Daily postings from the Keystone State Education
Coalition now reach more than 3050 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?
PA's 11 cyber charters were among lowest performing schools on new
School Performance Profiles. Do our
students and taxpayers really need more of these?
Keystone
Exams/Common Core: High school graduation testing requirement coming to Pennsylvania
By Jan Murphy |
jmurphy@pennlive.com on November 21, 2013 at 8:13 PM
A controversial statewide graduation testing
requirement that accompanies a new set of state-developed grade-level learning
goals closely aligned to the Common Core standards has passed a final hurdle. The Independent Regulatory Review Commission
on Thursday vote 3-2 to approve these changes to state regulations.
“The three yes votes Thursday came from
the commissioners appointed by the Corbett administration and House and Senate
Republicans.
The commissioners appointed by House and
Senate Democrats cast the opposing votes”.
Keystone Exams/Common Core: NewPa.
education standards win approval
Keystone Exams/Common Core: New
By Karen Langley / Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau November 22, 2013 12:08 AM
The Independent Regulatory Review Commission voted
3-2 to approve regulations containing the Pennsylvania Core Standards, drawn
both from previous state standards and from the Common Core, a set of math and
English expectations developed by nationwide associations of state officials.
“But Joan Duval-Flynn, education chair for the
state conference of the NAACP, said the impact of the regulation could be
devastating. "Students who are
pushed out of school with no diploma are regulated to lives of adversity, and
it's just so very sad that these men have used their power this way," she
said. In a pilot program for the
Keystones last year, one-third of students failed algebra, 50 percent failed
biology, and 25 percent language arts, according to education officials. With
the state dropout rate already at 25 percent, "this is serious and
far-reaching," said Duval-Flynn.
Critics said local school
boards could end up spending as much as $300 million to implement the tests.
Poor districts that cannot afford them will not even bother, said Dinniman, and
affluent districts don't want to be bothered.
Keystone
Exams/Common Core: Split Pa. panel votes to require tests to graduate
KATHY BOCCELLA, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER UPDATED: Friday, November 22, 2013 , 2:01 AM
HARRISBURG A
controversial plan to require high school students to pass proficiency tests to
graduate was approved Thursday by a divided state regulatory panel.
After hearing four hours of testimony, much of it
against the Keystone Exams, the Pennsylvania Independent Regulatory Review
Commission voted, 3-2, along party lines to implement the proposal.
Opponents had argued that the tests represented an
unfunded mandate that would cause financial hardship for school districts
without any evidence that they would improve learning.
"It is unfair and wrong to evaluate a youngster
in the city of Philadelphia and other areas when proper funding is not
present," State Sen. Andy Dinniman (D., Chester), minority chair of the
Education Committee and a former college professor, said after the vote.
Keystone
Exams/Common Core: State panel OKs tougher Pa. graduation standards
Delco Times by AP POSTED: 11/21/13, 6:57 PM EST |
HARRISBURG (AP) — Regulations that will set tougher
standards for Pennsylvania
students in order to graduate from high school won a near-final vote of
approval Thursday from a state panel that decides whether such rules are in the
public’s interest. The 3-2 vote by the
Independent Regulatory Review Commission capped several hours of testimony by
more than 30 people, many of whom expressed concern about the potential fiscal
impact, said David Sumner, the commission’s executive director. The panel approved what is called the
Pennsylvania Core Standards and assessments associated with the standards,
including the new state Keystone Exams for high school students.
Keystone
Exams/Common Core: How much did the Gates Foundation spend funding public
relations efforts promoting the Common Core in Pennsylvania ?
2013
|
College-Ready
|
US Program
|
$262,003
|
|
2012
|
College-Ready
|
US Program
|
$257,391
|
|
2011
|
College-Ready
|
US Program
|
$595,859
|
|
2010
|
College-Ready
|
US Program
|
$5,000
|
Keystone
Exams/Common Core: Pennsylvania
Partnerships for Children email November 21, 2013
We’ve got great news to pass along: Pennsylvania ’s
Independent Regulatory Review Commission today approved the Pennsylvania Core Standards and assessments
aligned to those standards, including Keystone Exams for high school students.
The adoption of these standards and assessments is good news for students,
parents and taxpayers, helping ensure our graduates are truly prepared for the
challenges they will face beyond high school.
“Preparing Our Students
for Success” is produced by A+ Schools, Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, Mission:
Readiness, PennCAN, the Pennsylvania Business Council, Pennsylvania
Partnerships for Children, Philadelphia School Partnership, Pittsburgh Public
Schools, Students First and Team PA. For more information,
visit:
“During Thursday's briefing, Adam Schott said
Research for Action analyzed the state's new School Performance Profile scores
completed for 11 state cybers. They were among the lowest-performing schools in
the state. None met the statewide
average for all publicly funded schools: The average cyber scored 44.7,
compared to 67.3 for regular charters and 77.8 for public schools. Researchers also found the average cyber had
an alarming rate of annual student turnover: 27 percent withdrew in 2011-12.”
Nonprofits call for moratorium on cyber charters
MARTHA WOODALL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER November 21, 2013 ,
7:32 PM
The Education Law Center on Thursday urged
the Pennsylvania Department of Education to deny applications for six new cyber
charter schools, saying they don't work.
Citing poor academic performance, high student
turnover, fraud charges involving former officials at two cybers, and a $366.6
million cost of the 15 cyber charters already operating in the state, the
Philadelphia-headquartered nonprofit called for a one-year moratorium on new
ones. Cyber charters enroll 35,000 students statewide. "We have no idea as to whether they [the
six applicants] are going to be approved," David Lapp, a staff attorney,
told reporters Thursday in a joint phone briefing along with representatives
from Research for Action, an independent education-research organization
based in Philadelphia .
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20131122_Nonprofits_call_for_moratorium_on_charters.html#y8aDJobXDfsBiZi3.99
SB1085: Alloway
charter school bill: Bad time for terrible idea (Essay)
Our own state Sen. Richard Alloway is poised to vote
for a bill that would weaken our local public schools and gut taxpayer over
control of how our school tax dollars are spent.
Senator Alloway has co-sponsored SB 1085, a bill
that would allow for the unfettered expansion of charter schools into our
communities without the approval of local taxpayers or school boards.
The Alloway bill proposes to let an institution of
higher education authorize charter schools. If this bill becomes law, charter
schools will set up shop in our communities and send Franklin County
school districts tuition bills ranging from $7,542-$16,961 for each student who
attends the charter schools each year.
A single charter school with 400 seats would cost Franklin County taxpayers more than $4,000,000
per year. Taxpayers would have to pay the new charter school tuition bills in
addition to all of the costs of our traditional school districts and the more
than $5,300,000 that we already pay in cyber charter school tuition.
Charter
school funding leaves Allentown
School District
'bleeding,' board member says
By Colin McEvoy
| The Express-Times November 21, 2013 at 9:30 PM
Facing the loss of thousands of students and
millions of tuition dollars to charter schools, the Allentown
School District is asking the state to give it a break. The Allentown
School Board unanimously approved a resolution tonight urging the
state Legislature to reform the funding formula for charter and cyber schools. The state once offered at least partial
reimbursement of charter costs for public school districts, but for the past
three years, the cost has fallen completely on the districts and their
taxpayers, school board members said.
"We're bleeding," board member Scott
Armstrong said. "I'm for charter schools. I'm pro-choice for
charter schools. But you can't bleed the public system in order to facilitate
charter schools."
The district remains financially responsible for a
student's tuition when he or she goes to a cyber or charter school. District officials last month said 2,166
students are enrolled in 19 cyber and charter schools, resulting
in $19.6 million in tuition being diverted from the school district.
SRC doesn't
renew 2 charters founded by Dorothy June Brown
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER UPDATED: November 21, 2013, 11:01 PM
Two schools founded by Dorothy June Brown failed to have their charters renewed Thursday, asPhiladelphia
School District officials
voiced concerns about both.
Two schools founded by Dorothy June Brown failed to have their charters renewed Thursday, as
A resolution to renew the charter of Laboratory Charter School
with stipulations was on the School Reform Commission agenda Thursday night,
but Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. withdrew it, citing new information the
district had received.
Both Lab, with campuses in Northern Liberties,
Overbrook, and Wynnefield, and Planet Abacus have been operating without
charters for more than a year, and parents and staff say they fear for the
future of the schools without them. The schools perform well academically, but district
officials have had concerns about finances and administration.
Brown, the founder of both, is on trial in federal
court on fraud charges.
Lab parent Richard Weiss, who has been part of a
group working to clean up the school, suggested that a "rogue" member
of the charter's board was trying to sabotage the process.
The majority of Lab staff and parents have been
working to combat "cronyism and wasteful spending," Weiss said. The school, Weiss and others reminded the
SRC, is the only Philadelphia
recipient of a 2013 National Blue Ribbon, given by the U.S. Department of
Education.
"What
the charter and choice movement has done is sell the line, 'All you have to do
is look out for your own child'. So escape if you can and leave everyone else
behind. Public education is a civic obligation,"
Charter
Schools In Philadelphia :
Educating Without A Blueprint
NPR Morning Edition by ERIC WESTERVELT November 22, 2013 2:58
AM
Listen
to the Story runtime: 4 min 24 sec
This is final story in a three-part
report on Philadelphia
schools in crisis.
Shayna Terrell is in a good mood: It's report card
night at the Simon Gratz Mastery Charter high school in North
Philadelphia , and parents are showing up in good numbers.
Terrell, Mastery's outreach coordinator, welcomes
parents. Her goal on this night is to get 40 percent of Gratz parents to come
to the school, meet teachers face-to-face and get their child's report card.
It's part of the effort to make Gratz a positive hub for a community long
challenged by high rates of poverty and crime.
A few short years ago Simon Gratz was one of Philadelphia 's most troubled, violent and
academically underachieving high schools. Today, Gratz is very much on the
rebound.
By Kendal Gapinski, Daily Local News
POSTED: 11/20/13, 5:59 PM
EST |
The report, “The Bottom Line is Children: Public
Education in Chester County,” looks at the county in terms of public education
and focuses on low-income students, graduation rates and funding available for
the county’s educational system. It
finds that while the county is the wealthiest in the state, the number of
low-income students is increasing.
According to the report, approximately 15,400
students in the county qualified for the free or reduced lunch program in 2012,
a 33 percent increase in four years.
Even wealthier districts saw an increase of
low-income students. Both Great
Valley and
Tredyffrin/Easttown saw the number of students qualifying for free or reduced
lunch increase. Great
Valley saw its number of
students eligible for the program double between 2008 and 2012, while
Tredyffrin/Easttown’s number rose by 58 percent.
Editorial:
Unlevel playing field for many Delco students
Delco Times Editorial POSTED: 11/20/13, 10:37 PM EST |
Put away the calculators, class.
You won’t need a slide rule for this lesson. Today’s math class is a bit more obvious than that.
Delaware County , more so than most other areas of
the state, is shortchanging children when it comes to education funding. It’s called an uneven playing field. And
Delco kids are the ones who are constantly running uphill. That much was made obvious by a new
study released this week by the child advocacy group Public Citizens for
Children and Youth, which came to the conclusion that Delaware County
schools are underfunded to the tune of $45.3 million.
The miracle here is not thatDelaware
County still manages to
educate 70,000 students despite a serious funding shortfall, but how many of
those students continue to excel.
You won’t need a slide rule for this lesson. Today’s math class is a bit more obvious than that.
The miracle here is not that
“The number of students
eligible for free or reduced price lunches, for example, rose by 42 percent
over the last four years, and access to full-day kindergarten, often cited as a
way to boost early-stage learning, is only accessible to 26 percent of Bucks
students.”
Bucks schools score high on group's report card
Bucks schools score high on group's report card
Philly.com by Chris Palmer Wednesday, November 20, 2013 ,
2:01 AM
DOYLESTOWN The news is mostly good for Bucks County
public schools, according to a report released Tuesday by an education advocacy
group. Twelve of 13 districts in Bucks
boast above-average graduation rates, the report said. Standardized test scores
are similarly high, and several districts have had success closing performance
gaps among students from different economic backgrounds. The Bucks publication is one of four
county-centric reports that Public Citizens for Children and Youth (PCCY) is
releasing this month focusing on the Philadelphia
suburbs. PCCY is a Philadelphia-based youth advocacy organization.
PCCY’s Public
Education County Reports
Public Citizens for Children and Youth November 2013
Who's to
blame for the Philadelphia
school crisis? Critics say it's Gov. Corbett: John L. Micek
By John L. Micek |
jmicek@pennlive.com on November 21, 2013 at 9:30 AM ,
This morning, NPR's Morning Edition took
a closer look at the massive problems afflicting Philadelphia's troubled public
schools.
In the first installment of a three-part series,
reporter Claudio Sanchez tries to get to the bottom of what's causing the
problems in Pennsylvania 's
largest public school system. And, as you might expect, there are no satisfactory
answers:
"But has there really been a lack
of investment in Philadelphia 's
public schools? Private foundations, after all, have poured millions of dollars
into schools here; much of that money has gone to the city's 86 privately run
charter schools. But in terms of public funds, the district says it's
broke." "Is it the state's
struggling economy? Poor management and waste? Or, as some critics allege, is
it the fault of the politicians who control the district's funding, starting
with Republican Gov. Tom Corbett?"
What about our
investment in public education?
"This week the
General Assembly made a dramatic choice that concluded with deliberations
tonight to invest in Pennsylvania ,"
Corbett said. "These investments create a road map of progress across the
state."
House passes
$2.4 billion transportation bill
Measure boosts transportation funding by $2.4 billion via higher
fuel taxes and fees.
By Steve
Esack, Dan Hartzell and Samantha Marcus, Call Harrisburg Bureau 10:45 p.m.
EST, November 21, 2013
House lawmakers voting 113-85 gave the final OK
Thursday evening, capping a whirlwind of legislative activity and debate over
four days. Gov. Tom Corbett is expected to sign the bill next
week, and when he does it'll be one of his biggest policy victories.
Shortly after the 6:17 p.m. vote, Corbett publicly
thanked Republican and Democratic lawmakers, business and labor groups and his
predecessors who backed him in pushing through the first major transportation
funding increase in 16 years. Their unified strength, Corbett said, shows that Pennsylvania knows how to govern better than Washington, D.C., where partisan politics grinds
negotiation to a halt.
PA Senate
Session Now Available on Any Mobile Device
“Enabling users of iPhones, iPads and Android
devices to watch the Senate in real time is another significant step forward as
we continue improving the General Assembly’s new website,” Senator Pileggi
said. “It’s important to make our work as accessible as possible to the
public.”
“Many of the issues we address in the General
Assembly, while specific to Pennsylvania ,
are being followed by people all over the country,” Senator Costa said.
“Taking these steps to provide real-time access to view Senate sessions is an
innovative approach to reaching everyone whether across the state border or
half way around the world.”
Senate session can be viewed on the Senate’s website
at www.pasen.gov by
clicking on “Watch Session Live.” Direct links to the streaming video are:
- For
web browsers, www.pasen.gov/Video/SenateVideo.cfm
- For
mobile devices, www.palegis.us/feeds/?q=S
Senators Pileggi and Costa encouraged the public to
continue commenting on the General Assembly’s new website using the Twitter
hashtag #PAGAwebsite.
“As more students opt
out, the main school district becomes more distressed, hollowing out a core
public institution so a certain percentage of students can come and go as they
please.”
Philadelphia's
School System is Crumbling and It's an Early Warning Sign For America
PolicyMic By Jonathan Karp November 19, 2013
"Without the funds to restore crucial staff
members, we cannot open functional schools, run them responsibly or provide a
quality education to students."
These words were
spoken in August by Superintendent William Hite, Jr. of the School District of Philadelphia , the man tasked with
opening schools for the fall after a budget shortfall led the district to
layoff more than 3,700 workers in June. The schools opened anyway, but with
funding tied up on the state level and in labor costs, Hite was successful in
bringing a mere 1,400 of these workers back, most on emergency funding
Downingtown
high-schoolers to launch science experiment into space
WHYY Newsworks ONWARD A BLOG BY ZACK SEWARD NOVEMBER 21, 2013
A science experiment designed by high school
students in Downingtown , Pa. , is heading to the International Space
Station next month. The experiment,
housed in a glow stick-esque tube of simulated stomach acid, is to determine
whether common medications dissolve the same way in space as they do on earth.
Microgravity impacts bodily systems, too.
"NASA has certainly done a lot of studies with
bone mass and with how the human body reacts," said Justin Staub, one of
two teachers at Downingtown
STEM Academy
who helped lead the project. "But students were really curious about what
happens if you get a cold? What happens if you get the flu?"
The voyage to the International Space
Station isn't the work of NASA, however.
The experiment from Downingtown is one of 23 student
projects hitching a ride on a commercial resupply mission scheduled for Dec. 15. The nationwide initiative to launch
science projects into space is the work of a Maryland-based nonprofit. "This is the era of commercial human
spaceflight — and all these students recognize they are part of history,"
said Jeff Goldstein, center director at theNational
Center for Earth and Space Science Education (NCESSE).
Tweet from Susan
Ohanian @susanoha42m
1963 On the
same day President Kennedy died in Dallas, Aldous Huxley died in Los Angeles
& C. S. Lewis died in London
Congratulations! Getting elected
to the school board was the easy part…..
PSBA New
Board Member Training: Great Governance, Great Schools !
November 2013-April 2014
November 2013-April 2014
Announcing School Board
Academy ’s New Board Member Training:
Great Governance, Great
Schools !
You will need a wealth of information quickly as you
jump out of the starting block and hit the ground running as a newly elected
member of the board of school directors. New board members, as well as veterans
who might like a refresher, will want to make the most of the opportunity to
attend PSBA's New Board Member Training Program: Great Governance, Great Schools !
.
EPLC is recruiting current undergraduate or graduate students to
serve as part-time interns
EPLC
is recruiting current undergraduate or graduate students to serve as
part-time interns beginning January or May of 2014 in the downtown Harrisburg offices. One
intern will support education policy work including the Pennsylvania School
Funding Campaign. The second intern position will support the work of the Pennsylvania Arts Education
Network. Ideal candidates have an interest/course work in political
science/public policy, social studies, the arts or education and also have
strong research, communications, and critical thinking skills. The internship
is unpaid, but free parking is available. Weekly hours of the internship are
negotiable. To apply or to suggest a candidate, please email Mattie
Robinson for further information at robinson@eplc.org.
The Last Waltz Philly benefit for Philadelphia School
Children at the Trocadero on Saturday, November 30th
WXPN The Key November
5, 2013 | 12:25 PM |
By Bruce
Warren
On
Saturday, November 30th the Trocadero Theatre hosts The Last Waltz Philly, a benefit
for Philadelphia
school children. Producers of the event Fergus Carey (owner of Fergie’s, Monk’s
Cafe, Belgian Cafe and Grace Tavern), Bryan
Dilworth (of Bonfire Booking), singer-songwriter Andrew Lipke, and musician and
producer Kevin Hanson. The Last Waltz, a concert by rock group The Band and featuring
numerous guest musicians including Neil Young, Muddy Waters, Van Morrison, Joni
Mitchell, Dr. John, Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond and others, was held on
Thanksgiving in 1976. The Last Waltz Philly will celebrate the music of The
Band’s farewell show all for an excellent cause.
Proceeds
will benefit four Philadelphia organizations that focus on education: Parents
United for Public Education, the Passyunk Square Civic Association Education Committee, theFriends of Horatio B. Hackett School and the School
District of Philadelphia’s Music Education Instrument Repair Program.
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
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.