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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup August 28, 2016:
Focus
on Charter/Cyber Reform
Southeastern PA Regional 2016 Legislative
Roundtable: William Tennent High School (Bucks Co.) SEP 22, 2016 • 7:00 PM -
9:00 PM
More
info & Registration: https://www.psba.org/event/2016-legislative-roundtable/
COUNCILWOMAN GYM, POWER TO HOST CITY HALL
EVENTS TO SUPPORT FAIR FUNDING FOR PA SCHOOLS
SEPTEMBER 12: SING-IN
SEPTEMBER 13: FAIR FUNDING LAWSUIT HEARING
Philadelphia
City Council
More
info and RSVP: http://phlcouncil.com/fairfundinged
Delco Times Editorial: It’s time for
reform at Pa.’s charter schools
Delco Times POSTED: 08/27/16,
11:02 PM EDT | UPDATED: 2 HRS AGO
The two stories sat side by side
on the same page earlier this week. The placement could not have been more
ironic. On the same day that Gov. Tom
Wolf made good on another campaign pledge, this time to establish a division
inside the state Education Department to keep tabs on the state’s burgeoning
charter school industry, the CEO from a cyber charter school was in court to
plead guilty to tax fraud charges. Charter
schools, set up in Pennsylvania by the Charter School Law - Act 22 of 1997, to
offer Pennsylvania families an alternative to public schools that increasingly
fail to offer families, usually in struggling communities, an adequate
alternative, too often have failed to do so. In fact, too often test scores at
charters have varied little from their counterparts in the public schools. What has changed is the huge economic impact
the desertion of those children – and the state funding that follows them – has
had on public schools. And of course,
the bottom line for charter schools and their backers. The business of charter
schools has proved in many cases to be quite lucrative.
“Two years ago, Mr. DePasquale called
for an overhaul of charter law to make the schools more effective and
accountable. It is time for the Legislature and Education Department to take a
hard look at his suggestions, which mostly have fallen on deaf ears. Improvements could help to ease school
districts’ concerns about charters, give new energy to the charter movement and
repair some of the damage caused by Trombetta’s callow plunder.”
Post Gazette Editorial: Charter school caper: Trombetta finally
admits guilt, but mess remainsPost Gazette Editorial By the Editorial Board August 27, 2016 12:00 AM
Pennsylvanians struggle with high
property taxes, yet school districts still labor to make ends meet because of
inadequate state funding and the encroachment of nontraditional charter
schools. Every penny counts. By diverting public money for personal
use, Nicholas Trombetta hurt the state’s schoolchildren, taxpayers, school
districts and the charter school movement he helped to create. Trombetta, founder of the Beaver County-based
Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School, pleaded guilty Wednesday in U.S.
District Court in Pittsburgh to a count of tax conspiracy. He faces up to five
years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The U.S. attorney’s office alleged
that he diverted $8 million of taxpayer money for personal use, spending the
money not on education, U.S. Attorney David Hickton said, but on “condos
and airplanes.” Trombetta didn’t even have the decency to fold when the jig was
up. He fought the charges for three years before entering his guilty plea,
wasting resources the authorities could have devoted to other cases. The case
is sad partly because PA Cyber had given wind to the charter movement and
brought attention to Beaver County.
As students return to class, some
recommendations to improve cyber-charter schools: Lawrence Feinberg
PennLive Op-Ed By Lawrence Feinberg on August
26, 2016 at 2:00 PM
Lawrence A. Feinberg, of Ardmore, Pa., is serving in his
seventeenth year as a school director in Haverford Township. He is the
founder and a co-chairman of the Keystone State Education Coalition.
If it sometimes seems like
"tuition-free" cyber charter ads are running non-stop, consider that
in just one year your tax dollars paid for 19,298 local TV commercials for
Agora Cyber Charter, just one of Pennsylvania's 13 cyber charters. And far from being tuition-free, total cyber
tuition paid by Pennsylvania taxpayers from 500 school districts for 2013, 2014
and 2015 was $393.5 million, $398.8 million and $436.1 million respectively. Those commercials were very effective,
especially if you were an executive at K12, Inc., a for-profit company contracted
to manage the cyberschool. According to
Agora's 2013 IRS filing, it paid $69.5 million that year to K12, Inc. According to Morningstar, total executive compensation
at K12 in 2013 was $21.37 million. Not
so effective for kids or taxpayers, though. What the ads don't tell you
is that they are paid for using your school tax dollars instead of those funds
being spent in classrooms, and that academic performance at every one of
Pennsylvania's cyber charters has been consistently dismal.
2013, 2014, 2015
Source: PA Department of Education website.
A score of 70 is considered
passing
CEO of Agora Cyber Charter calls for
reforms
In response to a recent
commentary piece, Conti rebuts criticisms of cyber charters.
The notebook Commentary by Dr. Michael Conti August 23, 2016 — 2:48pm
In response to
the recent commentary piece in the Notebook that
asks the question “How
can we improve the performance and accountability of Pennsylvania cyber
charters?” (Lawrence A. Feinberg, Aug. 18) we feel it absolutely
necessary that we reply, as Agora was the only one of the Pennsylvania’s 13
cyber charter schools that was mentioned specifically in this piece. First, it should be known that Agora admits
it has endured a tumultuous year. However, our administration and board
have always done what is in the best interest of our students. In 2015, Agora
severed its management relationship with K12 to become an independently managed
school. When we open our virtual doors on Sept. 6, our primary relationship
with K12 will be limited and the firm will serve as a provider of
curriculum and support services.
To argue that cyber charters are
alone in contracting with for-profit companies is quite misleading. School
districts everywhere use for-profit companies to purchase textbooks for
classrooms, keep technology on the cutting edge, and stock vending machines in
their brick-and-mortar cafeterias. These expenses are not unique or out of
the ordinary– they are simply part of maintaining a successful school or
district.
“A study released this summer by 50CAN,
the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools and the National Association
of Charter School Organizers — typically advocates for school choice and
charter schools — called for chronically low-performing cyber charters to be
closed. Reports from Mathematica Policy Research, the Stanford University
Center for Research on Education Outcomes and the University of Washington
Center on Reinventing Public Education last year slammed cyber charters for their
students' lack of year-over-year improvement and limited instruction time. The report looked at more than 100 full-time
cyber charter schools in 17 states, including Pennsylvania, plus Washington,
D.C., and was an attempt to gather first-of-its-kind information about the
rapidly growing cyber charter sector, said James L. Woodworth, the lead author
and a quantitative research analyst at Stanford. The study found that cyber charter school
students in Pennsylvania on average progressed as if they had received the
equivalent of 101 fewer days of instruction in reading and 167 fewer days in
math compared to students in traditional schools in a 180-day school year, he
said. Nationally, cyber charter students progressed as if they had an average
of 180 days less of instruction per year in math — really not at all.”
Study: Cyber charter students don't keep pace with counterparts in
regular classrooms
Trib Live BY ELIZABETH
BEHRMAN | Saturday, Aug. 27, 2016, 9:40 p.m.
When Judy Cremone and her husband
adopted their teenage son three years ago, his behavioral issues made it
impossible for the Turtle Creek couple to enroll him in a traditional school.
They enrolled the boy, now 15, in
Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School. The ability to do his work online and at his
own pace seems to be good for him, said Cremone, 48. He earns A's and B's, an
improvement. “Education is vital to me,”
Cremone said. “He has got to get a good education, and he is extremely smart.
But he wouldn't survive in public school.”
Cremone's son was among about 30,000 students across the state enrolled
in a cyber charter school last year, up from about 27,000 in 2011-12. State
data show about 25 percent of Allegheny County's charter school students attend
cyber charters, which provide classes online rather than in traditional
classrooms. But as enrollment in cyber charter schools has grown, so has
criticism about the schools' ability to adequately educate their students.
Beaver County Times By The Times
Editorial Board August 27, 2016
The legacy of Nick Trombetta will
be a complicated one to document for future generations.
His supporters will tell you the
man saved the dying steel town of Midland, transforming it into a
state-of-the-art education complex that created hundreds of jobs and became
home to his creations -- the PA Cyber Charter School, the Lincoln Park
Performing Arts Charter School, several spinoff entities, and the crown jewel
of his empire, the Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center. His critics will point out that he is a
convicted felon, having pleaded guilty to siphoning off some $8 million in
taxpayer funds for his own benefit and that of family and friends. They will
tell you he created a spider web of connected companies that he controlled,
directly or indirectly, and that his every move was self-serving, done to build
his own personal wealth and wield incredible power over the people who owed him
their livelihoods. If you were to try to
summarize Trombetta’s contributions to Midland, and to public education in
general, it would come down to this: The man did some very good things, and the
man did some very bad things.
Why John Oliver may help change
Pennsylvania’s ‘worst charter school laws in the nation’
Billy Penn By Mark Dent August 26, 2016 at
10:30 am
Eugene DePasquale’s phone started
buzzing during the most recent episode of John Oliver’s “Last Week
Tonight.” It was younger family members
calling and texting to say they saw the clip of him saying “Pennsylvania has
the worst charter school laws in the nation.” DePasquale had no idea, of
course. He’s not a subscriber. “Maybe
I need to get HBO,” he said, “but it’s an extra cost and I’m trying to be
fiscally responsible as your auditor general.”
For the last several months, DePasquale has railed against
Pennsylvania’s charter laws. He came out with an
audit of Philadelphia’s charter situation earlier this year and has
continued to stress the need for reform throughout the summer. Just yesterday
he gave a press conference about a faulty payment appeals process that overly
benefits charters at the expense of school districts. So he’s continually tried to bring awareness.
But getting featured on Oliver? “That
18-minute segment has probably done more than people could imagine,” DePasquale
said. “There’s something going on out there that needs to be looked at.” Here’s what DePasquale finds to be the worst
aspects of charter schools in Pennsylvania, a few ways to improve them and why
he’s optimistic change might finally happen to Pennsylvania’s charter laws,
which date back to the late 1990s.
Pa. senator says HBO's John Oliver 'went
too far' with charter school rant
Inquirer by Tommy Rowan, Staff Writer @tommyrowan AUGUST 26, 2016 10:31 AM EDT
Apparently, as HBO's John Oliver
was poking fun at Pennsylvania's charter school system, Pennsylvania Sen.
Anthony Hardy Williams wasn't laughing.
On Wednesday, Williams (D., Phila.) sent the Last Week
Tonight host a "Dear John" letter, questioning an assertion
on his Sunday show that Pennsylvania's "charter schools are
terrible." "I really do
enjoy your wit and informative style," Williams wrote, "but you
went too far with your segment on Pennsylvania's charter schools." On his program Sunday, Oliver used
Pennsylvania laws and Philadelphia schools as examples of why he
believes charter schools are something of gamble when it comes
to education. “Charter schools
unite both sides of the aisle more quickly than when a wedding DJ throws
on ‘Hey Ya,’ ” Oliver said to kick off his piece, further noting that the
first charters emerged 25 years ago as a way to explore
new approaches to education. Earlier
this year, Pennsylvania Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said the
state has “the worst charter school law in the United States." Oliver agreed.
Pa. department of education enhancing
oversight of charter schools
WHYY Newsworks BY KEVIN MCCORRY AUGUST 25, 2016
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf
announced Wednesday that he's beefing up the state's oversight of charter
schools by creating a new division within the Department of Education devoted solely
to the sector. "Charter schools
play an important role in our education system, but that role must be
accompanied by sufficient oversight," Wolf said in a statement.
"Establishing this new division within the Department of Education will
allow us to maximize our resources to not only ensure charters are being
properly supported, but that they are being held accountable to
taxpayers."
The Wolf administration says the
new division more rigorously monitor the fiscal and academic integrity of
charters. "Establishing a division
within the Department is the next step to further streamline communication with
charter schools, help ensure they receive needed technical assistance from the
Department, and ensuring that all public schools in the commonwealth are held
to the same high-quality standards," said state education secretary Pedro
Rivera in a statement. Wolf spokesman
Jeffrey Sheridan said the move will simply bring the charter sector in line
with the oversight the department gives the state's 500 traditional districts. "All of those things already happen with
traditional public schools," said Sheridan. "They do not currently
happen in the manner that they should with brick-and-mortar and cyber charter
schools."
Capitolwire: Charter officials skeptical
of Wolf’s new division of charter schools.
PA Coalition of Public Charter
Schools website By Christen
Smith Staff Reporter Capitolwire August 26, 2016
HARRISBURG (Aug. 24) — Gov. Tom
Wolf’s new division of charter schools got off to a bad start Wednesday, just
moments after the administration announced the new office within the state
Department of Education. “The fact that
no charter school has been consulted in the creation of this office is not a
good start, but we will see how the office is funded and staffed and watch
closely what it actually does,” said Bob Fayfich, executive director of the
Pennsylvania Coalition of Public Charter Schools. “We are cautiously
optimistic, but the charter community has been burned before and our honest
initial impression is that it may be another effort to undermine school choice
in Pennsylvania, regardless of the statements in the press release regarding
improving quality and accountability.” Fayfich,
an outspoken critic of the administration’s treatment of charter schools over
the last two years, wasn’t alone in his skepticism.
“While the Keystone Alliance
welcomes the Wolf administration and the department’s willingness to work and
partner with brick-and-mortar charter schools, as the saying goes, ‘the devil
is in the detail’ as it relates to the administration’s actual intent with the
creation of this division,” said Tim Eller, executive director of the Keystone
Alliance for Public Charter Schools a former PDE spokesperson with the Corbett
administration. “While the department already has statutory oversight of cyber
charters, by law, oversight and accountability of brick-and-mortar charters
currently is under the purview of the school district(s) that granted the
charter.”
Audit finds Pa. education department
oversight on charter school payments insufficient
BY KATIE MEYER, WITF AUGUST 25, 2016
Pennsylvania's process to address
appeals of charter school payment is unclear, according to an audit that
recommends it be re-examined. Pennsylvania's
charter schools receive part of their money from the public school districts in
which they're located. The charter submits a bill, and the district can approve
or deny it. But under current law, if
the district denies payment, the charter can go directly to the state Education
Department for the funding. According to
the audit report, the department then approves it, no questions asked, and it's
paid out from the district's state subsidy.
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said it's not easy for districts to
get back money they think has been wrongly routed to charters. "A school district's only option,"
he said, "is to enter into a lengthy, confusing, nonsensical, rabbit-hole
world that is [the education department's] charter school payment appeals
process."
Charter school loan documents give another
link to Atiyeh
By Jim Deegan
| For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on
August 26, 2016 at 2:52 PM, updated August 26, 2016 at 3:05 PM
Innovative
Arts Academy Charter School in Catasauqua released loan documents
Friday that identify the lender as Charter Solutions LLC, a limited liability
corporation at 1177 Sixth St. in Whitehall Township — the same address as
Atiyeh's Whitehall Manor. Atiyeh also is
the fledgling school's landlord at 330 Howertown Road in Catasauqua. The loan documents provide the latest link
yet between Atiyeh and the charter school amid a swirling controversy about
who's responsible for a mystery mailer that promoted the charter school and
denigrated Liberty High School.
Dirty tactics smear efforts of charter
schools | Editorial
By Express-Times
opinion staff on August 28, 2016 at 6:00 AM, updated August 28,
2016 at 9:21 AM
Is this any way to promote a
charter school?
The pending debut of the Innovative
Arts Academy Charter School in Catasauqua in September might have been
uneventful, considering school officials said they had met their goal of
enrolling 300 students for the sixth-to-12th-grade school. Then a newspaper ad in the Morning Call and
an anonymous mailer raised the school's profile dramatically. They touted the
drug bust of a Liberty High School student last year, asking parents"
"Why worry about this type of student at school?" and advising them
to "Come visit Arts Academy Charter School." Reaction to the unsigned mailer, which listed
the school's address, was immediate. Bethlehem Area School District
Superintendent Joseph Roy called it a low blow and an impetus for the
Legislature to reform the state's charter school act. Pennsylvania Auditor
General Eugene DePasquale, a critic of the state's approach to charter
schools, said he wants to know who drew up and authorized the promotions. He
asked the U.S. Department of Education Office of Inspector General to look into
it.
York
Dispatch OPED by James Paul, Commonwealth Foundation1EDT
August 25, 2016
“Back to school” can be an emotional time for
students. Some greet the school year excited to learn and socialize, while
others regretfully say goodbye to summer. Over the next nine months, many will
have their lives transformed for the better. But for thousands of other
children, this time of year is defined by disappointment. They are trapped in schools that don’t meet
their needs — effectively held hostage by a system that limits choice and
opportunity. Nearly 20 years after
charter schools were introduced in Pennsylvania, 130,000 students benefit from
the educational choice offered by these independently managed, publicly funded
schools.
PSBA Report: Examining Pennsylvania
charter school revenues, expenditures and transparency
Charter schools were created with
the intent of allowing communities to establish public schools independent from
existing traditional public schools as a means to improve student performance,
increase learning opportunities, encourage innovation, create professional
development opportunities for teachers, and to provide expanded school choice,
particularly to provide opportunities for children that were being underserved. Under current Charter School Law, school
districts are responsible for authorizing the creation of, assessing the
performance of, and periodically reauthorizing brick-and-mortar charter schools
located within their boundaries. Charter schools receive the bulk of their
funding via payments from the school district where the charter school student
resides. Many of the laws, regulations and other mandates that dictate what
school districts are required to do, how they must do it and, ultimately, how
much will be spent to get it done do not apply to charter schools. PSBA’s report takes a closer look at how
charter schools and school districts are spending public funds and highlights
some of the issues encountered by PSBA in obtaining information from charter
schools under the Pennsylvania Right-to-Know Law. The
full report is available here.
The records submitted by charter schools as part of the RTK
request can be accessed here:https://www.psba.org/charter-rtk-docs.
NEW:
Southeastern PA Regional 2016 Legislative Roundtable: William Tennent High
School (Bucks Co.) SEP 22, 2016 • 7:00
PM - 9:00 PM
PSBA website August 25, 2016
Take a more active role in public
education advocacy by joining our Legislative Roundtable
This is your opportunity for a
seat at the table (literally) with fellow public education advocates to take an
active role in educating each other and policymakers. Auditor General Eugene DePasquale, along with
regional legislators, will be in attendance to work with you to support public
education in Pennsylvania. Use the
form below to send your registration information!
2016 National Anthem Sing-A-Long - September 9th
American Public Education Foundation Website
The Star-Spangled Banner will be sung by school children nationwide on Friday, September 9, 2016 at 10:00am PST and 1:00pm EST. Students will learn about the words and meaning of the flag and sing the first stanza. This will be the third annual simultaneous sing-a-long event created by the APEF-9/12 Generation Project. The project aims to bring students together – as the world came together – on September 12, 2001.
PA Supreme Court sets Sept. 13 argument
date for fair education funding lawsuit in Philly
Thorough
and Efficient Blog JUNE 16, 2016 BARBGRIMALDI LEAVE A COMMENT
Registration
for the PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference Oct. 13-15 is now open
The conference
is your opportunity to learn, network and be inspired by peers and
experts.
TO REGISTER: See https://www.psba.org/members-area/store-registration/ (you must be logged in to
the Members Area to register). You can read more on How to Register for
a PSBA Event here. CONFERENCE WEBSITE: For
all other program details, schedules, exhibits, etc., see the conference
website:www.paschoolleaders.org.
The Early Bird Discount Deadline has been Extended to Wednesday, August 31, 2016!
PA Principals Association website Tuesday, August 2, 2016 10:43 AM
To receive the Early Bird Discount, you must be registered by August 31, 2016:
Members: $300 Non-Members: $400
Featuring Three National Keynote Speakers: Eric Sheninger, Jill Jackson & Salome Thomas-EL
PSBA
Officer Elections Aug. 15-Oct. 3, 2016: Slate of Candidates
PSBA members seeking election to
office for the association were required to submit a nomination form no later
than April 30, 2016, to be considered. All candidates who properly completed
applications by the deadline are included on the slate of candidates below. In
addition, the Leadership Development Committee met on June 24 at PSBA
headquarters in Mechanicsburg to interview candidates. According to bylaws, the
Leadership Development Committee may determine candidates highly qualified for
the office they seek. This is noted next to each person’s name with an asterisk
(*). Each school entity will have one
vote for each officer. This will require boards of the various school entities
to come to a consensus on each candidate and cast their vote electronically
during the open voting period (Aug. 15-Oct. 3, 2016). Voting will be
accomplished through a secure third-party, web-based voting site that will
require a password login. One person from each member school entity will be
authorized as the official person to cast the vote on behalf of his or her
school entity. In the case of school districts, it will be the board secretary
who will cast votes on behalf of the school board.
Special note: Boards should be
sure to include discussion and voting on candidates to its agenda during one of
its meetings in September.
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