Sign up for our newsletter

Test score increases in D.C. are ‘very good news’

Proficiency tops 51% in math and reading

by Meredith Somers
Washington Times
July 30, 2013

Standardized test scores for D.C. public and charter schools are the highest they have been in six years, an accomplishment officials on Tuesday said should be applauded but also serve as motivation to continue to raise the bar.

The D.C. office of the state superintendent of education released the 2013 Comprehensive Assessment System scores, showing that 48.4 percent of public school students were proficient in math and reading while 55.8 percent of charter school students were at a proficiency level.

“This is a day for all of us to be proud of the direction we’ve taken in the city,” said Deputy Mayor for Education Abigail Smith, addressing a crowded auditorium at Kelly Miller Middle School in Northeast. “But we haven’t arrived. We are not where we need to be and none of us would suggest that we are.”

Results from the comprehensive testing show 51.3 percent of all students in the District are performing at proficient levels, a 4 percent rise from 2012 and a 17.8 percent rise since 2007. Math proficiency levels increased 3.9 percent to 53.0 percent, while reading scores rose 4.1 percent to a 49.5 percent proficiency level. In 2007, scores for both math and reading were below 37 percent proficiency.

“Statewide proficiency is far too low,” D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray said. “This isn’t an easy path. It’s hard work every day. These results come at a turning point for education in the city.”

The District adopted the Common Core State Standards Initiative in 2010 and is in the midst of a five-year effort which includes an emphasis on reading and math. Forty-five states, the District and several U.S. territories use the Common Core standards as a way to measure education, although a number of states in recent months have expressed doubts about the curriculum.

There is no national assessment to compare the District’s Common Core standards to those of other states, but the National Assessment of Educational Progress report card provides a general view of where the District’s fourth- and eighth-grade students compare to comparable cities.

Information provided by the Council of the Great City Schools showed that from 2007 to 2011, the District saw a 9 percent and 7 percent increase in math proficiency for its fourth- and eighth-graders, respectively. Baltimore saw a 4 percent rise in its fourth-grade math scores, and a 3 percent bump for its eighth-grade math scores. Boston reported a 6 percent increase at the fourth-grade level for its math tests and a 7 percent increase for eighth-graders.

The District test results also showed between 4 percent and 5 percent improvements in math scores for economically disadvantaged groups, English language learners and special-education students. Reading proficiency for those same groups improved roughly 3 percent to 5 percent.

“There is no way to deny that the announcement today is indeed very good news,” said Michael Casserly, executive director of the Council of the Great City Schools. “Their gains are substantial and sharp in both reading and mathematics. The work that they have done to improve reading and literacy is clearly paying off. I think that’s the bottom line: Results like this do not happen by accident.”

The overall goal of the District is to have 75 percent proficiency in reading and math, and 5 percent overall growth each year.

“Education really is an endurance sport,” said Maria Ferguson, executive director of the Center for Education Policy. “Most people have an unrealistic timeline of how education happens.”

This year’s testing window was April 22 to May 3, and school officials said that of the 80,231 students enrolled in the District’s public and charter schools, 32,838 students — or 41 percent — took the test. Of those students, about 20,000 of them are in traditional public schools.

Students from third grade to 10th grade were tested, and results showed that every grade improved its math and reading scores from last year, except for seventh-grade math scores, which dropped by less than half of 1 percent.

“We still have a long way to go, but I’m excited about what’s ahead,” D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson said.

Tuesday’s announcement was optimistic, a far cry from the past two years, which were marred by a cheating scandal.

A USA Today report found that several teachers helped students choose the right answers or flouted security protocols in April 2011. The inspector general’s office ruled that the issue was not widespread, but at least one teacher was fired and the District was strongly encouraged to adopt new standards of security for test booklets and testing areas.

Daily Headlines for August 2, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Florida Education Chief Resigns Amid Indiana Controversy
Wall Street Journal, August 2, 2013
Florida Education Commissioner Tony Bennett abruptly resigned Thursday amid a school-grading controversy tied to his tenure as Indiana’s top education chief, dealing a blow to Gov. Rick Scott’s efforts to transform Florida’s public schools.

Florida education chief Tony Bennett resigns over how a C became an A
Christian Science Monitor, August 1, 2013
Tony Bennett stepped down after reports that, while directing Indiana schools, he upped the grade of a charter school reportedly run by a major GOP donor. It’s a blow to attempts to grade schools.

Florida’s Education Chief Quits Amid Report That He Changed a School’s Rating
New York Times, August 2, 2013
Florida’s commissioner of education, a rising star in a national movement pushing for test-based accountability in public schools, resigned on Thursday after just seven months in office, after news reports surfaced that he had changed the grade of an Indiana charter school founded by a prominent campaign donor while he was the superintendent of schools there.

Jeb’s Education Racket
National Review Online, August 2, 2013
The resignation of Florida education commissioner Tony Bennett couldn’t have come at a better time. His disgraceful grade-fixing scandal is the perfect symbol of all that’s wrong with the federal education schemes peddled by Bennett and his mentor, former GOP governor Jeb Bush: phony academic standards, crony contracts, and big-government and big-business collusion masquerading as “reform.”

Are Charter Schools Public Schools?
Opinion
City Watch, August 2, 2013
It depends on what you mean by “public”.
The term doesn’t seem to have a well-nailed-down meaning. As befits an emotionally-freighted term, there are many components of its definition. Where you happen to invest your personal priorities, governs how this word — which is essentially an avatar, a placeholder for a whole host of ideas and representations — is defined.

FROM THE STATES

ARIZONA

4 Tucson-area schools earn enough D’s for ‘failing’ label
Arizona Daily Star, August 2, 2013
Four Tucson-area schools received their third successive D grades and are in danger of being labeled failing.

COLORADO

Colo. begins controversial teacher-grading system
Denver Post, August 1, 2013
Colorado adopted a statewide teacher-grading system three years ago, a rating that sorts educators from “highly effective” to “ineffective.” Teachers with too many consecutive low ratings could lose tenure, while new teachers and those on probationary status will need passing marks before achieving tenure, or non-probationary status.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Escaping the flaws of public schools
Letter
Washington Post, August 1, 2013
The Post’s July 29 front-page article “Of school choice and accountability,” on Virginia’s law allowing a religious exemption from public schooling, missed a fundamental aspect of the debate. The options for policymakers are not limited to allowing or preventing religious exemptions but rather include doing away with public school altogether.

FLORIDA

Turnover may make Florida’s education chief job a tough sell
Miami Herald, August 1, 2013
Despite its national reputation in school reform circles, Florida hasn’t found it easy to attract — or keep — a leader since Gov. Rick Scott took office. Three commissioners and two interim commissioners have gone through the state Department of Education in Scott’s 31 months.

Parents cheer as Florida schools chief resigns
Sun Sentinel, August 2, 2013
Parents and education activists across South Florida hailed the departure of Florida’s Education Commissioner Tony Bennett, saying they strongly disagreed with his emphasis on high-stakes testing and data driven reforms.

Rowlett, two other schools apply for charter status
Bradenton Herald, August 2, 2013
Manatee County could have three new charter schools by the 2014-15 school year. The school district received applications from Rowlett Elementary, iGeneration Empowerment Academy and the Manatee Y Technological High School by Thursday’s deadline. The school board has 60 days to review the applications and vote on whether to accept the charters.

IDAHO

Idaho schools improve in Star Rating
Idaho Press Tribune, ID
August 2, 2013
More than half of Idaho’s schools were rated as “top-performing” schools by the state’s Five-Star Rating System.

ILLINOIS

Parents rail at CPS cuts
Chicago Tribune, August 2, 2013
Parents and education advocates voiced anger and frustration over spending cuts affecting their children’s schools during one of two public hearings Thursday on the Chicago Public Schools’ $5.58 billion budget.

D-300 charter school clarifies fees after state intervenes
Northwest Herald, August 1, 2013
Officials from a District 300 charter school will remove language from an enrollment form that asked parents to pay corporate membership fees, after a state agency received complaints that the fees were mandatory.

INDIANA

Break given to Christel House could have spared two IPS schools from state takeover
Indianapolis Star, August 1, 2013
Two Indianapolis Public Schools might never have been taken over by the state if then-Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett had offered the district the same flexibility he granted a year later to the Christel House Academy charter school.

KANSAS

Georgia lawmaker urges Kansans to seek more school choice
The Wichita Eagle, August 1, 2013
Warning supporters that they would be “fighting a Goliath” if they push for charter schools or similar measures, a Georgia lawmaker urged people at a former Wichita elementary school Thursday to press ahead for legislation that would enable and encourage more school choice.

LOUISIANA

12 EBR schools improve performance
The Advocate, August 2, 2013
Twelve Baton Rouge public schools learned Thursday they have earned passing grades and no longer have Fs under Louisiana’s letter grade-based school accountability system.

There should be a Plan B
Editorial
Monroe News Star, August 2, 2013
We have high hopes that Excellence Academy will provide great opportunities for the students it enrolls.

$2 million coming for charter, low-performing schools in Jefferson Parish, New Orleans
Times-Picayune, August 1, 2013
The state is granting about $2 million to open new charter schools and improve low-performing conventional schools in Jefferson Parish and New Orleans, the Department of Education said Thursday. The money comes from a $5.8 million pool that the department is distributing to to 21 educators and organizations around Louisiana.

MAINE

Maine charter school helps turn a life around
Portland Press Herald, August 2, 2013
Among the 10 students in Friday’s first group of graduates is a young Maine man who had struggled at a traditional school.

Bowen defends Maine school grading system in wake of Florida colleague’s ouster
Bangor Daily News, August 2, 2013
The resignation in Florida of a close ally of Maine Education Commissioner Stephen Bowen and Gov. Paul LePage has prompted a new round of criticism of some of the administration’s initiatives, including a controversial A-through-F grading system for Maine’s public schools.

MASSACHUSETTS

Hundreds help reinvent Dorchester school
Boston Globe, August 2, 2013
Drew Gallagher said he was so excited to start at UP Academy Charter School of Dorchester that he could not fall asleep Wednesday night because of “the first-day jitters.”

MISSOURI

School transfer deadline leaves families waiting
St. Louis Post Dispatch, August 2, 2013
A deadline for participating in an unprecedented student transfer effort came and went Thursday, but not without leaving some parents in tears outside a Riverview Gardens School District community center.

NEW JERSEY

New look for old home in Clifton
Clifton Journal, August 2, 2013
One of North Jersey’s first charter schools, located in one of Clifton’s oldest buildings, will finally receive some much-needed renovations and updates to its worn down edifice.

Cory Booker Accused of Mismanaging $100 Million Zuckerberg School Donation
US News & World Report Blog, August 1, 2013
Newark Mayor and U.S. Senate candidate Cory Booker is accused of mismanaging a large grant to his New Jersey city’s school system in an ad released Thursday by a conservative political group. The charge is vigorously denied by Booker’s staff.

NEW YORK

More than 2,200 seek Buffalo school transfers
Wall Street Journal, August 2, 2013
The Buffalo School District says more than 2,200 students have asked to be transferred from low-performing schools for the fall.

NORTH CAROLINA

McCrory proposes stipends for master teachers, calls for reduction in testing
New & Observer, August 1, 2013
CHAPEL HILL Gov. Pat McCrory outlined his plans for education Thursday, including a proposed $30 million innovation fund that would reward 1,000 top teachers with $10,000 stipends.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma state schools superintendent challenger outraises incumbent
The Oklahoman, August 2,2 013
Joy Hofmeister, a Republican from Tulsa, reports raising $166,056 since late April. State schools Superintendent Janet Barresi reports raising $101,100 during the past quarter. That amount includes a $100,000 loan the GOP incumbent gave to her campaign.

PENNSYLVANIA

Appeals panel backs Coatesville in closing charter
Philadelphia Inquirer, August 2, 2013
The state Charter Appeals Board has upheld the Coatesville Area School District’s decision to close Graystone Academy – a 200-student charter school that has had an acrimonious relationship with the district.

Pocono Mountain Charter School students, teachers in limbo
Pocono Record, August 2, 2013
Pocono Mountain Charter School teachers were devastated by news that the embattled school could be shutting its doors, but remained hopeful at a staff meeting Thursday afternoon.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Superintendent’s remarks about S.C. school’s grades draw ire
The State, August 2, 2013
State superintendent of education Mick Zais says parents should get their children out of failing schools or get involved to make them better.

TENNESSEE

Kids should not be ‘monetized’
Letter
The Tennessean, August 2, 2013
After leading a recent “talk” about charter schools here in Nashville, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul enthused that, “As I listen to this conversation, you don’t really hear any downsides about charter schools. It seems to be all good.”

TEXAS

Dallas ISD seeks PR help with duties including selling new teacher pay-for-performance system
Dallas Morning News, August 2, 2013
The district recently opened a request for proposals for a communications consultant. It wants someone to help Superintendent Mike Miles and other administrators sell the upcoming and probably controversial teacher pay-for-performance system, manage crisis communication and develop a strategic communications plan.

ONLINE LEARNING

District hires digital learning chief
Greenwich Times, August 1, 2013
The Greenwich school district has hired Phillip Dunn, most recently the Stamford public school system’s chief information officer, as its first director of digital learning and technology — a move crucial to implementation of its new Digital Learning Plan.

Virtual, summer school graduates succeed despite struggles
Frederick News Post, August 2, 2013
The final graduates in the Class of 2013 celebrated their accomplishments Thursday at a commencement ceremony for Frederick County Public Schools’ virtual and summer programs.

College Park Academy’s first principal has blazed academic trails in Hawaii
Washington Post, August 1, 2013
The public charter school will begin its academic year Aug. 19. Ortiz-Brewster said the academy will have a rigorous curriculum, using on-site teachers as well as customized online courses. It also will have a Web portal, an online site that will promote collaboration among students, parents and faculty.

Online options for students
Times Daily, August 1, 2013
When school starts back in a couple of weeks, 100 Florence High School students will be the district’s first Florence Virtual School participants.

Summer school is still about learning, catching up
Bremerton Patriot, August 1, 2013
The online option allowed high school students to work ahead for more credits toward graduation. Students who want to take a class that isn’t normally available during the school year can do so for $160 throughout the summer. Students taking online classes had live one-on-one instruction 24 hours a day.

Online education doesn’t work for every student
Editorial
Daily Bulletin, August 1, 2013
Online education is a nominally good idea that is fast proving itself as problematic as … well, most other supposed revolutions in pedagogy.

Daily Headlines for August 1, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

New charter school opens at New Millennium site in Fresno
Fresno Bee, July 31, 2013
Just months after New Millennium Institute of Education was denied its charter renewal by both Fresno Unified School District trustees and county officials, a new education program called Charter Academy is moving into the old school’s building.

West Contra Costa teachers union head opposes charter school proposal
Contra Costa Times, July 31, 2013
The head of the West Contra Costa school district’s teachers union announced her opposition to a proposed campus of Silicon Valley-based Summit Public Schools at the district’s board meeting July 24.

Vouchers: My personal case
Manteca Bulletin, August 1, 2013
Each morning, she explained, a school bus would pick up the APEX students — by definition a group of supposedly “high-level, college-bound kids” — and bus them to their chosen school. We would attend two classes each morning at the APEX school, after which we would be bused back to Crenshaw.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

The Chosen Charter
Washington City Paper, August 1, 2013
At Sela Public Charter School, the newest idea in D.C. education—Hebrew—is three millennia old.

FLORIDA

A is for ABC: Charter school bucks state trend
Apalachicola Times, July 31, 2013
The Apalachicola Bay Charter School swam against the statewide current last week, as it posted its second consecutive A grade, and fourth in the last five years.

Lake Wales High School May Have Waiting List for Locals
The Ledger, July 31, 2013
Lake Wales High School may have to put some local students on a waiting list.

Flagler schools plan radio ads to reach families
Daytona Beach News-Journal, August 1, 2013
An increasingly competitive market is one reason school leaders are sharpening their pitch for potential customers.

Democrats Won’t Hear Tony Bennett’s Grade-Change Explanation, Call for Resignation
Sunshine State News, August 1, 2013
Despite Tony Bennett’s explanation and flat denial of wrongdoing, Democrats have jumped on an opportunity to bash the commissioner of education in the wake of recent reports of a grade change which took a GOP donor-created school from a “C” to an “A.”

Bennett’s troubling test score
Tampa Tribune, August 1, 2013
Democrats and teachers’ unions are gleeful about the revelation that Florida Education Commissioner Tony Bennett, while overseeing schools in Indiana, changed the grade of a charter school owned by a political supporter.

GEORGIA

$10M in limbo over teacher pay based on merit
Gainesville Times, August 1, 2013
Georgia could lose out on $9.9 million in Race to the Top grant money if it doesn’t implement merit-based pay for teachers by September 2015.

ILLINOIS

Hits to classroom exceed CPS estimates
Chicago Tribune, July 31, 2013
When Chicago Public Schools released its preliminary budget last week, district officials said funding to classrooms would be cut by $68 million.

State: Pingree Grove charter school must clarify fees
Chicago Daily Herald, July 31, 2013
State officials have told Pingree Grove charter school leaders to make clear the membership fees they outline in an agreement with parents are voluntary. If the fees were mandatory — like some parents have been led to believe — Cambridge Lakes Charter School would be violating state law.

Judge denies request to keep 10 Chicago schools open
Chicago Sun Times, July 31, 2013
Another legal hurdle to closing a historic number of schools fell Wednesday as a Cook County judge denied a request by parents to keep open 10 of the 50 shuttered Chicago public elementary schools.

INDIANA

Pence lends support for student evaluation tests
Journal Gazette, August 1, 2013
Gov. Mike Pence talked about doing things “the Indiana way” during his first town-hall meeting as the state’s chief executive.

LOUISIANA

Lafayette parents tout online tool
The Advocate, August 1, 2013
Parents have a little extra help staying abreast of the latest Lafayette Parish School Board issues and what’s happening in the district: other parents.

$3 million gift will aid New Orleans teaching ranks
The Advocate, August 1, 2013
Teach for America, which trains high-achieving college graduates to enter troubled public school classrooms, is getting a $3 million donation to add 510 teachers in the New Orleans area, officials announced Wednesday.

OHIO

Ohio legislators try to repeal Common Core school standards
Columbus Dispatch, August 1, 2013
Just weeks before Ohio children return to school, conservative lawmakers introduced a last-minute bill yesterday to block new and more-rigorous curriculum guidelines championed by governors and education leaders.

OKLAHOMA

Common core big picture becoming fuzzier as implementation nears
The Oklahoman, August 1, 2013
The closer Oklahoma and other states inch toward fully implementing the full vision of common core academic standards for public schools, the less clear the big picture becomes.

NEBRASKA

Charter School with Autism Focus Closer to Reality
KAALTV, July 31, 2013
It’s an idea that came from the parents of students with autism, a school specialized to meet the needs of their children. It’s called Rochester Beacon Academy, and it’s one step closer to becoming a reality. The group has already formed an 88 page charter and it’s been approved by their authorizer.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter school reports progress
Salem News, August 1, 2013
After a bumpy start, the Salem Community Charter School, a public school for high school dropouts, is making steady progress, charter school officials said last night.

Lift the cap on charter schools
Bay State Banner, July 31, 2013
School bells will soon be ringing and parents will once again be concerned with the quality of education for their children. This is not a problem for the affluent, who can afford the expense of private schools, but for others the choice is limited.

MICHIGAN

Warren school district tries out year-round program
Detroit News, August 1, 2013
The fourth-grader is participating in a new year-round school program being implemented at three elementary schools in the Warren Consolidated Schools District. The district is the first in Macomb County to convert public schools to year-round classes.

MINNESOTA

Minnesota School of Science loses in court: Out of Cityview
Twin City Daily Planet, July 31, 2013
A Hennepin County Court today upheld Minneapolis Public Schools’ decision to evict Minnesota School of Science (MSS), denying the charter school a restraining order that would have allowed it to continue operating out of the North Minneapolis Cityview building.

MISSOURI

In Missouri, Race Complicates a Transfer to Better Schools
New York Times, August 1, 2013
When the Missouri Supreme Court upheld a law in June allowing students from failing school districts to transfer to good ones, Harriett Gladney saw a path to a better education for her 9-year-old daughter.

Heed lessons from the Gordon Parks case
Kansas City Star, July 31, 2013
The troubled saga of Gordon Parks Elementary, a small charter school in Kansas City, holds big lessons for improving public education.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Haley: Fixing schools means ‘tough conversation’ about rural-wealthy inequity
The State, July 31, 2013
Gov. Nikki Haley met privately with about a dozen business and legislative leaders Wednesday to discuss her forthcoming education reform proposal.

TENNESSEE

Common Core critics call for timeout on tougher standards
The Tennessean, August 1, 2013
As the one-year countdown to Common Core state education standards begins today with the first day of school for many systems, Tennessee educators are fending off pleas to stop the clock for a timeout.

VIRGINA

Middle school leaders diagnose education problems
Richmond Times-Dispatch, August 1, 2013
A summit held Wednesday sought to unite area middle school leaders in their efforts to improve early adolescent education.

WISCONSIN

Nearly 50 private schools seek to join Wisconsin’s voucher program
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, July 31, 2013
From Rhinelander to Green Bay to Beloit, almost 50 private and religious schools and school systems have registered to join a new statewide voucher program that would allow them to educate students on taxpayer dollars this fall.

ONLINE LEARNING

One computer plus one student equals FG schools’ new program
Muskogee Phoenix, August 1, 2013
Fort Gibson Public Schools is launching its One-to-One digital device program this year. Under the program, each student — from pre-kindergarten through 12th grade — will have access to a computer, either a student’s personal laptop or tablet or one from the district that the student can check out.

District will provide iPads for all K-8 students
KUSA-TV, July 31, 2013
We have all heard of stories of entire schools providing iPads for students to use in class. But, Englewood Public Schools has a bigger idea to give every student in every classroom in every school a digital edge.

Callie Wendell: The DC Experience

After living and breathing in Washington D.C. for the past two months, I have come to my final week in this great city. This week has been a very sweet and sour week for me. As much as I am ready to go home and see friends and family again I am going to miss Washington D.C. and all of the things I have learned here. There have been probably three major aspects of growth while in the city. First, my work with CER along with my interactions with TFAS (The Fund for American Studies) has helped fully shape my beliefs in politics. Everything I have heard and learned I have questioned and analyzed; as a result, I have been able to gain a fuller understanding of the policy realm along with some specific polices such as education policy and what my beliefs are regarding both.

The second aspect of growth I attained while in D.C. was the ability to survive in the real world. Before coming to D.C. I never had to buy groceries and make meals because I still live on a college campus back home. CER was my first full time job/ internship. Often times in the beginning of the summer I questioned whether or not I could survive this real world experience. In the end, I not only survived it, but learned that it isn’t as bad and scary as I thought it would be. CER provided me with a nice transition to the real world. The working environment was fantastic and I was able to work with a great group of people who understood that this was a completely new experience for me.

Probably the biggest impact this summer has had on me was how these experiences have shaped what I want to do after college and my personal and professional growth in that area. I came into college as a History and Citizenship Education major and over the past three years that has grown to me graduating next spring with a B.A. in History, a B.A. in Political Science and a certification to teach Citizenship Education. With more degrees come more options, which, for me, meant I questioned what I wanted to do with after college because I now had so many options. After my experience in D.C. and specifically with CER I have learned that I am a hands-on person who enjoys interacting with people and educating. That does not necessarily mean teaching in the traditional manner but educating people about policy or about important issues. CER opened my eyes to the variety of ways you can educate people. One of the major ways CER does this is through the Media BullPen. Although I have loved working with this sector of CER and fully support what they are doing, I have learned that I am more the type of person who wants to be involved directly with a group of people and tell them important information.

Although this doesn’t necessarily give me a specific career goal it does help me narrow down my options. My passion for education and education policy has only grown at CER. I now know with certainty that education is my passion. Overall my experience in our nation’s capital has helped me grow professionally and personally and I could not be more grateful for all the opportunities I have been provided with here.

Charter School Primer

Charters 101: A quick guide from CER on understanding charter schools.

Download or print your PDF copy of Charter School Primer

 

Daily Headlines for July 31, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Alternatives to Teach for America
Twin City Daily Planet, July 31, 2013
Teach for America, a nonprofit that recruits teachers from elite colleges to spend two years teaching in under-resourced schools, has come under increasing scrutiny in recent months. Supporters claim that bringing the “best and brightest” into inner city schools is a way of increasing teacher quality.

Back to the blackboard
Editorial, Chicago Tribune, July 31, 2013
Even if you don’t follow education policy, you know these four words: No Child Left Behind. That’s the landmark 2002 law pushed by President George W. Bush to bring all students up to federal reading and math standards by 2014.

School districts invited to apply for Race to the Top funds
Los Angeles Times, July 30, 2013
The U.S. Department of Education on Tuesday invited districts nationwide to begin applying for the latest batch of high-profile federal school-reform grants.

Teachers union touts skewed public school survey
One News Now, July 31, 2013
It’s all about phrasing the question. At its recent annual meeting, the American Federation of Teachers unveiled a poll showing most respondents oppose school choice. But that contradicts most other polls on the subject.

Cynthia Tucker: It’s time for a longer year
Opinion, Philadelphia Inquirer, July 2013
The design of the school year is left over from a bygone era, when children were expected to help with the tasks of maintaining home, hearth, and farm. Summer is a time for harvesting the spring yield and planting the fall crops, and children used to help with the plowing, the planting, and the picking.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

$20-million Walton donation will boost Teach for America in L.A.
Los Angeles Times, July 31, 2013
The Arkansas-based Walton Family Foundation announced Wednesday that it is donating $20 million to a nonprofit that recruits talented college graduates to teach in public schools for two years. The largest number of instructors, more than 700, is slated for Los Angeles.

Adelanto school at center of parent trigger controversy
Los Angeles Times, July 31, 2013
Parents used the state law to transform a public elementary school into a charter campus, Desert Trails Preparatory Academy. By June, the director says, students should be a year ahead of their peers.

DELAWARE


Conservative groups bemoan lack of local education oversight

The News Journal, July 31, 2013
A growing national debate over the use of Common Core State Standards in schools was on display Tuesday night during a panel discussion by conservative activists who said the standards are taking decisions about education out of the hands of parents and local school boards.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DC CAS Test Scores Turn Failing School Around
WUSA9, July 30, 2013
The school test culture changed in the District. In one school, the standardized test highlights a complete transformation.

Test score increases in D.C. are ‘very good news’
Washington Times, July 2013
Standardized test scores for D.C. public and charter schools are the highest they have been in six years, an accomplishment officials on Tuesday said should be applauded but also serve as motivation to continue to raise the bar.

The District’s public education is on a healthy trajectory
Washington Post, July 30, 2013
THE ANNOUNCEMENT of historic achievement levels by D.C. public school students on annual math and reading tests was accompanied by reams of numbers, bar charts and graphs. But the best encapsulation of the accomplishment was the fist-pump-punctuated “Yes!” from D.C. Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D).

FLORIDA

Bennett defends change of grade
Florida Today, July 31, 2013
Florida Education Commissioner Tony Bennett defended himself Tuesday after reports that school grades in Indiana, where he previously worked, had been changed to benefit a political donor.

Gov. Scott silent regarding future of his education commissioner
Miami Herald, July 31, 2013
Nationally celebrated education reformer Tony Bennett was wooed to Florida in January to bring stability to the state education department.

Once-failing charter school turns around
Palm Coast Observer, July 31, 2013
A once-failing charter school has turned itself around, an analysis shows.

GEORGIA

$9.9 million in Race to the Top grant in jeopardy
WLTZ, July 30, 2013
U.S. Department of Education officials are warning that $9.9 million of Georgia’s Race to the Top grand funding is in jeopardy.

Peach BOE denies charter school petition
Macon Telegraph, July 30, 2013
The Peach County Board of Education denied Tuesday a petition to open a charter school in Byron. Now, the charter school members will await a vote from the state Board of Education, which can override the local school board and approve the charter high school.

INDIANA

Former schools’ chief gets an F for the effort
Editorial, Evansville Courier & Press, July 31, 2013
At one time or another in our academic careers, most of us wish we could have changed a grade.
But, whether it was for pride (feeling we unfairly were penalized) or angst (avoiding parental response to a bad report card), it never happened.


Making (up) the grade

Editorial, Journal Gazette, July 31, 2013
After Democrat Glenda Ritz defeated incumbent State Superintendent Tony Bennett last November, Gov. Mitch Daniels lashed out at public school teachers.

ILLINOIS

CPS starving its schools to justify privatization
Opinion, Chicago Sun Times, July 30, 2013
On Wednesday July 24, I was physically removed from a Chicago Board of Education meeting after I waited four hours to speak for two minutes. I timed it at two minutes and five seconds, but I was not allowed to finish. While board member Henry Bienen nodded off, I tried to say what I had to say:

LOUISIANA

Two Algiers schools see enrollment above projections
The Lens, July 31, 2013
The board of InspireNOLA approved a $1.5 billion budget for the 2013-2014 academic year, allocating $6.3 million for Alice M. Harte Charter School and $8.9 million for Edna Karr High School during the charter organization’s first year managing the schools under Orleans Parish School Board oversight.

MAINE

New Maine charter school forms have ‘substantive’ changes
Portland Press Herald, July 31, 2013
The next round of applications to open a charter school in Maine will be due Dec. 2. The Charter School Commission voted Tuesday to approve the deadline, the final language for applications for both regular charter schools and virtual charter schools, and a new scoring system for evaluating applications.

MARYLAND

Don’t link teacher pay with test scores
Baltimore Sun, July 30, 2013
Speaking as a retired educator with 35 years of service, I wish to say it was most disheartening to read the education article, “Amid test score drop, Lowery focuses on ushering in reforms” (July 26).

MINNESOTA

Kline’s education bill a throwback to the BAD old times
Twin City Daily Planet Blog, July 30, 2013
Federal involvement in educational policy began in 1965, under President Johnson, with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA). PBS, in 2005, published a good historical snapshot of the federal government’s involvement in national education policy up to that time:

MISSISSIPPI

Bill pre-filed to end education nonprofit
Decatur Daily, July 31, 2013
An Alabama lawmaker said he aims to shut down a little-known education foundation that may have brought in less money than the state’s school system spent running it.

MISSOURI


News Leader, July 30, 2013
Given the chance to offer input, education officials from Christian County and the surrounding area told their state representatives not to override the veto of a tax cut bill that the Missouri General Assembly approved this spring.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Cold shoulder for charter school in Easthampton
The Gazette, July 31, 2013
For nearly all of the 18 years the Hilltown Cooperative Charter Public School has been around, school leaders have been on the hunt for more suitable quarters.

NEW YORK

Partnership for Student Advocacy aims to help students at closing Christopher Columbus High School
New York Daily News, July 31, 2013
Group is already providing SAT test prep courses; seeks to raise $10,000 to help cover cost of test fees, college visits.

NORTH CAROLINA

Without pay bumb, teachers getting masters’ worry about debt
WRAL, July 30, 2013
The state budget signed by Gov. Pat McCrory last week eliminates salary increases for teachers who get advanced degrees, which means teachers currently enrolled in master’s programs won’t get the benefit.

OHIO

Overdue homework
Columbus Dispatch, July 31, 2013
Ohio’s effort to adopt a better system of high-school exit tests is jammed up in confusion and controversy. The blame for that can be placed with any number of parties, but what’s needed right now to move the effort forward is a simple legislative fix to the launch date for the new tests.

PENNSYLVANIA

Right decision on charter school
Editorial, Pocono Record, July 31, 2013
A state appeals board has sensibly revoked the charter of the controversial Pocono Mountain Charter School. Charter officials say they will seek a stay in order to appeal the ruling. But the appeals board’s unanimous, 6-0 decision confirms the host school district’s and this newspaper’s long-held view that the charter school’s financial operations were improperly entangled with its sponsoring organization and landlord, the Shawnee Tabernacle Church.

State board revokes Pocono Mountain Charter School’s charter
Pocono Record, July 31, 2013
A state appeals board Tuesday voted unanimously to revoke the charter for the Pocono Mountain Charter School. The ruling caps what has been a years-long, expensive fight between the school and Pocono Mountain School District that centered on the charter school’s leadership, financial affairs and church sponsorship.

WISCONSIN

Vouchers draw strong interest
Beloit Daily News, July 30, 2013
Wisconsin parents interested in their child attending a private school using a voucher must apply through the Department of Instruction between Thursday, Aug. 1 and Friday, Aug. 9.

Vouchers pay for private school cast offs
Superior Telegram, July 30, 2013
Gov. Scott Walker suggests he won’t pursue expansion of the private school voucher program in future years unless it proves to be successful.

WYOMING

Laramie charter school gets building money
Billings Gazette, July 30, 2013
The state Building Commission voted Tuesday to spend up to $4 million to purchase a building in Laramie for a charter school despite strong opposition from state Superintendent of Public Instruction Cindy Hill.

WASHINGTON

6 compete for 2 open seats on Seattle’s School Board
Seattle Times, July 30, 2013
In the two contested races for Seattle School Board, the candidates include a writer and activist, a government-relations and public-affairs consultant, an educational consultant, a tutor, an unemployed parent and a fundraiser.

ONLINE LEARNING

Boulder Valley’s online learning director accused of stealing $6,000 from district
Daily Camera, July 30, 2013
Boulder Valley’s online learning director was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of theft for allegedly using nearly $6,000 in school district money to fund his own online learning start-up company.

Oakwood High School may go digital
Marietta Daily Journal, July 31, 2013
The Cobb School District is exploring formal conversion of Oakwood High School from an alternative education school to a support program called the Oakwood Digital Academy.

Daily Headlines for July 30, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Rand Paul wants more school choice for poor, minority students
Washington Post, July 29, 2013
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) wants children — especially minority and poor children — to have more choices in education.

Senators’ fact-finding mission on charter schools zeroes in on pros not cons
Nashville City Paper, July 29, 2013
U.S. Sens. Lamar Alexander and Rand Paul’s fact-finding mission to Nashville to learn about the progress of Tennessee charters focused on the pros of the school movement and left out some of the cons.

Charter schools are rebuilding the walls of segregation
Opinion
Patriot News, July 30, 2013
Charter schools are seen by many parents, policymakers and educators as the panacea in public education. Each year, these campuses are increasing in number nationwide.

Common Core supporters say defections are no big deal
Washington Post, July 29, 2013
As lawmakers in Florida and Michigan debate whether to pull out from the new Common Core academic standards, states that have been writing the standards and related exams downplayed the defections as no big deal.

Turning public schools into forts
Commentary
Washington Times, July 29, 2013
Even so, promises of profit, safety and efficiency aside, it doesn’t bode well for our nation’s youth, who are being raised in quasi-prisonlike school environments, where they are treated as if they have no rights and are taught even less about the Constitution.

Hold states accountable on schools
Opinion
Politico, July 29, 2013
While I respect Thomas B. Fordham Institute President Chester Finn and Executive Vice President Michael Petrilli for their decades of work in education reform, in their recent article, “Education Reform a Test for GOP,” they grade the Republican Party on an overly generous curve. In neglecting the crucial role of the federal government as a disruptive force for school improvement, the authors aren’t just reciting conservative talking points – they’re ignoring extensive evidence to the contrary.

FROM THE STATES

ARIZONA

In Arizona, testing costs jump 50 percent under Common Core
Daily Caller, July 30, 2013
The standardized tests required under Common Core, the new federal education guidelines, will increase the state of Arizona’s test-related costs by 50 percent, according to a new report.

CALIFORNIA

Parent-trigger school in High Desert opens its doors
San Bernardino Sun, July 29, 2013
Two weeks ago, Desert Trails was a public elementary school “” Desert Trails Elementary School, as the sign outside still reads. But on Monday, when the school reopened as a charter school, it was more than just the first day of the 2013-14 school year: It was an historic moment; the first time California’s 2010 parent-trigger law has been successfully used to change the direction of a failing public school.

L.A. County literacy initiative reaches juvenile offenders
Los Angeles Times, July 30, 2013
The feel-good assembly was Los Angeles County’s latest initiative to improve the literacy skills of its juvenile offenders — in this case, teenagers convicted of robbery, assault, rape and other crimes who are serving time at Camp Afflerbaugh probation camp.

COLORADO

Charter group recognizes school district
Our Colorado News, July 29, 2013
The Colorado League of Charter Schools recently recognized the Douglas County School District for its support of charter schools, awarding it the organization’s Pioneer Award.

CONNECTICUT

School district to consider possibility of new magnet programs
CT Post, July 29, 2013
School officials will present at Tuesday’s Board of Education meeting a preliminary proposal to open new magnet programs at Parkway School and North Street School to address the racial imbalance and building capacity issues facing the town’s 11 elementary schools.

IDAHO

Terry Ryan is Idaho Charter School Network president
Idaho Business Review, July 29, 2013
The Idaho Charter School Network has named Terry Ryan president. Ryan previously worked as vice president for Ohio Programs and Policy at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute.

INDIANA

GOP donor’s school grade changed
Journal Gazette, July 30, 2013
Former Indiana and current Florida schools chief Tony Bennett built his national star by promising to hold “failing” schools accountable. But when it appeared an Indianapolis charter school run by a prominent Republican donor might receive a poor grade, Bennett’s education team frantically overhauled his signature “A-F” school grading system to improve the school’s marks.

Why Tony Bennett rigged school accountability
Editorial
Journal Gazette, July 30, 2013
Everyone wondered what took the Indiana Department of Education so long to report its A-to-F grades — a cornerstone of the state’s school accountability push during former Superintendent Tony Bennett’s term.

LOUISIANA

Course Choice online voucher program’s waiting list continues to grow
Times Picayune, July 30, 2013
The waitlist for Louisiana’s Course Choice mini-school voucher program continues to grow, with more than 1,000 students in line to take online classes at public expense.

MAINE

Baxter school criticized for luncheon with political group
Portland Press Herald, July 30, 2013
But charter school officials deny seeking funds from the conservative Maine Heritage Policy Center

MASSACHUSETTS

Arroyo releases plan to close achievement gap in Boston Public Schools
Boston Globe Blog, July 29, 2013
City Councilor Felix G. Arroyo, one of twelve candidates running to become the next mayor of Boston, today released a plan aimed at working to close the academic achievement gap between students of different races and different economic backgrounds in the city’s public schools.

MISSOURI

Mehlville’s shortage of space for school transfers is questioned
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 30, 2013
Mehlville schools have room for about 150 students wishing to transfer from the troubled Riverview Gardens School District — and no more, Superintendent Eric Knost has said time and again.

Judge chastises MO education agency, keeps charter school open
KCTV, July 29, 2013
Cole County Judge Daniel Green said the Missouri Board of Education had violated the state’s open-meetings law and abused its power in rejecting the school’s efforts to renew its charter.

NORTH CAROLINA

North Carolina Ends Teacher Tenure
Stateline, July 29, 2013
North Carolina has become the latest state to overhaul its teacher tenure rules, directing school administrators to offer four-year contracts to top performers but one- or two-year contracts to everybody else.

Frustration brings teachers to Raleigh by the thousands
Greensboro News & Record, July 29, 2013
Thousands of North Carolina teachers marched on the state capitol Monday, saying they’ve had enough of the frozen salaries, budget cuts and Republican policy shifts that are wrecking public education.

OHIO

Suiting up kids learning at home
Chillicothe Gazette, July 30, 2013
School districts such as Coshocton City Schools will immediately have to comply with new policies regarding home-schooled children who want to participate in public school activities.

OKLAHOMA

School testing settlement shows issue was taken seriously
Editorial
The Oklahoman, July 30, 2013
STATE schools Superintendent Janet Barresi and Department of Education staff have negotiated a $1.2 million settlement with CTB/McGraw-Hill in response to that vendor’s failures, which disrupted standardized testing at schools this spring.

PENNSYLVANIA

Parents push back on new school report card
Philadelphia Daily News, July 30, 2013
District officials got more than they bargained for during a meeting about a proposed new school report card last night when parents and teachers unleashed their frustrations about the district’s status.

Career Connections school appeal to be heard today
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 30, 2013
An appeal by Career Connections Charter School in Lawrenceville to the State Charter Appeal Board will be heard today in Harrisburg, but appeals filed by two other local charter organizations are not on the agenda.

TENNESSEE

Tennessee schools struggle to close TCAP gaps
The Tennessean, July 30, 2013
Middle Tennessee school districts, like their peers across the state, are still struggling to close academic achievement gaps between groups of children, especially the gap between students with disabilities and those without, according to state test results.

More autonomy could help broken schools improve
Editorial
Commercial Appeal, July 28, 2013
The Achievement School District, created by the state of Tennessee to turn around its worst public schools in five years, recently got its first-year grades.

TEXAS

New charter school to focus on health sciences
Midland Reporter-Telegram, July 30, 2013
A new charter high school meant to prepare students for careers in the health science field will open in Midland for the 2014-15 school year.

Texas faces long odds in getting test exemption for top achievers
Dallas Morning News, July 29, 2013
A plan to reduce testing for higher-performing elementary and middle school students was one of the feel-good bills of the 2013 legislative session. But several experts believe it will never see the light of day in Texas schools.

VERMONT

New law allows high schoolers to take one free college course
Bennington Banner, July 30, 2013
Students in the Green Mountain State are being afforded added opportunities for a postsecondary education courtesy of new legislation known as the “flexible pathways” bill.

VIRGINIA

Norfolk officials will offer charter school details
The Virginian-Pilot, July 30, 2013
Officials will be stopping by schools in early August to answer questions and offer details on Superintendent Samuel King’s proposal to convert them into charters.

WISCONSIN

Local schools scramble to meet voucher application deadline
Sheboygan Press, July 29, 2013
Starting Thursday, parents can apply for the Wisconsin Parental Choice Program and local schools are scrambling to meet the deadline.

Look closely at school reform initiative
Opinion
Journal Sentinel, July 30, 2013
There’s talk of a new education “reform” initiative directed at Milwaukee Public Schools, based on the experience of what’s been done in New Orleans. We are being told it’s a miracle — a claim we should take with a large dose of skepticism.

ONLINE LEARNING

Metro Nashville’s virtual school becomes first of its kind in TN
The Tennessean, July 30, 2013
As the first Tennessee school district to offer public virtual school, Metro Nashville is going a step further by having the first virtual school to adopt the academy model, officials said Monday.

Flexibility brings success in WCSD online school
Daily Sparks Tribune, July 28, 2013
Ashlyn and Jessa Wright enjoy cramming their schedules full of activities, lessons and vacations throughout the year, partly because they can take their education with them. Missing school days is no longer a worry for the two Sparks residents.

Online K-12 Classes Grow in Nevada
KTVN, July 29, 2013
With back-to-school coming up, you may want to consider a free virtual K through 12 education. It’s been working for 10th grader Nicholas Hansen in Sparks.

Daily Headlines for July 29, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Early high school graduation programs gain traction
USA Today, July 27, 2013
Across the nation, fewer than 3% of students graduate high school early, according to the National Center for Education Statistics’ most recent report from 2004. About half of states have policies that allow the practice, according to the Education Commission of the States.

Improving the way student teachers learn
Washington Post, July 26, 2013
Jane Dimyan-Ehrenfeld’s “A better way to teach the teachers” [op-ed, July 19] suggested that teacher preparation follow the medical school model of extensive, high-quality clinical experiences and rigorous testing. I commend her ideas and am pleased to note that substantial work is underway to move teacher education in that direction.

Leave this bill behind
Editorial, Philadelphia Inquirer, July 27, 2013
The House last week passed a bill that would gut the landmark No Child Left Behind law, returning most school oversight to states and districts. While there is plenty in the law that requires fixing, the House legislation would be a major setback for public education.

Mend, not end, No Child Left Behind
Star Tribune, July 28, 2013
There is nearly universal agreement that the controversial No Child Left Behind federal education law should be changed. But while congressional representatives on both sides of the aisle agree on that point, they are worlds apart on what those changes should be.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Few private schools signed up to take transfers under Alabama Accountability Act
The Huntsville Times, July 28, 2013
Students seeking to transfer under Alabama’s new school choice law don’t have many private schools to choose from, at least so far.

ARIZONA

Charter schools sue Arizona to keep funding
Arizona Republic, July 29, 2013
About 200 charter schools are seeking an injunction that would prevent the Arizona Department of Education from recouping more than $5 million in classroom-site funds that state officials say it overpaid the schools.

CALIFORNIA

Ben Chavis’ Last Stand
City Journal, July 28, 2013
By every measure, the American Indian Model Schools (AIMS), a charter school system based in Oakland, California, puts that embattled city’s traditional public schools to shame.

District to take huge hit to wallet
The Record, July 29, 2013
California’s recently adopted system for funding public education is expected to dramatically reduce a financial windfall that has been enjoyed in recent years by New Jerusalem Elementary School District in rural Tracy.

Parent Trigger Law changes failing Adelanto school into new charter
San Bernadino Sun, July 28, 2013
After years of legal and political battles, a controversial law giving parents the power to take control of a failing school will be put into action today, when the former public Desert Trails Elementary School will reopen as a charter school, Desert Trails Preparatory Academy.

With ‘Parent Trigger’ Laws on the Ropes, Three Overhauled Schools Reopen in Los Angeles
TIME, July 26, 2013
Controversial legislation that allows parents to vote in new management at public schools is faltering everywhere but Southern California, where the law is getting its first real test.

DELAWARE

John A. Kowalko Jr.: Lawmakers flunk charter reform test
Opinion, The News Journal, July 29, 2013
Historically, at the end of a session year, the General Assembly’s accomplishments are reviewed for their benefit to Delawareans. Assessments of achievements can distract attention from the failure to meet some challenges. In the General Assembly’s haste to promote itself as effective and judicious, we should temper any evaluation with an honest reflection on our mistakes.

Moyer school officials working to avoid closing
The News Journal, July 29, 2013
As state education officials work to bring The New Moyer Academy charter school in Wilmington out of violation of its charter, school leaders say they’re making significant strides and arguing that concerns about its teaching and finances are being blown out of proportion.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. summer-school enrollment fails to meet target
Washington Post, July 28, 2013
The District’s school system failed to fill its summer-school seats for students in kindergarten through eighth grade this year after officials implemented a new invitation-only admissions policy that triggered criticism — and an injection of additional funds — from the D.C. Council.

Student’s home-schooling highlights debate over Va. religious exemption law
Washington Post, July 28, 2013
Josh Powell wanted to go to school so badly that he pleaded with local officials to let him enroll. He didn’t know exactly what students were learning at Buckingham County High School, in rural central Virginia, but he had the sense that he was missing something fundamental.

FLORIDA

Charter schools get help from an unexpected source
Column, Sun Sentinel, July 26, 2013
Support for charter schools no longer is an issue reserved for conservative, Republican education reformers. In increasing numbers, liberal Democrats are weighing in on the side of charter schools. This glimmer of bipartisanship bodes well for education in Florida, and throughout the United States.

Education chief faces his biggest test
Editorial, Tampa bay Times, July 27, 2013
Florida was one of the early leaders of a group of states developing tests for the Common Core State Standards, and it manages the money for the group, which is funded by a federal grant. Yet House Speaker Will Weatherford and Senate President Don Gaetz want Florida to pull out of the organization and design its own tests.

More Florida parents using state scholarships to send children to private schools
Miami Herald, July 29, 2013
That was until Morales learned about Florida’s scholarship program for children from low-income families. The scholarships are funded by corporate donors, which receive a dollar-for-dollar tax credit for their contributions.

GEORGIA

Georgia school class size increases while funding drops
Athens Banner Herald, July 28, 2013
Public school class sizes in Georgia have increased as districts struggle with funding cuts and falling tax revenue.

INDIANA

Back-to-school means new legislative mandates for local schools
Salam Leader, July 28, 2013
A new law requiring every school district develop policies and practices to deal with teenage gangs is among at least a dozen new education-related laws with long-term impact that went into effect earlier this month.

MAINE

Does the new Portland charter school deserve Justin Alfond’s condemnation?
Bangor Daily News, July 27, 2013
Big Bangor Daily News story: “Maine Senate President Justin Alfond, D-Portland, attacked a new charter school in his district Friday for aligning itself with what he called one of the most extreme political organizations in Maine.”

MICHIGAN

Casandra Ulbrich: The way Michigan funds its public schools is broken
Opinion, Detroit Free Press, July 29, 2013
Michigan has seen a decline in student enrollment of more than 183,000 students. At the same time, we have seen a net gain of more than 110 charter schools. Next year, Michigan is slated to open more than 30 new charter schools, despite a continuing decline in the number of students statewide.

Despite mountains of school data, parents put little faith in numbers
Battle Creek Inquirer, July 29, 2013
This fall will mark the fourth school year she’s sent her sons, ages 7, 9 and 12, to BCPS through the state’s Schools of Choice program.

Statewide evaluation good for teachers
Editorial, Detroit News, July 28, 2013
The council tasked two years ago with creating a model teacher evaluation in Michigan turned in its report this past week. The group of evaluation experts, commissioned by the Legislature in 2011, toiled extensively and their work has been largely met with praise.

MINNESOTA

Mpls. charter school presses case against eviction
Minnesota Public Radio, July 28, 2013
A north Minneapolis charter school being evicted from its building is hoping for a last-minute reprieve at a court appearance on Tuesday.

MISSISSIPPI

Teacher merit proposal in flux
Clarion Ledger, July 28, 2013
With the school year fast approaching, education officials are still not sure how to measure the effectiveness of four pilot programs designed to give teacher merit pay a test run.

MISSOURI

School districts, cultural institutions and universities could all collaborate
Letter, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 28, 2013
The announcement of the collaboration between St. Louis Public Schools and KIPP charter schools is good news indeed. And the Post-Dispatch’s editorial exhortation (“Open doors,” July 22) to imagine additional partnerships is well-taken.

NEW YORK

Charter schools score higher than NYC schools, but critics say comparison is unfair
New York Daily News, July 27, 2013
Publicly funded, privately run charter schools enroll less than half as many English-language learners and fewer kids with disabilities than district-run schools do.

Evaluation Law May Provide Protection for Teachers
Wall Street Journal, July 27, 2013
The new teacher-evaluation law that was supposed to make it easier for New York schools to get rid of bad teachers might have an unintended consequence: Firing rookie teachers could become harder.

Schools Rake in Private Funds
Wall Street Journal, July 29, 2013
The fundraising arm of the New York City public-school system brought in a record $47 million in pledges in the past year, a sign that donors want to extend the effects of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s policies past the end of his third term.

NEW JERSEY

Putting New Jersey’s high school diplomas to the test
Op-Ed, New Jersey Spotlight, July 29, 2013
There were more than 100,000 ninth-graders in New Jersey public schools this past year, and they all had one thing in common: None of them knows what they have to do to graduate.

NEW MEXICO

Red River Valley Charter School preps students for new academic year
Sangre de Cristo Chronicle, July 28, 2013
Getting a child to sit still in school after a summer of free-range activity can be a test of patience.
But Red River Valley Charter School is looking to help children stay on the ball — sometimes literally — with sensory integration practices.

Summer school new reality for many students
Albuquerque Journal, July 29, 2013
Joseph Cruz should be enjoying one of the sweetest summers of his life – that brief moment of freedom after high school graduation and before college or career.

NORTH CAROLINA

Teacher pay: ‘You don’t want this’
Ashville Citizen Times, July 28, 2013
She’s the kind of teacher that makes some kids want to be her when they grow up. But when they’ve told her recently that they want to teach, all she can think is, “Don’t do it. You don’t want this.”

PENNSYLVANIA

Tackling truancy
Reading Eagle, July 28, 2013
Berks County’s only charter school has had the county’s worst truancy rate.

District partially restores schools taff thanks to $33 million in new funding
Philadelphia Daily News, July 28, 2013
Secretaries, music teachers and sports staff will be called back to schools effective immediately, Superintendent William R. Hite announced yesterday during a School Reform Commission meeting. The estimated $33 million in new revenues that will cover the recalled staffers’ salaries, however, will only stretch so far, district officials warned.

School board’s charade
Editorial, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, July 26, 2013
As summer is ending and school is about to start, we would think Armstrong School District would find it obvious that Everlasting Elderton Charter School will not be opening this fall, once again denying parents and students of an alternative choice in education.

TENNESSEE

Nashville Prep leader accuses school board member of ‘drunk rage’ in Facebook fight
Nashville City Paper, July 27, 2013
The leader of one of Nashville’s most successful charter schools went to blows with a prominent Metro school board member over Facebook Friday night, complete with personal attacks and threats to obstruct the charter’s future school expansions.

ONLINE LEARNING

Back to School: Virtual school expands learning opportunities
The Tennessean, July 28, 2013
Sumner County high school students will this year have the option to take one or more classes online through the district’s new virtual program offered through E.B. Wilson High School.

Broward keeps controversial online education firm
Sun Sentinel, July 28, 2013
Online education provider K12 Inc. will continue serving students in Broward, despite recent state findings that the company used improperly certified teachers in another school district.

Computers change way students learn, educators teach
Alexandria Town Talk, July 29, 2013
Gone are the days where teachers behind a podium deliver lectures to students sitting quietly in their desks while parents nervously wait for report cards to arrive home signaling a student’s success or challenges.

Charter iSchool High offers options for students
Houston Chronicle, July 28, 2013
Cameron York will be a high school sophomore this fall, but based on the coursework he’s completed, the 15-year-old student is on track to possibly graduate next spring and begin taking college courses — tuition-free.

Online class pilot project is educational
Editorial, Merced Sun-Star, July 29, 2013
An experiment using online classes to help struggling students in math got off to a rough start. But it’s wise to learn from the pilot project, not to prematurely declare it a failure.

Online schools’ performance may not match claims
South Bend Tribune, July 28, 2013
Students enrolled in Indiana’s two largest virtual public schools have a 50 percent to 60 percent chance of passing the ISTEP exam in the coming school year if current achievement trends continue.

Daily Headlines for July 26, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Blog: The Time Districts Spend on Standardized Testing
Washington Post, July 26, 2013
The amount of lost instructional time is somewhat staggering.

Kara Kerwin to Become President of the Center for Education Reform
Education Week, July 25, 2013
The Washington-based Center for Education Reform, one of the most visible advocacy group for charter schools and school choice, has announced that Kara Kerwin will become the next president of the group.

KIPP Charter Schools Forge Pipeline to College
Washington Post, July 26, 2013
How detailed recruiting targets worked for KIPP students who sought admission to college this fall.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

200 charter schools plan to sue state over funding
AZ Central, July 25, 2013
The Arizona Charter Schools Association and about 200 of its member charter schools plan to file a lawsuit against the Arizona Department of Education today, association president Eileen Sigmund said.

CALIFORNIA

Jordan High’s staff shakeup puts students on better track
Los Angeles Times, July 24, 2013
New, motivated teachers have helped improve test scores.

San Jose school district paid teachers more than required
San Jose mercury News, July 25, 2013
Even in tight budget years, the Alum Rock Union School District paid many of its teachers and administrators more than required by its contracts and rules, a practice that in 10 years has cost more than $1 million.

West Contra Costa teachers union head opposes charter school proposal
Contra Costa Times, July 25, 2013
The head of the West Contra Costa school district’s teachers union announced her opposition to a proposed campus of Silicon Valley-based Summit Public Schools at the district’s Wednesday night board meeting.

FLORIDA

Teacher raises: Orange offers all teachers $1025 raise, ‘effective’ teachers $2,525 (negotiations underway with teachers union)
Orlando Sentinel, July 25, 2013
All Orange County teachers, no matter their final evaluation, would get a $1,025 raise this year while those with “developing,” “effective” or “highly effective” ratings would get even more, under a school district proposal made this summer.

GEORGIA

Georgia school chief explains Common Core test retreat: We couldn’t afford it. We will have similar test.
Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 26, 2013
While Georgia will be pursuing other options for developing its own state assessments in English language arts and math at the elementary, middle and high school levels, these tests will be very similar to what the PARCC tests will be like.

School board member agrees to face ethics hearing in Cherokee
Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 25, 2013
The Cherokee County school board voted Wednesday night to conduct an ethics hearing on controversial board member Kelly Marlow.

LOUISIANA

Character education tied to academic achievement, New Orleans panelists say
Times-Picayune, July 25, 2013
A panel Thursday highlighted an element that gets less notice in the world at large but is obvious to anyone walking into one of New Orleans’ many charter schools: character education.

New Orleans charter school Miller-McCoy hires new principal
Times-Picayune, July 23, 2013
The Miller-McCoy Academy for Mathematics and Business has hired Eric Greely Sr. as principal of New Orleans’ only all-male public charter school.

New orleans education activists to address violence Friday
Times-Picayune, July 25, 2013
The student members of Kids Rethink New Orleans Schools will focus on violence prevention at the group’s eighth annual news conference Friday, emphasizing restorative justice and other ways to end conflicts peacefully.

White wants to continue some sort of accountability testing
The Advocate, July 25, 2013
While the high-stakes test called LEAP ends next year, some sort of measuring stick will likely remain for future students in key grades, state Superintendent of Education John White said Thursday.

MAINE

Portland panel delays $40M school bond vote until 2014
Portland Press Herald, July 26, 2013
Three city elementary schools will have to wait another year before residents can vote on building improvements that school administrators and parents say are desperately needed right now.

MARYLAND

In light of declining test scores, Lowery looks to tackle reform
Baltimore Sun, July 25, 2013
State school superintendent ends first year with new curriculum, teacher evaluations and new tests on horizon

MASSACHUSETTS

Starting high school later may help sleepy teens
Boston Globe (AP), July 26, 2013
Decades of sleep research have confirmed what parents know: It’s hard for teenagers to wake up early.

Vallas to keep Bridgeport job during appeal
Boston Globe (AP), July 16, 2013
Bridgeport’s school superintendent will be allowed to stay on the job while he appeals a judge’s ruling that found he is not qualified to hold the position.

MICHIGAN

Charter schools multiplying in Mich. As more families opt out of public school
Detroit News, July 26, 2013
Kyle McClendon will join hundreds of other students going to 37 new charter schools opening across the state.

Common Core opponents set to testify next week before Michigan House Committee
MLive.com, July 25, 2013
Opponents of the Common Core State Standards are expected to have their day next week before a Michigan House subcommittee hearing testimony on the guidelines.

Kalamazoo Public Schools hires 18 teachers; four others resign
MLive, July 26, 2013
The Kalamazoo Board of Education approved the hiring of 18 teachers and two school psychologists to fill vacancies created by retirements and resignations.

MISSOURI

Teachers brace for classroom changes
KSDK-Online, July 25, 2013
Many school districts in the St. Louis area are saying they will be getting anywhere from a handful to several hundred new students because of the transfers and we wanted to know what this means for local teachers.

NEW YORK

Sharon Springs teachers get tablet help
Albany Times Union, July 25, 2013
Grant helping to train teachers on use of iPads in the classroom.

NORTH CAROLINA

Charlotte-Meck teachers mobilize to protest budget
Charlotte Observer, July 25, 2013
The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Association of Educators plans to take a busload of protestors to Raleigh for the final Moral Monday protest next week, saying efforts to work with legislators failed.

N.C. ‘Read or Flunk’ Plan Gets Mixed Reviews From Local Educators
Charlotte Observer, July 25, 2013
A new state law saying low scores on reading exams can hold children back from promotion to fourth grade drew vigorous discussion Thursday from top officials in four Charlotte-area school districts.

RHODE ISLAND

Gov. Chafee signs legislation strengthening safety standards for school building construction in RI
Providence Journal, July 25, 2013
Governor Chafee has signed legislation strengthening safety standards for the construction of school buildings on properties previously used for industrial or manufacturing purposes.

TENNESSEE

As many Metro Nashville teachers could lose jobs
The Tennessean, July 24, 2013
Metro preps to use data to remove low-performing educators.

TEXAS

Texas’ Bid to Ease Mandatory Exams for Public School Students
New York Times, July 25, 2013
Less time spent on exams comes with caveat of maybe having to obtain NCLB waiver.

UTAH

Utah year-round students head back to school
Deseret News, July 25, 2013
Many of Utah’s year-round elementary schools, including several in Salt Lake and Davis counties, opened their doors to a new school year Thursday.

WISCONSIN

Study: Specialized programs boost MPS students into college
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, July 25, 2013
More Milwaukee Public Schools students who participate in the district’s specialized curricula ultimately enroll in college than those who don’t, according to a Public Policy Forum report released Thursday.

ONLINE LEARNING

Educators visit Mooresville to learn how to digitally convert schools
News & Observer, July 25, 2013
Eleven districts learning how to form digital classrooms at conference.

Daily Headlines for July 25, 2013

NEWSWIRE IS BACK! Click here for the latest weekly report on education news and commentary you won’t find anywhere else, spiced with a dash of irreverence, from the nation’s leading voice in school reform.

NATIONAL COVERAGE

State education officials: ‘We’re sticking with Common Core’
Washington Post, July 24, 2013
Most state officials responsible for implementing the new K-12 standards are confident that their states will stick with the program.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

California seeing shortage of special ed teachers
ABC San Francisco, July 25, 2013
There’s a big divide in the Bay area and throughout California that the state can’t quite figure out how to bridge. Schools keep getting more special needs students, less certified teachers.

COLORADO

Denver Public Schools gets $10 million grant from the Gates Foundation
Denver Post, July 25, 2013
Denver Public Schools will receive $10 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to bolster its teacher evaluation system.

Colorado lands $15 million from Feds for early childhood education
Denver Post, July 24, 2013
$15 million in federal funding in early childhood education.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Report: Fewer DC charter schools have financial problems
Washington Post, July 24, 2013
District charter schools had fewer financial problems in FY 2012 compared to year before.

A Visionary’s final ideas on fixing high schools?
Washington Post, July 24, 2013
When Theodore Sizer, known to friends and admirers as Ted, died of colon cancer in 2009…we lost the nation’s leading scholar on high schools and one of the best education writers.

Baker taking applications for vacant seat on Board of Education
Washington Post, July 24, 2013
Prince George’s County executive is accepting applications to fill a seat on the Board of Education.

FLORIDA

Miami-Dade faces tough decisions on ‘teacher’ raises
Miami Herald, July 24, 2013
For months, Florida teachers have been hearing they would receive $2,500 raises in the coming school year, Gov. Scott made it a priority.

GEORGIA

Cobb school board approves digital math book purchase
Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 24, 2013
Cobb’s school board decided Wednesday to purchase $2.9 million worth of electronic math textbooks for its middle and high school students.

Judge: Don’t reinstate 2 suspended from DeKalb school board
Atlanta Journal Constitution, July 24, 2013
Process for removing school board members took significant step after judge believed 2 board members failed to make case for reinstatement.

ILLINOIS

CPS Budget: Classroom spending to be cut by $68 million
Chicago Sun-Times, July 24, 2013
CPS plans to slash total classroom spending by $68 million.

MAINE

Portland board OKs second vote on school spending
Portland Press Herald, July 24, 2013
The Portland School Board voted unanimously Tuesday night to recommend the City Council approve a second referendum on the school budget.

MARYLAND

Education leaders call for moratorium on testing
Baltimore Sun, July 24, 2013
A number of education leaders are calling for a moratorium on annual student assessments until Maryland switches to tests that match a new curriculum being implemented this year.

Editorial: For teachers and students, a path to higher achievement
Detroit Free Press, July 25, 2013
If you think running under-performing teachers out of Michigan classrooms is the surest way route to improving education, you’ll be disappointed by the proporsal unveiled this week.

NEW JERSEY

District keeping focus on improving tech ability
Daily Journal, July 24, 2013
The city’s school district aims to be a leader when it comes to technology in the region and beyond.

NORTH CAROLINA

CMS teacher assistants face cuts in hours, pay
Charlotte Observer, July 24, 2013
Hundreds of Charlotte Mecklenburg schools assistants will work shorter schedules and take pay cuts to avoid layoffs in the wake of state budget cuts.

APS Volunteers can apply online
Albuquerque Journal, July 25, 2013
APS has made it easier for parents and other willing volunteers to help out in their schools, by moving the application process online.

SC Dropout rate declines for fourth straight year
Charlotte Observer, July 24, 2013
SC’s dropout rate declined for fourth straight year, as hundreds fewer students quit their schooling during 2011-12.

State budget wins final legislative approval
News & Observer, July 24, 2013
House and Senate gave final approval to $20.6 billion budget Wednesday.

House votes down bill giving ownership of Wake schools to county commissioners
News & Observer, July 24, 2013
Wake county real estate portfolio will remain under control of local school board.

OHIO

Teachers’ pension fund acting illegally, lawmaker alleges
Columbus Dispatch, July 25, 2013
Leaders of State Teachers Retirement System denied yesterday that pension fund is engaging in illegal activity.

PENNSYLVANIA

Blog: Growing collation pushes for new kind of Philly teachers’ contract
Philly Inquirer, The Notebook, July 24, 2013
A group is calling on the Philadelphia school district to look at dollars and cents in next teachers’ contract and selecting teachers not just based on seniority.

Knox plan: Put health clinics in schools
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA
July 25, 2013
Political and insurance industry veteran Tom Knox proposes walk-in health clinics in traditional public and charter schools.

Threat of strike looming in Shaler area
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 25, 2013
It has been hard work between school officials and teachers union negotiating a contract before start of school year on Sept. 3.

Pittsburgh Public Schools grants charter to school in Hill district
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 24, 2013
After failing to approve the proposal last month, the board of Pittsburgh Public Schools granted a charter to the Hill House Passport Academy Charter school.

TENNESSEE

Parents question Nashville schools’ balanced calendar
The Tennessean, July 25, 2013
Crowd at meeting mostly opposed to calendar, wants return to traditional school year.

Planting seeds of science at school
Seattle Times, July 24, 2013
UW scientist tries to make learning about science appealing and effective for high school students.

ONLINE LEARNING

Baldwin County’s virtual high school will expand options for learning, experts say
Al.com, July 24, 2013
As Baldwin county school officials consider creating a standalone virtual high school, leaders from other school systems say online classes are a worthy enhancement to their curricula and likely to expand.