Daily postings from the Keystone State Education
Coalition now reach more than 3000 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school
directors, administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers,
Governor's staff, 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
These daily emails are archived at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
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?
“The lack of staffing
due to a deliberate withholding of funding is not just a disgrace. It is
dangerous and it is unsustainable.”
Standardized test scores have long
been strongly correlated with students’
household income. In 1979, 300 of Pennsylvania ’s school districts were above
the average for personal income and 201 were below. In 2011, 122 school districts were above the
average with 378 school districts below.
PA Senate Finance
Committee to publicly review IFO report about property tax reform proposal.
Capitolwire.com
Under the Dome October
11, 2013 (links may be subject to paywall)
The
Independent Fiscal Office has issued a report looking at the costs and benefits
of a proposal to eliminate school property taxes. And that report focusing on
House Bill 76 and Senate Bill 76 will be the subject of a public hearing to be
held next Tuesday by the Senate Finance Committee. The state House of
Representatives recently sent to the Senate legislation – House Bill
1189 – that would give school districts greater flexibility to replace school
property taxes with other taxes. The House did not consider House Bill 76, but
did defeat an amendment to HB1189 that would have replaced the bill’s language
with that of HB76. While the Senate has not indicated if it will consider HB1189, or SB 76
(similar to HB76), Senate Majority Leader Dominic Pileggi, R-Delaware, has said he’d at least like to do something to address
the impact of property taxes on senior citizens. Tuesday’s hearing is scheduled
to begin at 9:30 a.m. in Hearing Room #1 of the state Capitol
Complex’s North Office Building .
For more about the IFO’s report on HB76 and SB76, CLICK HERE to read the report and HERE to read a story from the Pennsylvania
Independent.
Tom Corbett Pressured By
Civil Rights Groups On Philadelphia
School Funding
Huffington
Post by Joy Resmovits Posted: 10/11/2013 12:01 am EDT
Ten
high-profile civil rights leaders are pressuring Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett
(R) to intervene in the sorry state of school funding in Philadelphia.
The
national and local leaders -- including the NAACP's Ben Jealous and the
Leadership Conference's Wade Henderson -- are asking Corbett to "take
immediate action to address the budget crisis in the School District of
Philadelphia," according to a letter the group sent to Corbett this week
and provided to The Huffington Post. "The crisis has become an
embarrassment to the entire nation," they wrote, accusing the state of
"knowingly jeopardizing" students' futures.
The civil
rights leaders warn that Philadelphia 's
school system has become "a cautionary tale for the rest of the country,
illustrating the harm that occurs when political posturing and irresponsible
budget decisions trump the educational needs of students, families, and
communities."
The group
is also asking the governor for a meeting.
Outrage grows over sixth
grader's death due to asthma
MARTHA WOODALL, INQUIRER
STAFF WRITER Friday, October 11, 2013 , 10:18
PM
The death
of a West Philadelphia sixth grader last month from asthma complications
continued to spark outrage Friday even as the Philadelphia
School District clarified actions
staff at Bryant Elementary School took the day the girl
became ill. Much of the anger stems from
the lack of a nurse on duty on Sept. 25 who could have recognized Laporcha
Massey's distress. Bryant has a nurse only two days a week.
“The lack
of staffing due to a deliberate withholding of funding is not just a disgrace.
It is dangerous and it is unsustainable.”
Girl dies after getting sick at school without nurse
A
12-year-old girl got sick late last month while she was at her Philadelphia school — a
school without a full-time nurse. She died later that day. Here’s a piece on
what happened to Laporshia Massey from the website of the nonprofit Parents
United for Public Education in Philadelphia . The
Philadelphia
school district has been in a state of crisis for years in large part because
of under-funding by the state. Drastic budget cuts this year led to what was
referred to as a “grim
new normal” that included the closure of two dozens schools, layoffs
of more than 3,800 personnel and other cuts that left some schools without
money for paper and new books.
“Above
Philadelphia is Lower Merion
School District . One of
its two high schools is Harriton
HS.
Harriton HS has 1188 kids and four full-time nurses. Science Leadership Academy
has 490 kids, and we have a nurse two days a week. This year, the average per
pupil expenditure in Philadelphia hovers just
under $10,000 per child while Lower Merion is
able to spend over $25,000 per child. The way we fund schools in this state is
criminal, and it has to change.”
Dear Gov. Corbett – How Many Kids Must Die?
Practical Theory Blog by Chris Lehmann Posted on October
10, 2013
Chris
Lehmann is the
founding principal of the Science
Leadership Academy, a progressive science and
technology high school in Philadelphia, PA.
You aren’t allowed to be surprised by this.
Laporshia Massey died on September 25th after having an
asthma attack at school. According to the article in City Paper, it was close to the end of
the day, the school called home for advice, and dad told his daughter that
they’d deal with it when she got home. She got home, and Dad realized how
serious the problem was, and rushed her to the hospital. It wasn’t enough, and
Laporshia died later that day.
You aren’t allowed to be surprised by this.
Bryant Elementary doesn’t have a full-time nurse, and the
25th wasn’t one of the days their nurse was staffed at their school. The school
called home, a teacher drove her home at the end of the day, so it is not as if
the school did nothing. And in case anyone thinks they could have / should have
seen this tragedy coming, you should know how hard it is as a lay-person to
make the call to call 911.
City slashes pre-K,
Head Start programs
Philly Trib Written by Wilford Shamlin III Friday,
11 October 2013 10:10
President Barack Obama has placed early childhood education
high on his agenda, but the School District of Philadelphia has scaled back on
the number of seats that serve students in pre-kindergarten and Head Start
programs for a third straight year.
The school district reduced the number of slots available
for pre-K and Head Start programs due to cutbacks in federal Title I funding,
said Fernando Gallard, chief information officer for Pennsylvania ’s largest K-12 school district
with an enrollment of 204,000.
Leaders of model day-care providers and a community
watchdog organizations say the loss of more than 1,300 seats would have far
reaching implications on children who come from low-income households and more
likely than their peers to start kindergarten without the foundation needed to
succeed in school. Research shows that students who lag behind their classmates
continue to do so throughout school and later in life.
Teacher contract talks stall in West Chester
MICHAELLE BOND, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER Friday, October 11, 2013 ,
8:14 PM
The school board and the teachers' union in the West
Chester Area School District remain at odds a month after the union's
membership rejected what the board called a tentative agreement and some union
members described as simply part of the fact-finding process.
In a statement released Thursday night, the board said it
wanted the community to know it had gone "above and beyond" in
negotiations and that the teachers have to make the next move.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20131012_Teacher_contract_talks_stall_in_West_Chester.html#4xMAvqV0vblsq7xc.99
Embattled Solomon cyber charter to close
MARTHA WOODALL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER Friday, October 11, 2013 ,
8:26 PM
Faced with concerns about student safety, finances, and
other issues, an embattled Philadelphia
cyber charter school will fold at the end of the month. Solomon
Charter School 's
board voted Friday to surrender the school's operating agreement to the
Pennsylvania Department of Education and close Oct. 30, in part because the
school's program for seventh- through 11th-grade students was housed in a building
that shared space with a sex-offender clinic.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20131012_Embattled_cyber_charter_to_close.html#MbfTkqmuSIw2321p.99
Solomon Charter closes abruptly
The notebook by David
Limm on Oct
11 2013
The Philadelphia-based cyber school had been the
subject of an
effort by the state Department of Education to revoke
its charter. In March, Ronald Tomalis, then the education secretary, said
that Solomon had been operating as a traditional brick-and-mortar school,
failing to provide the necessary virtual education required by the state's
charter school laws. The school fought the state's bid to shut the school down,
filing a court complaint challenging the constitutionality of the charter law's
application.
By Evan Brandt,
The Mercury POSTED: 10/09/13,
12:28 PM EDT |
POTTSTOWN —
When it comes to walking to school, the folks at Lincoln Elementary School
really “walk the walk.” That’s what they
were doing Wednesday morning when they celebrated International Walk to School
Day by meeting up at the Memorial Park spray park and walking the eight blocks
to their school together. Of course,
they had company, including parents, teachers, Principal Calista Boyer and
Pottstown Police Capt. Robert Thomas.
“I think
it’s good and I don’t see why they shouldn’t,” Thomas said. “When I was their
age, we walked to school every day. There were crossing guards, we paid
attention, the parents went with you. It was good, that was the culture. We
didn’t have a bus to ride.”
“Though
there are a lot of school superintendents and educators across the commonwealth
complaining about this, my complaint is that the reflection of a quality school
district is not based upon one set of metrics,” Sichel said. “[The profile] is
not a robust assessment of the good things we do here. It does not talk about
what percentage of [our] children go to college, and what percentage of [our]
students stay in college, or the percentage of the students that are doing
wonderful things in service. With that said … we are very proud of our scores …
we have done very well.”
By Jarreau Freeman jfreeman@montgomerynews.com Thursday, October 10, 2013
The results
are in, and Abington
School District obtained
scores in the 80s and 90s in the School Performance Profile, according to the
Pennsylvania Department of Education’s School Performance Profile website. Abington Superintendent Amy Sichel and her
administration presented the results from the district’s performance profile at
the school board’s Oct. 8 meeting.
The SPP is an online resource that shows the academic performance of nearly 2,400 of the state’s 3,000 public schools and enables educators, parents and taxpayers the ability to review the quality of the public schools in their district — including technological and cyber charter schools, according to a press release issued by the Department of Education.
The profile includes the results for the district’s Pennsylvania System of School Assessments and end-of-course Keystone Exams, evaluates student academic growth, shows the graduation rate and how a school works to increase the achievement of all its students, the release said.
The SPP is an online resource that shows the academic performance of nearly 2,400 of the state’s 3,000 public schools and enables educators, parents and taxpayers the ability to review the quality of the public schools in their district — including technological and cyber charter schools, according to a press release issued by the Department of Education.
The profile includes the results for the district’s Pennsylvania System of School Assessments and end-of-course Keystone Exams, evaluates student academic growth, shows the graduation rate and how a school works to increase the achievement of all its students, the release said.
Pittsburgh
Tribune-Review By Tom
Fontaine Friday, Oct. 11, 2013 , 3:21 p.m.
The former president of thePennsylvania
Cyber Charter
School 's board of
trustees said he resigned Thursday because his daughter no longer attends the
school, not because he is being investigated by the state Department of
Education. “I just felt there was no
reason for me to stay on there. It was time to move on,” David W. Jaskiewicz,
57, of Marshall
said, noting he was one of three parents of PA Cyber students appointed to the
nine-member board six years ago.
The former president of the
Read more:http://triblive.com/news/adminpage/4867738-74/charter-jaskiewicz-resignation#ixzz2hV8xxlez
“It’s a terrible problem in Philadelphia , but it’s a problem in so many
schools across the country. Teachers are getting laid off, counselors are
getting laid off, coaches are getting laid off. I’ve come to the conclusion
we’re cutting the wrong things in this country,” Pelley said by phone from New York City . “This is an
emergency. We’re losing kids every day.”
News anchor urges CEOs to fund education
Peter
Van Allen Reporter-Philadelphia Business Journal Oct 11, 2013 , 2:02pm EDT
A CBS news
anchor urged Philadelphia CEOs to open their checkbooks to help out city
schools.
“CBS
Evening News” anchor Scott
Pelley made the remarks Thursday before 1,400 people at the Greater
Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce breakfast at the Pennsylvania
Convention Center.
http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/news/2013/10/11/cbs-anchor-urges-ceos-to-fund-education.html
Budget Tensions Cloud
Hopes for End to 'Sequester'
Education
Week By Alyson Klein
Published Online: October
10, 2013
Sequestration—the
across-the-board budget cuts that represent the biggest slash in federal
education spending in recent history—may continue for the foreseeable future,
education advocates fear, a consequence of the budget deadlock that shuttered
the U.S. government and congressional brinkmanship over the debt ceiling.
With those
twin fiscal crises having consumed lawmakers’ attention for weeks,
stopping the sequestration cuts has
been shoved to the side, leaving school districts likely to cope with yet
another round of reductions to programs that serve the neediest children and
students in special education.
State Assessments Tell
Schools, Students and Parents Nothing
Education
Week Finding Common Ground Blog Peter DeWitt on October
11, 2013 6:24 AM
Assessment
is not bad. When done properly, assessment can tell students, parents and
teachers a great deal about learning. But state assessments, at least in New York State , focus solely on achievement and
accountability.
When
international educational leadership expert Michael Fullan wrote about the
drivers that create school improvement, he focused on the right drivers and the
wrong ones. He referred to accountability, which includes testing, as one of
the wrong drivers. In this article he wrote that
accountability was the wrong driver. "Accountability: using test results, and teacher appraisal, to
reward or punish teachers and schools vs. capacity building."
John Hattie
understands it as well. In Visible Learning Hattie noted that using
standardized tests to show student achievement offered a very low effect
because in most cases teachers and students do not see an itemized report with
a breakdown of where the student did well and where they did not. And he
wrote, "We require much more, however, from our schools than mere
achievement. Overly concentrating on achievement can miss much about what
students know, can do, and care about."
Raising the G.E.D. Bar Stirs Concern for Students
New York
Times By MOTOKO RICH Published: October 11, 2013
CAMBRIDGE,
Mass. — The high school equivalency exams taken by people who dropped out of
school and immigrants seeking a foothold in the American education system are
about to get harder and potentially more expensive, causing concern that fewer
will take and pass the exams.
Maria
Balvin standing on a makeshift "soapbox" as she made her case to be a
group leader at Youth Build Just-a-Start.
At a time when a high school diploma — much less an equivalency
certificate — is losing currency in the labor market, exams being introduced in
January will start to be aligned with the Common Core, a set of rigorous
academic standards for kindergarten through 12th grade that 45 states and the
District of Columbia have adopted.
Shelf space for books at
home predicts educational outcomes
Education
by the Numbers blog by Jill Barshay October 10, 2013
A
fascinating blog post, “Does Poverty Cause Low Achievement?“, by Richard Rothstein
of the Economic Policy Institute cautions researchers against using poverty or
family income when crunching numbers to come up with education policies. He
argues that poverty in and of itself doesn’t cause low achievement. And flawed
educational research conclusions have been made by using poverty in data
analyses. For example, a famous Heritage Foundation No Excuses study,
found that low income kids can do extraordinarily well at school. But these
low-income children were mostly the kids of Harvard and MIT grad students who
just happened to qualify for free lunches while their parents were getting
PhDs.
Online Provider K12
Inc.'s Stock Sinks on Poor Numbers
Education
Week Marketplace K-12 blog By Sean Cavanagh on October
10, 2013 3:17 PM
[Update (5:30):
In a conference call with investors and analysts today, K12 Inc.'s
executive chairman, Nate Davis, said the company took "full
responsibility" for not reaching its student-enrollment goals. The
company projected operating losses in
the first quarter of fiscal 2014 of between $8 million and $10 million. See
more details from the call at the end of this post.]
The stock
of online provider K12 Inc. took a steep plunge this week following its release
of information showing more modest projections for revenue and student
enrollment than analysts had anticipated.
In Ohio ,
State kicks in preschool money
The Columbus
Dispatch By Alex Felser Friday October 11, 2013
4:08 AM
More than
2,000 preschool-age children in Ohio
will get an early start to their education this year thanks to new funding. With the signing of House Bill 59, Gov. John
Kasich approved an additional $10 million for the Early Childhood Education
program for fiscal year 2014 that will fund 2,450 children’s preschool
education. In fiscal year 2015, $12 million will be allocated. “The problem was, students are starting
kindergarten behind in class and were not prepared,” said Ohio Department of
Education spokesman John Charlton. “Clearly, if a child starts behind in
kindergarten, it’s hard to catch up.”
The money
will be distributed through Early Childhood Education expansion grants to 144
preschool programs in Ohio
and will now serve 8,150 children through its $33.3 million budget.
Monarch butterflies have faced tough year
Post
Gazette By Sandy Feather October 12, 2013 12:09
am
Q. I planted a pollinator garden several years ago and specifically
included different types of butterfly weed (Asclepias spp.) for
monarch butterfly larvae. But I haven't had any takers this year. Where are
they?
A. You are not alone. Monarch-loving residents of the
northeastern United States
have been asking the same thing. A number of factors have conspired to reduce
the monarch population to record lows this year.
PA Budget and Policy Center Fall Webinar Series to
Tackle Property Taxes, Marcellus Shale, Health Care, Education
Posted by PA Budget and Policy
Center on October 9, 2013
Pack your
brown bag lunch and join the Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center
for a great series of noontime
webinars this fall — starting Friday, October 18 from noon to 1 p.m. Learn more about
the problems with legislative proposals to fully eliminate property taxes and
proven strategies to provide property tax relief where it is needed. Other
topics include the countdown to new health care options in 2014, the latest on
jobs in the Marcellus Shale, and what we can do to restore needed education
funding in Pennsylvania .
Each webinar is designed to provide you with the information you need to shape
the debate in the State Capitol.
More info
and registration here: http://pennbpc.org/webinars
October 15-18, 2013 | Hershey Lodge & Convention Center
Important change this year: Delegate Assembly (replaces the
Legislative Policy Council) will be Tuesday Oct. 15 from 1 – 4:30 p.m.
The
PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference is the largest gathering of elected
officials in Pennsylvania
and offers an impressive collection of professional development opportunities
for school board members and other education leaders.
Registration:
https://www.psba.org/workshops/?workshop=17
The Penn Stater Conference Center Hotel, State College , PA
The state
conference is PAESSP’s premier professional development event for principals,
assistant principals and other educational leaders. Attending will enable you
to connect with fellow educators while learning from speakers and presenters
who are respected experts in educational leadership.
Featuring
Keynote Speakers: Charlotte Danielson, Dr. Todd Whitaker, Will Richardson &
David Andrews, Esq. (Legal Update).
PASCD Annual
Conference ~ A Whole Child Education Powered by Blendedschools Network
November 3-4, 2013 | Hershey Lodge & Convention Center
We invite
you to join us for the Annual Conference, held at an earlier date this year, on
Sunday, November 3rd, through Monday, November 4th, 2013
at the Hershey Lodge and Convention Center. The Pre-Conference begins on
Saturday with PIL
Academies and Common Core
sessions. On Sunday and Monday, our features include
keynote presentations by Chris Lehmann and ASCD Author Dr. Connie Moss, as well
as numerous breakout sessions on PA’s most timely topics.
Click here for the 2013 Conference Schedule
Click here to register for the conference.
Join us as we celebrate their accomplishments!
Tuesday,November
19, 2013 5:30 pm
- 8:30 pm WHYY, 150 North 6th Street , Philadelphia
Invitations coming soon!
Tuesday,
Invitations coming soon!
Register: http://tinyurl.com/m8emc4m
Building
One Pennsylvania
Fourth Annual Fundraiser
and Awards Ceremony
THURSDAY,NOVEMBER 21, 2013
6:00-8:00 PM
THURSDAY,
IBEW Local 380 3900 Ridge Pike Collegeville, PA
19426
Building One Pennsylvania is an emerging
statewide non-partisan organization of leaders from diverse sectors -
municipal, school, faith, business, labor and civic - who are joining together
to stabilize and revitalize their communities, revitalize local economies and
promote regional opportunity and sustainability. BuildingOnePa.org
Join the National School Boards
Action Center
Friends of Public Education
Participate
in a voluntary network to urge your U.S.
Representatives and Senators to support federal legislation on Capitol Hill
that is critical to providing high quality education to America ’s schoolchildren
Proposed Amendments to
PSBA Bylaws available online
PSBA website 9/17/2013
A special issue of the School Leader News with the
notice of proposed PSBA Bylaws amendments has been mailed to all school
directors and board secretaries.
This issue also is available online in the Members Only section by clicking here. Voting on PSBA Bylaws changes will take
place at the new Delegate Assembly on Oct. 15, 2013 , at the Hershey Lodge &
Convention Center from 1-4 p.m. All member school entities should have
appointed their voting delegates and submitted names to PSBA. Details on
selecting an entity's voting delegate can be found in previous issues of
the School Leader News.
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