Daily postings from the Keystone State
Education Coalition now reach more than 3150 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?
Keystone State Education Coalition
"...This
has tended to isolate and concentrate the kids thought most difficult to
educate at the only schools in the city that must take them."
Still think that CCSS was a teacher and state-led endeavor?
Follow
the Money: How Bill Gates Bought the Common Core (in one Graphic Image)
"Peduto, who took office in January, said the health of the
city is closely tied to that of its schools. Better schools mean families move
into the city, which broadens the tax base, puts people in homes and reduces
blight, he said."
Pittsburgh Mayor Peduto proposes $16M for schools to boost
population
The
Tribune-Review By Megan Harris and Bob Bauder Tuesday, March 11, 2014,
11:00 p.m.
Mayor Bill Peduto says his pledge to increase Pittsburgh's population by 20,000 in 10 years hinges on improving the city's schools, but other leaders fail to see how the city can help.
Mayor Bill Peduto says his pledge to increase Pittsburgh's population by 20,000 in 10 years hinges on improving the city's schools, but other leaders fail to see how the city can help.
Councilwoman
Darlene Harris said Pittsburgh
lacks cash to throw at the problem, and Peduto doesn't have the authority to
compel the embattled district to get better.
“The
school district is a separate governmental body,” said Harris of Spring Hill, a
former school board president. “I don't think the city has money to give to another
governmental body.”
GOP response to plan is uncertain
By
Kate Giammarise / Post-Gazette Harrisburg
Bureau March 11, 2014 11:39 PM
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review By Bill Vidonic Tuesday, March 11, 2014, 7:42 p.m.
More than 150Mars
Area School
District residents cheered loudly Tuesday night
as the nine-member school board voted unanimously to reject Rex Energy's
proposal to conduct horizontal drilling for oil and gas underneath district
property along Route 228. “This is not
just for today, but forever,” said Amy Nassif of Adams .
“The community has spoken. We do not want this type of industry near our
children.” The school board rejected an
agreement that would have paid the district just over $1 million for a
five-year lease. The pact promised the district about $4,000 an acre for
drilling rights about a mile underneath nearly 175 acres of school property.
More than 150
The $1 million
payment included about $330,000 in advance royalties for the rights to drill from
a site about 4,000 feet from district property. The district would have
received 15 percent of royalties from the drilling.
"This year's
rate of students at Jefferson who receive free
or reduced-cost lunches is 32.7 percent, Seidenberger said. To be eligible for Head Start, a family's
income cannot exceed the federal poverty line. For a family of four that's
$23,850. Seidenberger said the only cost
to the district would be about $15,000 to $18,000 for transporting the
children. Community Services for Children would pay for certified staff and
materials through a federal grant."
With rise in poor
students, East Penn looks to open its first Head Start class
Move comes as
district sees a rise in the number of students from low-income families.
By Margie Peterson,
Special to The Morning Call 9:42 p.m. EDT, March 11, 2014
In a sign of its
changing demographics, East Penn School District
expects to get its first Head Start program for preschoolers at Jefferson Elementary School in the fall.
The school board is
slated to vote at its next meeting on whether to allow the nonprofit Community
Services for Children to start a Head Start program for 20 children at the
school.
Federally funded
Head Start is a preschool program for children from low-income families to
ensure they are ready to learn when they get to kindergarten.
"Our
demographics are changing in the district and I don't think it's a surprise to
any of you that we have more families that meet federal free- and reduced-lunch
standards, especially in the Lincoln
[Elementary School] and Jefferson-sending areas," Superintendent Thomas
Seidenberger told the school board Monday.
By on
March 11, 2014 at 7:33 PM
The Saucon Valley School Board has launched a website outlining
its position in its ongoing teacher contract negotiations. The board voted last month to accept a
contract settlement with the Saucon Valley Education
Association that would
have ended two years of contract talks. But the 186-member association had already rejected the
deal. The school board has
notified teachers they have 30 days, until March 25, to reconsider their
rejection of the new contract. At that point, the school board "will be
free to reconsider its position completely," district solicitor and
negotiator Jeffrey Sultanik wrote in a letter to the association's Pennsylvania
State Education Association representative.
KCSD: Reform state education funding
formula:
Lock Haven Express, March 11, 2014
The Keystone Central School Board would like to see a new, "fair and equitable" formula for basic education subsidies provided toPennsylvania 's public
schools. School board members are sending a letter to that effect to state
lawmakers and the governor at the request of the Pennsylvania School Boards
Association, and they encourage taxpayers to do the same.
Full story
East Penn School District wants funding
formula:
Easton Express Times, March 10, 2014
Is it too much to ask to have a reliable funding formula so school districts would know how much money they can count on from the state each year? That's was the plea Monday night when the East Penn School Board unanimously approved a resolution asking for a fair and consistent funding formula to help districts compile their budgets and set their tax rates.
Full story
Lock Haven Express, March 11, 2014
The Keystone Central School Board would like to see a new, "fair and equitable" formula for basic education subsidies provided to
Full story
Easton Express Times, March 10, 2014
Is it too much to ask to have a reliable funding formula so school districts would know how much money they can count on from the state each year? That's was the plea Monday night when the East Penn School Board unanimously approved a resolution asking for a fair and consistent funding formula to help districts compile their budgets and set their tax rates.
Full story
New Hope hearing focuses on charters, student performance
Judges questioned what the law
requires of charter schools
York Daily Record By Angie Mason amason@ydr.com
@angiemason1 on Twitter
UPDATED:
03/10/2014 07:35:24 PM EDT
An
appeals court hearing on New Hope
Academy Charter
School 's fate focused
largely on whether charter schools are required to meet specific student
performance marks in order to keep their charters, a discussion that led one
judge to lament the "vague" nature of the charter school law. Arguments in New Hope Academy 's
appeal were heard Monday before a three-judge panel in Commonwealth Court . The school is trying
to remain open after the York City School District
voted not to renew New Hope 's
charter in 2012, a decision that was upheld by the state Charter Appeal Board
last fall.
"It was this dissatisfaction with neighborhood school
options that drove, and continues to drive, the city's parents toward charters.
Since the passage of Pennsylvania 's
charter law in 1997, charter growth has boomed. The city now boasts 86 charters
that serve roughly 31 percent of the city's public school students. In that same time, the district has
continuously expanded its own boutique, non-neighborhood options. These district expansions have included Science Leadership
Academy , The Workshop School ,
Rush Arts, Hill-Freedman and more.
Both of these movements have, on average, siphoned the
city's top performing students away from neighborhood schools. This has tended
to isolate and concentrate the kids thought most difficult to educate at the
only schools in the city that must take
them."
For many Philly families
choosing high schools, it's either magnet or charter
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN
MCCORRY MARCH 11, 2014
Chrislie Dor, a budding poet at age 14, stands like Frost's
narrator at a fork in the road.
The paths diverge not in a yellow wood, but instead the
concrete jungle that is Philadelphia
public education. Looking down one bend as far as she can, Chrislie sees the
school district's selective-admission magnet high schools. Looking down the
other, she sees the city's charter schools.
Other options — such as Chrislie's district-run neighborhood
high school — may be in the vicinity, but they don't figure on her map.
More Renaissance charter schools planned
for the fall
by Dale
Mezzacappa on Mar 11 2014 Posted in Latest news
The School
District plans to designate two additional schools,
likely K-6 or K-8 elementaries, for conversion to charter schools in September,
Deputy Superintendent Paul Kihn said Tuesday, making this the fifth straight
year of the so-called Renaissance Charter Schools Initiative. But the process will be significantly
different this time. In the past, the District has chosen the schools to be
converted and approved a set of providers, which made their pitches to school
communities. Each School Advisory Council (SAC) then voted on which provider to
accept. For this round, the District
will match a provider with a school, and the "school communities" will
then vote whether to accept the choice or remain under District control.
Athough the schools will have SACs, the goal is to have all parents at a
designated school participate in the vote, Kihn said.
District to
give more schools to charters
Philly School Files Blog by Kristen
Graham POSTED: TUESDAY,
MARCH 11, 2014, 12:34 PM
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/school_files/District-to-give-more-schools-to-charters.html#ezdWxGsq0Y6cCd6T.99
Strategies
to Reduce High-Stakes Testing
Yinzercation Blog March 11, 2014
News flash: I am not against testing. Most parents,
teachers, and even students agree that we ought to assess what students learn.
Quality assessments help children learn and provide meaningful information to
teachers to help them meet the needs of individual students. Tests ought to
align with the curriculum (and ideally be designed by teachers) and give
timely, informative results to parents and students. Yet the skyrocketing use
of high-stakes-testing in our classrooms (such as the PSSAs, Keystones, GRADE,
CDTs, CBAs, and many others) does not appear to meet these requirements. Significantly, as we talked about in yesterday’s post,
parents and educators are increasingly worried about the high-stakes for
students attached to high-stakes testing. That piece has been getting a lot of
attention: there are several thought provoking comments on the blog (and I
encourage you to contribute your own), and the Washington
Post just published
the article. [Washington Post, 3-11-14]
So as we think about the growing negative consequences for
students, what can we do together to address the over-use and misuse of
high-stakes-testing? Here are some strategies:
"As the arts have been largely eliminated from U.S. public
school, a process that began in the 1970s, so has the avenue to one of the
arts’ irreplaceable gifts: the agency to withstand ambiguity and to
discern for yourself whether to pursue a problem or to quit and reassess. The external binaries of right and wrong
don’t exist in art as they do in most subjects. In math, the answer to the
problem is correct or incorrect. In history, a sequence of events is true
or false. In art, only the student can decide what critique to listen to and
what to ignore. Art is the arena of activity where we develop the skill
most required to innovate — the ability to harness our own agency."
Scientists aren’t the only innovators!
We really need artists
Too many people believe that
innovation emerges only from a lab. They're wrong -- and here's why it matters
Salon.com
by SARAH LEWIS March 10,
2014
“What’s
your favorite subject in school?” I heard a mother ask her young son
and daughter as we were in the elevator riding up in our building. “Gym,” the girl said. “Art,” the boy said.
I
smiled and looked down at the elevator floor. Just before I averted my eyes,
I had also noticed that my neighbor was most worried by her son’s
response: “Art.” She looked at me, panic-stricken. Don’t look at me, I thought. I know that, to
many, pursuing the arts can seem like the height of impracticality. I
remember how nervous my parents were when I came home from grade school
and declared that I wanted to be a painter. And then, when I told them
that after going to Harvard and Oxford, I wanted to be a curator.
We may
be concerned when a child expresses a love for the arts because we worry
that what President Obama has recently said (and as many have
before) could be right — skilled mechanics might have a better chance of
getting a high-paying job than those with degrees in art history, or those
pursuing a career in the arts. Yet what are we most in need of? People who
can think creatively and innovate.
Is your PA Congressman on the cosponsorship list?
More members of the House of Representatives join growing co-sponsor
list for NSBA bill
NSBA
School Board News Today by Staff March 11th, 2014
Fourteen
lawmakers from the U.S. House of Representatives have joined the 24 existing
co-sponsors on the Local
School Board Governance and Flexibility Act (H.R. 1386), since Feb. 2014.
The bi-partisan bill recognizes the benefits of local school district
governance and ensures that maximum local flexibility and decision-making are
not eroded through U.S. Department of Education (ED) actions. The National School Boards Association (NSBA)
attributes this wave of legislative support to the dedicated work of the
hundreds of school board members and state school boards association leaders
who attended NSBA’s new Advocacy Institute, held Feb. 2-4, 2014 in Washington . In addition
to building year-round advocates for public education and local school
governance, the institute arranged Capitol Hill visits for attendees to speak
with their members of Congress about protecting local school district
governance from unnecessary and counter-productive federal intrusion. Thirty-eight
Congressional co-sponsors have now signed on to the bill. Introduced
by Rep. Aaron Schock (R-lll.) on March 21, 2013, this legislation had as
original co-sponsors Reps. Schock, Rodney Davis (R-Iowa), Ron Kind (D-Wis.),
Patrick Meehan (R-Pa.), and David Valadao (R-Calif.).
How billionaire-funded ‘ed
reform’ groups push charters, vouchers
How powerful are
organizations such as Michelle Rhee’s StudentsFirst and other like-minded
groups that support charter schools, voucher programs and the weakening of
teachers unions.?
The Center for Public Integrity, a
nonpartisan, nonprofit investigative news organization that works to reveal
abuses of power, corruption and betrayal of public trust by public and private
institutions, takes a look at this issue in a new
post on its Web site, ”Education groups battle teachers unions in
state races.” It reveals the growing power of the purse of “education reform”
organizations that are funded by wealthy philanthropists and that are spending
big bucks to support mostly conservative candidates running for local and state
offices around the country.
And get this: Federal
tax rules allow them to operate without revealing from whom they get their
money, meaning the public doesn’t know who is funding many candidates running
for public office.
Testing Skeptics Aim to Build
Support for Opt-Out Strategy
Education Week By Karla Scoon Reid
Published Online: March 11, 2014
Riding what they see as
a wave of anti-testing sentiment among parents, opponents of high-stakes
assessments believe a strategy known as opt-out—having parents refuse to let
their children take state-mandated tests—could force policymakers to take note
of their cause.
Once considered a
rarity, the opt-out push has prompted high-profile boycott efforts and meetings
in large districts such as Chicago and led more parents nationwide to join
forces with anti-testing advocates in arguing that the assessments are
unnecessary, excessive, and, in some cases, even harmful to students.
Netflix CEO on Charter Schools goal: "Get rid of School
Boards"
Published
on Mar 9, 2014 youtube video runtime 2:37
Read
more at http://www.stoprocketship.com.
Billionaire Netflix CEO, Reed Hastings, provides the Charter School Roadmap:
Replace elected school boards with large non-profits run by rich oligarch
magnates. Hastings gave this speech at the March 4th, 2014 California Charter
School Association conference in San Jose, CA
Live Chat with PA's Major Education Leadership Organizations on Twitter
PSBA
website 3/11/2014
On Tuesday,
March 25 at 8 p.m., Pennsylvania 's
major education leadership organizations will host a live chat on Twitter to
share the opinions of school leaders from throughout the state and invite
feedback. Join the conversation using
hashtag #PAEdFunding and lurk, learn or let us know what you
think about the state of support for public schools. If you've never tweeted before, join us. It's
a simple, free and fast-paced way to communicate and share information. Here
are directions and a few tips:
- See
more at: http://www.psba.org/news-publications/headlines/details.asp?id=7286#sthash.OGonknCO.dpuf
PILCOP Special Education Seminars 2014 Schedule
Public
Interest Law Center of Philadelphia
Register Now! EPLC’s 2014 Education Issues Workshops for Legislative
Candidates, Campaign Staff, and Interested Voters
EPLC’s Education
Issue Workshops Register Now! – Space is Limited!
A Non-Partisan One-Day Program forPennsylvania Legislative Candidates,
Campaign Staff and Interested Voters
A Non-Partisan One-Day Program for
Wednesday, March 19, 2014 in Monroeville ,
PA
Thursday, March 27, 2014 inPhiladelphia ,PA
Thursday, March 27, 2014 in
Auditor General DePasquale to Hold Public Meetings on Ways to Improve
Charter Schools
Seeks to find ways to improve accountability, effectiveness,
transparency
The the last of
five public meetings will be held:
- Philadelphia: 1 to 3 p.m., Friday, March 14, City Council
Chambers, Room 400, City Hall
Time is limited to
two hours for each meeting. Comments can be submitted in writing by Wednesday,
Feb. 19, via email to Susan Woods at: swoods@auditorgen.state.pa.us.
2014 PA Gubernatorial Candidate Plans for Education and Arts/Culture in
PA
Education Policy and Leadership Center
Below is an alphabetical list of the 2014
Gubernatorial Candidates and links to information about their plans, if
elected, for education and arts/culture in Pennsylvania. This list will be updated, as more
information becomes available.
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