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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup Aug 21, 2017:
WATCH
LIVE: Can’t get out to see the eclipse? Don’t have glasses? Here is a live NASA
video
Delco Times POSTED: 08/21/17, 5:46 AM EDT | UPDATED:
55 SECS AGO
The glasses became this year’s Tickle Me Elmo. If you couldn’t get
a pair or can’t get out of work to see the eclipse, we’ve got you covered with
a live NASA feed.
CLICK HERE if viewing on a mobile
device.
Trib Live by THE
ASSOCIATED PRESS | Sunday, Aug. 20, 2017, 2:06 p.m.
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Top state officials are warning that
Pennsylvania's deficit-strapped government is rapidly approaching a more severe
stage in its seven-week-old budget stalemate, one in which Democratic Gov. Tom
Wolf may have to start deciding which bills to pay and which to postpone. Taxes are still being collected and checks
are being cut by the Pennsylvania Treasury under a nearly $32 billion budget
bill that lawmakers approved June 30, the day before the current fiscal year
began. But that spending plan is badly
out of balance and, without a loan or an emergency revenue package, the state
will face hard decisions within days. “Somebody's
not getting paid if this doesn't get fixed,” Auditor General Eugene DePasquale,
a Democrat, said Friday. “Who it is — the vendors, I don't know — that's a
decision for others to make. It's simply a math equation: there's not enough
money to pay everybody.”
“If
we applied Pennsylvania’s school funding solution to the Montgomery bus
boycott, it would be like the mayor of Montgomery saying, “We are going to
treat everyone fairly on the buses in Montgomery. From now on, every new bus we
get will be desegregated. Any passenger, black or white, can enter the front of
the bus and sit wherever they want to sit. However, our existing buses will
still be segregated with blacks in the back and whites in the front and when
necessary, blacks will give their seats up for whites, but this is only on
existing buses. This will solve the problem.” I’m confident we can agree it
would take years to solve the problem as buses were finally replaced. Likewise,
Pennsylvania’s problem will never be solved because we’ve put $6.4 billion in a
lockbox of discrimination forever.”
My
Turn: Our students deserve fairly funded schools
Pocono
Record Opinion By David Parker Posted
Aug 17, 2017 at 6:14 PM Updated Aug 17, 2017
David Parker is a Republican from
Monroe County who served in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in
2015-2016. He represented the people of the 115th District, which includes
three school districts shown to be collectively short-changed by $50 million in
2015-16 based on the new basic education funding formula. He serves as a
director with Citizens for Fair School Funding to continue advocating for
students and taxpayers to be treated fairly.
This past December marked the 60th anniversary of the day Rosa
Parks got to ride on the front of the bus in Montgomery, Alabama. We’ve made a
lot of progress on civil rights across this great country since Dec. 21, 1956;
but for some reason, in August 2017, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, we
are still treating African-Americans and other people of color like
second-class citizens when it comes to education funding. In 2014, our legislature recognized that
Pennsylvania distributes education funding unfairly and established a Basic
Education Funding Commission to design a better, fairer way to invest those
education dollars. A new, fair, funding formula was unanimously approved by all
members of the commission. Unfortunately, the legislature would only implement
the newly adopted formula on the new money added to the basic education line
item, while the existing $5.5 billion would continue to be distributed
unfairly. Recent studies show that this funding distribution method
discriminates against school districts with higher minority populations. It
certainly holds true in my home county of Monroe, where the least-white (49
percent) district gets less than $2,000 per student, while the mostly white (77
percent) district gets more than $4,300 per student. Based on the last two
state budgets, there is no plan to reach equity in school funding, and $5.5
billion in basic education funding and nearly $1 billion in special education
funding will continue to be distributed by this discriminatory method in
perpetuity. Tragically, by official state policy, Pennsylvania continues to
discriminate against schools with higher populations of students of color.
Penn Live Guest Editorial By Tomea Sippio-Smith Posted on August 18, 2017 at 8:30 AM
Tomea Sippio-Smith is the
education policy director at Public Citizens for Children and Youth, a
Philadelphia-based advocacy group.
State lawmakers often argue that education should operate with the
efficiency of business and the performance of a well-oiled machine, but they
have not provided schools with the legal tools to support that position. Pennsylvania's charter school law is a
perfect example. The Commonwealth's
decrepit charter school law has been mocked for its ineffectiveness. The law
gained national attention when John Oliver singled it out as doing little to
combat fraud, mismanagement and waste in charter schools. His searing take-down was prompted, in part,
by a scathing report released by state auditor general Eugene DiPasquale who
called it "the worst charter school law" in the nation. Last week, Pennsylvania's Supreme Court also
chimed in on the issue when it held that charter schools cannot operate outside
of what is permitted by state statute or their current charters.
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
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.
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 Weekpublished 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.
Times Tribune BY C.J. MARSHALL, STAFF WRITER / PUBLISHED: AUGUST 18, 2017
A group plans to open a charter school in Mehoopany in response to
Tunkhannock Area School District shuttering three of its four elementary
schools next year. Rebecca Peterson,
secretary for the Mehoopany Charter School Foundation, said the group wants to have
a charter school for grades one to eight operational next year. The foundation
formed following the Tunkhannock Area School Board’s March vote to close Evans
Falls, Mehoopany and Mill City elementary schools to improve education and
district finances. The schools will close at the end of the 2017-18 school
year. At Peterson’s request during a
recent Mehoopany Twp. Board of Supervisors meeting, township Supervisor Ryan
Visneski agreed to serve on an advisory board for the foundation. The foundation will present its proposal to the Tunkhannock Area
School Board in September, Peterson said.
She said she hopes the group can rent the Mehoopany Elementary School
building from the district after it closes. If that is not possible, the
foundation is exploring alternative locations.
Plans must be submitted to the state Department of Education by November
for a charter school to open in 2018. There
are four charter schools in Northeast Pennsylvania — Bear Creek Community
Charter School in Bear Creek Twp., Luzerne County; Evergreen Charter School in
Cresco, Monroe County; Fell Public Charter School in Fell Twp. and Howard
Gardner Multiple Intelligence Public Charter School in Scranton.
Another
view: State’s standardized testing scam
Daily Local Opinion by Senator Andy Dinniman
POSTED: 08/20/17, 8:18 PM EDT
State Senator Andy Dinniman represents the 19th Senatorial
District and serves as minority chair of the Senate Education Committee.
I know that when one challenges the policy of an administration,
especially of one’s own party, you risk entering the danger zone. But for 12
years in the Senate, I have fought tooth and nail against standardized testing
regardless of whether the administration has been Republican or Democratic. And
I’m not about to stop now. It’s just too important of an issue. Harrisburg always revolves around spin and
this week’s announcement of Pennsylvania’s Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA)
Plan was spin at its finest. The Governor and the Secretary of Education only
focused on one part of the ESSA plan and patted themselves on the back for
ending the “test culture.” Here are a few questions about the whole ESSA plan
that reveal the lack of candor in their claims:
• Does subjecting students as young as 8 and 9 years old to six
and a half days of testing, instead of eight, really end test culture?
• Does making eighth grade students take both the PSSA and the
Keystone Exam end test culture?
• Does continuing the Keystones as a high school graduation
requirement and forcing students to take the equivalent of 10 days of testing
end test culture?
• Does maintaining a policy of teacher evaluation and school
performance that still depends on test scores end the emphasis on teaching to
the test?
The answer to these questions is obviously no, despite any
attempts at political spin. And, as is often the case, what wasn’t said is much
more telling than what was.
Standardized
testing gets a welcome tweak in Pa. | Editorial
By Express-Times opinion
staff Updated on August 20, 2017 at 7:08 AM Posted on August 20, 2017
at 7:00 AM
You can make the case that learning shuts down in Pennsylvania's
public schools for a month or so every spring -- and we're not talking about
spring break. We're talking about the white-knuckle, lost-sleep, teach-to-the
test period that grips each district in March and April, when kids in third
grade through eighth grade gear up for the annual Pennsylvania
System of School Assessment exam. Teachers are required to get students ready for the PSSAs,
which take a week to test proficiency in math, English and science. The prep
can take up to a month, during which time other lessons and learning methods
take a back seat. Over a K-12 career, standardized testing can consume more
than 1,000 hours of prep and test-taking per student, according to the
Pennsylvania State Education Association. There's a lot riding on the PSSAs.
Districts and teachers are evaluated by how students perform. Outcomes can
affect property values in school districts. Ideally, the tests provide a
statistical readout on how public schools are preparing kids for jobs, college
and later life. It's also big business. Pennsylvania spend more than $50
million a year on standardizing testing, the bulk of it going to companies for
prep guides and pre-testing materials.
Manheim
Township adopts corrective action plan in response to unfavorable audit by
state auditor general
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer Aug 18, 2017
The Manheim Township school board is attempting to patch an old
wound that was reopened by the state's top fiscal watchdog in June. In response to an unfavorable audit by
Auditor General Eugene DePasquale earlier this summer, the board on Thursday
officially approved a corrective action plan, detailing ways it will improve
transparency and accountability. “We
acknowledge there was a mistake made. We've learned and we're moving forward,”
board President Mark Anderson said, calling the audit “a teaching moment for
the board.” The plan states that the
board will “comply with the Public School Code by ensuring that termination,
buyout, and severance provisions of contracts are not modified during the
course of the contract or in the event a contract is terminated prematurely.” In addition, the board “will ensure that
specific contract provisions define the termination terms and limit ...
associated costs for future Superintendent and Assistant Superintendent
contracts.”
Report
grades Pa. schools: Here's every Lehigh Valley high school's marks
By Sara K. Satullo | For lehighvalleylive.com
Posted August 21, 2017 at 07:15 AM | Updated August 21,
2017 at 07:15 AM
Curious about the best public high school in Pennsylvania or the
Lehigh Valley?
Niche.com has release its 2018 list of the best
high schools in the state and we went through it to see where our local schools landed
in the rankings, which include charter and magnet schools. The ranking relies on data pulled from the U.S. Department of
Education and a "rigorous analysis of key statistics and millions of
reviews from students and parents," according to Niche.com. They looked at state test scores, college preparation, graduation
rates and SAT/ACT scores amongst other factors. And it relies on reviews from
Niche users.
“Arizona
first passed a voucher program, technically called Empowerment Scholarship
Accounts, for disabled students in 2011. The program differs from traditional
vouchers by giving state funding directly to parents, who can use the cash to
pay for private school tuition, home-schooling or other education expenses. The
program has been repeatedly expanded and now covers a third of all students,
including children attending failing schools, those living on Indian
reservations, foster children and children of military members. Despite those
changes, only about 3,500 students now use it, and more than half are disabled.”
Arizona anti-voucher referendum poised to
make ballot
Idaho Statesman BY BOB CHRISTIE Associated Press AUGUST 19, 2017 2:27 PM
PHOENIX Opponents of Arizona's sweeping new school
voucher law took a big step toward blocking it until voters can weigh in next
year, after state officials determined that 97 percent of the 111,000
signatures collected by a grassroots group passed an initial certification. That
means county recorders who will review a 5 percent sampling of the signatures
over the next three weeks could reject 30 percent and the voter referendum
would still make the ballot. The measure is temporarily on hold until the
signature certification process concludes. The law extends eligibility to all
1.2 million Arizona students by 2022, but it caps enrollment at about 30,000. Voucher
backers say they give parents more choice, while opponents argue they siphon
money from cash-starved public schools.
PSBA Officer Elections: Slate of
Candidates
PSBA Website August 2017
PSBA members seeking election to office for the association were
required to submit a nomination form no later than June 1, 2017, to be
considered. All candidates who properly completed applications by the deadline
are included on the slate of candidates below. In addition, the Leadership
Development Committee met on June 17 at PSBA headquarters in Mechanicsburg to
interview candidates. According to bylaws, the Leadership Development Committee
may determine candidates highly qualified for the office they seek. This is
noted next to each person's name with an asterisk (*).
The
deadline to submit cover letter,
resume and application is August 25, 2017.
PSBA seeking experienced education
leaders: Become an Advocacy Ambassador
POSTED ON JUL 17, 2017 IN PSBA NEWS
PSBA is seeking applications for six Advocacy Ambassadors who
have been involved in day-to-day functions of a school district, on the school
board, or in a school leadership position. The purpose of the PSBA Advocacy
Ambassador program is to facilitate the education and engagement of local
school directors and public education stakeholders through the advocacy
leadership of the ambassadors. Each Advocacy Ambassador will be an active
leader in an assigned section of the state, and is kept up to date on current legislation
and PSBA position based on PSBA priorities to accomplish advocacy goals. PSBA Advocacy Ambassadors are independent
contractors representing PSBA, and serve as liaisons between PSBA and their
local and federal elected officials. Advocacy Ambassadors also commit to
building strong relationships with PSBA members with the purpose of engaging
the designated members to be active and committed grassroots advocates for
PSBA’s legislative priorities. This is a
9-month independent contractor position with a monthly stipend and potential
renewal for a second year. Successful candidates must commit to the full
9-month contract, agree to fulfill assigned Advocacy Ambassador duties and
responsibilities, and actively participate in conference calls and in-person
meetings
September 19 @ 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM Hilton Reading
Berks County Community Foundation
Panelists:
Carol Corbett Burris: Executive
Director of the Network
for Public Education
Alyson Miles: Deputy Director of Government
Affairs for the American
Federation for Children
James Paul: Senior Policy Analyst at
the Commonwealth Foundation
Dr. Julian Vasquez Heilig: Professor
of Educational Leadership and Policy Studies and the Director of the Doctorate
in Educational Leadership at California State University Sacramento
Karin Mallett: The WFMZ TV
anchor and reporter returns as the moderator
School choice has been a hot topic in Berks County, in part due to
a lengthy and costly dispute between the Reading School District and I-LEAD Charter School. The
topic has also been in the national spotlight as President Trump and U.S.
Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos have focused on expanding education choice. With this in mind, a
discussion on school choice is being organized as part of Berks County
Community Foundation’s Consider It initiative. State Sen. Judy Schwank and
Berks County Commissioners Chairman Christian Leinbach are co-chairs of this nonpartisan
program, which is designed to promote thoughtful discussion of divisive local
and national issues while maintaining a level of civility among participants. The next Consider It Dinner will take place
Tuesday, September 19, 2017, at 5 p.m. at the DoubleTree by Hilton Reading, 701
Penn St., Reading, Pa. Tickets are available
here.
For $10 each, tickets include dinner, the panel discussion, reading
material, and an opportunity to participate in the conversation.
Apply Now for EPLC's 2017-2018 PA Education Policy Fellowship
Program!
Education Policy and Leadership Center
Applications are available now for the 2017-2018 Education
Policy Fellowship Program (EPFP). The Education Policy Fellowship Program is sponsored
in Pennsylvania by The Education Policy and Leadership Center (EPLC). Click here for the
program calendar of sessions. With more than 500
graduates in its first eighteen years, this Program is a premier
professional development opportunity for educators, state and local
policymakers, advocates, and community leaders. State Board of
Accountancy (SBA) credits are available to certified public accountants. Past
participants include state policymakers, district superintendents and
principals, school business officers, school board members, education
deans/chairs, statewide association leaders, parent leaders, education
advocates, and other education and community leaders. Fellows are typically
sponsored by their employer or another organization. The Fellowship Program begins with a two-day
retreat on September 14-15, 2017 and continues to graduation
in June 2018.
Using Minecraft to Imagine a Better World
and Build It Together.
Saturday, September 16, 2017 or Sunday,
September 17, 2017 at the University of the Sciences, 43rd & Woodland
Avenue, Philadelphia
PCCY, the region’s most
influential advocacy organization for children, leverages the world’s greatest
video game for the year’s most engaging fundraising event for kids. Join us
on Saturday, September 16, 2017 or Sunday,
September 17, 2017 at the University of the Sciences, 43rd & Woodland
Avenue for a fun, creative and unique gaming opportunity.
Education Law Center’s 2017
Annual Celebration
ELC invites you to join us
for our Annual Celebration on September 27 in Philadelphia.
The Annual Celebration will take place this year on September
27, 2017 at The Crystal Tea Room in Philadelphia. The
event begins at 5:30 PM. We anticipate more than 300 legal,
corporate, and community supporters joining us for a cocktail reception, silent
auction, and dinner presentation. Our
annual celebrations honor outstanding champions of public education. This proud
tradition continues at this year’s event, when together we will salute these
deserving honorees:
·
PNC Bank: for the signature philanthropic cause of the PNC Foundation, PNC
Grow Up Great, a bilingual $350 million, multi-year early education initiative
to help prepare children from birth to age 5 for success in school and life;
and its support of the Equal Justice Works Fellowship, which
enables new lawyers to pursue careers in public interest law;
·
Joan Mazzotti: for her 16 years of outstanding leadership as the Executive
Director of Philadelphia Futures, a college access and success program serving
Philadelphia’s low-income, first-generation-to-college students;
·
Dr. Bruce Campbell Jr., PhD: for his invaluable service to ELC, as he rotates out of
the chairman position on our Board of Directors. Dr. Campbell is an Arcadia
University Associate Professor in the School of Education; and
·
ELC Pro Bono Awardee Richard Shephard of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
LLP: for his exceptional work as pro bono counsel, making lasting contributions
to the lives of many vulnerable families.Questions? Contact Tracy Callahan
tcallahan@elc-pa.org or 215-238-6970 ext. 308.
STAY WOKE: THE INAUGURAL
NATIONAL BLACK MALE EDUCATORS CONVENING; Philadelphia Fri, Oct 13, 2017 4:00 pm
Sun, Oct 15, 2017 7:00pm
TEACHER DIVERSITY WORKS. Increasing the number of Black
male educators in our nation’s teacher corps will improve education for all our
students, especially for African-American boys.
Today Black men represent only two percent of teachers nationwide. This
is a national problem that demands a national response. Come participate in the inaugural National
Black Male Educators Convening to advance policy solutions, learn from one
another, and fight for social justice. All are welcome.
Save the Date 2017 PA Principals Association State Conference
October 14. 15, 16, 2017 Doubletree Hotel Cranberry Township, PA
Save the Date: PASA-PSBA
School Leadership Conference October 18-20, Hershey PA
Registration now open for the
67th Annual PASCD Conference Nov. 12-13
Harrisburg: Sparking Innovation: Personalized Learning, STEM, 4C's
This year's conference will begin on Sunday, November 12th
and end on Monday, November 13th. There will also be a free pre-conference on
Saturday, November 11th. You can
register for this year's conference online with a credit card payment or have
an invoice sent to you. Click here to register for the
conference.
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/PASCD-Conference-Registration-is-Now-Open.html?soid=1101415141682&aid=5F-ceLtbZDs
http://myemail.constantcontact.com/PASCD-Conference-Registration-is-Now-Open.html?soid=1101415141682&aid=5F-ceLtbZDs
Registration Opens Tuesday, September 26, 2017
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