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These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
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2018 PSBA Advocacy Day April 16, 2018
Harrisburg
Join PSBA
and your fellow school directors for the annual Advocacy Day on Monday,
April 16, 2018, at the State Capitol in Harrisburg. PSBA is partnering
with Pennsylvania Association of Intermediate Units to have a stronger voice
for public education. Hear how advocacy makes a difference in the legislative
process and the importance of public education advocacy. This event is free for
members; registration is required.
Register online here: http://www.mypls.com/Default.aspx?tabid=3753
Register online here: http://www.mypls.com/Default.aspx?tabid=3753
Gov. Wolf calls for independent commission to draw Pa.
electoral maps
Inquirer by Liz
Navratil @liznavratil | lnavratil@post-gazette.com Updated: MARCH 26, 2018 — 4:26 PM EDT
HARRISBURG — A
week after two courts decided
not to intervene in a
challenge to Pennsylvania’s redrawn congressional district boundaries, Gov.
Wolf on Monday renewed his call for legislators to create an independent commission
to draw the state’s electoral maps. His announcement came a day
before the Senate’s state government committee was set to discuss that measure
and other potential election changes. That effort is supported by several
groups that endorsed the lawsuit that led the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court to strike down the previous
congressional map and impose a new one, a move that many expect will improve Democrats’
chances of gaining ground in this year’s elections. “This should not be a partisan issue,” Wolf said at a Monday afternoon
news conference in the Capitol. He added later, “This is really about
democracy.” Wolf is also backing efforts that would allow people to register to
vote on Election Day — instead of having to meet deadlines weeks before — and
would automatically register eligible voters when they get a driver’s license
from the state unless they opt out. He also supports limits on campaign
donations. All of the bills have been referred to legislative committees, but
have not left them — although some are expected to come up at a lengthy hearing
Tuesday. Some face resistance or skepticism from Republicans, who hold the
majorities in both chambers.
With two open seats, it's game on for Dems in the Philly
'burbs | Monday Morning Coffee
Penn Live By John L. Micek jmicek@pennlive.com Updated Mar 26, 8:51 AM; Posted Mar 26, 8:17 AM
Good Monday Morning, Fellow Seekers.This probably isn't the news that Pennsylvania Republicans wanted to wake up to on the start of a new working week. On Sunday, confirming recent rumors, GOP U.S. Rep. Ryan Costello, decided to call it a career instead of running for re-election in a redrawn district that includes the Democrat-friendly city of Reading and a chunk of Chester County. He's the second, suburban Philadelphia Republican to decide against running for re-election, and the 39th House Republican overall, to opt against a re-election bid in a mid-term season that's expected to heavily favor Democrats. Earlier this year, GOP U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan decided against seeking re-election after being implicated in a sexual misconduct scandal involving a former staffer. His former 7th District seat, which includes Delaware County, has also been redrawn. That leaves U.S. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-1st District (old 8th District) as the only suburban Philly Republican left standing among the old gang of three. And he may be feeling very lonely indeed, these days.
Rep. Ryan Costello retirement adds to opportunities for
Democrats across Philadelphia region
Inquirer by Jonathan
Tamari, Washington Bureau @JonathanTamari | jtamari@phillynews.com Updated: MARCH 26, 2018 — 5:20 PM EDT
WASHINGTON — One
after another, critical congressional races in the Philadelphia region have
fizzled before a single vote has been cast. A string of Republicans have turned
away from tough contests, leaving Democrats with opportunities to net a chunk
of the House seats they hope to gain this fall. The latest example came Sunday
night, when Rep. Ryan Costello, a Chester County Republican, decided
against running for reelection, bowing out of a contest once heralded as a
national bellwether for control of the House. Costello’s
departure had been brewing for weeks, as he grew angry over a new congressional
map imposed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and, according to confidants, had soured on serving in Congress. To
keep the seat, he would have had to overcome a strong challenger in a newly
redrawn district and an area reflecting what has been a suburban backlash
against President Trump. “The local Democrats and the left have become more engaged
and candidly more angry by the week as President Trump says things and does
things which many Republicans, myself amongst them, from time to time do
disagree with,” Costello told MSNBC
Sunday night in announcing
that he would not seek another term representing the state’s Sixth District.
What's next for March for Our Lives: Uniting black
students in cities with white students in suburbs
Inquirer by Michael
Boren, Staff Writer @borenmc | mboren@phillynews.com Updated: MARCH 26, 2018 — 6:17 PM EDT
The traumatizing
effect of gun violence on children of color was a central theme
at Philadelphia’s March for Our Lives. Now, the challenge is making sure those voices stay prominent in the
national conversation about gun control. It’s a steep task when gun
violence in urban communities of color is often ignored, overlooked, or dismissed with a shrug of, “What can you do?”, as
if it’s just accepted as the norm. But Romaine Wright, a black
consultant who helped three
student leaders organize Philly’s march, is hopeful. Both black and white students want to be safe when
they walk out the door, she said. “It’s a shared message: That we are all
standing here against gun violence,” Wright said. The difference, she said, is
“the suburban students want to come home from school, and the inner city kids
actually want to make it to school.”
Education Week Politics K12 Blog By Andrew Ujifusa March 26, 2018
The March for Our Lives may have riveted the nation over the weekend, but the next few months will determine if the nationwide demonstrations translate into action on gun control for the movement’s student leaders. Students who spearheaded Saturday’s massive march in Washington and hundreds of other events around the country are looking to put their shoulders into the push for stricter gun laws, such as a ban on selling semi-automatic rifles similar to the AR-15 used in several school shootings. That political activism is taking a variety of forms—but likely won’t get the same spotlight Saturday’s events attracted, and could face increasing opposition as the months wear on. And their work will enter the blocking-and-tackling phase of any successful political groundswell: turning people out to vote and electing lawmakers who will pursue the definitive policy changes they want.
Marching is great, voting is even better. Register by
April 16th.
If you know someone who will turn 18 by May 15th here in PA, they must
register now to vote in that election. The deadline is April 16th.
As protests swept the nation, Pennsylvania's U.S. representatives
went off the grid
JULIAN ROUTH
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette jrouth@post-gazette.com MAR 26, 2018 11:25 AM
Pennsylvania
members of Congress were mostly silent on social media as students from across
the nation gathered Saturday for one of the largest single-day protests in the
history of Washington, D.C., an analysis of their profiles found. Only two of
Pennsylvania’s 17 Congressmen used their Facebook and Twitter accounts to post
messages during the day hundreds of thousands of people across the country —
including many of their constituents — marched to protest gun violence and call
directly on their legislators to take action. Not a single Republican
representing the state in the U.S. House posted about the march or anything
related to gun violence. Eight of them — Reps. Scott Perry, Ryan
Costello, Pat Meehan, Bill Shuster, Tom Marino, Mike
Kelly, Charlie Dent and Lou Barletta — didn’t post at
all that day, but had used Twitter and Facebook at some point during the five
days leading up to the demonstrations.
State, federal
lawmakers from Pennsylvania discuss gun violence measures after students' March
for Our Lives
Lancaster Online by
TOM KNAPP | Staff Writer March 27, 2018
Bob Casey, a U.S.
Senator for Pennsylvania, was inspired by young people who marched Saturday
against gun violence. “It is because of these marchers and longtime advocates
that I am hopeful our country will finally implement important gun safety
measures,” Casey said. March for Our Lives, which drew hundreds of thousands of
people in cities across the country — including several
thousand Saturday in Lancaster — was a
response to the Feb. 14 massacre that killed 17 students at a Parkland,
Florida, high school. Students, Casey said in an email Monday to LNP, have had
enough. “I’ve seen incredible outreach from students — some as young as five
and six years old — who want Congress to take action on common-sense gun
reforms that will help them feel safe in school and in their communities,” he
said. Casey said he supports measures including implementing universal
background checks, limiting high-capacity magazines, bump stocks and assault
weapons, and preventing domestic abusers and people on the Terrorist Watchlist
from getting their hands on guns. "It is because of these marchers and
longtime advocates that I am hopeful our country will finally implement
important gun safety measures." Pennsylvania’s other U.S.
Senator, Pat Toomey, as well as U.S. Reps. Lloyd Smucker and Patrick
Meehan — all Republicans — did not respond by deadline Monday to emails
asking for their opinions on the march or its impact on future gun legislation.
Students speak up at East Penn school board meeting,
hinting at future advocacy
Carol Thompson Contact Reporter Of The Morning Call March 26, 2018
First, Emmaus High
School students walked out of the building to protest gun violence. A few weeks
later, some joined the throngs marching in Allentown and Washington, D.C., to
advocate for tighter gun laws. On Monday, they took to the lectern at an East
Penn School Board meeting. Students packed the
district conference room to defend their actions on March 14, when an estimated
800 stood in the high school parking lot to honor the victims of the recent
school shooting in Parkland, Fla., and to advocate for reduced gun violence. Emmaus
High School students might disagree about how to fix gun violence, but they
agree on one thing: They didn’t walk out to miss class. The walkout took place
during study hall, junior Samantha Smith said. “We stood united,”
she said. “We stood for a cause, and we stood for our lives. We’re not pawns.
We’re not sheep and we’re not snowflakes. We’re students, and we’re making a
difference.” We’re not
pawns. We’re not sheep and we’re not snowflakes. We’re students, and we’re
making a difference.— Samantha Smith Smith was joined by nearly a dozen
students, parents and community members who spoke up Monday in support of East
Penn School District’s handling of the walkout demonstration on March 14. They
said the district did the right thing by supporting — but not encouraging — the
students who demonstrated that day.
The board voted 6-2 at Monday's meeting to not accept the grant.
Jacqueline Palochko Contact Reporter Of The Morning Call March 26, 2018
In a heated meeting, the Stroudsburg Area School Board voted against accepting a nearly $5,000 grant from the NRA for its rifle team, with one school director calling it “dirty money.” At Monday’s school board meeting, the board voted 6-2 to not accept a $4,730 grant from the NRA. An AP analysis published earlier this month showed that the NRA has given more than $7 million in recent years to 500 schools through grants. Stroudsburg High School has never received this grant before. Members of the rifle team applied for it. Two students who spoke to the board before the vote said their equipment dates from the 1970s. Reaction was split from the audience, which was crowded with parents, students and members of the rifle team. Members of Monroe County United, a local nonprofit, were also there and opposed the grant.
http://www.mcall.com/news/education/mc-nws-stroudsburg-school-board-nra-grant-20180326-story.html
Detentions stemming from walkout lead to a passionate
Pennridge school board meeting
Intelligencer By Christian Menno Posted Mar 26, 2018 at 11:00 PMUpdated
at 12:18 AM
Reactions to
the board’s decision to impose detention on students that participated in the
national walkout ranged from supportive to angry.
The decision by the
Pennridge School District’s superintendent and school board to issue Saturday
detentions to students taking part in the national walkout earlier this month
brought about a wide range of reactions. They spanned the spectrum from
disappointed disgust to adamant support. The issue led to widespread media
attention, emails from residents and a deluge of posts online. The passionate
reactions continued Monday night, when board members, parents, residents and
students spoke during the board’s public meeting — the first since 225
students, many calling for stricter gun control laws and safer schools, walked
out of school March 14, one month after the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
Area schools encouraging girls to get STEM involved
Intelligencer By Chris English Posted Mar 26, 2018 at 5:00 AM
More than
800 girls from public and private schools throughout Bucks County attend the
annual STEM Conference at Delaware Valley University.
Don’t bring that “a
woman’s place is in the kitchen” kind of stuff around Jessica Perfetto.
She isn’t buying
any of it. Perfetto, a Pennsbury High School technology education teacher and
the district’s curriculum coordinator for applied engineering/technology
education, thinks the place for more and more females is in the laboratory, or
at architectural and engineering firms or similar destinations devoted to
science, technology, engineering and mathematics. With that goal in mind,
Perfetto this school year started a course called Introduction to Women in
Technology & Design that — though also open to boys — has the express
purpose of encouraging and making girls feel more comfortable in pursuing STEM.
And as March — Women’s History Month — winds down, the Pennsbury educator is
one of many around the area taking steps that could help girls someday make a
little history of their own in the STEM areas.
Don't lump brick-and-mortar charters with bad cyber
schools | Perspective
Inquirer
Opinion by John Page Updated: MARCH 26, 2018 — 1:50 PM EDTJohn Page is a member of the board of the Souderton Charter School Collaborative
A new study by Public
Citizens for Children and Youth takes a highly critical view of the performance
of cyber charter schools and broadly characterizes suburban brick-and-mortar
charters as underperforming as well. But PCCY’s report, primarily using
information from the Pennsylvania Department of Education, interprets the data
without a full understanding of its sources, which leads to an incorrect
conclusion. Reviewing the data with an understanding of where these numbers
come from reveals a better picture of Philadelphia’s suburban brick-and-mortar
charter schools. An Inquirer article (“Charters rise in suburbs; results
mixed,” March 15) summarized PCCY’s report as saying, “Half the suburban
charter schools in Bucks, Chester, Delaware, and Montgomery Counties fared
worse on state tests in the 2015-16 school year than districts with similar
shares of disadvantaged students.”
After Years of Failed ‘School Choice,’ Philadelphia Gets
Back Its Voice
OurFuture.org
by Jeff Bryant MARCH 27, 2018
Despite the strong
marketing for “school choice” by politicians and U.S. Secretary of Education
Betsy DeVos, communities that know firsthand what it’s like to have lots of
“options,” like charter schools and vouchers, have found what’s more important
is to have a voice in how their schools are governed and operated. That’s the
lesson to draw from Philadelphia, where the school district is about to
complete a transition to local control after 16 years of governance by a
state-appointed commission that emphasized cutting expenses and staff, closing
neighborhood schools, and expanding charters. State control of Philadelphia’s
schools came to an end in November 2017, when the state-imposed School Reform Commission
(SRC), which governed the schools, voted itself out of existence. This sets the
stage for the transfer of power to a local school board appointed by Mayor Jim
Kenney. The transfer of governing power is expected to be completed June 30. This
is a historic event, long in the making by a campaign of resistance led by
Philadelphia citizens.
Who are Philly's best teachers? 59 'exceptional
educators' honored
Inquirer by Kristen
A. Graham, Staff Writer @newskag | kgraham@phillynews.com Updated: MARCH 27, 2018 — 5:07 AM EDT
It comes in handy
that Zahmu Sankofa, a middle-school teacher in Port Richmond, is a singer and
songwriter: He uses his background as an entertainer to keep students engaged. Almost
three decades into a career in education, Rosemary Leslie is still inspired by
the energy and charm of her South Philadelphia kindergartners, and still
changing her teaching methods to meet the needs of every one. And Alicia
Conquest, who teaches Spanish in West Philadelphia, is a ball of energy who
captures her students’ hearts and minds with her lessons and her love. The trio
are among three of the 59 Philadelphia School District educators being honored
Tuesday by the Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Foundation with $3,500 awards
for excellence in teaching. The Lindback
Foundation honors excellent teaching locally. Since 2008, it has awarded
millions to outstanding School District teachers, who are chosen by school
officials and Lindback trustees. “People need to
know that there are some exceptional educators in Philadelphia public schools,”
said David Loder, one of the trustees. “There are so many committed, dedicated
teachers, and we’re proud to recognize them.”
United Way gives teachers lesson in understanding
traumatized kids
The United
Way started a collaborative to bring childhood trauma awareness to a myriad of
organizations.
Michelle Merlin Contact Reporter Of The Morning Call March 26, 2018
Beth Tomlinson
challenges a room full of 100 people to imagine her hand is a brain. Her wrist,
the brain stem, which controls functions such as breathing and heart rate. Her
thumb, the limbic system, which controls emotions and the fight-or-flight
response. Her fingers, the cerebral cortex, where thinking and reasoning takes
place. A typical learning brain is like a fist, all pieces working together.
But for students who experience trauma — anything from divorced parents to
sexual abuse to a parent in jail — it’s more like disconnected fingers. Their
brains cannot engage in learning because they are too focused on survival,
Tomlinson, the director of education for the United Way of the Greater Lehigh Valley, said. Adults can use the model to
show children what’s going on in their brains, Tomlinson said. And by holding
up four fingers, children can signal to adults that they need a minute to calm
down and get back in control of their emotions, she added. Last week’s lesson
was the second in a three-part training session by the United Way of the
Greater Lehigh Valley for educators and others who work with children.
From light bulbs to drones, a new curriculum takes flight
in North Philly school
WHYY By Avi Wolfman-Arent March 26, 2018
A Catholic school in North Philadelphia, is piloting a curriculum that
will turn students into literal pilots. Drone pilots, that is. Throughout this
school year, the students at Cristo Rey have gobbled up technical skills
they’ll eventually translate into a fleet of homemade drones. The drones
provide a capstone for the school’s new Autonomous Systems Engineering Academy,
an initiative funded and developed jointly by the auditing firm Deloitte
and Base 11, an education
nonprofit focused on getting more students into STEM-related fields. Nothing
has actually left the ground yet. On Monday, students road-tested model cars
they controlled using coded commands loaded onto a small computer. The
three-wheeled shells moved forward and back, turned side to side, snapped
pictures, and lit up. That may sound rudimentary, but it’s several steps removed
from where the students began the year.
Trib Live by MATTHEW SANTONI | Monday, March 26, 2018, 11:57 a.m.
Education Secretary
Betsy DeVos made good on a promise to visit struggling schools with a stop in
Johnstown on Monday. Greater Johnstown School District welcomed DeVos to
Johnstown Elementary — an unusual honor and a chance to review the school's
program for supporting students at risk amid the opioid crisis. It was her
first school visit since a "60 Minutes" interview in which she said she wanted to visit low-performing school districts but
wondered aloud, "Will they let me in?" DeVos' representatives said
the visit was not prompted by the "60 Minutes" interview, but rather
was part of the Trump administration's outreach on the opioid crisis. Cambria
County has the highest overdose death rate per capita in Pennsylvania, DeVos
said. Superintendent Michael Vuckovich said Greater Johnstown is the
third-poorest district in Pennsylvania, and the surrounding community had
experienced a 67 percent jump in overdose deaths since 2015.
Bethlehem School District cuts deficit to $5.4M
$3M would come from
fund balance
WFMZ By: Stephen Althouse Posted: Mar 27, 2018 12:55 AM EDT Updated: Mar 27, 2018
04:50 AM EDT
BETHLEHEM, Pa. -
Bethlehem Area School District's challenge this spring will be to balance
the books. School officials reported during Monday night's budget meeting
that they have cut the $10.7 million deficit projected in February for the
2018-2019 budget deficit down to $5.4 million. The majority of the
$5.3 million reduction came from one source: the district's fund balance. BASD
announced they'll use $3 million of it to narrow the gap, and they'll save
another $776,000 through the retirements of 23 employees. The changes leave the
new proposed budget's total revenues at $276.6 million and total expenditures
at $282 million. The district lays the blame for this year's budgetary
shortfall on insufficient funding and on charter schools. Superintendent
Joseph Roy said that local school districts such as BASD are not receiving
enough funding from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. He added that the formula
to fund charters schools is unfair to local school districts and that reform is
needed. In addition, he said that PSERS funding changes are also needed.
Erie schools’ monitor starts job with meetings in
Harrisburg
GoErie By Ed Palattella Posted at 2:01 AM
Monday is Charles
Zogby’s official first day as the Erie School District’s state-paid financial
administrator. He is meeting with state education officials this week. The Erie
School District’s state-paid financial administrator officially starts the job
on Monday, but he will begin his work in Harrisburg rather than Erie. Charles
Zogby, a former state budget and education secretary, will continue to meet
with state Department of Education officials and others in Harrisburg on Monday
to further review the Erie School District’s finances, the department said.
Those meetings are expected to last through this week. Erie schools
Superintendent Brian Polito said Zogby is scheduled to be in Erie next week,
and that the Department of Education is coordinating an introductory conference
call with the school district and Zogby this week. The department said Zogby,
appointed to the $148,000-a-year-post on March 9, will also meet this week with
representatives of Public Financial Management, of Philadelphia, the Erie
School District’s state-appointed financial adviser. PFM has assisted the
district in its extended effort to stay solvent.
PSBA Equity Coordinators Taskforce seeks participants
PSBA Website POSTED
ON MARCH 22, 2018 IN PSBA NEWS
PSBA invites staff
and leaders from across the commonwealth who are specifically tasked with
promoting equity initiatives in their district to participate in the first
Equity Coordinators Taskforce. PSBA defines equity as the just and fair
distribution of resources based upon each individual student’s needs. This
taskforce will discuss and share best practices, concerns, goals, and resources
on equity. We’d like to hear from districts currently doing this work and
incorporating equity into their framework. If interested, please email your
name, title and district to Michelle Kunkel by March 30.
In 1975, Congress promised to cover 40% of the average cost to educate a child with disabilities. Congress later amended the law to say that the Federal Govt would pay a “maximum” of 40% of per-pupil costs. Today, the Federal Govt pays less than half of what it originally promised in 1975.
(IDEA Series) Broken Promises: The Underfunding of IDEA National Council on Disability, February 7, 2018
https://ncd.gov/sites/default/files/NCD_BrokenPromises_508.pdf
Linda Brown, Symbol of Landmark Desegregation Case, Dies
New York Times By NEIL GENZLINGER MARCH 26, 2018
Linda Brown, whose father objected when she was not allowed to attend an all-white school in her neighborhood and who thus came to symbolize one of the most transformative court proceedings in American history, the school desegregation case Brown v. Board of Education, died on Sunday in Topeka, Kan. She was 75. Her death was confirmed on Monday by a spokesman for the Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel in Topeka, which is handling her funeral arrangements. He did not specify the cause. It is Ms. Brown’s father, Oliver, whose name is attached to the famous case, although the suit that ended up in the United States Supreme Court actually represented a number of families in several states. In 1954, in a unanimous decision, the court ruled that segregated schools were inherently unequal. The decision upended decades’ worth of educational practice, in the South and elsewhere, and its ramifications are still being felt.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/26/obituaries/linda-brown-symbol-of-landmark-desegregation-case-dies.html
2018 PSBA Advocacy Day April 16, 2018 Harrisburg
Join PSBA and your fellow school directors for the annual Advocacy Day on Monday, April 16, 2018, at the State Capitol in Harrisburg. PSBA is partnering with Pennsylvania Association of Intermediate Units to have a stronger voice for public education. Hear how advocacy makes a difference in the legislative process and the importance of public education advocacy. Government Affairs will take a deeper dive into the legislative priorities and will provide tips on how to be an effective public education advocate. There will be dedicated time for you and your fellow advocates to hit the halls to meet with your legislators on public education. This is your chance to share the importance of policy supporting public education and make your voice heard on the Hill. This event is free for members; registration is required.
Register online here: http://www.mypls.com/Default.aspx?tabid=3753
https://www.psba.org/event/2018-psba-advocacy-day/
NPE: Join us in a Day of Action April 20th to Stop Gun Violence in our Schools
Network for Public Education February 16, 2018 by Darcie Cimarusti
After the slaughter of students and staff in Parkland, Florida, the time for action has never been more urgent. The politicians sit on their hands as our children and their teachers are murdered in their schools. We will be silent no more! The failure to enact rational laws that bar access to guns designed for mass shootings is inexcusable. It is past time to speak out and act. Pledge your support to stop gun violence here. We call for mass action on April 20, the anniversary of the horrific shootings at Columbine High School. We urge teachers, families, students, administrators and every member of the community to engage in acts of protest in and around their schools. Create actions that work best in your community. Organize sit-ins, teach-ins, walkouts, marches–whatever you decide will show your school and community’s determination to keep our students safe. One elementary teacher suggested that teachers and parents link arms around the school to show their determination to protect children.
https://networkforpubliceducation.org/2018/02/join-us-day-action-stop-gun-violence-schools/
PASA Women's Caucus Annual Conference "Leaders Lifting Leaders"
May 6 - 8, 2018 Hotel Hershey
**REGISTRATION NOW OPEN**
Featured Speakers...
*Dr. Helen Sobehart - Women Leading Education Across Continents: Lifting Leaders from Here to There
*Dr. Tracey Severns - Courageous Leadership
*Dr. Emilie Lonardi - Lead and Lift: A Call for Females to Aspire to the Superintendency
*Deputy Secretary Matt Stem - Update from the PDE
Registration: https://www.pasa-net.org/wcconf
MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD! Join the PA Principals Association,
the PA Association of School Administrators and the PA Association of Rural and
Small Schools for PA Education Leaders Advocacy Day at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, June
19, 2018, at the Capitol in Harrisburg, PA.
A rally in support of public education and important
education issues will be held on the Main Rotunda Steps from 1 p.m. - 2 p.m.
Visits with legislators will be conducted earlier in the day. More information will be sent via email, shared in our publications and posted on our website closer to the event.
Visits with legislators will be conducted earlier in the day. More information will be sent via email, shared in our publications and posted on our website closer to the event.
To register, send an email to Dr. Joseph Clapper at clapper@paprincipals.org before Friday, June 8,
2018.
Click here to view the PA Education
Leaders Advocacy Day 2018 Save The Date Flyer (INCLUDES EVENT SCHEDULE AND
IMPORTANT ISSUES.)
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.
“CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT IS BETTER THAN DELAYED PERFECTION”. MARK TWAIN.
ReplyDeleteGreat job
Chuck