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Keystone
State Education Coalition
PA
Ed Policy Roundup Oct. 24, 2017:
VOUCHERS: The PA Senate Education Committee Meeting scheduled
for Tuesday 10/24 at 11:30 AM in Room 8E-B East Wing will include consideration
of SB2,
“Education Savings Accounts” the 2017 version of vouchers, which would
drain funding from our most underfunded schools.
Please consider calling your senator today, especially those who are members
of the education committee.
Senate Ed Committee
Members: http://www.legis.steate.pa.us/cfdocs/cteeInfo/Index.cfm?CteeBody=S&Code=23
Contact Info for All Members of the Senate:
Thanks
to Senate Education Committee Chairmen John Eichelberger and Andy Dinniman for
their candid discussion of pending legislative education policy topics at the
PASA-PSBA School Leadership Conference in Hershey last week. Here’s the video
on PCN….
Video: Future of Education in PA
PCN Video Runtime
1:16
PA School Boards
Association program on the future of education in Pennsylvania with PA Senate
Education chairs John Eichelberger and Andy Dinniman.
Say No to
Next Generation School Vouchers in PA
Tell your senator to vote NO on Senate
Bill 2ActionNetowrk by PA PUBLIC ED HARRISBURG October 23, 2017
Under the bill, parents of students in low-achieving
schools can receive funds in the form of Education Savings Accounts (ESA) to
attend a participating nonpublic school and for other expenses. Low-achieving
is defined as the lowest performing 15% of elementary and secondary public
schools, based on PSSA and Keystone Exam scores. (This does not include charter
schools or CTCs.) Those school districts would see their basic and special
education subsidies reduced by the amount calculated for each participating
student, with that money put into an ESA account for parents to use for
“qualified education expenses.” Senate Bill 2 creates a program targeted to the
same schools targeted by the existing EITC and OSTC scholarships that already
can be used at private schools. ESA proposals have been introduced in various
states across the country, and have been dubbed by the National Conference of
State Legislatures (NCSL) as “the next generation of vouchers.” (http://www.ncsl.org/research/education/the-next-generation-of-school-vouchers-education-savings-accounts.aspx) Block passage
of Senate Bill 2 and this latest attempt to sell vouchers. Please take
a moment to contact your senators.here: https://actionnetwork.org/letters/say-no-to-next-generation-school-vouchers-in-pa?source=direct_link&
By dianeravitch October 23, 2017
Peter Greene writes here about a sneaky effort in the Pennsylvania legislature to push through a voucher bill without public hearings. Republicans following the DeVos script want to raid public school funds and transfer your tax dollars to unaccountable private and religious schools and for a variety of other purposes (in one state in the west, a parent used the “education savings account voucher” to pay for an abortion, another parent bought school supplies, returned them, and bought the family a big-screen television). If you live in Pennsylvania, contact Your State Senator NOW.
Tomorrow (Tuesday) morning, the Senate Education Committee will be once again considering a bill to promote vouchers across the state of Pennsylvania, and to pay for them by stripping money from public schools. If you're in Pennsylvania, drop what you're doing and call your Senator today. SB 2, Education Savings Accounts for Students in Underperforming Schools, sets up vouchers with no oversight and an extremely broad criterion for how the vouchers can be spent. According to the official summary, voucher money may be spent on
1) Tuition and fees at a participating private school;
2) Payment for a licensed or accredited tutor;
3) Fees for nationally norm-referenced tests and similar exams;
4) Industry certifications;
5) Curriculum and textbooks; and
6) Services to special education students such as occupational, speech, and behavioral therapies.
So anything from private school tuition to buying books for home schooling to sending a child to massage therapist school.
State
Senate ponders House budget plan that's short of what it wanted
Reading Eagle by The Associated Press Tuesday
October 24, 2017 06:00 AM
HARRISBURG — Pennsylvania's Republican-controlled
Legislature on Monday began what could be a long week as lawmakers worked again
to try to end a four-month budget standoff with big borrowing and gambling
expansion packages to backfill a projected $2.2 billion deficit. The Senate
appeared ready to submit to a House budget-balancing plan that fell well short
of what Senate leaders and Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf had sought. The House plan,
passed last week, contains a grab bag of tax increases that is projected to
yield as much as $140 million in a full year but perhaps as little as $60
million. That is a small fraction of the $500 million-plus tax package the
Senate had passed in July in an effort to help wipe out Pennsylvania's
entrenched post-recession deficit. Pressing the House for more concessions
likely would extend the budget standoff, rather than ending it this week, said
Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre. "We're not thrilled with it, but it's
like everything else, you've got to look at it in its totality," Corman
said Monday. "And it isn't how we would have done it, obviously, but it's
what they can get 102 votes for and ... that's got to be respected and
understood."
Optimism
starting to build - again - around Pa. Capitol about solving state budget
stalemate
Penn Live By Charles Thompson cthompson@pennlive.com Updated on October
23, 2017 at 10:54 PM Posted on October 23, 2017 at 9:04 PM
Optimism is starting to build again around the idea
that Pennsylvania's state government could have a completed budget. And soon. The
Senate started moving related bills Monday, and the state House announced it
would return to voting session on Tuesday. "It's one of those things where
if everything's moving together, we could be done Wednesday," said Senate
Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre County. The so-far elusive goal here is
completion of a $2.3 billion revenue package to close a lingering deficit from
the 2016-17 budget year, and cover new spending in the current state budget.
Capitol Digest Blog by Crisci Associates October 24, 2017
The Senate Monday voted 41 to 9 to send a Fiscal Code bill-- House Bill 674 (Bernstine-R- Beaver)-- back to the House with specific fund transfers, a general provision requiring the transfer of $300 million from unnamed special funds to the General Fund to balance the state budget and other provisions. The general transfer provision requires the Governor to develop the list of special funds from which to take the $300 million and then submit that list to the State Treasurer.
Court bid
to block Gov. Wolf borrowing, including $1.25B against PLCB profits
A lawsuit filed Monday attempts
to block Gov. Wolf’s plan to borrow $1.25 billion against future PLCB profits
to help fill a $2 billion budget gap.Inquirer by Harold Brubaker, Staff Writer @InqBrubaker | hbrubaker@phillynews.com Updated: OCTOBER 23, 2017 — 5:31 PM EDT
Gov. Wolf’s plan to borrow $1.25 billion against
future profits of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board to help fill a gaping
$2 billion budget gap for fiscal 2017-18 faces a court challenge. A petition
for a temporary preliminary injunction was filed Monday in Commonwealth Court
of Pennsylvania by Matthew J. Brouillette, president and chief executive of the
Commonwealth Partners Chamber of Entrepreneurs; Rep. Jim Christiana (R.,
Beaver), and Harrisburg-area small businessman Ben Lewis. The petition said
Wolf’s borrowing, including loans from the state treasury, violated the
Pennsylvania Constitution. “Our constitution requires that the commonwealth’s
budget be balanced, meaning that expenditures cannot exceed revenues, and
that money only be borrowed in the name of the people of Pennsylvania with
the explicit consent of their General Assembly,” the petition said.
State
Senate bill would boost Erie schools
State House to consider proposal that
includes recurring funding. Language part of Senate bill meant to help end
state budget stalemate.
GoErie By Ed Palattella Posted
Oct 23, 2017 at 7:51 PM Updated
Oct 23, 2017 at 7:51 PM
The state Senate on Monday revived the Erie School
District’s hopes for $14 million in recurring additional state funding. In a
41-9 vote, the Republican-controlled Senate passed a budget-implementation bill
that, among many other things, would make the $14 million in increased aid
permanent from year to year for the Erie School District. The proposal, House
Bill 674, also known as a fiscal code bill, now heads to the
Republican-controlled state House for a vote, possibly as early as Tuesday. The
bill is separate from a budget revenue package that the Senate and House must
approve to end the state budget impasse that was 115 days old on Monday. The
revenue package details how the state will fund the budget. The fiscal code
establishes how the state will spend the money in the budget — once the budget
is final. House Speaker Mike Turzai on Monday called the members back to
Harrisburg for a Tuesday session that starts at 1 p.m. His staff said the
purpose of the session is “to vote on budget items.” Turzai, R-Allegheny
County, earlier had canceled the House session for this week
“In a stunning magnitude of funding
disparity, HB 178 proposes to increase funding for tuition subsidies at private
schools in the state to a grand total of $135 million over the next school
year. At the same time, the bill would appropriate an extra $500,000 to use for
public school districts facing severe budget shortfalls. However, that increase
would only result in a total supply of $5 million for struggling public schools
— less than four percent of the funding sent toward Pennsylvania’s private
schools.”
Editorial:
PA Republicans’ education bill offers little choice
THE PITT NEWS EDITORIAL BOARD
October 23, 2017
The first full school year under new Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos is well underway and, in a bill passed last week, Pennsylvania’s state legislators are mirroring the federal administration’s school policy. House Bill 178 is this year’s iteration of the state’s annual list of proposed changes to the Pennsylvania public school code. Passing the state House of Representatives last Wednesday, the legislation deals with issues in several areas of education policy, including standardized examinations, charter school governance and teacher evaluations. Given that it covers so many individual policies, it’s hard to say whether the bill would do more harm than good as law. Because of this mix, Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf has yet to make up his mind whether or not he’ll sign the bill if it arrives on his desk, Wolf spokesperson J.J. Abbott told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review last Wednesday. But in one area, the bill too closely resembles the dangerous rhetoric and proposals coming out of the DeVos Education Department — “school choice” and the level of funding for private schools versus public schools.
KDKA October 23, 2017 7:27 PM By Jon Delano
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — School boards applaud a bill,
they say, could help them control spending in public education by allowing
teacher lay-offs when economically required. A controversial omnibus education
bill was approved last week by the state House and is now in the state Senate. Why
the controversy? Because it would allow school districts to lay off teachers
for economic reasons — and ignore seniority in making those lay-offs. “Right
now school districts are encumbered to comply with the current law which does
not allow for furloughs for economic reasons — economic/financial reasons,”
South Park school director Patrick Sable told KDKA political editor Jon Delano
on Monday. Sable says current law ties the hands of school officials.
School districts trying to combat racism
Intelligencer By Chris English Staff Writer October
24, 2017
From Quakertown Community School District students
hurling racial slurs at Cheltenham cheerleaders after a football game, to
swastikas drawn on a bathroom wall at Council Rock High School North and racist
graffiti scrawled on a Neshaminy school sign, it's clear schools reflect a
larger societal truth. Racism and hatred
certainly are not dead. But officials at several area school districts
contacted by this news organization said they are doing their best to combat
it, and have various programs in place to fight hate and intolerance. Quakertown
Superintendent William Harner said he and other district officials are
determined to do everything possible to combat prejudice after the incident at
the football game earlier this month, saying at a recent school board meeting
he's going to "drive a truck through" racism in the district. "This
is an opportunity to really have a public discussion about community
values," Harner added. School board member Paul Stepanoff suggested
"publicly logging" racial incidents in the district to see how
widespread the problem is. Among the steps Quakertown has taken is partnering
with The Peace Center in Langhorne to have staffers there come in and talk to
students and teachers about ways to foster tolerance. Cheltenham School District
spokesman Steve Greenbaum said officials there have been generally satisfied
with Quakertown's efforts to engage in a "larger conversation on the
issues of racism and tolerance."
How
racist incidents at local schools taught a positive lesson | Editorial
by The Inquirer Editorial Board
Updated: OCTOBER 24, 2017 — 5:00 AM EDT
The most disheartening thing about
recent racist incidents in the Philadelphia region was the involvement of
teenagers. It was a bitter reminder that despite progress since the 1960s,
children are still being brought up to hate. But the rejection of hatred by
students who were outraged by their peers’ racism taught another lesson, that
the future does not have to be a repeat of the past. Washington Township High School students
staged an all-day sit-in Thursday to show their disgust with a spate of racist,
social-media messages exchanged by other students, most of them athletes. The
messages led to a scuffle Wednesday between black and white students. The protesters said they needed to get
school officials’ attention because this wasn’t the first incidence of racism
at the South Jersey school. “We wanted to make a statement that this is not OK.
The students want change,” said Kayla Webster, a junior. Coatesville Area High
School students similarly decided to show disdain for bigotry after schoolmates
posted photographs on social media of pumpkins carved with a swastika and KKK.
Hundreds of Coatesville students walked out of class Friday and marched around
the school.
York City school test scores show marked improvement (column)
York Daily Record Opinion by Eric B. Holmes Published
3:50 p.m. ET Oct. 20, 2017
Eric B. Holmes is superintendent of York City
schools.
Thirty-one years ago, I accepted a job as a social
studies teacher at the William Penn Senior High School and settled into an
apartment on West Market Street near Continental Square. During those first few
years in York, I regularly shopped at downtown stores and dined at downtown
restaurants. Then I watched all of those places close or relocate to
suburban shopping centers. The loss of York’s economic center triggered a
downward spiral that took years to unfold, and then more years to recognize as
the cause-and-effect pattern that’s struck so many cities across the United
States. City residents lost access to good-paying jobs. Middle-class families
left for the suburbs. Home prices declined. Single-family homes turned into
multi-family rentals. Neighborhoods deteriorated and crime accelerated. About
20 years ago, the full impact of that spiral struck the School District of the
City of York. I have never been interested in making excuses for the
disappointing standardized test scores that have been attributed to York City
schools. Those measures of grade-level proficiency accurately reflect the
academic status of our students. What I’ve found frustrating over the
years, however, has been the lack of context in which those scores are reported,
debated and criticized.
To reach special needs students, Bucks County school
turns to virtual reality
WHYY By Avi Wolfman-Arent October 23, 2017
Sophomore Oswald
Darway cradled the air in front of him like it was a crystal ball.
To the outside
observer, he appeared to hold nothing. But Darway, outfitted with a pair of 3D
glasses, saw something magical hovering before him: a supersized carbon atom. “I’m
just… I don’t even know,” Darway said. “It’s just so amazing to look at.”
This moment of fascination came from a classroom unlike any other in
Southeastern Pennsylvania. Earlier this year, the Valley Day School in
Morrisville, Bucks County outfitted their computer room with 15 virtual reality
devices made by a California company called zSpace. School administrators say
they now have the area’s first “mixed reality lab.” And they believe their new
technological toys can unlock the learning potential of an especially
challenged student group.
Gas-tax supporter now against it because of tradeoffs
on health, environment
Inquirer Opinion by Greg
Vitali Updated: OCTOBER 23, 2017 — 10:38 AM EDT
State Rep. Greg
Vitali (D., Delaware, Montgomery) represents the 166th Legislative
District.
As a longtime
supporter of the severance tax, I find myself in the unusual position of now
opposing it. Although it would provide much-needed revenue for this year’s
commonwealth budget, it is clear that Senate Republicans will not allow even a
modest severance tax without exacting provisions that would significantly
compromise the state Department of Environmental Protection’s ability to
regulate the natural gas industry. Pennsylvania is the only major gas-producing
state without a severance tax. It has been fiercely opposed by the drillers
since it was first proposed by Gov. Edward Rendell in 2010. Since then,
drillers and their representatives have spent $46.6 million on lobbying and
$14.5 million on strategic campaign contributions to legislative leaders and
key committee chairs, according to the Inquirer. But despite the gas industry’s
opposition, the commonwealth’s dire financial situation has sparked serious
discussion about a severance tax to help fund the budget. In July, the state
Senate passed a tax-code bill that contained a severance tax of less than 1
percent. But the bill also included three provisions that would make it
much more difficult for the DEP to regulate the natural gas industry.
Philadelphia's
state senators join call for release of school environmental data
After recent mold outbreaks, officials are
demanding more transparency.
The notebook by Greg Windle October 23, 2017 —
4:23pm
The drumbeat is building for the District to release
detailed environmental data about every school. All seven of Philadelphia’s
state senators have joined several members of the City Council and the Healthy
Schools coalition in calling for the information to be made public.
In a letter to Superintendent William Hite,
the state senators cite the
mold outbreak at John B. Kelly Elementary School as the
catalyst for demanding the data. “We appreciate the District’s work to
remediate the problem and return students and staff to the school,” the letter
reads. “But it’s alarming to us that this issue was not addressed prior to the
start of school in September. Students and staff have been in that unhealthy
environment for at least the past six weeks. That’s simply unacceptable.” In
response to initial calls for more data to be released last week, the District
issued a statement about the progress it is making on environmental issues.http://thenotebook.org/articles/2017/10/23/philadelphia-s-state-senators-join-call-for-release-of-school-environmental-data
State: Philadelphia violated rights of at least 800 young students
The District failed to evaluate incoming kindergartners and 1st graders with special needs.
The notebook by Staff report October 23, 2017 — 5:07pm
Pennsylvania education officials have ruled that the Education Law Center was right when it charged that the School District of Philadelphia violated the rights of about 800 students with disabilities who did not get needed services after entering kindergarten or 1st grade. The Pennsylvania Department of Education has ordered the District to take corrective action to provide compensatory services for all children who were denied a free and appropriate public education due to the District’s delay and inaction. The Education Law Center applauded the department’s findings and intervention, but said that more is needed. “The department’s decision represents an important first step towards ensuring that all young children with disabilities receive the critical special education services they need from day one and are not forced to languish in kindergarten or 1st grade without the programming and support to which they are legally entitled,” said Sean McGrath, an attorney with the Education Law Center.
http://thenotebook.org/articles/2017/10/23/state-philadelphia-violated-rights-of-at-least-800-young-students
SRC gives
Hite a raise and a contract extension
The school superintendent was praised for
bringing 'increased stability' and 'positive momentum' to the District.
The notebook October 23, 2017 — 4:10pm
The School Reform Commission gave Superintendent
William Hite his report card today, and it looks like he gets an “A." He's
being rewarded with a raise and a contract extension. In its annual
evaluation of the superintendent, the SRC measures his performance using four
levels: distinguished, proficient, needs improvement, and failing. He is
assessed in six areas. In student growth and achievement, systems leadership,
and human resource management, he was rated “proficient.” In
the other three areas — district operations and financial management,
communication and community relations, and professionalism — he
was rated as “distinguished.” “The 2016-2017 school year was one of academic
progress, increased stability and positive momentum,” SRC Chair Joyce Wilkerson
said in a statement. “Because of Dr. Hite’s leadership and unwavering focus,
the School District of Philadelphia not only continues to make important
strides but is in a stronger position today than it was one year ago.” In the
evaluation, the commission praised Hite for “steady leadership” that “led to
another year of a balanced budget, sustained investment in classrooms, a
contract with Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, and, most importantly,
the increased academic achievement of our students.”
On report-card day, Philly superintendent gets good
marks, and a raise
Inquirer by Kristen
A. Graham, Staff Writer @newskag | kgraham@phillynews.com Updated: OCTOBER
23, 2017 — 1:57 PM EDT
William R. Hite
Jr., Philadelphia’s school superintendent, earned strong marks — and a raise —
from his bosses on the School Reform Commission, according to anevaluation released
Monday. For the 2016-17
school year, Hite was rated “distinguished” in three areas — district
operations and financial management; communication and community relations; and
professionalism. He earned the next-highest grade, “proficient,” in student
growth and achievement; systems leadership; and human resources management. The
superintendent, whose contract runs through August 2022, also gets a raise, the
first of his career in Philadelphia. He will make $311,760 annually, a salary
bump of 3.92 percent; he had been earning $300,000. Hite’s raises are tied to
the average base salary increase for teachers, who ratified their first new contract in years in June. SRC members cited
Hite’s “leadership and unwavering focus” in their strong evaluation.
OCT 31, 2017 • 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Registration Required
Recently passed through the General Assembly as House Bill 1285, Joint Resolution 1 proposes to amend the constitution by authorizing the General Assembly to enact legislation allowing local taxing authorities (counties, municipalities and school districts) to exclude from property taxation up to the full assessed value of each homestead/farmstead property within the taxing jurisdiction. If approved, what does this change mean for schools in PA? In this complimentary webinar, learn about the legislative history, facts and implications of the amendment so you can make the decision that is right for you on Nov. 7.
Presenters include:
·
Nathan Mains, PA School Boards Association;
·
Hannah Barrick, PA Association of School Business Officials
·
Jim Vaughan, PA State Education Association
·
Mark DiRocco, PA Association of School Administrators
None of the organizations sponsoring this webinar have a
position on the ballot question. The objective of the webinar is purely
information based and to separate fact from fiction.Register online here: GoToWebinar.com
https://www.psba.org/event/webinar-proposed-constitutional-amendment/
Cyber Charter School Application; Public Hearing November 20
Pennsylvania Bulletin Saturday, October 14, 2017 NOTICES - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Pennsylvania Bulletin Saturday, October 14, 2017 NOTICES - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
The Department of
Education (Department) has scheduled one date for a public hearing regarding a
cyber charter school application that was received on or before October 2,
2017. The hearing will be held on November 20,
2017, in Heritage Room A on the lobby level of 333 Market Street, Harrisburg,
PA 17126 at 9 a.m. The hearing pertains to the applicant seeking to operate a
cyber charter school beginning in the 2018-2019 school year. The purpose of the
hearing is to gather information from the applicant about the proposed cyber
charter school as well as receive comments from interested individuals
regarding the application. The name of the applicant, copies of the application
and a listing of the date and time scheduled for the hearing on the application
can be viewed on the Department's web site at www.education.pa.gov. Individuals who wish to provide comments on the
application during the hearing must provide a copy of their written comments to
the Department and the applicant on or before November 6, 2017. Comments
provided by this deadline and presented at the hearing will become part of the
certified record. For questions regarding this hearing, contact the Division of
Charter Schools, (717) 787-9744, charterschools@pa.gov.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Department of Education
Cyber Charter School Application for Commonwealth Education Connections Cyber
Charter School 2017
Charter School
Application Submitted: September 27, 2017
Delaware County Leaders Announce Groundbreaking
Supreme Court Decision for Public Education Wed. Oct 25th 9:00 am
Lansdowne
Community leaders, education advocates,
parents to read from landmark ruling
Lansdowne (Oct
18, 2017) – On Wednesday, October 25th, Delaware County civic
organizations, school districts will be joined by parents and advocates from
across Delaware County to hail the landmark ruling by the PA Supreme Court
(William Penn v. Pennsylvania Dep’t
of Ed) that school districts and parents the opportunity to prove the case that
the current method of funding school violates the education funding and equal
protection clauses of the Pennsylvania constitution.
Reversing a precedent more than 20 years old, the Supreme
Court has announced that the Commonwealth Court must hear the plaintiffs cases
against the governor, the legislature, and the PA Department of Education.
WHAT: Press
conference and live reading to announce the PA Supreme Court Decision
WHO: Rafi Cave, School Board Vice
President, William Penn School District
Michael Churchill, Esq., Public
Interest Law Center
Lawrence A. Feinberg, Co-Chair,
Keystone State Education Coalition
Jane Harbert, Superintendent,
William Penn School District
Jennifer Hoff, School Board
President, William Penn School District
Shirlee Howe, Education
Coordinator (Montco and Delco Counties), PCCY
Tomea Sippio-Smith, Education
Policy Director, PCCY
Dan Urevick-Ackelsberg, Esq.,
Public Interest Law Center
WHEN: Wednesday,
October 25th, 2017 9-10AM
WHERE: Penn Wood High School, Green Avenue Campus
100 Green
Avenue, Lansdowne, PA 19050
RSVP to shirleeh@pccy.org
or call 215-563-5848 x34.
Seventh Annual Pennsylvania
Arts and Education Symposium, November 2, 2017 Camp HillThe 2017 Pennsylvania Arts and Education will be held on Thursday, November 2, 2017 at the Radisson Hotel Harrisburg Convention Center in Camp Hill. See the agenda here.
Early Bird Registration ends September 30.
https://www.eplc.org/pennsylvania-arts-education-network/
Support the Notebook and see Springsteen on Broadway
The notebook October 2, 2017 — 10:57am
Donate $50 or more until Nov. 10, enter to win – and have your donation doubled!
"This music is forever for me. It's the stage thing, that rush moment that you live for. It never lasts, but that's what you live for." – Bruce Springsteen
You can be a part of a unique Bruce Springsteen show in his career – and support local, nonprofit education journalism! Donate $50 or more to the Notebook through Nov. 10, and your donation will be doubled, up to $1,000, through the Knight News Match. Plus, you will be automatically entered to win a pair of prime tickets to see Springsteen on Broadway! One winner will receive two tickets to the 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 24, show at the Walter Kerr Theatre. These are amazing orchestra section seats to this incredible sold-out solo performance. Don't miss out on your chance to see the Boss in his Broadway debut. Donate to the Notebook today online or by mail at 699 Ranstead St., 3rd Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
http://thenotebook.org/articles/2017/10/02/springsteen-on-broadway
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
Register
for New School Director Training in December and January
PSBA Website October 2017
You’ve started a challenging and
exciting new role as a school director. Let us help you narrow the learning
curve! PSBA’s New School Director Training provides school directors with
foundational knowledge about their role, responsibilities and ethical obligations.
At this live workshop, participants will learn about key laws, policies, and
processes that guide school board governance and leadership, and develop skills
for becoming strong advocates in their community. Get the tools you need from
experts during this visually engaging and interactive event.
Choose from any of these 10
locations and dates (note: all sessions are held 8 a.m.-4 p.m., unless
specified otherwise.):
·
Dec. 8, Bedford CTC
·
Dec. 8, Montoursville Area High School
·
Dec. 9, Upper St. Clair High School
·
Dec. 9, West Side CTC
·
Dec. 15, Crawford County CTC
·
Dec. 15, Upper Merion MS (8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m)
·
Dec. 16, PSBA Mechanicsburg
·
Dec. 16, Seneca Highlands IU 9
·
Jan. 13, A W Beattie Career Center
·
Jan. 13, Parkland HS
Fees: Complimentary to All-Access members
or $170 per person for standard membership. All registrations will be billed to
the listed district, IU or CTC. To request billing to an individual,
please contact Michelle Kunkel at michelle.kunkel@psba.org.
Registration also includes a box lunch on site and printed resources.
Registration Opens Tuesday, September 26, 2017
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