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Utah ranks 11th in U.S. for charter school policy

by Rachel Lowry
Deseret News
January 23, 2013

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

The center, which has been analyzing state charter school laws since 1996, also ranked Utah in the top 10 for online learning, parental choice, teacher quality and transparency in the latest evaluation of charter education.

“Utah is a leader when it comes to hitting those hot-button issues that empower parents to be in the driver’s seat of their children’s education,” said Kara Kerwin, director of external affairs at the Center for Education Reform, a nonprofit organization in Washington, D.C.

The state’s transparency is exemplary, Kerwin said.

“Utah’s website is parent-friendly and accessible, containing easy-to-understand data,” she said.

Another critical piece, Kerwin said, is the election of local school boards.

“Held during the general elections in November, parents have the convenience, as well as the power, to make decisions about who runs their schools,” she said.

“Utah’s charter school law is considered strong because it provides equitable funding to charter schools, facilities funding and a strong authorizing system that includes capable independent bodies such as universities and the semi-independent state charter board,” according to the center’s website.

Utah ranked high in school choice, as well. “Utah has one private school choice program (special-needs vouchers). The state does have a charter school law. Utah allows for limited public virtual schooling. Open enrollment exists, both for intra-district and inter-district public school choice,” the website said.

According to the website, Utah has adopted “multiple student-centric policies designed specifically to harness the power of technology.” This is due, largely in part, to the passage of SB65 and the Statewide Online Education Program.

Robert Ralphs, executive director of Alianza Academy in Salt Lake City, said state laws and policies allow charter schools to be flexible and encourage the creation of new models. For him, that means online learning.

A hybrid school that combines traditional instruction with nearly three hours of online instruction, Alianza Academy is not the only model for digital learning. Four or five charter schools are modeling such techniques, and nearly every school is moving in that direction, Ralphs said.

“As an outsider who came into the charter school scene only three years ago, I applaud what the people in Utah who’ve been at it for 14 years have done,” he said. “It’s really quite remarkable. And it’s served kids well.”

But there is always room for improvement. Teacher evaluations could use some work, Kerwin said.

“Right now in Utah, eligibility for dismissal is not a consequence of unsatisfactory evaluations,” she said. “Ineffective classroom performance is not grounds for dismissal. That’s not right for our kids. Utah should be thinking about how to better evaluate schools, teachers and students.”

But one consideration must be made, said Sonia Woodbury, director of City Academy, a Salt Lake City charter school.

“The charter school movement started about 20 years ago,” Woodbury said. “So while it’s good that we have people looking at our schools, we have to remember how relatively new this is, in a sense. There’s no clear settling of how things are going to look.”

In terms of state policy and law, Woodbury said she’s been impressed by the Legislature’s willingness to listen.

“Every year, legislators come out of session to speak with us on the hill,” she said. “I attend meetings in small and large groups where I have a voice, and people are listening to us. They seem very accessible to me.”

Of the 43 U.S. states with charter school laws, four states received an A, nine earned a B, 19 got a C, and 11 ranked in D or F categories.

Parent Power Index Rates Each State on Education Options

by Kelly Ni
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.

The new tool is called the Parent Power Index (PPI). Parent Power refers to parents’ access to quality education and information, according to the PPI website. The index, created by the Center for Education Reform (CER), is much like an interactive report card.

Parent Power is made up of five elements: charter schools, school choice, teacher quality, transparency, and online learning. If a state does well in these areas, then their PPI is high.

Indiana ranked number one, followed by Florida, Ohio, Arizona, District of Columbia, Louisiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Utah, in that order.

Kara Kerwin, director of external affairs at the CER, helped develop the PPI. She said that the elements of Parent Power have been under study since 1996.

“The value that these schools have where parents can make a choice is so critical and increases student achievement,” she said. With systems and policies in place that do not put parents in charge, Kerwin said that parent engagement is very hard.

“For example, one element on the PPI is transparency, so how good the information parents have about their schools is really important,” she added.

“Whether or not school board elections are held during the general election in November, or whether or not they’re held at odd times can really disenfranchise parents from what’s going on in their schools,” Kerwin said, adding that some schools in some towns have moved school board elections to April or March or to the third Monday of an unexpected month.

“It’s not really clear or transparent when they can be voting for the officials that run and operate the schools. So, that’s an important aspect of what gives people power,” Kerwin said.

Vouchers, which give students the tax funds to go to any school of their choice, and scholarships can change lives dramatically, according to Kerwin.

Also taken into account in the PPI are whether or not the state has a parent trigger law, how pro-reform the governor is, and how well the state’s media reports education reforms. The Media Bullpen tracks and rates media’s reporting on education reforms.

According to Kerwin, PPI is all about giving parents information and the power to know they can do something. It’s about informing them on whether or not they have access to choices—and letting them know that they can make choices.

A pioneer in school choice, famed economist Milton Friedman, who pushed for free and open markets and once advised Ronald Regan, dedicated the last years of his life together with his wife, economist Rose Director Friedman, pushing for school choice. Their view, according to the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, is that schools educate better when they are forced to compete. The Friedman Foundation is a source for considering school choice in the PPI.

The element of charter schools in the PPI is ranked by The Essential Guide to Charter School Law 2013 National Ranking and Scorecard, online learning is ranked by Digital Learning Now!, and teacher quality is ranked by the National Council on Teacher Quality.

Graduation Rate Moves Up, Hits 78%

“High school graduation rate tops 78 percent – highest since 1976”
by Allison Terry
Christian Science Monitor
January 22, 2013

Public high school students are graduating at the highest rate since 1976, motivated in part by grim economic conditions and the need to be competitive in a crowded job market.

More than 3.1 million high school students received their diplomas in spring 2010, with 78.2 percent finishing in four years, the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) reported Tuesday. The rate is a 2.7-percentage-point increase over the previous year, and those two rates are the highest since the 75 percent rate in 1975 and 1976.

The report does not analyze for causes, but education officials say the increasing rate can certainly be linked to the struggling economy.

“If you drop out of high school, how many good jobs are there out there for you? None,” said Education Secretary Arne Duncan in an Associated Press interview published Tuesday.

This was not the case 10 or 15 years ago, he said.

“When I grew up on the South Side of Chicago, it wasn’t great, but I had lots of friends who dropped out, and they could go work in the stockyards or steel mills, and they could buy a home, support a family, do OK,” Secretary Duncan said.

With an average annual salary of $20,241, high school dropouts earn $10,386 less than high school graduates, who earn $30,627, according to Census Bureau data.

The need for young people to be competitive in the job market is increasingly important, especially as part-time jobs and internships available to students are decreasing, says Donna Harris-Aikens, director of education policy and practices at the National Education Association.

“Part of the impact of the economy on students is that internship slots are being taken by adults who need to switch gears or gain experience in different fields, so they can get back into the mainstream of employment,” Ms. Harris-Aikens says.

It is important for students to see how their education is relevant to their employment experience and how earning a diploma will benefit them in both the short and long term, she says.

The increasing graduation rate is “extremely promising,” Harris-Aikens says, but there is still plenty of room for improvement. “We want to be at 100 percent.”

The achievement gaps along racial lines are a noticeable area for improvement, she says.

Asian/Pacific Islander students graduate at the highest rate (93.5 percent), followed by white students (83 percent), Hispanic students (71.4 percent), American Indian/Alaska Native students (69.1 percent), and black students (66.1 percent), according to the NCES report.

“If we can work to close those gaps, the graduation rate overall will see dramatic increases,” Harris-Aikens says.

The graduation rate also varies widely across states: Lowest-ranked Nevada reported 57.8 percent graduation rate, and top-ranked Vermont reported 91.4 percent.

One next step is to do a more in-depth analysis to see which strategies are working and which strategies need to be readjusted.

The most important strategy, Harris-Aikens says, is “paying attention to details and talking to kids, helping them figure out what they need.”

NCES bases the graduation rate on the averaged freshman graduation rate (AFGR), an estimate of public high school students who graduate within four years of starting ninth grade. The US Department of Education continues to refine the way it reports graduation rates, including establishing a national formula for state reports, but the AFGR is currently the best measure, the NCES report says.

Newswire: January 23, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 3

CER at 20. Yep it’s that time again. Another anniversary. This one is the 20th, and we will celebrate the tried and true classics of education reform –– the people and the issues –– on October 9, 2013, in Washington DC. A conference and review of the movement during the day, a gala to beat all galas at night. Mark your calendar. You will not want to miss it! Speaking of another kind of Miss…

HIT OR MISS? The Mississippi Senate approved an amendment to the state’s weak charter law last week, creating an additional authorizer route to improve the chances that schools will be approved outside of the school board monopoly. That monopoly is drumming up myths and fear surrounding the potential for new people to come into the state to run schools (oh, my!) and that some could actually dare to be from companies that pay taxes, and who have a solid track record of education in other states. A group of status quo citizens parading around as a parent network have caused House Ed members to restrict the already modest Senate proposal. With MS education scraping the bottom, and kids in jeopardy, it’s hard to imagine why brave lawmakers would accept more mediocrity.

CHOICE IS A CIVIL RIGHT. Congratulations President Obama on your second inauguration and how fitting it fell on the day we recognize Dr. King. Many reformers tweeted with pride as you recalled “The Preamble” from our Declaration of Independence, as you called for us to equalize the playing field for all Americans. You mentioned education, but you did not mention equity there. Unshackled by union payback and votes, and as we prepare to celebrate National School Choice Week, it’s time to revisit your opposition to school choice, challenge your supporters and truly equalize opportunity in America. We were reminded of the impact politics has on one’s point of view when we uncovered again this letter from then-Gov. Clinton to Wisc. Rep. Polly Williams as she launched a movement for school choice from the African-American community, back in 1990! Her legacy took hold and grew. As president, Clinton would go on to veto the program many of us fought for in DC, and a version eventually became law, though not without opposition. Join us now, post election, in this latest horizon for civil rights.

MANDATE FOR LEADERSHIP. For our “new” leadership, even a limited federal role can accomplish much for education. Mandate for Change offers evergreen advice for any government leader or policy maker, now and in the future. Mandate is a call to action – and we must begin to act now.

BAEO. Join others united to resolve the aforementioned inequities when the Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO) convenes in Orlando from March 14-16, 2013 for its annual symposium.

STAY INFORMED. Get in the game at the Media Bullpen, the nation’s largest and only aggregator of education news. Set up personalized feeds, comment and share national, state, and local news from CER’s 24/7 virtual newsroom.

Daily Headlines for January 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

High School Graduation Rate Tops 78 Percent – Highest Since 1976
Christian Science Monitor, MA, January 22, 2013

Some 78.2 percent finished in four years, graduating in spring 2010, a new report found Tuesday. Grim economic conditions and the need to be competitive in a crowded job market played a role.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Lesson In Legislating
Anniston Star, AL, January 22, 2013

A year ago, Gov. Robert Bentley and many Republican leaders in the state Legislature were promoting passage of a bill to create charter schools.

CALIFORNIA

Triggering Reform
Victorville Daily Press, CA, January 22, 2013

The reasons for the fierce teachers union opposition to successful completion of California’s Parent Trigger law by parents of Desert Trails students were obvious, particularly to the unions themselves. They knew that if the Adelanto school was converted to charter status, unhappy parents all over the state would be encouraged to follow suit.

DELAWARE

State On Right Road To Beat Its Dropout Record
Delaware News Journal, DE, January 23, 2013

Not since 1974 has the U.S. experienced the level of high schools students graduating on time as it is witnessing now.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Will The Mayor Step Up For Charter School Children?
Washington Examiner, DC, January 22, 2013

Mayor Vincent Gray’s budget office is preparing the administration’s proposed fiscal year 2014 budget, which the mayor will send to the District of Columbia Council in late March. The budget will fund both the traditional public school system and public charter schools, which are run independently of the school system and educate 43 percent of District students enrolled in public schools.

FLORIDA

Florida Governor To Call For Teacher Pay Raises
Brevard Times, FL, January 23, 2013

January Florida Governor Rick Scott on Wednesday will unveil a proposal for an across-the-board teacher pay increase, a spokeswoman for the governor confirmed Tuesday.

Teacher Evaluation Report Needs To Be Meaningful
TC Palm, FL, January 23, 2013

Most Treasure Coast teachers rated “effective” or “highly effective” in their classrooms for the 2011-12 school year, according to data released recently by the Florida Department of Education.

ILLINOIS

Far Fewer Schools May Close This Year
Chicago Tribune, IL, January 23, 2013

The commission on school closings has told Chicago Public Schools officials that shutting a large number of schools would create too much upheaval, and that it is leaning toward a recommendation for closing far fewer schools than many have feared — possibly as few as 15, sources said.

Chicago Catholic Schools See Enrollment Increase
WNCT, IL, January 23, 2013

Enrollment in Chicago’s Catholic schools has grown over the past three years. The Archdiocese of Chicago announced Tuesday the school system has seen an increase of 675 students during that period.

Parents Raise Questions About UNO Charter Schools’ Use Of Millions From State Grant
Chicago Tribune, IL, January 22, 2013

Construction on a new charter high school in Chicago’s Gage Park neighborhood reached a milestone Tuesday even as the school’s operators fended off criticism from one parents group about its finances.

INDIANA

BSU Revokes School Charters
Muncie Star Press, IN, January 23, 2013

Choice in public school education in Indiana took a blow Tuesday with the announcement that Ball State University is revoking seven charter schools in Gary, Indianapolis, Fort Wayne and Richmond.

Imagine Life Science Academy East’s Charter Won’t Be Renewed By Ball State
Indianapolis Star, IN, January 22, 2013

An Indianapolis charter school — the Imagine Life Science Academy East — could face closure after Ball State University made good on a promise to enforce higher standards at the charter schools it sponsors.

Gov. Pence Lobbies For Tax Cut, School Vouchers
Palladium-Item, IN, January 22, 2013

Gov. Mike Pence used his first State of the State address Tuesday night to lobby for a personal income tax cut, an expansion of Indiana’s school voucher system and improved vocational training.

IOWA

Iowa House Panel Begins Review Of Branstad’s School Reform Proposals
Des Moines Register, IA, January 23, 2013

Gov. Terry Branstad’s top-priority education reform package received its first official airing in the Iowa Legislature on Tuesday night, in a lengthy hearing before a panel of seven House members.

LOUISIANA

School Audits Uncover Issues At Lusher, Lagniappe, Miller-McCoy
Times-Picayune, LA, January 22, 2013

Audits released Monday by the Louisiana Legislative Auditor’s office point to problems in 2011-12 at several New Orleans charter schools. A Lusher employee embezzled $25,000, Miller-McCoy has two potential ethics violations and Lagniappe Academies failed to conduct criminal background checks on some employees.

MAINE

Fifth High School Year A Solid Education Reform
Portland Press Herald, ME, January 23, 2013

A low-cost, smooth transition to college would help both students and the Maine economy.

MASSACHUSETTS

Let’s Talk ‘Legacy’
Boston Herald, MA, January 23, 2013

Gov. Deval Patrick last week said he wants to pour hundreds of millions of new dollars into the state’s education system via a massive tax increase, in part to narrow the achievement gap in the state’s needier communities. But there is a piece of legislation on Beacon Hill that wouldn’t cost taxpayers a dime and, if enacted, could have darn near the same impact.

MICHIGAN

Michigan Public Schools Fare Poorly In Statewide Study
Detroit News, MI, January 22, 2013

Michiganians gave the state’s public school system mediocre grades in an extensive study released Tuesday by The Center for Michigan that also found residents are skeptical of proposed reforms to expand online learning, lengthen the school year and allow universal open enrollment.

MINNESOTA

North Mpls. Science Charter School Raising The Bar
CBS Minnesota, MN, January 22, 2013

In just its second year, the Minnesota School of Science charter school in north Minneapolis is raising the bar. With an air of confidence, science student Jailynn Gainous doesn’t skip a beat when asked to explain her experiment.

Lakes Area Charter School Celebrates Class Of 2013
Osaki Review, MN, January 23, 2013

Nine young people recently wrapped up their high school career and are now beginning the next chapter of their lives.

MISSISSIPPI

Charter Schools Bill Clears House Panel, But Questions Remain
Clarion Ledger, MS, January 23, 2013

Concerns about school funding, administrator qualifications and allowing for-profit companies to manage charter schools in Mississippi will likely dominate debate on a related House Education Bill this week.

Opposition to Charter Schools is Growing in Oxford School District
Mississippi Public Broadcasting, MS, January 22, 2013

The state Senate may vote this week on whether to allow charter schools in Mississippi — after the House already passed the bill. But, as MPB’s Sandra Knispel reports, resistance is growing in some school districts, among them Oxford.

Senate-Like Charter Bill Best Option
Clarion Ledger, MS, January 23, 2013

My views on charter schools have evolved over the past two years, and the tipping point for me was moderating a roundtable discussion on the issue and listening to two parents who are desperate for better opportunities for their children.

MISSOURI

South City Parish Schools Look For New Idea
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, January 23, 2013

Faced with declining enrollment and rising costs, pastors and principals at 10 south St. Louis parish schools are discussing changes to the landscape of Catholic education in that part of the city.

NEVADA

Quest Academy Audit Sparks Emergency Action
KTNV Las Vegas, NV, January 22, 2013

Charter schools get a treasure trove of tax dollars to provide alternatives for Nevada students. But the administration of one school has been acting like pirates… raiding the school’s stash of money for personal gain.

NEW JERSEY

Christie Gets Tougher With Charter School Teachers
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, January 23, 2013

According to the administration, making it more difficult for charter teachers to earn tenure gives the schools themselves “more flexibility”

NEW YORK

24 Catholic Schools to Close
Wall Street Journal, January 23, 2013

Two dozen Roman Catholic schools in New York learned Tuesday they would permanently shut their doors at the end of the school year, in what the church said it hopes is the last round of closings for the foreseeable future.

Two Dozen Catholic Schools In The New York Metropolitan Area Will Get The Axe, Including Two High Schools
New York Daily News, NY, January 23, 2013

The St. Agnes Boy High School in Manhattan and Blessed Sacrament/St. Gabriel High School in New Rochelle and 22 elementary schools are slated for closure, according to the New York Archdiocese.

The School Bus Mess
New York Times, NY, January 23, 2013

New York City mayors have long tolerated one of the most inefficient school transportation systems in the country — made so by a labor agreement that undermines competitive bidding and poorly designed bus routes.

Elmira Charter School Will Be Co-Ed, Offer Grades K-2 Initially
Elmira Star Gazette, NY, January 22, 2013

The group proposing to open a charter school in Elmira has decided to make it co-ed, initially offer kindergarten to second grade and name it Finn Academy — An Elmira Charter School.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg Slams UFT For Presenting Teacher Evaluations That Are A ‘Fraud And Hoax’ To Public
New York Daily News, NY, January 22, 2013

The city lost out on nearly half a billion dollars after failing to meet Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s deadline to create an effective system that would grade the performance of educators. UFT President Michael Mulgrew fired back that the mayor only wants it his way.

An Absentee Mayor
New York Post, NY, January 23, 2013

Transforming the city’s public-school system into a national model for quality and effectiveness was once right at the top of Mayor Mike’s personal legacy list.

NORTH CAROLINA

A School As Transformative Force
Herald, Sun, NC, January 22, 2013

It is a work in progress, but it is a work whose progress is heartening on many levels.
Maureen Joy Charter School is moving ahead on schedule with renovations that will put it into much larger quarters this fall, and quarters that will be more convenient for many of its students and their families.

Wake Commissioners Back County Funding For Charter Construction
News & Observer, NC, January 22, 2013

Wake commissioners agreed to seek deep changes to the county school system Tuesday, voting to ask the General Assembly to sign off on a wish list that could change who owns schools, how they get built and how the school board gets elected.

PENNSYLVANIA

More Charges Against Charter-School Officials
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 23, 2013

The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced five additional charges Tuesday against charter school founder Dorothy June Brown and three former administrators for defrauding the schools.

Pa. Charter School Ratings Plummet Under New Calculations
Allentown Morning Call, PA, January 22, 2013

The number of charter schools hitting testing benchmarks plummeted after the federal government said the state Education Department graded them too leniently.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Racial Tensions Fuel The Fiery Debate Over A North Charleston Montessori Program
Charleston City Paper, SC, January 23, 2013

To hear the way parents raised their voices in a meeting last Tuesday night about the Montessori programs at Malcolm C. Hursey Elementary School, you might think that their neighborhood, their way of life, and their children’s futures were on the line. And maybe they were.

TENNESSEE

Charter Incubator Reports On Successes Of Two Nashville Schools
The Tennessean, TN, January 23, 2013

The two Nashville schools shepherded into business by the Tennessee Charter School Incubator are proving to be worth the investment of time and money, according to a report created by the organization and released today.

‘Nashville Commits’ Initiative Wants More Metro Kids College-Ready
The Tennessean, TN, January 23, 2013

A Nashville charter school founder has assembled more than 70 notable Nashvillians, including Tennessee House Speaker Beth Harwell, to tackle the ambitious goal of tripling the city’s number of low-income college-ready graduates by 2020.

Board Members Weigh Charter Schools And Wonder: What’s Their Secret?
The Tennessean, TN, January 23, 2013

After being told the six highest performing middle schools in Metro Nashville are charter schools, officials asked what charters have that district schools don’t.

Board To Make It Official: No More Memphis City Schools System
Commercial Appeal, TN, January 22, 2013

The unified Memphis and Shelby County school board gave tentative approval Tuesday to a proposed resolution that will put the Memphis City Schools district officially out of business as of July 1.

Voucher Debate: Harris Outnumbered In Knox School Board Discussion
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, January 23, 2013

A majority of Knox County school board members are against school vouchers, but on Tuesday one member tried to sway his colleagues to be open to them.

TEXAS

New Longview Charter School Takes ‘Student-Centered’ Focus
Longview News-Journal, TX, January 23, 2013

A new education option in Longview offers students in third through sixth grades the opportunity to experience project-based learning in a small school setting.

Vouchers Pushed During School Finance Hearing
San Antonio Express, TX, January 23, 2013

Introducing more school choice to parents could save Texas billions of dollars and result in higher pay for public school teachers, witness Joseph Bast testified Tuesday morning in the lawsuit trial of the state’s school finance system.

WASHINGTON

An Opportunity To Shape State’s Charter Schools
Yakima Herald-Republic, WA, January 23, 2013

Washington’s experiment in charter schools is moving forward as the state Board of Education takes public comment on rules that will govern what is essentially a pilot project. Washington voters started this process in November when they narrowly approved Initiative 1240, which allows the state to join most of the rest of the country in the charter school movement.

WEST VIRGINIA

RESA Important Part Of Public School Reform
Martinsburg Journal, WV, January 23, 2013

One of the key recommendations a consultant made for public school reform in West Virginia was to reduce the size of the bloated state Department of Education. In addition to the DOE’s cost, the current system is too centralized to perform effectively, the consultant wrote in an “audit” report.

WISCONSIN

Fitzgerald, Other Ex-Speakers Lobby For Vouchers
Appleton Post Crescent, WI, January 23, 2013

Advocates for expanding school vouchers in Wisconsin have hired three former Republican speakers of the state Assembly to help make their case, a sign of political firepower on a contentious issue that has renewed calls to ban the increasingly common practice of moving directly from the Legislature to lobbying.

ONLINE LEARNING

Virtual School Blames Poor Performance on Students
Nashville Public Radio, TN, January 22, 2013

Tennessee’s largest K-through-12 online school had to defend poor standardized test results to state lawmakers Tuesday. Tennessee Virtual Academy posted scores labeled “unacceptable” by the state.

Lancaster Schools Knock Down Digital Academy Contract
Lancaster Eagle Gazette, OH, January 22, 2013

The Lancaster Board of Education voted 5-0 to not renew the district’s sponsorship of the Lancaster Digital Academy on Tuesday.

Virtual Academy Leases Second Downtown Bldg.
Clarkston News, MI, January 23, 2013

The Oxford Virtual Academy (OVA) is expanding, not just in the number of students it serves, but in the actual physical space it occupies. OVA is in the process of moving some of its operations into 5 S. Washington St., which formerly housed the ArtCapsule.

Online Ed Expansion, School Choice Plan Murky In 2013
Michigan Live, MI, January 22, 2013

A proposal to revise the state’s School Aid Act to allow state funding to follow students to where they take individual classes will not be part of Gov. Rick Snyder’s budget proposal next month, but could make its way into legislative discussions over that budget.

Triggering reform

Opinion
by Steve Williams, Opinion Page Editor
Victorville Daily Press
January 22, 2013

The reasons for the fierce teachers union opposition to successful completion of California’s Parent Trigger law by parents of Desert Trails students were obvious, particularly to the unions themselves. They knew that if the Adelanto school was converted to charter status, unhappy parents all over the state would be encouraged to follow suit.

And they also feared that if a reorganized Desert Trails school performed successfully — i.e., if its students improved and performed better on state-mandated tests — even more parents would start pulling the trigger.

Those fears have been, it turns out, justified. During the week the Los Angeles Unified School District accepted Parent Trigger petitions from parents of children who attend 24th Street Elementary School, one of the worst-performing schools in the district. According to the Los Angeles Times (a down-the-line union backer, it should be noted), John Deasy, superintendent of the LAUSD, pledged to work with the parents to enact “fundamental and dramatic change” at the school.

The victory for LAUSD parents came little more than a week after the Adelanto School Board unanimously approved a Parent Trigger plan by parents of students at Desert Trails Elementary after more than a year of delays. Union-supported delays, obviously.

The Parent Trigger, for those whose attention has been occupied elsewhere, is a reform mechanism begun in this state in 2010, in which parents of failing schools may force a school district to undertake specific reforms, including sending their children to a different public school, converting the school into a charter school, or receiving opportunity scholarships to send their children to the private school of their choice.

As we said, teachers unions nationwide have been fighting Parent Trigger and charter schools for years, claiming charters are mostly failures and that they bleed funding from the public school system. To less and less avail, judging by increasing evidence.

Last last week, the Center for Education Reform, a Washington, D.C., organization, released its 14th annual Charter School Laws Across the States Ranking and Scorecard. It showed that more than two million students are now attending in excess of 6,000 public charter schools. Still, the Center noted that only four states improved their laws since the first report card on the movement was issued last year. In other words, union opposition has kept most of the country from improving the system designed to reform and reinvigorate K-12 education. Thankfully, California is one of the four.

What the teachers unions in particular (and unions generally) oppose is individual choice. In education, unions fiercely oppose vouchers, which are designed to allow parents to pick the school they want their children to attend. They also, obviously, fiercely oppose charters, which allow parents who can’t pick the schools they want their children to attend, to at least change the schools their children must attend. What they instead seek is to monopolize education.

We would be remiss if we failed to point out that if the present public education system performed even adequately, let alone excellently, there would be no outcry for reform. Sadly, it doesn’t. And parents are finally demanding change. And choice.

Parent Power Index Scoring Rubric

January 22, 2013

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

Click here for more on Parent Power Index Methodology.

Daily Headlines for January 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

High-School Graduation Rate Inches Up
Wall Street Journal, January 22, 2013

Percentage of Students in Public Institutions Getting Diplomas Reached 35-Year High in 2010, But Country Still Lags Peers

National Public High School Graduation Rate At A Four-Decade High
Washington Post, DC, January 22, 2013

The percentage of students at public high schools who graduate on time has reached its highest level in nearly 40 years, according to the most recent federal government estimates released Tuesday.

FROM THE STATES

ARIZONA

2 Tucson Charter Schools Approved
Arizona Daily Star, AZ, January 22, 2013

Two new charter schools are slated to open in Tucson this fall. The Arizona State Board of Charter Schools approved the applications on Jan. 14 for Model Community Learning Center and The Rising School, according to board documents.

CALIFORNIA

Chico School Board Faces Hefty Agenda, Including Ruling On Blue Oak’s Fate
Chino Enterprise-Record, CA, January 22, 2013

In their first meeting of the new year, the Chico Unified School District board of trustees will face a hefty agenda that includes the fate of a charter school, consideration of a pair of maintenance projects that have become “serious” health and safety issues, and a report on a community-based group laboring to help the schools.

Parents Plead For Charter Students To Play On Same Team
Tehachapi News, CA, January 22, 2013

Despite the recent explosion of charter school expansion and their accompanying success, there remains one component of charter schooling that falls short. The limitations on charter school student’s access to sports.

CONNECTICUT

Charter Editorial Was Too Vitriolic
Stamford Advocate, CT, January 22, 2013

Your editorial, “Charter school push fails math test” (Jan. 15), exemplifies a major problem with the education reform debate, which is the vitriol that ruins the opportunity for any reasoned conversation about how to better educate children, particularly ones who are underserved by the existing options.

Charter Schools The Right Investment
Connecticut Post, CT, January 21, 2013

As the pastor at Cathedral of the Holy Spirit — and as a member of the Bridgeport Board of Education — I found the Connecticut Post’s recent editorial “Wrong way to spend education dollars,” Jan. 14) to be misleading and insulting to those of us attempting to better the lives of children in our community.

FLORIDA

State Plan To Help Charter Schools Irks Palm Beach County School Board
Palm Beach Post, FL, January 21, 2013

Some Palm Beach County School District officials are incensed at a state proposal to offer once again millions of dollars next year for capital improvements at charter schools — and none at traditional public schools.

Downtown Miami Charter School Helps Students Succeed
Local 10, FL, January 21, 2013

Florida Trend Magazine named Charter Schools USA CEO John Hage its ‘Floridian of the Year’

GEORGIA

Members Selected For Georgia Charter School Panel
Augusta Chronicle, GA, January 21, 2013

The Georgia Department of Education last week approved the new State Charter Schools Com¬mission, a seven-member body that has the power to authorize charter schools even over the objection of local school boards.

INDIANA

Signature School Lottery Produces Stressful, Edge-Of-Seat Clutching Afternoon
Evansville Courier & Press, IN, January 21, 2013

It was a stressful, clutching-the-edge-of-your seat afternoon for the Schmidt family when Evansville’s Signature School held its lottery Jan. 15 for next fall’s incoming freshman class.

IOWA

New Paths To Teaching, Administrating
Spencer Daily Reporter, IA, January 22, 2013

Only one week into the 2013 legislative session, Gov. Branstad’s proposed bill to reform Iowa’s education system is already generating discussion. In the 157-page bill, Branstad focuses on changing four key areas of the education system: teacher compensation and career development, recruitment of educated professionals to become teachers, the “career or college ready” seal and online learning opportunities for students.

LOUISIANA

City School Board To Discuss Property Use
Monroe News Star, LA, January 22, 2013

Less than five hours after the Monroe City School Board added an agenda item that could have impacted charter schools the district has approved to open, the item was reworded and changed from an action item to only discussion.

Closing Of Achievement Gap For New Orleans Schools ‘Premature’
WWLTV, LA, January 21, 2013

In her commentary for WWLTV.com, Leslie Jacobs informs the public, “in case they missed it,” that “we have closed the performance gap” in New Orleans’ schools. Not only is this “gap” closed; it happened two years ago, in 2010-11. Somehow we missed it for two years.

MAINE

Proposed Harpswell Charter School Draws Heavy Support From Community
Bangor Daily News, ME, January 21, 2013

When the nearly 60 people who attended a public hearing Friday were asked if they support a proposed charter school in town, almost every hand went up.

MASSACHUSETTS

Incomplete Assignment: 20 Years Of School Reform In Bay State
Enterprise News, MA, January 22, 2013

Two decades after a sweeping law ushered in MCAS exams, charter schools and other major changes in the classroom, state leaders and experts say Massachusetts still has more homework to do on education reform.

Education Secretary Reville Closes Chapter On Public Service
Lowell Sun, MA, January 22, 2013

Education Secretary Paul Reville is leaving the governor’s cabinet this month after guiding the state through a series of major education reforms that are still being debated today.

MICHIGAN

Don’t Miss The Chance To Give Kids A Brighter Future
Detroit News, MI, January 22, 2013

They’re grown up before you know it. Moms everywhere understand how it can feel like just yesterday that we brought our kids home from the hospital; then before we realize it, they’re going off to school, taking driver’s training and looking at colleges. As a mother myself, I marvel with each New Year at how quickly the time flies as our children age, learn, mature and grow into exceptional people.

Charter School Firm Buys Vacant Warren Target Building
Detroit News, MI, January 22, 2013

A charter school may soon set up shop in a vacant Target store on Dequindre between 11 Mile and 12 Mile in Warren.

MISSISSIPPI

Miss. House Looks at Charter School Proposal
Local 15tv, MS, January 22, 2013

State House members are poised to take up their own version of charter school legislation.

Allow Charter Schools In Mississippi
Clarion Ledger, MS, January 22, 2013

For decades, Mississippi has shuffled and reshuffled its children through a public education system that lacks accountability, choice and innovation. As a result, many of Mississippi’s children are stuck with an education that fails to prepare them for life.

Comparing The House And Senate Charter School Bills
Clarion Ledger Blog, MS, January 21, 2013

Getting information out of the House leadership about their charter school bill is tough sledding today, but I’ve had a chance to read the entire House bill (pdf version) and compare it to the Senate version (pdf version). Here’s a quick-and-dirty analysis.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Teacher Evaluation Changes In Nashua Up For Discussion
The Nashua Telegraph, NH, January 22, 2013

The Board of Education’s Human Resources Committee is meeting Tuesday night to discuss a proposed revision to the teacher evaluation process in the city.

NEW MEXICO

Charter Authorizers Play Crucial Roles
Albuquerque Journal, NM, January 22, 2013

Recently I was asked, “Who approves or oversees charter schools and to whom are they accountable?” That is a great question! Like traditional public schools, charters are accountable to their students, parents, communities, the Public Education Department, the Legislature and to the taxpayers of New Mexico.

NORTH CAROLINA

Phoenix Academy to Expand
High Point Enterprise, NC, January 21, 2013

An expanding Phoenix Academy will start serving middle school students this fall as leaders begin construction planning.

A New N.C. Push For Teacher Tenure Reform
Charlotte Observer, NC, January 22, 2013

N.C. Senate leader Phil Berger didn’t spend much time on education last week in his preview of the upcoming legislative session, but the Eden Republican provided a new clue about how his party will pursue the delicate issue of how we reward and dismiss our teachers.

OKLAHOMA

Editorial Oklahoma Policymakers Shouldn’t Retreat From A-F Grading System
The Oklahoman, OK, January 22, 2013

FOR months, some administrators have loudly objected to the state’s new A-F grading system for schools. Now, the Cooperative Council for Oklahoma School Administrators and the Oklahoma State School Boards Association have released a study declaring the grades “have statistical limitations that jeopardize their validity, reliability and usefulness.”

TENNESSEE

Tuition Vouchers Boost Competition In Education
Commercial Appeal, TN. January 22, 2013

Let’s shift the intensity of competition from “school systems” to schools and principals and teachers. Competition helps everyone — except those who give up. Competition helps us all become better, as individual people, as companies that produce products and services, and as entire nations and civilizations.

WASHINGTON

Teachers’ Test Boycott Draws Growing Support
Seattle Times, WA, January 21, 2013

Support is growing for Garfield High teachers in their boycott of a district-required test. Seattle Public Schools officials, while saying the test has value, also are acknowledging that some of the teachers’ concerns have merit.

Teachers Union Shouldn’t Go Against Voters
Bellingham Herald, WA, January 22, 2013

Washington voters approved a citizen’s initiative to experiment with charter schools by the narrowest of margins – 50.6 percent statewide, 50.19 percent in Thurston County – but that’s no justification for the teachers union to launch a lawsuit.

WISCONSIN

New Network of Charter Schools Coming
Urban Milwaukee, WI, January 21, 2013

A plan to open a network of charter schools has been delayed at least a year until funding can be secured by organizers, who continue to say their educational model will ultimately help close the city’s achievement gap.

Utah praised for abundance of charter school options

by Ray Parker
Salt Lake Tribune
January 18, 2013

Utah ranks 11th in the nation when it comes to charter school programs, according to a new national study.

The Beehive State earned an overall “B” grade in charter education, according to the Center for Education Reform, a pro-charter Washington, D.C., nonprofit.

The group’s latest evaluation of states’ charter laws includes other categories deemed important for education reform: parental choice, online learning, teacher quality and transparency.

“These are the hot-button issues in education reform today,” Jeanne Allen, the center’s president, said Thursday. “We’ve been ranking charter schools for 14 years.”

Still, there is one area the group does not specifically look at that’s of interest in Utah: graduation rates.

Recently, Utah education officials looked at charter high school graduation rates, which ranked among the highest and lowest in the state: from 27 percent to 100 percent. The overall state graduation rate is 78 percent.

State officials said charter schools need to do a better job of tracking students if they leave the school before graduating. The students could have graduated at another school, but were posted as not graduating from their charter schools.

Allen said the same problem exists on a national level.

“We don’t have a level playing field as far as data,” Allen said. “Are charter schools doing poorly because they’re doing poorly or because of the [inadequate] data?”

The center has studied and evaluated each state’s charter school laws since 1996.

In its latest evaluation, the center had mostly positive comments about Utah in four of its five categories.

Under “charter schools,” center officials wrote of the state on its website: “Utah’s charter school law is considered strong because it provides equitable funding to charter schools, facilities funding and a strong authorizing system that includes capable independent bodies such as universities and the semi-independent state charter board.”

As for “school choice,” center officials wrote: “Utah has one private school choice program [special-needs vouchers]. The state does have a charter school law. Utah allows for limited public virtual schooling. Open enrollment exists, both for intradistrict and interdistrict public school choice.”

The group praised the state’s online learning: “Due in large part to the leadership of the Utah Legislature, Utah has adopted multiple student-centric policies designed specifically to harness the power of technology.

Primarily through the passage of SB65, the Statewide Online Education Program, and charter policy enacted over the last decade, digital learning has become available in some form to all Utah students.”

Its “transparency” also was praised: “Utah has a very parent-friendly website that provides easy to understand school report cards as well as information on the Carson Smith Special Needs Scholarship and charter schools. The 40 local school boards in Utah are elected during the November general election.”

But when it comes to “teacher evaluations,” the group said Utah has some work to do. “Neither tenure decisions nor license advancement and renewal are based on effectiveness,” the group wrote. “Eligibility for dismissal is not a consequence of multiple unsatisfactory evaluations in Utah, and ineffective classroom performance is not a ground for dismissal. The state does not ensure that the appeals process for dismissed teachers is expedient; however, a last hired, first fired policy is prohibited during layoffs.”

Among the nation’s 43 states with charter school laws, the center ranked them as follows: four states earned an “A,” nine got a “B,” 19 received a “C” and 11 states were given a “D” or “F.”

Allen said it’s not only charter school laws but the other four categories that make for education reform.

“As policymakers consider changes to their charter school laws, they also need to be mindful of what it takes to have truly great education reform policies across all issues,” Allen said.

The center’s 2013 Charter School Laws Across the States Ranking & Scorecard can be found at Edreform.com/in-the-states, which will be available to the public Tuesday.

“Charter and traditional schools don’t have to be on opposite sides anymore,” said Kim Frank, of the Utah Charter Network. “The main reason to see charter schools in Utah grow is you have smaller schools. And with new and innovative programs, that information can be shared with all schools, and all ships rise.”

Group gives Michigan ‘A’ for support of charter schools

Detroit News
January 18, 2013

Michigan earned an “A” for its charter school laws, according to a report card issued this week by the Center for Education Reform.

The organization issues the assessment annually, ranking states according to the strength and quality of their charter school laws.

Michigan was ranked No. 4 on this year’s list, up from No. 5 last year. The top four all received a letter grade of “A” on the report card, including Washington, D.C., Minnesota and Indiana.

Michigan received high marks in the areas of authorizer quality, school autonomy and teacher freedom. It got low marks for facilities and funding equity.

Michigan has passed a number of charter school reforms in the past two years, including lifting the cap on university-authorized charter schools and removing many of the limits on cyber charter schools, along with strengthening accountability measures for all charter schools.

“Michigan’s ‘A’ is very well-deserved,” said Dan Quisenberry, president of the Michigan Association of Public School Academies.

“This report card is an accurate reflection of the positive strides we’ve made and the work that still needs to be done. The climate for quality public education in Michigan is much better now than it was a couple years ago, but as the report card points out, charter schools still aren’t being treated equally when it comes to equity in funding and facilities. We’re an ‘A’ now, but we need to be an ‘A-plus’ if we want our educational system to be truly great.”

On Monday a report released by an independent analyst of charter schools shows charter school students in Michigan and Detroit are out-learning their public school counterparts.

The study, done by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, found the typical Michigan charter school student school gained more learning in a year than a district school peer — an advantage of about an additional two months of reading and math learning.

The learning advantage was even greater for students in Detroit charter schools, which make up 27 percent of the state’s charter students, on average gaining nearly three months achievement for each year they attend charter schools.