Sign up for our newsletter

Spotlight on State Superintendent Races

“State Chiefs’ Races Blend K-12 Issues, State Politics”
by Andrew Ujifusa
Education Week
October 10, 2012

School finance, the role of standardized tests, and local control of education policy are among the hot issues as candidates vie for the top school leadership spot in four states next month, with three incumbent state superintendents running hard on their records as they seek another term in office.

Mr. Bennett also stressed external validation from groups such as the Center for Education Reform, a Washington-based pro-school-choice group that ranked Indiana as the number one state for “parent power.”

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Won’t Back Down from Parent Organizing

October 10, 2012

If Teachers Can Organize, Why Can’t Parents? That’s essentially the question that Doreen Diaz, president of the Desert Trails Parent Union, an organization formed to change failing Desert Trails elementary school under California’s parent trigger law, asks in a Washington Examiner column.

The frustrated parent compares the real life efforts of California parents to turn a school around to the movie Won’t Back Down, saying the movie makes union tactics seem tame in comparison.

So of course Doreen Diaz was excited to appear next to AFT President Randi Weingarten during a panel at Education Nation, where she could ask the union leader directly how she could justify the tactics being used to stop the Desert Trails conversion. Diaz:

“On the panel, she [Randi] told me how she understood my frustration over my daughter’s education and how she shared my goals of giving her a great school. But after the lights and the cameras turned off, she left the stage and sent a tweet deploring the absence of parents who want “real” empowerment at the panel discussion. I had been sitting right next to her for the entire discussion. Her tweet made me feel just like our school district has made me feel for years: invisible.

It is Weingarten’s union that fights hardest against parent trigger laws, despite the fact we are fighting for the same right to organize that her teacher-members enjoy — a right we support.” Read More…

Lawsuit Over Anti-Amendment Tactics

“Lawsuit: School districts used students to promote anti-amendment stance”
by Mike Paluska
CBS Atlanta
October 8, 2012

WATCH NEWS CLIP VIDEO HERE

In a lawsuit filed with the Fulton County Superior Court on Monday, five people part of a class action lawsuit allege that the Fulton and Gwinnett School Districts used tax payer money and students to strike down Amendment One on the Nov. 6 ballot.

Amendment One will be voted on by the public on whether to amend the Georgia Constitution to grant the state more power to create charter schools.

“The defendants are using tax dollars to fund a campaign to defeat the amendment in order to retain their current monopoly of power of public education in Georgia,” according to the suit filed by Allen Hughes, Rich Thompson, Rae Anne Harkness, Kelley O’ Bryan Gary and Kara Martin, on behalf of themselves and all taxpayers in Georgia.

On Monday, CBS Atlanta News spoke to Thompson and Harkness.

“I support school choice, and I support the ability for parents to have more options for their children. The unfortunate part is we have a bureaucracy that has decided they don’t want parents to have that option,” Thompson said. “And they are using our tax dollars against us to limit us from receiving accurate information so parents can make informed decisions on Election Day.”

According to the lawsuit, “Defendant Fulton, Defendant Gwinnett and the districts and the entire Education Empire have used public sources and funds to prepare anti-amendment documents, distributed the material electronically, given anti-amendment speeches while on official business, adopted resolutions opposing the amendment, allowed representatives of the teachers union to appear at staff meetings and advocate against the amendment, held staff meetings on public property in which teachers were warned that, unless they voted ‘No,’ they could lose their jobs and allowed the Georgia PTA to use students to carry the anti-amendment information home in backpacks.”

A representative with Fulton County Schools told CBS Atlanta News they don’t have a position on the proposed amendment and only have information from a question and answer session posted on their website.

“I want to see all the school districts take the material down,” Harkness said. “They were wrong that they should not have been advocating for it, we want them to return the tax dollars they have used to promote it so far.”

According to both Thompson and Harkness, they just want the vote on Nov. 6 to be fair.

“The lawsuit isn’t about how to vote or telling people how to vote – it’s about having a fair election,” Harkness said.

A hearing on the lawsuit has been scheduled for 2 p.m. Wednesday.

Students must come first

Guest Opinion
by Bob Shillingstad
Coeur d’Alene Press
October 8, 2012

We will all be faced with a deciding vote on the first steps of education reform in November and it is important that everyone understand what is proposed and what is at stake. Idahoans will vote on three referenda aimed at repealing what may be one of the most sweeping education reforms in the country.

First, understand the problem. A report released a few months ago by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Institute for a Competitive Workforce ranked Idaho as one of the four worst states in terms of the percentage of students who enroll and complete a four-year degree. Jeanne Allen, president of the D.C.-based Center for Education Reform, lays out the case like this:

“In states like this, the assumption is all is well. The reality is they’ve simply been going through the motions for years, and the result is a kind of Third World education status.”

Here is a summary of what education reform under “Students Come First” does:

* Aims to change our culture by getting control over costs and elevating achievement. Thus the so-called Luna laws now restrict collective bargaining to salary and benefits, phases out tenure and force teacher contract negotiations out in the open. They also eliminate a practice that across America operates largely to protect bad teachers and keep good ones out of the classroom: the last hired, first fired system of seniority.

* The other two prongs of Students Come First deal mostly with quality. New merit pay provisions mean that teachers can earn up to $8,000 a year extra for serving in hard to fill positions or helping their schools boost student achievement. The technology part has to do with ensuring that students and teachers in any part of Idaho have access to the best instruction available.

The teachers’ union is fighting all of this but rather than trying to answer the provisions of quality in the classroom they are focusing on the fact that Idaho will provide secondary students with a laptop computer and offer a variety of online classes. Listen to what Juan Williams (a popular Democratic pundit) has to say in a recent Wall Street Journal editorial about technology in the classroom.

Mr. Williams describes Mooresville, North Carolina this way: “The district ranked 100 out of 115 school districts in North Carolina on per pupil spending. But in the last 10 years, its test scores have pushed it from a middling rank among North Carolina’s school districts to a tie for second place. Three years ago, 73 percent of Mooresville’s students tested as proficient in math, reading and science. Today 89 percent are proficient in those subjects.

“The big change in Mooresville is that their textbooks, notes, learning materials and assignments are computerized, allowing teachers and parents to track their progress in real time. If a student is struggling, their computer-learning program can be adjusted to meet their needs and get them up to speed. And the best students no longer wait on slow students to catch up. Top students are constantly pushed to their limits by new curricular material on their laptops.”

Superintendent Mark Edwards says, “Our teachers are better informed, our parents are better informed, and our students are understanding what they’re doing and why they’re doing it.” He notes, by the way, that digital learning hasn’t increased the costs.

A recent article co-authored by Arne Duncan, President Obama’s Secretary of Education, and Reed Hastings, CEO of Netflix, targeted this issue in a very clear challenge. They stated in part, “In the past two decades technology has revolutionized the way Americans communicate, get news, socialize and conduct business. But technology has yet to transform our classrooms. At its full potential, technology could personalize and accelerate instruction for students at all educational levels. And it could provide equitable access to a world class education for millions of students stuck attending substandard schools in cities, remote rural regions, and tribal reservations. Other countries are far ahead of us in creating 21st century classrooms.”

The unions are not giving up. They are trying to scare parents and voters with warnings about wasted money on technology, larger class size, school safety, whatever they think will work on the emotions. We’ve seen this script before. As with other public sector unions, the Idaho Education Association offers no real alternative. At a time when Idaho’s education budgets are being cut for lack of revenues, the union answer is always the same: more money for more of the same.

Mr. Luna and the Legislature have answered. Idaho cannot afford more of the same. In November vote YES on the three propositions. Let’s turn failure in our schools into more local control and success.

Bob Shillingstad is a Hayden resident who taught for 13 years in public schools.

New Chief Executive for Philly Archdiocese

“New chief executive to run Philadelphia Archdiocese high schools”
by Martha Woodall
Philadelphia Inquirer
October 8, 2012

An education manager and consultant will become the first chief executive of the new foundation that is running high schools and special education schools for the Archidiocese of Philadelphia.

The Faith in the Future Foundation was scheduled to introduce Samuel Casey Carter – an author and manager who has experience with Catholic and charter schools – during a ceremony at SS. John Neumann and Maria Goretti High School in South Philadelphia Monday at 11 a.m.

“I do believe what we do here will become a national model that others will replicate,” Carter, 46, a Pittsburgh native, told The Inquirer in an exclusive interview before the announcement.

H. Edward Hanway, the Faith in the Future chairman, said Carter – who is called “Casey” – was selected following a national search to helm the independent foundation that was created earlier this year to garner financial support for Catholic schools, raise their visibility and increase enrollment.

The archidiocese announced in August it had turned management of the 17 archdiocesan high schools and four special education to the foundation.

“We wanted someone who was a demonstrated leader who understands the challenge of K-12 education, particularly Catholic education,” Hanway said.

Carter, he said, was one of at least three finalists who emerged from a field of 10 national candidates that were identified with the help of a search firm.

Hanway said the foundation was especially interested in finding a top administrator who could develop a clear vision and articulate a persuasive strategy to help the schools grow.

“Casey has the right mix of strategic ability and experience with practical applications,” Hanway said. “That’s why the search committee felt he would be an outstanding choice.”

He declined to reveal Carter’s salary.

Carter has been living just outside Washington, D.C., where he is president of Carter Research, an education consulting firm. He said he, his wife and three daughters will relocate to Philadelphia.

Monday was to be his first day on the job.

He said he is excited to be involved in Philadelphia’s ground breaking effort with the foundation to bolster and advance Catholic schools.

Carter already had what he said was an inspiring meeting recently with Archbishop Charles J. Chaput. He plans to immediately embark on what he’s dubbed his listening tour. He intends to visit all the archdiocesan high schools and special education schools by Thanksgiving.

The resume for Carter’s extensive career includes serving as president from 2005 to 2007 of National Heritage Academies. The Michigan-based education management firm operates 76 elementary charter schools in nine states. None are in Pennsylvania.

“I’ve spent most of my career discovering what works in the education of the young and working with others to replicate it,” he said.

As a consultant, Carter has worked with officials at the Cristo Rey Network, which operates private Catholic high schools for low-income students in 17 states and Washington, D.C. Cristo Rey Philadelphia High School opened in the city in August.

Carter said he also has worked with KIPP, a national nonprofit network charter schools that specialize in college-prep instruction for low-income students. KIPP Philadelphia has four charters.

As a Bradley Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, Carter wrote a well-known work the foundation published in 2000 entitled No Excuses: Lessons from 21 High-Performing, High-Poverty Schools

Adam Meyerson, now president of the Philanthropy Roundtable in Washington, D.C., said Carter wrote the volume under his direction.

Meyerson called it “a highly influential and inspiring book” that showed there were a public, charter and religious schools across the nation where children of all races and income levels were meeting high expectations and that these successful models could be replicated.

He said Carter’s new position in Philadelphia will enable him to apply some of the management lessons that charter organizations have found to Catholic schools.

Carter earned his high school diploma from Portsmouth Abbey, a New England boarding school operated by the Benedictine monks. He earned his undergraduate degree from St. John’s College in Annapolis. He studied theology at Oxford University and earned a master’s degree in philosophy from The Catholic University of America.

Parent Power Index In The News

Alaskans for Choice in Education blog
Parent Power Index for Alaska
October 1, 2012

All Right Magazine
Florida Makes Top Ten In Parent Power Index
September 26, 2012

Association of American Educators blog
Center for Education Reform Releases Parent Power Index Tool
September 17, 2012

Choice Media
Parent Power Index Ranks States in Ed Reform
September 19, 2012

Choice Words Blog (Thomas B. Fordham Institute)
Florida school choice—great, but could be better
September 21, 2012

Deseret News
Utah ranks 11th in U.S. for charter school policy
January 23, 2013

Education Week
Battle Over ‘Won’t Back Down’ Won’t End Anytime Soon
September 28, 2012
‘Parent Power Index’ Rates States on Certain Criteria
September 18, 2012

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

Hartland News
Parent-Driven Education Gains Ground in States
March 6, 2013

Highland Community News
Parents vs. The Blob
September 10, 2012

Idaho Reporter
Index ranks Idaho education 15th in the country based on options for students
September 27, 2012

Nashua Telegraph
New Hampshire rates low on “parent power” index
September 17, 2012

North Carolina Family Minute
Parent Power Index (Radio clip)
September 27, 2012

Parents for Educational Freedom in North Carolina (PEFNC) Blog
New tool provides NC’s “Parent Power Index”
September 19, 2012

Philadelphia Tribune
Pa. gets good grades in education reform ranking
January 26, 2013

Takepart.com
Want a Voice in Your Child’s Education? Live in These 10 States
September 25, 2012

Tampa Bay Times
Florida parents have the power in making education choices, advocacy group says
September 17, 2012

The Locker Room (John Locke Foundation Blog)
NC Ranks #31 for Parent Power
September 17, 2012

Watchdog Wire
Florida Ranks 2nd on Parent Power Index
September 26, 2012

WJON, The Pete & Doug Show
MN Gets Passing Grade in K-12 Educational Parent Power
January 31, 2013

Former Gov. John Engler on panel discussing role of business in public education

by Dave Murray
Grand Rapids Press
October 4, 2012

Former Michigan Gov. John Enlger is part of a panel discussion debating whether schools can be run as a business but stay true to their humanitarian vision.

Engler, a three-term governor who oversaw the start of charter schools and school choice opportunities in the state, is discussing the growth of private companies in American public education at the event, hosted by the Center for Education Reform and SABIS, an international education provider.

The discussion is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. on October 10 in Washington, D.C., but is planned to be streamed live on the Center for Education Reform’s website,2024.edreform.com.

Engler is expected to be joined by the panel by Jeanne Allen, the center’s president,Brian Jones, chairman of the D.C. Public Charter School Board, and James Tooley, author of “From Village School to Global Brand: Changing the World Through Education,” which examines SABIS’ growth.

‘The role of the private sector in education is enormously promsing. The concepts of innovation and scale that business acumen can and does bring to education is often overlooked and misunderstood,” Allen said.

“Understanding the example set by an international group like SABIS is just one way to learn about best practice. Another is to look someone who has both been an education pioneer, a policy maker and a business leader for insight. Gov Engler is uniquely qualified to discuss the intersection of these areas given his experience and now as head of the Business Roundtable which has long been in the forefront of education change.”

The Center for Education Reform, founded in 1993, is an advocacy organization for changes in education structure.

SABIS operates in 15 countries on four continents, including two charter schools in Detroit and one in Saginaw and Flint.

In addition to his with charter schools, Jones is senior vice president and general counsel of Strayer University, which offers classes aimed at working adults on 96 campuses in 26 states. He was the U. S. Education Department’s general counsel between 2001 and 2005.

Join the Next Grassroots Revolution in U.S. Education

October 4, 2012

Dear Friends,

I hope you all found time this weekend to go see Won’t Back Down. Now that it is in theaters, parents are seeing the movie and wondering if – and how – they can take control of their child’s education. Lucky for them, our Parent Power Index© can tell them just that.

As I mentioned to you last week, there are powerful anti-reform groups actively working against this movie, including the teachers unions. They fear that old adage that “information is power.” So we’ll double our efforts to make sure parents get the power they need and deserve.

We know firsthand the enormous tasks that parents can accomplish on behalf of their children when given the right tools and information. The Center has since 1993 counseled thousands of parents and activists on how to improve their schools, and with the tools we’ve created they’ve started schools, changed laws, and taken back their communities. And to meet the demands of anyone’s schedule our new Take 5 Minutes and Take Back Your Schools gives actionable tools to anyone wanting to get engaged now.

Thousands have already explored the Parent Power Index© and with your help in spreading the word we can create the next grassroots revolution in American education. So tell your friends and neighbors to visit the Parent Power Index© and become part of the national imperative to secure real, substantive improvement in all schools!

Thank You!

Jeanne Allen
President

Fact check: On education, gains difficult to demonstrate

by Howard Blume
Los Angeles Times
October 3, 2012

On education, President Obama correctly noted that his ideas for reform have been drawn from ideas championed by Democrats and Republicans, an overlap that also has drawn criticism in some quarters from allies of the president such as teacher unions.

Obama also said that his education reforms were “starting to show gains.” Such gains would be difficult to demonstrate. There are rising test scores in many states, but it’s difficult to link these to federal programs. The president has indeed favored aggressive reforms in education, but most of them are still in process as far as results.

Education historian Diane Ravitch, watching the debate, said in an email that the school-reform grants under Obama’s “Race to the Top” program have “thus far improved nothing.” (Ravitch is a disappointed Obama supporter who is strongly against Romney.) The Obama administration also has successfully pushed nearly all states to adopt year-by-year learning standards called the “common core.” The goal has been to raise academic standards and promote improved curricula nationwide, but little related to this effort has taken effect yet.

Mitt Romney spoke of education as part of his economic plan. The specifics he mentioned included simplifying the structure of the federal Department of Education. He complained that 47 training programs are housed in eight different agencies. For better or worse, job-training programs are, in fact, housed in multiple federal agencies.

He also spoke of sending education dollars “back to states,” which analysts from both parties have interpreted as a signal that he would reduce the budget and scope of the Department of Education.

Obama, in contrast, has sent education dollars from the federal government to the states via grants and direct aid, under the economic stimulus program, to save programs and jobs. Such programs have increased the federal deficit. The grants were frequently in exchange for adopting education reforms favored by the Obama administration.

Romney, in contrast, is suggesting that dollars would be returned to the states because they would not go to the federal government in the first place.

In criticizing Romney’s tax plan, the President emphasized repeatedly that his challenger’s plan would result in reduced funding for government programs, which, he said, would prove a burden for the middle class—either through more taxes or through cuts in services.

[For the Record, 7:58 p.m. PST Oct. 3: This post has been updated below following the conclusion of the debate.]

As an illustrative metaphor, Obama cited overcrowded classrooms and old, out-of-date textbooks. It’s accurate that his economic-stimulus dollars for education saved teachers’ jobs — which had the result of maintaining smaller classrooms in many places. The number of education jobs preserved is 160,000, according to the National School Boards Assn. The Obama administration puts the number three times higher.

Overall, however, the federal government provides only a small portion of the funds for public education nationwide. And the stimulus dollars were one-time assistance that could only maintain teaching jobs for about two years as a bridge to better economic conditions. This strategy worked in some states, but many teaching jobs were lost in California after the stimulus funds ran out.

This comment on the debate came by email from Jeanne Allen of the Center for Education Reform in Washington, D.C. She has generally praised Romney’s approach to education as moving away from federal heavyhandedness (and some questionable policy directions) under Obama.

“So far I’ve heard they both want to improve skills—Romney wants to make schools better—his words—and Obama wants to invest, do more Race to the Top [grants], hire math and science [teachers]. Thousands of flowers blooming organically versus lots blooming in one growing field might be one way look at it,” she said.

The debate returned to education, just over an hour into the discussion, during the President’s response to a question about the proper role of government.

“We’ve got to reform schools that are not working,” Obama said. “We’ll give you money if you initiate reforms.”

Even critics would likely concede he was speaking accurately at this point, whether they support his policy priorities or not. This approach—providing incentives—was embodied in the administration’s Race to the Top grants and other programs. The President added: “Race to the Top was not a top-down approach.”

Here, some observers from both parties would disagree, arguing that the Obama administration expanded the federal role in a way that some find objectionable.

The president also talked of plans to hire more teachers and stated that his Republican challenger “doesn’t think we need more teachers. I do.”

That characterization does not represent Romney’s position, although it’s true that Romney has criticized the federal economic-stimulus program, which provided money to preserve teaching jobs for about two years during the recession. As far as hiring or retaining teachers, Romney has said that the funding of teachers should be a state and local decision.

Candidates Square Off on Education: How Much Chicken in Every Pot?

A timely issue that is finally worth the debate

by Jeanne Allen
October 3, 2012

Who knew education would come up repeatedly tonite?

Romney: After the president opened the debate about his jobs plan, Romney introduced the education component into the debate, combining jobs and skills, which come from education.

Obama: We have to improve our education system — we have a program called Race to the Top and now we are going to hire 100,000 math and science teachers.

Romney: I agree education is key to the future of our economy but we have 27 different training programs across government not working together. (we are fact checking this)

Obama: Says he inherited 18 programs for education that were well intentioned but not working for kids; that one teacher in NV has 42 kids and 10 year old textbooks. (we are fact checking this, too!)

This smattering of their words scratches the surface of an engaging, competitive conversation that highlighted education six times (at least) before the first 15 minutes were up and despite having been asked no direct questions about education. The candidates would go on to amplify their points throughout, and eventually address the proper federal role, which, despite suggestions among education reformers to the contrary, really is very, very different. And by all twitter, news media and pundit reports, even on this issue Romney was the winner.

Before I get to that, I have to say that I’m a bit concerned it’s the pollsters who are winning. The President was able to weave in class size and money, as if those two issues were the answer. Well that’s what the pollsters say, and that’s what a lot of people who are too busy to read the research or data believe. But it’s not accurate.

It is an “everything old is new again” tactic to winning friends and influencing people but it’s the proverbial “chicken in every pot” formula and the and candidates sparred on exactly how much chicken should be promised to the respective pots…or whether it was the government’s role to find it, bake it and put it there.

As the president repeated the word “invest” or “investment,” I thought back to Ed Secretary Arne Duncan’s comments yesterday at the press club where he boasted about spending, while accusing Romney of wanting to make cuts. That puzzles me. For years, our colleagues in the Obama Administration have prided themselves on their unique reform pedigree, their progressive approach. But that’s scarce in the campaign talk these days. Why?

I think back to those pollsters I’ve followed for years, how these days, talking about “investment” scores brownie points, and reform is, well, so anti-establishment. So with the stakes high, “invest” in education is being used to sell, and sell hard, that education spending will not suffer under Obama II.

The candidates agreed that there is a fundamental difference in their views of government.

The president harkened back to the words of Abraham Lincoln, celebrating his embrace of our great freedoms and enterprise, but saying, that “clearly education is one of those things we can do together.” Lincoln started land grant colleges, the president said, and…if people are educated we are all better off.

“When it comes to education, we have to reform schools that are not working… we had a program called RtTT we’ll give money if you do reforms, but I’ve also said lets hire more teachers…hard pressed states can’t do that. We’ve seen teachers laid off — it’s the kind of investment the federal government can make, it can’t do everything… but it can help. Gov Romney doesn’t believe we need to hire teachers.”

Romney pushed back. That’s simply not true. I value teachers. Does the federal government have a responsibility to improve education? It’s the purview of local and state government, Romney responded, and the primary federal role for kids with special needs (eg IDEA/Title 1 money) should help them get educated at their school of choice. That money “should follow the kids to the schools of their choice.”

That comment stumped Obama. I was surprised. He could have jumped on the school choice band wagon but doing so would have angered the unions while exciting his progressives supporters. Pollsters.

Romney returns another punch. “I propose we grade our schools make them more effective, more efficient. Massachusetts schools are ranked #1 in nation…”

Out of the gate, Romney’s points hit home with reformers. Point Number 3 on Romney’s list of things to fix the economy was to make sure “our people have the skills to succeed and the best schools in the world, which they are not now.”

They are not now, he said. They are not the best. There. He did the unpopular thing. He told the American people our schools are not good. And that’s when the first debate within a debate — about education — ensued.

After that, any time Romney mentioned education Obama had to do so as well. It became tit for tat, competitive and aggressive. And it became a debate where education, which was not supposed to be present at all tonight, ended up factoring prominently.

It all goes to show that, no matter what your specific cause or reform approach, reformers who have worked hard for years to see their issues recognized, should be thankful. Many a presidential campaign has come and gone for this particular blogger and oftentimes education is but a token mention to the interest groups watching. There are wide variations in our candidates on their points of view, their appetite and their attitude toward educational change. But at least they recognize — both of them — finally — that education is a critical voter issue. So whether they prey upon poll-tested-words or simply say what they believe, they at least know how important the issue of ED REFORM is, and that it is here stay. And with 20 years of working for this real attention for real education reform, I am more than happy it is, to President Obama and Governor Romney’s credit, worth the debate.