Daily postings from the Keystone State
Education Coalition now reach more than 3250 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
SB76: Protests could doom action on property tax reform legislation
PSBA
members in Bucks, Montgomery, Chester and Delaware Counties
PSBA
Buxmont Region 11 and Penns Grant Region 15 Combined Region/Legislative Meeting
-- Thursday, May 15, at William
Tennent High
School
- Buffet dinner/registration, 6 p.m. ($8 charge for
dinner) - Program, 7:30 p.m. -- Minority Senate Education Committee Chair
Hon. Andy Dinniman will introduce guest speaker Diane Ravitch, author and
education historian, and former Assistant Secretary of Education. Retiring House Education Committee Chairman
Paul Clymer will also be honored for his long time (1981) public service.
SB76: Protests could doom action on property tax reform legislation
The
property tax reform movement is picking up steam in Harrisburg , as Senate Bill 76 gets increased
attention. Last week, that attention
translated into protest, as 41 organizations joined forces to speak out against
the legislation, known as the Property Tax Independence Act.
“We’re
getting wind that this is getting legs,” said Sam Denisco, vice president of
government affairs for the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry,
reported Andrew Staub of PA Independent.
According to the PA Independent report, the coalition of business groups
is voicing concerns about Senate Bill 76, “arguing it could hamstring
retailers, hurt poor people and leave schools with a volatile funding stream.”
"It's also true that when Corbett claims higher spending
on education, he includes larger pension contributions, which past governors
didn't count in their calculations of education spending. The Corbett team says
those contributions are real money and will contribute to the long-term
stability of schools. The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center
calculated that Corbett's first budget left schools with $860 million less than
the year before. You can read their analysis here.
You can read the Corbett administration's explanation for its claim of a $1.5
billion overall education spending increase here."
WHYY
Newsworks A BLOG BY DAVE DAVIES APRIL 16, 2014
Is Tom
Corbett still a Republican? No doubt, but
his latest campaign ad would play well if he were competing in the Democratic
primary. It's a soft and warm 60-second
spot which casts Pennsylvania 's
governor is a big booster of education and education spending. The ad places
the governor among an ethnically diverse mix of schoolchildren and pictures him
and his wife, Susan, with the African-American child their daughter adopted. Maybe I shouldn't bring that up, but pros
well tell you none of the images in political commercials are left to chance.
This is an ad that seems designed to play well among Philadelphia Democrats and
independents. "Tom and I were both
teachers, and so education is really important," Susan Corbett says in the
ad, "and we know that's the key to success. He's increased spending in the
education department $1.5 billion over what it was when he came into
office."
PILCOP Analysis: Half of PA’s Schools Fail to Meet State Proficiency
Targets
A Law
Center analysis of the 2013 state proficiency exam testing results shows a
widespread and growing inability of public schools to prepare a significant
portion of their students to meet the state’s educational standards in reading
and math. The analysis includes all
public schools, including those that are district run, charters, and a few
other non-district schools reporting results on the PSSA and Keystone
proficiency exams. The results are significant because these failures are not
confined to a relatively few “ineffective” districts and because the number and
percentage of schools unable to meet the current state standards for
proficiency has increased over the last three years. This analysis shows Pennsylvania has a long
way to go before it is able to provide an adequate education in all schools so
that students can meet state standards.
Bartram's troubles: Not about
funds?
thenotebook by Bill
Hangley Jr. on Apr 16
2014 Posted in Latest news
As news of violence and
disarray at Bartram High School dominated Philadelphia headlines, national education
researchers were downtown at the Convention Center, discussing the theory and
practice of a “portfolio” school reform strategy that relies on management
changes – converting low-performing schools to charters or closing
them. And while many have tied Bartram’s
troubles to the budget cuts that sharply reduced staff levels at the school,
Philadelphia School Partnership head Mark Gleason does not agree. “It’s not about funds,” said Gleason, whose
organization controls millions in private dollars that it distributes to
replicate, improve, or expand well-performing schools. He made his
remarks as he talked informally with a group of educators at the American
Educational Research Association convention earlier this month.
'Election season' in North
Philly: parents hear pitches on charter conversion
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY APRIL 16, 2014
The stump speeches have
begun, and with them, the partisan divide.
Parents at two North Philly elementary schools are fast approaching an
election that could forever alter the academic trajectory of their children. Here the distinction is not Democratic or
Republican, but "district-run" or "charter." Nestled in the bright, beautiful auditorium
at Luis Muñoz-Marín elementary school in Fairhill, parents heard the first
round of pitches Tuesday night from both the existing school leadership and
ASPIRA — a charter organization with roots in Muñoz-Marín's heavily Latino
section of North Philly.
Teachers at Mt. Airy
charter vote to allow strike
MARTHA WOODALL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Thursday, April 17, 2014, 1:08 AM
POSTED: Wednesday, April 16,
2014, 6:25 PM
MOUNT AIRY After 18
months of frustration over their inability to obtain a new contract, teachers
at Khepera Charter
School in Mount Airy
have unanimously voted to authorize negotiators to call a strike if
necessary. Teachers said they hope they
won't go on strike. If they do, it would be a first. None of the handful of
charter schools that are unionized in Pennsylvania
has had one.
The 26 teachers and
counselors at Khepera represented by the Alliance of Charter School Employees,
Local 6056, voted April 2 to give negotiators the power to call a strike.
Criteria for the volunteers
includes being free of any conflicts of interest
By Jenna Ebersole Pocono Record Writer April 14, 2014
The Pocono Mountain
Charter School
is in the early stages of reconstituting its board, but those with conflicts of
interest need not apply. The charter
school, under the court-appointed custodianship of Alan Price Young, is
circulating a draft of new bylaws for comment. Young said the school is also
accepting applications for volunteer advisory positions. People selected will
be trained and could possibly become part of a future new board. The embattled school remains locked in a
fight for survival with Pocono
Mountain School
District . The state's Charter Appeal Board voted
once to keep it open and once to shut it down, citing entanglement between the
school and its landlord, the Shawnee
Tabernacle Church . The school's founder, the church's Rev.
Dennis Bloom, is imprisoned on separate tax fraud charges.
District to raise taxes by at least 2.7 percent, see class
sizes increase.
By
Jacqueline Palochko, Of The Morning Call 5:32 a.m. EDT, April 17, 2014
The Easton Area
School District could see
staff reductions as high as 100 or as low as 29 over the next two school years. But one thing is certain: Class sizes will
increase in the district, with as many as 35 students in some middle and high
school classes. Superintendent John
Reinhart presented the school board with four budget scenarios Tuesday night.
He also held a news conference Wednesday morning to discuss the options. Each
scenario involves staff reductions and at least a 2.7 percent property tax
hike. Reinhart said he prefers an option
that would eliminate — through attrition — nine staff positions in 2014-15 and
20 in 2015-16. And over the course of the next two school years, taxpayers
would see a 2.7 percent tax increase each year.
Even
though it means lugging a couple of extra pounds in an already loaded backpack,
the one-to-one laptop initiative is receiving high marks from students at Conestoga Valley High School .
Members
of the superintendent's student advisory committee gave school board members an
update at on Monday, April 15, on the educational technology program, which
is in
its first year of implementation.
Revised SAT Won’t Include Obscure
Vocabulary Words
New
York Times By TAMAR LEWIN APRIL 16, 2014
The College Board on Wednesday
will release many details of its revised SAT,
including sample questions and explanations of the research, goals and
specifications behind them. “We are
committed to a clear and open SAT, and today is the first step in that
commitment,” said Cyndie Schmeiser, the College Board’s chief of assessment, in
a conference call on Monday, previewing the changes to be introduced in the
spring of 2016. She said the 211-page
test specifications and supporting materials being shared publicly include
“everything a student needs to know to walk into that test and not be
surprised.”
SAT Changes Include Fewer Answer
Choices, Shorter Mandatory Test Time
Huffington
Popst by Joy Resmovits and Rebecca Klein Posted: 04/16/2014 12:01 am
EDT Updated: 04/16/2014 10:59 am EDT
The
College Board on Wednesday released blueprints for a redesigned SAT test,
giving an early ffirst look at what's in store for many students with college
aspirations. Among the changes: Multiple choice questions will have four
possible answer choices, instead of five, and reading passages will contain
significantly more nonfiction than fiction.
The roughly 250 pages of test blueprints -- which the College Board
stressed are a draft and "not a full reflection of what will be
tested" -- offered new details about the redesigned test, slated for 2016,
which the not-for-profit company announced in March.
States' Rollout of Common Core Goes
Under the Microscope
State strengths, challenges eyed from various angles
Organizations
tracking implementation of the Common Core State Standards praise state
education agencies for collaborating well with local officials and across state
borders, and for developing a strong base of materials to help with the
transition to the standards.
But
states still face hurdles, analysts find, including finding adequate funding to
make the common core a reality at the classroom level and assuring that the
rollout goes smoothly amid other significant policy shifts.
Public Citizens for Children and Youth
(PCCY) will Host an Education Funding Forum in Delaware County
on May 7th
On May
7th, PCCY will host a forum that discusses the state of school
funding in Delaware
County . As many of you
all know, state budget cuts have impacted districts beyond
Philadelphia. The event will be held at the Upper Darby Municipal Branch
Library, 501 Bywood Avenue ,
Upper Darby PA 19082 from 6:30pm-8pm.
Attendees will get a budget update from Sharon Ward of the Pennsylvania Budget
and Policy Center ,
hear from School Board members representing Upper Darby, William Penn, and Haverford School Districts and learn how they can
get involved. Contact Devon Miner at devonm@pccy.org for any
questions or concerns.
Please
RSVP by clicking here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1OjFpJwTHnZwRqh0Q5Tdp0KHYaI1Jg0XNvGpmeYMmIyA/viewform
PSBA Advocacy Forum and Day on the Hill
May 5-6, Mechanicsburg & Harrisburg
Make an impact on the legislative process by attending PSBA’s Advocacy Forum and Day on the Hill, May 5-6. Day one will provide legislative insights on pensions, training on being an effective advocate, and media relations. Dr. G. Terry Madonna, leadingPennsylvania political analyst, will discuss
the legislative landscape in his usual lively and informative style. How to Be an Effective Advocate -- Hear from
former Allwein Advocacy Award winners Larry Feinberg, Roberta Marcus and
Tina Viletto on how to successfully support your issues. At noon, Rep. Dave Reed, Majority
Policy Chairman, will address participants.
On day two, participants will start with a breakfast at the Harrisburg Hilton with Lt. Gov. Jim Cawley as guest speaker and then hit the ground running with visits to legislative offices in the State CapitolSpace is limited so register early. Click here for more details and to register online.
May 5-6, Mechanicsburg & Harrisburg
Make an impact on the legislative process by attending PSBA’s Advocacy Forum and Day on the Hill, May 5-6. Day one will provide legislative insights on pensions, training on being an effective advocate, and media relations. Dr. G. Terry Madonna, leading
On day two, participants will start with a breakfast at the Harrisburg Hilton with Lt. Gov. Jim Cawley as guest speaker and then hit the ground running with visits to legislative offices in the State CapitolSpace is limited so register early. Click here for more details and to register online.
Registration
fee of $50 includes lunch and dinner on May 5 and breakfast on May
6.
Educating the Voter: A Forum on Public
Education featuring Democratic gubernatorial candidates - April 30th 6:00 pm
Phila Central Library
Presented by Committee of Seventy, Congresso and
Philadelphia Education Fund
Wednesday,
April 30, 2014 at 6:00PM
Join Democratic gubernatorial candidates Katie McGinty, Tom Wolf, Allyson Schwartz and Rob McCord for a discussion on public education.
Please
click here to
register.
PSBA
nominations for offices now open!
Deadline April 30th
PSBA Leadership Development Committee seeks strong leaders for the association
Members interested in becoming the next leaders of PSBA are encouraged to complete an Application for Nomination no later than April 30. As a member-driven association, the Leadership Development Committee (LDC) is seeking nominees with strong skills in leadership and communication, and who have vision for PSBA. Complete details on the nomination process, links to the Application for Nomination form, and scheduled dates for nominee interviews can be found online by clicking here.
PSBA Leadership Development Committee seeks strong leaders for the association
Members interested in becoming the next leaders of PSBA are encouraged to complete an Application for Nomination no later than April 30. As a member-driven association, the Leadership Development Committee (LDC) is seeking nominees with strong skills in leadership and communication, and who have vision for PSBA. Complete details on the nomination process, links to the Application for Nomination form, and scheduled dates for nominee interviews can be found online by clicking here.
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, April 29th,
12-4 p.m.
Wednesday, May 14th,
1-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.
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.
Hello I wish to to share a comment here concerning you to definitely be able to inform you just how much i personally Loved this particular study. I have to elope in order to aTurkey Day time Supper but desired to leave ya an easy comment. We preserved you Same goes with be returning subsequent function to read more of yer quality articles. Keep up the quality work.
ReplyDeleteProperty Tax Records
Gathering common facts and quotations or otherwise confirmed arguments required for some great custom case studies may demand some time and almost always huge efforts. As a secondary student i understand i need help on my subject suggested at college, because i realize the problem and need someone to collect the data for better analysis. This custom writing company can do it logically as i prefer using foundation that are respected.
ReplyDelete