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, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, 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 and searchable 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?
Common Core/Keystone Exams: IRRC to act
on final-form regulation “Academic Standards and Assessment" at public
meeting 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, November 21, 2013 .
SB 1085 removes the language that charter schools were to serve as
models of innovation for other public schools
Don’t Teach For America
“Education reform” that helps only
your resume
The Harvard Crimson THE RED LINE Blog By SANDRA Y.L.
KORN October 23. 2015
Last month,
I got an email from a recruiter. An associate of Teach For America, citing a
minor leadership role in a student organization as evidence that I “have
distinguished [myself] as a leader here on Harvard’s campus,” asked me to meet
with Harvard’s TFA representative on campus. Dropping phrases like “race and
class,” “equal opportunities,” and “educational injustice,” the recruiter
promised that I could have a significant impact on a classroom
in an underserved community. I have
thought for many years about teaching high school history. But I stopped
replying to this email after a few exchanges.
I am not
interested in TFA.
“Number One Reason: Poor and minority children need and deserve
the most prepared and most experienced teachers. To give them less is
malpractice.”
Top Ten Reasons Not to
Contract With Teach For America
Education
Week John Wilson Unleashed Blog By John Wilson on October
7, 2013 6:07 AM
Lately, I
have been reading numbers of articles about Teach For America (TFA) written by
former participants in the program as well as by researchers and investigative
reporters. It appears that there is general consensus that TFA is not the
answer to teacher shortages, closing achievement gaps, or eliminating poverty
in this country. Most of the writers agree that the program is using public
schools and poor children to develop a network of new leaders who will advance
a corporate reform agenda. Great harm has been done in school districts and
states where these new TFA leaders have emerged. Who bears the greatest portion
of responsibility for what is happening?
By Moriah
Balingit / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette October
23, 2013 1:48 PM
Pittsburgh
City Council today took the first step in forming a 23-member public education
task force that will be charged with coming up with alternatives to closing
public schools in the city.
Council gave
preliminary approval today to a resolution sponsored by Councilman Theresa
Kail-Smith creating the task force. The resolution also calls on the Pittsburgh
Board of Education to place a moratorium on shuttering schools for the 2013-14
school year and to reconsider a new teacher evaluation system. Another
part of the resolution, asking the district to reconsider its new teacher
evaluation system, was deleted.
The task
force will include four council members, two school board members, one member
of the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers, two members of educational advocacy
groups, members of the Pittsburgh Public Schools administration and a peppering
of students and community members. It will be charged with producing a report
by next September.
PA Cyber wants 30-day
review of Times information request
Roxanne
Leone, PA Cyber’s right-to-know officer, responded Thursday, two days after this
paper filed a request seeking records of payments to colleges for PA Cyber
students.
Looking into the fog of
education funding
JOHN BAER, DAILY NEWS
POLITICAL COLUMNIST Wednesday, October 23, 2013 , 3:01 AM
THE
RESIGNATION this week of Pedro Ramos as head of the School Reform Commission
and Gov. Corbett's replacement pick, whenever it comes, is bound to roil the
whole issue of state funding for public schools. It's an issue that separates most Democrats
from most Republicans, is certain to play big in next year's gubernatorial
election and creates something like a fog of war. It's confusing and forces
facts into separate ideological corners.
The answer to whether Corbett drastically cut money for education or is
funding schools at record levels (or both) depends on your definition of
"education." And the political
impact of the answer depends on how you view government's role when it comes to
spending tax dollars.
Read more
at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20131023_Looking_into_the_fog_of_education_funding.html#0cmPlwEVOh9B3UI9.99
PCCY Blog Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Thanks to
the nature of Pennsylvania ’s charter law and
underfunding from the state, the expansion of charter schools in recent years
has debilitated the finances of Pennsylvania ’s
school districts. As a result, by creating more educational options for a
small share of students, state policy is undermining the conditions where most
students go to school. And nowhere has been hit harder than the School District of Philadelphia .
A new report from Moody’s raises a red flag about school district credit ratings finds that the charter boom increases districts’ debt and puts their credit rating at risk, andPhiladelphia
is the prime example. The report points out that in Philadelphia, charter
enrollment has skyrocketed from four in 1997 to 80 in 2012; a development which
has had terrible consequences for the District’s financial well being.
The report points to many bleak trends without even mentioning the complete
elimination of $266 million in state aid granted to the districts with the
highest levels of charter enrollment. Of course, given high charter
enrollment Philadelphia was hit hardest, losing $110 million in charter funding
in 2011 and none of it’s been replaced by other state aid.
A new report from Moody’s raises a red flag about school district credit ratings finds that the charter boom increases districts’ debt and puts their credit rating at risk, and
Op/Ed:
Lessons from CASD: School policies can promote a culture of discrimination
The
Times of Chester County
October 22, 2013
By Solomon Hunter and Rhonda Brownstein, The Education Law
Center
When
one or two individuals in an organization blatantly act out in discriminatory
ways, it’s easy to imagine that dealing with those individuals, primarily by
removing them from the organization, solves the problem. The message, often, is
that these individuals were outliers and in no way reflect the views of other
members of the organization.
That
was the approach last year in the Oxford
Area School
District , where a school principal was eventually
ousted following the disclosure of abusive and discriminatory statements in
text messages and email exchanges about students with disabilities. According
to parents and advocates, though, the emails and text messages were simply the
electronic manifestation of discriminatory in-person interactions occurring on
a regular basis.
Frerichs honored for 16 years of service
on Penn Manor school board
Sixteen
years and counting — that’s how long Richard Frerichs has been serving on the
Penn Manor school board. His fellow board members honored Frerichs Monday with
a certificate of appreciation from the Pennsylvania School Boards Association.
Frerichs,
who served three years as Penn Manor board president, has long been involved in
public education. He worked for 36 years at Millersville University ,
retiring in 2004 as chair of the Department of Educational Foundations. He was
recently appointed by Gov. Tom Corbett to serve on the MU Council of Trustees
and also serves as board president-elect of the Pennsylvania School Boards
Association. His term as president begins next year.
Common Core/Keystone Exams: The PA State
Board of Education (Board) has submitted the final-form regulation entitled
“Academic Standards and Assessment."
The Independent Regulatory Review
Commission (IRRC) plans to meet and act on this regulation at our public
meeting at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, November 21, 2013 .
Regulation #6 – 326:
Academic Standards and Assessment
Amends existing
regulations to reflect Pennsylvania 's
Common Core Standards in English language arts; address test security concerns;
and require students to demonstrate proficiency on the Keystone Exams in order
to graduate from high school.
The
agenda and any changes to the time or date of the meeting will be posted on
IRRC’s Web site at www.irrc.state.pa.us. Please note that any comments should be
submitted to the Board prior to the 48-hour blackout period, which begins
at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, November 19, 2013 . Please provide IRRC with a
copy of any comments submitted, as well. Please note that all
correspondence and documents relating to a regulation submitted to IRRC are a
matter of public record and appear on IRRC’s Web site.
For
a copy of the regulation or if you have any substantive questions regarding the
regulation, please contact the Board at (717) 787-3787. You can also download the final-form
regulation from IRRC’s Web site using the following link:
Cities Are
Trying to Fix Their Schools by Luring the Middle Class: It Won't Work
These
initiatives cannot substitute for reforms that address the root causes of
concentrated poverty, budget shortfalls, and failing schools.
The
Atlantic by MAIA BLOOMFIELD
CUCCHIARA OCT
15 2013 , 10:49 AM
ET
For
people who care about public education, the news from Philadelphia is grim. Even for a city
accustomed to doomsday budget scenarios, this year’s fiscal crisis is
staggering. The School District
of Philadelphia , with
a total
budget of $2.4 billion, faces a shortfall
of $300 million. In an effort
to close this gap, the district has shuttered dozens of schools, laid-off
thousands of employees, and made previously unimagined cuts to school-level
programming and staffing. The consequences of these cutbacks were
apparent when schools
opened this September: in many schools, classrooms are severely
overcrowded, secretaries and assistant principals are gone, materials are in
short supply, key staff (such as guidance counselors and nurses) are dividing
their time between several schools, and arts and other programs have been
scaled back or cut altogether.
This
year’s budget crisis, like those that have preceded it and those that are
likely to follow, can be traced to the vicious combination of middle-class
flight to the suburbs and a school funding model that relies on declining
local property taxes. The result is a cycle of underfunded schools and
rising poverty. In 2010, according to the U.S. Department of Education, the School District of Philadelphia spent $13,000 per pupil on
a student population that is 77 percent poor and 76 percent African American or
Latino. A few miles away, in the affluent suburb of Lower
Merion , where the student population is 7 percent poor and 10
percent African American or Latino, per-pupil spending neared $27,000. Is it
any surprise Philadelphia ’s
schools are struggling?
Summer Search Philadelphia
Summer
Search is a national youth development non-profit. We work with low-income high
school students to transform what they believe is possible for themselves. We
help students in seven cities across the country develop the skills and
character traits they need to become college-educated leaders who give back to
their families and communities. Since
1990, we’ve partnered with high schools to identify students short on
opportunity and long on resilience, altruism, determination—character traits
that hold the seeds for success in school and in life. We make a long-term
investment in these students (at least five years, from high school through
college).
Our
character-based program is a unique combination of relationships and
opportunities that helps them build the skills they need to thrive. We partner
each student with a professional mentor and build a circle of relationships
around them. Then, we offer them experiential opportunities that crack open
their view of the world and ultimately reveal what they’re capable of.
Summer
Search alumni, often the first in their families to earn a college degree, are
beacons of change who give back to their families and communities.
—
83% of Summer Search students are on track to get a college degree; contrast
that with fewer than 1 in 10 of their peers.
— 80% of surveyed alumni volunteered for social cause.
— 80% of surveyed alumni volunteered for social cause.
Most States
Surpass Global Average in Math, Science
Education
Week By Catherine
Gewertz Published Online: October 24, 2013
A
new analysis of how all U.S.
states stack up against countries around the world shows that 8th grade
students in 36 states outperformed the international average in math and those
in 47 did so in science. The federal
report, released today, showcases the academic prowess of high-achieving
states, such as Massachusetts , Minnesota , and Vermont ,
which outperformed all but five of 47 countries, provinces, and jurisdictions
abroad in mathematics. The top performers in that subject were South Korea , Singapore ,
and Chinese Taipei (Taiwan ).
Better News in New Study That Assesses U.S. Students
New
York Times By MOTOKO RICH Published: October 23, 2013
Amid
growing alarm over the slipping international competitiveness of American
students, a report comparing math and science test scores of eighth graders in
individual states to those in other countries has found that a majority
outperformed the international average. But
the report, to be released Thursday by the National Center for Education
Statistics, an office of the Education
Department, showed that even in the country’s top-performing states — which
include Massachusetts, Vermont and Minnesota — fewer students scored at the
highest levels than students in several East Asian countries.
“It’s
better news than we’re used to,” said David Driscoll, the chairman of the
National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for the national exams
commonly known as the Nation’s Report Card. “But it’s still not anything to
allow us to rest on our laurels.”
In ‘Flipped’ Classrooms, a Method for Mastery
New
York Times Opinion By TINA ROSENBERG October 23, 2013 , 11:15 am
Fixes looks
at solutions to social problems and why they work.
In
traditional schooling, time is a constant and understanding is a variable. A
fifth-grade class will spend a set number of days on prime factorization and
then move on to study greatest common factors — whether or not every student is
ready. If student turns in shoddy work
in a ‘flipped mastery’ class, she can’t move on to the next level. But there is another way to look at schooling
— through the lens of a method called “mastery learning,” in which the
student’s understanding of a subject is a constant and time is a variable; when
each fifth grader masters prime factorization, for instance, he moves on to
greatest common factors, each at his own pace.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/23/in-flipped-classrooms-a-method-for-mastery/?src=recg
Obama to Name
NewSchools' Ted Mitchell to Top Higher Ed Post
Education
Week Politics K-12 Blog By Michele McNeil on October
23, 2013 10:01 AM
In
an important move for the higher education community, it looks like Ted
Mitchell, the CEO of the NewSchools Venture Fund, will
become the under secretary nominee at the U.S. Department of Education, several
sources told Politics K-12. He would replace Martha Kanter as the top higher
education official at the department and likely become a member of Secretary
Arne Duncan's inner circle of advisers. The position requires Senate
confirmation.
Mitchell,
who has a major interest in reforming schools of education, wouldn't be the
first NewSchools talent to come to the department. Duncan hired the fund's Joanne Weiss to
launch and run Race to the Top. Weiss, who left the department in July,
eventually became his chief of staff. In January, the department hired Jonathan
Schorr of NewSchools for its communications team.
#2 at U.S. Department of Education Loves”No-Excuses” Charter Schools ,
Not Public Schools
Diane
Ravitch’s Blog By dianerav October
23, 2013 //
A
reader has done research on the new Undersecretary of Education. The
“no-excuses” charters are known for their emphasis on strict discipline,
conformity, and obedience to all rules. They typically have high rates of
suspension and attrition.
Public
school parents should know who Arne Duncan and President Obama chose to run the
nation’s public school system. This is
an interview with Ted Mitchell. Like all ed reformers, he makes no mention of
the actual, existing public schools 90% of your kids attend. Instead, he tells
of us his dream to turn all public schools into no excuses charter chains:
Can The
School Change Debate, Itself, Change?
Education
Week Leadership 360 Blog By Jill Berkowicz and Ann Myers on October 24, 2013
The
responsibility for systemic change belongs to all of us. Some lead,
others support, and others, with varying degrees of reticence, will, hopefully,
follow. We live in a time of accelerating change, in a society where most
things are disposable. The old phrase "planned obsolescence" comes to
mind. Debates rage about fundamental things like local control and individual
choice. Amidst this we hold to our schools as representative of our
neighborhood and our community. Public schooling is one of those cohering
forces in this widely diverse nation. Most of us spent our childhoods there and
we send our children there. In the past few years, the national curriculum
called Common Core Standards has encompassed us. It is a fundamental change at
the classroom level. What is today's challenge? Is it the change itself
or the manner in which we go about it?
Building Common Ground Summit Saturday October 26, 2013
Dickinson/PSU
School of Law ,
Carlisle , PA ,
333 W. South Street
Interactive
Panel Discussions
Senator
Pat Vance, Senator Rob Teplitz, Molly Hunter of Education Law Center, Richard
Fry, Superintendent of Big Spring School District
For
info and registration please email: buildingcommongroundpa@gmail.com
PCCY hosting a funding formula event in
Philly October 28, 5:00 pm
On
Monday, October 28th 2013, Public Citizens for Children and
Youth (PCCY) is hosting a funding formula event starting at 5pm. Pennsylvania is one of
three states without a funding formula. We invite parents, community leaders,
and other stakeholders to come and help develop strategies that push for a fair
and well-funded school funding formula. The event will take place at the United Way
Building , 1709 Benjamin Franklin Parkway Philadelphia , PA 19103 . You can RSVP by visiting
the following link:
Register TODAY
for the 2013 Arts and
Education Symposium Wednesday,
October 30, 2013
PA
Arts Education Network
The
State Museum of Pennsylvania 300
North Street , Harrisburg , PA 17120
Registration,
Networking, and Refreshments-8:00 a.m. to 8:45 a.m.
Program-8:45
a.m. to 5:15 p.m.; Lunch-12:00 p.m.; $40 Per Person
Details and registration: http://www.artseducationpa.org/events/the-arts-and-education-symposium-2013/
Details and registration: http://www.artseducationpa.org/events/the-arts-and-education-symposium-2013/
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
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.
DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES - DR. PEDRO
NOGUERA, NOV 5th
Where:
Abington Senior High School
When
November 5, 2013
8:30 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Contact
Lynn Murphy, Delaware Valley
College
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, November
21, 2013 6:00-8:00 PM
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
The National School Boards Association 74th Annual
Conference & Exposition April 5-7, 2014 New Orleans
The
National School Boards Association 74th Annual Conference &
Exposition will be held at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans , LA. Our first time back in New Orleans since the spring of 2002!
General Session speakers include education advocates
Thomas L. Friedman, Sir Ken Robinson, as well as education innovators Nikhil
Goyal and Angela Maiers.
We have
more than 200 sessions planned! Colleagues from across the country will present
workshops on key topics with strategies and ideas to help your district. View
our Conference Brochure for highlights on sessions
and focus presentations.
- Register now! – Register for both the conference
and housing using our online system.
- Conference Information– Visit the NSBA conference
website for up-to-date information
- Hotel List and Map - Official NSBA Housing Block
- Exposition Campus – View new products and
services and interactive trade show floor
Questions? Contact NSBA at 800-950-6722 (NSBA) between
the hours of 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. EST.
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
It's been good to see your blog when I always look for such type of blogs. It’s great to discover the post here. You have done really a superb job with your web site. Marvelous stuff is here to read. UK Property Advice Events
ReplyDelete