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,
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These daily emails are archived and
searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
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Keystone State Education Coalition
Here's a school choice: markets
do not ensure equity, social justice, civic engagement, and opportunity for
all.
Blogger's note - Stark contrasts in the news today: Philly
underfunding; suburban districts passing budgets; New Orleans closing last
public school for a system of separate and unequal charters…..
"On the one hand, proponents of school choice would be
thrilled – a major American city leads the way. In the eyes of national
educational reformers, Philadelphia
would now be their neoliberal poster child posed in front of Independence Hall.
Most parents would be satisfied, although their children might not always be
able to attend their first-choice schools. But regardless, individual
preference would be the hallmark, and the books would be balanced. On the other hand, we are all citizens of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania , which should remind us
that we are “people united by common interest.” Because it is perceived to be
in the people’s interest, the Commonwealth requires that all its children be
educated at public expense. In Philadelphia
that common interest has long meant support for a single public school system, with a robust parochial and
independent school network as an option.
The city’s public schools have accepted all children
regardless of race, ethnicity, religious belief, socio-economic status, special
need or spoken language. And the School
District of Philadelphia
has served a common purpose as reflected in its common curriculum and
standards. A strong public school system has been considered in our common
interest.
Which should suggest a caution: As our public schools slide
inexorably into a new form of organization, we need to keep in mind that
markets do not ensure equity, social justice, civic engagement, and opportunity
for all."
Philly Takeover or
turnaround? The School District 's prospects
the notebook by James H.
Lytle on May 29 2014 Posted in Commentary
James H. Lytle is Practice Professor of Educational
Leadership at the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education, a former
District administrator, and a former superintendent in Trenton.
One of the undercurrents floating among parents and teachers is
that the School District ’s financial crisis
has been created by elected officials and their allies in order to “charterize”
and privatize the entire District. Would
this strategy be an answer to the budget problem? Charter schools can be
significantly cheaper to operate than District schools, and demand from parents
is high and growing. Were the District to become, essentially, a system of
charter schools, with the School Reform Commission as authorizer, then perhaps
we might have both a balanced budget and happy parents. It may at first sound far-fetched or
overblown, it may not. But it’s a scenario that’s looking like the SRC’s only
practicable option other than bankruptcy. Because without substantial funding
increases, the School District, as is, cannot be sustained.
Here's over a billion dollars in funding
that the state has simply stopped paying and pushed down to local taxpayers…
Corbett budget skips school
construction $$ for the 3rd year: Thursday Morning Coffee
By John L. Micek |
jmicek@pennlive.com on May 29, 2014 at 8:58 AM, updated May 29,
2014 at 10:09 AM
Good Thursday Morning, Fellow Seekers. We may be writing these words within eyeshot
of the tranquil waters of the Gulf of Mexico, but we still have our focus
keenly trained on goings-on in the Keystone
State . Thus do we bring you news this morning that,
for the third year in a row, school districts looking to fix leaky roofs and
other crumbling infrastructure will have to do it on the backs of local
taxpayers. That's because
the Corbett administration's budget proposal for the fiscal year that
begins July 1 continues a moratorium on funding new projects, our friends
at The Tribune-Review report this morning. The administration cut funding for new
building applications in 2012, stalling 354 projects in various stages of
completion or capital planning. At least 200 have since been financed -- some
even finished -- with the expectation of state reimbursement that still hasn't
come, the newspaper reports.
Passing Pa. 's standardized test to graduate from
high school derided as 'unfunded mandate'
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN
MCCORRY MAY 28, 2014
State Sen. Andrew Dinniman, (D-Chester
County ), introduced legislation in Harrisburg Wednesday that would exempt Pennsylvania high school students from
having to pass standardized tests to graduate.
Starting with the class of 2017, Pennsylvania
law dictates that students must show proficiency on Keystone standardized tests
in Algebra I, Biology and Language Arts before earning diplomas. Dinniman said recent state cuts to classroom
education budgets make this requirement an "unfunded mandate" that
will simply "stamp failure" on many students coming from impoverished
school districts. Dinniman's proposal,
S.B. 1382, would leave graduation requirements up to individual districts.
"With a new superintendent and high school principal,
the district has worked hard to promote itself as the "New" Chester Upland
with stronger academics and less violence.
The effort has paid off, officials said, with a 900-student
bump in enrollment this year.
The district is betting on even more students signing up
next year, which is why its anticipated charter-school payment is $6 million
less than this year."
KATHY BOCCELLA, INQUIRER
STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Friday, May 30, 2014, 1:08 AM POSTED: Thursday,
May 29, 2014, 8:03 PM
http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20140530_Chester_school_district_s_deficit_may_be_shrinking.html#I8RbzZXkpGFbxeEL.99
SRC refuses to pass
budget with 'unacceptable' cuts
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER
STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Friday, May 30, 2014, 1:08 AM POSTED: Thursday, May 29, 2014, 10:12 PM
Taking an unexpected, unprecedented stand, the School Reform
Commission refused Thursday night to pass a 2014-15 budget. Its officials said
they would deliberately violate the City Charter by not approving a spending
plan. A visibly frustrated
Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. said he could not recommend the $2.4 billion
budget "as educationally sound or economically prudent for the city or
state." "Our severely
under-resourced school system threatens the future of one of America 's
greatest cities," Hite said. He said the district needed $216 million more
just to get to this year's service levels, which he called inadequate, and $440
million more from the city, state, and labor unions to open schools in decent
shape.
http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20140530_SRC_refuses_to_pass_budget_with__unacceptable__cuts.html#j5I3mcK8Yz7LmD9t.99
"Michael Churchill of the Public Interest Law Center of
Philadelphia urged the SRC to invite Gov. Corbett to come to an SRC meeting to
hear how city students have so much less spent on them than students in
surrounding, wealthier districts.
Ask him, Churchill urged, "why this is OK."
SRC won't adopt 'Doomsday II'
budget
the notebook by Dale
Mezzacappa on May 29 2014
Posted in Latest news
[Updated 11:30 p.m.] The School Reform Commission declined Thursday
to adopt a budget proposal that would raise class sizes as high as 41, cut 800
teachers, reduce special education services to their bare minimum, prevent
all but the most basic building maintenance, and make further cuts
in services like counselors and nurses.
The SRC made the decision even though failing to adopt a
budget before the end of May violates the city charter. "Rather than adopting a 'Doomsday
II' budget – and give anyone the impression that the cuts it contains are
feasible or acceptable – we are going to not act on the budget tonight," announced SRC Chairman Bill Green. "Instead,
we will continue to focus our energy and attention on securing the needed
funding for our schools."
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN
MCCORRY MAY 29, 2014
After receiving a devastatingly bleak portrait of the
potentially necessary cuts to the Philadelphia
School District 's bottom
line, the School Reform Commission defied the city charter Thursday night by
refusing to adopt a budget for fiscal year 2015. The district currently faces a $440
million budget shortfall. It needs $216 million in additional revenue merely to
open schools next year with this year's bare-bones, "doomsday" level
of services. The additional $224 million
would help the district implement Superintendent William Hite's vision for
system-wide growth.
The district currently cannot count on any of this funding.
"As a manager, I have to present a budget, but as an
educator, I do not support this proposed budget," an emotional Hite said.
"Until there is more certainty around revenue from the state and the city
[I am recommending] that the SRC do not take action on this budget." The SRC backed the move, which drew a
standing ovation from parents, students and education advocates who packed the
auditorium at the district's headquarters on North Broad Street ."
SRC eschews 'doomsday'
vote
SOLOMON LEACH, DAILY
NEWS STAFF WRITER LEACHS@PHILLYNEWS.COM,
215-854-5903 POSTED: Friday, May 30, 2014, 12:16 AM
I N AN unprecedented move, the School Reform Commission opted
yesterday not to vote on a proposed "doomsday" budget that would have
required more than 1,000 layoffs, significantly increased class sizes, reduced
school police and special-education services.
Under the city charter, the school district is required to adopt a
budget by May 30. Superintendent William Hite said the district needs a clearer
answer from city and state lawmakers on the district's request for an
additional $216 million before it can come up with a realistic spending plan.
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20140530_SRC_eschews__doomsday__vote.html#OJy5IhJdRp7Sqy6u.99
Divided Radnor Township
School Board adopts $85.9
million budget
By Linda Stein lstein@mainlinemedianews.com
Published: Wednesday, May 28, 2014
In a 5-4 vote along party lines, the Radnor Township School
Board Tuesday adopted an $85.9 million budget for the 2014-2015 school year. The budget, which does not raise real estate
taxes, includes funding for full day kindergarten and requires no program cuts.
The millage rate was kept at 21.7122 mills. The board also appropriated
$1,062,922 from the fund balance [savings] toward the district’s share of the
employee retirement contribution. Also, $217,140 was earmarked for the student
iPad program at Radnor
High School .
"As in years past, it is the jump in contributions to
the state Public School Employees’ Retirement System that is the biggest
attention-grabber. That total is pegged at $6.9 million for the next fiscal
year, for an increase of 26.4 percent over 2013-14."
Wallingford-Swarthmore
approves budget
Delco Times By NEIL A. SHEEHAN, Times Correspondent POSTED: 05/29/14,
10:40 PM EDT |
NETHER PROVIDENCE — With more than a month to spare before the
deadline, the Wallingford-Swarthmore School Board has already given the final
thumbs-up to the district’s budget for fiscal year 2014-15. There were no comments from anyone on the
board or members of the public prior to the 7-1 vote in favor of the $71.3 million
spending plan on Monday night. Board member Richard Sonntag was absent while
Vincent Marriott participated by phone.
Robert Reiger cast the only “no” vote, but did not offer an
explanation for that decision.
Property owners will see their school taxes rise by 2.1 percent
under the budget. That will translate into a hike of $149 for a property
assessed at the district average assessed value of about $178,000, for a total
of $7,215.
"O’Donnell noted the major increases in the budget are
retirement and health care, which combined have raised about 25 percent. He
cited the Public School Employees’ Retirement System, which has hiked from 16.9
percent to 21.4 percent."
Rose Tree Media OKs 1.9
percent tax spike
Delco Times by LESLIE KROWCHENKO POSTED: 05/29/14, 10:42 PM
EDT |
In New Orleans , major school district closes
traditional public schools for good
With the start of the next school year, the Recovery School District
will be the first in the country made up completely of public charter schools,
a milestone for New Orleans
and a grand experiment in urban education for the nation.
Education Week District
Dossier Blog By on May 29, 2014 10:18 AM
Nine years after Louisiana education officials swept most of New Orleans ' chronically under-performing schools into a
state-controlled district after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the last
handful of non-charter, "traditional" schools run by the Recovery School District have been closed for
good. As reported
this morning by the Washington Post's Lyndsey Layton, and reported
many months ago by the Times-Picayune, the Recovery School District—which
at one time operated nearly 35 schools—has converted fully to an all-charter
school system. The last five schools the RSD operated directly will not reopen
again in September. Hundreds of RSD teachers and other employees will lose
their jobs as the district evolves to manage issues such as citywide truancy,
special education, and the common application system for charter schools.
It's a breathtaking
makeover of an urban school system that, before the hurricane, had 120 schools
and 60,000 students run by an elected school board that was bedeviled by
mismanagement and corruption.
"Formula for success: close public schools. Open
charter schools. Fire veteran teachers. Replace them with TFA. Spend billions
to refurbish buildings. This is the same formula that is being imported to
urban districts across the nation. Is it sustainable? Did it really “work” or
is this a manufactured success, bolstered by billions from the Waltons and
other philanthropists who favor privatization?"
Diane Ravitch's Blog By dianeravitch May 29, 2014 //
Lyndsey Layton of the
Washington Post describes the triumph of the reform movement in New Orleans : The last public school has
closed for good. A few observations.
All schools in New Orleans are now
charter schools. It’s hard to compare
achievement pre-and post-Katrina because so many students never returned after
the hurricane. Test scores are up, graduation rates are up, but populations are
different. “By most indicators, school quality and academic progress have
improved in Katrina’s aftermath, although it’s difficult to make direct
comparisons because the student population changed drastically after the
hurricane, with thousands of students not returning.
New York Times By MOTOKO RICH MAY 29, 2014
Opposition to the Common Core, a set of reading and math
standards for elementary, middle and high school students that were originally
adopted by 46 states and the District of Columbia, has gathered momentum among
state lawmakers in recent weeks. The
governors of Oklahoma and South Carolina are considering signing bills
to repeal the standards and replace them with locally written versions. In Missouri , lawmakers
passed a bill that would require a committee of state educators to come up with
new standards within the next two years.
Although the Common Core, developed by a coalition convened by the
National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers,
was initially backed by a group of Republican governors, the Obama
administration also lent its support. For the past year, conservative Republicans,
seizing on the administration’s backing, have argued that the standards amount
to a federal takeover of public schools.
"We support higher standards and rigor in the
classroom, but every day, concern among parents is growing over Common Core.
The feds are taking over and rushing this. Let's face it: centralized planning
didn't work in Russia ,
it's not working with our health care system and it won't work in education.
Education is best left to local control," said Jindal through a written
statement."
Bobby Jindal accused of
playing 'presidential politics' with Common Core
By Julia O'Donoghue,
NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune on May 22, 2014 at 6:30 AM,
After weeks of ratcheting up the anti-Common Core rhetoric,
Gov. Bobby
Jindal issued some of his most blistering remarks on the academic
standards yet Wednesday night (May 21).
"We support higher standards and rigor in the classroom,
but every day, concern among parents is growing over Common Core. The feds are
taking over and rushing this. Let's face it: centralized planning didn't work
in Russia ,
it's not working with our health care system and it won't work in education.
Education is best left to local control," said Jindal through a written
statement.
The governor was responding
to a letter sent by 33 state lawmakers urging him to block the use of
a Common Core-associated test. He had made similar declarations in a USA TODAY opinion
piece last month, but his comments regarding the local Louisiana dispute over
Common Core are usually more
measured.
2014 CONFERENCE ON THE STATE OF EDUCATION IN PENNSYLVANIA
60 YEARS AFTER BROWN HOW ARE THE CHILDREN? WHAT ARE THE
ISSUES?
Saturday, May 31, 2014 - 9:00 AM
– 3:00 PM (8:30 Registration)
MARCUS FOSTER STUDENT UNION 2ND
FLR. CHEYNEY UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, DE Co. Campus
Keynote
Speaker: Dan Hardy – Retired Reporter -Philadelphia Inquirer
Distressed Schools: How Did it
Come to This?
PANELS:
- The State of Education in Pennsylvania 60
Years after Brown
- Keystones and Graduation: Cut the
Connection
- How Harrisburg Cut District Funding,
Poured on the Keystones, and Connected them to Graduation
- Financing Our Schools: What Does it Cost
to Educate a Child in 2014 and How Should We Fund It?
- Effective Advocacy – How to be
Heard in Harrisburg - And - What We Need to be Saying
For
more info and registration: http://www.naacpmediabranch.org/#
Education
Policy and Leadership Center
Click
here to read more about EPLC’s Education Policy Fellowship Program, including:
2014-15 Schedule 2014-15 Application Past Speakers Program Alumni And More
Information
PCCY invites you to get on
the School Spirit Bus to Harrisburg on Tuesday June 10th for Fair and Full
School Funding!
Public Citizens for Children and Youth
On Tuesday June 10th, Public Citizens for Children
and Youth (PCCY) will be going to Harrisburg. Join committed parents,
leaders, and community members from around state to make it clear to Harrisburg
that PA students need fair and full funding now! We are providing free
transportation to and from Harrisburg as well as lunch. Please
arrive at the United
Way Building
located at 1709 Benjamin Franklin
Parkway no later than8:15am. The bus will
depart at 8:30am sharp! Reserve your seat today by emailing us
at info@pccy.org or
calling us at 215-563-5848
x11. You can download and share our flyer by clicking here. We hope to see you there!
Pennsylvania Education Summit
Wednesday, June 11, 2014 from 9:00 AM to 3:30 PM (EDT) Camp Hill, PA
PA Business-Education Partnership
Featuring:
Welcome By Governor Tom Corbett (invited)
Remarks Acting Secretary of Education Carolyn Dumaresq
(confirmed)
Perceptions & comments of business leaders, educators,
college presidents, and advocacy groups
Full agenda here: http://www.bipac.net/pbc/2014-PA-Education-Summit-Agenda.pdf
Registration: http://www.eventbrite.com/e/pennsylvania-education-summit-tickets-11529363637?aff=eorgf
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.