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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup Dec 12, 2016
Editorial:
If our public schools aren't broken, please don't fix them
Lancaster Online by The LNP
Editorial Board Dec 11, 2016
THE ISSUE: In last Sunday’s LNP, local education
leaders expressed the hope that President-elect Donald Trump’s choice of Betsy
DeVos as his Secretary of Education is a signal that the federal government
will have a limited role in education, as Trump promised during the campaign.
DeVos, a former Michigan Republican Party chairwoman, has been along with her
husband, Dick — heir to the Amway fortune — that state’s biggest supporter of
charter school expansion.
Our public schools are doing a
good job. That’s the view of Penn Manor
School District Superintendent Mike Leichliter and other education leaders
here. And it’s a view we share.
We are fortunate in Lancaster
County to have an array of public, private and parochial schools that do an
excellent job of educating our children and instilling in them the values of
community service and academic achievement.
For evidence, we submit our recently launched Schools section, which
last month offered eight pages filled with the names of Honor Society members,
honor roll winners, chorus and orchestra members and other achievers at county
schools. (Music For Everyone founder John Gerdy writes about the Schools
section in today’s Perspective.) So, to Betsy DeVos, Trump’s
choice for education secretary, we’d say this: If it’s not broken, don’t fix it
(the word “ain’t” generally appears in that saying, but this is an editorial
about education so we cleaned up the grammar in case teachers are reading).
New pre-K study finds ambitious programs
bring big returns on investment
WHYY Newsworks BY AVI
WOLFMAN-ARENT DECEMBER
12, 2016Pre-K advocates in Philly and elsewhere often argue that government investment in early childhood education pays societal dividends in the long run. New research by a prominent academic puts a number on those dividends, and it's a big one. In a study published today, Nobel-Prize-winning economist James Heckman from the University of Chicago and colleagues broke down decades of data from a group of 30-somethings who attended two North Carolina early childhood programs in the 1970s. They found that every dollar spent on this cohort of kids created $6.30 in return on investment. Or to put it in terms a stockbroker might understand, the childcare program produced annual returns of 13 percent — the kind of figure that tends to make Wall Street types swoon. Part of what distinguishes this study — other than the fact that it comes from an academic heavy-hitter — is that it factors in a wide range of perceived benefits. The researchers used data detailed enough to calculate whether placement in one of the two child care programs increased the future earnings of participants, boosted their parents' earning potential, improved participants' health, and reduced the likelihood participants would commit crimes. The final return-on-investment figure took all of those benefits into account and spit out a composite number.
Beaver County Times By Calkins
Media December 12, 2016
As its name indicates,
Pennsylvania’s Independent Fiscal Office is supposed to be a nonpartisan
agency. Its function is to prepare
revenue projections for the governor and state lawmakers to review in preparing
the state budget. The agency specifically stays away from supporting policies,
only giving the facts and figures of its revenue projections. In other words, taxpayers should be able to
trust the numbers in its reports since the office is not supposed to be
influenced by politics. If that is
indeed the case, then all Pennsylvanians should sit down and take a good, hard
look at some recent numbers compiled by the office. In a special five-year outlook, Matthew
Knittel, the director of the office, noted that the state could face a budget
deficit of $500 million by the end of the current fiscal year next June. He added that budget deficit could expand to
$1.7 billion the following year and $3 billion by 2022 if there’s no change in
the state’s current financial plans. In
the short term, Knittel said the deficit could be blamed on the state relying
on optimistic revenue projects, a slowdown in the economy in the first quarter
and the General Assembly not following through with plans to raise $150 million
by enacting an internet gaming bill and selling a second casino license in
Philadelphia. In the long term, he said
the state will face a number of challenges related to the deficit, including:
"We know that as human beings ...
if there's one measure you're being judged by, that's all you focus on,"
he said.”
Pa. education leader stops at
Dover school
York
daily Record by Angie Mason ,
amason@ydr.com3:47
p.m. EST December 8, 2016
Pennsylvania's top education
official offered a look at how performance scores for schools could change and
become less reliant on a single standardized test as he visited Dover Area High
School on Thursday. Education Secretary
Pedro Rivera visited Dover as part of the state's "Schools that
Teach" tour and fielded questions on a broad range of subjects, from
pension reform to teacher recruitment. Here's a look at some of the discussion
he had with educators, students and state legislators.
The future of school scoring
Rivera talked about the Future
Ready PA Index, which the state is
recommending as a potential replacement for the School
Performance Profile (SPP), a score of 0-100 assigned to schools. While based on
a number of measures, the SPP still relies heavily on standardized tests
— the PSSA and Keystone exams.
At Pa. Society, a bit of nostalgia, some
healthy ambition and a whole lot of Donald Trump: Analysis
By John
L. Micek | jmicek@pennlive.com on December 10, 2016 at 2:15 PM,
updated December 10, 2016 at 2:16 PM
MANHATTAN - Charlie Gerow, Republican
consultant and old school Pennsylvania Society bon
vivant, was
getting positively misty eyed. When the
last of the champagne was uncorked and the last toasted was toasted late
Saturday night or sometime in the disreputable early hours Sunday morning, a
profoundly silly and anachronistic Pennsylvania tradition that dates to the
Gilded Age came to an end. Or at least
it one form, in any case. And Gerow was among those mourning it.
That's because this weekend
marked the final weekend that the gala round of dinners, cocktail parties and
receptions where elbows are rubbed, hobs are nobbed and hands are shook will be held
at the Waldorf Astoria hotel on Park Avenue.
Commentary: Past time to provide
affordable college in Pennsylvania
Philly Daily News
Commentary by Kate
Shaw Updated: DECEMBER
9, 2016 — 3:01 AM ESTKate Shaw is executive director of Research for Action, a Philadelphia-based nonprofit education research organization. She served for three years as the deputy secretary of postsecondary and higher education in the Pennsylvania Department of Education in the Rendell administration.
WITH THE ELECTION of Donald Trump, any national effort
to create a pathway to an affordable college education is likely a distant
dream. At the same time our economy requires a college credential to obtain a
living-wage job, the cost of college makes earning a degree increasingly out of
reach. The imperative of a college degree is deeply felt, as students across
our country mortgage their futures by taking out ever-larger loans in their
quest to obtain this holy grail. Indeed, research conducted by Temple's Sara
Goldrick-Rab and summarized in her new book Paying
the Price documents the appalling truth
that many college students choose to spend their dollars on education, rather
than food. And many drop out altogether. Yet states have the power to act.
In Pennsylvania, it is past time. As documented in a research brief written by
my Research for Action colleagues, the cost of college in Pennsylvania is among
the highest in the country and is certainly the highest in our region. Fully 70
percent of our students graduate from college with debt, which is on average
nearly $34,000. The reasons for our skyrocketing
college costs are myriad. Historically, Pennsylvania has chosen not to invest
directly in its public colleges and universities, and state investments per
student have fallen 50 percent since 1990. As a result, in 2003, the tuition
and fees paid by students and families surpassed state appropriations as the
largest source of institutional revenue.
Despite what you may have heard, charter
schools aren't the enemy: Angel Figueroa
PennLive
Op-Ed By Angel Figueroa on December 09, 2016 at 11:30 AM,
updated December 09, 2016 at 11:32 AM
Angel Figueroa is the chief executive officer of I-LEAD
Charter School in Reading.
This holiday season, one family
in Reading, Pa., has a lot to be thankful for.
Jaritza Rodriguez is set to graduate from high school, where she serves
as student government president. By this time next year, she'll have
become the first in her family to go to college. She wants to be a
radiologist and is applying to Penn State.
Just a few years ago, such a bright future was anything but certain for
Jaritza. If the Reading School Board gets its way, hundreds of other
students won't get the same chance she's had to get their education back on
track at the public charter school called I-LEAD Charter School For nearly
three years, the school board has been trying to revoke I-LEAD's charter, in
spite of having renewed it just five months before starting the revocation
action. School board officials have rejected offers of free mediation and
instead are pursuing costly legal efforts to lock I-LEAD's doors to the many
students who have no other options.
This kind of education isn't
easy, but it's giving students like Jaritza a second chance.
And they're embracing it with great
enthusiasm. To cite but one measure, I-LEAD students' truancy rate is
barely half that of high school students in the city's other public schools.
The friction between teachers’ union and
the SRC
The notebook by Paul Jablow December 9, 2016 — 3:14pm
Then-State Sen. Vincent Fumo (D.,
Phila.) angrily stood up on the floor of the legislature in April 1998
and, with his typically colorful language, said what he thought of a bill that
would pave the way for a state takeover of the Philadelphia School District. “Those of you who hate labor unions and think
that they’re a plague on society,” Fumo said, “this is your orgasmic bill.” Act 46 passed shortly afterward with a vote
that mostly followed party lines. It potentially replaced the locally appointed
school board with the School Reform Commission and severely constrained the
rights of the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers (PFT). If put into effect, Act 46 would ban
teachers’ strikes and deny the PFT the power to bargain over scheduling,
teacher assignments, and prep time. Both
District Superintendent David Hornbeck and Gov. Tom Ridge predicted that the
takeover would never happen. Less than three years later, it did. At that point, both men might have been
surprised at the way relations between the PFT and the District would evolve
over the 15 years that followed.
Ed Palattella: Badams deftly expands scope
of schools crisis
GoErie by Ed Palattella Posted
Dec 11, 2016 at 2:00 AM
The Erie School District's
state-mandated financial recovery plan, sent to Harrisburg on Tuesday, includes
impassioned statements from Superintendent Jay Badams and his staff.
Among them: The Erie School
District "is in the top 3 percent among Pennsylvania school districts for
poverty, English language learners, and charter school enrollment. Despite
this, the district's per-pupil funding is among the lowest in the state. As a
result, Erie is one of the most economically disadvantaged and underfunded school
districts in the entire Commonwealth." But statements from other Erie
County superintendents could be just as crucial for the 11,500-student Erie
School District as it pursues an annual increase in state funding of $31.8
million. Six of the county's 12 other
superintendents wrote letters that the Erie School District attached to the
financial recovery plan. The letters support Badams' efforts to strengthen
Erie's public schools. The letters also detail how the other districts would
suffer if Erie closed its four high schools - an option Badams said he would
reconsider in 2018-19 if the state fails to provide enough aid to keep the Erie
School District solvent and improve its programs and buildings.
Smethport school board re-elects Dennis, Funk
Bradford Era By FRAN DE LANCEY
Era Correspondent delancey401@yahoo.com
December 8, 2016
SMETHPORT — The
Smethport Area School Board re-elected its two top officers Wednesday during
the annual reorganizational meeting. Director
Dan Wertz was temporary president for the elections that saw president Larry
Dennis and vice-president Bill Funk returned to office for one-year terms. The board adopted a resolution stating the
district will not increase property taxes for the following fiscal year by more
than the index as indicated by Act 1 of 2006, which was passed by the state
legislature. The index is the state's
measure for calculating property tax increases by wage inflation. All proposed
tax increases for 2017-18 will be kept within the district's adjusted index of
3.7 percent, which is determined by the Pennsylvania Department of Education.By limiting its tax rate by adopting this resolution, the district certifies that it has sufficient funds to balance its final budget.
Judges orders provisional ballots counted
in close Pa. House race, report: Friday Morning Coffee
Penn Live By John L. Micek |
jmicek@pennlive.com Email the author | Follow on Twitter on December 09, 2016 at 8:13 AM,
updated December 09, 2016 at 3:44 PM
THE MORNING COFFEE
Good Friday Morning, Fellow
Seekers.
In the Pa. recount that few
outside suburban Philadelphia are talking about, a Chester County judge has ordered
that 14 of 15 disputed provisional ballots be opened in a closely contested
race for the state House of Representatives.
As The Philadelphia Inquirer reports, West Chester Mayor Carolyn
Comitta, a
Democrat, currently leads incumbent GOP state Rep.
Dan Truitt by 18 votes in the fight for the
156th House District seat. Comitta had argued that the county should
count every vote cast in the contest, which included 15 provisional ballots.
“There were always financial challenges,
he said. “Challenges like the No Child Left Behind initiative. But the greatest
challenge every single day, every single year, is how do you take the resources
you have and the people that you have and make sure kids are getting the best
education possible. That is part of the artistry of being a good leader; how
you develop your people so that they are inspiring kids, unleashing the human
potential in kids, and doing everything they can to make kids successful, no
matter what your resources are.”
Retiring superintendent is most proud of people, not buildings
Daily Item by Rick Dandes Dec 9, 2016
LEWISBURG — On his last full day
on the job as Lewisburg Area School District superintendent, Mark DiRocco waxed
nostalgic. “It was an emotional day for
me,” he said Thursday afternoon, “so I took time to walk through every building
and watched teachers and kids and what they are doing. That’s what I’ll miss,
watching teachers work with kids.” People
think DiRocco’s crowning achievement is building the new high school. “Actually,” he said, “I consider that one of
my lesser achievements. It was something that needed to be done and it took up
a lot of my time and energy to make it happen, but buildings don’t teach kids,
people do. The new building is the proper venue to teach kids that the old
building couldn’t. But really, any leader’s legacy is the people and the
culture that he or she puts in place. And as you move on, does that culture
maintain itself? Does it build on to even greater success? Hopefully five
years down the road, people will be able to say the district is even better
than it was when I stepped out the door.”
Midstate
school district’s infrastructure woes highlight statewide problem
Abc27 By Chris Davis Published: December
9, 2016, 6:17 pm Updated: December 9, 2016, 6:23 pm
HALIFAX, Pa. (WHTM) – A Dauphin
County school board learned this week just how massive the need to renovate or
rebuild two schools is, without a clear path to pay for it. We first reported
on this in February when
the Halifax Area School District started looking at its infrastructure needs. A
far more in-depth study from architectural firm KCBA presented to the school
board this week paints a dire picture, one facing districts across the state. “Certainly, it has presented us with some
challenges here,” superintendent Dr. Michele Orner said Friday while giving
ABC27 a tour of Halifax Elementary School.
Why Easton's schools superintendent is
getting rave reviews
By Rudy
Miller | For lehighvalleylive.com Email the author | Follow
on Twitter on December 11, 2016 at 6:59 AM,
updated December 11, 2016 at 7:00 AM
Easton
Area School District's superintendent will do whatever it takes to
help children stay in school. That's why
Superintendent John Reinhart is this year's Champion of Education for the
nonprofit Communities
in Schools of the Lehigh Valley. "If there were a blueprint for a
superintendent, John is part of that blueprint," said Lehigh Valley
Communities in Schools President & CEO Timothy Mulligan. "He's a
deeply caring person, passionate about education." Communities in Schools is the
nation's largest dropout prevention organization, according to its website.
This year Communities in Schools of the Lehigh Valley will help 20,000
children, including intensive case management for 2,000, according to Mulligan.
Beaver County Times By The Times
Editorial Board Dec 11, 2016
The agreement between the
Blackhawk and Western Beaver school districts to share a superintendent will
certainly have its detractors, but we believe this is the type of innovative
thinking that more public school districts need to utilize. Robert Postupac had been temporarily serving
as Blackhawk’s superintendent since June, while continuing in his full-time
position at Western Beaver. Last week, Blackhawk’s school board voted to make
the arrangement permanent. Postupac’s
new contract with Blackhawk will run until June 2022 and his contract with
Western Beaver, which expires June 30, 2018, will likely be extended by that
school board so that it lines up with the Blackhawk arrangement. Under the
proposed terms of the deal, Postupac will be paid $120,000 annually in salary
and benefits, with the two districts splitting the cost. The state Department
of Education will have to approve the arrangement as well. Postupac said he will continue to split his
time between the two neighboring districts and plans to spend time at both
nearly every day. The arrangement is
certainly unusual, and there will undoubtedly be logistical issues to work out
along the way, but the plan makes sense if you consider the ongoing public
school enrollment declines throughout Beaver County.
York
Dispatch by Alyssa
Pressler , 505-5438/@AlyssaPressYD7:45 p.m. EST December 11, 2016
There are mixed local feelings
about President-elect Donald Trump's choice for education secretary, Betsy
DeVos. DeVos is a former Michigan
Republican Party chairwoman who leads the American Federation for Children,
which seeks to improve education in the nation by offering parents more
education choices. Trump has been a
staunch supporter of school choice, which essentially means that students and
parents would have alternative options to public schools in their area, such as
charter schools or private schools. He also has said he hopes to add
a federal investment of $20 billion toward school choice. His choice
of DeVos, announced Nov. 23, might further the initiative.
New York
Charters Enroll Fewer Homeless Pupils Than City Schools
New
York Times By KATE
TAYLORDEC.
9, 2016
Mosaic Preparatory
Academy, which shares a building with the upper grades of Success Academy
Harlem 3. Last year, 42 percent of Mosaic students were in temporary housing,
compared with 10 percent at Success.CreditAlex Wroblewski for The New York
Times
On East 111th Street, the upper
grades of Success Academy Harlem 3, acharter school,
share a building with Mosaic Preparatory Academy,
a traditional neighborhood elementary school. In many ways, the children who
attend the two schools in Harlem are similar. They are mostly black and
Hispanic, and a majority come from low-income families. But there is one big difference: At Mosaic, 42
percent of students last year were in temporary housing, according to New York
City data, meaning that they were living in a shelter, doubled up with
relatives, in a hotel or in other transient circumstances. At the Success
school, which draws from across District 4, only 10 percent of students were
living in such conditions. The contrast,
while unusually extreme, reflects a trend across the city: With a record number
of New Yorkers experiencing homelessness, charter schools are serving fewer
homeless students, proportional to their total enrollment, than traditional
public schools.
'SNL' goes after Trump's Cabinet picks -
by introducing Walter White as the head of DEA
Inquirer by Elahe
Izadi , (c)
2016, Washington Post Updated: DECEMBER 11, 2016 12:46 PM
This weekend's "Saturday
Night Live" didn't begin with its familiar construction of Alec Baldwin
impersonating President-elect Donald
Trump, but the show still brought in some outside star power for its cold open. In a sketch focusing on Trump's controversial
Cabinet picks, Bryan Cranston reprised his "Breaking Bad" character
Walter White to play the incoming president's nominee to lead the Drug
Enforcement Administration. "Walter
is amazing, he came highly recommended by Steve Bannon," Kellyanne Conway
(Kate McKinnon) says.
Inquirer Editorial: Trump's cabinet picks
so far aren't very reassuring
Updated: DECEMBER 11, 2016 —
3:01 AM ESTPresident-elect Donald Trump is packing the Trojan horse he calls a cabinet with nominees lacking minimal requisite experience, temperament, and discipline, or who are callously antagonistic toward the missions of agencies they would head. Take retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, whom Trump has picked as national security advisor. Flynn has recklessly spread internet garbage that reflects his prejudices. He has called "Islamism" a cancer all Muslims have; repeated anti-Semitic remarks on social media; and circulated fake news that the FBI had evidence Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton was in a pedophilia ring and a money launderer. No security advisor should be blinded by such biases or in thrall with fake news, especially one who will be advising a president with zero foreign policy experience.
Teacher to Trump’s education pick: Let’s
‘address the elephant in the room.’ It’s you.
Washington Post Answer Sheet
Blog By Valerie Strauss December 10
The selection of Betsy DeVos by
President-elect Donald Trump as his education secretary
nominee has been attacked by public school advocates who see her longtime
support for school “choice” and private Catholic education as evidence that she
does not support America’s public education system. In this post, that sentiment
is explained by an educator who has written an open letter to DeVos. He is Patrick Kearney, facilitator for
Teacher Leadership in the Johnston Community School District in Iowa. He spent 25 years as a band director
in private and public schools of Iowa, and is a past-president of the Iowa
Bandmasters Association and past co-chair of the Iowa Jazz Championships. He
was also a founding board member of the Jazz Educators of Iowa. His wife
teaches in the Des Moines Public Schools and his son is studying education at
Drake University. Here’s the letter,
which first
appeared on Huffington Post. Kearney gave me permission to republish
it.
Would Donald Trump's Giant Voucher
Proposal Work For Rural Students?
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on December
12, 2016 8:03 AM
Most people have taken
President-elect Donald Trump's decision to tap billionaire GOP donor and school choice champion
Betsy DeVos as his education secretary as
a sign that he wants to make good on his campaign promise to create
a massive new school choice program.
One problem? School choice, at least in the form of vouchers or
brick-and-mortar charter schools, isn't easy to do in the rural states and
communities that played such a large part in Trump's victory in the
electoral College. Just
ask Don German, the executive director of the Arizona Rural Schools
Association. His state has embraced school choice, both in the form of
education savings accounts and charter schools. But, for the most part, those
options haven't reached isolated districts.
"There's very few charters that want to set up in the very small
and rural communities in Arizona," he said. In fact, nationally, just 7.5
percent of charter school students live in rural areas, according to the
National Center for Education Statistics. About 57 percent live in urban
areas.
Dueling Editorials Over Detroit Charters
Education Week By Walt Gardner on December
12, 2016 7:55 AM
It's quite common for editorials
to differ about controversial issues in education, but I've not often seen two
that differ so sharply about the same issue in the same school district ("How Trump's Schools Chief Helped Turn Around Detroit," The Wall Street Journal, Dec. 10; "We don't need a charter-school lobbyist as education
secretary," USA
Today, Dec.
6). I'm referring now to the selection of Betsy DeVos by President-elect Donald Trump as the next education secretary. To Ingrid Jacques, the deputy
editorial page editor of The Detroit News, DeVos is just what the city
needs. She cites DeVos's success in promoting charter schools as early as
1994 that has resulted in nearly 100 opening in Detroit, and the finding in
2015 by Stanford's Center for Research on Education Outcomes that students in
those charters gain three months of extra learning a year compared with their
peers in traditional schools. But to
Stephen Henderson, the editorial page editor of The Detroit Free Press, the
pick is a disaster. He says that DeVos is in essence a lobbyist, with no
relevant credentials or experience in public education. He doubts that DeVos is
qualified to help set standards, guide accountability and oversee
research. In fact, Henderson questions if she is even interested in any
of these things.
Betsy DeVos's Michigan legacy
Betsy DeVos's resume includes
education reform efforts that reshaped Michigan schools. But student test
scores have gone down in the past two decades.
By Ron
French | Bridge Magazine on December 06, 2016 at 1:00 PM, updated December 07, 2016 at 1:03 PM
It's clear how Betsy DeVos wants
to change public education. It's equally
clear how hard Donald Trump's nominee for U.S.
Secretary of Education will push, and how much she'll spend, to make those
changes. What's less clear is whether
her remedies for public education -- unveiled in Michigan over more than two
decades -- actually help students learn.
The academic rank of Michigan students compared with peers in other
states has dropped dramatically since DeVos's biggest policy victories: the
expansion of charter schools (most run by for-profit companies), and breaking
down barriers to students attending schools outside their home district, known
as school choice. Even her critics laud
DeVos for her guiding principles -- that all students deserve access to a
quality education and shouldn't be trapped in a failing public school. But DeVos' dogged commitment to policies that
have yielded, at best, mixed results in Michigan raises questions about what
lessons she would take to Washington, as well as about her willingness to
listen to viewpoints outside her free-market ideology.
Breitbart by DR. SUSAN BERRY9 Dec 2016
Donald Trump’s education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos joined him for a “Thank You” rally in her home state of Michigan, where she told the crowd making education great again means “finally putting an end to the federal Common Core.” Trump’s pick is the former chair of the Michigan Republican Party and one of the party’s most influential donors. DeVos is a proponent of charter schools and school vouchers. “In deference to the U.S. Senate confirmation, I’m not giving interviews, but just between us let me share this,” DeVos said to the crowd, speaking from prepared remarks. “It’s time to make education great again in this country.” Mlive.com reports DeVos initially had planned to skip Trump’s stop in Grand Rapids. The report states:
Politico By MICHAEL STRATFORD 12/09/16 09:29 PM EST
President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for education
secretary, Betsy DeVos, pushed back against criticism of her selection today —
accusing the media of spreading false stories about her.
“There’s a lot of false news out
there,” DeVos said on stage with Trump at a rally in her hometown of Grand
Rapids, Mich. “All I ask for is an open mind and the opportunity to share my
heart.”
DeVos doesn't have a conventional
background in education, such as working as a teacher or schools
superintendent. But the billionaire philanthropist has long donated to
"school choice" advocacy groups and politicians who are supportive of
school vouchers and charter schools.
DeVos told the Michigan crowd she
has “the experience, the passion and the know-how to make change happen” in the
nation’s education system. “I’ve been
involved in education issues for 28 years, as an activist, a citizen-volunteer
and an advocate for children,” she said.
Last 5 New Orleans public schools expected
to become charter operations
By Danielle
Dreilinger, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune Email the author | Follow
on Twitter
on December 09, 2016 at 6:19 PM, updated December 09, 2016 at 7:37 PM
on December 09, 2016 at 6:19 PM, updated December 09, 2016 at 7:37 PM
New Orleans may soon be the
first city to have an all-charter school system
-- a landmark in U.S. history. Orleans
Parish Superintendent Henderson Lewis Jr. announced Friday (Dec. 9) he had
"received informal expressions of interest from current school and charter
leaders to convert some or all of our remaining five network elementary and
high schools to charter schools authorized by OPSB."
The five schools currently under school board control this would affect: Ben
Franklin Elementary, Eleanor McMain Secondary, Mahalia Jackson Elementary, Mary
Bethune Elementary, and McDonogh No. 35, comprising a middle and high school. Charters
are publicly funded but run by independent boards, held to benchmarks set
by an authorizing party -- in this case, the Orleans Parish School Board.
Blogger note: Have an opinion about the
appointment of Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education? Call these three senators today.
1. Senator Lamar Alexander, Chairman, U.S. Senate Committee on
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions CommitteeWashington, D.C. Phone:(202) 224-4944
2.
Senator Toomey's Offices
Washington, D.C. Phone: (202) 224-4254
Senator Casey is a member of the Senate
Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee
3.
Senator Casey’s Offices
Washington, D.C. Phone: (202) 224-6324
Toll Free: (866) 802-2833
PHLpreK
Now Enrolling!
Philadelphia Mayor's
Office of EducationDid you know that quality early childhood education sets our children up for success? It reduces the need for special education, raises graduation rates, and narrows the achievement gap. These benefits ripple throughout our schools, neighborhoods, and local economy.
That’s why the City of Philadelphia is expanding free, quality pre-K for 6,500 three- and four-year-olds over the next five years. In fact, the first 2,000 pre-K seats are available now. Families should act fast because classes begin on January 4th at more than 80 locations.
Please help us spread the word. Parents/caregivers can call 844-PHL-PREK (844-745-7735) to speak with a trained professional who will help them apply and locate quality pre-K programs nearby. For more information, visit www.PHLprek.org
Pennsylvania Every Student Succeeds Act Public Tour
The Department of Education (PDE) is holding a series of public events to engage the public on important education topics in Pennsylvania. The primary focus of these events will be the Every Student Succeeds Act, the federal education law signed by President Barack Obama in late 2015. A senior leader from the department will provide background on the law, and discuss the ongoing
development of Pennsylvania’s State Plan for its implementation, which will be submitted to the U.S. Department of Education in 2017. Feedback is important to PDE; to provide the best avenue for public comment as well as provide an opportunity for those who cannot attend an event, members of the community are encouraged to review materials and offer comments at http://www.education.pa.gov/Pages/tour.aspx#tab-1
Upcoming Public Events:
Friday, December 16- Philadelphia- 11:00 am- Community College of Philadelphia
Community College of Philadelphia
Bonnell Building, Bonnell Auditorium, Room BG-20
1700 Spring Garden Street Philadelphia, PA 19130
Community College of Philadelphia
Bonnell Building, Bonnell Auditorium, Room BG-20
1700 Spring Garden Street Philadelphia, PA 19130
Wednesday,
January 4- Quakertown- 5:30 pm- Bucks County Free Library
Bucks County Free Library Quakertown Branch
401 West Mill Street Quakertown, PA 18951
Bucks County Free Library Quakertown Branch
401 West Mill Street Quakertown, PA 18951
Tuesday,
January 10- Scranton- 4:00 pm- Career Technology Center of Lackawanna County
Career Technology Center of Lackawanna County
3201 Rockwell Avenue Scranton, PA 18508
Career Technology Center of Lackawanna County
3201 Rockwell Avenue Scranton, PA 18508
“The “Success Starts Here” campaign is a
multi-year statewide effort to share the positive news about public education
through advertising, web, social media, traditional media and word-of-mouth
with the goal of raising understanding of the value of public education in
Pennsylvania. The campaign is led by the Pennsylvania School Boards
Association, but relies on the support of a wide variety of participating
organizations.”
Share
Your School’s Story: Success Starts Here Needs You!
Success Starts Here needs you!
Show your support by sharing stories, using social media and applying window
clings to all of your school buildings. Below are some links to resources to
help you help us.
Not sure where to start? This
simple tool kit will provide to you everything
you need to get involved in the campaign, including ways to work with the
media, social media tips, a campaign article to post, downloadable campaign
logos, and photo release forms.
We know you have great stories,
and it’s easy to share them! Just use our simple form
to send your success story to be featured on our
website. Help spread the word about how Success Starts Here in today’s public
schools.
All school entities have been
sent a supply of window clings for school building entrances. Need more? No
problem! Just complete the online order form and more will quickly be on
their way to you.
PASBO
is seeking eager leaders! Ready to serve on the board? Deadline for intent
letter is 12/31.
PASBO
members who desire to seek election as Director or Vice President should send a
letter of intent with a current resume and picture to the Immediate Past
President Wanda M. Erb, PRSBA, who is chair of the PASBO Nominations
and Elections Committee.
PSBA Virtual New School Director Training, Part 1
JAN 4, 2017 • 6:30 PM - 9:00 PM
The job of a school board director is challenging. Changing laws, policies, and pressures from your community make serving on your school board demanding, yet rewarding at the same time. Most school directors – even those with many years of experience – say that PSBA training is one of the most important and valuable things they have done in order to understand their roles and responsibilities. If you are a new school board director and didn’t have the opportunity to attend one of PSBA’s live New School Director Training events, you can now attend via your computer, either by yourself from your home or office, or with a group of other school directors.
This is the same New School Director Training content we offer in a live classroom format, but adjusted for virtual training.
Part 1
·
Role and
responsibilities of the school board director.
·
How to
work with PSBA’s member services team.
·
Your
role as an advocate for public education.
·
The
school board’s role in policy.
(See
also: Part
2, Jan. 11; Part
3, Jan. 18)Fee: $149 per person includes all three programs. Materials may be downloaded free, or $25 for materials to be mailed to your home (log in to the Members Area and purchase through the Store/Registration link).
Register online: https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/6607237329490796034
PSBA Third Annual Board Presidents Day
JAN 28, 2017 • 8:00 AM - 3:00 PM Nine Locations Statewide
Jan. 28, 2017 (Snow date: Feb. 11, 2017)
Calling all school board presidents, vice-presidents, and superintendents — Join us for the 3rd Annual PSBA Board Presidents Day held at nine convenient locations around the state.
This is a day of meeting fellow board members from your area and taking part in thought-provoking dialogue about the issues every board faces. PSBA Past President Kathy Swope will start things off with an engaging presentation based on her years as board president at the Lewistown Area School District. Bring your own scenarios to this event to gain perspective from other districts. Cost: $109 per person – includes registration, lunch and materials. All-Access Package applies. Register online by logging in to the Members Area (see the Store/Registration link to view open event registrations, https://www.psba.org/members-area/store-registration/)
NSBA Advocacy
Institute 2017 -- Jan. 29-31, Washington, D.C.
Join school directors around the country at the conference designed to give you the tools to advocate successfully on behalf of public education.
Join school directors around the country at the conference designed to give you the tools to advocate successfully on behalf of public education.
- NSBA will help you develop a winning
advocacy strategy to help you in Washington, D.C. and at home.
- Attend timely and topical breakout
sessions lead by NSBA’s knowledgeable staff and outside experts.
- Expand your advocacy network by swapping
best practices, challenges, and successes with other school board members
from across the country.
This
event is open to members of the Federal Relations
Network. To find
out how you can join, contact Jamie.Zuvich@psba.org. Learn more about the Advocacy
Institute at https://www.nsba.org/events/advocacy-institute.
Register now
for the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference
Plan to join public education leaders for networking and learning at the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference, March 25-27 in Denver, CO. General registration is now open at https://www.nsba.org/conference/registration. A conference schedule, including pre-conference workshops, is available on the NSBA website.
Plan to join public education leaders for networking and learning at the 2017 NSBA Annual Conference, March 25-27 in Denver, CO. General registration is now open at https://www.nsba.org/conference/registration. A conference schedule, including pre-conference workshops, is available on the NSBA website.
SAVE THE DATE LWVPA Convention 2017 June
1-4, 2017
Join the
League of Women Voters of PA for our 2017 Biennial Convention at the beautiful
Inn at Pocono Manor!
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