Daily
postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now reach more than 1900
Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors, administrators,
legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, PTO/PTA officers, parent
advocates, teacher leaders, education professors, members of the press and a
broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies, professional associations and education
advocacy organizations via emails, website, Facebook and Twitter.
The Keystone State Education Coalition is
pleased to be listed among the friends and allies of The Network for Public
Education. Are you a
member?
These daily
emails are archived at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
Education Voters
PA – Statewide Call to Action day April 10th
Download 1 page pdf with information about the April 10th
call-in day.
Districts are able to provide quality cyber and blended services at a
fraction of the cost without wasting tax dollars on advertising and corporate
bonuses.
Boiled Frogs
Remember the story about boiling frogs? If you put a frog into a pot of
hot water, he will jump right back out; but if you put him in a pot of cold
water and slowly bring it to a boil, he doesn’t notice until it’s too late, and
you have a boiled frog. Unless you want to cook poor little amphibians, the
point of this story is that we humans often get used to terrible situations –
even as the danger slowly increases around us. We can’t let this happen in
public education, where our pot is nearing the boiling point.
Quite simply, the situation in our schools is worse this year than last
year. Despite what Gov. Corbett’s administration continues to claim (see
our response
to yesterday’s ridiculous assertion), here in Pennsylvania our children are now dealing
with the combined loss of nearly $2 billion. That’s the initial $1 billion
trouncing that Gov. Corbett gave our schools in 2011, followed by the 2012
budget that locked those cuts in. Last year, the consequences of those cuts
were new and raw, and our grassroots response was swift and loud. But we need
to remember what is happening right now and not become complacent: we can’t
accept this as some inevitable new reality.
“It’s not that I’m against assessments — I think we need to make sure
our kids understand what they are being taught — but what we have now is
testing without a purpose and a system that only benefits the testing companies
and the people who want to privatize public education. “I see this as sort of a Berlin Wall and I hope enough people get
upset about it and knock it down.”
Educators weigh in on calls for PSSA
‘opt-’out
Delco Times By TIMOTHY LOGUE Published: Thursday, April 04, 2013 tlogue@delcotimes.com @timothylogue
A Western Pennsylvania mother’s opinion
piece in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette about opting her 9-year-old son out of
Pennsylvania System of School Assessment tests has garnered a lot of attention
and, as of Wednesday night, more than 27,000 recommendations by Facebook users.
“After doing some research and talking with other parents, my husband and I decided to ‘opt out’ Jacob from the PSSA tests,” Kathy M. Newman wrote in the piece, which ran Sunday. “We are opting him out because we do not like what high-stakes tests are doing to Jacob, to our family, to his teachers, to his school and, ultimately, to our entire education system.”
“After doing some research and talking with other parents, my husband and I decided to ‘opt out’ Jacob from the PSSA tests,” Kathy M. Newman wrote in the piece, which ran Sunday. “We are opting him out because we do not like what high-stakes tests are doing to Jacob, to our family, to his teachers, to his school and, ultimately, to our entire education system.”
“Ms. Newman's opinion piece has drawn more than 40,000 page views on
post-gazette.com. And more than 400 people from around the country have posted
comments, both in agreement and disagreement.”
Op-ed on PSSA exams hits nerve with parents
Some parents have
become increasingly unhappy with what they see as the negative effects of
high-stakes tests.
By Eleanor Chute and Mary Niederberger /Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette April
4, 2013 12:22 am
By Eleanor Chute and Mary Niederberger /
If you want to get a conversation
started with parents, just mention two words: "standardized tests." Since standardized tests have become
increasingly important in schools under the federal No Child Left Behind Act,
some parents have become increasingly unhappy with what they see as the
negative effects of high-stakes tests, including what they call a narrowing of
the curriculum to focus on tests.
Piccola: Charter school reform needs
to put students, not special interests, first: As I See It
Patriot-News
Op-Ed By Jeffrey Piccola on April 03, 2013 at 8:30 AM
Cyber charter schools are meeting unique needs in public education—needs
defined by 38,000 parents who view cyber schooling as the best, and sometimes
only, alternative for their children. Parents, better than anyone, know when
they see failure and know when they see hope. Cyber charter schools provide
that hope, save taxpayers money, and save children’s lives. Tragically, the
voices of parents and children seeking better educational options are missing
from almost every educational discussion in Harrisburg .
IMHO,
Ex-senator and unabashed choice/privatization advocate Piccola has a
particularly rosy view of cyber charters and seems to have a complete and total
disregard for taxpayers on this matter.
Districts are able to provide quality cyber and blended services at a
fraction of the cost without wasting tax dollars on advertising and corporate
bonuses.
Charter schools - public funding without public scrutiny
Proposed statewide
authorization and direct payment would further diminish accountability and
oversight for public tax dollars
Two principals are first Philly casualties of cheating
probes
Submitted
by thenotebook on Wed, 04/03/2013 - 12:55
by Dale
Mezzacappa and Benjamin Herold for the Notebook and NewsWorks
In the
first fallout from Pennsylvania ’s
nearly two-year-old investigation into possible cheating on state standardized
tests at 53
Philadelphia District schools, two city principals have surrendered
their administrative credentials.
PERKIOMEN—The Perkiomen Valley School Board is prepared to vote April 8
on three resolutions calling for state legislative action to reform the funding
formula for charter and cyber charter schools, as well as the pension system
for school employees.
“Truebright is one of more than 130 charters
nationwide run by followers of Imam M. Fetullah Gulen, who lives in
self-imposed exile in the Poconos.”
Former administrator from Truebright
to testify
Martha Woodall, Inquirer
Staff Writer Thursday, April 4, 2013 , 3:01 AM
A former administrator from Truebright
Science Academy
Charter School
will testify about operations of the North Philadelphia
charter when a school district hearing resumes Thursday.
The charter school, which is linked to a controversial Turkish imam, is
fighting to remain open.
http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20130404_Former_administrator_from_Truebright_to_testify.html
Philly schools will make bidders
compete for all potential 'Renaissance' schools
WHYY Newsworks By Benjamin Herold April 2, 2013
In a break from recent practice, the Philadelphia School
District will require this year's three potential
Renaissance charter operators to compete for the right to manage each of the
traditional public schools that have been designated for turnaround. "We didn't want a situation where we had
specific operators targeting specific schools," said District Deputy
Superintendent Paul Kihn.
As a result, Mastery Charter Schools ,
Scholar Academies and Universal Companies will
all formally vie to manage Alcorn, Kenderton and Pastorius elementary schools
as charters beginning next school year.
2 Philly principals surrender
administrative credentials
Philly School Files Blog by Kristen Graham POSTED: Wednesday, April 3, 2013 , 9:56 AM
Two Philadelphia
School District
principals whose schools were under investigation for possible state-exam
cheating have surrendered their administrative credentials.
Barbara McCreery, the former principal of Communications Tech
High School , surrendered
her administrative license "in lieu of discipline."
Lola Marie O'Rourke, the former principal of Locke Elementary, surrendered
her superintendent's letter of eligibility, supervisory and administrative
credentials, also in lieu of discipline.
An urban school district that works
— without miracles or Superman
To listen to some school reformers, you’d think there are no urban
traditional public schools that are successful. Here’s a different story,
adapted and excerpted from “Improbable
Scholars: The Rebirth of a Great American School System And A Strategy For
America’s Schools” (Oxford University Press), by David
Kirp, professor of public policy at the University of California at
Berkeley. He is a former newspaper editor and policy consultant, as well as the
author of numerous articles in various publications and several books,
including “Shakespeare, Einstein and the Bottom Line: The Marketing of Higher
Education.” His new book, “Improbable Scholars,” tells the story of the public
schools in Union City, N.J., where teachers do an amazing job of teaching
high-poverty students without employing “miracle” reforms.
Restorative Practice: Opening Up,
Students Transform a Vicious Circle
New York Times By PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN
Published: April
3, 2013 27
Comments
Mr. Butler’s mission is to help defuse grenades of conflict at Ralph J.
Bunche High
School , the end of the line for students with a
history of getting into trouble. He is the school’s coordinator for restorative
justice, a program increasingly offered in schools seeking an alternative to
“zero tolerance” policies like suspension and expulsion.
The approach now taking root in 21 Oakland
schools, and in Chicago , Denver
and Portland , Ore. , tries to nip problems and violence in
the bud by forging closer, franker relationships among students, teachers and
administrators.
“…it suggests that the angry, worried debate over how to improve the
nation’s mediocre education — pitting the teachers’ unions and the advocates of
more money for public schools against the champions of school vouchers and
standardized tests — is missing the most important part: infants and toddlers.”
Investments in Education May Be Misdirected
New York Times Business Day By EDUARDO
PORTER Published: April 2, 2013
….Children of mothers who had graduated from college scored much higher
at age 3 than those whose mothers had dropped out of high school, proof of the
advantage for young children of living in rich, stimulating environments. More surprising is that the difference in
cognitive performance was just as big at age 18 as it had been at age 3.
“The gap is there before kids walk into kindergarten,” Mr. Heckman told
me. “School neither increases nor reduces it.”
If education is supposed to help redress inequities at birth and improve
the lot of disadvantaged children as they grow up, it is not doing its job.
American Public Media Marketplace
for Tuesday, April 2, 2013 by Amy Scott
Incentivizing
cheating: Can we learn from Atlanta ?
Public school teachers and administrators trickled into the Fulton County
jail in Atlanta
today. It’s the deadline for educators indicted in a widespread cheating
scandal in the Atlanta
public schools to surrender, or face arrest. In all, 35 people face charges in
an alleged conspiracy to inflate standardized test scores in order to receive
cash bonuses. To critics who believe
standardized testing in public schools is out of control, the lesson from Atlanta is clear: the
stakes are too high.
PBPC Launches New Policy Webinar
Series
The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center
April 3, 2013
The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy
Center is launching a new webinar
series that will connect you — direct from your computer — to the latest policy
debates in Harrisburg .
From education funding to expanding health care coverage to constructing a fair
tax system, our webinar series will provide you information you need to know
and show you how you can shape the debate in the State Capitol.
Here’s the first one in the PBPC webinar series:
Webinar: Selling Snake Oil to the
States: ALEC’s State Tax and Budget Agenda at Work in Pennsylvania Tuesday April 9, 2013 ,
4-5 p.m.
The American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC — a leading voice
for state Voter ID and Stand Your Ground laws — is a driving force behind state
budget and tax policies that benefit the wealthy and corporations at the
expense of public investments. ALEC’s hand is evident in legislative proposals
in Pennsylvania
to cut taxes for profitable corporations at the expense of schools, health care
and human service programs.
Join Greg Leroy, Director of Good Jobs First, and Dr. Peter Fisher of the
University of Iowa for a webinar that will debunk
ALEC’s myths about taxes, employment policies and economic growth. Learn about
new efforts in Pennsylvania
to divert state resources to pay for a new round of tax cuts to profitable
corporations.
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.
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