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?
Vote
today – defend democratically governed American public education
“ corporate
money and power threaten the integrity and possibly the very existence of
public education. Public schools uphold collective values, break down racial
and religious barriers, and are integral to the concept of citizenship. Without
them, democracy would be jeopardized. Local communities, not hedge fund managers
and entrepreneurs, must remain financially and socially invested in public
education. That's a back-to-basics lesson not to be forgotten.”
In Vermont , a Brave Call
for Public Education
Education
Week Living in Dialogue Blog By Anthony Cody on November
3, 2013 11:54 AM
I
visited the great state of Vermont
last week, and traveled through its rugged mountains. Today I read an editorial
in a Vermont
newspaper that reminds us why that state is a bastion of independence and
democracy. The editorial in the Valley News reviews
the career and viewpoint of Diane Ravitch, and reaches this conclusion:
Community Schools: City Connects: A
Systemic Approach to Student Support
Youtube video runtime 6:22 Published on Oct 31,
2013
Our
mission is to have every child engage and learn in school by connecting each
student with the tailored set of intervention, prevention, and enrichment services
he or she needs to thrive. Learn more at http://www.CityConnects.org
or on Twitter @CityConnects, http://twitter.com/CityConnects.
“And a
provision allowing colleges to approve charter applications would remove
decision-making power from local education officials, who still would be left
holding the bag if the school underperforms, he said.
"Universities
. . . don't have any financial skin in the game…”
Charter-school
bill draws ire
Critics: Proposed reform 'devastating'
Philly.com by ASSOCIATED
PRESS POSTED: November 5, 2013, 12:16 AM
A
BILL TO overhaul Pennsylvania 's
charter-school law would gut local control of the alternative schools by
eliminating enrollment caps and giving universities the power to authorize new
charters, opponents said yesterday. The
criticism from the Education
Law Center
comes after a state Senate committee recently voted to advance the legislation,
which supporters say will provide greater accountability and stronger standards
for charter schools.
Nearly
119,500 students are enrolled in Pennsylvania 's
176 charters, which are publicly funded but operate independently of local
districts.
Read
more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20131105_Charter-school_bill_draws_ire.html#krStqsOgXFMGrQbW.99
GOP figures asked Corbett to forgo 2014
bid: party sources
By Robert J. Vickers |
rvickers@pennlive.com on November 04, 2013
Though
Gov. Tom Corbett is slated to launch his re-election campaign Wednesday,
well-connected Republican sources say the poll-weary incumbent has been
approached informally about not running and that top members of the state's
congressional delegation have been sounded-out about running in his stead. Speculation has been rife for months that
Corbett might not seek a second term. Last week a Franklin
& Marshall College poll highlighted the cause of
the conjecture. Just 20 percent of poll respondents said the
governor should be re-elected.
And
reliable GOP sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of
reprisals, say prominent party figures have broached the subject of withdrawing
from the race with the governor.
CharlotteObserver.com
By MARC LEVY Associated Press Posted: Nov. 03, 2013
Read
more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/11/03/4436728/pa-taxpayers-foot-growing-bill.html#.UnjGIXB-R2h#storylink=cpy
SchoolCIO.com October 29,2013
Despite
recent news of the budget woes plaguing the school
district of Philadelphia ,
a bright spot has been the success stories coming out of Northeast High School ,
located in one of the lowest income areas of the city. As part of a rigorous
Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate program overhaul that began
in the 2010 - 2011 school year, Northeast High School incorporated Shmoop, digital
publishers of test prep materials and educational guides, and saw the number of
college eligible AP scores (3+) triple in three years.
Cash balance plans threaten retirement
security: Stephen Herzenberg
By Patriot-News Op-Ed By Stephen Herzenberg on November 04, 2013
at 5:15 AM ,
Stephen Herzenberg is the
executive director of the Keystone
Research Center .
The
Pennsylvania Legislature is considering a new public-sector pension proposal
that offers up some ideas worth exploring but is flawed at its heart, costing
taxpayer more while deeply cutting retirement benefits for teachers, nurses,
and other public employees. The plan,
advanced by state Rep. Glen Grell (R-Cumberland), recognizes the need for an
alternative to Gov. Tom Corbett’s proposal to put new public employees into
401(k)-type individual accounts.
The
Legislature rejected the Governor’s approach in June after actuaries confirmed
what the Keystone
Research Center
said months earlier: his plan digs a deeper pension hole for taxpayers – $40
billion deeper. By shifting new
employees out of existing pensions, the Governor would starve these plans of
resources needed to invest and return them to financial health.
By the numbers: Pennsylvania pensions
• $47.3B — Pennsylvania 's total
unfunded pension liability
• $29.5B — Unfunded
liability of Public School Employees Retirement System
• $17.8B — Unfunded
liability of State Employees Retirement System
• $13K — Amount each Pa. household would have
to pay to fully fund pension liability
• $25,000 — Average
annual pension benefit paid to school and state retirees
Sources: PSERS, SERS
Note: Figures are based
on actuarial reports completed Dec. 31, 2012 and published in June.
The Intelligencer By Natasha Lindstrom Staff Writer Posted: Sunday, November 3, 2013
8:00 pm | Updated: 6:28 am , Mon Nov 4, 2013 .
State
Rep. Glen Grell’s so-called “three buckets plan” uses a combination of
borrowing, voluntary concessions by current employees and a new cash balance
plan for future employees to reform Pennsylvania’s public pension systems. He
touts his pension proposal as the only one pitched this legislative session
that addresses an unfunded liability that’s approaching $50 billion.
Pre-employment drug tests of school
employees likely to end up in court if it becomes law
By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com
on November 04,
2013 at 8:00 AM
Legislation
advancing in the state House that would subject prospective school employees to
pre-employment drug tests is already drawing a threatened legal challenge if it
becomes law.
A
lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania said such
a law would violate the constitutional protection for a person’s privacy.
“As
soon as anybody would object to a drug test, we’d be challenging it, I think.
I’d be really surprised if we wouldn’t,” said Mary Catherine Roper, ACLU staff
attorney.
Keystone
Politics Blog Posted on November 4, 2013 by Jon Geeting #
That’s
really what the headline should’ve been on PA Independent-alumJim
Panyard’s post at the conservative Media Trackers site. In many other states, per-pupil funding is
either equal, or per-pupil funding is higher in districts with
more challenging socio-economic profiles.
In
Pennsylvania ,
per-pupil funding in higher-need districts is
lower than in whiter, more affluent suburban districts, as Panyard’s
piece shows:
Susan Corbett
addresses education
Pa.’s first lady says
Keystones, funding issues impact schools
By
Russ O’Reilly (roreilly@altoonamirror.com) , The
Altoona Mirror November 3, 2013
First
lady Susan Corbett has been working on decreasing the high school dropout rate
in Pennsylvania .
Her efforts have produced a technology-based system to detect middle-school
students who may later drop out and provide them with interventions. Meanwhile, she recognizes that the state's
public education funding and focus on high-stakes testing have been criticized
as factors that could increase dropouts.
The first lady told the Mirror that she accepts research that says
high-stakes testing like Keystone Exams can increase dropout rates. But she
does not oppose plans of her husband, Gov. Tom Corbett, and the Legislature to
make Keystones a graduation requirement beginning with the Class of 2017.
After
document is approved, it will be sent to school board
By
Eleanor Chute / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette November
3, 2013 11:19 PM
The
TeenBloc students of A+ Schools today expect to reach their goal of student
ratification of a proposed student bill of rights for Pittsburgh Public
Schools. TeenBloc, which kicked of its
campaign with a rally three weeks ago, set a goal of 25 percent of students in
grades 9-12 -- about 1,600 -- voting for the bill, which includes 10 rights,
such as equitable academic resources and positive school disciplinary policies. That's their first step in what they hope
ultimately will be approved by the school board.
In God We
Trust bill called a “pandering piece of puffery”
Originally
Published: 11/3/2013
The
Issue: Bill would require all schools to post the national motto, "In God
We Trust."
Our
Opinion: It would do nothing to close the education gap between U.S. students
and those from other nations. While
school districts across the commonwealth are struggling to make ends meet
without raising taxes and taxpayers are screaming for relief from the onerous
property tax, the members of the Legislature will consider the National Motto
Display Act. The measure would require
each school building in the state to post "In God We Trust" within 60
days should the proposal pass both chambers and be signed by the governor.
So
this is what passes for meaningful legislation in Pennsylvania these days.
Platt, Bissinger, Nowak launching news
outlet
Peter
Van Allen
Reporter-Philadelphia Business Journal
Nov 4, 2013 ,
12:55pm
The
former editor of Philadelphia
Magazineand the Daily News will lead a new publication.
Larry
Platt is CEO and editor for the Philadelphia Citizen, a publication
that claims it will offer “solutions-based journalism” intent on “changing Philadelphia for the
better.” Its brief Web page said the
city’s journalism has gone from “dire to absurd.” It does not have any content
yet. Among those involved in the project
are Ajay
Raju, managing partner of the Philadelphia office of the law firm Reed
Smith LLC;Jeremy
Nowak, former president of the William
Penn Foundation; and Buzz
Bissinger, an outspoken magazine writer and commentator.
Charter schools are hurting urban public
schools, Moody’s says
In
1997, Philadelphia ’s
first four charter schools opened. Fifteen years later, there are more than 80
— and they’re straining the city’s public schools. Philadelphia
is one of several urban public school districts where the rise of charter
schools poses a threat to district finances, according to Moody’s, the credit
rating agency. In 2003, the Philadelphia
district spent 7.9 percent of its general fund on charters. By fiscal 2012, the
schools ate up 23.7 percent of the fund.
“While
the vast majority of traditional public districts are managing through the rise
of charter schools without a negative credit impact, a small but growing number
face financial stress due to the movement of students to charters,” a team of
analysts write in a new Moody’s report.
Children from
poor families lag in cognitive development and other areas, report says
Less
than one in five third-graders from low-income families score at or above the
national average in math, reading and science assessments, and only about half
maintain a healthy weight and are in “excellent” or “very good” health. That compares with about half of children
from higher-income families who are scoring above average on standardized tests
and 62 percent of children from wealthier families who are in very good health. Such disparities in early achievement and
health are illustrated in a report by the
Annie E. Casey Foundation called “The First Eight Years: Giving Kids a
Foundation for Lifetime Success.” The report, which is being released Monday,
tracks children’s well-being across multiple areas and in every state.
The 10 books whose images are displayed
here are the winners of the New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Books
Awards for 2013.
New
York Times Sunday Book Review October 31, 2013
An Open Letter To The Board And
Management Of K12
Seeking
Alpha by Whitney Tilson Nov 4 2013 , 07:00
To
the board and management of K12 (LRN):
Since
I went public with my presentation and article detailing
the many reasons for my short position in K12's stock, I've had the pleasure of
both meeting and speaking extensively with CEO Ron Packard and also having a
call with Executive Chairman Nate Davis. It's very unusual for senior management
of a company to speak with a short seller (full disclosure: I continue to have
a short position in the stock, as I discuss in this article),
so the fact that they were willing to do so is a credit to K12. I found Packard and Davis to be refreshingly
candid about K12's challenges and what the company is doing to address them,
and believe that both of them are genuinely sincere in wanting to do right by
the students who enroll at the company's schools. As I discuss below, however,
I think their words are inconsistent with many things K12 is doing. In
particular, I don't think they fully appreciate the tension and trade-offs
between their desire to maximize growth, profitability, and the share price vs.
doing their best to ensure that every one of K12's nearly 130,000 students is
engaged and learning.
A Plea for Catholic Schools to Ignore New
Common Core Guidelines
New
York Times By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA Published: November 4, 2013
A
group of Roman Catholic scholars has called on Catholic schools to ignore the
new educational standards known as the Common
Core, a set of guidelines on what students should know and be able to do
from kindergarten through 12th grade, opening a front with parallels to the
fight over using the guidelines in public schools.
In a letter to the nation’s bishops last month,
the group, including more than 100 professors and university administrators,
argued that the Common Core would actually lower standards, that it would move
parochial schools away from their grounding in the church, and that its
emphasis on increased nonfiction reading across many subjects would translate
into less focus on literary and philosophical classics, and moral teaching.
With
more than half of the nation’s dioceses saying that their schools will adopt
curriculum informed by the Common Core, the critics asked bishops to repudiate
the guidelines.
Chris
Christie’s demented “you people” movement: The right’s school-for-cash
obsession
New data proves conservatives and moguls are spending huge sums to
turn schools into Wall Street profit centers
Salon.com
BY DAVID SIROTA MONDAY,
NOV 4, 2013
01:49 PM EST
It
is easy to think of the concept of oligarchy as something distant and
fantastical – something that involves exotic destinations like Manhattan,
Monaco, Macau and Moscow but not the Middle America locales that you’d never
see in, say, a glitzy Jason Bourne flick. I guess the assumption at work is
that in a place so often derided as Flyover Country, there’s not much that any
true oligarch might covet. Of course,
there’s a good case to be made that oligarchy is actually more of a powerful
social, political and cultural force out here than anywhere else. From
yesteryear’s Copper
Kings in Montana to today’s epic land and water grab
all over the Midwest and Rocky
Mountain region, the
heartland has always been the oligarchs’ playground. It is also their
laboratory – the place where the ruling class brutally imposes its hare-brained
schemes on the population, as if we are guinea pigs.
You
can see what this local version of oligarchy looks like most clearly in
education. Indeed, in the last few days, the national media momentarily
reported on such oligarchy when the GOP’s prospective 2016 presidential
candidate, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, publicly berated teachers with the
ugly “you
people” epithet. The headline-grabbing exchange came after an educator
dared to question him about his efforts to turn his state into a laboratory for
the destructive ideology of anti-public-school oligarchs. Christie, who has
slashed public school funding and worked to divert public education resources
into private schools, responded to the question with the oligarch’s
let-them-eat-cake attitude, saying of teachers “I’m tired of you people.”
When the
IRRC considered the Keystone Exams in 2009, school districts all over PA passed
resolutions in opposition; was your district one of them?
School
Board Resolutions Opposing Keystone Exams Submitted to IRRC - 2009
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:
Mark B. Miller to speak
at Nov. 12th conference on school violence
Congratulations to PSBA First Vice President Mark B. Miller for presenting at an upcoming conference related to school violence. Miller will offer a presentation titled “Breaking the Circle of Violence: Bullying, Duty of Care, and Deliberate Indifference” inLinthicum Heights , MD on Nov. 12. For more details, click here.
Congratulations to PSBA First Vice President Mark B. Miller for presenting at an upcoming conference related to school violence. Miller will offer a presentation titled “Breaking the Circle of Violence: Bullying, Duty of Care, and Deliberate Indifference” in
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
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