Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 3525 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors,
administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's
staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Wolf education transition
team members, Superintendents, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher
leaders, business leaders, faith-based organizations, labor organizations, education
professors, members of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies,
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These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
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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 April 1, 2015:
Three guys who may pick
Philly's next mayor
Education Voters of PA will hold a forum
about public school funding in Cumberland County: Wednesday, April 1, 7:00 pm
at the Grace Milliman Pollock Performing Arts Center, 340 North 21st Street,
Camp Hill.
More info/registration: http://www.educationvoterspa.org/index.php/site/news/2015-events/
More info/registration: http://www.educationvoterspa.org/index.php/site/news/2015-events/
PA-Gov: Wolf Answers
Budget Questions in Facebook
Town Hall
PoliticsPA Written
by Abby Smith, Contributing Writer March 31, 2015
Gov. Tom Wolf took to social mediaagain Tuesday
for another Town Hall with constituents — this time to field questions about
his first proposed budget. The 20-minute Town Hall was live streamed on
the governor’s Facebook page, and he answered a
number of questions that had been posed by Pennsylvanians in comments the
previous day. Wolf continued to come
back to two portions of his budget: property tax relief and investment in
education — measures he said Pennsylvanians have repeatedly called for.
According to the Governor, his proposed budget strikes the right balance
between these two constituent concerns, unlike the budget plan drafted by the
Republican-controlled legislature.
Governor Tom Wolf uses Facebook to field questions on
budget
By James P. O'Toole / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette April 1, 2015 12:00 AM
Gov. Tom Wolf argued the case for his budget proposals in a
virtual town hall Tuesday, answering questions about the plan in a
live-streamed presentation on his Facebook page.
The Democrat brought his bully pulpit to the social media
venue just as the debates in a more traditional forum — the annual
department-by-department budget hearings — were wrapping up in the House and
Senate. Mr. Wolf renewed his contention that a severance tax on natural gas and
a broadening of the sales tax would allow the state to address recurring
deficits, increase aid to education and allow school districts to enact
substantial cuts in their property taxes. In a 20-minute session, he faced a
series of mostly friendly questions. To one parent, concerned at how his budget
would treat cyber charter schools, he defended his plan to tighten funding
oversight but insisted that it would adequately support the alternative schools
while saving the state $160 million.
Public session altered by
Wolf
Trib Live By The Associated Press Tuesday, March 31,
2015, 8:42 p.m.
HARRISBURG — Gov. Tom Wolf made his second
official appearance on social media Tuesday at what was billed as a Facebook Town Hall but looked more like him being
interviewed by an aide. Hundreds of
written questions expressing viewpoints about tax reform and other issues were
posted on Facebook before the event, but they were distilled into about a dozen
questions that Wolf answered while sitting at a table with deputy press
secretary Megan Healey, a former local TV journalist.
Twitter town hall on
education funding in Pa.
Tuesday night
Penn Live By Therese Umerlik | tumerlik@pennlive.com Email
the author | Follow on Twitter
on March 31, 2015 at 7:24 PM, updated March 31, 2015 at 9:16 PM
on March 31, 2015 at 7:24 PM, updated March 31, 2015 at 9:16 PM
UPDATE: The town
hall is now over, but you can view the tweets below.
This evening Policy and Planning Secretary John Hanger and
Acting Education Secretary Pedro Rivera will chat on Twitter about the need for
an equitable, accountable basic education funding formula. Twitter users and followers can follow the
state Department of Education below from 8 to 9 p.m. to see responses from
Hanger and Rivera. During the chat, Hanger's tweets will be signed JH and
Rivera's tweets PR. The hashtag is
#FairFundingPA. The Pennsylvania
Association of Rural and Small
Schools will be posting
questions via its Twitter account.
Other groups participating in the chat include the
Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators, Pennsylvania School Boards Association,
Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials and Pennsylvania
Association of Elementary and Secondary School Principals.
"Lawrence
Feinberg of the Keystone
State Education Coalition
said the problem is that the tax credit program essentially substitutes state
funds for what should be private support of private and parochial schools. "You know, that's millions of dollars
that never gets into the general fund and therefore is not available in the
budget when the legislature and the governor are sitting down to figure out how
they're going to fund basic education," Feinberg said.
The Susquehanna donors get
that. Indeed, that's their policy goal. They favor using tax dollars to support
alternatives to failing public schools.
Feinberg said there's another
problem with what the Susquehanna principals are up to. Politicians who back
school choice programs, he says, are often supported by a handful of wealthy
donors, both here and elsewhere. Letting
rich contributors use their money to tip the scales of educational policy, he
says, is not healthy for democracy. "It would seem that with recent national
court decisions, you know, money talks and everybody else walks," Feinberg
said."
Three guys who may pick
your next mayor
WHYY Newsworks DAVE DAVIES OFF MIC A BLOG BY DAVE DAVIES MARCH 31, 2015
The three men who will probably be the most influential
players in the Philadelphia
mayor's race are so media-shy that I don't even have photos of them. The principals in a Bala Cynwyd-based
securities trading firm called Susquehanna Group International are funding an
independent effort to support state Sen. Anthony Williams for mayor, and
they've begun with a TV ad buy worth over a half-million dollars. (You can see
the ad here.) For some
perspective on the scale of that buy, the $500,000 cost is more than any of the
six mayoral campaigns, including Williams, had in total in their last campaign
finance filing in January. Who are the
Susquehanna boys? As best I can tell, they're three very rich guys who are
driven not by financial self-interest, but by an ideological commitment to
school choice -- charter schools and taxpayer-funded tuition vouchers for
private and parochial schools.
Here's a
2014 KEYSEC posting on the Students First PAC…
Six millionaires/billionaires
contributed $1,482,604 to privatize democratically-governed Pennsylvania public education.
Here are
some other prior Keystone State Education Coalition postings
on the Students First PAC money trail:
January
9, 2012 FOLLOW THE MONEY: Contributions to Students First PAC - Not Exactly
Grassroots $6.66 Million from just 19 donors
October 22, 2011: Students First PAC Contributions to Senate Ed Committee Members
April 22, 2011: Students First PAC Ramps up ...
January 3, 2011 - Follow The Students First PAC Voucher Money
October 22, 2011: Students First PAC Contributions to Senate Ed Committee Members
April 22, 2011: Students First PAC Ramps up ...
January 3, 2011 - Follow The Students First PAC Voucher Money
"Pennsylvania and many
other states have seen aggressive growth of charter schools, but too often the
data on their effectiveness is confusing or contradictory. That may always be
the case, since even if students of similar demographic backgrounds are
compared, there are significant enough differences between traditional public
schools and charters to make comparison hard.
Two such areas, according to
Kate Shaw, of Philadelphia-based Research for Action, which has undertaken many
education studies, are in special education and students who live in poverty.
Traditional public schools typically have more students with high needs in special
education and more students experiencing extreme poverty with far more risk
factors than charter counterparts. That, Shaw says, can make direct comparisons
between traditional and charter schools problematic."
DN Editorial: The charter
news is mixed
Comparing them with traditional schools is
tricky, and more needs to be known
Daily News Editorial
POSTED: Wednesday, April 1, 2015, 12:16 AM
TAKEN at face value, two recent developments on the
charter-school front - at the national and state level - might be considered
positive ammunition for those championing alternatives to traditional public
schools. Last week, Stanford
University's Center for Research on Education Outcomes released a new report that
studied charter-school performance in 41 urban areas, including Philadelphia . It found
that such charters provide higher levels of growth in math and reading compared
to traditional public schools.
Philly mayoral candidates
talk public education, movies and weed with Central High students
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY MARCH 31, 2015
Plenty of tough, wonky, policy-driven questions were lobbed
at the Philadelphia mayoral candidates at a
forum hosted by students at Central
High School Tuesday. Among them were carefully worded queries
about the city's unfunded pension liability, City Hall's perceived pay-to-play
political culture, and – especially relevant to the social sciences students
who organized the event – the future of Philadelphia public education. But unlike the multitude of other mayoral
forums organized this campaign season, this one also allowed the candidates to
shake loose and dish one-word answers on the students' pet issues.
"The Rendell Center
for Civics and Civic Engagement at the University of Pennsylvania
will host the candidate forum May 4. It will be televised from School District headquarters and viewed in elementary,
middle, and high schools across the city.
Rendell said teachers will collect questions from students. The best
queries will be posed to the candidates by the students who came up with them."
Rendell announces mayoral
education forum
CHRIS BRENNAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER POSTED: Wednesday, April 1, 2015,
1:08 AM
Former Gov. Ed Rendell on Tuesday announced an education-focused
forum for Democratic candidates for mayor, with questions drawn up by fourth
and fifth graders from the Philadelphia
School District . Could Rendell, who also served two terms as
mayor, eventually endorse one of those candidates? "Not likely," was Rendell's reply,
despite an encouraging tweet he sent Doug Oliver's way.
Philly District receives
$1.5 million grant for innovations in early literacy
the
notebook By Dale Mezzacappa on Mar 31, 2015 06:27 PM
The Philadelphia
School District and the
Free Library have received a $1.5 million federal grant for a program called
"Building Bridges with Books" that will benefit students from 10
elementary schools. The program is
designed to "build bridges" between families and schools through
early literacy activities, including monthly parent training sessions on the
importance of reading and talking to children and regular visits to the
library. Students in kindergarten, 1st
and 2nd grades will make biweekly trips to their local Free Library branch. In
addition, the 10 schools will receive 30 new iPads each, allowing them to
access more than 1,000 children's books in the library's collection. Students
will also receive four books each to take home over the summer.
Fewer state dollars shifts
Centennial's budget burden to locals
Bucks County Courier
Times By Gary Weckselblatt Staff Writer Posted: Monday, March 30,
2015 4:30 am | Updated: 2:26
pm, Mon Mar 30, 2015. (paywall)
As the Centennial School Board wrestles with developing its
budget for 2015-16, one director put the blame for a likely tax increase
squarely on the shrinking share of state and federal dollars.
“Basically, elected officials who get paid look good and
school district officials who don’t get paid have the burden of raising your
taxes,” Steven Adams said. “That’s the card dealt to us.”
More teaching, less
testing a good move for Pa.
schools
THE ISSUE:
Gov. Tom Wolf
said he is looking to replace, with input from teachers, Pennsylvania ’s School Performance Profile,
the public school-accountability system put in place by his predecessor in
2013. The state’s largest teachers union supports moving away from an “emphasis
on toxic
testing” and looks forward to hearing Wolf’s plan. A spokesman for House
Republicans said they are “miffed” because tests provide accountability. State
Sen. Lloyd Smucker, R-West
Lampeter Township ,
who chairs the Senate Education Committee, was more measured, with
a defense of testing and an openness to improving the state’s accountability
system. Concerns that Pennsylvania students
are spending too much classroom time taking and preparing for standardized
tests is not limited to teachers.
Parents
are opting their children out — a right they have under
Pennsylvania
law.
With parents and teachers both concerned, it’s good that the
governor has spoken up.
Diane Ravitch's Blog By dianeravitch March
31, 2015 //
Blogger Yinzercation has an excellent
article explaining the negative effects of “tax credits” on public
education. “While our legislators are
busy looking under their sofa cushions for spare change to fund the state
budget, they might want to consider the $75 million that just walked out the
front door. That’s how much the Education Improvement Tax Credit (EITC) program
costs us taxpayers every year. “The
misnamed EITC program has nothing to do with educational improvement and
everything to do with funneling what would have been state budget dollars into
private schools, while increasing profits for corporations. Here’s how it
works: corporations can get an EITC tax credit by contributing to a Scholarship
Organization, which channels the money to private schools. The companies
receive up to 90% of their contributions as a tax credit, worth up to $300,000
per year, and can get a federal tax write-off as well, making the program
highly attractive.
Testing Resistance & Reform News: March 25 - 31,
2015
FairTest Submitted by fairtest on March 31, 2015 -
1:04pm
The U.S.
assessment reform movement is growing so rapidly that it is hard to keep up.
This week's clips include stories from 30 states as well as updates from the
fight to rollback federal testing mandates
FairTest is a hub for the national testing resistance -- every day
dozens of activists, journalists and policy-makers contact us for information
and advice.
Academic vs. play-based preschool debate fading in
favor of intellectual discovery
By Jill Harkins / Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette April 1, 2015 12:00 AM
Lilian Katz views the debate about whether preschool should
be play-oriented or academically oriented from her own but an increasingly
embraced perspective.
“You don’t say to preschoolers, ‘What do you know?’ because
then they think there’s supposed to be something already in their heads. You say,
‘What do you want to find out?’ ” said the co-director of the Clearinghouse on
Early Education and Parenting at the University
of Illinois .
“What do you know?” emphasizes academics, including the rote
memorization of the alphabet, where a teacher provides a sole correct answer.
“What do you want to find out?” requires a child to find his own path to one of
many answers through investigation or play.
How preschoolers will be taught becomes an increasingly
critical question in the wake of President Barack Obama’s recently announced
Preschool for All Initiative and Gov. Tom Wolf’s allocation of an additional
$120 million, an 88 percent increase, to early childhood programs in his
proposed state budget.
4 takeaways to note from
Education Trust's school funding report
Education Dive By Allie Gross | March
30, 2015
Last week, Education Trust published "Funding Gaps 2015,"
a report that looks specifically at how states and cities are contributing to
education budgets. While talking heads typically zero in on federal funding of
schools — like how Race to the Top and No Child Left Behind impact budgets —
the reality is that the bulk of a district's cash flow comes from more local
sources. In fact, according to Education Trust, an estimated 87% of a
district's funding comes from states and cities. With many districts currently
suffering from tightened budgets, the report calls out the states failing to
properly fund their schools, highlighting those that have particularly
held out on districts with large low-income populations.
For a closer look at the report's findings, here are four
key takeaways to note.
Why More Education Won’t Fix Economic Inequality
New York Times by Neil Irwin MARCH 31, 2015
Suppose you accept the persuasive data that inequality has
been rising in the United
States and most advanced nations in recent
decades. But suppose you don’t want to fight inequality through politically
polarizing steps like higher taxes on the wealthy or a more generous social
welfare system. There remains a
plausible solution to rising inequality that avoids those polarizing ideas:
strengthening education so that more Americans can benefit from the advances of
the 21st-century economy. This is a solution that conservatives, centrists and liberals alike
can comfortably get behind. After all, who doesn’t favor a stronger educational
system? But a new papershows
why the math just doesn’t add up, at least if the goal is addressing the gap
between the very rich and everyone else.
Private school success due
to better students, not better schools, StatsCan says
School resources
and practices differ slightly between public and private schools, agency finds
CBC
News Posted: Mar 31, 2015 10:27 AM ET Last Updated: Mar 31, 2015
4:38 PM ET
Students at Canadian private schools have more educational
success than their public school peers because of their backgrounds and
classmates, not the schools themselves, Statistics Canada says in a new report. The study followed 7,142 Grade 10
students, focusing on standardized test scores in reading, math and science at
age 15, as well as the educational qualifications they had earned
by age 23. Private school students had
better test scores (about nine per cent higher on average) and more
educational success after high school.
None of the differences, however, could be attributed to
school resources and practices, Statistics Canada says. "Two factors consistently account for
these differences," the report released on Tuesday said. "Students
who attended private high schools were more likely to have socio-economic
characteristics positively associated with academic success and to have school
peers with university-educated parents."
SCHOOL PLAY – It’s a tough
subject
PCCY website March 2015
A live theatre collaboration between playwrights Arden Kass and
Seth Bauer and Public Citizens for Children and Youth. Directed by Edward
Sobel.
School Play explores our attitudes toward public education
using the real voices of Pennsylvanians from across the Commonwealth.
Invited Dress Preview: April 8th @ 7:30pm
Philadelphia Premier: April 9th @ 7:30pm (only
a few seats left!)
More info: http://www.pccy.org/initiatives/school-play/
RSVP to schoolplay@pccy.org to reserve your seat - April 9th is
almost sold out and only a few seats remain for April 8th!
Who will be at the PSBA Advocacy Forum April 19-20 in
Mechanicsburg and Harrisburg?
- Acting
Ed Sec'y Pedro Rivera
- Senate
Ed Committee Majority Chairman Lloyd Smucker
- House
Ed Committee Majority Chairman Stan Saylor
- Senate
Appropriations Committee Chair Pat Browne
- Diane
Ravitch
- House
Majority Leader Dave Reed
- House
Minority Leader Frank Dermody
- 2014
PSBA Tim Allwein Advocacy Award winners Shauna D'Alessandro and Mark
Miller
How about You?
Join PSBA for the second annual Advocacy Forum on April 19-20,
2015. Hear from legislative experts on hot topics and issues regarding public
education on Sunday, April 19, at PSBA headquarters in Mechanicsburg. The next
day you and fellow advocates will meet with legislators at the state capitol.
This is your chance to learn how to successfully advocate on behalf of public
education and make your voice heard on the Hill.
Details and Registration for PSBA members (only $25.00) https://www.psba.org/event/advocacy-forum-day-hill-2015/
Curmuducation Blog Saturday, March 21, 2015
I don't get out much. I'm a high school English teacher in a
small town, and kind of homebody by nature. When I leave town, it's for family
or work. But in just over a month, on the weekend of April 25-26, I am taking a
trip to Chicago for neither. The Network
for Public Education is the closest thing to an actual formal
organization of the many and varied people standing up for public education in
this modern era of privatizing test-driven corporate education reform. NPE held
a conference last year, and they're doing it again this year-- a gathering of
many of the strongest voices for public education in America today. Last year I followed along on line-- this year I will be there.
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
For this event, sponsored by Public Citizens for Children and
Youth (PCCY), local dentists will provide free screenings and cleanings for
children. Give Kids a Smile Day is especially for children who do not
have health insurance or who have not had a dental exam in the last six months.
Appointments are necessary, so please call PCCY at 215-563-5848 x32 to
schedule one starting Monday, March 16th. Volunteers will be
on hand to answer calls. Smile Day information can also be found on the school
district website and on PCCY’s website - http://www.pccy.org/resource/give-kids-a-smile-day/.
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