Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 3500 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors,
administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's
staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Superintendents, PTO/PTA
officers, parent advocates, teacher leaders, business 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, Twitter and LinkedIn
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?
The Keystone State Education Coalition is an endorsing member of The Campaign for Fair Education Funding
PA Ed Policy Roundup for October
23, 2014:
"The state's decision in 2011 to stop reimbursing
the School District for a portion of Charter
School tuition has cost
the District at least $100 million a year."
ADVOCACY: Great seeing so many of you at
PSBA/PASA School Leadership Conference this week in Hershey! If you have not already done so, grab a
couple colleagues and be sure to signup as a PSBA Advocate at the PSBA booth in
the Aztec lobby next to the conference registration desk.
FYI, video has not been posted yet for this
hearing or the prior hearing held on October 16th in Perkiomen Valley
Basic Education Funding
Commission Public Hearing
Enrollment Changes and School
Funding Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Agenda and links to testimony
from Pittsburgh
hearing on October 21st
WHYY Newsworks: Tom Wolf on
education, uncut: Vote trading, increasing investment, and disbanding the SRC
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN
MCCORRY OCTOBER 22, 2014 LISTEN
WHYY Newsworks: Listen: 7 minutes
with Gov. Corbett on education spending and competing priorities
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN
MCCORRY OCTOBER 15, 2014
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett came to WHYY studios Friday to
answer a wide array of questions from various reporters during an hourlong
visit. Aside from NewsWorks Tonight host
Dave Heller's interview, the conversations weren't intended to be broadcast
in their entirety.
But upon reviewing the tape – considering the importance of
education as an issue in this election – I decided to post my full, unedited
seven-minute conversation with Corbett, who is seeking re-election to a second
term. Some of what the Republican incumbent
says will become content for analysis pieces in the coming weeks, as well as
for our hourlong election special hosted by senior reporter Dave Davies. That's
slated to air at the end of the month.
Tune in Thursday 1:00 pm for
live coverage of Tom Wolf interview
Editorial board members from several Digital First Media
Pennsylvania news organizations will interview Democratic gubernatorial
candidate Tom Wolf at the York Daily Record offices 1 p.m. Thursday. Bookmark this article to view a video feed
and live coverage of that session.
Readers will be able to comment on the interview as part of our
live coverage.
Mapping the data: Corbett is
nation's highest-paid governor
Money doesn’t buy you everything. Because if it did Tom
Corbett, the country’s highest-paid governor,
would not be trailing his challenger by double digits. A salary report, based on new data compiled by the nonpartisan Council of State
Governments and shared with The Washington Post, reveals Corbett
gets paid more than any other top executive in the nation. Corbett earns an annual salary of $187,818,
though 1.7 percent of the total is being repaid as part of a statewide
management pay freeze.
"The [state's] decision in 2011 to
stop reimbursing the School District for a portion of Charter School
tuition has cost the [District] at least $100 million a year."
Some insights from Philly controller's
latest report on charters
the notebook By Dale Mezzacappa on Oct 22, 2014 10:51 PM
Philadelphia City Controller Alan Butkovitz has been studying
charters in Philadelphia for a while now,
looking into fraud and keeping tabs on the quality of School District oversight.
In his latest report, released Tuesday, he concludes that the
way charters are funded is crippling the District's finances.
The Butkovitz report mostly goes over well-trod territory, but
he comes up with a few facts and figures worth drawing attention to:
- Since 1999, the overall number of students attending publicly
funded Philadelphia
schools has stayed about steady at 202,000, only now, one-third of them attend
charters.
- "In 2013, while the [District] faced a deficit in the
$70 million range, the Charter Schools posted an aggregate positive fund
balance of $117 million."
- "The [state's] decision in 2011 to stop reimbursing the
School District for a portion of Charter School tuition has cost the [District]
at least $100 million a year."
- "Minimal resources have been devoted to charter school
accountability." The report notes that the 87 charter schools are overseen
by a staff of six with an annual budget of less than $1 million. Only three
charters have been revoked in 14 years, "despite reports of waste, fraud,
abuse and poor performance," while dozens of District schools have been
closed.
- Charter schools spent a much higher proportion on
administration vs. instruction than the District, and much less per student on
special education.
- Low-incidence special education students, the most expensive
to educate, make up 5 percent of the population in traditional public schools.
That's twice as high a percentage as is found in charter schools.
Butkovitz recommends that the charter funding formula be
overhauled to reflect "student need and actual costs, and must adjust for
demographic differences between charter and traditional public schools. He says
that "particular attention must be paid to how special education is
funded."
By Dale Mezzacappa on Oct 22, 2014 07:17 PM
Lawyers for the School District and the Philadelphia Federation
of Teachers traveled to Harrisburg
on Monday for one of the legal skirmishes in the battle over whether the School
Reform Commission has the power to nullify the union's labor contract and
unilaterally change health benefits. The
session in Commonwealth Court
before President Judge Dan Pellegrini was scheduled to start at
9:30 and lasted until 11 a.m. As of 7 p.m., there had been no ruling.
The judge heard arguments over whether the case should remain
in Commonweath Court
or be heard in Common Pleas Court ,
as the PFT says is required by labor law. The District filed the original
motion in Commonwealth Court .
The PFT has already won a decision in local Common Pleas Court , temporarily blocking
the health care benefits changes and ordering expedited arbitration in the
dispute.
28th senatorial district candidates
Scott Wagner and Linda Small put their differences on display
By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com on October 22, 2014
at 4:43 PM, updated October 22, 2014 at 7:14 PM
Candidates vying for the state Senate seat representing the
central portion of York
County put their
differences on display before an audience of York Rotarians on Wednesday. They showed they differ on what should be
done about public employee pension plans, on an extraction tax on gas drillers,
and on impact of unions, particularly the Pennsylvania State Education
Association, in state policy-making. They
also distinguished themselves from each other in how they would approach the
job of being the senator of the 28th District.
New Report Outlines Potential
Savings for PA Taxpayers through Investment in Pre-K
PR Newswire Published: Oct 20, 2014 3:08 p.m. ET
Pre-K for PA Analysis Looks at Long-term Cost
Savings Generated from Reduced Grade Repetition and Special Education Needs
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
-- Pennsylvania stands to reap significant benefits in the form of reduced
costs to taxpayers and the state budget as a result of expanded access to
pre-kindergarten programs for the commonwealth's 3- and 4-year-olds. That's
according to new research released byPre-K for PA and
conducted by The Economy League of Greater Philadelphia. The report outlines how investment in
high-quality pre-k benefits K-12 school systems by reducing the need for
special education programs and grade repetition, and producing fewer behavioral
problems in school. Pennsylvania
schools currently spend a significant amount of time and money helping children
catch up who arrive for kindergarten unprepared – both academically and
socially.
ACT tests for 182 high school
students disappear
SUSAN SNYDER, INQUIRER
STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Thursday, October 23, 2014, 1:08 AM POSTED: Wednesday,
October 22, 2014, 1:27 PM
On Sept. 13 at Upper
Darby High School ,
182 students took the ACT college readiness exam, then began anxiously awaiting
their scores. They're still waiting.
ACT Inc. confirmed on Wednesday that the students' test sheets
are missing and that it has been unable to find them, despite searching for two
weeks. "It's these kids' worst
nightmare," said Bari Krein, whose daughter, a senior at Lower Merion High
School, came to her at 4 a.m. worried about how the lost tests would affect her
college search, she added. ACT is
continuing to look for the tests, said Ed Colby, a spokesman for the Iowa-based
standardized exam - a counterpart to the SAT, which is more widely used in the Philadelphia region.
I often ask, half in jest, how much of high school biology
do you remember? Then
how important was it? Do you know the answer to this sample Keystone
Biology exam question: which characteristic is common to prokaryotes &
eukaryotes? If not, why do we now require every high
school student to know this?
“If you don’t know
where you’re going, any road will get you there.”
School Board Blogger by David Hutchinson Monday, October
20, 2014
A column in EdWeekly this summer wisely made this point in
regards to the new, incredibly complex, unreliable - yet state-mandated -
teacher evaluations, suggesting that we should have first asked the question,
“What is it that we're trying to measure?” Indeed, that question should
have been asked before the state Board of Education voted to mandate ‘Keystone
exams’ in English literature, Algebra and Biology as high school graduation
requirements.
Here’s the essence of the issue, as I see it: the Keystone
exams are fundamentally incompatible with the set of knowledge and skills that
students need for success in the modern world. Mandating them as high
school graduation requirements only serves to institutionalize a program of
education more appropriate for the middle of the last century. It will reduce
opportunities for students, who instead of taking electives in their areas of
interest, will be required to take remedial courses in order to pass an exam
that measures their ability to memorize and regurgitate information they are
unlikely to ever need or use.
Pittsburgh Mayor’s Task Force
on Education
Yinzercation Blog
October 22, 2014
I was honored earlier this year to be asked to serve on Mayor
Peduto’s Task Force on Education. That group just wrapped up its fourth meeting
last night and many folks have been asking how it’s going, so here’s a quick
report. I am optimistic by nature and
was excited about the opportunity to get the Pittsburgh Public School
administration, board members, and educators together with elected
representatives from City Council, the mayor’s office, and community members to
think about how to improve our schools and neighborhoods. Meeting process and
organizational issues have beaten back some of that optimism, but I remain
hopeful that (perhaps small) steps towards progress can be made.
Study: Rural Penn. Students
Trump City
Peers in College Enrollment
Education Week Rural Education Blog By Jackie Mader on October
21, 2014 4:41 PM
Students who graduate from rural Pennsylvania high schools
have higher college enrollment and persistence rates than students in city
schools, although they still lag behind their town and suburban peers,
according to a recently released study. The
Regional Educational Laboratory Program at the federal Institute of Education
Sciences examined the average rates of college
enrollment and persistence for rural and non-rural students during the 2009-10
and 2010-11 school years for "College Enrollment and Persistence in Rural Pennsylvania Schools."
The report found that most high school graduates, regardless of location,
matriculated at public four-year or in-state colleges. During the 2010-11
school year, about 59 percent of rural students enrolled in college, compared
to 55 percent of their peers from city high schools, and 70 percent of their
peers at suburban high schools. About 80 percent of rural students continued on
to their second year of college compared to only 63 percent of city students,
nearly 80 percent of suburban students, and about 78 percent of students from
towns.
Mosaica Charter Schools
Are Drowning in Red Ink
Courthouse News September 23, 2014 By COURTNEY WALTERS
Teachers' Unions to Spend
More Than Ever in State, Local Elections
Education Week By Lauren Camera Published Online: October 22, 2014
Deep-pocketed teachers’ unions, hoping to affect education
policy at the state and local levels, are expecting to pour more money into
those campaigns in the 2014 midterm elections than ever before. With the express mission of unseating
Republican governors and flipping control of conservative state
legislatures—legacies of the GOP tide in 2010—the two national unions, in
particular, are taking a page out of the playbook of some newer and smaller
education advocacy groups: Focus on down-ballot candidates and work up to the
top ticket.
Spending on state races isn’t new for the teachers’ unions,
which are still putting millions of dollars into federal races, particularly
the slew of U.S. Senate contests expected to decide control of that chamber.
New website offers closer
look into candidate' views on public education
PSBA NEWS RELEASE 10/6/2014
The Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA) has created a
new website for its members and the general public to get a closer look into
candidates' views on public education leading up to the 2014 election for the
Pennsylvania General Assembly. Following
the primary elections, PSBA sent out a six-question questionnaire to all
Pennsylvania House and Senate candidates competing for seats in the November
election. Candidates are listed by
House, Senate seat and county. Districts can be found by visiting the 'Find My
Legislator' link (http://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/home/findyourlegislator/).
Features include:
·
Candidate images, if provided
·
Candidates are tagged by political party and
seat for which they are running
·
Candidates who did not respond are indicated by
"Responses not available."
Visit the site by going to
http://psbacandidateforum.wordpress.com/ or by clicking on the link tweeted out
by @PSBAadvocate.
Candidates wishing to complete the questionnaire before
election day may do so by contacting Sean
Crampsie (717-506-2450, x-3321).
- See more at: http://www.psba.org/news-publications/headlines/details.asp?id=8650#sthash.1vGGRff4.dpuf
Register Now – 2014 PASCD
Annual Conference – November 23 – 25, 2014
Please join us for the 2014 PASCD Annual Conference, “Leading
an Innovative Culture for Learning – Powered by Blendedschools Network” to
be held November 23-25 at the Hershey Lodge and Convention Center in Hershey , PA.
Featuring Keynote Speakers: David Burgess - - Author of "Teach
Like a Pirate: Increase Student Engagement, Boost Your Creativity, and
Transform Your Life as an Educator", Dr. Bart Rocco, Bill Sterrett
- ASCD author, "Short on Time: How do I Make Time to Lead
and Learn as a Principal?" and Ron Cowell.
This annual conference features small group sessions (focused
on curriculum, instructional, assessment, blended learning and middle level
education) is a great opportunity to stay connected to the latest approaches
for cultural change in your school or district. Join us for PASCD
2014! Online registration is available by visiting www.pascd.org
Upcoming PA Basic Education
Funding Commission Meetings*
PA Basic Education Funding
Commission website
Thursday, November 6, 2014 at 10
AM, Lancaster
Tuesday, November 18 & 19, 2014, Philadelphia
Thursday, December 4, 2014 at 10 AM, East Stroudsburg
Wednesday, December 10, 2014, 10 AM - 12:00 PM, Lancaster
* meeting times and locations subject to changehttp://basiceducationfundingcommission.pasenategop.com/
Tuesday, November 18 & 19, 2014, Philadelphia
Thursday, December 4, 2014 at 10 AM, East Stroudsburg
Wednesday, December 10, 2014, 10 AM - 12:00 PM, Lancaster
* meeting times and locations subject to changehttp://basiceducationfundingcommission.pasenategop.com/
January 23rd–25th, 2015 at The Science Leadership
Academy , Philadelphia
EduCon is both a conversation and a conference.
It is an innovation conference where we can come together, both
in person and virtually, to discuss the future of schools. Every session will
be an opportunity to discuss and debate ideas — from the very practical to the
big dreams.
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