Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 3600 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,
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These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
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Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup for June 1, 2015:
June marks start of budget 'cacophony' in PA Capitol
COMMUNITY MEETING: PUBLIC SCHOOL FUNDING
IN BERKS COUNTY
The Capitol's hot topic? How long a budget deal will
take
Cumberlink Sentinel May
29, 2015 Marc Levy Associated Press
June marks start of budget 'cacophony' in PA Capitol
Morning Call By Steve EsackCall
Harrisburg
Bureau May 31, 2015
HARRISBURG — For
months, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf and Republican lawmakers have been trying to
build public support for their budget plans by holding roundtable discussions,
political events and rallies at schools and businesses. The partisan displays
continued Friday with Wolf and his wife Frances visiting a college in
Lancaster County to tout his plan to increase
education spending, from preschool to university, by 12 percent as part of his
proposed $33.8 billion budget. House Speaker Mike Turzai, R-Allegheny, was in the
same county on the same day headlining a discussion among Republican lawmakers
and like-minded business leaders opposed to the main element of Wolf's
education plan: a new tax on natural gas drillers.
The public events
are meant to show supporters they are not backing down from their respective
priorities prior to budget talks, said G. Terry Madonna, Franklin
& Marshall College pollster and political science
professor. "At this point they
can't concede before they get down to crunch time," he said. The crunching starts Monday.
Did you catch our weekend
postings?
PA Ed Policy Roundup for May 31, 2015:
One in five U.S. schoolchildren are living
below federal poverty line
Erie District has faith in
Wolf budget
By ERICA ERWIN erica.erwin@timesnews.com 31 May 2015 — Erie Times-News
The Erie School
District 's proposed final budget includes no tax
increase and is balanced almost entirely by state money the district isn't
guaranteed to receive. But Erie schools
Superintendent Jay Badams said the proposal is a realistic one, and said he is
"cautiously optimistic" that the district will receive at least some
of the additional state funding included in Gov. Tom Wolf's 2015-16 budget proposal. "I want to stress that my optimism is
guarded, and it's resting very heavily on the belief that our legislators
understand (funding) problems need to be solved and need to be solved
quickly," Badams said. The $157
million proposed final budget passed by the Erie School Board on Wednesday
bridges what started out as a $7.4 million budget gap on the assumption that
the district will receive much of what Wolf has proposed: $6.1 million in
additional funding from the state, including nearly $3.9 million in additional
basic education subsidy and $1.2 million in additional special education funds. The district also expects to save about $1
million in online charter school tuition.
"A bill introduced in
the House in January would make using the Keystone Exams as a graduation
requirement optional for school districts. Dinniman's Senate bill would put a
moratorium on it. Neither bill has been
brought out of committee, but Dinniman said he was optimistic: His bill has 28
cosponsors, more than a majority. It would put the moratorium in place until
the state has provided equal funding for all schools and had time to analyze
other means of student assessment, he said."
West Chester school
district mobilizes against Keystone Exams
JUSTINE
MCDANIEL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: June 1, 2015, 1:08 AM
A Chester County school
district is ramping up the fight against the Keystone Exams, while more than
half of Pennsylvania's state senators have signed on to a bill that would put a
moratorium on using the tests as a high school graduation requirement. This week, a widely shared letter by Jim
Scanlon, superintendent of the West
Chester Area School District - which consistently
ranks in the top 10 percent in testing statewide - put a spotlight on
opposition to the tests, which have outraged hundreds of parents, students, and
educators across the state. "You've
got kids starting to give up," Scanlon said. State Sen. Andy Dinniman (D., Chester) called
Chester County the "epicenter for this whole movement," saying that
even in its top-performing schools, educators and students say the tests are
detrimental.
“...personalized
education of every student, every day; and it is difficult to measure factors
that we consider to be essential."
Lower Merion School Board passes resolution on standardized testing
Main Line Times By
Richard Ilgenfritz rilgenfritz@mainlinemedianews.com @rpilgenfritz
on Twitter Published: Friday, May 29, 2015
Cyber schools would have to check truancy under
Pennyslvania bill
By Molly Born / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
June 1, 2015 12:00 AM
What began as a
conversation between two local children’s advocates recently made its way to
the state House of Representatives in the form of a bill to address truancy in
charter and cyber charter schools. The
legislation, introduced last month by state Rep. Dom Costa, D-Stanton Heights ,
would require such institutions to enforce compulsory attendance laws for their
students. Under current law, charter schools or cyber charters are supposed to
contact a student’s home school district when he or she misses three or more
days without an excused absence, a process Mr. Costa and Pittsburgh Public
Schools solicitor Ira Weiss said should stay in-house.
City Council to School District :
Go Away Already
Council’s school budget hearings were a
farce, but the real damage to Philadelphia
schools is being done by the State.
Philly Mag Citified BY PATRICK KERKSTRA | MAY
31, 2015 AT 5:55 AM
- Council lamentations that the district
is an insatiable monster that will not rest until it has devoured the life
savings of every tax-paying Philadelphian. Example: “So you want all of the money, all of
the time, basically.” — Council President Darrell Clarke.
- Council’s bizarre fixations on
irrelevant minutiae. Example: “Cursive writing should be mandatory.”
— Councilwoman Blondell Reynolds Brown.
- Council’s disturbing disinterest in the root causes
of the district’s ongoing financial distress.
- Complaint after complaint about the
district’s lack of transparency and failure to answer some pretty basic
questions.
So, pretty much the
usual.
Read more at http://www.phillymag.com/citified/2015/05/31/philadelphia-school-funding/#58UdloQJqjxurZXf.99
"Gym: Philadelphia
is a place where corporate education reform has done so much damage. No one
is a bigger symbol of that damage than the hedge fund billionaires behind
the Susquehanna Group. They poured
nearly $7
million into a municipal election, dwarfing any amount of money coming
from elsewhere. As I said in a press conference, these were three billionaires
looking to destroy public education in a city they would never live in and
hurting children they would never know. That about sums it up, and it’s why the
public resoundingly rejected them and their narrow abusive agenda that had done
so much harm not just to children but to entire neighborhoods and communities."
*Hope Always Wins the Day*
City-councilor-to-be Helen
Gym talks about the movement behind her win—and a clear defeat for the
education reform vision…
Edushyster Blog MAY 29, 2015 by EDUSHYSTER2012
EduShyster: That sound you
just heard was me uncorking a box of champagne. But you still have to win the
general election in November. Did I start celebrating too soon?
Helen Gym: No—you
didn’t celebrate too early. I’m not worried about the race but I definitely
want to make sure that in the final tally in November that I move up in votes
and send a clear message about voters prioritizing public education and
communities. And just to put things in perspective, Democrats outnumber
Republicans in Philly by more than 7 to 1.
A dozen years later,
KIPP'S first class graduates
MARTHA
WOODALL, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER LAST
UPDATED: June 1, 2015, 1:08 AM
One day in the
summer before fifth grade, Courtney Scott was jumping rope with a friend
outside her family's West Philadelphia
rowhouse when her parents called her inside to meet a stranger. The visit was not
the only thing about KIPP
Philadelphia Charter
School that would be
different. To ensure students were ready for college, principal Marc Mannella
told the family, classes would run from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays.
Enrichment programs would take up Saturdays, and they'd meet for three weeks
before school even started that fall. "I
was not excited, to say the least," Scott, 22, recalled
recently. She agreed to try KIPP for a year.
But what she began as a trial in 2003 turned into a 12-year
transformation that culminated two weeks ago when Scott received her diploma
from Haverford College .
Charter Sector Challenged
by Quality of School Boards
Education Week By Arianna
Prothero Published Online:
May 29, 2015
A District of Columbia charter school spent
millions contracting for services with a company owned by the school’s founder.
And an Ohio
charter spent more on rent than staff salaries—money paid to a company that was
owned by the same education management group that ran the school. Those two cases illustrate a recurring issue
in the charter school sector: poorly prepared school boards that fail to stop
questionable deals or flat out corruption.
When charter schools
struggle or get shut down, weak governance is often the source of trouble. And
many times, that issue is linked directly to the charter school's board, an
entity that even many charter supporters say too often flies under the radar of
public scrutiny.
Efforts to
professionalize charter boards and raise the caliber of the people serving on
them are gaining traction in some corners of the charter sector, even if policy
and research focused on the role of those local boards remain scant.
Apply
now for EPLC’s 2015-2016 PA Education Policy Fellowship Program
Applications are
available now for the 2015-2016
Education Policy Fellowship Program (EPFP).
The Education Policy Fellowship Program is sponsored in Pennsylvania by The Education Policy and
Leadership Center (EPLC). With more
than 400 graduates in its first sixteen years, this Program is a premier
professional development opportunity for educators, state and local
policymakers, advocates, and community leaders. State Board of
Accountancy (SBA) credits are available to certified public accountants. Past participants include state policymakers,
district superintendents and principals, charter school leaders, school
business officers, school board members, education deans/chairs, statewide
association leaders, parent leaders, education advocates, and other education
and community leaders. Fellows are typically sponsored by their employer
or another organization. The Fellowship
Program begins with a two-day retreat on September 17-18, 2015 and
continues to graduation in June 2016.
Click here to read about the Education Policy
Fellowship Program.
Sign up here to receive a weekly
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predictable and sustainable Basic Education Funding Formula by 2016
Sign up to support fair funding »
Campaign for Fair
Education Funding website
Our goal is to
ensure that every student has access to a quality education no matter where
they live. To make that happen, we need to fundamentally change how public
schools are funded. The current system is not fair to students or taxpayers and
our campaign partners – more than 50 organizations from across Pennsylvania -
agree that it has to be changed now. Student performance is stagnating. School
districts are in crisis. Lawmakers have the ability to change this formula but
they need to hear from you. You
can make a difference »
COMMUNITY MEETING: PUBLIC
SCHOOL FUNDING IN BERKS
COUNTY
Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 Time:7:00 – 8:30 p.m. | Registration begins
at 6:30 p.m.
Location: Berks
County Intermediate Unit,
1111 Commons Boulevard ,
Reading , PA 19605
Local school district leaders will discuss how state funding issues are
impacting our children’s education opportunities, our local taxes, and our
communities. You will have the opportunity to ask questions and learn how you
can support fair and adequate state funding for public schools in Berks County . State lawmakers who represent Berks County
have been invited to attend to learn about challenges facing area schools.
PILCOP: Adequately and
Fairly Funding Pennsylvania Schools: What are the Needs and Where Does the
Money Come From? (Live Webinar)
June 8, 2015, 12:00 — 2:00 P.M.
June 8, 2015, 12:00 — 2:00 P.M.
Staff attorney
Michael Churchill will speak about what schools need and where the money comes
from in this Pennsylvania Bar Institute (PBI) webinar on June
8. Click here to register.
Governor Wolf has
proposed $500 million in new funding for public schools starting this July. He
has proposed as shale extraction tax and increases in personal income and sales
taxes to pay for this. This Philadelphia
Bar Association Education Law Section and PBI are hosting a webinar that will
focus on how much public schools need and differing proposals on how state
funds should be distributed this year and in the future. Other focuses will
include the current local tax burdens for public schools and issues concerning
how the state should raise revenues to pay for these programs. The program will also provide information
about the components of a good funding formula and look at the work of the
Basic Education Funding Commission and the state-wide Campaign for Fair
Education Funding, of which we are a leading member.
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