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Keystone State Education Coalition
Grassroots Non-Partisan
Public Education Advocacy
PA Ed Policy Roundup for
August 20, 2014:
PDK-Gallup:
majority of public oppose Common Core; have more trust in their local school
board than federal govt when it comes to deciding what students should learn
PA BASIC EDUCATION FUNDING COMMISSION MEETING
(public
hearing on Basic Education Funding in Pennsylvania )
Wednesday, August 20, 2014 10:00 AM Hearing Room 1 North Office Bldg.
Watch live: http://pasenategop.com/
Taney's Mo'ne
Davis on cover of Sports Illustrated
By Michael Feeley |
mfeeley@pennlive.com on August 19, 2014 at 1:05 PM,
updated August 19, 2014 at 3:11 PM
Little League World Series
sensation Mo'ne Davis, who plays for Philadelphia 's
Taney Dragons, will grace the cover of this week's Sports Illustrated. Sports Illustrated explained why:
"Last week, this week, maybe
next week, she's owned the sports conversation," Sports
Illustrated manager editor Chris Stone said. "How often do you
get to say this about a 13-year-old girl? It's the easiest type of story to
identify as a cover story.
The PA Basic Education Funding Commission will meet
on Wednesday, August 20
From PASAnet Update for August 18, 2014
Focus of the meeting will be the current basic education
funding system. Representatives from the PDE and the Senate and House
appropriations committees will offer presentations. In addition, PASA and PASBO
will brief commission members on the composition, demographic trends and
cost-drivers of the basic education system. Created by passage of HB 1738 (now
Act 51 of 2014), the commission is charged with
examining current basic education funding and making recommendations on a new
formula for the distribution of basic education funding. The Commission’s
recommendations must be provided by June 2015.
PDK-Gallup: Obama
losing public support on education issues, new poll finds
Anybody paying attention to the
roiling education reform debate won’t be especially surprised by the results of
a well-regarded
annual poll: Support for President Obama on education issues is waning —
with only 27 percent giving him an A or B — and a majority of the public saying
they oppose the Common Core State Standards and have more trust in their local
school board than in the federal government when it comes to deciding what
students should learn.
Obama and his education secretary,
Arne Duncan, came into office in 2009 with reform agenda that included using
standardized test scores to evaluate educations, promoting common standards
across states and increasing the number of charter schools. According to the
poll, support for Obama in education has fallen every year since 2011.
"A majority of those surveyed, 54
percent, do not think standardized tests are helpful to teachers; many do not
understand how charter schools work, and the number of Americans saying they
are familiar with the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) has skyrocketed in
just one year, with a majority saying they oppose the standards."
NEW PDK/GALLUP POLL
FINDS DECLINING PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN UNCLE SAM’S EDUCATION POLICIES
46TH Annual PDK/Gallup Poll Also
Shows Big Swing On Issue of Higher Common Education Standards
PDK Press Release August 20, 2014
ARLINGTON, Va., Aug. 20, 2014 – The
American public has sharpened its belief that the federal government should not
play a dominant role in public education, with a majority saying they simply do
not support initiatives that they believe were created or promoted by federal
policymakers, a new survey shows. Moreover,
only 27 percent of respondents give President Barack Obama a grade of “A” or
“B” for his performance in support of public schools – down from 41 percent in
2011. A majority of those surveyed, 54 percent, do not think standardized tests
are helpful to teachers; many do not understand how charter schools work, and
the number of Americans saying they are familiar with the Common Core State
Standards (CCSS) has skyrocketed in just one year, with a majority saying they
oppose the standards.
Those and other findings are
contained in the 46th edition of the PDK/Gallup Poll of the
Public’s Attitudes Toward the
Public Schools.
46th Annual
PDK/Gallup Poll of the Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools
Support
Slipping for Common Core, Especially Among Teachers, EdNext Poll Finds
Education Week Curriculum Matters
Blog By Catherine
Gewertz on August 19, 2014 6:11 AM
Results
of a poll released on Tuesday show strong public support for the idea
of shared academic standards, but much weaker support for the standards that
have been put in place by 43 states and the District of Columbia: the Common
Core State Standards. The poll of 5,000
adults, conducted this past spring by Education
Next, a journal published by Stanford
University 's Hoover
Institution, shows that more than two-thirds of adults support the idea of
shared academic standards. But when they were asked about the "common
core" specifically, support dropped by 15 percentage points. "The words 'Common Core' elicits greater
antagonism than does the concept of common standards itself," the report
said.
Stagnant
ACT Scores Show Test-Driven U.S.
School Policies Have Not Improved College Readiness, Even When Measured By
Other Tests
FairTest News Release August 19,
2014
Another year of flat scores on the
ACT, the nation’s most widely administered college admissions exam, provides
further evidence that a decade of test-driven public school policies has not
improved educational quality. Reacting
to ACT scores released today, Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director of the
National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest) said, “Proponents of 'No
Child Left Behind,' 'Race to the Top,' ‘waivers,’ and similar state-level
programs promised that focusing on testing would boost college readiness while
narrowing score gaps between racial groups. The data show a total failure
according to their own measures. Doubling down on unsuccessful policies with
more high-stakes, K-12 testing, as Common Core exam proponents propose, is an
exercise in stubbornness, not meaningful school improvement.” (see http://fairtest.org/common-core-assessments-factsheet)
Stagnant scores and racial gaps
have also been reported on the federal government’s National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP) and the SAT college admissions test.
Testing Resistance
& Reform News: August 13 - 19, 2014
Submitted by fairtest on August 19,
2014 - 1:04pm
Across the U.S. , students
are returning to classrooms where even more time will be devoted to
standardized exam preparation and administration. Over the summer, some
districts developed hundreds of new tests to comply with mandates from federal
and state politicians who are still not listening to their constituents (http://www.naplesnews.com/news/education/collier-must-create-more-than-7...).
Not surprisingly, the escalating testing frenzy is additional motivation for
the nation's growing assessment reform movement.
New ed.
leadership corps deploying statewide to communicate importance of school
funding formula
PSBA website
NEWS RELEASE 8/19/2014
Supported by William Penn Foundation, 11 "Circuit
Riders" to Carry Message to Communities
HARRISBURG (AUGUST 19, 2014) --
Pennsylvania's major education leadership associations have recruited nearly a
dozen veteran educators to serve as "regional circuit riders,"
traveling throughout the state to communicate directly with school districts.
Their mission is to galvanize support for a basic education funding formula as
a means to provide predictability in budgeting and begin to erase disparities
in the way the state supports schools.
"Strong public schools are
critical to a strong economy and the investments our state makes should
strengthen every community," said Jim Buckheit, executive director of the
Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators (PASA).
Five associations -- including
PASA, the Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA), the Pennsylvania
Association of School Business Officials (PASBO), the Pennsylvania Association
of Rural and Small Schools (PARSS), and the Pennsylvania Association of
Intermediate Units (PAIU) -- are spearheading this initiative with support from
the William Penn Foundation.
- See more at: http://www.psba.org/news-publications/headlines/details.asp?id=8365#sthash.NAWFmTcf.dpuf
New research
consortium to focus on Philly's schools in quest for best practices
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY AUGUST 19, 2014
A first-of-its-kind research
partnership that could prove highly influential on Philadelphia 's public schools was announced
Tuesday. The Philadelphia Education Research Consortium
(PERC) – funded by a three-year $900,000 grant from the William Penn Foundation
– will "provide research and analyses on some of the city's most pressing
education issues" for the city's district and charter sectors. The nonprofit Research For Action will act as
the consortium's home base.
"Up until now, any research
that was done in the district was done on a piecemeal basis,
project-by-project," said RFA's executive director Kate Shaw. And it was
often in the interest of "whatever researcher was doing the
research." By contrast, PERC's
researchers will serve at the self-identified needs of the city district and
charter schools.
School district
reserves for more than pensions
Many Pennsylvania school districts have begun to
cannibalize their long-term reserve funds to balance their operating budgets —
a short-term fix that can only lead to more long-term problems. The situation
illustrates further than the state government pays an inadequate share of
public school funding. State law
properly precludes local school districts from hoarding money, and properly
allows districts to keep modest reserves to deal with emergencies, bolster
their credit-worthiness and prepare for known impending expenses.
Some of the funding emergencies are
the result of the state government’s failures. For example, many districts have
begun to use reserve funds to meet their exponentially increasing pension
expenses, which large are the result of the Legislature’s refusal to correct
its own incompetence relative to pension policy. Some districts must use
reserve funds to pay debt costs resulting from new construction, because the
state has imposed long delays on required reimbursements from Harrisburg .
Some lawmakers have noted that the state’s 500 school districts
collectively have $4.3 billion in reserve funds, and that the money should be
used for operations before the state government increases its contributions.
Corbett lauds ‘Pennsylvania Learns' in visit to Garnet Valley
Delco
Times By SUSAN L. SERBIN, Times Correspondent POSTED: 08/19/14,
9:14 PM EDT
Apple to
provide Pa.
educational program
KATHY BOCCELLA, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: Wednesday, August 20, 2014, 3:59 AM POSTED: Wednesday,
August 20, 2014, 12:35 AM
Gov. Corbett announced Tuesday that
Apple Inc. would provide a free online educational resource through iTunes that
features courses and other programs, such as algebra 1, biology, and English
language arts, the core-curriculum subjects that students must pass in order to
graduate from high school. In an
appearance at Concord Elementary School in Garnet
Valley , Corbett called Pennsylvania
Learns on iTunes U a "virtual one-stop shop of high quality information
... all at the fingertips of Pennsylvania
students." "To me, this is a
game-changer," he said before a roomful of students and educators, as well
as acting Education Secretary Carolyn Dumaresq, who witnessed a quick
demonstration of the program.
Delco
Times By SUSAN L. SERBIN, Times
Correspondent POSTED: 08/19/14, 9:20 PM
EDT |
As Gov. Tom Corbett visited the Garnet Valley
School District for the launch of
Pennsylvania Learns on iTunes U, a group of individuals representing Delaware
County Democrats gathered outside Concord
Elementary School . They
maintained that “Corbett continues to mislead voters on failed educational
leadership.” Although in the district to launch a new web-based, free program
called Pennsylvania Learns on iTunes U, Corbett was accused by the group of
refusing to address why former Department of Education Secretary Ron Tomalis
was being paid a $140,000 salary “to do no work.”
the notebook commentary By
Judy Robbins on Aug 19, 2014 12:07 PM
We Philadelphians have a special
kind of love for this old city. It is a love rooted in family, food,
neighborhoods, and, yes, our schools. As a “lifer” in the Philadelphia School
District , from 1999 to 2012, I have a vested
interest in its future. Over the last
two years, I’ve observed the District’s budget crisis from the comfort of my
computer screen in my dorm room at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill . But this past May I traveled 400 miles back home and took
action alongside hundreds of other Philadelphians who refuse to accept the
meager hand being dealt to Philly students.
The sounds of young, hopeful voices echoed through municipal halls during
City Council sessions this spring. Philly’s children understand that the state
is depriving them of a high-quality education and they are eager to do their
part.
Federal
prosecutors in Trombetta case seek to keep documents secret
TribLive By Jason
Cato Monday, Aug. 18, 2014, 4:03 p.m.
Federal prosecutors on Monday asked a judge for permission to keep their response secret from the public over claims that they recorded conversations between a former cyber school head and his attorneys. The U.S. Attorney's office inPittsburgh last year
charged PA Cyber founder Nicholas Trombetta with 11 counts of mail fraud,
bribery, tax conspiracy and filing false tax returns related to accusations he
siphoned at least $1 million in tax dollars paid to the online school. No trial
date has been scheduled.
Federal prosecutors on Monday asked a judge for permission to keep their response secret from the public over claims that they recorded conversations between a former cyber school head and his attorneys. The U.S. Attorney's office in
State Open
Records Chief Says E-mail a Blind Spot in PA Transparency Laws
WESA Pittsburgh NPR By MARY WILSON AUGUST 18, 2014
The head of Pennsylvania 's Office of Open Records says
state transparency laws are out of step with modern communication technology
and are long overdue for an update. The
call to action comes after Gov. Tom Corbett shared his own technique for
evading certain record requests from the public. Corbett recently told reporters that he tries
to avoid using e-mail, and deletes his e-mails about once a week. Otherwise, he
said, reporters would be able to see e-mails requested under the state's
Right-to-Know law. The law is enforced
by the state's Office of Open Records. Executive Director Terry Mutchler said
retention policies probably require such messages to be kept for more than a
week. On average, she said, public records must be kept for one to three years.
“The scale of recent funding cuts in Philadelphia and other
low-income districts has been unprecedented. Since 2011 Philadelphia has experienced a $294 million
drop in state school funding. Philadelphia educates 12 percent of
Pennsylvania’s school students but experienced 35-percent of statewide school
funding cuts,” read a portion of that report’s executive summary."
Gov. Corbett’s
education, budget plans criticized in reports
PhillyTrib Written by Damon C.
Williams August 15, 2014
The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy
Center (PBPC) has released a pair of reports critical of Gov. Tom Corbett’s
budget forecasts and school funding efforts.
One study evaluates how states come
up with revenue estimates for their annual budgets. Pennsylvania scored a two on a scale of one
to five due to its failure to employ basic best practices that create strong,
reliable revenue estimates to guide state spending, the report said.
Thirty-eight other states and the District of Columbia scored higher than Pennsylvania , only five states scored lower.
Six states scored the same. While the first report deals more with technical
changes the Corbett administration could make in better calculating budget
forecasts, the second report called Corbett to task for his part in the ongoing
saga of public education funding.
Post-Gazette Letter to the Editor
by STATE REP. JAMES ROEBUCK August 19, 2014
The writer, Democratic chairman
of the House Education Committee, represents the 188th Legislative District A recent letter to the editor questioned the need for
adequate school funding in Philadelphia
and recycled anti-worker talking points (“Philadelphia Schools,” Aug. 11).
The root of the problem in Philadelphia is the same as the main cause of school
property tax hikes in Allegheny
County : Gov. Tom
Corbett’s roughly $3 billion in K-12 education cuts over four years. To make
matters worse, those cuts have had a higher percentage impact in lower-income
school districts. Philadelphia teachers have already made
concessions and done their part. The city of Philadelphia has also done its part by
significantly increasing local funding for the schools in recent years. The current controversy does not even center
around state funding — Philadelphians are simply seeking the authority to tax
ourselves. The question is whether the state will allow Philadelphia to raise more local revenue
through an increase in the cigarette tax in our one county only, to plug an $81
million hole in an already inadequate school budget. Allowing this local
self-help is the very least the state can do.
Saucon Valley
board, teachers to meet ahead of strike deadline
By Sara K.
Satullo | The Express-Times on August 19, 2014 at 6:24 PM
Saucon
Valley teachers have set a Thursday deadline for the school
board to approve
their final contract offer to avoid a likely strike, but it seems the
two sides might return to the table.
District solicitor
Jeffrey Sultanik said the school board will meet with the union Sunday at the
request of union chief negotiator Rick Simononis. But that doesn't mean the
school board has accepted the union's latest offer, he said.
New Pennsylvania Voter
Registration Mail Application http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_160329_770861_0_0_18/OnlineVoterRegFormBlank.pdf
On September 17, 2014 the Education
Law Center will hold its annual event at the Crystal Tea Room in the Wanamaker
Building to celebrate Pennsylvania’s Education Champions. This year, the event
will honor William P. Fedullo, Chancellor of the Philadelphia Bar Association;
Dr. Joan Duvall-Flynn, Education Committee Chair for the Pennsylvania State
Conference of NAACP Branches; and the Stoneleigh Foundation, a Philadelphia
regional leader on at-risk youth issues.
Pennsylvania Arts Education
Network 2014 Arts and Education Symposium
The 2014 Arts and Education Symposium will be
held on Thursday, October 2 at the State Museum
of Pennsylvania in Harrisburg, PA. Join us for a daylong convening of
arts education policy leaders and practitioners for lively discussions about
the latest news from the field.
The Symposium registration fee is $45 per person.
To register, click
here or follow the prompts at the bottom of the page. The Symposium will include the following:
Register Now – 2014 PAESSP State
Conference – October 19-21, 2014
Please join us for the 2014 PAESSP State Conference, “PRINCIPAL
EFFECTIVENESS: Leading Schools in a New Age of Accountability,” to be
held October 19-21 at the Sheraton Station Square Hotel, Pittsburgh , Pa.
Featuring Keynote Speakers: Alan November, Michael Fullan &
Dr. Ray Jorgensen
This year’s conference will provided PIL Act 45 hours,
numerous workshops, exhibits, multiple resources and an opportunity to network
with fellow principals from across the state.
PASA-PSBA School Leadership
Conference registration forms now available online
PSBA Website
PSBA Website
Make plans today to attend the most talked about education
conference of the year. This year's PASA-PSBA
School Leadership Conference promises to be one of the best with new
ideas, innovations, networking opportunities and dynamic speakers. More details
are being added every day. Online registration will be available in the
next few weeks. If you just can't wait, registration
forms are available online now. Other important links are available
with more details on:
·
Hotel
registration (reservation deadline extended to Sept. 26)
·
Educational
Publications Contest (deadline Aug. 6)
·
Student
Celebration Showcase (deadline Sept. 19)
·
Poster
and Essay Contest (deadline Sept. 19)
Slate of candidates for PSBA
offices now available online -- bios/videos now live
PSBA Website August 5, 2014
PSBA Website August 5, 2014
The slate of candidates for 2015 PSBA officer and at-large
representatives is now available online.
Photos, bios and videos also have been posted for each candidate.
According to recent PSBA Bylaws changes, each member school entity casts one vote
per office. Voting will again take place online through a secure, third-party
website -- Simply Voting. Voting will openSept. 9 and closes Oct.
6. One person from the school entity (usually the board secretary) is
authorized to cast the vote on behalf of the member school entity and each
board will need to put on its agenda discussion and voting at one of its
meetings in September. Each person authorized to cast the school entity's votes
will be receiving an email in the coming weeks to verify the email address and
confirm they are the person to cast the vote on behalf of their school
entity.
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