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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup Jan 9, 2017
“That
is, in math, it is as if the cyber students did not attend school at all”
In Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman’s
school districts, over the past 5 years, taxpayers have spent over $24 million
on chronically underperforming cyber charters that they never authorized.
In Speaker of the House Mike Turzai’s
school districts, over the past 5 years, taxpayers have spent over $8.4 million
on chronically underperforming cyber charters that they never authorized.
In Senate Education Committee Majority
Chairman John Eichelberger’s school districts, over the past 5 years, taxpayers
have spent over $49 million on chronically underperforming cyber charters that
they never authorized.
In Senate Education Committee
Minority Chairman Andy Dinniman’s school districts, over the past 5 years,
taxpayers have spent over $58 million on chronically underperforming cyber
charters that they never authorized.
In Senate President Pro Tempore Joseph
Scarnati III’s school districts, over the past 5 years, taxpayers have spent
over $44 million on chronically underperforming cyber charters that they never
authorized.
Not one of Pennsylvania’s
cyber charter schools has achieved a passing School Performance Profile score
of 70 in any of the four years that it has been in effect. Most cyber charters never made Adequate
Yearly Progress during the years that No Child Left Behind was in effect.
Along with increasing pension costs, charter school
tuition payments are one of the top two cost drivers for Pennsylvania’s school
districts. While
brick and mortar charters have to be authorized by a school board, cyber
charters are authorized by the state, with virtually no input by taxpayers who
must foot the bill, even if they have higher performing blended school programs
operating in their districts at considerable savings to taxpayers.
A June 2016 study by the National
Alliance for Public Charter Schools, the National Association of Charter School
Authorizers, and the 50-State Campaign for Achievement Now (50CAN) found
that online
charter students lost an average of about 72 days of learning in reading and
180 days of learning in math during the course of a 180-day school year, the
study found. That is, in math, it’s as if
the students did not attend school at all.
Thanks to PCCY for compiling the cyber charter spending
figures from cyber charter enrollment and tuition data on the PA Department of
Education website
Did you catch our weekend postings?
PA Ed Policy Roundup Jan 8: Taxpayers in
PA Senate President Scarnati’s 27 school districts had to pay chronically
underperforming cyber charters $9.4M in 15-16, up from $7.4M in 11-12.
We had reports from western PA of a
telephone campaign by DeVos supporters asking voters to contact their senators
to support her nomination. If you have
not already done so, please consider calling Senators Toomey and Casey as noted
below.
Betsy DeVos' confirmation hearing is
officially set for Jan. 11 at 10 a.m. in 430 Dirksen
Over the past three weeks, I have
been unable to find any press coverage of her ever having visited a traditional
public school.
In a constituent response letter regarding the nomination of
Betsy DeVos dated December 2, 2016, Senator Toomey stated: “I believe she is a
great pick.” His Washington, D.C. phone number is (202) 224-4254 You can find phone numbers for
his Pennsylvania offices here
Senator Casey is a member of the Senate Health, Education
Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee that will be holding the confirmation hearing. His Washington, D.C. phone number is (202)
224-6324 You can find phone numbers for his
Pennsylvania offices by clicking on the “Regions” link at the bottom of this “Contacts”
page
“As Philadelphia school budgets have shrunk,
librarians have grown rarer, almost to the point of extinction. In 1991, the
school system employed 176 certified librarians. Now, the librarians are only
at Anderson, Elkin, Greenberg, Penn Alexander, Roosevelt, and Sullivan
elementaries and Central and South Philadelphia High Schools. In addition to the librarian-staffed
libraries, 13 libraries are kept open by 128 volunteers from the West
Philadelphia Alliance for Children, according to the district.”
Phila.'s school librarians: a species
nearly extinct
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Staff Writer @newskag Updated: JANUARY 9, 2017 — 3:01 AM EST
How many full-time, certified
librarians would you guess one of the nation's largest school systems - a
district with 220 schools and 134,000 students - employs?
One hundred? Two hundred? Not even close. Eight certified, full-time
school librarians staff Philadelphia School District buildings. A handful of
others juggle library responsibilities with teaching classes. Many school
libraries are closed entirely. School
libraries have been disappearing in Philadelphia and elsewhere for years, but
that the number of full-time, certified librarians is now in the single digits
is astonishing, even to those who study library trends. "That has to be the worst
nationally," said Debra Kachel, a school-library expert and instructor at
Antioch University Seattle. "It's really appalling."
State riding dangerous fiscal course
Altoona Mirror EDITORIALS JAN 8, 2017
Gov. Tom Wolf’s decision not to
seek 2017-18 income and sales tax increases puts Pennsylvania on track for a
more amicable budget-preparation exercise than the first two of Wolf’s
administration. Still, it’s premature to
speculate that Harrisburg will accomplish its budget mission without serious
disagreements along the way. Likewise, it’s premature to assume that a new
budget will be in place by the June 30 deadline. Here’s a capsule of why there is cause for
anxiety and pessimism during the weeks leading up to the governor’s Feb. 7
budget address:
— The projected $1.7 billion 2017-18
budget deficit projected weeks ago by the nonpartisan Independent Fiscal Office
hasn’t evaporated.
— There’s a projected $600
million 2016-17 budget shortfall that will complicate efforts to fashion a
balanced 2017-18 spending plan. Wolf has blamed the problem on underfunding of
human services and lackluster tax collections, but there probably are
additional fiscal “bogeymen” present.
— Because of past failures to
address the commonwealth’s fiscal problems, the state’s credit rating is among
the nation’s lowest.
— Pennsylvania’s school-funding
disparities remain among the nation’s widest, and education spending is a big
part of every state budget.
Wolf making steady internal cuts in face
of looming Pa. deficit
WHYY Newsworks BY KATIE MEYER, WITF JANUARY 9, 2017
The Wolf administration has
started making concerted cuts in an effort to help get Pennsylvania out of its
fiscal hole. The state faces a projected
$600 million revenue shortfall this fiscal year, on top of a
multibillion-dollar structural deficit. The
leaders of the GOP majorities in the House and Senate have made their positions
on the state's financial deficits clear — they're opposed to passing any tax
increases. Instead, they favor
restructuring; for instance, merging state agencies and eliminating redundant
spending. So far the governor is taking
similar steps. "You know, leading
into the budget obviously we know we have a pretty significant structural
budget deficit, and this is part of the governor's effort to reduce costs and
streamline government across the board," said JJ Abbott, a spokesman for the
governor.
“As was the case in 2015, Argall wants to boost
Pennsylvania’s personal income tax by 60 percent, from 3.07 percent to 4.95
percent, raising an estimate $5 billion.
A person earning $50,000 a year in taxable income would see their income
taxes rise from $1,535 to $2,475, the AP reported. The sales tax would rise significantly, from
6 percent in most parts of the state to 7 percent, while applying it to a
broader range of goods and services. Sales
tax exemptions on many transactions such as groceries, clothing, and shoes;
legal, accounting and financial services; dry cleaning; funeral services; salon
services; basic television services; trash pickup; liquor and beer by the
drink; non-prescription drugs; and tickets to sporting events, concerts and
other events would be eliminated. As the
AP reports, Argall’s bill would only allow the collection of school property
taxes to retire current debt. It would give districts an inflationary aid
increase annually and would require voter approval for school boards seeking a
local income tax increase.”
Editorial: Pols eye 1 more whack at
property taxes
Delco Times Editorial by
PennLive.com POSTED: 01/08/17, 10:58 PM EST
If we had a nickel for every
proposal to reduce or eliminate Pennsylvania’s school property tax that’s come
down the pike over the last couple of decades, the chances are pretty good we’d
have raised the estimated $14 billion it’ll take to fund the massive tax shift. So as the 2017 legislative session opens,
we’ll credit state lawmakers for once again tackling the longest-lived (outside
of pension reform) policy challenge in Pennsylvania politics. Emboldened by larger majorities in the state
House and Senate, the proposal’s Republican backers say they finally have the
votes they need to pass a tax elimination or reform bill. It’s no secret that Pennsylvania’s real
estate levy, as it’s currently structured, is fundamentally unfair, imposing a
crushing burden on retirees and poorer school districts. Thus we’ll offer our muted encouragement – as
well as a couple of major caveats. For
one, unlike a failed push to eliminate the tax in 2015, backers must
absolutely, positively show their work.
Post Gazette Opinion By Rahm Emanuel January 8, 2017 12:00 AM
We need quality schools of every type — especially public schools. There are ways to make sure we get them, argues Chicago Mayor RAHM EMANUEL
By nominating voucher and charter
school advocate Betsy DeVos to be his education secretary, President-elect Donald
Trump has ignited another round of debate over school choice. Yet as
cable-news talking heads argue about whether or what kind of school reform is
needed in the United States, parents are having a different discussion at the
kitchen table — one based on finding the best school, not whether it’s a
“reform” school. Promoting choice at the
expense of quality isn’t an education strategy, it’s a political agenda.
Rather, those of us creating education policy need to simply focus on providing
the quality choices that students deserve.
We have seen successes when choice and quality have been pursued
together. Some public charter schools, such as the Noble Network and Urban Prep
in Chicago, have boosted graduation rates and increased college enrollment for
low-income students of color. Noble’s graduation rate is above 80 percent, and
100 percent of Urban Prep’s 2016 graduates were college-bound.
Despite charter success stories
such as these, however, most children will continue to enroll in their local
neighborhood school. We need to ensure that those schools are providing a
high-quality education, too.
New
standards could improve career technical education
Centre Daily Times BY BRITNEY
MILAZZO bmilazzo@centredaily.com
JANUARY 7, 2017 6:26 PM
Administrators at CPI said
they’re always looking to be on the forefront of providing the real world with
career-ready employees. That’s why
they’re going to review a set of proposed enhanced standards with their board,
committee members and stakeholders to make sure the recommendations are met in
a way that benefits the student and the employer. It was sparked in late November when two
state representatives announced they have been working on a set of standards to
help improve career technical education and job preparedness. It’s a way to “better develop future
generations for the workforce, which will serve to improve Pennsylvania’s
economy,” state Rep. Seth Grove, R-York, said.
Grove and state Rep. Pat Harkins, D-Erie, prepared a report for the House
Select Subcommittee on Technical Education and Career Readiness from a
culmination of seven hearings the subcommittee held during the 2015-16
legislative sessions. It came with
testimony from more than 60 business and education leaders, according to a
report from the House of Representatives.
Lancaster Online The LNP
Editorial Board Jan 8, 2017
THE ISSUE: In keeping with a law
passed by Pennsylvania’s General Assembly in 2012, schools that accept federal
funding are required to collect and publicly disclose their athletic
participation and financial data at the middle and high school levels. An analysis of the 2014-15 data in last Sunday’s LNP Sports
section found that 11,109 student-athletes in Lancaster County
participated on a freshman, junior varsity or varsity high school sports team;
that number is inflated somewhat because two- and three-sport athletes are
counted more than once. The data for the 2015-16 school year are to be released
later this month. Pennsylvania is one of just six
states that require the reporting of school athletic participation data,
according to State College High School Athletic Director Peg Pennepacker. It’s a sound idea: Disclosure is important,
especially when public money is being spent. And millions are spent each year
on interscholastic sports. As LNP noted
last Sunday, the original intent of the Pennsylvania Equity in Interscholastic
Athletics Disclosure Act was to push schools to comply with Title IX, the 1972
federal law that prohibits gender discrimination in schools that receive
federal funding. Title IX remains an
essential tool in ensuring that girls are getting an athletic experience that
compares equitably to what boys are getting. It’s not always a given. So we
appreciate that our Legislature got this right. But the reporting system could
use a few tweaks.
Downingtown Area School District receives
AAA rating
Daily
Local By Staff Report POSTED: 01/08/17,
11:47 AM EST | UPDATED: 15 HRS AGO
EAST CALN >> The
Downingtown Area School District has received the highest bond rating from both
Standard and Poor’s and Moody’s Investment Service. Downingtown noted it is the only district in
Pennsylvania to have received the AAA designation from both credit agencies,
and there are only 21 in the country who received a similar rating from both
services. Moody’s Investor’s Service and
Standard and Poor’s are the two largest rating agencies sharing roughly 80
percent of this market. According to Standard and Poor’s, a school district
rated AAA has an extremely strong capacity to meet its financial commitment on
an obligation. Districts rated AAA by Moody’s are judged to “be of the highest
quality, subject to the lowest level of credit risk.”
http://www.dailylocal.com/general-news/20170108/downingtown-area-school-district-receives-aaa-rating
Palmerton
Area Education Association poised to strike this morning
Michelle
Merlin Contact Reporter Of The Morning
Call January 9, 2017
Teachers in the Palmerton Area
School District are ready to picket district administration offices Monday
morning after the two parties couldn't reach an agreement on the Palmerton Area
Education Association's contract. The
union's last contract — which expired June 30, 2016 — covered 132 people in the
district, including teachers, nurses and other district employees. The union is
seeking salary and health benefit concessions that the board maintains are too
costly and will burden taxpayers. The
union's most recent proposal sought a four-year deal with annual raises of 3,
4, 4 and 5 percent, according to a statement on the district's website. The
district's current offer involves raising the starting salary, with a 3.25
percent increase each year, and a stipend for attaining a master's degree,
according to the district statement.
Democrats Seek Delay for Betsy DeVos'
Confirmation Hearing Over Ethics Review
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Alyson Klein on January
8, 2017 2:00 PM UPDATED
Democrats want to push back a
confirmation hearing for President-elect Donald Trump's pick for education
secretary, Betsy DeVos, until her paperwork detailing any potential conflicts
of interest has been cleared by the congressional Office of Government Ethics. The confirmation hearing for DeVos, a GOP
megadonor and advocate for school choice, is set for Wednesday. She is one of a
handful of Trump's nominees whose ethics paperwork has not yet been cleared, prompting concerns from the OGE and
congressional Democrats. "It
would certainly be concerning if nominees break from standard practice and
don't submit their ethics paperwork in advance of a hearing," said Eli
Zupnik, a spokesman for Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., in an email.
"Making sure that nominees don't have conflicts of interest and will truly
put families across the country first is one of the most important jobs that
the Senate has in this process, and we remain hopeful that it will not be
rushed through and that Democrats and Republicans will be able to review the
paperwork and have the opportunity to ask all reasonable questions." It doesn't seem likely that Republicans will
go along with the Democrats' suggestion of a delay. It is committee tradition
to wait until ethics paperwork is completed before holding a vote on a nominee,
but not neccessarily before a hearing, said an aide to Sen. Lamar
Alexander, R-Tenn., the committee chairman.
Corporate Education Nominee DeVos Faces
Pushback from Dem Senators
Common Dreams By Deirdre Fulton, staff writer Friday, January 06, 2017
As one U.S. senator denounces Betsy
DeVos' record in Michigan, six others are demanding President-elect Donald
Trump's pick for Education Secretary untangle the "complicated web of
political and not-for-profit organizations" she has spun over her career
pushing a corporate education agenda nationwide. Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) met
Thursday with DeVos, a former head of the Michigan Republican Party who has
championed conservative education policies in that state and around the
country. Her efforts have been largely successful in Michigan, where DeVos has
spent two decades advocating for more charter schools and less oversight. But investigations by
the Detroit Free Press and others have
found that work to be detrimental
to students—an opinion apparently shared by Stabenow. "Our conversation reaffirmed my strong
concerns about her nomination," Stabenow saidfollowing
Thursday's meeting. "Betsy DeVos and her family have a long record of
pushing policies that I believe have seriously undermined public education in
Michigan and failed our children. Therefore, I cannot support [her]."
Teachers unions mount campaign against
Betsy DeVos, Trump’s education pick
Washington Post By Emma Brown January
9 at 6:00 AM
National teachers unions are
mounting an aggressive campaign against Betsy DeVos, President-elect Donald
Trump’s pick for education secretary, arguing that she is an ideological
extremist with a record of undermining the public schools her department would
oversee. The National Education
Association, the largest labor union in the nation, is mobilizing teachers to
call and email their senators, urging a vote against DeVos’s confirmation. The
president of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi Weingarten, is
scheduled to deliver a speech Monday in which she plans to say that DeVos
endangers a new and fragile bipartisan consensus on the federal government’s
role in education. “Betsy DeVos is not
qualified, and even more than unqualified, Betsy DeVos is an actual danger to
students — especially our most vulnerable students,” said NEA President Lily
Eskelsen Garcia. “She has made a career trying to destroy neighborhood public
schools, the very cornerstone of what’s made our nation so strong.” DeVos is a Michigan billionaire and major
Republican donor who, during the past two decades, has focused her energy and political
contributions on promoting charter schools and taxpayer-funded vouchers for
private and religious schools.
Teachers union boss slams President–elect
Donald Trump’s pick for U.S. Education Secretary
BY BEN CHAPMAN NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Saturday,
January 7, 2017, 6:43 PM
The head of the nation’s
largest teachers union ripped President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to lead
the U.S. Education Department, saying the selection could harm public schools. The Senate has scheduled a Wednesday
confirmation hearing for Betsy DeVos, a philanthropist, businesswoman and
education activist. She’s been a longtime advocate for charter schools and
vouchers — and an opponent of teachers unions.
That puts DeVos firmly at odds with Randi Weingarten, president of the
American Federation of Teachers. “She is
really out of the mainstream,” Weingarten said of DeVos. “And the things that
she promotes have been tried over the last 20 years and they haven’t worked.” Weingarten will deliver Monday what her union
is calling a major education speech, where she will provide a detailed argument
for how DeVos’ pro-school-choice agenda could harm public school kids.
Los
Angeles Times Opinion by Samuel E. Abrams January 8, 2016
Donald Trump never tires of reminding us that he
is a businessman, and in Betsy DeVos, he has nominated a secretary of Education
who endorses a business model for improving elementary and secondary schooling.
The problem is, it’s the wrong model. DeVos’ prescriptions
include for-profit school management, taxpayer-funded vouchers to cover private
school tuition and parental choice as the primary vehicle for regulation.
Yet where such free-market remedies have been tried, they have yielded
disappointing results. The free-market
model dates to an essay written by University of Chicago economist Milton
Friedman in 1955. Friedman contended that the role of government in education
should be limited to providing parents with vouchers to cover a fixed amount of
tuition at schools meeting minimum requirements. If cost exceeded voucher
value, payment by parents — or scholarship funding — would have to make up the
difference.
NPE
Pennsylvania alert: Betsy De Vos
Network for Public Education January
2, 2017 by Carol Burris
The confirmation hearings for
Betsy DeVos will happen shortly. Please call your senators this week and let
them know you oppose her appointment as Secretary of Education. If you called
already, please call again. It is most
effective to call a local office. Below is the list of local office locations
to drop off a letter, and local numbers to call your senators. If you want a script for your call, you can
find it here. Please pick up the phone and call.
You can share this alert with
friends and family in your state by posting this link: http://wp.me/p3bR9v-2aO
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
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:
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
Register
for the 2017 PASA Education
Congress, “Delving Deeper into
the Every Student Succeeds Act.” March 29-30
Offered in partnership with PASA
and the PA Department of Education March 29-30, 2017 at the Radisson
Hotel Harrisburg - Camp Hill, PA . Approved for 40 PIL/Act 48 (Act
45) hours for school administrators. Register online at http://www.pasa-net.org/ev_calendar_day.asp?date=3/29/2017&eventid=63
PSBA Website
Because no one ran for the open seat of At-Large Representative (Central) on the PSBA Governing Board during the 2016 elections, this position is currently vacant. According to PSBA Bylaws (Article III, Section 4), the Governing Board shall fill the vacancy. The Governing Board is currently seeking nominations for this position from individuals in the Central Section, including Regions 4, 5, 6, 9 and 12, (see map). The selected person will fill the position for 2017, and the seat will be open for election for the remaining two years (2018-19) of the three-year term, according to PSBA Bylaws (Article III, Section 4, Part B, 2). The selected person may run for election for the remaining two years.
https://www.psba.org/2017/01/nominations-at-large-central/
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!
Save the Date 2017
PA Principals Association State Conference October 14. 15, 16, 2017
Doubletree
Hotel Cranberry Township, PA
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