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Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for April 27, 2015:
Open 2007 RTK:"If charters were allowed
to operate in the dark with public money, it would be an incredible breeding
ground for fraud."
The Campaign for Fair
Education Funding will be live tweeting from today's hearing using hashtag
#FairFundingPA
Upcoming Basic Education Funding Commission Meeting
April 27 10 am
Central PA education forum
Tuesday,
April 28, 6:30-8:30
Grace Lutheran
Church (in Harkins Hall), 205 S. Garner Street ,
State College
Info and Registration:
HERE
Southeastern PA Regional
Meeting on School Funding
Wednesday April 29th 7:00 pmSpringfield High School Auditorium, 49
West Leamy Avenue, Springfield ,
PA 19064
Wednesday April 29th 7:00 pm
Info and Registration:
HERE
November 2007: Still Waiting
for compliance with this RTK…
"If charters were
allowed to operate in the dark with public money, it would be an incredible
breeding ground for fraud."
By Dan Hardy INQUIRER STAFF WRITER POSTED: November
22, 2007
A Pennsylvania
Supreme Court decision has, for the first time, established that charter
schools must release information requested under the state's Right-to-Know law,
according to a lawyer in the case. The
decision, handed down Tuesday said a Chester
charter school must hand over its management contract and other financial
documents to a Delaware
County newspaper. In 2005, Matthew
Zager, a reporter for the Delaware County Daily Times, filed a Right-to-Know
law request with Vahan Gureghian, head of the management company that operates
the Chester Community Charter
School . Zager asked for
an auditor's report, financial statements, and the school's management
agreement with the corporation that had managed the charter before 2002.
The request was
denied by Danielle Gureghian, Vahan Gureghian's wife and a lawyer for his
management company. She said the management firm was a private company and not
subject to the Right-to-Know law. Delaware County Common Pleas Court ,
Commonwealth Court ,
and the Supreme Court all rejected that argument. "Charter schools are not
exempt from the statutes that are applicable to public schools," the
Supreme Court said in its ruling.
Time to get involved in
education funding discussion
Delco Times Heron's Nest Editor's Blog by Phil Heron Monday,
April 27, 2015
We used our so-called bully pulpit again on Sunday to
lament something we've talked about many times.
Pennsylvania 's
system of funding education is broken, fundamentally flawed that has created an
uneven playing field. It's especially
dangerous for kids in distressed school districts, kids like those who live in
the William Penn School District .
They are the ones who get penalized for no other reason than their zip code.
"There’s no question we
need to change the way that we fund our schools. According to federal data, Pennsylvania now has the
largest gaps in the nation in spending from wealthy school districts to poorer
ones. Students from one district to the next in Delaware County can have access
to vastly different schools, classrooms and resources based solely on where
there were born.
Without a formula, education
funds are dispensed yearly based on political considerations with little regard
for what is actually needed in the classrooms to give students the opportunity
to meet academic standards set by the state."
Letter to the Editor: Find
out how we can fix education funding
Delco Times Letter
by Lawrence
Feinberg POSTED: 04/26/15, 10:33 PM EDT |
To the Times:
Having served as a
member of the Haverford School Board for the past 16 years, I’d like to believe
that I have a good understanding of the challenges that our students, teachers
and our taxpayers confront as we strive to provide access to a quality
education for the roughly 6,000 students we serve. And I am very confident that, collectively,
we do a great job, especially our students whose achievements in the classroom
speak volumes for how hard they work. But districts in every corner of the
state are facing some stiff challenges.
For the past nine
months, I’ve been making the rounds, literally, and visiting school districts
across the county and the region as a “circuit rider” as part of a statewide
effort to change fundamentally the way that our state funds public education. Dozens and dozens of groups and individuals
are working across Pennsylvania
to make sure that every student, no matter where they live, has access to a
quality education. Our goal, collectively, is to ensure that Pennsylvania adopts and maintains an
adequate and equitable system of funding public education by 2016.
“I try not to say we just need more money,”
Cave said, adding that he would like to instead see a plan where the board is
at least able to have some idea of the help it could get from the state when it
comes time to put together the next budget.
“A formula to predict a forecast and plan,
that would be a huge help,” he said. “I don’t believe throwing money at a
problem would solve anything.”
William Penn struggles
with bleak budget numbers
By Nick Tricome, Delco Times Correspondent POSTED: 04/26/15,
1:48 AM EDT |
HARRISBURG >> When it comes to the budget for the William Penn
School District, Rafi Cave can’t tell you what will happen next. “We have no idea,” Cave, the vice president
of the school board, said. “We can’t forecast the current method.” The current method’s lack of a funding
formula from the state is what has been a problem for the district. On
Wednesday, Cave, representing the district and the Coalition for Residents of
Yeadon (C.R.Y.), accompanied 23 other organizations, consisting of 50 young
voters from Southeastern Pennsylvania, on a trip to Harrisburg to call for fair funding for
schools.
Editorial: Fair funding
issue continues down the road
Kids – and taxpayers
- in the William Penn School District
who for years have faced an uphill slog, weighed down by an inherently unfair
funding system that penalized them for no good reason other than their zip
code, got a hard civics lesson this week.
Their plea for
justice, for the courts to do what the Legislature too often has failed to do,
that is fix what is clearly a broken system of school funding in Pennsylvania,
fell on deaf ears.
A lawsuit filed by
officials in financially struggling school districts, along with seven parents,
the Pennsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools, and the NAACP Pennsylvania
State conference was
rejected by Commonwealth Court .
Philadelphia School Advocacy
Partners is an arm of the Philadelphia School Partnership, which is funded by a
number of donors, including Jeffrey Yass, one of three Main Line financial
traders who support Democratic State Sen. Anthony H. Williams' mayoral
campaign. Mark Alderman, a lawyer for
the independent expenditure group financed by Yass and his partners to support
Williams, said Yass and his wife had assured him they were not among donors who
contributed to Philadelphia
School Advocacy Partners'
ad campaign. Wang said the
advertisements were being funded by some of the partnership's donors, but he
declined to identify them.
School-choice advocacy
group plans big TV push
ANGELO
FICHERA, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER POSTED: Monday,
April 27, 2015, 1:08 AM
A school-choice
advocacy group in Philadelphia
will roll out on Monday the first of a planned series of television
advertisements to promote its cause as voters consider whom to support in the
mayor's race. Mike Wang, executive
director of Philadelphia School Advocacy Partners, said his organization
intended to spend more than $1 million on television ads in the coming months,
much of it after the May 19 primary. "This
is about getting every child access to a great school," Wang said, adding
that the group would spend "whatever it will take to do that."
The 30-second ad,
which will run on cable and network television in the Philadelphia area,
criticizes politicians who "won't allow more public charter schools"
and spotlights the power of the vote wielded by families seeking better school
options.
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/news/20150427_School-choice_advocacy_group_plans_big_TV_push.html#GKbisOs8lY4xPPX3.99
While you were gone:
Monday morning debates, polling updates and more
WHYY Newsworks NINETYNINE A BLOG
BY BRIAN HICKEY APRIL 27,
2015
Wondering what's
been going on with the mayoral campaign since you walked away from your
computer on Friday? We got you covered. Let's
check out a few stories that have run here, and via other media outlets, in the
past few days. (And one that's coming up.)
The PA Chamber had it
wrong - Gov. Wolf's budget works for Pa.
workers: Jeffrey Sheridan
PennLive Op-Ed By
Jeffrey Sheridan on April 26, 2015 at 1:00 PM,
Jeffrey Sheridan is Press
Secretary to Gov. Tom Wolf.
Despite the
suggestions of Gene Barr in his recent op-ed, these are real problems facing Pennsylvania that we
must address. Governor Wolf's
proposed budget is a blueprint for Pennsylvania 's
future.
Top Wolf aide stands by
tax-shift claims despite independent report finding of higher net taxes for all
income groups
Penn Live By Charles Thompson |
cthompson@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on April
24, 2015 at 6:42 PM, updated April 24, 2015 at 8:55 PM
Gov. Tom Wolf's
administration responded to a potential political body-blow to its tax reform
proposals Friday, with top aides arguing some of the underlying assumptions
in a new report that says
the Wolf plan will result in higher net tax burdens for even middle-income
families are "shaky."
But Republican legislative leaders, or their spokesmen, said the report
bears out what they suspected all along: that Wolf's policy ambitions are
expensive and should be recognized by all as coming with tax increases for most
if not all.
Wolf's Policy
Secretary John Hanger held a conference call with reporters Friday to reaffirm
the administration's basic sales pitch - that even as overall collections rise,
most Pennsylvania
taxpayers will pay less under Wolf's approach-
in spite of the new conclusions from the Independent Fiscal Office.
All Pennsylvanians to pay
more, GOP gleans from report on Wolf's tax plan
Trib Live By Brad
Bumsted Saturday, April 25, 2015, 12:01 a.m.
Wolf budget right
approach, even if all Pennsylvanians must pay
THE ISSUE
The Independent Fiscal Office, a nonpartisan state agency, reported late last
week that Gov. Tom Wolf’s proposed budget would mean “a net tax
increase for all (income) groups” in Pennsylvania ,
“including a small net increase for the lowest income group.” The Wolf
administration disputes the finding, saying Revenue Department estimates show
it delivering tax cuts to all, including middle class families. Giving
the Independent Fiscal Office the benefit of the doubt, the governor’s budget
still sets Pennsylvania
on the right path for the future. If we
all have to pay higher taxes, it will be worth it. It is our schools — K-12 public schools,
state-system and state-supported colleges and universities, and our community
colleges — that need some of those funds. They need resources to deliver a
solid education to our future plumbers, construction workers, doctors, nurses,
governors, lawmakers, business leaders and overall workforce.
We all have a
responsibility to help pay for that investment.
Pa. Republican Senators
hope to win battles over pensions, liquor
Penn Live By Marc Levy | The Associated Press on
April 26, 2015 at 10:38 AM, updated April 26, 2015 at 10:57 PM
"Schools in Allegheny County reported 2,985 homeless students
last year, said Bill Wolfe, executive director of the Homeless Children's
Education Fund, where Smith and the other eight students volunteer."
Senior at Pittsburgh 's CAPA school
focuses spotlight on homeless students
Trib Live By Mike
Wereschagin Sunday, April 26, 2015, 11:03 p.m.
They stood silently, faces impassive, their young hands holding the cardboard signs of beggars in a place that once was sacred. An audience of about 100 people in the Grand Hall of The Priory Hotel, a former Benedictine monastery, stared silently back at the eight high school students whose clean, unwrinkled faces contrasted so sharply with the messages about youth homelessness scrawled on their signs. “Homeless people have been reduced to a single image, which is the man on a corner with a cardboard sign and an open palm,” said Madeline Smith, a senior at the Pittsburgh Creative and Performing Arts school. Smith, 18, of Marshall-Shadeland said she organized the art event, Hope through Creativity, on Sunday to show that reality is more complex.
They stood silently, faces impassive, their young hands holding the cardboard signs of beggars in a place that once was sacred. An audience of about 100 people in the Grand Hall of The Priory Hotel, a former Benedictine monastery, stared silently back at the eight high school students whose clean, unwrinkled faces contrasted so sharply with the messages about youth homelessness scrawled on their signs. “Homeless people have been reduced to a single image, which is the man on a corner with a cardboard sign and an open palm,” said Madeline Smith, a senior at the Pittsburgh Creative and Performing Arts school. Smith, 18, of Marshall-Shadeland said she organized the art event, Hope through Creativity, on Sunday to show that reality is more complex.
Proposed UCF budget would
boost taxes beyond Act 1 limits
Unionville Times By Karen Cresta, Correspondent, The Times April 14, 2015
Keystone Exams
face growing opposition; health care eligibility audit discussed
EAST MARLBOROUGH –
Taxes for the Unionville-Chadds Ford School District would increase beyond the
state’s Act 1 limits, if the Board of Education opts to adopt the $79.2 million
proposed budget discussed in some detail during Monday night’s board work
session — meanwhile growing area opposition to the use of the Keystone Exam as
a graduation requirement could mean changes on the horizon. Although the budget doesn’t require final
approval until the end of June (the board is expected to give final budget
approval at its June 15 meeting), the heavy lifting of the budget process is
underway. A public hearing on the budget is already slated for next month — and
final decisions on whether to push taxes beyond the 1.9% Act 1 index limit, and
if so, how much, are only now starting to come into focus.
"The analysis, done by the Center for
Media and Democracy, a nonprofit liberal watchdog and advocacy agency based in
Wisconsin that tracks corporate influence on public policy, says that four
companies — Pearson Education, ETS (Educational Testing Service), Houghton
Mifflin Harcourt, and McGraw-Hill— collectively spent more than $20 million
lobbying in states and on Capitol Hill from 2009 to 2014."
Testing Corporations Spend
Millions to Lobby Congress and State Legislatures
Diane Ravitch's Blog
By dianeravitch April
26, 2015 //
Valerie
Strauss posted
an article about the lobbying activities of the giant testing
corporations. They spend many millions of dollars to ensure that Congress and
the states understand the importance of buying their services. It would be
awful for them if any state decided to let teachers write their own tests and
test what they taught. The four
corporations that dominate the U.S. standardized testing market spend millions
of dollars lobbying state and federal officials — as well as sometimes hiring
them — to persuade them to favor policies that include mandated student
assessments, helping to fuel a nearly $2 billion annual testing business, a new
analysis shows.
States Expanding Mandates
for Students to Take Computer Science
Education Week Digital
Education Blog By Audrey Armitage on April 23, 2015 11:34 AM
Fourteen states are
now mandating that computer science classes be counted towards students'
required credits in high school math, science, or foreign language, according
to a new report by the Education
Commission of the States. Additionally,
two states have enacted policies that allow computer science classes to be used
to fulfill graduation requirements, though they don't require students to take
those courses. These
policies are relatively new—most have been adopted within the past year or two,
said report author Jennifer Zinth of the ECS, a Denver-based research
organization.
Beyond a New School Funding
Formula: Lifting Student Achievement to Grow PA's Economy
Wednesday, May 6, 2015 from 7:30 AM to 10:00 AM (EDT) Harrisburg , PA
7:30 am: Light breakfast fare and registration; 8:00 am:
Program
Opening Remarks by Neil D. Theobald, President, Temple University
SESSION I: THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF ACHIEVEMENT GAPS IN
PENNSYLVANIA’S PUBLIC SCHOOLS with introduction by Rob Wonderling,
President, Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, and Member, Center on
Regional Politics Executive Committee.
Presentation by Lynn A. Karoly, Senior Economist, RAND
Corporation
SESSION II: WHAT CAN PENNSYLVANIA
LEARN FROM THE WORLD’S LEADING SCHOOL SYSTEMS? with introduction
by David H. Monk, Dean, Pennsylvania
State University College
of Education .
Presentation by Marc S. Tucker, President and CEO, National Center on Education and the
Economy
Sessions to be followed by a response panel moderated
by Francine Schertzer, Director of Programming, Pennsylvania Cable
Network
Program presented by the University Consortium to Improve
Public School Finance and Promote Economic Growth
Common Core Forum: A Closer Look at the PA Core
Standards
Thursday, May 7, 6:30 - 8:00 pm Radnor Middle
School
Presented by the Leagues of
Women Voters of Chester County , Haverford,
Lower Merion , Narberth and Radnor. Supported by the Radnor School District
Panelists Include:
Fred Brown, K-12
Math Supervisor, School District of Haverford
Township
Jon Cetel, Education
Reform Agent, PennCAN
Mary Beth Hegeman,
Middle School Teacher, Lower
Merion School
District
Cynthia Kruse , Delaware County Intermediate
Unit
Susan Newitt,
Retired Elementary Teacher, Lower
Merion School
District
Wendy Towle,
Supervisor of Language Arts & Staff Development, T/E School
District
Larry Wittig,
Chairman of the State Board of Education
All are
invited for a screening of the documentary:
STANDARDIZED: Lies, Money
& Civil Rights—How Testing is Ruining Public Education Monday, April 27, 7-
9 PM Wayne , PA
The Saturday
Club, 117 West Wayne Avenue ,
Wayne , PA
Standardized testing
has long been a part of public education. Over the last ten years however,
education reform has become an increasingly heated political issue and
seemingly a highly profitable target market for private enterprise resulting in
expanded and high-stakes testing. While some hold the view that testing is an
effective assessment of student ability and teacher and school effectiveness,
many feel these exams are instead undermining our students, teachers and
schools. Daniel Hornberger’s STANDARDIZED documentary
raises issues about this model of education reform and the standardized
testing that goes along with it. The film includes interviews with prominent
educational experts and government officials who take aim at the goal of
standardization that is being promoted and imposed by our federal and state
governments. It sheds light on the development, nature and use of these
assessments, the consequences of high-stakes testing, and the ostensible private
enterprise and government agendas behind them.
A Q&A
session with a panel of informed parents, teachers and experts will follow.
This screening
is made possible through a collaboration of Radnor, Tredyffrin/Easttown and Lower Merion concerned parents and PTOs.
PHILLY DISTRICT TO HOLD
COMMUNITY BUDGET MEETINGS
Wednesday,
April 15
Wednesday,
April 22
Tuesday,
April 28
Wednesday,
May 6
Tuesday,
May 12
Thursday,
May 14
Congreso, 216 West Somerset St .
Wednesday,
May 20
Nominations for PSBA
offices closes April 30
PSBA Leadership Development Committee seeks strong leaders for the association
Members interested in becoming the next leaders of PSBA are encouraged to complete an Application for Nomination no later than April 30. As a member-driven association, the Leadership Development Committee (LDC) is seeking nominees with strong skills in leadership and communication, and who have vision for PSBA. The positions open are:
PSBA Leadership Development Committee seeks strong leaders for the association
Members interested in becoming the next leaders of PSBA are encouraged to complete an Application for Nomination no later than April 30. As a member-driven association, the Leadership Development Committee (LDC) is seeking nominees with strong skills in leadership and communication, and who have vision for PSBA. The positions open are:
- 2016 President Elect (one-year term)
- 2016 Vice President (one-year term)
- 2016 Eastern Section at Large
Representative - includes Regions 7, 8, 10, 11 and 15 (three-year
term)
Complete details on
the nomination process, including scheduled dates for nominee interviews, can
be found online by clicking here.
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