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
Pennsylvania Education Policy Roundup
for April 11, 2014:
Possible solution to pension problem? What's your alternative to 30 years of higher
property taxes?
PSBA
members in Bucks, Montgomery, Chester and Delaware Counties - save the date
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.
A temporary financial transaction tax would solve our pension problem:
Tim Potts
By PennLive
Op-Ed By Tim Potts on April 10, 2014 at 1:00 PM
Tim Potts serves on the Carlisle Area School
Board.
It has
been frustrating to see this year’s gubernatorial candidates largely ignore the
most serious problem Pennsylvania
faces: our $50 billion pension debt. It’s a debt that must be paid, and it
sucks the life out of state and local school budgets. The debt is the result of our legislature,
abetted by both Republican and Democratic governors, being irresponsible
stewards of the retirement systems on which hundreds of thousands of seniors
depend. First lawmakers increased the pension benefits in 2001; then they
refused to pay for it. In the Carlisle Area School District ,
where I serve on the board of directors, the share of property taxes going
toward pension costs has increased 1,691 percent since 2001.
Chances
are, the increase in your school district is about the same.
"Chairman Colleen Kennedy released a statement saying
the endorsement is “the most important endorsement we will make this election
cycle.” The statement said the PAC is backing Smith because Davidson previously
voted in support of a vouchers amendment and also accepted campaign donations
from Students First, a political action committee supporting school
choice."
Save Upper Darby Arts endorses Billy Smith for state House
Delco
Politics Keystone Kopp Blog by John Kopp April 10, 2014
The
political action committee formed by Save Upper Darby Arts announced it is
endorsing Billy Smith for state House. Smith,
a lawyer from Lansdowne, is challenging state Rep. Margo Davidson, D-164, of
Upper Darby in the Democratic primary. Dafan Zhang, a law student from East
Lansdowne, also is running as a Democrat.
Saud Siddiqui, the chief operating officer of Upper Darby Caring
Foundation, is running unopposed in the Republican primary.
Save
Upper Darby Arts formed as a grassroots organization two years to prevent
drastic cuts to Upper Darby School District’s art, music, physical education,
library, technology and foreign language programs. The group attracted national media attention
by producing an online video and gathering more than 22,000 petition
signatures. The group’s efforts led the General Assembly to restore $2.726
million to Upper Darby.
SB76: State Legislation Could Cause $2.6 Billion in Cuts to Education
Funding Over the Next 5 Years
WESA
NPR Pittsburgh By HALDAN
KIRSCH April 10, 2014
Opponents
of a state bill that would replace school property taxes with a sales tax have
voiced their concerns for small businesses and the poor should the bill be
passed. According to an analysis by the PA Independent Fiscal Office, this bill
would cause $2.6 billion in cuts to funding for school districts in the next
five years. According to PA Education
Law Center Executive Director Rhonda Brownstein, the possible effects of this
bill would be devastating to school districts across the state. Advocates including the Pennsylvania Budget
and Policy Center, PA Chamber of Business and Industry, PA Education Law
Center, and Lutheran Advocacy Ministry in PA have written to the Senate Finance
Committee in opposition of SB 76. The
bill would alter funding sources for education by replacing local school
property taxes with new sales taxes that would be expanded to include
groceries, clothing, and footwear.
SB76: PA lawmakers dueling over alternatives to property taxes
PA
Independent By Andrew Staub / April 10, 2014
Want a smart investment for
kids? Try high-quality preK: Joan Benso
By Joan Benso on April 10, 2014 at 9:45 AM
If we could invest tax
dollars in a way that reduces public school costs, increases graduation rates,
lowers spending on crime and social services and helps build a more competitive
workforce with stronger earning power, would you get behind it? Such an investment opportunity already exists
in our region in the form of high-quality pre-kindergarten. Unfortunately, we
aren’t doing enough to take full advantage of it here or across Pennsylvania,
and that means lost savings for taxpayers and missed opportunities for
kids. A growing body of research shows
children who attend high-quality pre-k head to kindergarten better prepared to
learn and have improved social and emotional skills throughout school. They tend to perform better academically and
need fewer special education and remedial learning services. As a result,
taxpayers and society benefit in all those ways I mentioned earlier. http://www.pennlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2014/04/want_a_smart_investment_for_ki.html
Officials urge state House to
require schools to report abuse
By Cindy
Scharr, Delaware County Daily
Times POSTED: 04/10/14, 10:49 PM EDT
PHILADELPHIA — A coalition led by state Sen. Anthony Williams,
D-8, of Philadelphia, is urging lawmakers in the Pennsylvania House of
Representatives to approve the “Pass the Trash” bill, designed to keep school
districts from sending teachers suspected of child sexual abuse to other
districts. Williams, the sponsor of
Senate Bill 46, which passed in the Senate last year, was joined Thursday by
Delaware County District Attorney Jack Whelan and Darby Township Police Chief
Len McDevitt.
Centre
Daily Times BY LORI FALCE lfalce@centredaily.com
April 8, 2014
Acting
Secretary of Education Carolyn Dumaresq came to State College on Tuesday to
hand out awards, but she took a break to talk about a variety of education
issues, including many with specific interest to Centre County. Dumaresq sat down with the Centre Daily Times
editorial board with a folder of information on Gov. Tom Corbett’s Ready to
Learn agenda and proposed 2014-15 education budget. Most was not new
information, but it did give the secretary a chance to show her passion for the
subject.
"Typically, when a district's student
population drops, the funds it receives based on enrollment recede. That
reality has many observers, and not just conspiracy theorists, wondering if
that is the ultimate goal of a nationwide school reform movement: to so starve
traditional public schools of funds and students that they go out of business,
leaving the education of America's children to publicly supported charters,
for-profit companies, and private and parochial schools."
What good is the SRC?
What good is the SRC?
Philly.com Opinion by
Harold Jackson, Inquirer Editorial Page Editor POSTED: Friday, April 11, 2014, 1:08 AM
Talk about a tangled web
built with deception. That's a pretty good description of the Philadelphia School
District and its 13-year relationship with the
city's School Reform Commission. The
deception is rooted in the SRC's being a state-empowered institution that tries
to play the role of a locally controlled school board. To say that hasn't
worked very well is an understatement. The tension between the SRC's dual
personalities is on full display now as the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
considers its petition to invoke a provision of Act 46 allowing it to bypass
parts of its collective bargaining agreement with the teachers' union. The SRC
says inadequate funding by the state and other sources has made it necessary
for it to take this extraordinary step. The teachers' union has responded that
the SRC is a state creation and thus a party to decisions that created the
fiscal crisis it cites as the reason to invoke Act 46. http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/20140411_What_good_is_the_SRC_.html
Retired principal is straightening out Bartram
KRISTEN
A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Thursday, April 10,
2014, 1:08 AM POSTED: Wednesday, April 9, 2014, 8:00 PM
Rules
need to be enforced at Bartram
High School , Ozzie Wright
said: no hoodies, no cellphones, no showing up late, no lingering in the
hallways. Adults need to listen to
students, but students need to listen to adults. "We need to get this school under
control," said Wright, a veteran troubleshooter, retired district
principal, and retired Army captain. Wright,
65, was dispatched last week to calm Bartram, the Southwest
Philadelphia school where brawls and open drug use have been
common all year, and where a "conflict resolution specialist" was
recently knocked unconscious by a student.
First order of business? Getting students to class, and laying down the
law on rules that were on the books but applied haphazardly - policies about
electronics, lockers, and uniforms, for instance.
Philly
Parents Protest Possible Charter School
By NBC10.com -
Nefertiti Jaquez Apr 9, 2014 Video runtime: 2:03
The Philadelphia
School District announced that Luis Munoz-Marin Elementary School could become
a charter school. Now parents of the students are speaking out. NBC10's
Nefertiti Jaquez has the details.
http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/video/#!/news/local/Parents-Protest-Possible-Charter-School/254474141
Auditor General announces
audit of Phila. School District
REGINA MEDINA, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERMEDINAR@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-5985 LAST UPDATED: Thursday, April 10, 2014, 1:30 PM
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, with Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. at his side, announced this afternoon that his office has begun a performance audit of the city School District.
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, with Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. at his side, announced this afternoon that his office has begun a performance audit of the city School District.
The preparations began
April 1 between the staffs of the auditor's office and the district. The
auditors are expected to be inside the district at the end of the month, said
Susan Woods, spokeswoman for the auditor's office.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20140410_Auditor_General_Philly_School_District.html#k8bEBAcHvZj3Hpmi.99
Charter schools taken aback
by threats to sports programs
AARON CARTER, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER CARTERA@PHILLYNEWS.COM
POSTED: Thursday, April 10, 2014,
3:01 AM
FOR THE FIRST time since
the PIAA voiced concerns that charter schools tilt the competitive balance in
their favor because of enrollment practices, District 12 charters responded
yesterday to the association's executive director, Dr. Robert Lombardi. And a familiar theme was sounded at a
90-minute meeting at Cannstatter Volkfest Verein in the Northeast, which
included District 12 athletic directors.
"We're not doing anything wrong, so why would you take [sports]
away from us?" Nueva Esperanza Academy Charter athletic director Ben Brous
said. "And that's the big issue, because this blanket statement worries
our school."
Measures to prevent violence
in schools fall short, experts say
By Mary Niederberger,
Rich Lord and Joe Smydo / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette April 10, 2014 11:45 PM
Teaching students alternatives
to violence and improving their access to mental health services are among the
best ideas officials say they have for preventing the kind of bloodshed that
has struck a long list of schools, including Franklin Regional
High School . But they say progress on arresting school
violence nationwide has been hamstrung by a lack of funding, deployment of
school-safety programs that haven't worked and a failure to properly train
school staff and students. "We're
15 years after Columbine, and you'd have thought we would have solved that
problem," said John Matthews, executive director of the Texas-based
Community Safety Institute, referring to the 1999 rampage at a Colorado high school in
which seniors Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold fatally shot 12 students and a
teacher and injured about 20 others before committing suicide. A new Vanderbilt University
study suggests that teaching younger students conflict-resolution skills -- to
think before they act -- could be more effective than other techniques for reducing
violence
We Need to Talk About the
Test
A Problem With the
Common Core
New York Times Opinion By ELIZABETH PHILLIPS APRIL 9, 2014
I’D like to tell you
what was wrong with the tests my students took last week, but I can’t.
Pearson’s $32 million contract with New
York State
to design the exams prohibits the state from making the tests public and
imposes a gag order on educators who administer them. So teachers watched hundreds
of thousands of children in grades 3 to 8 sit for between 70 and 180 minutes
per day for three days taking a state English Language Arts exam that does a
poor job of testing reading comprehension, and yet we’re not allowed to point
out what the problems were. This lack of
transparency was one of the driving forces that led the teachers at my school
to call for a protest rally the day after the test, a rally that attracted
hundreds of supporters. More than 30 other New York City schools have scheduled their
own demonstrations. I want to be clear:
We were not protesting testing; we were not protesting the Common Core
standards. We were protesting the fact that we had just witnessed children
being asked to answer questions that had little bearing on their reading
ability and yet had huge stakes for students, teachers, principals and schools.
NPE Call for Congressional
Hearings on Testing
Network for Public Education April
10, 2014 NPE Call for Hearings
On March 2, 2014, The
Network for Public Education issued a call for congressional hearings on the
overuse and misuse of testing in our public schools.
Together, we have managed to catch the attention of members of Congress.
We created a Twitter Storm that sent out over 20K tweets and reached 400K
people via social media while trending #1. We flooded the offices of Congress
with phone calls from concerned constituents. We continue to bring attention to
the plague of over-testing and the media has taken notice!
For the next part of our
campaign, we are asking our Friends & Allies to print out and mail a copy
of this
letter to the offices of our friends at Institute for America ’s Future in Washington D.C. .
In the coming weeks, we will hand deliver our letters to Congress. Keep an eye
out for details!
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. Just added -- 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. On day two, participants will
start with a breakfast at the Harrisburg Hilton and then hit the ground running
with visits to legislative offices in the State Capitol. Space 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
Pennsylvania Governor's
School for the Agricultural Sciences
Deadline to Apply: April 25, 2014
When: July 13 to August 9, 2014 Penn State
University
PGSAS provides a broad
overview of the diverse fields of agriculture and natural resources. Interested
high school students and their parents should review this website to learn more
about requirements and the application process.
Pennsylvania Governor’s
School for Engineering and Technology
Application must be
postmarked by April 18, 2014.
July 20, 2014 - August
2, 2014 Lehigh University | Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
The Pennsylvania
Governor’s School for Engineering and Technology (PGSE&T) is a two-week
summer residential program for talented high school students of science and
mathematics. Sponsored by the Pennsylvania Department of Education and hosted
by the P.C. Rossin College of Engineering and Applied Science at Lehigh University,
PGSE&T offers an enrichment experience in science, technology, engineering
and mathematics (STEM) and emphasizes cooperative learning and hands-on
laboratory experiences.
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.