a recent parent meeting for Imagine MASTer Academy, one big question that school officials said was difficult to answer was, “Why?”

More School Choice Options Touted, Extending Vouchers To Kindergarteners
Northwest Times, IN, January 27, 2013

As the nation celebrates National School Choice Week today through Friday local and state school choice supporters said they’d like to see changes in the law to give parents even more options.

IOWA

This Must Be The Year For Education Reform
Sioux City Journal, IA, January 27, 2013

From the beginning, we have applauded and supported the administration of Gov. Terry Branstad for its pursuit of education reform.

LOUISIANA

More Boards Follow Rules
The Advocate, LA, January 28, 2013

Twenty-five of New Orleans’ 43 charter school boards have complied with a state law that requires them to publicize and gather public input on their school budgets before they’re finalized, according to a Lens survey.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter Schools’ Building Costs Cited
Boston Globe, MA, January 28, 2013

As charter schools lobby the State House for increased funding for building improvements, they have a new tool to help them make their case: A report expected to be released Monday outlines the financial challenges faced by Massachusetts charter schools that lease or purchase their own facilities.

City on a Hill Offers Choice Where None Exists
South Coast Today, MA, January 28, 2013

The families and children of New Bedford cannot afford to wait for the New Bedford Public Schools to fulfill their promises of a better education.

MICHIGAN

Spend Early Education Dollars Wisely
Detroit News, MI, January 27, 2013

As they consider increasing preschool funds, lawmakers ought only to support effective programs

MINNESOTA

Minnesota Falls Behind On School Choice
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN, January 27, 2013

Back in 1991, my home state of Minnesota was a national leader in promoting the progressive reform of parental school choice. The Star of the North had begun allowing parents to claim a state income tax deduction for school expenses, including tuition at private schools, in 1955. In the 1980s, it pioneered the concept of public-school choice through open enrollment. In 1991, St. Paul became home to the nation’s first public charter school.

MISSISSIPPI

A Model That Benefits All Children
Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, MS, January 27, 2013

No one would argue that our schools are in need of smart and sustaining reform. Every child in our state deserves a quality education that will one day prepare them to compete globally in the workplace. Simply put, our children are not keeping up with children in top-performing countries. Regrettably, some children in our state have been denied the chance to be taught in consistently good schools by good teachers.

MISSOURI

Charter Schools Bring Competition To Education
Kansas City Star, MO, January 27, 2013

For those intent on deriding the Kansas City School District at every turn, the idea of charter schools is often an appealing alternative. A more realistic view would see the schools as an education option for families, but not a silver bullet for everything ailing public schools.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Charter School Funding Bill Moving Forward in Statehouse
Nashua Telegraph, NH, January 28, 2013

A bill to revert charter school spending practices back to those in place before 2010 is officially moving forward, but it likely won’t mean an earlier end to the moratorium on new charter schools.

NEW YORK

Catholic Competition
New York Post, NY, January 27, 2013

Today marks the start of Catholic Schools Week. There should be nothing parochial about the local celebrations.

Still on Strike, a Bus Union Sees a Threat to Its Culture
New York Times, NY, January 28, 2013

The strike, which has shut down roughly 5,000 of the city’s 7,700 school bus routes, is expected to continue this week, though the drivers’ union and the school bus companies had agreed to sit down at Gracie Mansion with a mediator on Monday.

Albany Charter School Group Becomes Hotbed Of Fraud, Embezzlement
NYaltnews, NY, January 27, 2013

The Brighter Choice Foundation, which was created by a Republican political operative, Thomas Carroll, is reeling as its chief financial officer has been charged with embezzling more than $200,000 from the organization.

Assembly Democrats Are Opposed To Gov. Cuomo’s New, $224 Million Line In The Sand In The City’s Teacher Evaluation Fight
New York Daily News, NY, January 28, 2013

Assembly Democrats are strongly opposed to Gov. Cuomo’s decision to impose a second strings-attached deadline on the city to approve a teacher evaluation plan.

NORTH CAROLINA

Lambeth’s Proposal For A Charter-School District Needs Much More Study
Winston-Salem Journal, NC, January 28, 2013

We have long supported charter schools in North Carolina. We favored lifting the state’s 100-school cap in 2011 because we think charter schools encourage innovation, give parents a choice, and put needed competitive pressure on the public schools to do a better job.

Davidson Elementary Enrollment Falls
Charlotte Observer, NC, January 27, 2013

While private and charter schools proliferate in the Lake Norman area, Davidson Elementary School’s enrollment has decreased by more than 20 percent over the last seven years.

Charter Schools May Double By 2014
News & Observer, NC, January 26, 2013

The events sponsored by the N.C. Public Charter Schools Association will draw parents looking for schools for their children. Over 1,000 people are expected to attend the charter fairs, where they can get information on the state’s 107 existing charter schools, the 25 new ones set to open in August and the more than 150 that have submitted letters to the state indicating they want to open in 2014.

Popularity High For Two Charter Schools In Vance County
Daily Dispatch, NC, January 26, 2013

Equal access to high quality educational opportunities is becoming more attainable in the state of North Carolina since the enactment of a bill signed into law by former Gov. Bev Perdue in 2011, lifting the 100-school cap on charter schools.

OHIO

Kasich Set To Unveil School Funding Plan
Toledo Blade, OH, January 28, 2013

It’s been a decade since the Ohio Supreme Court issued its fourth and final ruling declaring the state’s funding of schools unconstitutional because it placed students in poorer districts at a competitive disadvantage with their wealthier counterparts.

PENNSYLVANIA

Pa. Gets Good Grades In Education Reform Ranking
Philadelphia Tribune, PA, January 26, 2013

The Center for Education Reform, a national non-profit tasked with improving public education, has released an encompassing report that grades parental empowerment, solid educational choices, teacher quality and access to digital learning, among other factors. That Pennsylvania ranks in the top ten of all states can be viewed as proof educational reforms in the commonwealth are beginning to take hold.

Sub-Par Options: Charter Schools As A Class Don’t Measure Up
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 27, 2013

Now that the test scores for Pennsylvania charter schools have been recalculated, parents and taxpayers will be able to make more of an apples-to-apples comparison with the performance of traditional public schools.

Pittsburgh-Area Catholic Schools Launch An Outreach Association
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 27, 2013

At a time when school choice is hot, one choice that has been around for more than a century has boosted its marketing efforts to get the word out.

It’s A Shame Pa. Chose To Become A Wild West Of Charter Schools
Newsworks Blog, January 27, 2013

The state of Pennsylvania just got caught cooking the books. Which books? Well, this little scam didn’t have to do with dollars or deficits. It had to do with test scores. The scores emerging from the state’s charter schools, to be precise. As reported by Martha Woodallin The Inquirer, the Corbett administration – a big charter backer – fiddled with how it evaluated charters to make the picture look rosier.

Activists Gear Up Against Planned Philadelphia School Closings
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 27, 2013

As the clock ticks down to a School Reform Commission decision on shutting one in six Philadelphia public schools, opponents of the plan are ramping up their push against it.

Bills Would Alter Funding For Charter Schools In Pa.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 26, 2013

Republicans in the House are proposing changes in how charter schools are funded, after a late decision last year not to call a House vote made charter-school legislation a major piece of unfinished business.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Local Charter Schools To Conduct Enrollment Lotteries
Beaufort Gazette, SC, January 27, 2013

Three area charter schools plan enrollment lotteries soon because they have more applicants than spots available. Here is information about Bridges Preparatory, Riverview and Royal Live Oaks Academy of the Arts & Sciences.

TENNESSEE

School Board May Have Learned Why Charters Succeed
The Tennessean, TN, January 28, 2013

Metro school board members nailed it last week with a direct question: If the district’s most successful middle school test scores are coming out of six charter schools, how can regular schools emulate that success?

Governor To Outline School Voucher Program
NewsChannel5, TN, January 27, 2013

Governor Bill Haslam is preparing for Monday night when he will deliver his annual address. During his State of the State speech, he is expected to cover the hot-button issue of education reform in Tennessee.

Haslam To Introduce Public-Money-To-Private-Entities Transfer Program
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, January 27, 2013

Gov. Bill Haslam confirmed that, in his annual State of the State address tomorrow, he will introduce his own proposal to create a program in Tennessee to transfer more public money to private hands, beginning with a school voucher system. He declined to elaborate about which private concerns he would make eligible for taxpayer dollars.

Proposed Change In ‘Parent Trigger’ Law Would Give Tennessee Final Say
Commercial Appeal, TN, January 28, 2013

A state representative from Memphis is proposing a change in the so-called parent trigger education law that would give the state final approval.

Bill In Works To ‘Tweak’ Teacher Evaluations In Tennessee
Commercial Appeal, TN, January 26, 2013

Teachers across the state, including thousands in Shelby County, could have a job evaluation that better reflects their work, if a bill now in the draft stages passes this legislative session.

TEXAS

Waco-Area Schools Speak Out Against ‘Unfair’ Vouchers
Waco Tribune, TX, January 27, 2013

Waco, Midway and China Spring school boards approved the same resolution last week stating their opposition to vouchers, taxpayer savings grants, franchise tax credits or any other provision that diverts public money from public schools to private schools.

UTAH

The Winners And The Losers
Desert News, UT, January 26, 2013

The idea of charter schools took awhile to catch on in Utah, and it still isn’t popular among some public-school advocates.

Lawmaker Wants To Add Charter School Costs To Property Tax Notices
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, January 27, 2013

A Republican lawmaker wants to show Utahns how much of their property taxes goes toward charter schools, by adding a line to their local property tax notices.

‘Yes’ On Seattle Public Schools Levies — With Reservations
Seattle Times, WA, January 27, 2013

Vote yes for two Seattle Public School levies, but the district’s academic challenges and management problems remain cause for concern.

ONLINE LEARNING

Teachers Flip For ‘Flipped Learning’ Class Model
Associated Press, January 27, 2013

When Timmy Nguyen comes to his pre-calculus class, he’s already learned the day’s lesson — he watched it on a short online video prepared by his teacher for homework.

Superintendent Questions Cyber School Funding
The Sentinel, PA, January 27, 2013

The funding of cyber education programs is something that Mark Leidy, superintendent of Mechanicsburg Area School District, has seen as problematic.

Georgia’s Virtual Schools See Enrollment Increasing
Augusta Chronicle, GA, January 26, 2013

Interest in virtual education is rising across Georgia for families who want an alternative to traditional public schools, causing a significant increase in enrollment at the major online providers this academic year.

Common Core Pushes Edith Wharton Aside

January 28, 2013

Who knew Edith Wharton might lose her place in history because of the Common Core? In yet another article about how state standards are being negatively affected by the new wave of national standards, this pioneering piece from the Pioneer Institute makes clear that there’s more at stake than meets the eye.

Seems that there’s no shortage of issues with content and approach bubbling to the surface in the multi-million effort, so much so that the Foundation For Educational Excellence, Jeb Bush’s group, has taken to debunking what they are calling Common Core myths on a regular basis. Myth or reality, the point is that things are going missing. Perhaps we need to dig deeper before going all in.

RADIO: Jeanne Allen talks School Choice, Parent Power

Radio Interview
Arizona Politics & Culture
January 27, 2013

CER Founder & President Jeanne Allen talks about school choice, parent power, teacher quality, and more during National School Choice Week kickoff.

Daily Headlines for January 25, 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

Moving to Opportunity Results Show Need to Expand Choice and End Zip Code Education
Dropout Nation, January 24, 2013

An article of faith among many traditionalists that moving poor children and their families out of downtrodden neighborhoods into more-affluent ones will somehow improve their achievement.

White House: Schools Must Open Sports To Disabled
USA Today, January 25, 2013

The Obama administration for the first time is telling school districts across the USA that they must give disabled students equal access to extracurricular sports, a move that advocates say has been years in the making.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

Berkeley Charter School Fosters Creativity And Innovation
San Jose Mercury News, CA, January 24, 2013

Realm Charter School, the city’s only public charter school, opened its doors in fall 2011 to provide students in grades 6 through 12 with a program centered on project-based learning, with an emphasis on technology, research and action.

Do We Really Need A Charter School?
Burbank Leader, CA, January 25, 2013

On Sunday, Jan. 6, The Herald-Mail reported a request by several citizens to the Board of Education to consider the approval of what would be our first charter school.

Take Closer Look At Education Grade
Times-Standard, CA, January 25, 2013

Public education is frequently under the microscope, with good reason. Public education affects our entire population, as it is charged with preparing children and young adults with the academic, physical, and social tools necessary to succeed as adults.

Charter School Rift
North Coast Journal, CA, January 24, 2013

The prospect of sharing campus space has a community fretting about inequality

It’s Reform Vs. The Union In LAUSD Race
Los Angeles Daily News, CA, January 24, 2013

The future of Los Angeles’ public-education reform is at stake on March 5. That’s not hyperbole; that’s the truth about what could happen next election day.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Rocketship Charter Schools Revamping Signature ‘Learning Lab’
Washington Post Blog, DC, January 25, 2013

The Rocketship network of charter schools has made a name for itself in the world of school choice — and attracted $2 million from the Obama administration to help it grow — with its “blended learning” model that incorporates traditional classroom settings with a computer “Learning Lab” for students.

D.C. School Leaders Concerned About Proposed Graduation Requirements
Washington Examiner, DC, January 24, 2013

D.C. students would have to complete more art, music and physical education before they can graduate under a proposal by the DC State Board of Education. But school leaders warn that the new requirements would hurt both students who excel and those who lag behind.

FLORIDA

Charter Schools Poised to Get Florida’s Capital Outlay Funding for Third Straight Year
Bradenton Times, FL, January 25, 2013

In 2012, charter schools were narrowly unsuccessful in getting a state bill passed to require public school districts to give charter schools some of their local property tax revenue, though they received about $55 million for school construction through Governor Scott’s controversial decision to give them all of the state’s available capital outlay funding. If a recently proposed FLDOE budget is adopted, they’ll get even more next year, while school districts again go without.

Teacher Pay Proposal Smacks Of Political Bribe
Orlando Sentinel, FL, January 25, 2013

Our translation: Desperate to perk up a 36 percent approval rating ahead of his 2014 re-election bid, Scott hopes this “investment” pays dividends at the polls. We’re surprised he didn’t throw in a promise of dark chocolate, red wine and foot massages.

Study Shows Students’ Race, Poverty Not Factors in Teacher Ratings
News Chief, FL, January 24, 2013

Studies show students’ race and socio-economic status have virtually no correlation with their teachers’ performance evaluation scores, a top Florida education official told a legislative panel Thursday.

A Boost For Teachers — Maybe
Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL, January 25, 2013

Gov. Rick Scott’s proposed, $2,500 pay hike for Florida teachers is the first positive news that these underappreciated professionals have seen in a long time.

GEORGIA

Final Fundraising Data Shows 10-1 Advantage For Charter Backers
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, January 24, 2013

Backers of a constitutional amendment supporting charter schools outspent opponents more than 10 to 1 last fall, with most of the money coming from out-of-state advocates and businesses that make money off of such schools, year-end records show.

IDAHO

Luna Calls For 3% Budget Boost For Idaho Schools
Spokesman Review, WA, January 24, 2013

A humbled Idaho schools Superintendent Tom Luna told state lawmakers Thursday that regardless of how it’s done, he wants Idaho to keep investing in teacher pay and classroom technology.

INDIANA

School, Parents Push Toward Charter Appeal
The Journal Gazette, IN, January 25, 2013

Nearly 200 parents, current and former students and teachers came out in support of the school during a meeting Thursday where parents shared stories and learned more about Ball State University’s decision and what they can do to get involved.

KANSAS

House Committee Approves Bill That Would Prohibit Teachers Union From Using Voluntary Paycheck Donations For Political Advocacy
Lawrence Journal World, KS, January 24, 2013

A House committee on Thursday approved a bill that would prohibit the Kansas National Education Association from taking voluntary paycheck donations from teachers and using those funds for political advocacy.

LOUISIANA

Neville Charter Group To File Complaint
Monroe News Star, LA, January 25, 2013

Neville Charter school spokesman Ronnie Shelby said Thursday the group believes the “acting superintendents” of Monroe City Schools interfered with the vote process for the Neville charter and they plan to file a complaint with the Department of Education and the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.

MISSISSIPPI

Teacher Prep Efforts Criticized
Clarion-Ledger, MS, January 25, 2013

In Mississippi, 94 percent of college- and university-based teacher preparation programs “are insufficiently selective,” according to a report released today by the National Council on Teacher Quality.

Desoto Lawmakers: Tweak Charter Bill
DeSoto Times, MS, January 25, 2013

DeSoto County lawmakers say the charter school bill which eventually emerges from joint Senate and House conferees will likely be a vast improvement from last session when lawmakers were confronted with a “bad bill,” State Rep. Pat Nelson, R-Southaven, said Thursday.

GOP Split On Charter Bills
Clarion Ledger, MS, January 24, 2013

New battle lines have been drawn on charter schools expansion in the Legislature, and they’re no longer between Republicans and Democrats. They’re between Republicans and appear to be pitting the speaker and governor against the lieutenant governor.

Charter Schools: Runaway Train?
Jackson Free Press, MS, January 24, 2013

A few times during last night’s debate over the Mississippi House of Representatives’ charter-school law, HB 369, Democrats were resigned that charter schools were a runaway train they couldn’t stop.

NEW JERSEY

Schools Fail To File Work For Tax-Exempt Status
Courier Post, NJ, January 25, 2013

Two local charter schools, including the city’s oldest, have lost tax-exempt status after failing to file required forms with the IRS for a three-year period.

NEW MEXICO

H.S. Graduation Rate Soars
Albuquerque Journal, NM, January 25, 2013

New Mexico’s high school graduation rate jumped to 70 percent last year, a significant increase from 2011′s 63 percent.

NEW YORK

Oswego Charter School Plan Moving Forward Again
Oswego County Times, NY, January 25, 2013

Organizers of the Renaissance Charter School of Oswego took a step backward last summer so they can leap ahead now.

Mr. Mulgrew’s Pupils
New York Daily News, NY, January 25, 2013

There will be a power behind the throne in the schools chancellor’s office if John Liu, Bill de Blasio or Bill Thompson wins the 2013 mayoral election. His name will be Michael Mulgrew.

Closing Schools To Serve Kids Better
New York Daily News, NY, January 25, 2013

The closing of Catholic schools in the archdiocese of New York has garnered a lot of headlines recently, and for good reason. No one ever likes to see a school close. Shuttering a school is very painful for me, and I know that the difficulty it causes for our students, their families and our parishes is even greater.

OKLAHOMA

Barresi To Seek $37.7 Million In Supplemental School Funding
Tulsa World, OK, January 25, 2013

State Superintendent Janet Barresi announced Thursday that she will be seeking $37.7 million in supplemental appropriations from the Legislature.

OREGON

Oregon Schools Begin To Tie Teacher Pay To Student Test Scores
The Oregonian, OR, January 24, 2013

In the past few months, six Oregon school districts have quietly paid $2.75 million in bonuses to teachers and principals who excelled on the job and boosted student test scores, a controversial practice that is increasingly being tried around the country.

PENNSYLVANIA

With New Rules, Pa. Charter School Performance Plummets
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 25, 2013

The percentage of Pennsylvania charter schools that met academic benchmarks plummeted after the state Department of Education was forced to recalculate the performance rates.

Charter Schools Not Private
Pittsburgh Tribune Review, PA, January 24, 2013
The Jan. 20 article “Many Alle-Kiski school districts challenge private charter, cyber schools” perpetuates the gross inaccuracy that charter schools are private. There is no such thing as a “private charter school.“

Education Reform Should Not Be Reduced To Parody
Allentown Morning Call, PA, January 24, 2013

It is shameful that The Morning Call chose to publish Bill White’s column (“Charter schools delivering what they promise?”) that reduces education reform in Pennsylvania to a parody. Mr. White’s senseless dialogue about a fictitious school is neither forthcoming in its context nor based in reality.

SOUTH CAROLINA

School Choice Bill Introduced In SC Senate Again
The State, SC, January 25, 2013

A bill to help S.C. parents pay the cost of private school was introduced again in the state Senate Wednesday.

TENNESSEE

‘Parent Trigger’ Idea On TN Schools Takeover Evolves
The Tennessean, TN, January 25, 2013

A much-anticipated parent trigger bill that would allow a majority of parents or teachers to force a school takeover is ready to wind its way through the Tennessee House.

TEXAS

Sen. Patrick Touts Support Of New Group For School Reform
Dallas Morning News Blog, TX, January 24, 2013

Senate Education Committee Chairman Dan Patrick said Thursday he will work with a new organization, Texans Deserve Great Schools, to help craft legislation that improves public schools through such means as expanded online learning, better teacher preparation, classroom innovations and tougher rules for failing schools.

LISD Trustees OK Anti-Voucher Resolution
Avalanche-Journal, TX, January 24, 2013

Trustees of the Lubbock Independent School District on Thursday approved a resolution opposing the state adoption of any voucher-type plan, even as they commended the district’s new publicity drive, launched to answer campaigns by area school districts.

Texas Teachers, Foundations Converge On Capitol
Houston Chronicle, TX, January 24, 2013

Hundreds of teachers gathered at the state Capitol on Thursday to urge Texas lawmakers to roll back $5.4 billion in public education cuts imposed two years ago, while nearby a coalition of foundations pushed for reforms without necessarily spending more money.

VIRGINIA

Obenshain Comments on Bringing Charter Schools to Virginia
Luray Page Free Press, VA, January 24, 2013

Theoretically, Virginia is a charter school state. Theoretically. Unfortunately, our charter laws are such that it’s nearly impossible to obtain a charter, and there are only four charter schools in the entire Commonwealth.

Va. House, Senate Panels Back Bill To Overhaul Teacher Evaluation, Grievance Processes
Washington Post, DC, January 24, 2013

The House of Delegates passed a major component of Gov. Bob McDonnell’s education reform package Thursday, hours after a Senate committee endorsed the measure.

WISCONSIN

Rosendale-Brandon Set To Start New Charter School
Fond du Lac Reporter, WI, January 25, 2013

The Rosendale-Brandon School District is moving ahead with plans for a project-based charter school.

ONLINE LEARNING

Expert: Schools Need To Get Online
Columbus Dispatch, OH, January 25, 2013

More online learning could be coming to a school near you, based on a meeting yesterday of Columbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman’s Education Commission, which is examining how to improve education in the city.

District Recommends Denial Of Online School
Our Colorado News, CO, January 24, 2013

Representatives from the Colorado Virtual Academy had one last chance to convince the Adams 12 Five Star Schools Board of Education to renew its charter application during its Jan. 16 meeting.

National School Choice Week 2013


MS House Passes Charter School Bill

“House passes charter school bill in wee hours of morning”
by Associated Press
Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
January 24, 2013

Bleary-eyed charter schools supporters took a few minutes to bask in a big victory early today, but were quick to acknowledge that the fight’s not over.

The Mississippi House voted 64-55 to pass House Bill 369, which would expand charter schools in the state. The vote came after more than seven hours of debate and three hours of a computer reading the 251-page bill.

Last year, proposals for charter schools — public schools that agree to meet certain standards in exchange for freedom from regulations — never reached the House floor. This year, House Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton, muscled a carefully tailored bill through his chamber. The bill’s managers conceded enough changes that even a group that had fought the proposal swung over to endorse it during debate yesterday.

“I’m proud we could deliver this for Mississippi children, but we’ve still got a long way to go,” Rep. Charles Busby, R-Pascagoula, said after the debate. The freshman was tapped to handle the bill on the floor, enduring hours of sometimes repetitive questions from mainly Democratic opponents.

Now come negotiations with the Senate, which passed a broader bill last week. The House and the Senate must agree on a version before it can go to Republican Gov. Phil Bryant, who during his State of the State address Tuesday reiterated a desire to sign an expanded charter law.

The House version differs from the Senate bill, limiting charters to 15 a year, giving school boards in districts rated “A,” ”B” or “C” a veto, and prohibiting students from crossing district lines. The Senate bill doesn’t impose a limit, doesn’t give a veto to C-rated districts, and allows students to cross lines statewide. Gunn offered concessions to opponents because charter opposition is stronger in the House.

Rep. Pat Nelson, R-Southaven, said the endorsement of the bill by The Parents Campaign, which had been lobbying against it, as one factor that pushed it toward passage. As debate began yesterday afternoon, authors amended the measure to bar charter school boards from hiring for-profit management organizations to run schools.

The lobbying group, which had voiced fears of for-profit groups, announced its support after the nonprofit amendment was adopted.

“We are close to getting a bill that can provide good charter schools for our children who need them — those trapped in chronically underperforming schools,” executive director Nancy Loome wrote in an email to supporters urging them to call lawmakers and tell them to vote ‘yes.’

Still, Nelson and five other Republicans ended up voting against the final bill. But some of those opponents voted to protect the bill against hostile amendments. Republicans managing the bill confirmed an agreement with GOP opponents to vote against amendments proposed by Democrats before voting against the final bill.

Members voted down 17 amendments after approving the first one. Statewatch, a bill-tracking service, said that was the largest number of amendments offered to any proposed legislation in at least six years. Among rejected proposals were ones mandating that charter school teachers join the Public Employees Retirement System, allowing for public referendums before charter schools could be set up, or requiring lawmakers to fully fund the Mississippi Adequate Education Program before setting up charter schools.

The debate was the longest since Republicans took over the House in 2012. Rep. Bob Evans, D-Monticello, forced the 251-page bill to be read, delaying the vote until 12:52 am.

That marathon was still ahead of House members when Busby started the debate by asking: “What will we do today that is different than yesterday that will put our children in a better place tomorrow?”

Busby joined the Education Committee when House Speaker Philip Gunn, R-Clinton, kicked charter school opponent Linda Whittington, D-Schlater, off the panel. He quoted former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as saying there is no time for evolution in education.

“I want you to help me start the education revolution in Mississippi today,” he said.

But a number of black Democrats said they mistrusted Republicans’ claims of wanting to improve education for black children, a current that flows strongly through their opposition to charter schools.

Several became indignant after Rep. Brad Mayo, a white Oxford Republican, compared his father’s segregated schooling in the Sunflower County town of Drew to the struggling state of schools there today. State education officials forced a merger of the Drew district and the Sunflower County district in July, closing Drew High School, which graduated Archie Manning.

“I don’t believe for one second that you care about improving the plight of our children,” said Rep. Adrienne Wooten, D-Jackson.

Daily Headlines for January 24, 2013

NEW NEWSWIRE TODAY! 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 Feds’ Education Power Grab
Los Angeles Times, CA, January 24, 2013

It’s time to have a conversation about the issue before we find that the executive branch, or even the entire federal government, has become our national school board.

School Choice: 49 Million Students Still Without Options
The Hill, DC, January 23, 2013

Heidi and Frank Green used to worry about their daughters while they were at school. The Clarksville, Indiana couple was concerned about bullying, cursing, large class sizes, a revolving teaching staff, and a general lack of attention for students.

National School Choice Week starts Jan.27
Havasu News, AZ, January 24, 2013

National School Choice Week starts Jan. 27 as part of a national campaign to let communities know there are choices when it comes to a child’s education.

Julia Steiny: Michelle Rhee Throws Gas on Ed Reform Hostilities
Go Local Prov, RI, January 24, 2013

The ever-controversial Michelle Rhee and her organization Students First have issued a State Policy Report Card, grading states’ reform policies. Almost all the states got either a “D” or an “F.” Dummies.

Parent Power Index Rates Each State on Education Options
The Epoch Times, January 23, 2013

It is well-known that if parents are engaged in their children’s education, then their children will likely be more successful in school, and now for the first time, parents are provided with a Web gateway that indexes and details how much power each state gives to parents regarding their children’s education.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

School Flexibility Act Pre-Filed in Alabama House of Representatives
Montgomery Adviser, AL, January 24, 2013

House lawmakers have prefiled a bill that would allow school districts to request waivers from some state laws if they believe the waivers could lead to better results in the classroom.

CALIFORNIA

Bullis Willing To Accept Split-Campus Offer
Marin Independent Journal, CA, January 23, 2013

Bullis Charter School announced Wednesday it will accept Los Altos School District’s likely proposal to split it between two campuses next year, provided certain modifications are made.

Cheers Erupt When Blue Oak Awarded Charter Renewal
Whittier Daily News, CA, January 24, 2013

Cheers and applause aren’t sounds usually heard by a school board but celebration erupted in the Chico Unified School District trustees meeting when the panel approved the charter renewal for Blue Oak School.

Viva Cell Towers, School Choice
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, January 23, 2013

We won’t take sides in the endless cell tower debates, other than to point out that we need towers if we want smartphones, and that many careful, reputable studies have failed to find health problems from exposures to microwave radiation at levels approved by the Federal Communications Commission. Yet we won’t hesitate to side with school choice, and the rights of parents to become deeply involved in the operation of publicly funded schools.

A Simpler, Fairer Way To Fund California’s Schools
Los Angeles Times, CA, January 24, 2013

Driving along Pacific Coast Highway, you can see the successive layers of earth and rock that have piled up over millions of years to create California’s coastal landscape. You can see a similar but less attractive phenomenon if you look at the way California funds its public K-12 schools.

COLORADO

District Renews Charter Of Brighton School Stripped Of Federal Grants
Denver Post, CO, January 23, 2013

The board of education for School District 27J in Brighton on Tuesday approved a charter renewal for Eagle Ridge Academy, which was stripped of federal education grant funds and is under criminal investigation.

CONNECTICUT

Committee Hears Options For Rebuilding Charter Oak Academy
Hartford Courant, CT, January 23, 2013

It will cost between $47 million and $49 million to renovate or rebuild Charter Oak International Academy, an architect for the project told committee members and town officials Wednesday night.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Mendelson Puts School Truancy On D.C.’S Front Burner
Washington Times, DC, January 23, 2013

Phil Mendelson is of a mind that his city’s government is obligated to curb the school truancy problem. To that end, the chairman of the D.C. Council is in line with his colleague, David A. Catania, who is legislatively poking at the issue by proposing that parents of chronically truant children be punished.

D.C. Council Members Fear Schools Near Tipping Point As Students Flee System
Washington Post, DC, January 23, 2013

The District’s traditional public school system is in danger of shrinking significantly unless officials make changes that persuade parents to stop fleeing to public charter schools, D.C. Council members said Wednesday.

FLORIDA

No Easy ‘A’ for Rick Scott’s Teacher Pay Hike
Sunshine State News, FL, January 24, 2013

A lot of details need to be worked out to make Gov. Rick Scott’s $2,500 across-the-board salary increase for real for Florida’s teachers.

Local Educators Skeptical of Gov. Scott’s Pay Proposal for Teachers
The Ledger, FL, January 24, 2013

Gov. Rick Scott’s proposal to give every Florida teacher a $2,500 pay raise in the 2013-14 budget is receiving skeptical responses from local educators.

GEORGIA

Charter Expansion Details In Progress
Cherokee Tribune, GA, January 24, 2013

Regarding Cherokee Charter Academy’s high school expansion, recently approved by the Georgia Department of Education, the school’s Local Governing Council continued to keep mum on plans at its meeting Wednesday.

Center for Ed Reform: Georgia Ranks 16th for Strong Charter Laws
Atlanta Journal Constitution Blog, GA, January 23, 2013

Georgia ranks 16th in the nation for strong charter laws, according to the Center for Education Reform’s annual scoreboard.

ILLINOIS

State Survey Aims To Offer Detailed Look At Schools
Chicago Tribune, IL, January 24, 2013

Calling it an “X-ray” of public schools, Illinois is launching an unprecedented attempt to gather candid information on how teachers are teaching, students are learning and principals are leading.

INDIANA

Cautionary Tale Comes From Ohio
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, IN, January 23, 2013

Will the seven schools whose charters have been revoked actually close? Ohio’s experience suggests otherwise.

Welcome Charter Ruling
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, IN, January 23, 2013

When union leader Albert Shanker championed charter schools as teacher-directed laboratories of reform in a 1988 address, the president of the American Federation of Teachers probably didn’t envision the disappointing form some of those schools would take 25 years later.

School Appeals Charter Decision
Palladium-Item, IN, January 24, 2013

The board of Kenneth A. Christmon STEMM Academy in Richmond voted Wednesday night to appeal Ball State University’s decision to not renew its charter school contract.

Parents Rally Behind Gary School To Save Charter
Post Tribune, IN, January 23, 2013

Parents and supporters of the Charter School of the Dunes are starting a calling campaign appealing to Ball State University not to yank its charter.

Voucher Bill Delayed Again
The Journal Gazette, IN, January 24, 2013

A move to expand the state’s voucher program was postponed for the second consecutive week Wednesday.

IOWA

Branstad: Education Reform Can Be Passed, But Don’t Get Too Bogged Down In How Dollars Are Divvied Up For Districts
Muscatine Journal, IA, January 23, 2013

Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad insisted on Wednesday the state Legislature can pass a comprehensive education reform plan early in the session, arguing that getting bogged down in an argument over how much basic state aid should go to local school districts could imperil the proposal.

LOUISIANA

Program To Help School Dropouts
The Advocate, LA, January 24, 2013

At least 2,000 Lafayette Parish School System high school dropouts between the ages of 15 and 21 now have a chance to earn their diploma on their own time with the support of tutors and an advocate, school officials said Wednesday.

MARYLAND

Achievement Gap For Montgomery Students To Be Re-examined In February
Maryland Gazette, MD, January 23, 2013

The achievement gap between students of different races and backgrounds in Montgomery County Public Schools will be examined again in detail next month.

MASSACHUSETTS

City Considers School Assignment Plans
Boston Globe, MA, January 24, 2013

No favorite emerged Wednesday night after school officials presented three proposals to an advisory committee weighing changes in the way the city assigns students to schools.

New Leadership Closure Triggers Anger And Panic Among Parents, Students In Springfield
The Republican, MA, January 23, 2013

The pending closure of New Leadership, a well-established charter school with 500 students, has triggered a firestorm among the students, parents and faculty and could drive up the city’s middle through high school population by as much as 4 percent.

MICHIGAN

Focus On Teaching Our Teachers
Detroit News, MI, January 24, 2013

Giving teachers more support, better training is an effective way to improve education in Michigan

Detroit Public Schools Face Drastic Cuts To Balance Budget
Detroit News, MI, January 24, 2013

The financial slide inside the state’s largest school district will continue through 2016, leaving Detroit Public Schools with 28 fewer schools, 1,688 lost positions and 13,000 fewer students, according to a deficit elimination plan obtained by The Detroit News.

Huffington Post Blames Charter Schools for Serving Poor Kids
Mackinac Center for Public Policy, MI, January 24, 2013

A recent article in the Huffington Post badly distorts the findings of new study of Michigan’s charter public schools by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, and in the process blames charter public schools for serving too many poor kids.

MINNESOTA

Minnesota Schools Would Have More Money, Control Under Plan
West Central Tribune, MN, January 23, 2013

School districts and school boards would have more control over how to use state funding under a budget proposed by Gov. Mark Dayton, officials told legislators Wednesday.

MISSISSIPPI

Big Questions About Charters
Jackson Free Press, MS, January 23, 2013

The atmosphere at the Mississippi Capitol got tense for a few moments Thursday when Sen. Kenneth Wayne Jones, D-Canton, leader of the Legislative Black Caucus, questioned the legitimacy of Gov. Phil Bryant’s education policy recommendations.

Mississippi House Approves Charter Schools
Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, MS, January 24, 2013

The Mississippi House stayed into session until early Thursday to pass charter school legislation 64-55.

School Officials React To Charter Bill
DeSoto Times, MS, January 24, 2013

DeSoto County will be impacted by the new charter school bill if it passes the Legislature this session.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Law to Fund Private Schools Unconstitutional
Seacoast Online, MA, January 24, 2013

On June 27, 2012, the New Hampshire House and Senate overrode a veto by former Gov. John Lynch and passed a law that diverts public tax dollars for use in private secular and parochial schools.

Manchester Parents Add To Charter Wish List, Say School Budget Is Left Until Too Late
New Hampshire Union Leader, NH, January 23, 2013

Several dozen residents turned out on a frigid Wednesday evening to urge the Charter Commission to consider changes to the city’s basic governing document they said would benefit the public school system.

NEW YORK

The Union Wants An Evaluation Deal
New York Daily News, NY, January 24, 2013

Does Mayor Bloomberg really want a new teacher evaluation system? Is it going to be possible to put such a system in place before Gov. Cuomo’s deadline of Sept. 1?

WNY Maritime Charter Teaches Hamburg Students Leadership Skills
The Sun News, NY, January 24, 2013

High school senior and Hamburg resident Brandon Cruz knew he wanted to join the military after high school. After spending two years at St. Francis High School, he met a few cadets at a camp he attended from the Western New York Maritime Charter School, and decided that the school might be for him.

NORTH CAROLINA

Wake School Changes Have State GOP Support
News & Observer, NC, January 23, 2013

A top Republican state lawmaker says he supports both changing the way the Wake County school board is elected and taking away the body’s power to buy land and own schools.

Schools Chief: Forsyth Not Likely To Be ‘charter-school District’ Soon
Winston-Salem Journal, NC, January 23, 2013

Superintendent Don Martin assured principals in the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools this week that the system will not become a charter-school district anytime soon, but state Rep. Donny Lambeth, R-Forsyth, said he will push for a bill to make that possible in the upcoming legislative session.

OREGON

Oregon Scores D- In Teacher Preparation
Statesman Journal, OR, January 24, 2013

Oregon received a D- for its policies on teacher preparation, according to a report from the National Council on Teacher Quality, an education reform advocacy group.

PENNSYLVANIA

Two Camden Charters Lose Tax-Exempt Status
Philadelphia Enquirer, PA, January 24, 2013

After more than three years of failing to file required IRS forms, two Camden charter schools have lost their tax-exempt status, a requirement to be granted a New Jersey charter.

Pennsylvania Charter School Test Results Sag
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 24, 2013

Recalculated figures for attaining Adequate Yearly Progress on the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment exams for 2012 show that 28 percent of charter schools met the standard compared with 49 percent based on calculations made previously.

Pittsburgh Public Schools Rejects Hazelwood K-8 Charter School
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 23, 2013

The board of Pittsburgh Public Schools has rejected a request from Propel Schools to open a K-8 charter school in Hazelwood.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Proposals Would Restrict Private Schools From Championships
Greenville News, SC, January 24, 2013

Greenville County’s private and charter schools would be prohibited from competing for athletic championships against public schools if new proposals are approved by the South Carolina High School League.

TENNESSEE

Annual Report On Charter Schools Released
NewsChannel 5, TN, January 23, 2013

A annual report on Metro Charter schools was released Wednesday night during a special meeting and reception.

TEXAS

Good Reasons for Corpus Christi ISD to Oppose Tuition Vouchers
Corpus Christi Caller Times, TX, January 24, 2013

The Corpus Christi Independent School District’s resolution against vouchers for private school tuition comes as no surprise. Vouchers would be contrary to CCISD’s best interests.

School Leaders Vow To Expand Quality Choices
Houston Chronicle, TX, January 23, 2013

Houston’s urban school leaders vowed Wednesday to continue efforts to expand quality school choices, despite financial and regulatory challenges.

UTAH

Report: Utah Ranks 11th In U.S. For Charter School Policy
Desert News, UT, January 23, 2013

Utah charter school policy ranks 11th in the nation, scoring a B grade, according to the Center for Education Reform.

VIRGINIA

Report: Va. Isn’t Picky Enough About Training Teachers
The Virginian-Pilot, VA, January 24, 2013

The state’s undergraduate teacher-preparation programs are “not sufficiently selective,” according to the National Council on Teacher Quality.

Virginians Support Nontraditional Educational Options
Richmond Times-Dispatch, VA, January 24, 2013

A majority of Virginians favor three education concepts that have gained little traction among state leaders, according to the latest Commonwealth Education Poll from Virginia Commonwealth University.

WASHINGTON

MAP is the Anti-Standardized Test
Seattle Times, WA, January 23, 2013

The Measures of Academic Progress test that Garfield High School teachers are boycotting provides important insight about students’ academic needs, writes guest columnist Matt Chapman.

WISCONSIN

Advocates In The Home Of Voucher Schools Push For More Freedom To Choose
Wisconsin Reporter, WI, January 23, 2013

School choice in Wisconsin has come a long way since the late 1980s, when Republican Gov. Tommy Thompson and Milwaukee led the national school voucher revolution.

WYOMING

Senate Kills Two Education Reform Bills
Wyoming Tribune Eagle, WY, January 23, 2013

The bills would have raised the dropout age to 18 and made students take four years of math in high school.

ONLINE LEARNING

YWCA Sponsors New Leadership Academy
Valley Breeze, RI, January 23, 2013

YWCA Rhode Island has received the go-ahead from the Rhode Island Department of Education for a groundbreaking online charter school designed for at-risk high school students.

No Cyber Charter School In Pennsylvania Made Adequate Yearly Progress
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, January 23, 2013

Recalculated figures for attaining Adequate Yearly Progress on the Pennsylvania System of School Assessment exams for 2012 released by the state Department of Education show that the number of charter schools hitting the targets for AYP dropped from 77 to 43.

Hermiston School District Adds Online Classes
Oregon Public Broadcasting, OR, January 23, 2013

Cayla Ontiveros spends her mornings online, perhaps spending time with friends or searching for a job.