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The Keystone State Education Coalition is an endorsing member of The Campaign for Fair Education Funding
Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for
January 12, 2015:
Program on
PA school funding; Chambersburg Jan 15th 6:30
pm
Public school funding will be
discussed at program
A Community Conversation about Public School Funding in Franklin County
will be held Thursday, Jan. 15, at 6:30 p.m., in First
Evangelical Lutheran
Church of Chambersburg ,
43 W. Washington St .
The Record Herald Posted Jan. 10, 2015 @ 2:00 pm
A Community Conversation about Public School Funding inFranklin County
will be held Thursday, Jan. 15, at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15, in First
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Chambersburg, 43 W. Washington St . Local school district leaders discuss how
state funding issues are impacting education and local taxes.
A Community Conversation about Public School Funding in
Confirmed guests include state Sen. Richard Alloway II and John
Eichelberger Jr. and state Rep. Paul Schemel.
Those attending will be able to ask questions; share stories, concerns,
and suggestions; and learn how you can support fair and adequate state funding
for schools.
Panelists:
— Dr. Joe Bard, executive director, PA Association of Rural and
Small Schools
— Dr. Joe Padasak, superintendent, Chambersburg Area
School District
— Jim Duffey, superintendent, Fannett-Metal School
District
— Dr. Gregory Hoover, superintendent, Greencastle-Antrim School
District
— Beth Bender, superintendent, Shippensburg Area
School District
— Dr. Charles Prijatelj, superintendent, Tuscarora School District
The program is hosted by Education Voters of PA and Education
Matters in the Cumberland
Valley , partners in the
Campaign for Fair Education Funding, a state coalition working to ensure that
all students have access to a quality education, no matter where they live.
For more information, contact Susan Spicka at 717-331-4033 or
sspicka@educationvoterspa.org.
"Watkins unpacked his plan to partner
with the charters -– which included recategorizing charter students as Chester-Upland School District students -- at a hearing
in December. "By recategorizing
charter students and making them Chester Upland students, we wouldn't have been obligated to pay
their tuition costs," said Watkins. He said the district currently pays
$9,000 to $35,000 in tuition per student, in addition to absorbing departure
costs."
WHYY Newsworks BY LAURA
BENSHOFF JANUARY 9, 2015
A Chester County judge has scrapped a money-saving attempt by
the Chester-Upland
School District to merge
the administration of its district and charter schools. The District's state-appointed receiver Joe
Watkins said Judge Chad Kenney scrapped his plan to merge the administration of
public and charter schools due to a lack of progress. Meetings with charter administrators had been
"civil," said the district's state-appointed receiver Joe
Watkins.
"I think some of the concern had to do with the issues of
control," he said. "In a partnership, those are legitimate." The Chester-Upland School
District faces a $20 million structural deficit,
which Watkins attributes to costs incurred by student exodus to charter schools
and the state government's decision in 2011 to eliminate money in the budget to
help districts cover the cost of departure.
Almost half of the more than 7,000 students in the area attend charter
schools.
Watkins has floated several unorthodox fixes for the
chronically underperforming and overextended school district, including talk of
a partnership and an flux of more than $1 billion from a Chinese
investor. In the past, the
district has offered laptops and Dr. Dre headphones to lure students back from
charters.
Did you catch our weekend postings?
PA Ed Policy Roundup Jan 10: The Hill Congress Blog: America
is secretly number one internationally in education
Weekend tweet from Keystone State
Ed Coalition:
Was Corbett Open
Records Chief appt an 11th hour gift to charter magnate/benefactor Gureghian?
Common Core pushes Lehigh Valley
districts toward full-day kindergarten
By Jacqueline
Palochko Of The Morning Call January 10, 2015
Full-day kindergarten may become norm in Lehigh Valley .
Common Core pushes Bethlehem ,
other school districts toward full-day kindergarten.
Should 5-year-olds spend all day in school? Remember kindergarten? The songs and stories,
naps and snacks. They're still part of a 5-year-old's day, but so are reading,
math and science. And school districts are finding that's too much to cram into
a half day. Bethlehem Area may become
the biggest district in the Lehigh
Valley to switch to
solely full-day kindergarten. Superintendent Joseph Roy will ask the school
board Monday to expand kindergarten in all 16 elementary schools next school
year. Currently, 14 of the district's 48 kindergarten sections are full-day. Easton Area and Parkland
are mulling over the option.
Statewide, nearly 400 of the 500 districts offer just full-day
kindergarten, according to the state Department of Education. But in the Lehigh Valley ,
it's been slow to catch on. Only a handful of districts, such as Northampton
Area and Nazareth Area, offer solely full-day classes to all 5- and
6-year-olds. Others are like Bethlehem , limiting
full-day classes to at-risk students. While educators see academic value in
expanding kindergarten, cost and space have kept many districts from making the
move. Roy
said his request is being driven by several factors: convenience for working
parents, the loss of students to charter schools and — most importantly in his
mind — Pennsylvania 's
new Common Core-based academic standards.
Considering what's expected of students when they reach first grade,
"full-day kindergarten is the right thing to do educationally," he
said.
http://www.mcall.com/news/local/mc-lehigh-valley-kindergarten-programs-20150110-story.html#page=1
By Eleanor Chute / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette January 12, 2015 12:00 AM
Pittsburgh Public Schools is urging more teachers to take on
expanded leadership opportunities that could pay as much as $11,300 extra a
year, including efforts to attract a more diverse group of applicants. As one of the ways to recruit current city
teachers to the positions, the district today will host information sessions at
board headquarters focused on “teachers of color,” although the session is open
to all. “This would be aligned with what
we do when trying to build strong and diverse application pools,” said Jody
Spolar, chief human resources officer. “If you want to advance the goal of
diversity in your workplace … you have to be deliberate about making sure you
have a strong applicant pool.” Currently,
15 percent of the teaching staff are minorities while 11 percent of the
career-ladder teachers are minorities. Sixty-six percent of students are
minorities.
School with $160 annual
budget sees kindness from strangers
KRISTEN A. GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Sunday, January 11,
2015, 1:08 AM
First came the calls. Then the reams of paper, more precious in
a cash-strapped public school than gold.
Finally, the checks arrived. Anna
Lane Lingelbach Elementary, a public school in Germantown , began the academic year with a
discretionary budget of $160: 40 cents to spend on each needy student. But after readers learned of the school's
plight in November from an Inquirer story, an avalanche of donations flowed
from around the country. Most notably,
one anonymous angel gave the school $100,000, a sum that should buy Google
Chromebooks for each of the school's 420 students, kindergarten through eighth
grade. For a place that principal Marc
Gosselin had described as "so far below just the baseline that you need to
run a school," the generosity feels like a dream. "This will help to bridge the equity gap
in our school," Gosselin said last week.
Maurice Flurie: Gov.-elect
Wolf has correct idea to create charter school office
Morning Call Opinion
by Maurice Flurie January 9, 2015
Maurice "Reese" Flurie is CEO of Commonwealth Connections
Academy , a public, nonprofit cyber
charter school in Pennsylvania .
During his campaign, Gov.-elect Tom Wolf said charter schools in
Pennsylvania
should be held accountable to the students they teach, the families they
support, and the taxpayers who fund them.
I couldn't agree more. That is
why I support his proposal to create an office of Charter and Cyber Charter
Schools within the
Pennsylvania Department of Education. This new office would strengthen measures
of transparency and accountability. Today,
cyber charter schools instruct nearly 40,000 students. The waiting list for
brick-and-mortar charter schools exceeds that number. The state Education
Department has been backlogged while stretching reduced resources and recently
began seeking to contract with outside entities to handle some responsibilities
related to cyber charter schools. The demand and evolving landscape necessitates
a separate state office with dedicated resources to fulfill its
responsibilities.
Our cyber charter school, Commonwealth Connections
Academy , reflects that
demand. It is a public, not-for-profit cyber charter school serving 9,000
students throughout Pennsylvania .
Just five years ago, we served 4,000 students.
Blogger's Note: Cybercharters might be a
good fit for some students but none of PA's cybercharters have achieved a
passing School Performance Score of 70 in the two years that the SPP has been
in place, and most PA cybers never made AYP under No Child Left Behind. Regarding the 40,000 student waiting list
cited above, to my knowledge there is no credible, reliable, accurate
unduplicated count of students actually on charter school waiting lists in Pennsylvania .
Nov. 2014: Pa.
cyber charters again get low marks on state tests
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY NOVEMBER 17, 2014
A new study by Research for Action has found that Pennsylvania 's
cyber-charter sector continues to yield subpar results on the state's
standardized tests. Using the state's recently released school
performance profile data for 2013-14, RFA found the average School Performance
Profile score for the cyber-charter sector was 48.9 – well below the averages
for the state's brick and mortar charters and traditional public schools. To date, no cyber charter has earned a SPP of
70 or higher, the state Department of Education's quality threshold.
Ethics complaint filed
against Rutgers professor
JONATHAN LAI, INQUIRER
STAFF WRITER LAST UPDATED: Friday, January 9, 2015, 11:59 PM
POSTED: Thursday, January 8, 2015, 6:29 PM
A nonprofit advocacy group representing New
Jersey charter schools filed an ethics complaint this week
accusing a Rutgers
University professor of
abusing her title and improperly using her university affiliation to lobby
against charter schools. Julia Sass
Rubin, an associate professor at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and
Public Policy, denied the accusations, describing them as an attack on academic
freedom and an attempt to silence her.
The New Jersey Charter Schools Association, a nonprofit group
that advocates for charters, has long butted heads with Save Our Schools New
Jersey (SOSNJ), a group Rubin founded to support traditional public schools and
that has criticized charters.
"Rubin co-authored
a report in October showing that charter schools in New Jersey educate significantly smaller
percentages of poor students, special education students and students from
non-English speaking families than the public school districts in which they
are located."
Charter schools association
files ethics complaint against Rutgers
professor, SOSNJ founder
NJ.COM By Adam Clark | NJ Advance
Media for NJ.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on January 08, 2015 at 1:26 PM, updated January 09, 2015 at 8:11 AM
on January 08, 2015 at 1:26 PM, updated January 09, 2015 at 8:11 AM
Contending that a Rutgers professor and public schools advocate
has used her position, title and state university resources to wage a
personally driven campaign against them, a group representing the state’s
charter schools has filed an ethics complaint against the Save Our Schools NJ
co-founder. The complaint, filed with
New Jersey State Ethics Commission, charges Julia Sass Rubinviolated
the State’s Conflict of Interest Law and Uniform Ethics Code, as well as the
University’s Code and Policies for faculty employees.
NYT Letters: Easing the Rules
on Home Schooling
New York Times JAN. 9, 2015
Re “Home
Schooling: More Pupils, Less Regulation” (front page, Jan. 5): The push for looser requirements and less
accountability for parents who home-school their children may obscure gaps in
home-schooled children’s education. In
general, while children who are home-schooled do well on verbal tests, they do
not perform as well in mathematics and have been found to have slightly lower
scores on the mathematics SAT and ACT exams. This may limit their academic and
career options. In school, students
learn social skills, bond with their peers and are exposed to diverse opinions.
Children who are home-schooled risk being socially isolated.
A 'Sizable Decrease' In Those
Passing The GED
NPR by Cory Turner and Anya Kamenetz JANUARY 09, 2015 3:26
AM ET
One year after the launch of a major overhaul of the GED exam —
the first since 2002 — the high school equivalency program has seen a sharp
drop in the number of people who took and passed the test, according to local
and state educators and the organization that runs it. In addition, at least 16
states have begun offering or plan to offer new, alternative tests. Combined, these changes represent a dramatic
shift in the equivalency landscape dominated by the GED since its inception
during World War II. Last January, the
GED test moved to the computer. It also got more expensive, by most accounts
more difficult — and, for the first time, the program is being run on a
for-profit basis. The new GED Testing Service is
a joint venture between the American Council on Education, the nonprofit that
has run the program since it began, and the education company Pearson. What effect did all of these changes have
on test takers?
"Our number of graduates for this last calendar year has
dropped about 85 percent," says Myles Newman, who helps coordinate GED
preparation for one school district in Lexington County ,
S.C. States including Wisconsin ,
Pennsylvania and Colorado are reporting large drops as well.
NYT Editorial: Racial
Isolation in Public Schools
New York Times By THE EDITORIAL BOARD JAN. 9,
2015
New York Times By NATASHA SINGER JAN. 11, 2015
….“Education is one of the last industries to be touched by
Internet technology, and we’re seeing a lot of catch-up going on,” said Betsy
Corcoran, the chief executive of EdSurge, an industry news service and research
company. “We’re starting to see more classical investors — the Kleiner
Perkinses, the Andreessen Horowitzes, the Sequoias — pay more attention to the
marketplace than before.” While rising
sharply, the values of ed tech financing deals are chump change compared with
the money flowing into consumer software. Uber, the ride-hailing app, for
instance, raised $2.7 billion last year. The smaller sums going into ed tech
illustrate the challenges facing start-ups as they try to persuade public
school systems to adopt their novel products. Companies often must navigate
local school districts with limited budgets and slow procurement processes. To
bypass the bureaucracy, many start-ups are marketing free learning apps and
websites directly to teachers in the hopes that their schools might eventually
buy enhanced services.
NPE 2015 Annual Conference – Chicago April 24 - 26 –
Early Bird Special Registration Open!
January 4, 2015 NPE 2015 Annual Conference, NPE National Conference
Early-bird discounted Registration for the Network for
Public Education’s Second Annual Conference is now available at this address:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/network-for-public-education-2015-annual-conference-tickets-15118560020
These low rates will last for the month of January.
The event is being held at the Drake Hotel in downtown Chicago , and there is
a link on the registration page for special hotel registration rates. Here are
some of the event details.
There will be a welcoming social event 7 pm Friday night,
at or near the Drake Hotel — details coming soon. Featured speakers will be:
§
Jitu Brown, National Director – Journey
for Justice, Kenwood Oakland Community Organization, Network for Public
Education Board of Directors
§
Tanaisa Brown, High School Senior, with
the Newark
Student Union
§
Yong Zhao, Author, “Who’s Afraid of
the Big Bad Dragon?“
§
Diane Ravitch in conversation with
§
Lily Eskelsen Garcia, NEA President and
§
Randi Weingarten, AFT President
§
Karen Lewis, President, Chicago
Teachers Union
Join a Community
Conversation about Public School Funding in Franklin
County ; January 15, 6:30 pm Chambersburg
Confirmed Guests of Honor:
Senator Richard Alloway Senator John Eichelberger Representative-Elect Paul
Schemel
Join a Community Conversation about Public School Funding in
Franklin County on Thursday, January 15 at 6:30 at the First Evangelical
Lutheran Church of Chambersburg, 43 West Washington Street, Chambersburg, PA
Local school district leaders will discuss how state funding issues are
impacting our children’s educational opportunities, our local taxes, and our
communities and area legislators will be in attendance to learn about voters'
concerns. Ask questions. Share your stories, your concerns, and your
suggestions. Learn how you can support fair and adequate state funding for our
area schools
Panelists:
Dr. Joe Bard, Executive
Director, PA Association of Rural and Small Schools
Dr. Joe Padasak, Superintendent,
Chambersburg Area School District
Mr. Jim Duffey, Superintendent, Fannett-Metal School District
Dr. Gregory Hoover,
Superintendent, Greencastle-Antrim
School District
Mrs. Beth Bender,
Superintendent, Shippensburg
Area School
District
Dr. Charles Prijatelj,
Superintendent, Tuscarora
Area School
District
More info:. Franklin_County_Flyer_Final_PDF.pdf
Mark Your Calendars. The next Twitter Chat on PA School Funding is
Tuesday, January 27, 2015 at 8:00 p.m.
Join us #paedfunding
Tweet from Circuit Rider Kathleen Kelley
Adams Co. PSBA Basic
Education Funding Listening Tour Breakfast
JAN 14, 2015 • 8:30
AM - 10:30 AM
Jan. 14, 8:30-10:30 a.m. at the Gettysburg Area
Middle School , 37 Lefever St. , Gettysburg ,
PA
PSBA Members Register online: https://psba.wufoo.com/forms/p97bly31fs5ecs/
PILCOP Special Education
Seminar: Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities
United Way Building 1709
Benjamin Franklin Parkway , Philadelphia ,
19103
Tickets: Attorneys $200
General Public $100 Webinar
$50
"Pay What You Can" tickets are also
available
Speakers: Sonja Kerr; Kathleen Carlsen (Children’s
Dyslexia Center of Philadelphia)
This session is designed to provide the audience with
information about how to address 1) eligibility issues for children with
learning disabilities, including dyslexia and ADHD, 2) encourage self-advocacy
and 3) write and implement meaningful IEPS (what does Orton-Gillingham really
look like?) This session is
co-sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania School of Policy and Practice.
The University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy & Practice is a
Pre-approved Provider of Continuing Education for Pennsylvania licensed social workers.
Questions? Email jfortenberry@pilcop.org or call 267-546-1316.
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.
PSBA Master School Board
Director Recognition: Applications begin in January
PSBA website December 23, 2014
The Master School Board Director (MSBD) Recognition is for
individuals who have demonstrated significant contributions as members of their
governance teams. It is one way PSBA salutes your hard work and exceptional
dedication to ethics and standards, student success and achievement,
professional development, community engagement, communications, stewardship of
resources, and advocacy for public education.
School directors who are consistently dedicated to the
aforementioned characteristics should apply or be encouraged to apply by fellow
school directors. The MSBD Recognition demonstrates your commitment to
excellence and serves to encourage best practices by all school directors.
The application will be posted Jan. 15, 2015,
with a deadline to apply of June 30. Recipients will be notified by the MSBD
Recognition Committee by Aug. 31 and will be honored at the PASA-PSBA School
Leadership Conference in October.
If you are interested in learning more about the MSBD
Recognition, contact Janel
Biery, conference/events coordinator, at (800) 932-0588, ext. 3332.
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