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Monday, December 21, 2020

PA Ed Policy Roundup for Dec. 21, 2020: Seven of the state’s 14 cyber charter schools have never had their finances reviewed by the auditor general

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, 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.

 

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Keystone State Education Coalition

PA Ed Policy Roundup for Dec. 21, 2020

Seven of the state’s 14 cyber charter schools have never had their finances reviewed by the auditor general

 

$82 billion for schools in Second Stimulus Package

Most of the spending for schools is divvied up between the Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund ($54.3 billion) and the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund ($22.7 billion), programs that provide funding to states to distribute to schools according to local demands. Money from the CARES Act allotted to ESSER mostly helped state education departments build out technological capacity for remote learning or support nutritional services. Money for HEERF covered pandemic-related costs and provided colleges with funding to give directly to students through emergency financial aid grants.

What Is in the $900 Billion Second Stimulus Package?

NY Magazine By Matt Stieb December 21, 2020

On Sunday, almost nine months after the CARES Act was signed into law, Congress agreed upon a second stimulus after weeks of post-election negotiation — a $908 billion bill that is less than half the size of the original coronavirus relief package. The bill, part of a $1.4 trillion spending package, comes just days before millions of Americans are slated to lose federal unemployment aid at the end of the year, and as the pandemic continues to set records for new cases, hospitalizations, and daily death counts. To help alleviate the first crisis, the bill will provide a $600 check for every Americans making up to $75,000, as well as $300 per week in federal unemployment benefits for an additional 11 weeks. To help slow down the second crisis, the bill includes $69 billion to expand vaccine distribution, test-and-trace measures, and other public-health efforts. With the House and Senate reportedly approving the measure, the agreement on the second stimulus package comes in tandem with a one-day stopgap spending bill, the third one-day extension in the past 10 days, as Democrats fought for state and local assistance and Republicans pushed for a liability shield to protect corporations from employees reporting unsafe pandemic conditions. (Both efforts appear to have been cut on the Senate floor.) Below are the most prominent measures in the second stimulus package before it heads to a final vote and presidential approval.

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/12/what-is-in-the-usd900-billion-covid-second-stimulus-package.html

 

The state has never audited King of Prussia-based Agora Cyber Charter School, which took in more than $96 million in revenue two years ago and will far surpass that due to the enrollment spike this year. The school was established in 2005, at the start of former Auditor General Jack Wagner’s first term in office. Four terms have gone by without a state review. Along with Agora, the state has never audited Achievement House, Esperanza, Insight, Pennsylvania Distance Learning, Pennsylvania Leadership and Reach cyber charter schools, according to state records. Commonwealth Charter Academy, which now has about 18,000 students and a budget that could reach $270 million — $100 million more than the Scranton School District — has not been audited by the state since 2012.

As cyber charter school costs soar, state fails to conduct required audits

Times Tribune BY SARAH HOFIUS HALL STAFF WRITER Dec 20, 2020 Updated 18 min ago

Pennsylvania cyber charter schools could receive more than $1 billion in taxpayer money this year with little oversight as the state fails to conduct required financial audits, a Sunday Times investigation found. Meanwhile, the 14 cyber schools spent at least $12.7 million on advertising and marketing last year — with some schools spending nearly $1,000 per student to convince others to enroll. And it’s working. As cyber charter school rosters grow faster than ever expected prior to the coronavirus pandemic, local educators and some state leaders have strengthened their calls for reform and transparency. More than $20 million in school taxes in Lackawanna County will go to cyber charter schools this year, but the state does little to track how those schools spend the money.  Seven of the state’s 14 cyber charter schools have never had their finances reviewed by the auditor general, the newspaper found. The office has audited just two schools in the last five years. It last audited the largest cyber school in the state, Harrisburg-based Commonwealth Charter Academy — with a budget that could top $270 million in 2021 — nearly nine years ago.

https://www.thetimes-tribune.com/news/education/as-cyber-charter-school-costs-soar-state-fails-to-conduct-required-audits/article_a3e70510-34cf-59ea-9928-666386b3d275.html

 

Blogger note: this was one of two new cyber charter applications submitted to PDE this year; the second application is still awaiting a decision from PDE.

REJECTED! Doomed-to-fail cyber charter application denied by PDE

Education Voters PA Commentary Published by EDVOPA on December 19, 2020

The Pennsylvania Department of Education (PDE) delivered an early holiday gift to Pennsylvanians. On Monday, November 30th, PDE denied the revised application of the Virtual Preparatory Academy of Pennsylvania (VPAP) Cyber Charter School.

VPAP is a new project of Ron Packard, former mergers and acquisitions specialist at Goldman Sachs and founder of K12, Inc., the nation’s largest for-profit online charter school operator.  Packard left K12, Inc. after a shareholder lawsuit alleged that it violated securities law by making false statements to investors about cyber charter school students’ poor performance on standardized tests. He is now the CEO of Accel Schools, a for-profit management company that is buying up low-performing charter schools in Ohio. Packard hopes to expand his portfolio—and his profits—by opening a new cyber charter school in Pennsylvania as well. We provided testimony at a public hearing on November 5th urging PDE to deny VPAP’s application. In our testimony, we documented Accel Schools’ proven track record of running failing charter schools in Ohio. The online school in Ohio that is run by Accel received an “F” grade for every measure of student achievement included in the Ohio Department of Education’s school report card for 2018-2019.  Of the 35 Accel charter schools in Ohio with state report card data from the Ohio Department of Education for 2018-2019, 26 received either a “D” or “F” grade.

http://educationvoterspa.org/blog/rejected-doomed-to-fail-cyber-charter-application-denied-by-pde/

 

Reprise Nov. 19th: Here’s 4 good reasons for Pa. to reject any new cyber-charter school applications | Opinion

By Lawrence A. Feinberg   Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor November 19, 2020

The Pennsylvania Department of Education held public hearings this month regarding the proposed authorization of two new cyber charter schools. I had the opportunity to present comments at both hearings. I am a school director serving in my 21st year as a member of the Haverford Township school board. For the past dozen years or so, I have also served as chair of the Delaware County School Boards Legislative Council with school board representatives from each of the fifteen districts in Delaware County. In 2007, I presented “Testimony on Cyber-Charter School Funding, Oversight and Accountability’ to the Pennsylvania House Education Committee. And I have been following cyber charter issues closely ever since. Cyber-charters may be a great fit for some highly motivated, self-disciplined students or those with very involved parents or guardians. But generally speaking, cyber students are not learning, and taxpayers are paying twice what they reasonably should, with the excess funds being taken away from all the other students remaining in a school district when a parent chooses to send their child to a cyber charter. With the COVID pandemic, the Pennsylvania Association of School Business Officials (PASBO) recently estimated that cyber charter enrollment has increased by 24,000 students over last year, with taxpayers on the hook for an additional $350 million in tuition.

https://www.penncapital-star.com/commentary/heres-4-good-reasons-for-pa-to-reject-any-new-cyber-charter-school-applications-opinion/

 

School District of Philadelphia New Charter Application Public Hearing

When:  Tue, December 22, 2pm – 6pm

Where: Remote Meeting (more information to be added) (map)

Description: Notice is hereby given that the Board of Education of The School District of Philadelphia (“School District”) shall hold initial public hearings pursuant to the Charter School Law on applications for new charter schools in Philadelphia.  The hearings will be held on December 22, 2020 via remote platform.  The remote platform link will be posted on the Board of Education’s website at https://www.philasd.org/schoolboard/.

 

Rejected charter school proposal in Lancaster might have new life thanks to controversial federal grant program

Lancaster Online by ALEX GELI | Staff Writer December 21, 2020

When professional soccer club founder Brian Ombiji proposed a charter school infusing both sports and education in the city, one member of the Lancaster school board called the application “extremely negligent” and a waste of time. Another called the proposed school a soccer program with a “side hustle in education.” The school district solicitor said the proposal sounded like “a soccer club in search of a charter school as opposed to a charter school itself.” And in October, in unsurprising fashion, the school board unanimously denied the charter school application. So why did the U.S. Department of Education award the club a $1.2 million grant to support its proposal? In late September, the federal government awarded the All Football Club Lancaster Lions soccer organization the grant, to be spent within five years on allowable expenses by law, such as building curriculum and community outreach. U.S. Department of Education reviewers who graded Ombiji’s grant proposal scored it a 70 of 115 possible points, or a 61%. Yet, they still awarded the grant.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/rejected-charter-school-proposal-in-lancaster-might-have-new-life-thanks-to-controversial-federal-grant/article_f69e7e40-4173-11eb-8fd9-6fb172fae30e.html

 

Collegium Charter school sues Coatesville schools over $18M

DEBBIE WYGENT for LNP | LancasterOnline December 20, 2020

Collegium Charter School in Exton, Chester County, has filed a preliminary injunction against both the Coatesville Area School District and the Pennsylvania Department of Education over $18 million in allegedly delinquent payments Collegium says it is owed for educating about 2,300 of its students who reside in the Coatesville district. Coatesville school board members and Collegium parents traded points of view about the funding dispute during the school board’s Dec. 15 remote meeting. Some parents have taken the delay very personally. In a statement from Kenneth Kilpatrick, spokesman for Collegium, CEO Marita Barber states Coatesville has no legal basis for withholding money from Collegium and education funds must follow the child. “This issue is about protecting families’ rights to choose a public school they believe is best for their children,” Barber said. Coatesville board President Robert Fisher said the board “does not have any dislike of charter schools” and the real issue is the state’s “flawed funding formula” surrounding how charter school tuition is paid. Coatesville pointed to a very tight budget and says it must pay charter school tuition while also providing transportation and a full educational program for its own public school students. Currently 33.82% of Coatesville’s budget goes to support area charter schools, including Collegium.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/regional/charter-school-sues-coatesville-schools-over-18m/article_fd4bcac0-432d-11eb-9a5e-1f9101c187c6.html

 

“In Philadelphia, 57.1% of the students district-wide have attended 95% of the instructional days through November, said spokesperson Christina Clark. The pandemic has had the biggest impact on students in poor-performing and economically disadvantaged districts like Camden, but school officials across the region are struggling to keep students engaged in remote instruction. They worry about students falling behind academically.”

Students aren’t showing up for virtual learning. ‘Are they well cared for? Are they safe?’

Inquirer by Melanie Burney, Posted: 37 minutes ago December 21, 2020

In virtual school, on any given day, one in four Camden public school students is absent. Nearly 1,700 students, or about 25% of the student enrollment in the state-run district, are not showing up for class, said Superintendent Katrina McCombs. Average daily attendance has fallen during the pandemic from about 92% last year to about 75%. McCombs and state educators who oversee Camden schools want to know why so many kids are missing school. The district has been fully remote since schools were shut down by the coronavirus last spring. “It is something we’re taking very seriously,” McCombs said. Surprisingly, kindergarten, first and second-grade students have the lowest attendance rate overall, while ninth graders have the lowest attendance rate among high school students, she said. Camden enrolls about 6,800 students in its traditional public schools.

https://www.inquirer.com/education/nj-education-attendance-schools-virtual-attendance-skipping-camden-pandemic-coronavirus-20201221.html

 

Pennsylvania’s children could lose a year of education due to COVID-19 | Opinion

Penn Live By Edward Albert, PhD Updated Dec 18, 2020; Posted Dec 18, 2020

Dr. Edward Albert is Executive Director of Pennsylvania Association of Rural and Small Schools.

As the long, dark COVID-filled months stretch before us, and as schools scramble to respond to the latest curveballs thrown by the pandemic, the government must fully address the threats our school districts face moving forward. For an unprecedented educational catastrophe is looming and will jeopardize our children’s future success, and thus the success of our country, if no countermeasures are taken. I think I speak for all Pennsylvanians when I say the health and safety of students, teachers, and staff is paramount. And our schools have been working hard to innovate new ways to protect their children and staff while still providing the best education possible. Of course, with positive COVID cases continuing to mount and people being encouraged to stay home as much as they can, many schools are beginning to rely more and more on remote learning – which has been riddled with challenges, especially for rural schools in cash-strapped counties. Many teachers and administrators in these counties have found it particularly difficult to meet the needs of all of their students via technology alone without the resources they so desperately need.

https://www.pennlive.com/opinion/2020/12/pennsylvanias-children-could-lose-a-year-of-education-due-to-covid-19-opinion.html

 

Nine months in, impact of COVID-19 on education starting to show

ANDREW GOLDSTEIN Pittsburgh Post-Gazette agoldstein@post-gazette.com DEC 20, 2020 7:15 AM

Colleen Brasacchio says she already sees the ripple effects of remote instruction in her kids’ educations. As the mother of a third and first grader as well as a preschooler in the Mt. Lebanon School District, she said she can tell the impact it has had on their reading, their writing and even in their will to learn. “They don’t want to go to school right now,” Ms. Brasacchio said last week in a phone interview. “They don’t feel like they’re learning, they don’t want to participate. They want to be in school with their friends, with their teachers, where professionals are engaging them.”  During the past nine months, the COVID-19 pandemic has forced K-12 schools nationwide to dramatically shift how they deliver education to students. While some have returned to full-time in-person instruction, many more have instituted hybrid or remote learning models, where students are in their classrooms for part of the week or not at all. Experts believe the rapid changes in instruction will be felt well into the future; just how much of an effect the pandemic will have on education may not be known for years. But researchers have started looking into how COVID-19 has disrupted student learning so far.

https://www.post-gazette.com/news/education/2020/12/20/COVID-19-education-school-impact-effects/stories/202012200031

 

“Another large donor is Jeff Yass, an options trader and founder of Philadelphia-based Susquehanna International Group. Yass sits on the board of the libertarian think tank the Cato Institute, and is a powerful advocate for school choice and the expansion of charter schools.”

Georgia’s Senate runoffs: Special interest PACs flood the zone

By Chris Joyner, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution December 18, 2020

‘A battle between billionaires and millionaires,’ says one analyst.

Apart from the candidates themselves, political action committees have spent at least $150 million since the November general election to rally voters back to the polls for the Senate runoff, records show. While nearly two-thirds of that spending has come from super PACs connected to either Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell or Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, the rest has come from special interest groups with business before the new Congress. Brendan Fischer, director of federal reform for the non-partisan Campaign Legal Center in Washington, D.C., said spending by PACs in the Georgia runoffs is akin to an arms race financed by “a small handful of extremely wealthy interests.”

https://www.ajc.com/politics/georgias-senate-runoffs-special-interest-pacs-flood-the-zone/NOJ2N7NTVVGL5HPXU7GTYYE7DI/

 

Finalists Named For AASA’s 2021 National Superintendent Of The Year®

Honorees include superintendents from Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Washington 

Alexandria, Va. – December 18, 2020 – AASA, The School Superintendents Association, is pleased to announce the finalists for the 2021 National Superintendent of the Year®. This distinction honors school system leaders throughout the country who are making a positive difference in the lives of the students they serve, in addition to ensuring the safety and wellness of their school communities. Co-sponsored by AASA, AIG Retirement Services and First Student, the 2021 National Superintendent of the Year® will be announced during AASA’s virtual National Conference on Education, Feb. 18-19, 2021.

The four finalists for the 2021 National Superintendent of the Year® are:

https://aasa.org/content.aspx?id=45225

 

Erik Kincade: Support Erie County's public schools

Opinion by Erik Kincade Erie Times-News December 20, 2020

Erik Kincade, Ph.D., is the superintendent of the Fairview School District.

COVID-19 has wreaked havoc on schools and school communities for the past nine months. Difficult and often unpopular, decisions have been made in every district, regardless of whether they elected to go with remote, hybrid or traditional modes of instruction. School leaders have had to balance what they know is best — face-to-face instruction for all students — with an unknown virus that could potentially spread like wildfire through a community. It is widely accepted that adolescents who become infected with COVID-19 often have mild symptoms or even no symptoms at all. However, students, even young children, are capable of spreading the virus to others. And the long-term implications of having been infected with the virus are still being studied. While we want nothing more than to have our students back in the classrooms, we have had to wrestle with our primary obligation of providing a safe environment for all stakeholders, including the students and the adults in our buildings. As much as the Fairview School District aims to please, this is truly a case of not being able to please all of the people all of the time. 

https://www.goerie.com/story/opinion/columns/2020/12/20/erie-county-public-school-leaders-doing-their-best-amid-pandemic/3920621001/

 

“Goodin's departure will mark the fourth pending or current superintendent vacancy in the region.”

Goodin resigns as superintendent of Spring-Ford schools

Potstown Mercury by Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymedia.com @PottstownNews on Twitter December 18, 2020

ROYERSFORD — Spring-Ford Area Schools Superintendent David Goodin announced his resignation on Thursday. He has accepted a job as the superintendent of schools in Sampson County, North Carolina. Goodin's departure will mark the fourth pending or current superintendent vacancy in the region. The Boyertown Area School Board is currently seeking a replacement for Dana Bedden, who left in September and Owen J. Roberts Schools Superintendent Susan Lloyd announced her June retirement last month. Additionally, not only has Pottsgrove Schools Superintendent William Shirk also announced his retirement, but the district's assistant superintendent and business manager are also stepping down in June as well. 

https://www.pottsmerc.com/news/goodin-resigns-as-superintendent-of-spring-ford-schools/article_ac4d5bf6-4153-11eb-97d1-abde505ba0eb.html

 

Ears on the Philly Board of Education: December 10, 2020

Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools By Diane Payne December 16, 2020

The Board of Education held its final Action Meeting at the end of a year that upended the lives of every person in the world, including Philadelphia students and their families.  The suffering, isolation, and  fear felt by our most vulnerable citizens has been staggering–especially because so much of it was avoidable.  One thing that stood out in this last public meeting was the apparent absence of District administrations’ awareness of this fact. At the November Action Meeting, Superintendent Hite, in answer to concerns raised about students’  mental health,  promised to present this month the supports implemented by his administration.  Students heading into the holiday season with prolonged time off from school,  families whose breadwinners lost jobs and may not be able to afford to celebrate the holidays, some facing eviction–this would have been a perfect time to assure Board Members that our students have a safety net. But there was no presentation nor any question about it from any Board members.  

https://appsphilly.net/2020/12/16/ears-on-the-board-of-education-december-10-2020/

 

Defenders of Public Education Speak Before the Philly BOE, December 10, 2020

Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools December 16, 2020 Philadelphia School Board Testimony

Click on the title to read the transcript of the speaker’s testimony.

Eli Broad Rules at 440 N. Broad Street by Barbara McDowdall Dowdall

Closing Sheppard Elementary Will Hurt the Community by Keely Gray

Vote No on Relay G.S.E. by Deborah Grill

Board Turns Its Back on Students, Parents, Educators, Community by Lisa Haver

Goals & Guardrails: BOE Needs to Listen to Students, Parents and Teachers by Stephanie King

Quashing Public Engagement by Karel Kliminik

Against New Spending by Maddie Luebbert

https://appsphilly.net/2020/12/16/defenders-of-public-education-speak-before-the-boe-december-10-2020/

 

Despite state’s certification, GOP could oppose swearing-in of Jim Brewster in Pa. Senate

JULIAN ROUTH Pittsburgh Post-Gazette jrouth@post-gazette.com DEC 20, 2020 3:57 PM

Jim Brewster’s fate in the state Senate — at least at the start of the new year — could come down to a federal court decision that won’t be adjudicated until after the incumbent McKeesport Democrat is supposed to take the oath of office. Pennsylvania’s secretary of state certified Mr. Brewster’s win in the 45th Senatorial District this past week in his race against Republican Nicole Ziccarelli. Senators are sworn in on Jan. 5. A majority of the Republican-controlled Senate could oppose his swearing-in. Though GOP leaders haven’t floated the idea publicly, they have cast doubt on their social media feeds regarding the state’s certification. They cite the pending legal challenge in federal court over 2,349 ballots in Allegheny County that would be enough to swing the race in Ms. Ziccarelli’s favor if removed from the count somehow.

https://www.post-gazette.com/news/politics-state/2020/12/20/jim-Brewster-Nicole-ziccarelli-pennsylvania-state-senate-race-swearing-in-GOP-opposition-courts/stories/202012180151

 

2020 was an ugly year in Harrisburg. Don’t expect 2021 to be much better.

Inquirer by Andrew Seidman and Julia Terruso, Posted: 48 minutes ago December 21, 2020

Katie Muth’s assigned seat in the Pennsylvania Senate is near several Republicans who don’t wear face masks on the chamber floor. “I call it COVID alley,” said Muth, a Montgomery County Democrat. So in October, she brought a new desk into the chamber and set it up in the corner instead. She felt safer. Muth’s forced social distancing was emblematic of a vitriolic year in Harrisburg — an environment unlikely to mellow in 2021. While most Pennsylvanians can shelter in their political bubbles while they disagree about the severity of the pandemic and the reality of Joe Biden’s election win, in Harrisburg, elected officials have clashed over those same things while sitting right next to one another or on tense Zoom calls.

https://www.inquirer.com/politics/pennsylvania/pennsylvania-legislature-harrisburg-coronavirus-election-20201221.html

 

Our country requires better civics education

Opinion by JACK ELBAUM Post Gazette DEC 20, 2020 12:00 AM

Thomas Jefferson famously said that “an educated citizenry is a vital requisite for our survival as a free people.” In other words, in order for the United States to survive as a democracy, its people must be informed. Jefferson would be rolling in his grave if he saw the state of our country today. The people are far from informed, and that is putting our country in grave danger of collapse. We live in a country where less than one-third of people can name all three branches of the federal government, where 70% do not know the Constitution is the supreme law of the land — and where 10% of college graduates believe Judge Judy is a justice of the Supreme Court. If that is not scary enough, the picture is far more concerning among young Americans. Among millennials, 70% say they would be “likely” to vote for a socialist candidate, 36% approve of communism, only 8% can identify slavery as the central cause of the Civil War and a quarter say that “choosing leaders through free elections is unimportant.”

https://www.post-gazette.com/news/insight/2020/12/20/Our-country-requires-better-civics-education/stories/202012200009

 

School administrators say they were forced to resign over conservative Facebook posts

Inquirer by Maddie Hanna, Posted: December 18, 2020

Two former administrators at Montgomery County public schools are suing their school districts, alleging that they were illegally forced out of their jobs over Facebook posts criticizing the Black Lives Matter movement and Democratic politicians. Ashley Bennett — a former special education supervisor at the North Penn School District who appeared Thursday on Tucker Carlson Tonight — and Amy Sacks, a former elementary school principal in the Perkiomen Valley School District, said the districts violated their First Amendment rights, retaliating against them for comments made on their personal Facebook pages. In Bennett’s case, she said she was forced to resign after a June 24 post that criticized Black Lives Matter, in the wake of national protests over the police killing of George Floyd. “I’m just trying to figure out WHICH black lives matter,” said the post, which someone else wrote but Bennett shared. “It can’t be the unborn black babies — they are destroyed without a second thought.” The post accused the movement of harming Black police officers, and media outlets of ignoring “black on black violence.”

https://www.inquirer.com/education/teachers-facebook-posts-black-lives-matter-ashley-bennett-amy-sacks-20201218.html

 

Superintendent: 125 Shikellamy students quarantined after positive COVID-19 tests

Sunbury Daily Item By Francis Scarcella fscarcella@dailyitem.com Dec 18, 2020

SUNBURY — A total of 125 students at the Shikellamy Middle School are quarantined after three staff members and three students tested positive for COVID-19. Superintendent Jason Bendle said the middle school will learn remotely until Jan. 4. No other district building is closed and will be open for in-person instruction on Monday.  "We are going remote at the middle school to manage the cases," Bendle said.  Chief Shikellamy Elementary also had a report of a staff member testing positive Friday, but it is the only case at the building, Bendle said. 

https://www.dailyitem.com/news/local_news/superintendent-125-shikellamy-students-quarantined-after-positive-covid-19-tests/article_5ca74f4d-3c76-5d79-8ab5-9157a05edf72.html

 

Which Centre County schools are operating remotely due to COVID-19? Here’s a running list

Centre Daily Times BY MARLEY PARISH DECEMBER 18, 2020 10:32 AM

Since reopening in August, Centre County school districts have been forced to make adjustments to instructional plans as community COVID-19 cases continue to rise and statewide mitigation efforts aim to slow virus transmission. The Centre Daily Times is keeping a running list of school closures and planned reopenings. Because area schools are not required to publicly announce confirmed cases or building closures, this list may not be comprehensive but will be updated weekly with any changes or updates to instructional plans. If a school closure is not listed, or to provide more information, please email cdtnewstips@centredaily.com.

https://www.centredaily.com/news/rebuild/article247509800.html#storylink=mainstage_card

 

More than 1,000 COVID-19 cases have been reported at Lancaster County schools. Here's where they are [update]

Lancaster Online bby ALEX GELI | Staff Writer Dec 18, 2020

More than 1,000 cases of COVID-19 have been reported at Lancaster County schools so far into the 2020-21 school year. The cases come from 16 school districts, plus a brick-and-mortar charter school in Lancaster city and the county's career and technology center. And that might not be all. With the Pennsylvania Department of Health not tracking COVID-19 cases in schools, it's up to each district to notify the community of a positive test from someone inside its schools.

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/more-than-1-000-covid-19-cases-have-been-reported-at-lancaster-county-schools-heres/article_3df9f520-f90e-11ea-a2d4-cb2cf761df4e.html

 

Editorial page mission: Less shouting. Less polarization. More civil, thoughtful discussion.

Opinion by Shane Fitzgerald Bucks County Courier Times December 20, 2020

Shane Fitzgerald is Executive Editor of the Bucks County Courier Times and The Intelligencer and is the state editor for the 14 Pennsylvania publications in the USA Today Network. 

Pennsylvania is a big, diverse state that has many common issues that affect its residents. Environmental issues. Education issues. Political issues. And the list goes on.  Our 14 news organizations in the state’s USA Today Network are committed to rethinking how to utilize our resources to cover our communities – and particularly our diverse communities – in more purposeful ways.  Beyond the hiring and coverage recalibrations, we also want to engage in more meaningful dialogue with our readers. We want less polarization. We want less shouting. We want more thought-provoking discussion on important topics.   So we are initiating a reset of our editorial/opinion pages, which will launch in our print and digital products beginning Sunday, Jan. 3. Here is our mission statement:  

https://www.buckscountycouriertimes.com/story/opinion/2020/12/20/editorial-less-polarization-more-dialogue-goal-recasting-opinion-pages/3939889001/

 

Christmas star: Saturn and Jupiter have rare encounter Monday as 'Great Conjunction' takes place in the cosmos

Scott Tady Beaver County Times December 17, 2020

You've never seen Jupiter and Saturn this close together. No one has for the last 794 years. So, the Great Conjunction on Monday, Dec. 21 is worth braving the cold for an outside peek at the cosmos. People are using the term "Christmas star," and are making Star of Bethlehem comparisons to this late-December winter solstice pairing of Jupiter and Saturn. "How close they get to each other is usually far enough apart to easily distinguish each planet with the naked eye," said Frank Marzano of the Beaver County Amateur Astronomers. "That will not be the case this year. The two will appear as one planet for almost everyone. "A very rare occurrence, which has not occurred since the year 1623," he added. "But when that occurred, both were very close to the sun so no one could notice. So go back to the year 1226 for as close a conjunction that is also able to be seen in some dark sky."

https://www.timesonline.com/story/news/local/2020/12/17/saturn-and-jupiter-have-rare-encounter-monday-great-conjunction-occurs/6543284002/

 

What you need to know about this year’s winter solstice and the great conjunction | Opinion

By William Teets  Capital-Star Op-Ed Contributor December 21, 2020

(Editor’s note: Dr. William Teets is the director of Vanderbilt University’s Dyer Observatory. In this interview, he explains what does and doesn’t happen during the winter solstice on Dec. 21. Another cosmic phenomenon is also going to occur on the same day called “the great conjunction,” where Saturn and Jupiter, both of which can be seen with the naked eye, will appear extremely close to one another.)

https://www.penncapital-star.com/commentary/what-you-need-to-know-about-this-years-winter-solstice-and-the-great-conjunction-opinion/

 

 

Adopt the 2020 PSBA resolution for charter school funding reform

In this legislative session, PSBA has been leading the charge with the Senate, House of Representatives and the Governor’s Administration to push for positive charter reform. We’re now asking you to join the campaign: Adopt the resolution: We’re asking all school boards to adopt the 2020 resolution for charter school funding reform at your next board meeting and submit it to your legislators and to PSBA.

Resolution for charter funding reform (pdf)

Link to submit your adopted resolution to PSBA

 

336 PA school boards have adopted charter reform resolutions

Charter school funding reform continues to be a concern as over 330 school boards across the state have adopted a resolution calling for legislators to enact significant reforms to the Charter School Law to provide funding relief and ensure all schools are held to the same quality and ethics standards. Now more than ever, there is a growing momentum from school officials across the state to call for charter school funding reform. Legislators are hearing loud and clear that school districts need relief from the unfair funding system that results in school districts overpaying millions of dollars to charter schools.

The school boards from the following districts have adopted resolutions calling for charter funding reform. 

https://www.psba.org/2020/03/adopted-charter-reform-resolutions/

 

Know Your Facts on Funding and Charter Performance. Then Call for Charter Change!

PSBA Charter Change Website:

https://www.pacharterchange.org/

 

The Network for Public Education Action Conference has been rescheduled to April 24-25, 2021 at the Philadelphia Doubletree Hotel

 

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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