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Obama Proposes $75 Billion for
Universal Preschool over 10 years
Twelve Philly schools under 'quarantine'
during PSSA exams
WHYY Newsworks By Benjamin
Herold @BenjaminBHerold April 10, 2013
Forty-two Philadelphia District
schools are under heightened security during the administration of this year's
state standardized tests, including a dozen schools that are under
"quarantine" conditions. The
intensive monitoring comes in the midst of ongoing investigations into the
possibility of widespread adult cheating on the exams at 53 district schools in
2009, 2010, and 2011. After similar security measures were put in place during
the administration of last year's exams, test scores plummeted at 160 schools
across the district, in some cases by 30 percentage points or more.
By Sara K. Satullo | The Express-Times
on April 09, 2013
at 5:51 AM
The Bethlehem Area School District hopes
to boost the number of district 4-year-olds in high quality child care by 10
percent next school year.
The district wants to
supplement SPARK, its grant-funded prekindergarten program for at-risk
students, without costing district taxpayers so it's trying to get creative and
work with partners, Assistant Superintendent for Education Jack Silva said.
If Bethlehem Area is awarded a
state grant SPARK will serve 100 4-year-olds next year while there are 55
4-year-olds enrolled in district child care. Lehigh Valley Child Care and Head
Start serve about another 300 4-year-olds.
Perkiomen Valley School Board backs
pension, charter school funding reforms
By
Mark D. Marotta Journal Register News Service Tuesday, 04/09/13 04:55 pm
PERKIOMEN—The Perkiomen Valley
School Board has given its OK to three resolutions calling for reform in
funding for charter schools, cybercharter schools and the pension system for
school employees. …..According one of
the resolutions, Perkiomen
Valley has spent a total
of $3.93 million on charter and cybercharter school expenditures over the past
five years, with state reimbursement amounting to $496,169. The resolution
asserted that “the current state funding formula for regular and special
education in charter and cyber charter schools bears no relationship to” their
actual instructional costs. Language in the resolution said that “the state’s
flawed charter school funding formula is costing taxpayers hundreds of millions
in additional tax dollars.”
U. Darby residents assail planned cuts in
high school arts and sports programs
Rita
Giordano, Inquirer Staff Writer Wednesday,
April 10, 2013 ,
12:33 PM
They could swallow cutbacks in
transportation and school administration, and even tolerate an increase in
property taxes - within limits. But
residents of the Upper Darby
School District gave a
resounding "no way" to the hacking of beloved music and arts programs
and high school sports.
Those were some of the findings
in a report released Tuesday night by the University of Pennsylvania
Project for Civic Engagement.
Jeanne Yazinski, president of
the North Pocono Education Association, said "some progress" was made
during the session, during which she estimated there were two dozen people in
the room including school and union representatives plus a mediator.
Group wants Philly teacher, principal
reforms
Inquirer
Philly School Files by Kristen Graham Wednesday, April 10, 2013 , 1:02 PM
A newly-formed umbrella group
of many of the city’s leading education nonprofits hopes to affect the upcoming
Philadelphia
teachers’ contract. The
“Coalition for Effective Teaching,” made up of the Aspira Association, Congreso
de Latinos Unidos, Education Voters of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Education
Fund, Public Citizens for Children and Youth, the Urban League of Greater Philadelphia
and the United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey has studied
the current Philadelphia Federation of Teachers contract and is today
announcing recommendations for changes, both for teachers and the Philadelphia
School District management. The
Coalition says this is a critical moment for Philadelphia , an “opportunity to adopt
reforms that will improve the capacity of the district’s teachers and
principals to make a more signifcant contribution to student success and
achievement.”
The highlights of what
the Coalition is recommending for the PFT contract, which expires in August:
Why I opted out of the PSSA circus
By Tomika Anglin thenotebook on
Apr 10 2013
Posted in Commentary
This is a reprint of an article
that originally
appeared on Parents United for Public Education's website.
….I have chosen to
exercise my option to have my daughter excused from the
state’s two-week-long, one-size-fits-all assessment of her ability.
According to Pennsylvania
code, parents have the right to opt out of state standardized tests. Most
of us do not know this because the explanation about the PSSAs and our rights
under it is not distributed to parents. The School
District , however, must honor the request of parents who wish to
opt out according to religious reasons. I
am not alone. Across the country, an increasing number of parents have joined a
national opt-out movement. In Seattle , Pittsburgh and New
York City , parents are standing against the corrupting
and corrupted role that testing has taken in our children’s lives and in our
schools.
Masterman students make all the right moves
to win national chess title
WHYY Newsworks By Aaron
Moselle @awmoselle April
11, 2013
Students at a Philadelphia public school recently
maneuvered their way to a national chess championship title. Seven students from Julia
R. Masterman
Middle School in Fairmount competed in
the SuperNationals in Nashville ,
Tenn. , the Super Bowl of chess.
On Sunday, the team took home
the middle school title.
Obama Proposes $75 Billion for Universal
Preschool over 10 years
Governing.com BY: DYLAN SCOTT |
NATION | APRIL
10, 2013
Following up on his pledge to
expand early education to all American children, President Barack Obama
proposed pumping $75
billion over the next 10 years into a “Preschool for All” initiative introduced
in his fiscal year 2014 budget released Wednesday.
The program would start with a
$1.3 billion investment in FY 2014, increasing in future years to total $75
billion by FY 2023. The goal would be to enroll all low- and moderate-income
four-year-olds into high-quality preschool programs, while incentivizing states
to extend access to middle-income families and above. The White House expects 15 states to
participate in the initiative in the first year, with all states joining by the
third year. Twenty-eight percent of four-year-olds and only 4 percent of
three-year-olds attended a public preschool program in 2011.
President’s budget proposed flat
funding for Title I and IDEA; $295 million to expand choice/charters
An Economy
Built to Last and a World-Class Education for Our Children
The White House Office of
Management and Budget April 10, 2013
Education factsheet
Obama Budget Would Invest in Pre-K, High
School Overhaul
Education Week Politics K-12
Blog By Alyson Klein on April
10, 2013 11:49 AM
President Barack Obama's budget
unveiled today proposes new money for a big expansion of prekindergarten
programs, a new competitive-grant program for high school improvement, a new
Race to the Top competition focused on higher education—and level funding for
the two formula grants school districts depend on most: Title I grants for
disadvantaged students and special education.
No increases proposed for Title
I or IDEA in President’s budget; keep in mind the estimated impact of
sequestration on Pennsylvania
education….
Teachers and Schools: Pennsylvania
will lose approximately $26.4 million in funding for primary and secondary
education, putting around 360 teacher and aide jobs at risk. In addition about
29,000 fewer students would be served and approximately 90 fewer schools would
receive funding.
Education for Children with Disabilities: In addition,Pennsylvania
will lose approximately $21.4 million in funds for about 260 teachers, aides,
and staff who help children with disabilities.
Education for Children with Disabilities: In addition,
Sequestration:
Impact of March 1st Cuts on Middle Class Families, Jobs and Economic Security: Pennsylvania
The White House March 1, 2013
Unless Congress acts by March
1st, a series of automatic cuts—called the sequester—will take effect that
threaten hundreds of thousands of middle class jobs, and cut vital services for
children, seniors, people with mental illness and our men and women in uniform.
New York Times By MOTOKO RICH Published: April 10, 2013
AUSTIN, Tex. — In this state
that spawned test-based accountability in public schools and spearheaded one of
the nation’s toughest high school curriculums, lawmakers are now considering a
reversal that would cut back both graduation requirements and standardized
testing. In the state that spawned
test-based accountability in public schools, some parents and educators believe
it has resulted in limited flexibility.
The actions in Texas are being closely
watched across the country as many states move to raise curriculum standards to
meet the increasing demands of employers while grappling with critics who say
testing has spun out of control.
CER, ALEC, Rhee on same page…..
'Parent Power Index' Puts Familiar States
in Top Policy Spots
The Center for Education
Reform, a group with a relatively long tenure advocating for charters,
vouchers, and test-based teacher evaluations, has released its state rankings
on its "Parent Power Index." The
center classifies such power as when parents have "access to quality
educational options and are provided with good information to make smart
decisions about their children's education." No. 1 on the index is Indiana , which scores an
87 out of 100.
Who else gave Indiana top marks among states for its
education policy in 2013? The American Legislative Exchange Council. ALEC gave the state a 3.49 GPA in its latest "Report Card
on American Education" (just .01 points short of an A-, if you want to be
technical) and, perhaps more importantly, has model legislation that seeks
to replicate key portions of Indiana 's
major education policy changes, including vouchers and changes to teacher
evaluations. And who else ranked the Hoosier
State very highly on
education policy, if not quite at the top? Michelle Rhee's StudentsFirst advocacy group, which ranked the state third
overall.
Jon Stewart ridicules Tennessee bill linking welfare to good
grades
I recently wrote
a post about a Tennessee
state senator who has advanced legislation that would cut welfare payments to
families whose kids get really bad report cards and test scores.
The senator is Stacey
Campfield, a Republican, who was quoted in the
Knoxville News Sentinelas saying this was a great way to “break the cycle
of poverty.”
Here’s Jon
Stewart’s new take on this from “The Daily Show.”
Charter schools - public funding without public scrutiny
Proposed statewide
authorization and direct payment would further diminish accountability and
oversight for public tax dollars
Network for Public Education
Webinar: How to Organize a
Grassroots Group; Saturday, April 13 at 2:30
pm EDT
Many of those who have joined our network want to get involved in
grassroots work to change the direction of education in our communities. We are
now planning a series of web forums to share concrete ways to do just that. The
first will focus on how to organize grassroots groups.
Phyllis Bush and members of the North
East Indiana Friends of Public Education will share their experiences
in getting organized. Formed just two years ago, this group helped elect
teacher Glenda Ritz as state superintendent of education.
The webinar will take place on Saturday, April 13, at 2:30 pm Eastern time, 11:30 am Pacific time. You can register
here. You will be emailed a link to the webinar a day or two before the
event.
NICE BLOG!!! Education is the process of bringing desirable change into the behavior of human beings. It can also be defined as the “Process of imparting or acquiring knowledge or habits through instruction or study”. Thanks for sharing a nice information.
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