Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
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administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's
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leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations,
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Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for April 28, 2015:
Finding 1 formula for all schools a hard
job, panel told
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
Finding 1 formula for all schools a hard
job, panel told
State commission tasked with
revising funding for K-12
By
Eleanor Chute / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette April 27, 2015 11:24 PM
As the
state Basic Education Funding Commission wrestles with creating a new state
formula for K-12 education, comments at the panel’s final hearing pointed to
the difficulty of devising a formula that considers the varying needs of school
districts. The commission established by
the Legislature is expected to recommend a formula by June
10. Monday’ssession at the student union at the University of Pittsburgh
was its 15th hearing. The panel also is getting financial data from about 100
school districts to consider as it draws up the proposal for the Legislature’s
consideration.
By Sara K. Satullo | The Express-Times Email
the author | Follow on Twitter on April
27, 2015 at 4:30 PM, updated April 27, 2015 at 4:47 PM
Wolf's education chief vows to advocate
for schools
By Jacqueline
PalochkoOf The
Morning Call April 27, 2015
What did
Pa's education chief tell Lehigh
Valley school leaders?
When
Gov. Tom Wolf tapped Pedro Rivera, former superintendent
of the Lancaster School District , to be the state's
education chief, Rivera was in shock. "Are
you sure?" Rivera said he asked the governor. "The guy who has been a
pain the neck for the last few secretaries of education?" Rivera, who also has worked in Philadelphia schools, had
a reputation of being an advocate for urban, poverty-stricken school districts.
He was one of the leading forces in a lawsuit against the state over fair
funding. But Rivera is who Wolf wanted. When he spoke to Lehigh
Valley school leaders Monday at Lehigh University, Rivera stressed that he is
still a fighter who will advocate in Harrisburg
for districts that faced budget cuts and an increasing number of state mandates
over the last few years. During a talk
hosted by the Greater Lehigh Valley Chamber of Commerce, Rivera touted Wolf's
proposed budget, which calls for a $400 million increase to basic education
subsidies in 2015-16, bringing the total to $6.1 billion.
"If
we don't invest now, it's going to cost us a whole heck of a lot later,"
he said, referencing communities with high incarceration levels and lack of job
skills.
Gov. Tom Wolf
speaks about connecting education, industry in Hatboro
Publci Spirit Willow Grove By Eric Fitzsimmons efitzsimmons@montgomerynews.com @efitzsimmons08 on Twitter Published: Monday, April 27, 2015
Hatboro
>> Gov. Tom Wolf visited Hatboro on Tuesday, discussing education and
workforce redevelopment as part of his “Jobs That Pay” tour. Wolf took was shown around M&S Centerless
Grinding Inc., a company that provides precision grinding for medical,
aerospace and tech industries. He spoke with the owner of M&S, John Shegda,
and representatives from the Souderton
Area School
District about the importance of relationships
between education and industry.
First lady
visits East Pennsboro school on 'Schools That
Teach' tour
Penn
Live By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com Email
the author | Follow on Twitter on April
27, 2015 at 4:31 PM
First
lady Frances Wolf made
a stop on Monday on her "Schools That Teach"
tour at West Creek
Hills Elementary
School to hear from teachers and administrators about how
state funding cuts have impacted East
Pennsboro Area
School District . Along with reading to kindergartners, she
also took the opportunity to make a pitch for district officials to support
Gov. Tom Wolf's proposed investment in public education. East Pennsboro
schools would receive nearly $474,000 in additional funding in basic and
special education next year if the GOP-controlled General Assembly
approves the $500 million
increase that the Democratic governor has proposed for those
budget lines next year.
John Hanger: Gov. Wolf's budget a good
deal for Pennsylvanians
Morning
Call Opinion by John Hanger April 28, 2015
John
Hanger is secretary of policy and planning in the office of Gov. Tom Wolf.
Gov. Wolf has proposed a bold and comprehensive budget
that aims to create fairness, provide tax relief for seniors and families, and
make the necessary investments in education that will benefit all of Pennsylvania . Further, it closes the $2.3 billion
structural deficit and ends our commonwealth's fiscal crises through
sustainable budgeting practices. Elizabeth Steele's recent Your View("Elderly,
working families suffer under Gov. Wolf's Pa. budget") inaccurately
disparages crucial elements of the governor's historic proposal. Under Gov. Wolf's plan, 270,000 seniors will
have their school property taxes eliminated, while others will receive
substantial relief. This much-needed property tax cut will bring much-needed
relief to seniors on fixed incomes, some of whom have been forced to give up
the very home they have lived in their entire life simply because they cannot
afford to pay their property taxes.
Report:
Getting rid of racial bias in Pa.
school funding will take more than money
WHYY
Newsworks BY LAURA BENSHOFF
APRIL 27, 2015
Gov. Tom
Wolf's proposed education budget calls for increasing Pennsylvania spending on education by 7
percent -- and it starts by dividing that projected $400 million among the
state's 500 districts. These increases,
however, won't change how existing funds are allocated. "It's
a relatively small amount being added onto a base that has these gigantic
racial disparities built into it," according to data scientist David
Mosenkis, who analyzed Wolf's proposed budget distribution in a new report for
Philadelphians Organized to Witness, Empower and Rebuild -- known as POWER, a
faith-based social justice organization.
Poverty is
growing in Derry Township , school superintendent reports
By Monica Von Dobeneck | Special to
PennLive on April 27, 2015 at 9:12 PM
But Derry Township
School District
superintendent Joseph McFarland shared some surprising statistics on the
district's changing demographics with the school board Monday night. In 2000,
the number of students getting free and reduced lunches in the district stood
at 4 percent, earning the township its wealthy reputation. But by 2015, that
number had risen to 19 percent. And while it stands at 14 percent for the high
school, it is 21 percent at the elementary school. McFarland also shared some figures he received
from Robert Jarvis, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania
who has been studying poverty across the state.
According to those figures, some pockets of populations in Derry Township
have poverty rates approaching 40 percent. That is more than any other district
in Dauphin County
shows except for Harrisburg , Steelton-Highspire,
and small sections of Susquehanna Township and Middletown .
Fighting crime
with preschool: Law enforcement leaders advocate for pre-k funding
As
district attorney, Craig Stedman deals with some of the worst criminals in Lancaster County . But it
hasn't made him cynical. "Most of
the people that we end up prosecuting, they're not inherently evil
people," he said Monday morning. "There's
a few of them, and we can take care of them, but most of them, if they're given
the right direction, wouldn't turn to a life of crime." The key
to that direction, Stedman said, is education, and the earlier society provides
it, the better. That's why the district attorney and Lancaster County Sheriff
Mark Reese are advocating for increased state funding for early childhood
education.
Prevailing
wage reform proposed in Pa. House
Herald
Mail Media Posted: Monday, April 27, 2015 7:00 am | Updated: 1:41 pm, Mon Apr 27, 2015. by Jennifer Fitch
Delco teachers
to rally before meeting
Philly.com by Kathy Bocella LAST
UPDATED: Tuesday, April 28, 2015, 1:08 AM
Thirty school directors accepted into
inaugural cohort of Fellowship in School Governance
PSBA NEWS RELEASE April 27, 2015
The
Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA)
has created a new Fellowship in School
Governance program and accepted 30 school directors from across the state
into the inaugural cohort class. The Fellowship is a capstone program for
interested school board members who wish to go “above and beyond” in their
commitment and professional preparation. It is an
approximate 35-hour time commitment over the course of a program year
(January-October). Individual board members apply, and upon successful
admittance, join a cohort of board members.
Applicants are asked to actively participate and contribute to the work
of the cohort for the entire program year, and also are asked to attend that
year’s annual PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference where cohort teams will be
recognized and deliver an education session outlining the findings of a team
project.
NJ, PA among 10
Smartest States for Educating Your Kids Before College
Philly.com The Street Written by: Laurie
Kulikowski 04/25/15 - 10:13 AM EDT
Legislators
talk pensions, education funding at North
Penn School
District forum
North Penn Life By Jarreau Freeman jfreeman@montgomerynews.com @JarreauFreeman on Twitter Published: Monday, April 27, 2015
Lansdale
>> No topic seemed to be off limits at an education funding forum in the North Penn
School District . More than a dozen residents and North Penn School District officials gathered April 23 in the Penndale Middle School auditorium for a panel
discussion on basic education funding. Some
of the main topics that the panelists discussed were charter schools, property
taxes, pensions, the “hold harmless” provision and the state funding formula. Moderated by North Penn Superintendent Curtis
Dietrich, the goal of the forum was to educate and raise awareness among
residents and legislators regarding education funding concerns.
Pottsgrove
officials: Transparency, attendance matter
In Pennsylvania , township
and borough officials are paid a small stipend, but school board members are
not paid. School board members and
municipal board members typically put in hours in meetings, reading reports,
educating themselves about issues and talking to constituents. Some may say it’s a thankless job. The motivation to serve on a school board is
not unlike that of a Little League coach or a PTA president or the head of a
church council. People are driven by the opportunity to make a difference for
our families, our neighborhoods, our churches, our schools and our towns. Some may say that opportunity is priceless. Priceless or thankless, the role of a school
board member or township official is important, both to those who seek and
obtain it and to those represented. An elected official becomes the voice and
the decision-maker for the hundreds of people he or she represents in office —
the vote that determines tax rates, policies, procedures, school building plans
and where to make budget cuts. In that
representative role, officials owe it to their constituents to be transparent
and above-board in their dealings and to actively participate in the functions
of government.
Just how big
is opt out in Delaware ?
WHYY
Newsworks BY AVI WOLFMAN-ARENT
APRIL 28, 2015
Education
Justice Platform
Our
coalition, Great Public Schools Pittsburgh, has just released an important
education justice platform. See below for the short version, or click
here for the full version. The six organizations of the coalition worked
together to develop this platform to help educate and inform school board
candidates and other education advocates about the specific issues facing our
schools in anticipation of this spring’s primary election – when four of nine
school board positions will be on the ballot.
The GPS
education justice platform calls on candidates running for school board to
commit to the following:
- full funding for the PPS schools our
children deserve
- charter school accountability
- sustainable community schools
- welcoming and inclusive teaching and
learning environments
- support for educators who help our
children learn and grow
- universal early childhood education
- less testing, more learning
- transparency, accountability and
collaboration
Do you
care about these issues? Please come to our GPS Town Hall Forum this
Wednesday! April 29th from 5:30 – 7:30 pm at the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary’s Hicks
Memorial Chapel (616 N Highland
Ave , Pittsburgh , PA 15206 ).
Hear Me
Campaign
for Fair Funding PA
Many
schools in Pennsylvania
and around the country are struggling to provide basic student programs and
services. Some do not have the resources they need to provide all students with
a quality education, and students are suffering because of this lack of
resources. To address this problem, more than 40 organizations throughout Pennsylvania have joined
together to form The Campaign for Fair Education Funding. This coalition wants
to hear from students across Pennsylvania
to find out what resources are missing from schools and what it would mean to
have those resources for all of our public school students. #fairfundingpa For
more information, visit http://fairfundingpa.org/
“The pendulum might be swinging to the idea
that maybe kids actually do need a well-balanced education.”
Prioritizing
the Arts Over Test Prep
The Atlantic by SARA NEUFELD April 27, 2015
In an
age when public education has become synonymous with high-stakes exams, an
inner-city charter-school network is using culture and creative expression to
teach the Common Core standards. Fourteen-year-old
Zarria Porter spends her days surrounded by fine works of art. On her way to
dance and computer classes, she passes through a sun-drenched lobby showcasing
Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Brooklyn Bridge,” Albert Bierstadt’s “In the Mountains,” and—her personal favorite—“Song of the Towers” by Aaron Douglas. This is Zarria’s middle school. It is modeled
after elite private prep schools and filled with high-quality reproductions of
famous paintings from around the world. But Zarria is a student in Brownsville , Brooklyn, one of New York City ’s poorest and most
crime-ridden neighborhoods, and her school is a public charter.
Ascend Learning,
a network of seven charter schools in Brooklyn, is going to great lengths to
ensure students living in the world’s cultural capital aren’t deprived of
art—as so many poor, minority kids in urban America are. Inside renovated
buildings that could pass for high-end galleries, students are not only taking
art and music classes, but teachers also incorporate art into academic
subjects.
SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE: PART III OF AN
EDUCATION BUDGET PREVIEW
Third and State Blog Posted by Waslala Miranda on April 24, 2015 12:15
pm
The Senate
Appropriations Committee met on March 30 to discuss the proposed 2015-16
education budget with Acting Education Secretary Pedro Rivera. There were
three topics discussed at the committee hearing that will be key to
understanding the upcoming budget process:
- How well public schools are doing and
whether all children are given a fair chance to succeed;
- The role of unfunded pension costs in
budget concerns; and
- Property tax reform.
Today, we’ll be
looking at the last topic: property
taxes.
Charter Schools’ Latest
Innovation: Keeping Teachers Happy
Slate By Alexandria Neason April 27, 2015
As the charter
school movement comes of age, school leaders are realizing that good teachers
aren’t widgets that can easily be replaced.
As charter schools have proliferated New Orleans and the country, many schools,
including Success Prep, have largely relied on young, inexperienced teachers
who tend to leave the classroom sooner than their peers at traditional public
schools—an approach to hiring sometimes described as “churn and burn.” Charter
supporters like Teach for America founder
Wendy Kopp have even insisted that strong schools with an emphasis on good
training can survive the constant loss of teachers.
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
PHILLY DISTRICT TO HOLD
COMMUNITY BUDGET MEETINGS
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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