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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup May 1, 2017:
Better-Educated
Families Less Likely to Choose Pa. Cyber Charters, Study Finds
RSVP
Now! EPLC’s Education Policy Forum – May 4 in Indiana, PA on Governor Wolf’s
Proposed Education Budget
“In Pennsylvania and across the country,
full-time online charter schools have come under withering scrutiny. Studies by the Center for Research on Educational
Outcomes at Stanford University have found at both the national
and state level that students in the schools learn at a dramatically slower
pace than their peers in traditional brick-and-mortar schools. Last fall, Education Week published a major investigation into the sector,
highlighting concerns about students not using the schools' educational
software and about extensive lobbying efforts by the for-profit management
companies that dominate the industry.”
Better-Educated Families Less Likely to
Choose Pa. Cyber Charters, Study Finds
Education Week Digital Education
Blog By Benjamin Herold on April 28, 2017 9:38 AM
Live from AERA San Antonio - As information about the academic
struggles of Pennsylvania's cyber charters has become more accessible, the full-time
online schools have increasingly enrolled students from the state's
least-educated communities and most-disadvantaged school districts, according
to a new study to be presented here Sunday as part of the annual meeting of the
American Educational Research Association.
The result, according to researcher Bryan Mann of Penn State University? Cyber charter have become an inequitable
corner of Pennsylvania's school-choice system, leaving the state's neediest
students with another bad option that their peers from better-off school
districts largely avoid. "This may
be the educational policy equivalent of asking someone in a food desert to pick
between two fast food restaurants and hoping they make a healthy choice,"
Mann wrote in a pre-conference email interview.
An Education Week Investigation of the Cyber Charter Industry
Education Week In-Depth Series November 2016
With growing evidence that the nation's cyber charter schools are plagued by serious academic and management problems, Education Week conducted a months-long investigation into what is happening in this niche sector of K-12 schooling. The result is a deep-dive account of what's wrong with cyber charters. Education Week uncovered exclusive data on how rarely students use the learning software at Colorado’s largest cyber charter, the questionable management practices in online charters, and how lobbying in scores of states helps keep the sector growing.
All subgroups of students, including
those in poverty, English-language learners, and special education students,
perform worse in full-time virtual charters than in traditional public schools.”
PReprise June 2016: Charter Advocacy
Groups Want Higher Standards for Online-Only Schools
Education Week By Corey
Mitchell on June 16, 2016 5:45 AM | No
comments
Three of the nation's leading
charter school advocacy groups are calling for a complete overhaul of state
policies governing online-only charter schools.
A new report from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, the
National Association of Charter School Authorizers, and the 50-State Campaign
for Achievement Now (50CAN) outlines the challenges facing the online-only, or
virtual, schools and offers recommendations to hold their authorizers
accountable for student performance and financial decisions. The three groups largely crafted the report's
recommendations in response to sweeping research findings released last fall
that showed that students who took classes through virtual schools made
dramatically less progress than their peers in traditional schools. It was the
first national study of the cybercharter sector and was conducted by the Center
for Research and Educational Outcomes at Stanford University, the Center on
Reinventing Public Education, and Mathematica Policy Research.
In a review of online charter
school performance, the charter school advocacy groups found that:
·
All subgroups of students, including those in poverty,
English-language learners, and special education students, perform worse in
full-time virtual charters than in traditional public schools.
·
Students who leave full-time virtual charter schools are apt to change
schools more often after they leave cyber charters than they did before
enrolling.
"If traditional public
schools were producing such results, we would rightly be outraged," the
report introduction reads, in part. "We should not feel any different just
because these are charter schools."
Studies show racial bias in Pennsylvania
school funding
By Evan Brandt, The Mercury POSTED: 04/30/17, 9:49 AM
EDT | UPDATED: 2 HRS AGO
This chart, taken from
Pennsylvania Department of Education data, shows that while both Pottstown and
Mahanoy City in Schuylkill County have similar levels of poverty, and would
receive similar levels of basic education funding under the fair funding
formula, Pottsown, which has a less-white population, receives significantly
less under the current funding mechanism, while Mahanoy receives more than its
fair share.Graphic by David Mosenkis POTTSTOWN
>> People objecting to Pennsylvania’s status as the state with the widest
gap between funding for rich and poor school districts have argued that a zip
code all-too-often determines the quality of a student’s education. Apparently the color of a student’s skin
matters even more. New research has found that the
less white a district’s students are, the more unfair the funding gap in state
basic education dollars. The discovery
was made by two separate fair funding advocacy groups as they began applying
Pennsylvania’s new “fair funding formula” to the finances of the state’s 500
school districts. Because the state is
only putting 6 percent of its total education funding through the formula,
researchers at the Education Law Center and POWER (Philadelphia Organized to
Witness Empower and Rebuild) wanted to see what funding would look like for
poorer districts if all the state’s education funding were distributed using
the formula.
Celebrate National Charter Schools Week
with PCPCS!
PA Coalition of Public Charter
Schools website April 27, 2017
PCPCS is excited to announce that
Speaker Turzai will be visiting City Charter High School in Pittsburgh on
Tuesday, May 2, to help us celebrate the role that high-quality public charter
schools have played in our state. Every
year, National Charter Schools Week gives us the chance to raise awareness
about our amazing schools. Whether it’s highlighting the academic successes of
our students or the strong parental demand for more schools, we have a lot to
celebrate and share. This year, National Charter School Week will take
place May 1-5. ALL charter school
leaders are cordially invited to attend this event. If you are a cyber
school leader, please feel free to pass this information onto your staff that
is local to the Pittsburgh area if you are unable to join us!
Speaker Turzai Visit to
City High Charter SchoolWhen: Tuesday, May 2nd Time: 10AM-11:30AM
Location: 201 Stanwix St, Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Please rsvp by Friday, April 28, by clicking here.
Hesitating over terms, several Philly
charters decline to sign renewal agreements with district
WHYY Newsworks BY AVI WOLFMAN-ARENT APRIL 28, 2017
Several Philadelphia charter
schools signaled their displeasure with the district's charter office by
declining to sign renewal agreements before a Friday deadline, instead holding
out for better terms. The refusals
highlight simmering tension between charters and the school district over how
these publicly financed — but privately run — schools should be governed. Several charter leaders and advocates said
the school district wants them to sign agreements that overregulate and
overburden their sector, sapping them of the flexibility to make needed
reforms. "We want to be
accountable," said David Hardy, CEO of Boys' Latin of Philadelphia Charter
School, one of those that has not signed its charter agreement. "But what
they're doing is beyond accountability. It's almost dictatorial." "They try to treat us like
children," Hardy added. Others,
however, praise the charter office for taking a more thorough approach to
charter reauthorization and approval, arguing it helps root out bad actors. "Nobody likes to be told what to do, but
this is public money, and it requires public oversight," said Temple Law
professor Susan DeJarnatt. The school
district set a 1 p.m. Friday deadline for 21 Philadelphia charter schools to
sign five-year renewal agreements. The agreements are a standard part of the
charter school landscape, laying out how charters must behave and what
benchmarks they must meet to continue operating in Philadelphia.
Renewals roil Philly charter community
Inquirer by Martha Woodall, Staff Writer @marwooda | martha.woodall@phillynews.com Updated: APRIL 28, 2017 — 9:53
PM EDT
The Philadelphia School Reform
Commission was scheduled to decide Monday whether 23 charter schools should have their operating
agreements renewed for five years.
But provisions of the proposed
agreements have created so much turmoil that the SRC will consider
fewer than half of the charters up for renewal next week. The district told charter operators they had
until 1 p.m. Friday to return signed agreements to be considered during
Monday's SRC meeting. Thirteen charters refused. They objected to what they viewed as an
ultimatum, and cited confusion over the language and conditions the district is
seeking to impose — including enrollment caps — that the charters said violate
state law. As of Friday, only 10 charters
were on the SRC agenda, including Laboratory Charter School of Languages and Communications and Memphis Street Academy, which are facing nonrenewal. Mike Wang, executive director of the
Philadelphia School Advocacy Partners, which supports charters, said the
renewal documents represent “a big leap forward in terms of overreach" by
the district. The schools that have balked
include Belmont and Inquiry charter schools in West Philadelphia, which are
operated by the Belmont Charter Network.
“Our board met [Friday] and decided not to sign for either school,” said
Jennifer Faustman, CEO of the network. “There is this lack of
clarity around the terms they have put in the charters." She said the schools received renewal
documents only late last week and had little time to review them or ask
questions. Kevin Geary, a
district spokesman, said many of the issues were not new, including requiring
charters to sign documents before the SRC votes.
25 years later, Pittsburgh city schools
facing similar problems from the past
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette by MOLLY BORN mborn@post-gazette.com 12:47 AM APR
30, 2017
On a warm, late summer evening in
1992, a requiem of sorts played out at the Pittsburgh Public Schools offices in
Oakland. A group of parents and
educators, called the Advocates for African American Students, held a mock
funeral along Bellefield Avenue — casket, visitor guest book and all— and
circled the administration building in protest of the newly named
superintendent Louise Brennen. Then-school board member Jean Fink, who voted for
Ms. Brennen, recalled whizzing by the scene on the back of her husband’s
Harley. “I just went by on a motorcycle and didn’t stop.” The elegy, said Wanda Henderson, then the
group’s co-chair, “symbolized the end of multicultural education, access to
educational opportunities for black students and strong effective leadership.” She and other Advocates took formal action,
too, filing a racial discrimination complaint that year with the Pennsylvania
Human Relations Commission against Pittsburgh Public. They cited inequities
between white and black students from academic achievement to discipline to
resources, capped by the selection of Ms. Brennen over who they said was a more
qualified black candidate. A
quarter-century later, the district is faced with some of the same challenges.
A report this year revealed that “the weight of the district’s disciplinary
actions appears to fall disproportionately on students of color.”
Pa. lawmakers discuss education issues
with Fox Chapel residents
Post Gazette by RITA MICHEL 12:00 AM APR 28, 2017
“Right now the bill is dead,”
state Sen. Randy Vulakovich, R-Shaler, told those who gathered last week at Fox
Chapel Area High School to discuss state education issues with elected
officials. He was referring to Bill 76,
which proposes funding Pennsylvania schools by increasing income and sales
taxes instead of using property taxes, the current funding source. The bill
would not have eliminated property taxes entirely. School districts would still
have had the ability to use property taxes to cover existing school debt. For that reason as well as the loss of local
control, Fox Chapel Area administrators do not view the bill as a viable
solution to property tax issues. The April 20 discussion was a
meeting of the District Forum, a group of Fox Chapel Area residents that meets
regularly to discuss policies and topics of interest to them.
“State government cannot remedy this
disparity because most states face serious budget shortfalls. Pennsylvania,
which currently ranks 45th in state education spending and
faces a $1.7 billion budget deficit, has no new dollars for education spending.
It is not alone; 35 states currently spend the same as or less than they did in
2008.”
Education’s Taxing ProblemThe American Interest by MATTHEW FONTANA April 27, 2017
America’s schools need cash, but
Pennsylvania’s proposed solution—substituting sales taxes for property taxes as
a funding source—should get failing marks.
Since 1647, when the Massachusetts
Bay Colony first required any town of more than fifty families to hire and
support a local teacher with funds from the “general inhabitants,” local and
state governments have primarily funded public education through locally levied
property taxes. The result has been an increasingly impoverished public
education system with wide—and educationally harmful—disparities between
wealthy and poor districts. States are increasingly unable or unwilling to use
state funds to compensate for shortfalls in property tax revenue, and these
funding disparities have, with growing frequency, become the subject of state
court litigation. Courts in several states have
found that funding inequities and deep educational cuts violate state
constitutional guarantees of “through and efficient education” or “sound basic
education.” In short, every state is wrestling with the issue of educational
funding inequity. Nowhere is this issue more
apparent than in Pennsylvania. Upper Darby School District, a diverse
working-class and majority-minority suburb immediately outside the city limits
of Philadelphia, spends approximately $13,000 per student, whereas its
wealthier, and whiter, neighbor five miles away, Marple Newtown School
District, spends $22,000 per student. By virtue of zip code alone, one student
will receive $9,000 dollars in extra education spending. While per student
spending is not the only measure of educational success, it is fundamentally
unfair that the resources available to educate students are predicated on the
wealth of their community. Amplifying this unfairness is the racial and
economic segregation that underlies property tax disparities. For a variety of
reasons, including the legacy of redlining in the home mortgage loan industry,
minority families are often concentrated in the communities with the lowest
property values—and therefore attend schools with the least resources.
“In the afternoon, the School Reform
Commission plans to vote on renewals, nonrenewals and amendments involving 11
different charter schools. Although the charter office has completed
renewal agreements for 26 schools, more than a dozen charters have declined to
sign them in time for the vote, citing a variety of issues in complaining of regulatory
overreach.”
May Day will be busy: teachers organize
day of advocacy, SRC to vote on charter renewals
The notebook by Dale Mezzacappa April
30, 2017 — 3:15pm
Monday, May 1, is proving to be a
major day of activity in the world of Philadelphia education. In the morning, educators from
several schools, most with contingents from the activist Caucus of Working Educators,
plan to stay out of school and participate in May Day protests to draw
attention to issues of "economic, racial, and educational
justice." The biggest issue:
continued lack of a teachers' contract. The stalemate between the Philadelphia
Federation of Teachers and the SRC is now in its fifth year. Most teachers
have seen no raises during that time.
The District's tight financial picture -- primarily a result
of charter expansion and the state's outdated and mostly inadequate education
funding system -- is a major factor in the longstanding impasse.
“The educators have been working nearly
four years without a contract and nearly five without a pay raise.”
Philadelphia teachers plan contract
protests
Delco
Times By The Associated Press POSTED: 05/01/17, 6:19 AM EDT
PHILADELPHIA >>
Philadelphia school teachers are planning protests to draw attention to their
lack of a contract. Monday’s
demonstrations include picketing and rallies.
The educators have been working nearly four
years without a contract and nearly five without a pay raise. Schools are open and the district
says it’s working with principals and the company that provides substitute
teachers to ensure there will be no disruptions on the classrooms.
Contractless for four years, Philadelphia
teachers plan action Monday
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Staff Writer @newskag | kgraham@phillynews.com Updated: APRIL 30, 2017 — 8:09 PM EDT
Klint Kanopka used to say that he
would teach in Philadelphia until he “retired or died.”
He has been a fixture at Academy
at Palumbo, the magnet school where he has taught for eight years. He has won
national accolades for his teaching and hundreds of thousands of dollars in
grants for Palumbo, and until recently, he had not missed a day of work. But it has been nearly four years without a
teachers' contract, and nearly five without a raise. Kanopka is not paid for
his years of experience or the master’s degree he earned after his pay was
frozen. “I don’t want to leave
Philadelphia, but it feels like a contract will never happen,” said Kanopka,
34, who will enter a Ph.D. program in physics education at Stanford University.
Becoming a graduate student and teaching assistant will mean a $4,000 raise. Citywide, Philadelphia School District
teachers will call attention to their plight Monday, using the day -- May 1 is
traditionally a day of public activism for unions -- to highlight what they say
is a school system whose lack of action on their behalf is driving many away
and harming children.
Bethel
Park Chamber guest addresses school property tax reform
The Almanac By Harry Funk Published:
April 27, 2017
Since state Senate Bill 76’s
defeat by tiebreaker in November, its prime sponsor has vowed to reintroduce
what has become known as the Property Tax Independence Act for the new
legislative session. Although Sen. David
Argall, R-Schuylkill County, has yet to do so, opponents of the measure
continue to make efforts to inform the public about its ramifications. Representing the Allegheny
Intermediate Unit, for which she is director of legislative policy and
advocacy, Jamie Baxter recently addressed the topic with members of the Bethel
Park Chamber of Commerce. “I’m not
saying that property taxes are the way our schools should be funded,” she
explained. “I’m not saying that at all. I’m saying that this particular
proposal has negative impacts for school districts. There might be another
property tax reform proposal out there that can fund schools equitably.” Baxter referred to the “property tax
independence” component of the would-be legislation as a misnomer. “It’s only for school property taxes,” she
said. “It’s important to know that, under this proposal, property taxes would
not be eliminated. You would still have your county and municipal taxes to pay,
and you would also be paying property taxes based on your school district’s debt.”
Trib Live TOM
YERACE AND EMILY BALSER | Saturday, April 29, 2017,
12:01 a.m.
Local school district officials
are worried a Trump administration proposal to eliminate Title II federal funds
could leave their districts short of money for staff development and class size
reduction. According to the state
Department of Education, Title II money helps districts pay for teacher and
principal development, reducing class size and recruitment and retention
efforts for educators. The state
receives about $86 million in federal Title II funding each year, which it
doles out to local school districts. Pennsylvania
Secretary of Education Pedro Rivera sent out letters to districts cautioning
officials about the potential cuts if the proposal put forth by President Trump
and U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos takes effect. Local districts are looking at cuts ranging
from around $40,000 to more than $200,000, depending on the size of the
district. "Wiping out Title II would
absolutely wipe out $68,000 from our budget," said Freeport Area
Superintendent Ian Magness. Many districts
use their Title II funding to provide an extra teacher in elementary schools to
keep class sizes smaller and provide training for educators on curriculum
changes.
Trib Live by MATTHEW
MEDSGER | Friday, April 28, 2017, 12:01 a.m.
The New Kensington-Arnold School
Board gave notice Thursday night of the district's intention to furlough 33
teachers at the end of the school year. Many
of those teachers and their supporters filled the district board room to
bursting, some seated on the floor, as five board members, a bare quorum, voted
5-0 to approve the tentative furlough list.
The board cited declining student enrollment, the consolidation project
that closed two schools three years ago and curtailment of programs. But just because the board announced more
than 30 possible furloughs, that doesn't mean it will happen. More than 20 teachers were on the same list
last year and in 2015, 2014 and 2011. None
was furloughed last year or 2014, and no more than three were in those other
years. The teachers union requires the
school district to list before May teachers who might be furloughed.
Beaver County Times Staff and
Wire Reports April 28, 2017
PITTSBURGH — Sentencing has been
again delayed for an accountant who pleaded guilty to helping Pennsylvania
Cyber Charter School founder Nick Trombetta avoid federal income taxes on more
than $8 million. Neal Prence, of Koppel,
pleaded guilty to one count of tax conspiracy in September, but his sentencing
Thursday has been delayed indefinitely because he now wants to withdraw his
guilty plea and instead plead no contest.
A federal judge has yet to rule on that request, which could spare
Prence's accounting license. Federal
prosecutors contend Prence conspired with Trombetta, who pleaded guilty to the
fraud in August involving the Midland-based PA Cyber. Trombetta is scheduled for sentencing June 20
for using the school's money to fund a lavish lifestyle. His sister, Elaine Trombetta Neill, was also
charged in this case. Then-prosecutor James Wilson alleged Neill used a company
set up by her brother, One2One, as a "conduit through which Dr. Nicholas
Trombetta could channel money to himself, his sister, his mother and other
persons." Neill pleaded guilty to
filing a false income tax return more than three years ago, and is yet to be
sentenced. After more than eight
continuances, Neill is scheduled to be sentenced on July 14.
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer Apr
29, 2017 Updated Apr 29, 2017
The largest school district in
Washington may soon move
the start time for most of its schools to 9 a.m., one year after
testing later start times for its older students. Under the proposed plan, all middle and high
schools, and most K-8 schools, at Seattle Public Schools would start classes at
9 a.m. The first bell at most elementary schools would ring at 8 a.m. The changes, if approved, would be
implemented in the 2017-18 school year. This
year, the start times are 7:55 a.m., 8:45 a.m. and 9:35 a.m. Seattle's school board last year approved
the 8:45 a.m. start time for most of its middle and high schools and
some K-8 schools. Early data show that
the later start times for older students have led to increased attendance and
less need for discipline. A
district-appointed task force studied the issue for seven months prior to last
year's decision. It ultimately recommended an 8:30 a.m. start time for high
schools, an 8 a.m. start for most elementary schools and a 9:40 a.m. start for
middle school and K-8 students. Seattle
Public Schools, which serves about 55,000 students in its nearly 100 schools,
is one of the largest districts in the nation where teenagers start classes
later than 8:30 a.m.
The American
Academy of Pediatrics recommends middle and high school classes start
no earlier than 8:30 a.m. to combat teenage sleep deprivation.
Politics
as Usual: Wolf's approval rating up, new poll finds
Steve Esack and Laura OlsonContact Reporters Of The Morning Call April 29,
2017
In case you didn't realize,
Pennsylvania's 2018 election for governor is here.
Several Republicans appear to be lining up to face
each other in next year's May primary with the hope of unseating Democratic
Gov. Tom Wolf in the fall. As of now,
Wolf's going into the election cycle without a primary opponent — and a higher
approval rating. Wolf's approval rating
went up 4 percentage points to 40 percent since February, according to a new
Muhlenberg College/Morning Call Poll. At the same time, his disapproval rating
went down 5 percentage points to 35 percent. That's the best Wolf has done on
both ends among four Muhlenberg-Morning Call polls conducted since the York
County businessman took office in January 2015.
US Students
Need More Exposure to Arts and Music, Test Shows
New
York Times By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS APRIL 25, 2017, 3:31 A.M. E.D.T.
WASHINGTON — When it comes to
music and visual arts, American teenagers could use some help. The National Center for Education Statistics
reported Tuesday that in 2016, American eighth graders scored an average 147 in
music and 149 in visual arts on a scale of 300. Some 8,800 eighth graders from
public and private schools across the country took part in the test, which was
part of the National
Assessment of Educational Progress, often called the Nation's Report Card. Acting Commissioner Peggy Carr said the test
shows students have a lot to learn in art and music and that no progress has
been made since the same test was administered in 2008. "When I saw the results, clearly there is
room for improvement, because clearly there is a lot of content that students
weren't able to interact with correctly," Carr told The Associated Press.
Save
Medicaid In Schools Coalition Issues Statement Rejecting American
Alexandria,
Va. – April 28, 2017 – The
co-chairs of the Save Medicaid in Schools Coalition issued the following
statement today rejecting the American Health Care Act.
The Save Medicaid in Schools Coalition opposes the latest Medicaid proposal under consideration by the U.S. House of Representatives. Children cannot learn to their fullest potential with unmet health needs and this legislation would take health care services and access away from American’s most vulnerable children.
Medicaid is a cost-effective and efficient provider of essential health care services for children. School-based Medicaid programs serve as a lifeline to children who often can’t access critical health care and health services outside of their schools. Under this bill, the bulk of the mandated costs of providing health care coverage would be shifted to the states even though health needs and costs of care for children will remain the same or increase.
A per-capita cap, even one that is based on different groups of beneficiaries, will disproportionally harm children’s access to care, including services received at school. Schools are often the hub of the community, and converting Medicaid’s financing structure to per-capita caps threatens to significantly reduce access to comprehensive health care for children with disabilities and those living in poverty. We urge Congressional leaders to reject the American Health Care Act.”
Sasha Pudelski, AASA, The School Superintendents Association
The Save Medicaid in Schools Coalition opposes the latest Medicaid proposal under consideration by the U.S. House of Representatives. Children cannot learn to their fullest potential with unmet health needs and this legislation would take health care services and access away from American’s most vulnerable children.
Medicaid is a cost-effective and efficient provider of essential health care services for children. School-based Medicaid programs serve as a lifeline to children who often can’t access critical health care and health services outside of their schools. Under this bill, the bulk of the mandated costs of providing health care coverage would be shifted to the states even though health needs and costs of care for children will remain the same or increase.
A per-capita cap, even one that is based on different groups of beneficiaries, will disproportionally harm children’s access to care, including services received at school. Schools are often the hub of the community, and converting Medicaid’s financing structure to per-capita caps threatens to significantly reduce access to comprehensive health care for children with disabilities and those living in poverty. We urge Congressional leaders to reject the American Health Care Act.”
Sasha Pudelski, AASA, The School Superintendents Association
John Hill, National Alliance for Medicaid in
Education
Kelly Vaillancourt Strobach , National Association of School Psychologists
Kelly Vaillancourt Strobach , National Association of School Psychologists
For specific questions about the
Save Medicaid in Schools Coalition, please contact Sasha Pudelski, AASA
assistant director, policy and advocacy, at spudelski@aasa.org.
A vote to repeal the ACA could happen as soon as next week, jeopardizing Medicaid coverage for Pennsylvania schoolchildren. Pennsylvania public schools are currently at risk of losing millions of dollars in federal funding to help pay for mandated services for students with special needs.
A PSBA Closer Look March 2017
https://www.psba.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/ACL_ACCESS-program-jeopardized.pdf
Call your Congressman’s office today to let them know that with the repeal of ACA Pennsylvania could lose over $140 million in reimbursement for services that school districts provide to special education students
http://www.house.gov/representatives/find/
PSBA Spring Town Hall Meetings coming in May!
Don’t be left in the
dark on legislation that affects your district! Learn the latest from your
legislators at PSBA Spring Town Hall Meetings. Conveniently offered at 10
locations around the state throughout May, this event will provide you with the
opportunity to interact face-to-face with key lawmakers from your area. Enjoy
refreshments, connect with colleagues, and learn what issues impact you and how
you can make a difference. Log in to the Members Area to register today for this FREE event!
- Monday, May 1, 6-8 p.m. — Parkway West
CTC, 7101 Steubenville Pike, Oakdale, PA 15071
- Tuesday, May 2, 7:30-9 a.m. — A W
Beattie Career Center, 9600 Babcock Blvd, Allison Park, PA 15101
- Tuesday, May 2, 6-8 p.m. — Crawford
County CTC, 860 Thurston Road, Meadville, PA 16335
- Wednesday, May 3, 6-8 p.m. — St. Marys
Area School District, 977 S. St Marys Road, Saint Marys, PA 15857
- Thursday, May 4, 6-8 p.m. — Central
Montco Technical High School, 821 Plymouth Road, Plymouth Meeting, PA
19462
- Friday, May 5, 7:30-9 a.m. — Lehigh
Carbon Community College, 4525 Education Park Dr, Schnecksville, PA 18078
- Monday, May 15, 6-8 p.m. — CTC of
Lackawanna Co., 3201 Rockwell Avenue, Scranton, PA 18508
- Tuesday, May 16, 6-8 p.m. — PSBA, 400
Bent Creek Boulevard, Mechanicsburg, PA 17050
- Wednesday, May 17, 6-8 p.m. — Lycoming
CTC, 293 Cemetery Street, Hughesville, PA 17737
- Thursday, May 18, 6-8 p.m. — Chestnut
Ridge SD, 3281 Valley Road, Fishertown, PA 15539
For assistance
with registration, please contact Michelle Kunkel at 717-506-2450 ext. 3365.
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!
Pennsylvania Education Leadership Summit
July 23-25, 2017 Blair County Convention Center - Altoona
A three-day event providing an
excellent opportunity for school district administrative teams and
instructional leaders to learn, share and plan together
co-sponsored by PASA, the
Pennsylvania Principals Association, PASCD and the PA Association for Middle
Level Education
**REGISTRATION IS OPEN**Early
Bird Registration Ends after April 30!
Keynote speakers, high quality
breakout sessions, table talks on hot topics, and district team planning and
job-alike sessions will provide practical ideas that can be immediately
reviewed and discussed at the summit and utilized at the district level.
Keynote Speakers:
Thomas Murray, Director of Innovation for Future Ready Schools, a project of the Alliance for Excellent Education
Kristen Swanson, Director of Learning at Slack and one of the founding members of the Edcamp movement
Thomas Murray, Director of Innovation for Future Ready Schools, a project of the Alliance for Excellent Education
Kristen Swanson, Director of Learning at Slack and one of the founding members of the Edcamp movement
Breakout session strands:
*Strategic/Cultural Leadership
*Systems Leadership
*Leadership for Learning
*Professional and Community Leadership
*Strategic/Cultural Leadership
*Systems Leadership
*Leadership for Learning
*Professional and Community Leadership
CLICK HERE to access the Summit
website for program, hotel and registration information.
Save the Date
2017 PA Principals Association State Conference October 14. 15, 16, 2017
Doubletree
Hotel Cranberry Township, PA
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