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 is probably the only way they can protest against
the state stamping 'failure' on the students, teachers, and schools who don't
have adequate resources for their children to succeed."
"State Sen. Andrew Dinniman (D., Chester ), who has been publicly wary of the
way standardized tests are used, is not surprised interest is growing in the
opt-out issue. "Every time the
government ups the stakes of these exams, it puts parents in a position where
they have no choice but to ask if this is the right thing," he said.
"This is probably the only way they can protest against the state stamping
'failure' on the students, teachers, and schools who don't have adequate
resources for their children to succeed."
Some parents having their children opt out of PSSA exams
KRISTEN
A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER March 23, 2014, 10:30 PM
Robin
Roberts did the math, and she was astonished.
By
Roberts' count, her third grader was going to spend six school days - at least
12 hours - taking state standardized tests beginning this month at C.W. Henry
Elementary, a public school in Mount
Airy . Her fifth grader
would lose nine school days to the PSSAs, and her eighth grader 11 days. That troubled her. "If our schools are not getting the
resources to offer a basic education, what is happening?" she asked.
"If it's so important for us to do well on these tests, why are they not
setting us up to succeed? The test doesn't say anything about what my children
have learned, what they're able to achieve." So Roberts opted her three children out of
the exams, which the Philadelphia
School District will
begin administering Monday. She is part of a small but growing group of parents
who are pushing back against the standardized tests that for the last
decade-plus have been the most important metric by which schools are judged.
Read
more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20140324_Some_parents_having_their_children.html#mj2kOHL5sRq0A0VV.99
Fed Ed's testing tyrants
The Tribune-Review By Michelle Malkin Sunday - March 23, 2014
Have you had enough of
the testing tyranny? Join the club.
I'm not against all standardized academic tests. The problem is
that there are too many of these top-down assessments, measuring who knows
what, using our children as guinea pigs and cash cows. College-bound students in Orange County , Fla. ,
for example, now take 234 standardized diagnostic, benchmark and achievement
tests from kindergarten through 12th grade.
By Charles Thompson |
cthompson@pennlive.com on March 21, 2014 at 10:00 AM
By some
political measuring sticks, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett is considered the
most vulnerable Republican incumbent governor in America. But an emerging consensus from a variety of Pennsylvania political experts is that within the Keystone State , the gubernatorial election is now
also the Democrats' most realistic chance to celebrate statewide on Election
night. A key, albeit quiet, portion of
the 2014 legislative election cycle – candidate filings for ballot positions in
state House and Senate races – ended March 11.
And, according to experts with ties to both major political parties, the
way the battlefield looks now, chances for the Republicans to retain control of
the Pennsylvania House and Senate look strong.
WHYY
Newsworks BY ASSOCIATED PRESS MARCH 23, 2014
Government: Education system
rife with inequities
Inquirer by KIMBERLY
HEFLING, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS March 22, 2014, 2:03 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sixty
years ago, the Supreme Court ruled that black children have the right to the
same education as their white peers. But
civil rights data released Friday by the Education Department reflect an
education system rife with inequities for blacks and other minority students and
those with disabilities. Minority
students are less likely to have access to advanced math and science classes
and veteran teachers. Black students of any age, even the youngest
preschoolers, are more likely to be suspended. And students with disabilities
are more likely than other students to be tied down or placed alone in a room
as a form of discipline.
A black dad reacts to racial school-discipline disparities
WHYY Newsworks Philadelphia
Experiment Blog by Solomon Jones MARCH 24, 2014
As a black father, my concerns for
my children are much the same as those of other parents. I want my children to
be safe, to be brilliant, to be successful. Most of all, I want them to know
they are loved. But beyond those
concerns are the underlying anxieties that come with knowing one’s children
could face racial bias — even within the classroom. When discipline problems arise at school,
black parents don’t just have to deal with what happened. We also have to
assess the reasons why.
Letter to the Editor: Charter
school reform bills a work in progress
Delco Times LTE POSTED: 03/23/14, 9:02 PM EDT
By JONATHAN CETEL, Executive
Director, Pennsylvania Campaign for Achievement Now (PennCAN); ASHLEY DEMAURO, Pennsylvania
State Director, StudentsFirst; ROBERT FAYFICH, Executive Director, Pennsylvania
Coalition of Public Charter Schools
To the Times:
District, Philadelphia teacher's union talks could go
'nuclear'
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER March 24, 2014, 1:08 AM
For the city's
11,000-member teachers' union, the clock is ticking. Budget season is closing in, the struggling Philadelphia School District has a $14 million hole
to fill this school year, and it needs $440 million in new funds for next
year. But most significantly, the
district has signaled it is willing to use its "nuclear option" -
invoking special powers bestowed by the state law that created the School
Reform Commission - to get what it wants from the Philadelphia Federation of
Teachers. Superintendent William R. Hite
Jr. has publicly said he must have work-rule changes in order to compete with
charter schools.
“This is what I call a quiet, unfunded mandate,” Gray said.
“All of a sudden, you realize you’re spending a small fortune to collect data,
but you’re not sure why.” … “We’re
not saying they shouldn’t have data, just trying to show how this is growing
exponentially and taking up so much of our staff time,”
Haverford school board
concerned with PIMS info system
By LOIS PUGLIONESI, Delco Times Correspondent POSTED: 03/19/14,
11:19 PM EDT
HAVERFORD — School officials at a recent meeting expressed
concerns about increasing amounts of data the district is required to submit to
Pennsylvania Department of Education’s Information Management System. The longitudinal data system continuously
collects information for about 1.8 million students, pre-K through college, and
is used to support testing and accountability systems, Superintendent William
Keilbaugh said. The data includes demographic records, courses, assessments,
discipline, programs, services and more.
Keilbaugh noted that given the current number of fields, types of fields,
and multiple annual submissions for students and staff, Haverford annually
submits a whopping 15,023,713 fields of information to Information Management
System. Student templates total
7,841,600 fields, with 52 fields submitted 26 times throughout the year due to
corrections and changes.
By Joe Napsha Published: Monday, March 24, 2014, 12:01 a.m.
School districts are flipping the switch on audio-recording equipment attached to the cameras on school buses to keep an eye — and an ear — on students and drivers.Yough
School District 's
transportation provider, Student Transportation of America Inc., was given the
authority to turn on the audio-recording equipment beginning March 17.
Recording sound on buses adds another layer of safety for the students,
Superintendent Janet Sardon said.
School districts are flipping the switch on audio-recording equipment attached to the cameras on school buses to keep an eye — and an ear — on students and drivers.
New Lackawanna County
CTC director has new vision for school
Thomas
Baileys, Ed.D., first walked into the Career Technology Center of Lackawanna
County in 1973 as a student in the heating, ventilation and air-conditioning
program. He is now the center's new
administrative director. His career path
has included a job as an engineer, running a computer repair shop in Forest City
and working for the Western
Wayne School
District . He spent the past seven years as the
director of technology in the Colonial Intermediate Unit in Easton .
“When folks are running for office
they tend to listen to what constituents want. About 80 percent of
people in Pennsylvania
think investing in pre-K is a good idea,” she said today. To get that message across, her organization
has launched the “PreKforPA” web site and is pushing its #IamPreK social media compaign.
Area Early Education
Advocates Send A Message — With A Face — To Harrisburg
CBS Philly By Hadas Kuznits March 21,
2014 2:30 PM
PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Parents,
educators, grandparents, and others who have a vested interest in getting more
public funding for early childhood education in Pennsylvania were being
encouraged today to get their message across to legislators by sending photos
of themselves.
Each year, the Delaware Valley Association for the Education of Young Children holds a conference, but executive
director Sharon Easterling says this is a particularly important year for the
conference because of the Pennsylvania
governor’s race.
By Joe
Smydo / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette March 22, 2014 11:53 PM
After a
finals competition of 20 rounds, 240 words and nearly 31/2 hours, it came down
to this:
Unadulterated. Suneel Banerjee spelled it without hesitation
Saturday, winning the Western Pennsylvania Spelling Bee and the right to
represent the region in a national competition in Washington , D.C. ,
in May. The 13-year-old's feat was
stupendous -- to borrow a word from round eight -- considering he studied for
the bee only one night. "I wasn't
really that confident," Suneel, an eighth-grader at Fort
Couch Middle
School in Upper
St. Clair School District ,
said. "I felt as though I should have prepared more." The 64th annual bee, sponsored by the
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and hosted by Children's Hospital
of Pittsburgh of UPMC, drew about 110
elementary- and middle-grade students from schools as far away as Cambria County .
Closing in on proof of arts' value to kids
PETER
DOBRIN, INQUIRER CLASSICAL MUSIC CRITIC LAST UPDATED: Sunday, March
23, 2014, 1:09 AM POSTED: Saturday, March 22, 2014, 11:52 PM
For
four years, Ellie D. Brown has been trying to determine whether an early
education in the arts enhances children's ability to learn overall, and again
and again she has turned to an unlikely tool of inquiry: a small swab of
sponge. More than 24,000 times, the West Chester University
associate professor of psychology and her colleagues have reached into the
mouths of 500 children at Settlement
Music School 's
Kaleidoscope Head Start program and a nearby control school to measure
cortisol, the hormone associated with stress levels. Brown has several more months to go on her
research, but she believes she is onto something. Preliminary analyses
"give us good reason to believe that arts classes are associated with
decreases in cortisol for young children," she says.
Read
more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20140323_Closing_in_on_proof_of_arts__value_to_kids.html#eOKpQ8q8v8tUh2QX.99
Sen. Grassley seeking to defund Common
Core in Congress
Having
tried unsuccessfully last year to persuade his colleagues in Congress to defund
the Common Core program, Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) is at it again.
Grassley
is circulating a “Dear Colleague” letter asking legislators to sign on to a
separate missive that will be sent early next month to Senate education budget
appropriators, asking that they no more federal money be put into the 2015
budget that helps develop or promote the Core, a set of math and English
language standards adopted by most of the states that has become increasingly
controversial over the past year. Grassley is likely to meet resistance from
Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa), a Core supporter who is chairman of the Senate
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and of the Senate
Appropriations subcommittee on education.
Kindergarten teacher: My job is now about tests and data — not
children. I quit.
Susan Sluyter is a veteran
teacher of young children in the Cambridge Public Schools who has been
connected to the district for nearly 20 years and teaching for more than 25
years. Last month she sent a resignation letter ( “with deep love and a broken
heart”) explaining that she could no longer align her understanding of how
young children learn best in safe, developmentally appropriate environments
with the
testing and data collection mandates imposed on teachers today.
She wrote in part:
How Does PISA Put the World at
Risk (Part 3): Creating Illusory Models of Excellence
Yong Zhao's Blog 23 MARCH 2014
Few numbers command as much power
as PISA scores,
not even the number of Olympic medals or Nobel Prize winners in the world
today. It is utterly shocking and embarrassing to see some otherwise rational
and well-educated people (or at least they should be) in powerful positions
believe that three test scores show the quality of their education systems, the
effectiveness of their teachers, the ability of their students, and the future
prosperity of their society.
The claims are as bold as they are
illusory. In a June 2013 article in
the Times Education Supplement (TES)magazine, William
Stewart questioned if PISA
is fundamentally flawed:
ALEC clears path for
for-profit charter companies to cash in after school closures
NEA's Education Votes by Félix
Pérez Posted March 23, 2014
Whether in Memphis , Newark , Philadelphia ,
Washington , DC, or Chicago, communities
hit by school closures bemoan the loss of a longstanding neighborhood asset.
Residents say school board members and local elected officials give short
shrift to displaced students, many of whom have to walk long distances through
dangerous neighborhoods to reach their new schools, some of which have poor
records on academics, discipline and safety.
Network for Public Education's Pennsylvania Friends and Allies:
@the chalkface http://atthechalkface.com
Angie Villa Art & Education http://www.angievillaartwork.blogspot.com
Keystone State Education Coalition http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.blogspot.com/
Parents United for Public
Education http://www.parentsunitedphila.com
Pennsylvania Alliance for Arts
Education http://www.kennedy-center.org/education/kcaaen/statealliance/home.cfm
Philly Teacherman http://phillyteacherman.blogspot.com/
Raging Chicken Press http://www.ragingchickenpress.org/
Yinzercation http://yinzercation.wordpress.com
Education Debate - Pittsburgh ,
April 8
by Yinzercation
March 20, 2014
Please mark your calendars now
and plan to be a part of this event:
Tuesday, April 8th atPittsburgh Obama 6-12 515 N. Highland Ave. , Pittsburgh
PA 15206
Tuesday, April 8th at
Sign up for weekly Testing
Resistance & Reform News and Updates!
Fairtest - The National
Center for Fair and Open
Testing
PA School Board Members
interested in running for PSBA officer positions must file applications no
Later than April 30th
PSBA's website Electing PSBA Officers
All persons seeking nomination for elected positions of the Association
shall send applications to the attention of the chair of the Leadership
Development Committee during the month of April, an Application for Nomination on a form to be provided by the
Association expressing interest in the office sought. "The
Application for nomination shall be marked received at PSBA Headquarters or
mailed first class and postmarked by April 30 to be considered and timely
filed. If said date falls on a Saturday, Sunday or holiday, then the
Application for Nomination shall be considered timely filed if marked received
at PSBA headquarters or mailed and postmarked on the next business day."
(PSBA Bylaws, Article IV, Section 5.E.).
Details and position descriptions: https://www.psba.org/elections/index.asp
Live Chat with PA's Major Education Leadership Organizations on Twitter
Tuesday March 25th at 8:00 p.m.
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
How the Business Community Can Lead on
Early Education
Economy
League of Greater Philadelphia
Join
business and community leaders to learn about how you can help make sure every
child arrives in kindergarten ready to succeed. On April 29th, the Economy
League of Greater Philadelphia and the United Way of Greater Philadelphia and
Southern New Jersey will host a forum featuring business leaders from around
the country talking about why they’re focused on early childhood education and
how they have moved the needle on improving quality and access in their states.
Featured
Speakers
- Jack Brennan, Chairman Emeritus of The
Vanguard Group
- Phil Peterson, Partner, Aon Hewitt and
Co-Chair of America’s Edge/Ready Nation
- And more to be announced!
- Date & Time Tuesday, April
29, 2014 | 5-7 PM
Registration begins at 5 PM; program
from 5:30 to 7:00 PM
- Location Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia
10 North Independence Mall West Philadelphia,
PA 19106
Registration:
http://worldclassgreaterphila.org/worldclasscouncilforum
PILCOP Special Education Seminars 2014
Schedule
Public
Interest Law Center of Philadelphia
Tuesday, March 25th,
12-4 p.m.
Tuesday, April 29th,
12-4 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14th,
1-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
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
Thursday, March 27, 2014 in Philadelphia ,PA
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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