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Tuesday, January 7, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for Jan. 7: Challenges and Flaws in Current Charter School Law


Started in November 2010, 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 associations and education advocacy organizations via emails, website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.

These daily emails are archived and searchable at http://keystonestateeducationcoalition.org
Follow us on Twitter at @lfeinberg


PA Ed Policy Roundup for Jan. 7, 2020



Have you registered for Advocacy Day in Harrisburg to support public education Monday March 23, 2020?
All school leaders are invited to attend Advocacy Day at the state Capitol in Harrisburg. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA), Pennsylvania Association of Intermediate Units (PAIU) and the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators (PASA) are partnering together to strengthen our advocacy impact. The day will center around meetings with legislators to discuss critical issues affecting public education. Click here for more information or register at http://www.mypsba.org/ School directors can register online now by logging in to myPSBA. If you need assistance logging in and registering contact Alysha Newingham, Member Data System Administrator at alysha.newingham@psba.org



“March 2, 2020 - Monday
10:00AM Department of Education
1:00PM Department of Education (continued)”
House Appropriations Committee Budget Hearing Schedule Released
PA House GOP Caucus Website JAN. 06, 2020 
HARRISBURG – House Appropriations Committee Chairman Stan Saylor (R-York) released the following schedule for the 2020 House Budget Hearings:

WBAI Radio: Charter Schools Out of Control; Wednesday 10 am
Excited 2 hear @carolburris guests on  @WBAI Wednesday's #TalkOutOfSchool radio show - Retired teacher & blogger Peter Greene @palan57 & @EdVotersPA Executive Director @SusanSpicka You can tune in live Wed. 10 a.m. EST https://wbai.org/listen-live/ Call w/ ? (212) 209-2877

By Merlyn J Clarke Published on LinkedIn December 23, 2019
Merlyn J Clarke is a School Board Member at Stroudsburg Area School District
This communication concerns the problems that school districts currently face as a result of existing charter school laws. Obviously, some of what I have to say will not be new. I write, nevertheless, from the perspective of a school board member from a district, Stroudsburg, that is facing real problems caused by current charter school legislation.
 The Legitimacy of Public Schools is Long Standing
 Let me be clear up front. I am an unapologetic advocate of UNIVERSAL public education. This position arises from decades of evidence and persuasive philosophical argument that a democratic, pluralistic society cannot succeed in the absence of a universally educated and integrated public, where access to education reaches all sectors of society, regardless of race, religion, economic status, gender or geographic location. We tamper with this commitment at our peril. I will argue that the charter school law, as currently constituted, threatens this commitment by making it progressively more difficult for school districts to do their job of providing this education.
School Districts Must Have Control Over Their Budgets
How does current charter school law jeopardize these commitments?  Because school districts are sitting ducks for any charter school promoter/entrepreneur, whether local, regional or national--brick and mortar or cyber--that decides to invade a region, demand a charter, and then claim entitlement to legislatively mandated, locally generated tuition money for any student who chooses to attend the charter school.

Carol Burris: Joe Roy, a Hero of Public Education
Diane Ravitch’s Blog By dianeravitch January 4, 2020 //
Carol Burris, executive director of the Network for Public Education, writes here about Superintendent Joe Roy, a champion for students and public schools. I add him now to the honor roll of the blog.
Superintendent Joe Roy is a fearless fighter for better opportunities for the students that attend his small city school district of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.  His district is diverse, and about 60% receive free or reduced price lunch. In 2016, he was the Pennsylvania Superintendent of the Year. This is what he said when honored, “I’m one person out of 2,000 people in the district who do great work. So many people contribute, and it’s nice to have the recognition, but it shouldn’t be one person.”  That is who Joe Roy is. Two years ago, I spoke with Joe Roy who told me how his district is being drained of funding by charter schools and cyber charters. I was shocked by how much they cost. You can read about our conversation and what I learned here.
Now Joe is fighting side by side with other superintendents of Pennsylvania city districts whose finances are becoming unsustainable due to charter school drain. Joe therefore has become a target of the charter lobby. At a public meeting he said the following…..

Charter Schools; Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
PENNSYLVANIA BULLETIN PROPOSED RULEMAKING DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION [ 22 PA. CODE CH. 711 ]

Asbestos closes Philly elementary for at least the rest of the week
Inquirer by Kristen A. Graham, Updated: January 6, 2020- 5:00 PM
Carnell Elementary School will remain closed this week as Philadelphia School District officials scramble to fix damaged asbestos in dozens of locations throughout the building. The decision came after district personnel and officials with the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers spent several hours Monday walking through the Oxford Circle building. On the walk-through, they discovered new areas of damaged asbestos that will require attention, union officials said. The school, on Devereaux Avenue, was closed on Dec. 20 when damage to asbestos-containing pipe insulation was flagged. Carnell students will have missed eight school days if they return to class as planned Monday, Jan. 13, a date that depends on testing and inspection. Students can still come to the school building this week to pick up free breakfast and lunch between 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., district officials said in a news release. Carnell is the sixth Philadelphia school that has been temporarily shut because of asbestos. A seventh building — an early childhood education center — was also closed because of “imminent hazards” from asbestos.

Poverty grew in almost half of Pennsylvania counties despite strong national economy
Morning Call By TIM HENDERSON ASSOCIATED PRESS | JAN 02, 2020 | 8:00 AM
Despite an economic recovery that lifted people out of poverty in most areas of the country, poverty increased in at least one county in every state between 2016 and 2018. The poverty rate grew in 30% of counties from 2016-18, according to a Stateline analysis of U.S. Census Bureau county estimates released last month. The poverty rate is the percentage of people in households earning less than the poverty threshold, $25,750 for a family of four. While the overall poverty rate dropped between 2016 and 2018, from 13% to 12%, states varied widely. In New Jersey and Rhode Island, the poverty rate grew in only one county, compared with 83 in Texas. The poverty rate in Pennsylvania in 2016 was 12.9%, dropping slightly to 12.2% in 2018, according to the census estimates. Statewide, 30 of 67 counties, 45%, had a higher poverty rate in 2018 than in 2016.

Gov. Tom Wolf’s mental health plan offers hope of more counselors, social workers for schools
By JACQUELINE PALOCHKO THE MORNING CALL | JAN 03, 2020 | 6:26 PM
The Allentown School District referred about 700 students a year to mental health services about a decade ago. Now it’s closer to 3,000 a year. That’s a drastic increase for a district that educates 17,000 students, and shows the need for more resources to help children struggling with mental health, Superintendent Thomas Parker told Gov. Tom Wolf Friday afternoon. And for financially strapped districts like Allentown, Parker said, it’s nearly impossible to find the money for the necessary social workers and counselors. Parker shared the district’s struggle in getting children the help they need with Wolf and others attending a round-table discussion at Muhlenberg College in Allentown a day after Wolf announced a statewide effort offering help. Federal and state lawmakers were among those on hand. Wolf’s “Reach Out PA: Your Mental Health Matters,” campaign includes developing new state regulations on health insurance coverage, coordinating services for physical and behavioral health, analyzing pay and other factors for those who provide mental health services — and finding ways to get more social workers into schools. Wolf has said the effort would attempt to destigmatize the issue and provide people struggling with mental health issues the help they need. Wolf has not said how much if any additional money for mental health services he might be seeking in his coming 2020-21 budget address.

'Cyber snow days:' Why few school districts statewide opted in for the program
Teresa Boeckel, York Daily Record Published 6:00 a.m. ET Jan. 6, 2020 | Updated 10:23 a.m. ET Jan. 6, 2020
Cheers for snow days will still ring out in many homes in Pennsylvania. 
Fewer than 80 school districts, charter schools and others across the state have opted to use "cyber snow days" for the 2019-2020 school year, according to the state Department of Education's website. Gov. Tom Wolf signed a bill over the summer allowing districts to use the flexible instructional days when school has to be closed for inclement weather, emergencies or other reasons. Up to five days can be used each school year.  That means students complete assignments at home while the buildings are closed. Nine school districts and one regional charter school in York County have been approved, according to the state Department of Education's website.  But in other counties, such as Lebanon and Franklin, none of the school districts are participating. Statewide, seven applications were denied because the schools did not provide information that met the requirements of the law, such as single-day lesson plans, completed narratives or approved school board minutes, said Eric Levis, a spokesman for the state Department of Education. Here's a look at some of the challenges:

Snow days are slowly melting away across Pennsylvania — except in Lancaster County
Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer January 7, 2020
Lancaster County students get to enjoy snow days this year, but others across the state aren’t so lucky. Seventy-nine of Pennsylvania’s 500 school districts are participating in the state’s new flexible instructional day program, which allows schools to provide online instruction when snow or another emergency forces school buildings to close. But none of the county’s 17 public school districts are participating. Local school officials say they’re not yet sold on the voluntary program, which was signed into law last year by Gov. Tom Wolf. “Our best product is when we have teachers and students face-to-face throughout the learning process,” Pequea Valley Superintendent Erik Orndorff said. “We could do a cyber day but for us, it wouldn’t be our best product.” Orndorff expressed concern over the lack of interaction between teachers and students, and the problems that arise when considering students with special needs. “Learning is a social activity and we want to make sure our learners are engaged and involved,” Orndorff said.

Harrisburg schools progress report: State takeover brings changes, but much remains to be done
Penn Live By Sean Sauro | ssauro@pennlive.com Updated Jan 06, 8:00 AM;Posted Jan 06, 5:32 AM
It was mid-August, only a week before classrooms were opened to returning students, that teachers and staff members filed into the auditorium at Harrisburg School District’s John Harris campus, filling the hundreds of seats inside. A ringing bell drew their attention to the front of the room and to Janet Samuels, the newly appointed district leader who’s been tasked with turning around decades of financial and academic underperformance. Samuels addressed the cheering crowd, offering a promise: This school year will not be “business as usual by any stretch of the imagination,” she said. A semester later, Samuels, Acting Superintendent Chris Celmer and many of their supporters argue it’s a promise that’s been largely fulfilled. They point to achievements such as the creation of an accurate budget, a districtwide elementary school curriculum and clean, well-maintained school buildings. Still, there is much work to be done, they agreed. To help students caught in a failing system succeed, they must also find a way to effectively engage parents, retain teachers and contend with a dwindling savings account.

Erie School District to open bids for outside janitors
GoErie By Ed Palattella Posted Jan 5, 2020 at 12:10 AM Updated Jan 5, 2020 at 12:46 PM
State financial improvement plan mandates that School Board review contracting custodial services. Vote not until May 13. The Erie School District’s financial recovery is continuing with what will be more consequential decisions in 2020. The district administration is scheduled to open bids for outside custodial services on Monday as it reaches another stage of a process expected to dominate discussion on the School Board for the first half of 2020. The school directors must examine whether to outsource custodial services as part of the district’s state-mandated financial improvement plan. Contracting for such services will save the district an estimated $1 million a year, according to district figures. The financial improvement plan does not mandate that the School Board outsource the services, though it requires the board find other ways to save as much as $1 million a year if it does not approve the outsourcing for custodians and custodial supervisors. The board must consider whether to award a contract for outside custodians at its May 13 meeting, about five weeks before the June 30 deadline for the board to pass a budget for 2020-21. The board must consider whether to award a contract for outside custodial supervisors at a meeting in May 2021.

Pittsburgh Public Schools board member proposes more participatory process on budget
ANDREW GOLDSTEIN Pittsburgh Post-Gazette agoldstein@post-gazette.com JAN 5, 2020
With just a few days left in 2019, the Pittsburgh Public Schools were stuck with a budget that faced a massive funding hole. Its cause comes from the school board adopting a $665.6 million budget for 2020 but declining to approve the 2.3% property tax increase that the district wanted to help fund it. This, as board members argued over where the additional revenue would go, items that could still be cut from the budget and why a millage hike was necessary.  The problem was solved when the board passed a more moderate tax increase as a compromise during a special legislative session five days before the start of the new year — avoiding a possible district shutdown — and school administrators adjusted the budget accordingly.  Several board members at the Dec. 27 meeting where a new 1.2% tax increase was passed, though, expressed frustration that the budget remained unresolved until the final days of the year. Board member Pam Harbin said she would introduce a resolution that would make budget creation a more year-round and participatory process as a way to circumvent similar issues in future years. At a school board meeting later this month, she said, she will ask for three more workshops throughout the year where the public and board members can address budget concerns.

Kenney wants to ‘deliver’ on local control of Philly schools through more investment, service coordination
He plans a new Office of Children and Families to better coordinate services and will pursue more aid for community college students.
The notebook by Dale Mezzacappa January 6 — 3:11 pm, 2020
Updated with information about the appointment of Cynthia Figueroa as head of the Office of Children and Families.
Starting his second term on Monday, Mayor Kenney promised to continue increasing the city’s support for the School District, working to make Community College of Philadelphia more affordable, and coordinating city services better through a new Office of Children and Families. “We must follow the rest of the civilized world and make the investments necessary to improve the quality of education available to all of our kids,” the mayor said. “This isn’t just the right thing to do; our city’s future depends on it. … It’s a new era, and we will not fail another generation of our kids.” Kenney and City Council members took their oaths of office at the newly restored Met Philadelphia opera house, 858 N. Broad St. Among the four new Council members is education activist Kendra Brooks, who became the first person elected to Council outside the two major parties. She ran with the Working Families Party. The other new Council members are Democrats Jamie Gauthier, Katherine Gilmore Richardson, and Isaiah Thomas. Kenney promised to expand his administration’s initiatives on universal pre-K, community schools, after-school programs, and behavioral health services for students.

Norwin to cap tax hike at 3.4%
Trib Live by JOE NAPSHA   | Monday, January 6, 2020 8:41 p.m.
Property owners in the Norwin School District will not see their school taxes increase more than 3.4% — the maximum allowed without state or voter approval. The Norwin School Board Monday unanimously voted at its workshop meeting to limit any tax hike to the state maximum, which is about 2.8 mills in the Westmoreland County communities it serves. The school board does not have to approve a budget for next fiscal year until June 30. “Everybody’s goal here is to keep it (tax hike) as low as possible,” while maintaining a safe environment and quality education, said Brian Carlton, board president. Ryan Kirsch, business affairs director, said he expects to present a review of the 2020-21 budget at the school board’s workshop meeting in April, a month before the board likely will introduce a tentative budget for the next school year. Norwin has raised real estate taxes to the state-permitted limit each of the last four years.

PA Farm Bill Farm to School grant program accepting applications through Jan. 15
NorthCentralPA.com by NCPA Staff January 3, 2020
The PA Farm to School grant program offered through the PA Department of Agriculture aims to enrich the connection communities have with fresh, healthy food and local producers by changing food purchasing behaviors and education practices at schools and early childhood education sites. Up to $15,000 is available to school districts, charter schools, or private schools with pre-kindergarten classes, and elementary through fifth grade. Requirements and limitation information is available on the PA Dept. of Agriculture website. Specifically, the grant program provides schools with funding to improve access to healthy, local foods and increase agriculture education opportunities for pre-kindergarten through fifth grade. The goal is to bridge the gap between children and the food system by showing them that fresh, healthy food is available from Pennsylvania agricultural producers in their own community and the surrounding areas. In addition to funding the procurement of locally grown foods in school cafeterias, grant projects can include staff training initiatives, the development of nutritional and agriculture education, and even field trips to farms or other experiences that connect kids with food sources.
Eligible organizations have until January 15 to apply.

Special election to fill Folmer’s Pa. Senate seat pits a district attorney against a history professor
Penn Live By Jan Murphy | jmurphy@pennlive.com Posted Jan 06, 5:00 AM
Voters in the 48th state senatorial district will have the opportunity to go to the polls on Jan. 14 and elect someone to serve as their senator for the better part of three years. The two men vying for that seat are Lebanon County District Attorney Dave Arnold and Lebanon Valley College associate history professor Michael Schroeder. The district includes parts of Dauphin and York counties and all of Lebanon County. The seat is open following the resignation of Lebanon County Republican Mike Folmer, who stepped down after he was arrested and charged with possessing child pornography in September. The 48-year-old Arnold, the Republican nominee, is no stranger to politics, having held his elective office for the past 14 years. Schroeder, 61, the Democratic nominee, is making his first run at public office but counts his community and environmental activism along with study of politics and government from his work as a history scholar as qualifying him for the position.

Who’s running for Lehigh Valley state House seats?
By FORD TURNER THE MORNING CALL | JAN 06, 2020 | 6:00 AM
Open seats, entrenched incumbents and even gerrymandering have been part of the conversation as current or aspiring politicians decide whether to run for the Pennsylvania House in the Lehigh Valley. Statewide all 203 House seats are up for grabs this year, including the 11 whose districts contain parts of Lehigh or Northampton counties. The terms last two years, the annual pay is more than $90,000 and the benefits package is considered top-notch. None of the three state Senate seats that include portions of either county is open in this year’s election. As the Jan. 28 opening of the window for circulating nomination petitions approaches, the largest amount of jockeying and speculating in the Lehigh Valley may surround the 131st and 138th district House seats, which are being vacated by retiring incumbents Justin Simmons and Marcia Hahn. Other topics of political conversation have included the fact a sitting incumbent ― Republican Rep. Zachary Mako in the 183rd District ― is away on a long-term military deployment, as well as the widely held, bigger-picture belief that many districts across the state have been politically redrawn so as to make them almost unwinnable by one major party or the other.

Guest Column: Once upon a time, when politics worked for common good
Delco Times By Joseph Batory Times Guest Columnist Jan 5, 2020
In 1984, when I was offered the opportunity to become the superintendent of schools in Upper Darby, I had one serious reservation. I had to learn more about the “political factor” before I would accept the job. My predecessor and mentor, Mike Maines, had built relationships with the local politicians and cultivated these connections. As an assistant superintendent at that time, I didn’t know much about this. I was certainly aware that most of Upper Darby’s school board members had won election because of being endorsed by the Upper Darby Republican political powers, which had an overwhelming voting majority of the community at that time. But I knew little else. And so, a political breakfast meeting at a table reserved for such purposes took place in the back of Upper Darby’s Llanerch Diner. I met with John McNichol, the legendary and powerful leader of Upper Darby’s Republican political machine, and my knees were shaking. What in blazes did I know about dealing with politicians? John had had a private meeting with President Ronald Reagan in the White House the previous day. Talk about intimidating … I was scared to death and didn’t sleep the night before.

“As part of a ‘blue wave’ in the Philadelphia suburbs, Democrats also won control of the majority of governing seats in Bucks and Chester Counties during the last election cycle. Now, the entire five-county southeastern Pennsylvania region is controlled by Democrats.”
Delco Dems promise ‘sweeping change’ as GOP loses power in Philly suburbs
WHYY By Laura Benshoff January 6, 2020
Three Democratic council members took oaths of office in Delaware County on Monday, ending more than a century of GOP leadership. One by one, they remarked on the historic shift and pledged to increase accountability. “We’re going to face obstacles trying to change culture in a courthouse that’s been run by one party for generations … but our strength is really the commitment to make sure that government works better for all of the people in Delaware County, regardless of their party, the municipality they live in, or who they know,” said new council member Christine A. Reuther.  Delaware County Councilperson Christine Reuther was elected as a Democrat in the 2019 election, helping to give her party a 5-0 hold on the chamber. (Kimberly Paynter/WHYY) Democrats swept local races in November, changing party control of the county council for the first time since that body was created, and ending GOP dominance in county government that began in the Civil War era and was considered impossible to overcome until only recently.

“How will we know how our kids are doing if we don’t test them?” Here’s how…
Electablog by Mitchell Robinson December 18, 2019
Mitchell Robinson is associate professor and chair of music education at Michigan State University. His research is focused on music education and education policy. 
Attending the recent Public Education Forum in Pittsburgh last weekend was a wonderful experience in many ways…getting a chance to hear what many of the presidential candidates had to say about public education; meeting some of my favorite education reporters bloggers, and activists; and finally seeing public education receive the attention it deserves as one of the most important issues facing our nation. All in all, it was a terrific weekend…except for one nagging question, left largely unanswered by any of the candidates, and now lingering and looming over the next several months of debates, analyses, and discussions. This question was asked many times, and in a variety of ways, but in its most essential form it looks pretty much like this:“How will we know how our kids are doing if we don’t test them?”
On its face this looks like a perfectly legitimate question. After all, isn’t that what “tests” are for? To determine what and how much students know? Didn’t all of us have to take tests when we were in school? We turned out ok, so what’s the big deal? Why do so many teachers have such strong feelings about testing all of the sudden? What’s going on??? Well, first–a little context.

Common Core school standards keep failing, but they don’t have to | Opinion
Pam Greenblatt and Nicole Pugliese, for the Inquirer Updated: January 5, 2020 - 8:00 AM
Dr. Pam Greenblatt is head of lower school at the Haverford School, a (private) pre-K-12 boys’ school, where she developed a structured literacy program and design thinking curriculum. Nichole Pugliese is director of the Enrichment and Learning Center at the Haverford School and a graduate of the School of Health Studies and Education at St. Joseph’s University.
Why aren’t our children learning to read? At its debut, the Common Core gave hope that we could improve the reading, writing, and math outcomes of American children being outpaced by their international peers. The Common Core State Standards Initiative was introduced in 2009 by a bipartisan group of governors, experts, and philanthropists, and supported by then-Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. Originally adopted by more than 40 states, the Common Core aimed to create shared standards, including universal goals for mathematics and English language arts. Ten years into these standards, not a whole lot has changed for our students. The 2018 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) reported that U.S. students have shown no statistically significant changes since 2000, and have improved only in overall global rankings because other countries have declined, not because our scores improved. In Pennsylvania, only 40% of fourth graders are reading at a proficient level, just slightly better than the national average of 35%. While there isn’t one single reason why Common Core hasn’t affected literacy outcomes as significantly as hoped, a glaring shortcoming is the inefficient way students are taught to read.

“The Achievement School District has taken over dozens of underperforming schools in Tennessee’s two largest cities and assigned most to charter operators charged with moving the schools’ academic performance into Tennessee’s top 25 percent in five years.  That didn’t work. Most remain in the bottom 5%, and several schools have closed due to low enrollment. Teacher retention has been another major challenge. Similar turnaround models in other states haven’t fared better. Nevada closed its achievement district, while North Carolina and Mississippi have struggled to get theirs off the ground.”
All 30 schools in Tennessee’s turnaround district would exit by 2022 in a massive restructuring proposal
Chalkbeat By Caroline BaumanMarta W. Aldrich January 6, 2020
Tennessee wants to return 30 state-run schools to local districts in Memphis and Nashville no later than the fall of 2022, but also wants to retain its state-run district to possibly take over other chronically low-performing schools, says a proposal being unveiled this week. Exactly how that transition would happen is unclear as the state education department seeks to revamp turnaround work for Tennessee’s lowest performing schools.  According to a copy of the proposal obtained by Chalkbeat, the transition is part of a massive reset for the embattled turnaround model known as the Achievement School District – made up mostly of charter organizations – which has fallen woefully short of its goal to improve student performance since launching in 2012.  The department wants the proposed reforms, which would affect other struggling schools outside of the achievement district, to start by next fall. But before other schools could be absorbed by the achievement district, they would have a year to nine years to improve with the help of local interventions and additional state funding and support. 

Bloomberg education plan to promote charter school expansion
New York Post By Carl Campanile January 5, 2020 | 5:56pm
Presidential hopeful Mike Bloomberg may have backed off supporting stop-and-frisk, but he plans to double-down on another controversial policy from his time as New York Mayor — expanding charter schools. Bloomberg will soon roll out an education plan that will include backing the privately managed schools as an option for families, his campaign office told The Post — drawing a contrast with other top-tier Democratic presidential rivals. “Mike’s education plan will absolutely promote charter schools,” Bloomberg campaign spokesman Stu Loeser insisted. “The record number of charter schools opened under Mayor Bloomberg is clear. That isn’t changing.” “Few if any people in the country have opened more charter schools than Mike Bloomberg,” he continued. Many Democrats oppose charters, saying they divert funds and weaken traditional public schools.

All school leaders are invited to attend Advocacy Day at the state Capitol in Harrisburg. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association (PSBA), Pennsylvania Association of Intermediate Units (PAIU) and the Pennsylvania Association of School Administrators (PASA) are partnering together to strengthen our advocacy impact. The day will center around meetings with legislators to discuss critical issues affecting public education. Click here for more information or register at http://www.mypsba.org/
School directors can register online now by logging in to myPSBA. If you need assistance logging in and registering contact Alysha Newingham, Member Data System Administrator at alysha.newingham@psba.org

PA SCHOOLS WORK: Special Education Funding Webinar Tue, Jan 14, 2020 12:00 PM - 1:30 PM EST

Training: Enhancing School Safety Jan. 9th, 8 am – 1 pm Council Rock High School South
The training is provided by the United States Secret Service and the Office PA Rep Wendi Thomas, in partnership with the Bucks County Intermediate Unit, Bucks County DA Matt Weintraub and PSEA.
Date: Thursday, January 9, 2020, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Council Rock High School South, 2002 Rock Way, Holland PA 18954
This is the region’s first presentation of the National Threat Assessment Center's (NTAC) 2020 research on actionable plans to prevent violence in schools. The training is provided by the United States Secret Service (USSS) and is based on updated operational research conducted by the USSS and the NTAC. The training will offer best practices on preventing incidents of targeted school violence. This workshop will focus solely on how to proactively identify, assess, and manage individuals exhibiting concerning behavior based on USSS methodologies.
At the conclusion of the training, attendees will be able to:
·     Understand operational research on preventing incidents of targeted school violence;
·     Be able to proactively identify, using USSS methodologies, concerning behaviors prior to an incident;
·     Be able to assess concerning behaviors using best practice standards and use identified methods to better manage individuals who exhibit concerning behaviors with the goal of preventing school violence.

PSBA: Required School Director Training
Your trusted and approved source
The Pennsylvania Department of Education has named PSBA an approved provider of required school director training. Your association has more than 100 years of statewide expertise in school law, policy, finance and ethical governance, so you can be sure you’re receiving the highest quality learning, relevant to your role. To learn when you or your board will be required to complete training hours, please refer to PDE’s FAQs here
Act 55 and Act 18
Training requirements specific to you:

•   Newly elected and appointed school board directors –
•   Successful completion of five training hours.
•   Re-elected school board directors –
•   Successful completion of three training hours.
PSBA knows that everyone has unique scheduling requirements and distinct learning styles. Therefore, we have created two pathways in meeting state requirements:

PSBA New and Advanced School Director Training in Dec & Jan
Additional sessions now being offered in Bucks and Beaver Counties
Do you want high-impact, engaging training that newly elected and reseated school directors can attend to be certified in new and advanced required training? PSBA has been supporting new school directors for more than 50 years by enlisting statewide experts in school law, finance and governance to deliver a one-day foundational training. This year, we are adding a parallel track of sessions for those who need advanced school director training to meet their compliance requirements. These sessions will be delivered by the same experts but with advanced content. Look for a compact evening training or a longer Saturday session at a location near you. All sites will include one hour of trauma-informed training required by Act 18 of 2019. Weekend sites will include an extra hour for a legislative update from PSBA’s government affairs team.
New School Director Training
Week Nights: Registration opens 3:00 p.m., program starts 3:30 p.m. -9:00 p.m., dinner with break included
Saturdays: Registration opens at 8:00 a.m., program starts at 9:00 a.m. -3:30 p.m., lunch with break included
Advanced School Director Training
Week Nights: Registration with dinner provided opens at 4:30 p.m., program starts 5:30 p.m. -9:00 p.m.
Saturdays: Registration opens at 10:00 a.m., program starts at 11:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m., lunch with break included
Locations and dates

Congress, Courts, and a National Election: 50 Million Children’s Futures Are at Stake. Be their champion at the 2020 Advocacy Institute.
NSBA Advocacy Institute Feb. 2-4, 2020 Marriot Marquis, Washington, D.C.
Join school leaders from across the country on Capitol Hill, Feb. 2-4, 2020 to influence the legislative agenda & shape decisions that impact public schools. Check out the schedule & more at https://nsba.org/Events/Advocacy-Institute

Register now for Network for Public Education Action National Conference in Philadelphia March 28-29, 2020
Registration, hotel information, keynote speakers and panels:

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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