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Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for May 5, 2015:
Primer: Four Background
Pieces on PA School Funding
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
Funding,
Formulas, and Fairness: What Pennsylvania
Can Learn from Other States' Funding Formulas
A look back: How Pennsylvania has
distributed money for education since the 1960s
By the Notebook on
Oct 2, 2014 10:39 AM
Overview of
50 States' Funding Formulas
By Mike Griffith, Education
Commission of the States
Presented to PA Basic Education
Funding Commission October 2014
The ABC's of Basic Education
Funding in Pennsylvania
(video)
The Campaign for Fair Education Funding December 18, 2014 Video
Runtime 3:31
The Pennsylvania
Association of School Business Officials provides a short, easy to follow
tutorial on how funding works and the challenges lawmakers confront.
PASBO answers the
question: What is Basic Education Funding?
Rising free and reduced
school lunch figures: Does it show growing poverty rate in midstate?
Penn Live By Julianne Mattera
| jmattera@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 04, 2015 at 10:22 AM, updated May 04, 2015 at 11:17 AM
on May 04, 2015 at 10:22 AM, updated May 04, 2015 at 11:17 AM
The portion of students with free and reduced lunch — a
possible indicator of poverty — is on the rise at districts across
south-central Pennsylvania . In the last decade at school districts in
Dauphin, Cumberland, York, Lebanon, Lancaster and Perry counties, free and
reduced lunch eligibility has risen by an average of 11.38 percent (Cumberland
County) to 17.55 percent (Lancaster County), according to state Department of
Education data. While it's been
disputed whether free and reduced lunch data is a good metric for
measuring the poverty rates, Derry
Township School
District spokesman Dan Treddinick said such data
along with recently reviewed census figures exemplify what the district has
been seeing anecdotally. The traditionally
well-off school district has seen its free and reduced lunch
eligibility nearly triple — going from 7.8 percent in 2005 to 20.7 percent this
school year. Across the Susquehanna River, Mechanicsburg Area
School District 's
eligibility rates rose from 16.69 percent to 31.12 percent in the same time
frame.
Gov. Tom Wolf says Pennsylvania 's revenue
surge doesn't affect his tax recipe
By Charles Thompson |
cthompson@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 04, 2015 at 6:21 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 7:17 PM
on May 04, 2015 at 6:21 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 7:17 PM
State revenues are surging to the finish line. A new report from Pennsylvania's Independent Fiscal
Office shows that state general fund revenues are now likely to finish
the 2014-15 fiscal year June 30 some $594 million over its initial
projections. That's good short-term news
that also puts the IFO's latest estimate $374 million ahead of the revenue base
upon which Gov. Tom Wolf built his sweeping 2015-16 budget plan this
winter. But while any surplus is good,
it's not enough, Wolf said Monday, for him to make unilateral adjustments to
the historic tax increases he's called for to pay for ramped-up education funding and other
objectives.
Independent report contains
good short-term budget news for state
By Kate Giammarise / Post-Gazette Harrisburg Bureau May 4, 2015 11:16 PM
'It's a mess,' Bethlehem schools chief
on Keystone Exams project-based tests
By Sara K.
Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
May 04, 2015 at 8:35 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 9:23 PM
The Bethlehem
Area School District is pushing for mandate relief from Pennsylvania 's Keystone
Exams project-based assessments. Starting
with the class of 2017, students must pass three subject-based end-of-course
exams. If students can't pass the exams, state laws calls for them to complete
a project-based assessment. But the
assessments the state designed are rather rigid. Students and teachers
don't get to select the projects. Rather, students must take a series of online
modules, estimated to take from eight to 40 hours. Bethlehem Assistant Superintendent for
Education Jack Silva said the assessments are time and technology intensive.
And students will have to wait for the state to evaluate portions of the exams
before moving on to the next module.
"This education reform legislation,
which has the backing of House GOP leadership, is expected to be put to a vote
by the full House in the coming weeks and become part of the upcoming state
budget negotiations."
Eliminating
seniority-based teacher layoffs bill wins committee support
By Jan
Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 04, 2015 at 3:41 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 3:45 PM
School districts would be free to layoff teachers based on their
performance evaluation rather than seniority under legislation that the House
Education Committee approved on Monday. Rep. Steve Bloom Discusses His Bill That Eliminates
Seniority-based Furlough DecisionsBloom's bill allows for districts to
layoff teachers for economic reasons and allows those furlough decisions to be
based on teacher evaluations rather than seniority. However, if a layoff
decision comes down to two teachers with the same performance rating, the less
senior one would be the one to go. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Steve Bloom, R-North
Middleton Twp., also would extend the three-year time period before new
teachers could be eligible for tenure to five years and allows school districts
to furlough teachers for economic reasons.
Pa. teacher layoffs based
on evaluations, not seniority, gains support
By Sara K.
Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 04, 2015 at 5:48 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 5:58 PM
on May 04, 2015 at 5:48 PM, updated May 04, 2015 at 5:58 PM
Financial picture improves
for city schools, York
City School
District says
York Daily Record By Dylan Segelbaum dsegelbaum@ydr.com @dylan_segelbaum
on Twitter UPDATED: 05/04/2015 06:07:06 PM EDT0
COMMENTS
The York City School District 's
financial picture has started to stabilize during the past several years, said
Richard Snodgrass, the district's business manager. That's due to factors that include additional
state money and the district's attempts to control costs better, he said. At the end of the fiscal year on June 30, the
district should have a fund balance of about $6.7 million. That helps provide a
cushion, he said, as the money the district gets does not all come in at once.
Delco Times By Barbara Ormsby, Times
Correspondent POSTED: 05/04/15, 11:34 PM EDT
RIDLEY TOWNSHIP >> There
will be no increase in school taxes for Ridley School District residents,
according to the proposed final budget for 2015-2016 approved by the school board
at its May meeting. The real estate
millage rate will remain at 39.25 mills, or $3.93 for each $100 of assessed
value. For a house assessed at $100,000 the school tax bill will remain at
$3,930 for the upcoming school year. District
Superintendent Lee Ann Wentzel said the tax reduction under the state’s
Homestead/Farmstead Property Tax Reduction program is not yet determined.
Pottsgrove School District
weighs cuts to music, art programs
Reading Eagle By Paige Cooperstein Sunday May 3, 2015 12:01 AM
When William Einhorn
was laid off as the strings instructor in the Pottsgrove School District
to save money in 2010, the orchestra program quickly fell apart. "It became a postscript in the music
program," said school board member Dee Gallion at a recent school board
meeting. "The problem was there was no teacher to champion that
program."
Gallion said there
were no orchestra performances outside the school day and no special trips like
other ensembles had. Einhorn later
served as a substitute in the music department before eventually being
reinstated to a full-time role because of the strong community outcry to
revitalize the orchestra. Gallion said
190 new elementary school students have joined the orchestra since Einhorn
returned as the director. Five years
after Einhorn's layoff, the school board is again contemplating making cuts in
the music and art departments to help erase a budget deficit.
- See more at:
http://readingeagle.com/news/article/pottsgrove-school-district-weighs-cuts-to-music-art-programs#sthash.1R57fZAI.dpuf
Budget with tax increase, rebate gets OK in State
College
Centre Daily Times BY
BRITNEY MILAZZO bmilazzo@centredaily.comMay 4, 2015
There will be an
increase in school taxes for residents in the State College Area
School District . But in a 6-2 vote, the board approved a tax
rebate program at a meeting on Monday night for eligible residents, to help
offset the cost. The proposed final
budget of $136,135,898 passed in a 7-1 vote and calls for a 5.49 percent
increase in taxes. Jim Pawelczyk was the lone no vote. And starting July 1, the supplemental
property tax rebate program will be offered to residents. According to a report from the district, the
program will allocate $200,000 to eligible residents for the 2015-16 fiscal
year.
Read more here: http://www.centredaily.com/2015/05/04/4733598_budget-with-tax-increase-rebate.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy
Penn Live By Monica Von Dobeneck | Special to
PennLive on May 04, 2015 at 10:37 PM, updated May 04, 2015
at 10:57 PM
Real estate taxes
would remain steady for residents of the Lower Dauphin
School in the 2015-16
school year under a proposed budget. The
preliminary budget passed Monday night by the school board would
keep taxes at 18.42 mills. That means a home assessed at $100,000 will pay
$1,842 in real estate taxes. The $59.4
million budget is 2.2 percent higher than this year's. But if the district
removes the extra $1.1 million it will have to pay in pensions this year, the
increase is only .3 percent, according to superintendent Sherri Smith. The
district will be paying $6.6 million toward the Public School Employees
Retirement System this year.
"The Williams campaign's
last TV ad buy was around $65,000, a fairly modest purchase. American Cities,
the super PAC funded by three wealthy suburban donors, on the other hand, has
been spending more than $700,000 a week on ad buys, and if it were to put that kind
of firepower behind attack ads, the effect would be formidable."
Williams launches first
attack ad in Philly mayor's race
WHYY Newsworks DAVE DAVIES OFF MIC A BLOG BY DAVE DAVIES MAY 5, 2015
Two weeks before the
May 19 Democratic primary, state Senator Anthony Williams has launched the
first attack ad of the Philadelphia
mayoral campaign. The target, to no one's surprise, is former City Councilman
Jim Kenney. With the Baltimore riots a fresh memory and police
community relations a topic of widespread concern, Williams' ad recalls
comments Kenney made in a 1997 Inquirer article when he was talking about about
restrictions placed on police use of force.
Elementary students grill Philly
mayoral candidates
KRISTEN A.
GRAHAM, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: Tuesday, May 5, 2015, 1:08 AM POSTED: Monday, May 4, 2015,
12:13 PM
State Sen. Anthony
Hardy Williams jokingly promised extended recess and summer break.
Nelson A. Diaz
name-checked notable Philadelphia
School District grad
Questlove - though he called him Love Quest.
And James F. Kenney told those in the audience he loved them very much. Five of the six Democratic mayoral candidates
took the stage for a very different type of forum Monday: The questioners were
fourth and fifth graders from district schools around the city. The event was
sponsored by the Rendell
Center for Civics and
Civic Engagement.
Is Testing Students the Answer to America ’s Education Woes?
New York Times Room
for Debate UPDATED MAY 4, 2015 6:47 AM
PATRICIA LEVESQUE
Patricia
Levesque, former deputy chief of staff for education under Gov. Jeb Bush, is
the chief executive officer of the Foundation
for Excellence in Education, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving
the quality of education for all students.
KEVIN WELNER
Kevin Welner, a
professor of education and the director of the National Education Policy Center at
the University of Colorado Boulder, is the co-author, most recently, of "Closing
the Opportunity Gap: What America Must Do to Give All Children an Even
Chance."
The testing of
public school children across the country is winding up for the year. And in New York , this
week, academics are meeting todiscuss
the teacher evaluation process of which these tests play a crucial
role. But in all the talk about
testing students, holding teachers and principals accountable for performance
and the growing
opt-out movement, one question remains: Is the testing regime, which has
essentially been in effect for over a decade, working?
No Longer Counting Who's
Poor in School
US News and World
Report By The Hechinger
Report May 4, 2015 | 9:10 a.m. EDT
The use of the main
statistic that determines poverty in school is getting complicated.
Social justice looms
large for many, if not most, education journalists. We care about the often
substandard education of low-income children and the gap between the haves and
have-nots. Take a look at the winners of the
Education Writers Association awards on April 20, 2015. Most were writers who
told the stories of students in poverty.
Beginning this school year and going forward, measuring and describing
that poverty is about to get much muddier. That’s because the main statistic
used to determine poverty in a school – the number of students who receive free
or reduced-priced lunches – is starting to get diluted. According to new rules
that went into effect this 2014-15 school year, a school can provide free meals
to all students if certain minimum thresholds are met. They no
longer have to count exactly how many students are poor. And no other statistic
that measures school poverty is as readily available.
The Big Problem With the New SAT
New York Times Opinion By RICHARD C. ATKINSON and SAUL
GEISER MAY 4, 2015
Richard C. Atkinson is president emeritus of the University of California . Saul Geiser is a
research associate at the Center for Studies in Higher Education at the
University of California, Berkeley.
AT first glance, the
College Board’s revised SAT seems a radical departure from the test’s original
focus on students’ general ability or aptitude. Set to debut a year from now,
in the spring of 2016, the exam will require students to demonstrate in-depth
knowledge of subjects they study in school.
The revised SAT takes some important, if partial, steps toward becoming
a test of curriculum mastery. In place of the infamously tricky, puzzle-type
items, the exam will be a more straightforward test of material that students
encounter in the classroom. The essay, rather than rewarding sheer verbosity,
will require students to provide evidence in support of their arguments and
will be graded on both analysis and writing. Vocabulary will move away from the
obscure language for which the SAT is noted, instead emphasizing words commonly
used in college and the workplace.
SAVE The DATE: Northwestern PA School Funding Forum
May 28, 2015 7:00 PM Jefferson Educational
Society 3207 State St.
Erie , PA 16508
Panelists
Mr. Jarrin
Sperry, Superintendent, Ms. Jody Sperry, Board President
Mr. William Nichols,
Superintendent
Mr. Richard Emerick,
Assistant Superintendent
Dr. James Tracy,
Superintendent
Ms. Christine
Mitchell, Board President
Mr. William Hall,
Superintendent Mr. Aaron O'Toole, Director of Finance and Accounting
Keynote Speaker
Mr. Jay Himes,
Executive Director, Pennsylvania
Association of School Business Officials
CONFERENCE ON THE STATE OF EDUCATION
IN PENNSYLVANIA
A CALL FOR ADEQUATE AND EQUITABLE SCHOOL FUNDING
Sponsored by Coatesville and Media Area
NAACPs
9:00 AM – 1:30 PM SATURDAY, MAY 16, 2015
MARCUS FOSTER STUDENT UNION 2ND
FLOOR
CHEYNEY UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA DELAWARE
COUNTY CAMPUS, CHEYNEY, PA
Our children have to
pass the state mandated tests in order to move on with life. SO - it is time
for the PA Assembly to provide adequate and equitable funding to the public
schools of Pennsylvania.
FREE AND OPEN TO THE
PUBLIC. SPACE IS LIMITED.
COME AND ASK YOUR
PERSONAL QUESTIONS AND SHARE YOUR OPINIONS WITH PRESENTERS WHO ARE EXPERTS AND
POLICY MAKERS.
Pre-Registration is
required for meals. Deadline for Pre-registration is May 12, 2015
PRE-REGISTER
ON-LINE: HTTPS://www.surveymonkey.com/S/JTZB9F8
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
Harrisburg University Auditorium, Strawberry Square 326 Market
Street Harrisburg, PA 17101
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
150 Louella Avenue,
Wayne, 3rd floor
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
Wednesday,
May 6
Tuesday,
May 12
Thursday,
May 14
Congreso, 216 West Somerset St .
Wednesday,
May 20
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