Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 3850 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, professional associations and education advocacy organizations via
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These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
Keystone State Education Coalition
PA Ed Policy Roundup February 13, 2016:
RSVP Today for One of EPLC’s Education Policy Forum
Series on Governor Wolf’s 2016-17 State Budget Proposal
Wednesday, February 17, 2016 - Philadelphia
Thursday, February 25, 2016 - Pittsburgh
EPLC "Focus on
Education" TV Program on PCN - Sunday, Feb. 14 at 3:00
p.m.
A Discussion
on Governor Wolf's 2016-2017 state budget proposal for education, featuring:
Jodi Askins, Executive Director, PA Association for the Education of Young Children
Tom Gluck, Executive Director, PA Association of Intermediate Units
Marc Stier, Director, PA Budget and Policy Center
Kathy Swope, President, PA School Boards Association
Jodi Askins, Executive Director, PA Association for the Education of Young Children
Tom Gluck, Executive Director, PA Association of Intermediate Units
Marc Stier, Director, PA Budget and Policy Center
Kathy Swope, President, PA School Boards Association
All EPLC "Focus
on Education" TV shows are hosted by EPLC President Ron Cowell.
Visit the EPLC and the Pennsylvania School Funding Project web sites for
various resources related to education and school funding issues
The Allentown School District
is looking at taking out a $50 million loan — again — to stay afloat during the
state budget impasse.
"It's beginning to have
nothing but nightmarish consequences," Allentown superintendent says of budget
impasse
Jacqueline Palochko Contact Reporter
Of The Morning Call February 12, 206
District official: Erie schools headed for 'bankruptcy'
By Erica
Erwin 814-870-1846 Erie Times-News February
11, 2016 12:21 PM
By Ashley Andyshak Hayes For the Gettysburg
Times Posted: Friday,
February 12, 2016 12:02 am | Updated:
10:39 am, Fri Feb 12, 2016. (paywall)
The Fairfield Area
School Board voted Monday to formally show its support for six Pennsylvania school
districts involved in a lawsuit against the commonwealth over inadequate
education funding. The plaintiffs
include William Penn, Panther Valley , Lancaster ,
Greater Johnstown, Wilkes-Barre , and Shenandoah
Valley school districts, along with parents of children enrolled in Philadelphia city
schools.
"But here we are, with
alleged adults, each saying they want to find a solution to the state's fiscal
problems, acting less mature than a group of well-behaved 9-year-olds who had
the presence of mind to call out cyber-bullying for the immature nonsense that
it is. We have long recognized that politics is hardly for the
faint of heart. It's a game of sharp elbows and pointed words with very little
tolerance for the weak. But even in the
context of that openly adversarial relationship, there's a right way and a
wrong way to set the tone for the negotiations that one hopes will unravel a
very difficult to unravel problem.
So, y'know, grow up. Stop the stupid
bickering. Get off the Internet. And get back to work. You have one job and,
frankly, you all stink at it right now."
The Twitter feud that
proves we're never going to have a budget: Friday Morning Coffee
Penn Live By John L. Micek |
jmicek@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
February 12, 2016 at 8:12 AM, updated February 12, 2016 at 8:16 AM
Good Friday
Morning, Fellow Seekers.
The Wolf administration is keeping up the pugilstic tone it set during Tuesday's budget address, as it continues to hector Republican lawmakers to return to work to finish the state's incomplete 2015-16 budget, and to get to work on the new 2016-17 spending plan. The administration took to Twitter on Thursday, launching a #ThrowBackThursday - but with a decided edge: So, yeah, that happened ... And the weird thing is, it's a totally unforced error. The administration has been known to bristle when it's accused (and justifiably so) of never having transitioned from campaign mode (which requires a pugilistic approach) to one of governing (which requires a touch more finesse). It's instances like this that provide additional fuel for that fire. Naturally, the GOP responded. And things just escalated. And it's part of a pattern. The administration (or one of its dark money surrogates) shoots its mouth off on Twitter or in an email statement and lawmakers (or, in this case, the state party) feel obligated to respond.
The Wolf administration is keeping up the pugilstic tone it set during Tuesday's budget address, as it continues to hector Republican lawmakers to return to work to finish the state's incomplete 2015-16 budget, and to get to work on the new 2016-17 spending plan. The administration took to Twitter on Thursday, launching a #ThrowBackThursday - but with a decided edge: So, yeah, that happened ... And the weird thing is, it's a totally unforced error. The administration has been known to bristle when it's accused (and justifiably so) of never having transitioned from campaign mode (which requires a pugilistic approach) to one of governing (which requires a touch more finesse). It's instances like this that provide additional fuel for that fire. Naturally, the GOP responded. And things just escalated. And it's part of a pattern. The administration (or one of its dark money surrogates) shoots its mouth off on Twitter or in an email statement and lawmakers (or, in this case, the state party) feel obligated to respond.
Gov. Wolf visits Philly
school, warns of 'train wreck'
Inquirer by Patricia Madej, STAFF WRITER. Updated: FEBRUARY 12, 2016 —
5:49 PM EST
Gov. Wolf stopped by
Penn Treaty School
on Friday as a part of his "Schools that Teach" tour, hoping to drum
up support for his proposed 2017 budget, one that a Pennsylvania GOP spokesman
calls a "fantasy." Wolf also
warned of an incoming "train wreck" and a $2 billion deficit if last
year's budget isn't agreed upon soon. He warned of tens of thousands of
layoffs, higher property taxes and bigger classrooms. The governor visited for about an hour,
stopping in a number of classrooms before heading into the library where he
reiterated his fight for education funding increases. Penn Treaty was Wolf's
last stop of the day - he'd spoken at schools in Hazleton
and Easton
earlier in that morning.
"Otto-Eldred
School District Superintendent Matt
Splain represented rural Pennsylvania
at the state capitol in June, joining the fight for fair education funding. He
rallied with hundreds of parents, students, clergy, community leaders,
teachers, other educators and members of the Campaign for Fair Education
Funding to encourage state legislators to put in place a basic education
funding formula. Splain is also a member
of the Pennsylvania Association for Rural and Small Schools, and so is Northern Potter School District
(Ulysses) Superintendent Scott Graham, who has also fought for a sustainable,
predictable funding formula.
What’s more, last year, Sasala focused on a basic
education funding formula when he spoke during a Basic Education Commission
hearing in Mercer
County .
We may not be as populated as Philadelphia
or Pittsburgh , but education is clearly taken
seriously in northwestern Pennsylvania ,
and it shows."
Where is our ‘education
governor’?
Northwestern
Pennsylvania is being ignored by Harrisburg
–– again.
This time, Gov. Tom
Wolf is off on a “Schools that Teach” tour across the state. Well, pretty much
everywhere except our neck of the woods.
On Wednesday, Wolf visited Clairton
Elementary School in the Clairton School District
and Altoona Area
Junior High School in the Altoona Area
School District , where he talked about
two paths Pennsylvania
can take. “We have a choice in Harrisburg ,” he said. “We
can choose a path that funds our schools, eliminates our deficit, and puts Pennsylvania back on
track. But if we choose to continue to ignore reality, we will be forced to
make drastic cuts to education and in turn face billions in local property tax
increases.” Also on Wolf’s tour
are the more-populous areas, including around Philadelphia
and Pittsburgh .
The only school districts closer to us that are part of his journey are a
school near Erie –– General
McLane High
School –– and Robb Elementary School at the Keystone
Central School
District in Clinton
County . But what about school districts in McKean,
Potter, Cameron and Elk counties? Local school districts are more than
deserving to be among Wolf’s tour stops.
Compared with other
states, Gov. Tom Wolf's budget comes in on the high side
Penn Live By Charles Thompson |
cthompson@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
February 12, 2016 at 7:15 AM, updated February 12, 2016 at 10:01 AM
Because setting
aside for a moment all the policy differences on what's a "want" and
what's a "need" and whether tax increases are required, here's a
truism about the state budget proposed by Gov. Tom Wolf Tuesday. Its projected 7.1 percent spending increase
would clearly be one of the highest rates of state government spending growth
in the nation this year. It's quite a
culture shock from the "I'll-cut-school-spending-before-I-raise-state-taxes"
days of former Gov. Tom Corbett. And
it's one of the reasons why Republicans who control the state legislature
skipped over the usual budget day niceties this week and went right to
declaring Wolf's plan - with it's $2.7 billion tax increase - dead on arrival. "We are all concerned about the
imbalance in revenue and expenditures in this Commonwealth," Senate
Appropriations Committee Chairman Pat Browne, R-Lehigh County ,
said Tuesday. "But you can't promote fiscal balance when you're spending
at an unsustainable level."
PSBA Budget Webinar Powerpoint Presentation, Feb. 12,
2016
Download the
PowerPoint presentation by PSBA’s John Callahan, Assistant Executive Director
for Public Policy/Chief Lobbyist here:
Philly: SELLING THE SELLER
Can giving realtors tours of neighborhood
schools bring more parents back to the public option?
Philadelphia Citizen
BY MELANIE
BAVARIA FEB. 12, 2016
Imagine a school
with a computer lab filled with new Apple desktops. Full kindergarten to 8th
grade services for students with autism spectrum disorders. A nationally
recognized rock band. A two-way Spanish immersion program that produces kids
who are bilingual and biliterate by second grade. You’d have to move to the suburbs, or send
your kid to a charter, or pay a small fortune for private school. Right? That’s
the story everyone tells, anyway, from news reports to (often) fellow parents
to realtors, the first encounter many Philadelphians have with a prospective
neighborhood. But a group of about 40
realtors last week came away with a very different story after touring five
South Philly elementary schools that many of them—though they also live in the
neighborhood—had never seen before: Andrew Jackson, George W. Nebinger,
Vare-Washington, Eliza B. Kirkbride, and Southwark. What they learned is what
organizers of the tour hope they’ll pass on to their clients: Each of those
schools, and others like them, are worth a look.
“A lot of real
estate agents, by and large, don’t actually know anything about the catchment
schools in the neighborhoods where they are selling homes,” says Mollie Michel,
one of the organizers of the tour. “If you spend enough time reading the
newspaper you know about this terrible thing, or you know that the state is
running the schools, or you know that we have no budget, or you know that
Corbett stripped funding from our schools. Based on demand, it’s clear that
these real estate agents are hungry for more information about the schools.”
Gov. Wolf's budget
shortchanges charter students: Mary Steffey
PennLive
Op-Ed By Mary Steffey on
February 12, 2016 at 2:00 PM
Mary Steffey is the board president of the
Agora Cyber Charter School, based in King of Prussia, Montgomery County .
In
his 2016-2017 budget address, Gov. Tom Wolf proposed a dream for our
state. A promise of more basic education funding for next year, based on the
non-existent budget of this year. Wolf claims he wants
to choose a path that funds our schools, eliminates our deficit, and puts Pennsylvania back on
track. What everyone once again ignores, is that his plan is to only fund some of
our schools. Digging deeper into the
numbers behind Tuesday's speech, roughly $488 million would be diverted away
from charter school students. The
anti-charter stance taken by this administration has tried time and time again
to reduce or eliminate funding for charter and cyber charter schools in the
state. While the promises add up,
without a current budget in place and cash flowing to our students, the
increases start to feel a bit like monopoly money. Please, Governor, stop pitting taxpayers
against students. Stop hiding behind doom and gloom numbers you have created. Schools are struggling to prepare their own
budgets for 2016-2017, but our budgets are about math too - what difference
will an extra $200 million make if the students of Pennsylvania never see it?
Here's a prior KEYSEC posting
that focuses on cyber charter performance and the incredibly lucrative business
opportunities/compensation they have provided for K12, Inc and Pearson
executives. K12 Inc. provided management
services for Agora up until last year.
Agora was a major source of revenue for them; your tax dollars at work -
don't miss the Morningstar Executive Compensation link for K12…..
PA Ed Policy Roundup Oct 28: Cyber Charters Have
'Overwhelming Negative Impact,' CREDO Study Finds
Online Public Schools Are
a Disaster, Admits Billionaire, Charter School-Promoter Walton Family
Foundation
A new
political strategy: throw online charters overboard to save the rest of the
school privatization industry.
By Steven Rosenfeld / AlterNet
February 11, 2016
For the second time
in three months, the Walton Family Foundation—which has spent more than $1
billion to create a quarter of the nation’s 6,700 public charter schools—has
announced that all online public school instruction, via cyber charter schools,
is a colossal disaster for most K-12 students.
“If virtual charters were grouped together and ranked as a single school
district, it would be the ninth largest in the country and among the worst
performing,” co-wrote Walton’s Marc Sternberg and Marc Holley, respectively the
foundation’s director of educational giving and its evaluation unit director,
in a recent Education Week commentary.
“Online education must be reimagined. Ignoring the problem—or worse,
replicating failures—serves nobody.”
Last fall, the giant
foundation, which has pledged to
spend its second billion to expand charter public schools nationally between
now and 2020, simultaneously released three detailed comissioned studies
finding more than two-thirds of America’s 200,000 charter students receiving all
of their instruction over the Internet were barely learning the basics.
"There’s an element of
this rage at bad teachers that’s hard to talk about, and so it’s often avoided:
the dismaying truth that we don’t know how to educate poor inner-city and rural
kids in this country. In particular, we don’t know how to educate
African-American boys, who, according to the Schott Foundation for Public Education,
graduate high school at rates no better than fifty-nine per cent."
Stop Humiliating Teachers
The New Yorker BY DAVID
DENBY FEBRUARY 11, 2016
A necessary
commonplace: Almost everyone we know has been turned around, or at least
seriously shaken, by a teacher—in college, maybe, but often in high school,
often by a man or a woman who drove home a point or two about physics,
literature, or ethics, and looked at us sternly and said, in effect, You
could be more than what you are. At their best, teachers are everyday
gods, standing at the entryway to the world. If they are fair and good, they
are possibly the most morally impressive adults that their students will ever
know. For a while, they are the law, they are knowledge, they are justice. Everyone celebrates his or her personal
memory of individual teachers, yet, as a culture, we snap at the run-down heels
of the profession. The education reporter Dana Goldstein, in her book “The
Teacher Wars,” published in 2014, looks at American history and describes a
recurring situation of what she calls “moral panic”—the tendency, when there’s
an economic or social crisis, to lay blame on public-school teachers. They
must have created the crisis, the logic goes, by failing to educate the young. We have been in such
a panic for more than a decade, during which time the attacks on public-school
teachers have been particularly virulent. They are lazy, mediocre, tenaciously
clinging to tenure in order to receive their lavish pay of thirty-six thousand
dollars a year (that’s the national-average starting salary, according to the
National Education Association). As Goldstein put it, “Today the ineffective
tenured teacher has emerged as a feared character, a vampiric type who sucks
tax dollars into her bloated pension and health care plans, without much regard
for the children under her care.” Because of this person, we are failing to
produce an effective workforce; just look at how badly we’re lagging behind
other nations in international standardized tests. Our teachers are mediocre as
a mass; we have to make a serious effort to toss out the bad ones before they
do any more damage. And so on. It’s not just Republicans who talk this way. Democrats,
too, are obsessed with ridding the system of bad teachers. From the President
on down, leaders have been demanding “accountability.”
Group Aims to Boost
Advocacy Skills for Parents of Students With Disabilities
Education Week By Christina
A. Samuels Published
Online: February 9, 2016
A Pennsylvania town roiled by a controversy
that led to the resignation of its superintendent three years ago has found an
unusual path back to trust between the community and its school district: a
volunteer effort that so far has helped support dozens of parents of students
who have disabilities. The chain of
events began in 2013, when the then-superintendent of the Coatesville Area School District,
40 miles west of Philadelphia ,
was found to have exchanged dozens of sexist and racist text messages with a
district staff member. Meetings held in
the wake of that scandal revealed other deep-rooted problems in the
7,000-student school system, including allegations that district officials
discriminated against students with disabilities and minority students. Cathy Taschner, an administrator in another
district, stepped into the maelstrom when she was hired as Coatesville's
permanent superintendent in June 2014. The former superintendent, Richard Como,
resigned in September 2013.
PRESS RELEASE from United Opt Out National for
Immediate Release: February 12, 2016: Fifth Annual Event in Philadelphia , Feb. 26th – 28th
Posted on February
12, 2016 Email: unitedoptoutnational@gmail.com
Website: www.unitedoptout.com
United Opt Out
National is hosting their fifth annual event. This year’s sold- out
conference, “Transcending
Resistance, Igniting Revolution,” takes place in Philadelphia from February 26th to 28th.
Keynote speakers include Antonia Darder, Chris Hedges, Bill Ayers,
Stephen Krashen, and Jill Stein. In an effort to include the greater Philadelphia community, a pre-conference United Opt Out Town Hall
will take place on Thursday, February 25th. Place and time will be posted on
the website. United Opt Out, vehemently
opposed to the components of the Every Student Succeeds Act ( ESSA) that are
tantamount to a Black Friday sale of public education, will take this
opportunity to voice concerns and refine plans to push back against the
privatization efforts this bill attempts to secure. Unfortunately, it
continues the failure to secure an equitable learning environment for all
children as it continues the damaging ranking, sorting, and maligning
of children. During this conference, attendees will dig into each
component of the bill, clarify its purpose for the public, and brainstorm
demands and direct actions to advocate the changes needed to end the continued
punitive and exploitive aspects of the federal law.
"Southeastern Region Forum Series"Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Networking and Coffee - 9:30 a.m. Program - 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Networking and Coffee - 9:30 a.m. Program - 10:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
SUBJECT: Governor
Wolf's Proposed Education Budget for 2016-2017
SPEAKERS:
An Overview of
the Proposed 2016-2017 State Budget and Education Issues Will Be
Provided By:
Representative of
The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center
Ron Cowell, President, The Education Policy andLeadership Center
Ron Cowell, President, The Education Policy and
Statewide and
Regional Perspectives Will Be Provided By:
Donna Cooper,
Executive Director, Public Citizens for Children and Youth
Deborah Gordon Klehr, Executive Director, Education Law Center
Deborah Gordon Klehr, Executive Director, Education Law Center
Mark B. Miller,
President-Elect, Pennsylvania School Boards Association
Dr. George Steinhoff, Superintendent, Penn Delco School District
Dr. George Steinhoff, Superintendent, Penn Delco School District
One or more
representatives of other statewide and regional organizations are still to
be confirmed.
RSVP
for Southeastern Forum on-line at
Save
the Dates for These 2016 Annual
EPLC Regional
State Budget Education
Policy Forums
Sponsored
by The Education Policy and Leadership
Center
Wednesday, February
17 - 10:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. - Philadelphia (University of Pennsylvania )
Thursday, February 25 - 8:30-11:00 a.m. -Pittsburgh
Thursday, February 25 - 8:30-11:00 a.m. -
Attend the
United Opt Out Conference in Philadelphia
February 26-28
United
Opt Out: The Movement to End Corporate Reform will hold its annual conference
on Philadelphia from February 26-28.
The Pennsylvania Budget
and Policy Center will host its Annual Budget Summit on Thursday, March 3, 2016
9:00 - 3:30 at the Hilton Harrisburg.
PA Budget and Policy Center website
Join us for an in-depth look at the Governor's 2016-17 budget proposal, including what it means for education, health and human services, and local communities. The Summit will focus on the leading issues facing the commonwealth in 2016, with workshops, lunch, and a legislative panel discussion. Space is limited, so fill out the form below to reserve your spot at the Budget Summit.
PA Budget and Policy Center website
Join us for an in-depth look at the Governor's 2016-17 budget proposal, including what it means for education, health and human services, and local communities. The Summit will focus on the leading issues facing the commonwealth in 2016, with workshops, lunch, and a legislative panel discussion. Space is limited, so fill out the form below to reserve your spot at the Budget Summit.
Thursday, March 3,
2016 Hilton Hotel, Harrisburg Pennsylvania
The event is free,
but PBPC welcomes donations of
any size to help off-set costs.
PASBO 61st Annual
Conference and Exhibits March 8 - 11, 2016
Hershey Lodge and Convention Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania
Hershey Lodge and Convention Center, Hershey, Pennsylvania
PenSPRA's Annual Symposium, Friday
April 8th in Shippensburg, PA
PenSPRA,
or the Pennsylvania School Public Relations Association, has developed a
powerhouse line-up of speakers and topics for a captivating day of professional
development in Shippensburg on April 8th. Learn to master data to
defeat your critics, use stories to clarify your district's brand and take
your social media efforts to the next level with a better understanding of
metrics and the newest trends. Join us the evening before the
Symposium for a “Conversation with Colleagues” from 5 – 6 pm followed
by a Networking Social Cocktail Hour from 6 – 8 pm. Both the
Symposium Friday and the social events on Thursday evening
will be held at the Shippensburg University Conference Center. Snacks at the
social hour, and Friday’s breakfast and lunch is included in your
registration cost. $125 for PenSPRA members and $150 for non-members. Learn
more about our speakers and topics and register today at this link:
The Network for Public Education 3rd
Annual National Conference April 16-17, 2016 Raleigh , North Carolina .
The
Network for Public Education is thrilled to announce the location for our 3rd
Annual National Conference. On April 16 and 17, 2016 public education advocates
from across the country will gather in Raleigh, North Carolina. We chose Raleigh to highlight the tremendous
activist movement that is flourishing in North Carolina. No one exemplifies
that movement better than the Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II, who will be the
conference keynote speaker. Rev. Barber is the current president of
the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, the National NAACP chair of
the Legislative Political Action Committee, and the founder of Moral Mondays.
2016 PA Educational
Leadership Summit July 24-26 State College
Summit Sponsors:
PA Principals Association - PA Association of School Administrators
- PA Association of Middle Level Educators - PA Association of
Supervision and Curriculum Development
The 2016
Educational Leadership Summit, co-sponsored by four leading Pennsylvania education associations,
provides an excellent opportunity for school district administrative teams and
instructional leaders to learn, share and plan together at a quality venue in
"Happy Valley."
Featuring Grant
Lichtman, author of EdJourney: A Roadmap to the Future of Education,
Secretary of Education Pedro Rivera (invited), and Dana
Lightman, author of POWER Optimism: Enjoy the Life You Have...
Create the Success You Want, keynote speakers, high quality breakout
sessions, table talks on hot topics and district team planning and job alike
sessions provides practical ideas that can be immediately reviewed and
discussed at the summit before returning back to your district. Register and pay by April 30, 2016 for the
discounted "early bird" registration rate:
Interested in letting our
elected leadership know your thoughts on education funding, a severance tax,
property taxes and the budget?
Governor Tom Wolf,
(717) 787-2500
Speaker of the
House Rep. Mike Turzai, (717) 772-9943
House Majority Leader Rep. Dave Reed, (717) 705-7173
Senate President Pro Tempore Sen. Joe Scarnati, (717) 787-7084
Senate Majority Leader Sen. Jake Corman, (717) 787-1377
House Majority Leader Rep. Dave Reed, (717) 705-7173
Senate President Pro Tempore Sen. Joe Scarnati, (717) 787-7084
Senate Majority Leader Sen. Jake Corman, (717) 787-1377
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