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PA Ed Policy Roundup for
September 8, 2014:
Delco Times
Editorial: Get to work on fair education system in Pa.
BASIC EDUCATION FUNDING COMMISSION MEETING
Tuesday, September 9, 2014 10:00 AM
(public hearing on education economics and basic education funding)
Parkland School District Administrative Bldg. 1210 Springhouse Rd.
Allentown, PA
Concerned with adequate, equitable,
predictable, sustainable #paedfunding?
Follow new @PACircuitRider and @CircuitRiderSE accounts on
twitter
Delco Times Editorial:
Get to work on fair education system in Pa.
POSTED: 09/06/14, 9:40 PM EDT
All across Delaware County
and the rest of the state, students this week packed away the flip-flops and
cutoffs, picked up their backpacks, and made the long, slow slog back to
school.
Summer is over.
It’s something they share with the
folks we send to represent us in Harrisburg .
The members of the House and Senate likewise will stop working on their tans
and converge on the Capitol once again this week. Of course, they won’t be
there all that long. Many will soon be back on their home turf, ringing door
bells and shaking hands as they work on their re-election bids.
All members of the state House and
half of the state Senate will be on the November ballot.
Students don’t have that luxury. They
don’t get to vote on whether to go back to school. They do, however, feel the
fallout of many of the decisions that are made in Harrisburg .
Education a key
issue among Pennsylvania
voters
HARRISBURG — Statewide voters rank
education and schools, unemployment and personal finances, government and
politicians, taxes and energy issues and gas prices in descending order as the
top five most important problems facing Pennsylvania. Education and schools lead the lineup by a
wide margin. Twenty-nine percent of respondents say it’s the most important
problem, according to a new poll by Franklin and
Marshall College .
The poll surveyed 520 registered voters between Aug. 18 and Aug. 25 and
has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points. So how does voter sentiment square with what
state lawmakers may try to accomplish during a short month-long pre-election
session starting Sept. 15?
Politics as Usual
By Steve Esack and Laura
Olson,,Call Harrisburg
Bureau September 6, 2014
School funding panel coming to Lehigh Valley
Lawmakers do not return to session
until Sept. 15, but that doesn't mean they are not working.
Some of them will hit the road this
week for hearings.
The Legislature's Basic Education
Funding Commission will travel to Parkland
School District 's Administration Building
for a hearing at 10 a.m. Tuesday.
The commission, co-chaired by Sen.
Pat Browne, R-Lehigh, is trying to devise a new funding formula for public
schools.
Did you catch our weekend posting?
PA Ed Policy Roundup for September 6,
2014:
Corbett's key electoral battleground --
the classroom, not the campaign trail: John L. Micek
Trib Live By Eric
Heyl Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014, 9:00 p.m.
To: Pennsylvania state representatives
To: Pennsylvania state representatives
From: State Elected Official
Schedulers Inc.
Re: Fall House schedule
Dear Lawmakers, Welcome back (almost)!
This communique is to remind you
that the House reconvenes on Sept. 15 for its first voting session since July
2. If you're still at the beach, now's the time to shake the sand out of your
swimming trunks and hightail it back to Harrisburg . Don't worry about being able to quickly get
back into the swing of things after your 10-week summer layoff. Given the
relaxed schedule that's been prepared for you, there will be no swing, just
lackadaisically paced things.
You undoubtedly will be disparaged
for being in session for a mere 12 more days this year. Your most vociferous
critics will take pride in pointing out that averages out to three days a
month, which seems like a ridiculously light workload only because it is.
Read more:http://triblive.com/opinion/ericheyl/6702072-74/lawmakers-schedule-anniversary#ixzz3CertcWhf
Where Pa. gubernatorial
candidates Corbett, Wolf stand as race nears end
Trib Live By Mike Wereschagin
and Melissa Daniels Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014, 9:20 p.m.
The next governor will take office at a precarious but opportune moment forPennsylvania .
The next governor will take office at a precarious but opportune moment for
Republican Gov. Tom Corbett and his
Democratic challenger Tom Wolf sat with Tribune-Review reporters and editors in
recent weeks to talk about their records, their opponents and their plans for
the state. A growing structural deficit,
financial troubles at schools across the state, and Pennsylvania 's
recent credit downgrade by Moody's Analytics make supporters of Wolf, 65, of York take a grim view of
where the state is headed. But
Pennsylvania's economy has added more than 120,000 jobs in the past four years,
and growth in sectors such as energy offer a chance for a rebirth in
manufacturing and technology industries — something for which Corbett, 65, of
Shaler said he has laid the groundwork. With
fewer than 60 days until the election, the Trib matched the candidates' stands
on issues that an August poll by Franklin & Marshall College found most important to voters.
Read more: http://triblive.com/politics/politicalheadlines/6735253-74/corbett-wolf-tax#ixzz3CdDBm0tV
Who are the top
donors to Tom Corbett, Tom Wolf campaigns?: An AP analysis
Penn Live By The Associated
Press on September 07, 2014 at 12:36 PM
Donors to the campaigns of Republican
Gov. Tom Corbett and his Democratic challenger, Tom Wolf, have
given at least $31 million so far. The vast majority of those donations are by
individuals, families, businesses and groups that gave $10,000 or more in cash,
services or goods. Of the $13 million
that Corbett has reported raising in 2013 and 2014, donors who gave at least
$10,000 accounted for two-thirds of that, or $8.8 million, an Associated Press
analysis has found. Of the $18.1 million in donations that Wolf reported over
the same period, the $10,000 club, including himself, accounted for nearly all
of it — $16.6 million. Below is a
breakdown of the donors who have reached the $10,000 mark, based on finance
reports submitted to the state by the two campaigns. The figures are current
through June 9, the latest data the campaigns were required to make available.
The next campaign finance reports are due Sept. 23. The election is Nov. 4.
First day of
school... And, again, Philly educators prepared to do their best
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY SEPTEMBER 8, 2014
Here we go again.
The Philadelphia School District
opens its doors today, and, for the second year in a row, district leaders
admit that resource levels are nowhere near sufficient. Children, they
say, will not get the thorough and efficient education they're promised by
the Pennsylvania Constitution.
Schools this year will, in fact,
have less. Students will again find
overcrowded classrooms and a shortage of guidance
counselors and nurses. Teachers
will again be expected to pay for supplies out of pocket and achieve student
gains, despite minimal supports. Principals
will again find little discretionary funding in their budgets and will now make
due with fewer
school police officers, reduced building maintenance andcuts
to special education.
Nutter to tour
new Philly high school during 'education week'
SOLOMON LEACH, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER LEACHS@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-5903 POSTED: Sunday,
September 7, 2014, 3:01 AM
MAYOR NUTTER will visit one of the
city's new public high schools Monday to mark the start of classes for the
district's roughly 135,000 students. Nutter
and Superintendent William Hite will meet students, parents and teachers at
Learning in New Context, or LINC, on Erie
Avenue near 2nd Street in North
Philadelphia , one of three new schools opening to all students. It
is part of a week-long series of events to mark schools' opening. The new schools are one of the few bright
spots in the beleaguered district, which has suffered numerous cuts due to a
funding crisis.
As Philly school
begins, a year of challenges ahead
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: Sunday, September 7, 2014, 11:11 PM POSTED: Sunday,
September 7, 2014, 11:09 PM
For Philadelphia School
District principals, teachers, and students,
their usual new school year mix of nervousness and exhilaration has been
heightened this fall by a cash-starved financial picture. Still, 130,000 students will show up Monday
for the start of what will be a challenging 2014-15 school year. They're being asked to live through a second
year of extreme austerity that could worsen. The district faces an $81 million
deficit, and unless state lawmakers pass a cigarette tax by early October, more
cuts, including 1,000-plus layoffs, are possible.
"I'm excited - somewhat,"
Keith Arrington Sr., principal of Thurgood Marshall Elementary, said of the
coming school year. "I have some concerns about how it's going to work
out, but I think we can rise to the challenge."
Despite fiscal
woes, Phila. schools push for innovation
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER POSTED: September
5, 2014, 1:08 AM
William R. Hite Jr. finds himself
in an unusual spot: presiding over what is perhaps the gravest fiscal crisis
the Philadelphia School District has ever seen, yet
pushing hard for innovation.
On the superintendent's watch, two
new schools debuted last year. Three more will open Monday - Building 21,
Learning in New Contexts, and the U School - small, personalized places that
focus on projects, rely heavily on technology, and admit all students, not just
the best and brightest. All three were built with outside money. Hite has been accused of building new
programs at the expense of existing, struggling schools. He has been chastised
for championing yet another experiment in a district that has more than its
share of failed experiments.
National forum
focuses on how the arts can improve schools
By Eleanor Chute / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
September 8, 2014 12:00 AM
Antara Cleetus is only 11 years
old, but she already has opinions about arts education.
“It’s just like we learn reading.
We learn math. We learn science. Art is another way to learn more.
“You can be creative. You can
explore. Like writing, it’s a way to express yourself and makes you unique,”
she said. At the Arts Education
Partnership National Forum this week in Pittsburgh ,
Antara, a sixth-grader at Boyce Middle School in Upper St. Clair ,
will receive the group’s Young Artist Award.
The Council of Chief State School Officers, the National Endowment for
the Arts, the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies and the U.S. Department
of Education formed the partnership, based in Washington , D.C. ,
in 1995. It now is part of CCSSO.
Why Don’t More Men Go Into Teaching?
New York Times News Analysis By MOTOKO RICH SEPT. 6, 2014
AS Tommie Leaders, 22, approached
college graduation last spring, his professors told him he would have no
trouble getting hired. “You’re a guy teaching elementary, ” they said.
Mr. Leaders, who earned his
education degree from the University
of Nebraska in June, started teaching
fifth grade last month in Council
Bluffs , Iowa . He is
the only male teacher in the building.
Across the country, teaching is an
overwhelmingly female profession, and in fact has become more so over time.
More than three-quarters of all teachers in kindergarten through high school
are women, according to Education Department data, up from about two-thirds
three decades ago. The disparity is most pronounced in elementary and middle
schools, where more than 80 percent of teachers are women.
Educators, advocates and lawmakers
fight bitterly about tenure, academic standards and the prevalence of testing,
but one thing most sides tend to agree on is the importance of raising the
status of teaching so the profession will attract the best candidates.
"And the Florida School
Boards Association has begun considering motions that would call on the state
to change its testing policies.
According to
the News Press, the association first approved and then tabled two motions
on testing, one that would “compel the state to adopt to adopt a comprehensive
opt-out policy that would allow parents to have their students to be excused
without penalty, from participating in statewide standardized or state-required
assessments” and the other that would “compel the state to bring an immediate
halt to the practices of using statewide standardized or state-required
assessment results for any purpose other than diagnostic purposes."
Testing revolt
brews in Florida as Miami schools chief urges delay in new exams
In Florida , the state where former governor Jeb
Bush (R) pioneered the use of high-stakes standardized tests for school
“accountability” purposes, a testing revolt is unfolding.
Late last month, the Lee County
school board voted to drop all state-mandated tests as an act of “civil
disobedience,” though the
vote was rescinded because of fear that students would suffer the
consequences. Then Miami-Dade County
Public Schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho (who was, incidentally, named
the 2014 National Superintendent of the Year) blasted state testing policy and
called for a delay in administering new high-stakes standardized tests across
the state, saying in
this statement: The state must own
and address over-assessment. Instructional time is too precious to spend it
assessing students on duplicative measures. Assessment of students should serve
the strict purpose of informing instruction, not simply provide a variable into
a teacher’s performance evaluation formula, as is the case of the new
state-mandated, district-designed end-of-course K-12 exams. Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/09/02/4323758/carvalho-common-sense-on-student.html#storylink=cpy
Dozier proposes
'opt out' motion to FL School Board Assoc.
By
Emily Atteberry, eatteberry@news-press.com10:39 a.m. EDT September 6,
2014
Two opt-out motions proposed by Lee
County School Board member Jeanne Dozier at the Florida School Boards
Association meeting Friday initially passed, but was later tabled as educators
expressed concern over wording. Association
members debated Dozier's motion, which called for the state to halt
"high-stakes" consequences and enable parents to legally opt out
their children from testing. The opt out
idea has been gaining steam across the state since Lee school board members
voted 3-2 to opt out of state testing Aug. 27 and then rescinded the vote
Tuesday by a 3-2 vote. Mary Fischer changed her vote after critics said the
decision was made hastily without alternatives to taking state tests.
Please join us for a symposium
on:
“Funding Pennsylvania's
Public Schools: A Look Ahead”
This event is co-sponsored by the
University of Pittsburgh Institute of Politics and the Temple University
Center on Regional
Politics.
When: Friday, October 3, 2014, 8:30 am to 12 pm
Where: Doubletree Hotel Pittsburgh in Green Tree, PA
Session I:
"Forecasting the Fiscal Future of Pennsylvania's Public
Schools"
A panel of legislators and public
officials will respond to a presentation by Penn State Professor William
Hartman and Tim Shrom projecting the fiscal trajectory of Pennsylvania’s 500
school districts over the next five years and by University of Pittsburgh
Professor Maureen McClure discussing the implications for school finance of an
aging tax base.
Session II: "Why Smart
Investments in Public Schools Are Critical to Pennsylvania's Economic
Future"
Following an address by Eva Tansky
Blum, Chairwoman and President of the PNC Foundation, a panel of business
and labor leaders will discuss the importance of public school funding
reform to the competitiveness of regional and state economies.
We look forward to your
participation!
Superintendents,
School Business Managers and School Board Members
Register
for School Funding Campaign Statewide Videoconference Event -- Sept. 30th 7 -
8:45 pm
PSBA Website 9/5/2014
Register Online at: https://www.paiu.org/vcon/vcon_attendreg.php
Join hundreds of school leaders
from every corner of PA who will gather to learn about the statewide coalition
campaigning for a new adequate and equitable public school funding formula. The
video conference event will serve as the kick-off for the education
associations' efforts in support of the Basic Education Funding Campaign. The
event will be held at participating Intermediate Unit sites. Register online
at: www.paiu.org/vcon Sept. 30, 7-8:45 p.m.
- See more at: http://www.psba.org/news-publications/headlines/details.asp?id=8454#sthash.YILpTZi0.dpuf
PSBA Members - Register
to Join the PSBA, PASA, PASBO Listening Tour as BEF Funding Commission begins
work; Monday, Sept. 8th 4-6 pm in Bethlehem
The bipartisan Basic Education Funding Commission established under Act 51 of 2014 has begun a series of hearings across the state, and you’re invited to join the Listening Tour hosted by PSBA, the PA Association of School Administrators (PASA), and the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials (PASBO) as it follows the panel to each location this fall.
The first tour stop will be on Monday, Sept. 8, 2014 from 4-6 p.m., at the Broughal Middle School, 114 W. Morton St, Bethlehem, PA 18015. Click here to register for the free event. Other tour dates will be announced as the BEF Commission finalizes the dates and locations for its hearings. The comments and suggestions from the Listening Tour will be compiled and submitted to the Commission early next year.
The bipartisan Basic Education Funding Commission established under Act 51 of 2014 has begun a series of hearings across the state, and you’re invited to join the Listening Tour hosted by PSBA, the PA Association of School Administrators (PASA), and the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials (PASBO) as it follows the panel to each location this fall.
The first tour stop will be on Monday, Sept. 8, 2014 from 4-6 p.m., at the Broughal Middle School, 114 W. Morton St, Bethlehem, PA 18015. Click here to register for the free event. Other tour dates will be announced as the BEF Commission finalizes the dates and locations for its hearings. The comments and suggestions from the Listening Tour will be compiled and submitted to the Commission early next year.
Back to School
Special Education Boot Camp Saturday, September 20, 2014 8:30 A.M.- 3:00 P.M.
Public Interest Law Center of
Philadelphia
United Way Building 1709 Benjamin
Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, 19103
Join presenters from: Temple University · McAndrews Law
Offices · ARC
PA Education for All
Coalition · Delaware Valley Friends School
PA Dyslexia and Literacy Coalition
Attend workshops on: Early
Intervention · Dyslexia · Discipline · Charter
Schools
Inclusion · Transition
Services
Details and Registration: http://bit.ly/1nSstB7
Education Law
Center Celebrating Education Champions 2014
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 (Oct. 21-24) 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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