Daily postings from the Keystone State Education Coalition now
reach more than 4050 Pennsylvania education policymakers – school directors,
administrators, legislators, legislative and congressional staffers, Governor's
staff, current/former PA Secretaries of Education, Wolf education transition
team members, superintendents, school solicitors, principals, charter school
leaders, PTO/PTA officers, parent advocates, teacher leaders, business leaders,
faith-based organizations, labor organizations, education professors, members
of the press and a broad array of P-16 regulatory agencies, professional
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These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg
Keystone
State Education Coalition
SB2: Senator swap
in education committee likely to impact school choice vote
Ample tax
cuts for business, wealthy in new GOP tax accord
Delco Times By Stephen
Ohlemacher, Andrew Taylor and Marcy Gordon, The Associated Press POSTED: 12/14/17, 5:21 AM
EST | UPDATED: 39 SECS AGO
WASHINGTON >> Generous tax cuts for
corporations and the wealthiest Americans would be delivered in a sweeping
overhaul of the tax laws, under a new agreement crafted by Republicans in
Congress. Middle- and low-income families would receive smaller tax cuts,
though President Donald Trump and Republican leaders have billed the
package as a huge benefit for the middle class. The agreement reached Wednesday
by House and Senate GOP leaders also calls for scrapping a major tax
requirement of the “Obamacare” health law, a step toward the ultimate GOP goal
of unraveling the law. The agreement combines key elements of separate tax
bills recently passed by the House and Senate, striking compromises on some of
them. The Republicans are pushing to deliver final legislation to Trump before
Christmas as the first major legislative accomplishment of his presidency.
GOP Tax
Plan: WSJ Live Coverage
Wall Street Journal Last Updated Dec 13, 2017
at 7:55 pm ET
Join WSJ's tax-policy experts to follow the twists
and turns of Congress’s attempt to make the most significant tax-code changes
since 1986.
Republican Tax Bill in Final Sprint Across Finish Line
New York Times By JIM TANKERSLEY, THOMAS KAPLAN and ALAN RAPPEPORT DEC. 13, 2017
WASHINGTON — The day after suffering a political
blow in the Alabama special Senate election, congressional Republicans sped
forward with the most sweeping tax rewrite in decades, announcing an agreement
on a final bill that would cut taxes for businesses and individuals and signal the
party’s first major legislative achievement since assuming political control
this year. Party leaders in the House and Senate agreed in
principle to bridge the yawning gaps between their competing versions of the
$1.5 trillion tax bill, keeping Republicans on track for final votes next week
with the aim of delivering a bill to President Trump’s desk by Christmas. The
House and Senate versions of the tax bill started from the same core principles
— sharply cutting taxes on businesses, while reducing rates and eliminating
some breaks for individuals — but diverged on several crucial details.
Blogger note: Solid coverage of
education issues in the pending tax bill here. Have you contacted your
Congressman regarding concerns with the impact that the pending tax legislation
will have on public education?
The
Advocate, December 2017
By Noelle Ellerson Ng,
associate executive director, policy and advocacy, AASA
As 2017 draws to a close, federal advocacy and its
implications for education are far from boring. Between the need to avoid a
federal shutdown—a tough task further complicated by considerations related to
deferred action for childhood arrivals, an effort to raise the funding caps, a
push to provide funding for the children’s health insurance program (CHIP), and
more—and regular order, the fact that Congress is gunning to push through the
GOP tax bill means the end of the year will be active, intense, and likely down
to the last minute. The House and the Senate have both passed their respective
versions of the Tax Cuts & Jobs Act. Both bills are highlight partisan,
relying exclusively on Republican support, and the GOP is committed to seeing
this proposal through to completion to notch a win in its belt before 2017 draws
to a close. As the president and Congress move forward with their efforts to
overhaul the federal tax code, it is important to have an understanding of how
the proposed reforms will affect education. Tax reform and related changes may
not affect education as directly as changes in annual federal funding
(appropriations), but the potential consequences are significant. That is how
AASA came to be engaged in the current effort to overhaul federal tax code.
AASA efforts in monitoring the tax bill have been focused on specific policies
that will impact public education. We provided a summary of these issues in
a memo this summer,
and issued various resources with detailed analysis on the
blog. The bills will now go through the process of
conference, where by the chambers will reconcile the differences that exist
between the bills and emerge with one final bill that will then need to be
adopted by both chambers and then signed into law by the president.
Congressional Research Service prepared a white paper on what the conference
process involves, which you can access here.
Tax Plan’s Biggest Cuts Could Be in Living Standards
New York Times by Eduardo Porter ECONOMIC SCENE DEC. 12, 2017
In the summer of 2006, as President George W. Bush
was pressing to make permanent the tax cuts he had pushed through Congress in
2001 and 2003, the Treasury Department published
a so-called dynamic analysis that, the administration hoped, would prove
the undoubted economic benefits of the extension. But its conclusions didn’t
draw much applause from the White House: In the long term, the Treasury’s
Office of Tax Analysis found, the tax cuts would expand the economy by all of
0.7 percent. It never specified what it meant by “long term,” but on the
assumption it means a couple of decades, the tax change would add 0.035 percent
to annual economic growth over the period. Math and economics have changed
little since that exercise.
Treasury Secretary Steven
Mnuchin insists that the tax overhaul passed by Republicans in
the Senate this month would increase annual economic growth by 0.7 percentage
points over the next decade.
Church
leaders fear tax plan’s effect
Delco Times Opinion By
Rev. Lydia Munoz and Rev. James McIntyre, Times Guest Columnists POSTED: 12/13/17, 9:17 PM
EST | UPDATED: 4 HRS AGO
We write as faith leaders concerned by the moral
priorities of our nation, and as parents concerned for the health of our
daughter. Last week, Rep. Meehan voted for a tax bill that pays for huge tax
cuts for corporations with cuts to Medicaid and Medicare. Over 70 percent of
the tax breaks in this bill go to the wealthiest 1 percent and multinational
corporations already making record profits. The tax bill gives people with
incomes over $1 million an annual tax cut of about $14,890 and those with
incomes of over $3.1 million an annual cut of about $94,540 annually. These tax
cuts will be paid for with our children’s’ futures and our families’ health
care – if this tax bill passes, huge cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, Social
Security and Education are next. The federal budget resolution passed last
month allows Republicans to cut $1.5 trillion from Medicaid and Medicare next
year to pay for these massive tax breaks.
Net
Neutrality: The ISP industry donated $101m to Congress - here's how much Pa's
delegation got | Wednesday Morning Coffee
Penn Live By John L. Micek jmicek@pennlive.com Updated Dec
13, 8:30 AM; Posted Dec 13, 8:30 AM
Good Wednesday Morning, Fellow Seekers.You've probably heard by now about the fight over net neutrality: That is whether the internet should remain as it is now - free and open to all - or whether massive internet service providers should be allowed to charge more for certain content and services they provide over their networks. With the Trump administration's Federal Communications Commission almost certain to allow the latter over the former, the fight over net neutrality appears almost certain to spill into the halls of Congress. And since money talks on Capitol Hill - and few industries speak louder than big Telecomm (think Verizon, Comcast, AT&T, etc), the folks at tech website, The Verge, crunched the numbers, finding that, between 1989 and 2017, the industry fire-hosed some $101 million in donations onto Congress as it sought to have its voice heard on key issues.
As FCC
prepares net-neutrality vote, study finds millions of fake comments
WHYY By Brian Naylor December 14, 2017
It seems like a lot of Americans are
interested in the net-neutrality debate. Some 22 million public comments have
been filed with the Federal Communications Commission on the issue of whether
all web traffic should be treated equally. The agency is scheduled to vote
Thursday on whether to reverse regulations put in place during the Obama
administration that were aimed at guaranteeing that. But, it turns out, much of
that public input is not what it appears. The Pew
Research Center took a close look at the comments. Associate
Director Aaron Smith said several things popped out. Maybe the biggest, 94
percent of the comments “were submitted multiple times, and in some cases those
comments were submitted many hundreds of thousands of times.” So in other
words, almost all of the comments seem to have been parts of organized
campaigns to influence the FCC commissioners to vote one way or the other.
https://whyy.org/npr_story_post/fcc-prepares-net-neutrality-vote-study-finds-millions-fake-comments/
Debate
over ‘wasted’ votes dominates third day of state redistricting trial
WHYY By Emily Previti, WITF December 13, 2017
The plaintiffs’
argument in the state lawsuit over Pennsylvania’s congressional district map
hinges on whether they can prove the state legislature designed a map meant to
dilute Democratic votes. Much of the trial’s third day was spent by plaintiffs
trying to quantify the map’s alleged partisan advantages by looking at decades
of data, spurring a debate about how many votes are “wasted” because of the way
congressional boundary lines were drawn. Say you have five congressional
districts each with 100 voters. Democrats win two by wide margins, and
Republicans win three in tight races. That’s what redistricting experts would
call a map with an “efficiency gap” designed to advantage Republicans by
wasting votes for Democrats.
Blogger handy quote, attributed to both
Mark Twain and Gideon John Tucker "No
man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in
session."
'Anytime
you're in October talking about the budget, that's not a good year': Pa.
legislature exits 2017
Penn Live By Marc Levy The Associated
Press Updated 12:55 AM; Posted Dec 13, 9:05 PM
HARRISBURG -- The Pennsylvania Legislature finished
for the year on Wednesday after passing veto-bound abortion restrictions, while
anti-union legislation sought by top Republicans failed and legislation to tax
Marcellus Shale natural gas production remained in limbo. The GOP-controlled
House and Senate each adjourned until January after a flurry of votes and a
relatively spectacular showdown on the House floor between 25 rank-and-file
Republicans and House GOP leaders over a Marcellus Shale bill that has been
effectively filibustered for weeks by opponents. It closed a year dominated by
a budget deficit that took an extra four months to deal with. "Anytime
you're in October talking about the budget, that's not a good year," said
Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, R-Centre.
G. Terry
Madonna and Michael Young: An early preview of Gov. Wolf's re-election chances
Morning Call Opinion by G. Terry Madonna and Michael
Young December 12, 2017
Will Pennsylvania's Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf win a second
term in the rapidly approaching 2018 statewide election? Or will he become
another "one-term Tom," losing his bid for a second term, as did his
immediate predecessor, Republican Tom Corbett. Since a
constitutional change in 1968 permitted governors to seek a second term, each
has done so, beginning with Milton Shapp in 1974. And all but one, Corbett in
2014, won re-election, most of them handily. Winning a second gubernatorial term has been the
default position for the past half century. Indeed, that expectation prior to
Corbett's 2014 loss was once considered an iron law of Pennsylvania politics
known as the "eight-year cycle." So, as we approach the 2018 election
we come to a fork in the road for Pennsylvania incumbent governors. Will we
return in 2018 to the familiar cycle of governors being comfortably elected to
a second term, or will we see another first term governor defeated for
re-election as happened four years ago?
SB2: Senator swap in education committee likely to impact school choice vote
Written by Katie Meyer, Capitol Bureau Chief | Dec 14, 2017 5:11 AM
Some have speculated that a personnel change
in the Senate Education Committee was politically motivated.
(Harrisburg) - The state Senate Education Committee
is making a mid-session personnel change--switching out one Republican senator
for another. Erie County Republican Senator Dan Laughlin is officially moving
from the Education Committee to the Community, Economic, and Recreational
Development Committee. His replacement has been announced as Rich Alloway, a
fellow Republican from Franklin County. The move is significant because of
Senate Bill 2--a measure would let students in the lowest-performing public
schools use the money the state would have spent on their education for
alternative school options. Laughlin is a key opponent,
and a big reason the bill failed to get to the Senate floor in October by one
vote. Meanwhile, Alloway is one of the bill's co-sponsors. Some pro-public
school organizations have called foul. The group Education Voters of PA, which
often lobbies against charter schools and other school choice efforts, said the
committee change is "deeply troubling."
SB2: School
Voucher Bills Called a Bad Deal for PA Schools
Pennsylvania Council of Churches by s.strauss@pachurches.org December 13,
2017 – Andrea Sears, Public News Service (PA)
Education
Savings Accounts would give public education money to families to pay private
school tuition.
HARRISBURG, Pa. – Education advocates say bills
pending in the General Assembly to create Education Savings Accounts would
further defund public education in the state. Senate
Bill 2 and House
Bill 1717 would allow parents to pay private school
tuition with public money. The stated goal is to give parents alternatives to
underperforming schools. But according to Reynelle Staley, a policy attorney at
the Education Law Center, the bills actually would take money from the school
district where a child would have been enrolled and give it to families to pay
private or religious school tuition, tutors or other educational expenses. “They incentivize more advantaged parents to flee
the public education system,” says Staley, “and they take the legislature
further from its constitutional obligation to support and maintain a thorough
and efficient system of education.” She says children enrolled for a single
semester in a district where there are underperforming schools would be
eligible for vouchers through 12th grade. Families that move to a better school
district would continue to receive vouchers. And Staley points out that by
leaving the public education system, parents also leave behind federal and
state requirements for equal access to education.
Teacher pension-payment increase shrinks, saving
schools some money
Times Leader By Mark Guydish
- mguydish@timesleader.com | December 13th, 2017 10:20 pm
School district contributions to the teacher pension
fund continue to soar. But there was a small bit of good news when a state
agency responsible for setting the rates announced next year’s numbers:
Contributions are still going up, but less than projected. The impact likely
will be small. Take Dallas School District, where Business Manager Grant Palfey
is already crunching numbers for the 2018-19 fiscal year. The payment rate — a percentage
of teacher payroll — was supposed to climb from 31.74 percent to 33.43 percent,
but will rise only to 32.6 percent. “That saves us about $59,000,” Palfey said.
It’s not enough to change the math that has locked the school board and
teachers union in protracted, often-bitter contract negotiations — the district
insists it cannot afford what the union has asked for — but it is enough to
avoid furloughing one teacher if money gets tight, or to shrink any potential
tax hike. Of course, the announcement “saves” money the way a shopper saves by
unexpectedly finding a needed product on sale. Overall, the payment rate is
still climbing — something that has happened almost every year since the
2001-02 school year.
Governor
Wolf Announces Grant to Support Quality Early Learning Professionals
Governor Wolf’s
Website December 13, 2017
Harrisburg,
PA – Governor
Tom Wolf today announced a $1.4 million grant to increase the quality of
Pennsylvania’s early childhood learning professional workforce.
The Higher Education, Early Child Care, and
Community-based Partnership Working to Implement Innovative and Sustained
Pathways grant will enable early childhood education staff to
participate in and complete a credit-bearing Child Development
Associate (CDA),associate degree, bachelor degree, and/or Pennsylvania
PreK-4 teacher certification. “My administration is committed to expanding
access to quality pre-kindergarten programs so our children have a positive
start to their education,” said Governor Wolf. “Having educated and
knowledgeable early childhood educators creates quality classrooms, supports
positive relationships with children, and advances the argument for increased
compensation – early childhood teachers make an average of $9-$12/hour, even
with a degree.”
East Penn
made the right choice on full-day kindergarten, which should be offered by all
school districts
The newly elected East Penn School Board
voted Monday night to make all kindergarten classes full-day. The vote came two
months after the previous board had rejected full-day kindergarten.
Morning Call by Paul
Muschick Contact
Reporter December 13, 2017
Welcome to the 21st century, East
Penn School District. After resisting the inevitable, the school board finally
recognized what most of the rest of the region and state already had — that
offering full-day kindergarten to all of its students is worth the money. The
new school board’s vote Monday night to offer full-day kindergarten
exclusively, instead of its current mix of full-day and half-day, leaves only a
handful of districts in Lehigh and Northampton counties behind the times. It’s
time for them to get on board, too. Statewide, 77 percent of kindergarten
students attended full-day programs in the 2016-17 school year, according to
the Kids Count Data Center. That’s up from 71.5 percent in 2012-13.
Philly
residents: share what you want in your schools; questionnaire
Office of the Mayor
On November 16, the School Reform Commission (SRC)
voted to dissolve itself. Now, I will appoint an Educational Nominating Panel
to identify candidates for the new Board of Education (the Board). The City’s
Charter describes who should be on the Nominating Panel. Nine Philadelphians
who are the highest-ranking officers of organizations can be on the panel. The
organizations include:
● Chambers of commerce
● Philadelphia institutions of higher learning
● Community organizations
● Education organizations
● Labor groups
In addition to these nine Philadelphians, I will select four more citizens of Philadelphia.
The Nominating Panel will be formed in January. The panel will have up to forty days to recommend twenty-seven individuals for me to consider for the Board. From those names, I’ll pick nine to serve on the Board. The current text of these rules was approved by the voters of Philadelphia in 1999. As our Nominating Panel reviews potential Board members, I want to make sure they hear from you. Please share what you think is important for them to know as they make recommendations for the Board. We can ensure every child has quality schools in their neighborhood. We can do this by creating a school district that is more stable and more accountable to Philadelphians. We can do this -- together.
● Philadelphia institutions of higher learning
● Community organizations
● Education organizations
● Labor groups
In addition to these nine Philadelphians, I will select four more citizens of Philadelphia.
The Nominating Panel will be formed in January. The panel will have up to forty days to recommend twenty-seven individuals for me to consider for the Board. From those names, I’ll pick nine to serve on the Board. The current text of these rules was approved by the voters of Philadelphia in 1999. As our Nominating Panel reviews potential Board members, I want to make sure they hear from you. Please share what you think is important for them to know as they make recommendations for the Board. We can ensure every child has quality schools in their neighborhood. We can do this by creating a school district that is more stable and more accountable to Philadelphians. We can do this -- together.
City
Council hears litany of concerns during hearing on resolution to form new
school board
From who can serve to why the board should be
elected, parents, activists and students made impassioned pleas during two
hours of testimony.
The notebook by Greg Windle December 13, 2017
— 5:04pm
Philadelphia City Council members heard arguments
from parents, activists, the mayor’s office, and the Philadelphia Federation of
Teachers on school-related issues this week as they considered
a formal process for nominating new school board members. That will be
another step in forming a locally controlled school board for the city,
following the vote Nov. 16 by the current School Reform Commission to
dissolve itself. Mayor Jim Kenney has proposed that a nine-member appointed
school board take its place. Tuesday's hearing began with the mayor’s chief of
staff, Jane Slusser, outlining the logistics of transitioning from the SRC to
the new mayoral-appointed board. First, the state secretary of education has to
sign off on the abolition of the SRC by Dec. 31. In early January, the mayor
plans to announce his nominating panel, which will propose 27 people — three
for each available appointment. The mayor expects to announce his appointments
in mid-March, although they won’t take their seats until July. The mayor also
plans to submit his appointments to the city council for approval, based on the
resolution that will guide formation of the new school board. The
resolution also creates a Parent and Community Advisory Council, which will
convene at least twice a year to advise the board. The city council will vote
on the resolution in January, and if it passes, it will be on the ballot for
voters in the May primary election.
Philly's
Robeson High, a school on the rise, now in national spotlight
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Staff
Writer @newskag | kgraham@phillynews.com Updated: DECEMBER
12, 2017 — 4:55 PM EST
Paul Robeson High School is having a
moment. Richard Gordon IV, the school’s energetic principal, was just named
the nation’s top administrator by an online
education journal, hailed for his innovation and hard work. Mayor Kenney
visited the school Tuesday, oohing and aahing over Robeson’s myriad
partnerships, its 95 percent graduation rate, and the general sense of
well-being that permeates the hallways. Principal Richard Gordon IV (center)
shows Mayor Kenney one of the art classrooms. Gordon was named the nation's top
school administrator by an online education journal. “You have a nice school,”
the mayor said. “People seem happy to be here.” Marquan Thomas, a senior, couldn’t help himself.
From the back of his science class, he called out to Kenney. “It’s the best
public school in Philadelphia!” said Thomas, 17. Gordon smiled. “Not bad for a school that wasn’t supposed to be
here,” the principal said. In 2012, the school was designated for closure, but
was spared at the last minute after a passionate group of students and teachers
made a case so strong that the School Reform Commission couldn’t help but keep
it open.
Are you
one of more than 200,000 people paying too much in property taxes?
Inquirer by Laura
McCrystal & Michaelle Bond - Staff Writers Updated: DECEMBER
14, 2017 — 5:00 AM EST
The house on Massachusetts Avenue in Upper Darby had
been sitting on the market for a while when Tim Miles and his wife bought it
for $185,000 last year. Miles said the Realtor told him why other prospective
buyers had been wary: “The taxes were really high,” said Miles, 28, a lawyer.
“And I think that’s probably why they weren’t able to sell as quickly.” The
annual bill for the two-story house on a sixth of an acre was more than
$10,500. The township has some of the region’s highest taxes, but Miles’
property levy was thousands of dollars higher than even those
on comparably priced homes in the township. The reason: The county
estimate of the home’s worth — the “assessment” on which the tax bill is based
— was too high. Inaccurate assessments — primarily the result of varying rates
of property appreciation — are common throughout Pennsylvania. Why? Years or
decades pass between countywide reassessments, leaving many property owners to
pay more than their fair share — or less. Delaware County’s are so out of whack
that a judge has ordered the county to revalue all
its properties.
Community
Schools: Betsy DeVos may not recognize it, but these public schools work
Washington Post Answer Sheet By Valerie
Strauss December 13 at 6:00 AM
If you listen to
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos talk about traditional public schools, you
could get the impression that they are pretty much all the same. She repeatedly
talks about how they are designed in “old factory model” that worked decades
ago but no longer meets the individual needs of students. That is why, she
says, she wants to expand alternatives in the form of charter schools and
programs that use public funds to pay for private school education. On a stop
at a school in Wyoming this fall, DeVos said: “For far too many kids, this
year’s first day back to school looks and feels a lot like last year’s first
day back to school. And the year before that. And the generation before that.
And the generation before that! That means your parent’s parent’s parents! Most
students are starting a new school year that is all too familiar. … They follow
the same schedule, the same routine—just waiting to be saved by the bell.” Surely there are traditional public schools —
as well as charter schools and private schools — that do the same thing year in
and year out, and fail to inspire students. But there are many that work well
for students. And despite what DeVos says, traditional public schools or their
districts are not all alike, not even close. There are many schools in
traditional public school districts that have found new ways to meet the needs
of students — among them, what are known as “community schools.” This post
looks at the value of community schools.
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 11
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. 6, Haverford Middle School
·
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.
NSBA 2018
Advocacy Institute February 4 - 6, 2018 Marriott Marquis, Washington D.C.
Register Now
Come a day early and attend the Equity
Symposium!
Join hundreds of public education advocates
on Capitol Hill and help shape the decisions made in Washington D.C. that
directly impact our students. At the 2018 Advocacy Institute, you’ll gain
insight into the most critical issues affecting public education, sharpen your
advocacy skills, and prepare for effective meetings with your representatives. Whether
you are an expert advocator or a novice, attend and experience inspirational
keynote speakers and education sessions featuring policymakers, legal experts
and policy influencers. All designed to help you advocate for your students and
communities.
Registration is now open for the 2018 PASA Education Congress! State College, PA, March 19-20, 2018
Don't miss this marquee event for Pennsylvania school leaders at the Nittany Lion Inn, State College, PA, March 19-20, 2018.
Learn more by visiting http://www.pasa-net.org/2018edcongress
SAVE THE DATE for the 2018
PA Educational Leadership Summit - July 29-31 - State College, PA sponsored by
the PA Principals Association, PASA, PAMLE and PASCD.
This year's Summit will be held from July 29-31, 2018 at the Penn Stater
Conference Center Hotel, State College, PA.
Any comments contained herein are my comments, alone, and
do not necessarily reflect the opinions of any other person or organization
that I may be affiliated with.
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