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Newswire – January 30, 2018

SPOTLIGHT ON… THE STATE OF THE UNION

What We Can Expect. Will the State of the Union address include the state of the union’s education? We should hope so! And we urge the president to use his office and his bully pulpit to make the inextricable link between the most important precondition for success for all Americans — individually and as a nation — education. All indications point toward an emphasis on immigration, the economy, tax reform, infrastructure and national security, using the theme, as one administration official put it, “Building a safe, strong and proud America.”

That strength, as we all know, requires a strong, unequivocal commitment to education opportunity and innovation. “There is only one issue that unites all the rest – education,” said Jeanne Allen, CER’s founder and CEO. “Helping all our people accumulate the broad knowledge and foundation for educational advancement in myriad ways is a precondition for our economic success.”

What We Need to Hear. Making America’s education great again must be a priority! And voters agree. According to the latest POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, most voters – 75% — want to hear the president talk about improving the education system.

For Your Reference. Thirty-five years ago, the seminal report, A Nation at Risk, demonstrated the integral connection between strong education and a strong nation:

“If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war. As it stands, we have allowed this to happen to ourselves … We have, in effect, been committing an act of unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament.”

A year ago, the president celebrated the accomplishments and school choice success story of Denisha Merriweather (recipient of Florida’s tax-credit scholarship), who’s now an official with the Department of Education. Fantastic! There are more success stories to tell and more work to do. So, watch tonight and hold the president accountable! Engage and share your comments and ours. Jeanne Allen will be live-tweeting; follow her @JeanneAllen.


DID YOU KNOW?

✔ There’s a shocking gap between our Global Competitiveness ranking overall and where we rank in education?

✔ The World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Index for 2017-2018 ranks the United States as the 2nd out of 137 countries. Yet compared with other top-ranked countries, the US performs poorly in health and primary education, coming in 29th.

✔ It’s clear that the US can’t spend its way out of inequity. The US spends more per pupil (28% more) than most OECD countries: $11,800 per pupil, on average, compared to $9,200 in other OECD countries. Countries where students consistently outperform their peers on math and reading tests, such as Finland and Japan, spend less than $10,000 per pupil.

✔ Find out more in an upcoming CER report: “The Case for an Education Revolution.”


IN THE NEWS

✔ In less than a month, the Supreme Court will hear final oral arguments in Janus v. AFSCME. This case could have a huge impact on public workers, and that means teachers. And by “huge impact,” we mean a positive impact. A verdict in favor of Janus would overturn a 1977 ruling that extracting compulsory union “agency fees” from public employees does not violate their First Amendment rights if the fees don’t finance political activities. Newswire is your source for updates on this case and its impact on education.

✔ More voices speak out for our students and empowering individuals and communities. As part of our continuing “Voices of Color, Voices for Opportunity” series, an op-ed by Senator Anthony Williams, David Hardy and Sharif El-Mekki appeared in today’s RealClearEducation.

✔ And, as we say farewell to National School Choice Week 2018, remember that every week is school choice week. Choice is just the beginning, and being the loudest parent for all kids is a good thing. Read more by parent Reggie Barbour.


TELL US YOUR STORY!

Families all over the country have school choice stories to tell. Send us yours!

Newswire – January 17, 2018

Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr.

SPOTLIGHT ON… EDREFORM HISTORY

What Would Dr. King Say? It’s a week when history is very much on people’s minds. For starters, MLK Jr. Day reminded millions that the struggle for freedom and equality continues. As LEAP Innovations’ CEO Phyllis Locket puts forth, If Dr. King were alive today, “He would look for fairness and find inequity in funding. He would look for hope and find inequity in student achievement. He would challenge us to work harder, rise above our differences and march forward together.” In the incredibly thoughtful and forward-looking piece, Phyllis reminds us that expecting great results when we believe we can educate all students with the same uniform approach is shortsighted.

Don’t Know Much About? Meanwhile, after the thousands of forums, remembrances and celebrations ensued around the country, Washington, DC was the site of some talking-heads discussions around whether we’ve progressed educationally as a nation. At AEI, pundits and politicians debated the merits of the signature education efforts of the Bush and the Obama Administrations (as if they were interrelated vs. cumulative and reflective of the times — and the needs of those times). Education Secretary Betsy DeVos took to the stage to argue that neither No Child Left Behind (NCLB) nor Race to the Top accomplished the promised successes, because Washington doesn’t have the answers: “NCLB did little to spark higher scores. Universal proficiency, touted at the law’s passage, was not achieved. As states and districts scrambled to avoid the law’s sanctions and maintain their federal funding, some resorted to focusing specifically on math and reading at the expense of other subjects. Others simply inflated scores or lowered standards.”

True, some say, but what of the enormous changes it spurred in parents’ behaviors when they learned they could hold their schools to account? Suddenly parents had “rights” under a federal law — rights that caused them to ask questions, seek options and helped 12-15% increases in charter school enrollments nationwide.

35 Years Since a Nation at Risk. Assuming you know all about it (and if you don’t, here’s your very own copy), the nation has come a long way in changing the conventional notion of schooling: correcting a generation of mythology that once posited that districts were superior to parents when it comes to educating kids, dispelling the notions that poverty was an excuse for failure, and that just requiring certain subjects to be taught would result in mastery, and on and on. To be sure, progress is slow, but it’s been steady, and the last 35 years have seen schools closed for failing for the first time in history, while whole communities choose to find other schools (Detroit and DC come to mind), because there were other schools to be chosen.

One-hundred-eighty years of uniform, top-down schooling will take a few more years to bust — that is, if we’re willing. And on that note, we were interested to see the Reagan Institute is planning a 35th anniversary review of A Nation at Risk in Washington, DC. Details are forthcoming. Meanwhile, here’s your own personal library of various revisits to A Nation at Risk that we and others have conducted over the years.

It all underscores that no one effort — be it federal, state or local — is enough. They are all necessary to stem the tide of failing, or mismatched, or underachieving, or irrelevant, or mediocre, bureaucratic schools and systems!


CURRENT EVENTS

The nation is pumped for National School Choice Week, which will take place from January 21 – 27. A special double edition of Reality Check with Jeanne Allen will feature Voices of Opportunity — parents, teachers, leaders in the field and advocates — and will be available on January 22.


DID YOU KNOW?

According to the Washington Post’s Jay Matthews, an Education Trust study of 1,876 literacy assignments in 6 urban middle schools revealed that 18% required no writing at all; about 60% demanded only some note-taking, short responses or a sentence or two; 14% required students to write a single paragraph, and only 9% went beyond that. Almost no U.S. high school students are required to do long research papers, except students in private schools or public schools with International Baccalaureate programs.


TELL US YOUR STORY!

Is your state or city missing a big piece of the puzzle? Are you involved in an effort to make significant changes? Maybe you’re running a school. Maybe you’re driving change in your school or community and have hit a roadblock. The bottom line is that no effort is too small.

Share with CER how you are helping deliver the promise of an excellent education for all children. Together we can show how innovative education opportunities are bettering students’ lives.

Newswire December 19th, 2017

The Education Grinch Who Stole Christmas — Or So They Try

A special holiday Newswire!

The parents and teachers they wanted reform.
They looked for solutions to break from the norm.
They wanted things better, that’s why they were fighting,
to make sure their kids would learn reading and writing
and science and math and history too
for everyone’s children, not just a few.

But the Blob and its Grinches, they hated reform.
“Imagine,” they sniffed, “trying to break from the norm.”
“Standards, and charters, and school choice and such.
This edreform nonsense is much, much too much.”

“Who are they, these people, this reform-minded crew,
who think they know better than us what to do?
We’ll fix them, we’ll teach them, we’ll show them who’s boss.
We’ll make doubly sure that they suffer a loss.
We’ll stop all their harping and carping and cries
we’ll tell all the people their numbers are lies.
We’ll say that they’re wrong and, without hesitation,
we’ll say that they’re out to destroy education.

“We’ll say that their efforts are all out of place,
that options and choosing are just about race,
that charters in cities all over the nation,
are simply a ruse to promote segregation.

“Oh, we’ll offer solutions, the people will buy them,
We’ll say ‘give us money, and more time to try them.’
‘Yes, we’ve spent decades, and trillions in cash,
But with a few trillion more, you’ll see changes at last.’

And for those who ask questions or say it’s a waste,
with great condescension, they’ll be put in their place.
We’ll stop the reformers, we’ll stop them, we will.
Because, after all, we’re the kings of the Hill.

So the Blob and its Grinches embarked on their task
to make sure that all things reform finished last.

But the parents and teachers and grandparents too,
went on with their work, they knew what to do.
The Blob might have money and power and might
but that didn’t mean that they knew what was right.

And no matter the odds, or how long it might take,
the reformers were steadfast: a difference they’d make.
They wouldn’t be quiet and they wouldn’t give in
and whenever they lost, they would just start again.

They offered suggestions and wrote legislation
and some ran for office (to the Blob’s consternation).

“We’ll stop these reformers” the Blob-Grinches blustered
“and what we can’t stop we will just filibuster.
We’ll do all we can, oh we’ve got a few tricks,
after all it’s our business to play politics.”

“Against the reformers we’ll spend, spend galore,
and for those who are with us, we’ll spend even more.”

We’ll finance elections, and fund our proponents
We’ll launch a campaign that will smear our opponents.

But the parents and teachers and grandparents too,
just smiled at the Blob, because everyone knew
that for all its millions and for all its might,
the Blob could not manage to carry the fight.

And for all their ranting and raving and storm
they’ve really done nothing to stop edreform.

Newswire November 7th, 2017

CONGRESS, TAXES & EDUCATION. CER’s focus on Helping Learners at All Levels” to access the American dream is at the heart of a new proposal being considered on Capitol Hill. Expanding the economy requires more skilled workers, but not without the depth of education and training that will help them succeed. Read what we have to say about how to achieve this.

HIGHER ED & CONGRESS. And, since it’s important to always keep innovation at the forefront of the conversation, Congressional leaders would do well to read this evergreen piece by the Christiansen Institute– College transformed:  Five institutions leading the charge in innovation – which points the way to how we can transform higher education. Christiansen also has published a great resource on how to innovate under ESSA – The state innovator’s toolkit: a guide to successfully managing innovation under ESSA. This is a great homework assignment for all the nation’s educators.

EDUCATION & BLACK COLLEGES. The bold and forthright leader of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, Johnny Taylor, has some strong words for the NAACP. Talking about his own experience, and his mother’s decision to send him out of his neighborhood to a better school, Taylor said,

“The notion that someone sitting in the NAACP’s headquarters in Baltimore could take that choice away from my mother is unacceptable.”

Taylor’s comment, from an interview that appeared in the WSJ this past weekend, expands on an op-ed he penned earlier last month as part of CER’s Voices of Color, Voices for Opportunity series where he wrote: “If the NAACP continues to reject the educational opportunities school choice provides them, they risk becoming irrelevant – or worse – an enemy of the very people they claim to fight for.” Every day more and more leaders from communities of color are coming together to fight arcane efforts to protect the status quo. Kudos to Taylor, T. Willard Fair, Donald Hense and others who step up every day and put the interests of kids and families first.

AND THE AWARD GOES TO. Congratulations to Kansas City’s University Academy—Upper School, and to all the other winners of the Department of Education’s National Blue Ribbon Schools award for 2017. Pictured above: Tony Kline, University Academy Superintendent; Bush Helzberg, University Academy Board Chairman; Jeanne Allen, CER Founder and CEO; Barnett Helzberg, University Academy Founder; and Elizabeth Helzberg, CER Policy Associate.

TEACHERS & HIGHER ED. Not only did the State University of New York last month adopt a path breaking plan to allow charter schools to train their own teachers but just yesterday the NY Times editorial board endorsed the plan. Yes, we’ll repeat that: the NY Times editorial board endorsed the plan. Under the headline “The Best Charter Schools Deserve More Leeway on Hiring”  the board writes, “The new certification rules represent a reasonable attempt to let these schools avoid the weak state teacher education system that has long been criticized for churning out graduates who are unprepared to manage the classroom.” It’s a good editorial from start to finish – which isn’t something we can always say about a Times’ editorial. You should read it.

The Education, Workforce and Apprenticeship Tax Credit Act Will Encourage Job Creation and Job Preparation

Washington, D.C. – Jeanne Allen, Founder and CEO of the Center for Education Reform released the following statement regarding the proposed Federal Tax Reform Package:

As part of tax reform, there is an urgent need to ensure the preparation of current and future workers for the changing needs of the U.S. economy. Job creation and job preparation must go hand in hand. The only area of the current House tax package that addresses education is an expansion of 529 plans to include qualified K-12 expenses and apprenticeships. That is a laudable step, but it leaves too many Americans out of the equation.

The ability to set aside dollars under a 529 plan simply is not a reality for most Americans. In extending the 529 benefit to families for K-12 expenses and apprenticeships, the House’s tax reform package does not account for the importance of providing meaningful opportunities to Americans – opportunities our education, training and workforce programs have failed to provide – and underscores this stark reality.

We urge Congress to adopt the Education, Workforce and Apprenticeship Tax Credit Act which would encourage charitable donations to nonprofit organizations for community-based apprenticeship initiatives, career and technical education, workforce development, and educational preparedness.  Eligible organizations would include educational institutions, community organizations, training institutes, community colleges, non-profit scholarship granting organizations, and nonprofits affiliated with labor unions and labor-management committees.

These local programs are crucial to the national effort of preparing American workers for jobs. Education is the foundation of success, and it’s a means to that end. With the seriousness in which Washington is now moving toward an economic solution, we must ensure that Americans at all levels have the means to participate in the future.

To schedule an interview with Jeanne Allen, Founder & CEO of the Center for Education Reform, please contact Christina Mazzanti, Director of Communications: [email protected] | 202-750-0016.

 

Civil Rights Leaders Speak Out on NAACP’s Charter School Stance

David Hardy and Donald Hense

November 2, 2017

The NAACP’s new president recently issued a renewed call for a moratorium on charter schools. This stance keeps the Association at odds with thousands of parents and community leaders of color who know, firsthand, the critical role charters play in providing quality education to those in desperate need.

In light of this unfortunate action, the following statement, which originally appeared on July 31, 2017, is being reissued today.


African-American Education Leaders Speak Out Against NAACP Actions

The following statement was issued by CER directors David Hardy, founder and chair of Boys’ Latin Philadelphia Charter School, and Donald Hense, founder and chair of Washington, D.C.’s Friendship Public Charter Schools.

The NAACP’s campaign against charter schools is detrimental and disrespectful to all parents who struggle to ensure a quality education for their children.

Rather than embrace, and work to expand, the opportunities that charter schools represent to America’s disadvantaged, and to families of color across the nation, the NAACP has chosen to stand as an obstacle, and work to stifle, a movement that, for thousands of children, is the greatest — and only – hope for achieving a quality education.

The association’s recently released report is intentionally skewed to further a union-driven, anti-charter school agenda, and its “model legislation” effort is an outrageous political scheme to further support the union’s agenda by undermining the voice and will of parents who are fighting for options for their children’s education and for the right and freedom to choose.

The NAACP has a long history of fighting for justice and for individual rights that further opportunities, hopes and human dignity.

These efforts are the antithesis of that long fight, putting the association sadly, and uncharacteristically, on the wrong side of history.

Jeanne Allen on Rob Schilling Show, WINA in Charlottesville

Center for Education Reform founder and CEO Jeanne Allen went on WINA in Charlottesville on October 31st, 2017 to discuss the controversy surrounding her appearance in Backpack Full of Cash. She talks about CER’s mission, current events, and more, Listen here:

Newswire October 31st, 2017

HAPPY HALLOWEEN! Here’s one of several “spooky” spoof videos to help you celebrate the day in EdReform Style! These and others from CER’s “Lucky 13th” Anniversary in 2006. Everything old is new again!

CONGRATULATIONS AND APPLAUSE. Good friend and CER Board Member Kevin Chavous is the new president of the Virginia-based ed-tech and on-line learning company K-12 Inc. CER and Kevin go way back – working together in DC to shape a robust charter schools program, and to win funding of the District’s Opportunity Scholarship Program (efforts which, by the way, were also supported by BAEO). A highly respected voice of reform and a strong advocate of growing a learning culture in America so all can participate in the future, he’ll be an exceptional asset to K-12. Read our statement on Kevin here. While you’re at it, pick up a copy of one of Kevin’s many books, including his latest, a novel, called The Plan.

Kevin Chavous

FONDNESS AND FAREWELL.  It is with great fondess but sorrow that we note the dissolution of the Black Alliance for Educational Options, an organization well ahead of its time. BAEO’s primary founder – the great Howard Fuller  – whose book No Struggle, No Progress chronicles why and how we must fight for children – told us in 1998 at CER’s 5th Anniversary why we must change the complexion of the room if we were to succeed in our endeavor to truly make educational opportunity work for children of color. And change the complexion of the proverbial edreform room he did, along with a host of other fellow warriors, like Deborah McGriff, then-Pennsylvania State Representative and now Congressman Dwight Evans, Virginia Walden Ford, among others. A dozen became more than a thousand and their impact has been felt in just about every major reform battle. BAEO’s clear, unwavering, powerful voice in the reform movement will be missed and it is incumbent upon those who continue the fight, to embrace BAEO’s principles and help to carry their work forward. (We’d also call on funders to recognize that sometimes the hardest work that the eye cannot actually see is the most important. But that’s another story, for another day).

Challenge Charter wins award - July 18 2007

CONDOLENCES AND PRAISE  We are also extremely sad to report on the passing of Greg Miller, recently president of the Arizona State Board of Education and founder, along with his wife Pam of Challenge Charter School in Glendale in 1996 (a CER Charter School of the Year award winner!). An edreform pioneer, Greg was a member of the group that pushed for and won the passage of the Arizona law authorizing charter schools in 1994. Today, more than 180,000 children are enrolled in more than 550 charters in the state – a fantastic accomplishment and legacy for a fantastic guy. (Challenge Charter also continues to thrive with 500 children enrolled in grades K-6.) Our heartfelt sympathies go out to Pam, daughter Wendy Miller (who serves as CEO and principal at Challenge) and all the family & friends of the Millers. He will be missed.

What if We Gave Each Child a Backpack Full of Cash?

Jeanne Allen on Common Ground With Bill Walton

Our founder and chief executive, Jeanne Allen, recently sat down with William Walton. They discussed the controversy surrounding Matt Damon’s new film, the misleadingly titled Backpack Full of Cash, and how to bring the U.S. education system into the 21st century.

Watch the full interview above — and then read Bill’s op-ed, “The Answer to Failing Schools? Give Students “’Backpacks Full of Cash.’”

CER Applauds Board Member Kevin Chavous on New Role

Statement from Center for Education Reform Founder and CEO Jeanne Allen on Kevin Chavous’s new role:

“It is with great pleasure that I am pleased to announce that longtime friend, CER board member, and reform movement leader Kevin Chavous will become the president of K12 Inc.

I first met Kevin when he was a District of Columbia city councilman in the 1990s fighting for these new innovative things called “charter schools.” I saw him then as he is now, a forward thinking innovative leader on issues surrounding education.

When it comes to educating children, personalized learning and emerging technology have become a large part of the equation, and Kevin is the perfect leader to help grow that conversation. Our entire staff and board members here at CER wish him the best in his new endeavor.”

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October 28th, 2017: