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Schooling in America Survey: What Do Mothers Say About K-12 Education

A survey by the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice polled a group of “school moms” who had at least one child in preschool, elementary school or high school and asked them several questions on the state of education in America. Some interesting findings from the survey:

• School moms were much more likely to favor charter schools than oppose them. When charter schools weren’t defined, 45% favored charters and only 19% opposed. When given a definition, the percentage of moms in favor of charters went up to 63%. For American adults without children in school, the numbers were almost identical. This is something that CER has been saying and seeing in our polling for a while. Last year, CER did an independent poll and found similar results in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Florida.

• Seven out of 10 school moms were in support of tax credits, 19% were opposed and 12% had no opinion. American adults similarly support tax credit scholarships.

• Close to two-thirds of school moms (65%) support education savings accounts (ESAs), a new type of school choice reform that allows parents to put a portion of their public school funding into a savings account for use for primary, secondary or post-secondary education needs One-quarter of school moms (25%) said they opposed ESAs. Less than one out of ten school moms (9%) did not express an opinion.

• When given the definition for a school voucher program, six out of ten American adults (60%) said they support the policy – up four points since last year. About one third, 32%, are opposed.

• When considering the various actions that could occur from a parent trigger policy, both groups supported a school choice option. One out of three school moms (32%) and one-fourth of non-schoolers (26%) say that offering a voucher or scholarship to enroll in another school was the best trigger outcome to serve affected students and families.

Daily Headlines for May 14, 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

Conservatives and the Common Core
Wall Street Journal, May 14, 2013

Although the two of us have disagreed about several school-reform issues, we strongly believe that the Common Core State Standards, voluntarily adopted by 45 states, is one of the most promising education initiatives of the past half century. If implemented properly, they can better prepare students for college-level work and to gain the civic knowledge that is essential for democracy to prosper.

Teaching ‘Diversity’
Wall Street Journal, May 14, 2013

Polls show that parents place a premium on having high-quality teachers in the classroom. But the champions of “diversity” who run public schools seem more interested in making sure that teachers and students share the same race and ethnicity , even if that results in hiring a less-capable instructor.

Indiana Hits ‘Pause Button’ On Common Core Education Push
Washington Times, DC, May 13, 2013

Indiana’s former Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels was one of the biggest supporters of the K-12 academic standards known as Common Core.

STATE COVERAGE

ARKANSAS

Weiner High Supporters Push For Agriculture Charter School Option
Kait 8, AR, May 13, 2013

Supporters of Weiner High School are trying yet another road to keep the school open. They’re hoping a conversion charter school for agriculture will work.

CALIFORNIA

Nine San Fernando Valley Schools Seeking Affiliated Charter Status
Pasadena Star, CA, May 13, 2013

Nine more San Fernando Valley campuses would open this fall as charter schools if their applications are approved today by the Los Angeles Unified school board.

Parent Trigger Law Invoked To Kick Out L.A. School’s Administrators
San Bernardino Sun, CA, May 13, 2013

A group of parents appear ready to force the Los Angeles Unified School District to enact sweeping changes at their elementary school.

CONNECTICUT

Funding Trouble For Education Reform
WTNH A, CT, May 13, 2013

re state lawmakers back-tracking on Education Reform? The landmark law passed one year ago may be headed for funding trouble because of the state’s looming red ink problem.

DELAWARE

Delaware Senate To Vote On Bill Aimed At Standardizing School Choice Process
Washington Post, DC, May 14, 2013

The state Senate is set to vote on a bill standardizing the school choice process in Delaware. The bill to be voted on Tuesday cleared a Senate committee last week, just one day after receiving unanimous approval in the House.

FLORIDA

Failing Flagler Charter School Seeking Turnaround
Daytona Beach News-Journal, FL, May 13, 2013

Instructors at a Palm Coast charter school plagued by poor test scores and low enrollment have spent the year trying to help its students catch up with their peers in other area schools.

ILLINOIS

3 Days Of Marches Against School Closings Announced
Chicago Tribune, IL, May 14, 2013

With just over a week before the Chicago Board of Education votes on a proposal to close 54 schools, the Chicago Teachers Union and other activist groups said Monday they would hold marches over three days to protest the plan.

LOUISIANA

State Supreme Court Rules School Voucher Plan Unconstitutional
The Nonprofit Quarterly, May 13, 2013

Remember Louisiana’s plan to use public dollars to send students to private schools? Governor Bobby Jindal, a prospective Republican presidential candidate, made it a linchpin of his educational program.

MASSACHUSETTS

Teachers’ Contract With Brockton Ties Them To Student Test Scores In Return For 2 Percent Raise
Brockton Enterprise, MA, May 14, 2013

In exchange for one year of raises, the city’s teachers agreed to language training and a state requirement tying them to the academic performance of their students.

MICHIGAN

Students Left Looking For A School After Academy Of Flint Loses Charter
Flint Journal, MI, May 13, 2013

Nine months ago, officials at the Academy of Flint were told by Central Michigan University that the school’s charter would not be renewed.

A New WAY To Do Summer School
Detroit News, MI, May 13, 2013

Taking the summer off does not facilitate education. There is a new and better way of learning. In a few short weeks another school year will be coming to an end and the summer break will begin.

MISSISSIPPI

Lamar Co. Teachers To Receive Merit Pay Raises
Hattiesburg American, MS, May 14, 2013

Lamar County School District will give merit pay increases to teachers beginning in the fall 2014. The Lamar County School Board voted 5-0 to approve a plan for awarding the increases at its May 6 meeting.

MISSOURI

Heated Whipping Process On Display In Education Reform Vote
Missouri Times, MO, May 14, 2013

Senate Bill 125, backed by House Speaker Tim Jones, R-Eureka, and touted as a way to improve public schools, failed Wednesday by a vote of 76-82 after a long night in the chamber and an extremely contentious vote-whipping process.

NEVADA

One Move To Fund Education Meeting Opposition From School Boards, Teachers’ Union
Las Vegas Sun, NV, May 13, 2013

Gov. Brian Sandoval’s plan to give tax subsidies to help low-income students attend private schools ran into opposition Monday from school boards and a teachers’ union.

NEW YORK

Schools Chief Blasts Mayoral Candidates Over Remarks at Education Forum
New York Times, NY, May 14, 2013

Dennis M. Walcott, the New York City schools chancellor, lashed out at the Democratic candidates for mayor on Monday, saying that he did not believe any of them had a compelling vision to lead city schools and that they had been pandering to gain the support of the teachers’ union.

NORTH CAROLINA

Separate Public, Charter School Boards Will Hurt Education
News & Observer, NC, May 13, 2013

Republicans in the state legislature are in the process of making a multitude of bad decisions with regard to public education. And the antipathy they feel toward public school teachers, some of whom have criticized cuts to education, is leading GOP lawmakers down a path that will do much damage, from making it harder to get good teachers in the state to dividing public school governance between charter schools and conventional schools to providing vouchers of public money for parents to send kids to private schools.

OHIO

Yet Another Tale Of A Looted Charter School Shows That Better Fiscal Safeguards Are Needed
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, May 13, 2013

If the Cuyahoga County prosecutor has it right, for the last six years, an in-house den of thieves has stolen nearly $2 million from a Cleveland charter school for teen dropouts, ripping off the taxpayers and their students.

OKLAHOMA

Questions Linger Following Oklahoma City School District Transfer Flap
The Oklahoman, OK, May 14, 2013

PERHAPS Oklahoma City School Board members knew exactly what they were doing when unanimously denying transfers into Classen School of Advanced Studies, one of the state’s premier high schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Pennsylvania Getting Swept Into National ‘Common Core’ Education Debate
Morning Call, PA, May 14, 2013

Senate Democrats call on Gov. Tom Corbett to halt start of Common Core standards; House and Senate to hold hearings on Common Core.

Pa. Official: Charter Schools Flout Public-Records Law
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 14, 2013

Pennsylvania’s 180 charter schools routinely ignore the state’s Right-To-Know Law even though as publicly funded institutions they are bound to comply with it, the chief of the state’s Office of Open Records told a Senate committee on Monday.

NPSD Using Delay Tactics, Charter School Says
The Reporter, PA, May 13, 2013

Souderton Charter School Collaborative’s appeal of their denied charter school application has hit an obstacle, with legal counsel for the North Penn School Board objecting to the petition form that was used in gathering signatures of those in support of the charter.

Pittsburgh Public Schools Exploring Options For Different Learning Models
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, May 13, 2013

With options such as charter, private and parochial schools as well as district-operated magnet schools, only 40 percent of K-12 students in the city are attending the feeder school assigned by where they live.

Let’s Fund-Raise For Philly Schools
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 14, 2013

A recent gala headlined by John Legend celebrated the University of Pennsylvania’s exceeding its $3.5 billion fund-raising goal by $800 million. But only blocks away, University City High School students quietly emptied their lockers following the Philadelphia School Reform Commission decision to close their school and 22 others to cover a $300 million budget deficit.

TENNESSEE

Nashville Schools Cast Wider Net For Gifted Children
The Tennessean, TN, May 14, 2013

Black and Hispanic children are grossly underrepresented in the Encore program for academically gifted and talented students, which serves children from pre-kindergarten through eighth grade, according to statistics provided by the school system.

WISCONSIN

Lawmakers Tour Voucher Schools
Fox 11, WI, May 13, 2013

Some state lawmakers got a first-hand look at the state’s school voucher system Monday. Democrats and Republicans took a look around four voucher schools in Milwaukee Monday afternoon. This as Governor Walker is pushing to expand the school voucher program from two to nine districts including Green Bay, Fond du Lac and Sheboygan.

ONLINE LEARNING

Education Committee Votes Along Party Lines To Stall Virtual Charter Schools
Bangor Daily News, ME, May 13, 2013

Maine would impose a moratorium on virtual charter schools and require that all charter schools function as nonprofit organizations if three measures endorsed Monday by the Legislature’s Education Committee become law.

Online Charter School Hopes to Escape from Limbo
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, May 14, 2013

The nation’s largest online education company, K12 Inc., is once again registering kids and offering jobs to teachers for the debut of New Jersey’s first virtual charter school – all without knowing if the school will even open.

Virtual Schools Poised To Go Viral In Florida
Palm Beach Post, FL, May 13, 2013

Florida Virtual School grow 20 percent a year as legislature starts requirement for online class to graduate.

Dist. 300 Considers Second Online Charter School Plan
Daily Herald, IL, May 13, 2013

Community Unit District 300 board members have moved from one charter school proposal to another, holding a public hearing Monday night for the Illinois Online Charter School.

Moreno Valley: School Board To Consider Online School
Press Enterprise, CA, May 13, 2013

The Moreno Valley Unified School District board is scheduled to add another program to increase graduation rates, an online school.

Major Anniversary Conference and Awards Gala Lineup Announced

Honorable William J. Bennett, Education Commissioner Tony Bennett, Charter Pioneer Yvonne Chan, PA. Rep. Dwight Evans, Entrepreneurs Jon Hage and Deborah McGriff, among honorees and presenters

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
May 14, 2013

The Center for Education Reform (CER) announced today a preliminary list of confirmed participants for its 20th Anniversary Celebration – Conference, Gala and Rat Pack EdReformies on October 9, 2013 in Washington, DC. Honorees, speakers and participants in the full day’s events also include:

• Media personality Michelle Bernard
• Honorable Kevin Chavous
• Connections Education President Barbara Dreyer
• Activist reformers Howard Fuller and Lisa Graham Keegan
• Ted Kolderie, founder of the charter school movement
• The Gleason Family Foundation: Tracy, Jim and Janis
• NJ education committee director Melanie Schulz
• Georgia Representative Alisha Thomas-Morgan
• Accelerated School founder Johnathan Williams

These and additional thought leaders will participate in engaging discussions during the day about the course of education reform and lead a major celebration of reform at night.

“Our guests and speakers embody the pioneering and energetic leadership of the education excellence movement,” Jeanne Allen, Center for Education Reform President, said in a statement. “The examples they have set and the milestones they’ve accomplished are extraordinary. There is no better way to celebrate The Center’s 20th Anniversary than to do so in the company and with the wisdom of those who have set the standard for education reform.”

For more information on CER’s 20th Anniversary Celebration including honorees, other featured presentations, and registration information please visit the 20th Anniversary area of staging.edreform.com.

Daily Headlines for May 13, 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

Mothers Want More School Choices For Kids
USA Today, May 12, 2013

In a nation that offers so many choices from what cell phones to buy our kids to what pizza parlor will host their next birthday party, school choice is one choice no mother should be denied.

Study: Black Students Suspended More Often Than Others
USA Today, May 12, 2013

Black students are suspended more than three times as often as their white classmates, twice as often as their Latino classmates and more than 10 times as often as their Asian classmates in middle and high schools nationwide, a new study shows.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

Tanque Verde Looks At Turning Elementary School Into Charter
Arizona Star, AZ, May 12, 2013

The Tanque Verde Unified School District is considering the possibility of changing one of its elementary school into a charter school.

CALIFORNIA

Phillips Struggles To Save Its Charter Status
Napa Valley Register, CA, May 12, 2013

Students, parents and teachers from Phillips Charter School filled the room at a recent school board meeting in an attempt to save Phillips from losing its charter.

LAUSD Board Could Ban Suspensions For ‘Willful Defiance’
Los Angeles Times, CA, May 12, 2013

Backers of the resolution say ‘zero tolerance’ is harming kids. ‘Instead of punishing students, we’re going to engage them,’ says one supporter.

CONNECTICUT

The Wrong Way To Go After New School Law
CT Post, CT, May 11, 2013

Denying funding to programs created under last year’s school reform bill will not make them disappear.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Teacher Pay Gaps Among Washington Area Schools Could Deepen
Washington Post, DC, May 11, 2013

After years of pay freezes and unpaid furloughs, physical education teacher Steven Lightman received a roughly $8,000 annual salary bump this school year.

D.C. Would Be Stronger With A Weaker Mayor
Washington Post, DC, May 11, 2013

The recent investigation into cheating in D.C. schools highlights a little-understood fact in the District: Our mayor has too much power. Every state-level agency charged with overseeing the mayor’s activities reports to the mayor — a level of control that exists nowhere else in the country.

FLORIDA

Will Rowlett Chart A New Course?
Herald Tribune, FL, May 12, 2013

The last thing the embattled Manatee County School District needs is for one of its premier schools, Rowlett Magnet Elementary, to leave the fold.

ILLINOIS

Where UNO Charter Schools’ Money Comes From
Chicago Sun Times-IL, May 13, 2013

As the largest charter-school operator in Illinois, the United Neighborhood Organization depends largely on City Hall and Springfield.

INDIANA

New Law Shifts Remediation From College To High School
News and Tribune, IN, May 13, 2013

Legislation signed into law by Gov. Mike Pence will require high schools throughout Indiana do a better job of determining whether their students are ready to go college.

LOUISIANA

Charter Schools Help Drive Educational Success
Times-Picayune, LA, May 12, 2013

The charter school movement and the educator empowerment it provides has been a potent driver behind the academic gains we see in New Orleans public schools.

State’s School Voucher Funding Questioned
The Advocate, LA, May 13, 2013

Gov. Bobby Jindal faces budget and political hurdles in his bid to continue funding for vouchers after the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled that the current spending method is unconstitutional.

Voucher Ruling Creates Uncertainties
Shreveport Times, LA, May 13, 2013

Gov. Bobby Jindal somehow was claiming a victory and telling parents not to worry after the Louisiana Supreme Court, in a 6-1 vote, rejected his administration’s legal arguments and declared the financing of his voucher program unconstitutional.

Court Made The Right Choice On Voucher Issue
The Advertiser, LA, May 13, 2013

The Louisiana Supreme Court was right last week when it upheld a lower court decision that ruled funding the state’s voucher program with money from the Minimum Foundation Program was unconstitutional. Taxpayer money dedicated to supporting the state’s financially struggling public schools should not be diverted to private schools.

MARYLAND

School Reform 2.0
Baltimore Sun, MD, May 12, 2013

The mission should not just be to find another Alonso but to recruit someone who can address the challenges the departing CEO left behind

MASSACHUSETTS

We Face A Gap In Opportunity, Not Achievement
Boston Globe, MA, May 12, 2013

WHILE PARENTS told touching stories of their children’s activities at charter schools at last week’s hearing before the Legislature’s Education Committee, the fact that charter schools do not serve all Massachusetts students was also hammered home (“Charter advocates want cap removed,” Metro, May 8).

Where District Schools Falter, State Should Add More Charters
Boston Globe, MA, May 12, 2013

CHARTER SCHOOLS started as an experiment, but over the last two decades, the innovative academies, which operate independently of local school committees and teachers’ unions, have become an established source of new strategies.

MICHIGAN

Michigan Lawmakers Debate Teacher Performance Pay
Detroit News, MI, May 12, 2013

Michigan teachers’ performance in the classroom would play a bigger role in the amount they get in their paychecks under a proposal being debated in the Republican-controlled state House.

MISSOURI

Backlash Of New Education Standards Is Rooted In Suspicion Of Federal Government
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, May 12, 2013

James Shuls of the conservative Show-Me Institute considers himself an outspoken critic of the Common Core, a set of national standards that define what English and math skills public school children should learn at each grade level.

NEW MEXICO

Taos County Charters Emphasize School Choice
Taos News, NM, May 11, 2013

Taos’ charter schools are among those celebrating National Charter Schools Week by touting what they have to offer.

Double-Testing Districts Flunk Common Sense
Albuquerque Journal, NM, May 13, 2013

The whole idea behind moving New Mexico’s K-12 curriculum to a common core is to ensure students have the sufficient foundations in each subject matter at each grade level to advance. It is an essential requirement in the state’s federal waiver to No Child Left Behind mandates.

NORTH CAROLINA

Charter Schools More Segregated Than Traditional Public Schools
WCNC, NC, May 10, 2013

At Sugar Creek Charter School on North Tryon Street in Charlotte, black students make up 96% of the student body while at Community School of Davidson, black students account for about 3% of the school.

OHIO

Charter School For Troubled Students Calling It Quits
Columbus Dispatch, OH, May 11, 2013

A Columbus charter school that serves troubled students in grades 6-9 will close at the end of this school year.

Cleveland School District, Cleveland Teachers Union Revamp Salary System To Reward Best Teachers
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, May 13, 2013

A tentative contract negotiated by the Cleveland school district and Cleveland Teachers Union throws out “step” raises based on years of experience and advanced degrees and replaces them with a new system in which teachers have to earn “achievement credits” to move up the salary ladder.

Charter Schools, Too, Merit Public Aid
Columbus Dispatch, OH, May 13, 2013

When it comes to charter-school funding and performance, reality can be hard to discern when interest groups hide or distort facts. Nothing is more frustrating than an elusive truth.

OKLAHOMA

School Grading Bill Merits Oklahoma Legislature’s Approval
The Oklahoman, OK, May 13, 2013

IN the sometimes Orwellian world of politics, the meaning of words can be twisted beyond recognition. In the Oklahoma House of Representatives, some lawmakers are translating “local control” to mean school administrators have a right to require teachers to engage in grade inflation. Failure to turn in an assignment would be no cause for a student to get a zero.

PENNSYLVANIA

Charter School Lawyers Ask Judge To Postpone Whistleblower’s Suit
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 13, 2013

A federal investigation of a Kensington charter school has not made headlines since a TV station showed video of agents carting off boxes of documents in 2009, but the probe is very much alive.

Homewood School Alters Approach To Good Behavior
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, May 13, 2013

At Pittsburgh Faison K-5 in Homewood, fifth-grader Sha’nya Currington was so excited to be recognized for her good behavior that she ran across the gym, jumped up and gave a huge hug to educator Janice Motley.

SOUTH CAROLINA

New Charter Schools Not In Stars For Pee Dee
Morning News, SC, May 13, 2013

The South Carolina Department of Education announced a list of 19 schools last week that have applied to become accredited charter schools to open in the 2014-15 school year, after using next year to plan. The proposed schools are concentrated in the Midlands, the Upstate and in Charleston.

TENNESSEE

Williamson Co. Superintendent Gets His Wish: Freedom To Be More Like Charter Schools
Nashville Public Radio, TN, May 13, 2013

Williamson County Schools could be free of some state regulations as soon as July 1st. The suburban system pushed the “High Performing School Districts Flexibility Act” through the legislature, and it was signed into law late last week.

TEXAS

In Education Reform Debate, One Group Stands Out
Texas Tribune, TX, May 12, 2013

As his legislation expanding the state’s virtual school network reached the floor of the Texas House in early May, Rep. Ken King was focused on what it was not.

WISCONSIN

A Road Map For Education Reform
Wisconsin Journal Sentinel, WI, May 11, 2013

As much as any city in America, Milwaukee has played a pioneering role in educational choice. More than two decades after establishing the nation’s first urban school voucher program, Milwaukee offers families a raft of options, including district schools, charter schools and publicly funded private school scholarships.

ONLINE LEARNING

Altoona Pulls Out Of Cyber School
Altoona Mirror, PA, May 12, 2013

As one local district cuts ties to a local cyber charter school to save money, another is looking to take it over as a source of revenue.

Law Opens Up Funding For Virtual Schools
Bradenton Herald, FL, May 12, 2013

Private online learning companies will get a better shot at Florida public school funding under a bill that won approval on the final day of the legislative session.

Recording: K12 Inc. Struggled To Comply With Law
Miami Herald, FL, May 12, 2013

The Florida Center for Investigative Reporting and StateImpact Florida have obtained internal emails and a recording of a company meeting that provide new insight into allegations that K12 Inc., the nation’s largest online education company, uses teachers in Florida who do not have all of the required state certifications.

What Comes Next For Proposed Virtual Charter School In Suburbs?
Chicago Sun Times, IL, May 13, 2013

More than 100 suburban school board members voted against an online charter school in April that was proposed to serve students from Algonquin to Plainfield.

The Who’s Who Of Online Charter School Plan
Daily Herald, IL, May 13, 2013

Suburban school board members from Algonquin to Plainfield received a proposal February 14 for a virtual charter school that would cross 18 school district boundaries. It was a Valentine’s Day surprise from Virtual Learning Solutions, a fledgling nonprofit that had incorporated with the state just a month before.

True Colors: Celebrating Teachers, Students, and Reform

May 10, 2013

Our PALs in CA, in a lovely email about how much of a difference a great teacher can make in a child’s life, shared John Legend’s rendition of an 80s anthem celebrating Teacher Appreciation Week, calling on our students to celebrate their “true colors.”

Legend is among dozens of past CER EdReformie honorees. As CER turns 20, we’ll be honoring more education reformers at our Conference & Gala on October 9 at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C. You don’t want to miss it! Stay tuned here— CER At 20 Conference & Gala registration will be up soon!

Daily Headlines for May 10, 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

In Texas, Obama Lauds ‘New Tech’ High School. Model For The Future?
Christian Science Monitor, MA, May 9, 2013

President Obama kicked off his “Middle Class Jobs & Opportunity Tour” Thursday with a visit to Manor New Tech High School in Manor, Texas, where he met some of the students that will help make up the 1 million new graduates he hopes to see in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) over the next decade.

Michigan Parent To Arne Duncan: ‘Our Schools Are At The Breaking Point’
Washington Post Blog, DC, May 10, 2013

Education Secretary Arne Duncan just visited Michigan where he visited schools in Detroit and the Perry Child Development Center in Ypsilanti. Here’s an open letter to Duncan, put out before the visit and written by Steve J. Norton, executive director for Michigan Parents for Schools, a nonprofit advocacy group pushing for quality local public education.

National Survey On Teacher Quality Produces Some Troubling Results
The Oklahoman, OK, May 10, 2013

EDUCATION reform debates, locally and nationally, have largely focused on raising the bar for students. Less effort has been placed on ensuring that quality teachers are in the classroom. The National Council on Teacher Quality hopes this will change.

Winners And Losers In The School Wars
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 10, 2013

Education policy does not have to be a war in which 60 percent win, while 40 percent lose. Public education is too important for that. Let’s stop the school wars. With choice, we can all win.

Balloon Bursts On Test-Driven School Reform
Capital Times, WI, May 10, 2013

It’s a terrible time for advocates of market-driven reform in public education. For more than a decade, their strategy — which makes teachers’ careers turn on student gains in reading and math tests, and promotes competition through charter schools and vouchers — has been the dominant policy mantra. But now the cracks are showing. That’s a good thing because this isn’t a proven — or even a promising — way to make schools better.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Ace Charter Teachers Vote For Union; School Board Wonders Why
Camarillo Acorn, CA, May 10, 2013

“Our board has absolutely no idea why (the teachers) did this,” said Roger Rice, secretary of the ACE school board. “We were not consulted or spoken to and had no warning. Obviously (the teachers) have some concerns, but we just don’t know what drove their decision to organize.”

COLORADO

Aspen Ridge Charter School Looks To Offer Middle School, Enrichment Classes
Longmont Times-Call, CO, May 9, 2013

This week, Aspen Ridge Charter School in Erie announced to parents its plans to offer sixth, seventh and eighth grades and a more immediate goal to launch weekly enrichment classes.

DELAWARE

Delaware Charters Celebrate National Charter Schools Week
WDDE, DE, May 9, 2013

Hundreds of charter school officials, parents and students gathered on Legislative Mall Thursday to celebrate National Charter Schools Week.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

EDELIN: District Must Be Fair In Funding Charters
Washington Times, DC, May 10, 2013

This week is National Charter Schools Week, an event promoted by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools to celebrate the great work accomplished by charter schools across the country. Meanwhile, the D.C. Council is considering Mayor Vincent C. Gray’s proposals for funding D.C.’s charters, which educate 43 percent of the city’s public school students, as well as D.C. Public Schools.

Lawsuit Over Closure Of 15 Public Schools In Washington Heads To Court
Washington Post, DC, May 10, 2013

A lawsuit over the closure of 15 public schools is headed to court in Washington. Lawyers for the District of Columbia and the community group Empower DC will be in court on Friday.

The Charter Future Of D.C. Public Schools
Washington Post Blog, DC, May 9, 2013

With one decision about one elementary school, D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson is filling in the picture of the future of the District’s long-troubled public school system.

GEORGIA

City Schools File To Become Charter System
Times-Georgian, GA, May 10, 2013

The Carrollton city school system has filed a letter of intent to become a charter school system by next fall.

IDAHO

Charter School Plan Gains Momentum
Idaho Mountain Express, ID, May 10, 2013

A petition to form a new state-funded charter school in Blaine County has passed a “sufficiency review” by the Idaho State Department of Education and has now been submitted to the Blaine County School District board of trustees for its consideration.

INDIANA

Pence Signs Voucher Expansion
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, IN, May 10, 2013

Gov. Mike Pence on Thursday signed into law an expansion of Indiana’s already extensive school voucher program.

LOUISIANA

Guillory Vows To Fund Vouchers
Opelousas Daily World, LA,May 10, 2013

Days after the Louisiana Supreme Court struck down private school vouchers funded by public school money as unconstitutional, state Sen. Elbert Guillory, D-Opelousas, said the education committee is working toward a funding solution for the program.

Voucher Payments Under Review
The Advocate, LA, May 9, 2013

State Superintendent of Education John White said Thursday that officials are trying to decide how to make the school year’s final $6 million payment for vouchers after the state Supreme Court scuttled the way the aid is allocated.

MAINE

State’s Plan For Helping Schools Flawed At Core
Morning Sentinel, ME, May 10, 2013

About a week since it released its controversial A-F grades of Maine public schools, the Department of Education has announced how it plans to aid the schools that it has marked out as having fallen behind.

State Proposal No Help To Struggling Schools
Portland Press Herald, ME, May 10, 2013

Maine’s education commissioner announces an underfunded and poorly thought-out plan.

Democrats’ Reaction Cool To LePage Plan For Funding Charter, Certain Religious Schools
Morning Sentinel, ME, May 9, 2013

A long-awaited, sweeping school-choice bill from Gov. Paul LePage that would remove the cap on public charter schools and give public money to certain private, religious schools is getting a cool reaction from legislative Democrats.

MASSACHUSETTS

Will The City’s New Mayor Be Pro-Charter?
Boston Globe, MA, May 10, 2013

IT WAS a juxtaposition that demonstrates the way things are changing in Boston.
One of the elected officials who came to the State House this week to weigh in on charter schools was Boston Mayor Tom Menino. The mayor wants more charters that are subject to mayoral control (surprise, surprise), but doesn’t favor lifting the cap to allow more of the independent academies known as Commonwealth charters.

MICHIGAN

Officials Scramble To Save School Year For Saginaw County District
The Detroit News, MI, May 10, 2013

Amon-Weigandt was among the parents who blasted the school board Thursday night for allowing the tiny district to run out of money, forcing the cancellation of classes this week.

Michigan Schools Can Stop Deducting Union Dues
The Detroit News, MI, May 10, 2013

A divided federal appeals court released a ruling Thursday that lets Michigan public schools stop collecting union dues under a law approved last year.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Manchester Takes Legal Action To Stop Hooksett Exodus
Union Leader, NH, May 10, 2013

The Manchester School District is seeking an injunction in the Hillsborough County Superior Court to halt Hooksett School District from reassigning students to other schools.

NEW MEXICO

Boards Discuss Teacher Evals
Albuquerque Journal, NM, May 10, 2013

In an unusual joint meeting Thursday of the Albuquerque and Rio Rancho school boards, members of both boards raised concerns about the costs, logistics, timeline and fairness of the state’s new teacher evaluation system.

NEW YORK

DOE Plans To Co-Locate Charter School In Adult Learning Center
Amsterdam News, NY, May 9, 2013

The Department of Education’s (DOE) controversial co-location of charter schools is slated to affect adults who use the system to advance their education. Plans are in the works to co-locate a charter school in the Mid-Manhattan Adult Learning Center (MMALC) in Harlem.

BTF Going To Court To Enforce Teacher-Evaluation Agreement
Buffalo News, NY, May 9, 2013

The Buffalo Teachers Federation voted Thursday to take the Buffalo school district to court to enforce a teacher-evaluation agreement that the state Department of Education, the state education commissioner and the governor have declared illegal.

PENNSYLVANIA

City Leaders Pledge Effort To Get School Funds
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 10, 2013

City officials and leaders of the Philadelphia delegation in Harrisburg pledged their strongest efforts Thursday to find an additional $180 million for the School District, as about 300 students marched peacefully to City Hall, asking the government to “save our schools.”

Education Cuts Taking A Toll
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, May 10, 2013

Over the past four years, my children have attended their neighborhood school in Philadelphia. My husband and I were attracted to Cook-Wissahickon Elementary School in Roxborough because of its dedicated teaching staff, its vibrant parent community, and its academic strength and diversity.

Charter School For Autistic Students Proposed
Reading Eagle, PA, May 10, 2013

Tom Lubben is no stranger to starting a charter school. The Northampton County man had a hand in starting two arts-related charter schools in the Lehigh Valley. And he’s preparing to do it again.

Urban Pathways Charter Schools Committed To 100 Percent Graduation
New Pittsburgh Courier, PA, May 9, 2013

100 percent. This figure has remained constant at Urban Pathways Charter Schools. For the past three years, one hundred percent of Urban Pathways’ seniors have graduated and been accepted into mostly four-year colleges and universities.

RHODE ISLAND

Bill Exempting School Employee Evaluations From The Public Records Act Passes RI Senate
Providence Journal, RI, May 9, 2013The bill exempting all school employee evaluations from the public records act passed the Senate on a vote of 37 to 0 Thursday.
http://news.providencejournal.com/breaking-news/2013/05/bill-exempting-school-employee-evaluations-from-the-public-recirds-act-pass.html

TENNESSEE

Nashville’s Top Teachers Can Get Bonuses For Signing With Low-Performing Schools
The Tennessean, TN, May 10, 2013

Top teachers in Metro Nashville’s five lowest-scoring schools might earn a bonus next year, thanks to a state plan that will reward them for staying in troubled schools or give them a pay boost for moving to one.

TEXAS

Texas Charter School Wait List Numbers Remain Fluid
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, TX, May 10, 2013

As lawmakers debate expanding Texas charter schools to accommodate students wanting to leave unsatisfactory traditional classrooms, new details show charter school waiting list numbers can fluctuate during the year due in large part to varied reporting standards and duplications.

WASHINGTON

Sequim Says No To Charter Schools; Port Townsend Mulls Them
Peninsula Daily News, WA, May 10, 2013

The Sequim School Board will not authorize charter schools in its district, at least for the foreseeable future, and the Port Townsend School Board will discuss the matter Monday.

ONLINE LEARNING

D300 Supt. Bregy Sees Progress In Springfield On Online Charter Bill
Courier News, IL, May 9, 2013

Community Unit School District 300 Superintendent Michael Bregy was back at the Illinois State Capitol Tuesday — this time, without the red apparel that first gained the legislatively active district notoriety as it protested the extension of the economic development area around Sears corporate headquarters in Hoffman Estates about a year and a half ago.

Early Glimpses At Digital Learning
Greenwich Times, CT, May 9, 2013

In one corner of her classroom at Hamilton Avenue School, second-grade teacher Karrie Vale sits cross-legged on a circular rug, surrounded by a small cluster of students, a scattering of books and the glowing screens of iPads.

Teacher Appreciation: An Open Letter to My Child’s Teacher

Julie Collier, Executive Director of Parents Advocate League, shares her story of why she fights so hard for change in education during teacher appreciation week:

Dear Ms. M.,

As our family takes time during Teacher Appreciation Week to celebrate the teachers that have blessed our children, we are reminded how truly important the profession of teaching is to a child. We focus on the ways their teachers helped them learn and improve with mistakes over the years. We talk about my experience as a student and my 5th grade teacher, Mrs. Shinn, who inspired me to become an educator. My boys love hearing that I used to hate reading and writing back in the day until Mrs. Shinn allowed me to shine in my own way. They also love hearing about my former students and how I taught them, finding inspiration in their accomplishments.

Every year at this time I use this week to focus on the positive. I remind my children how far they have come, and all the great lessons that are still in store for their future. We talk about each grade they have made it through and how their teachers helped them.

This year was different. This was the first year my older son recognized that we never really talk about his first grade year. The year he was in your class. In that moment I allowed myself to be reminded of this painful time for my son and me as a mom and educator. I remembered (like it was yesterday) the very moment you told me he was having difficulty reading, and you suggested we work with him more at home. We did. I remember when you told me he could have dyslexia, and you suggested we have him diagnosed. We took him to his doctor right away who said, “He absolutely does NOT have dyslexia. If I had a dollar for every 1st grade teacher that said a student had this disorder, I could quit my job.”

I choose to leave the profession of teaching, the profession that I love so dearly, in order to focus fully on being a mother to my children. I knew that my duty, both as an educator and mom, was to get to the bottom of why my son was not learning to read. I continued to seek your advice as a fellow educator and the teacher to my son. I believed in you and trusted that you had all the answers. After all, you were the reading specialist at the school, and you have a masters degree in teaching reading.

I knew there was a problem when my son started crying before school. This was completely uncharacteristic and a huge red flag. He said he hated school and wanted to stay home because he didn’t understand it. He said it was too noisy in class. At one point he asked me if he was “special needs” and if so, why didn’t we tell him? My child, your student, felt like a failure in your classroom. Your continued response was to “do more at home.” There was one time when you brought me all your masters’ books and asked me to go through them because you just did not know what else to do.

The moment that I didn’t see coming, finally arrived February of that year, after months of concern and trying to work with you in resolving this together. My desperate worry for my child’s lack of growth in your classroom came to a head. Exasperated I said to you, “We are doing everything at home we possibly can to help,” and asked, “what more can YOU do to help my child?” You crossed your arms and sternly said, “Julie, we have nothing to offer your son.”

My heart felt like it stopped. I knew in that very moment my son was going to have a wasted school year in your class. I also knew you had washed your hands of this “problem.” I don’t remember if I even responded to you or not. I do remember walking away from you feeling such profound disappointment and frustration, yet total resolve to not let my child fail. It was in my hands now, and mine alone.

That day I had to sit my dejected 7 year old child down and tell him, “This is not your fault. Unfortunately, you do not have a great teacher this year, but I am going to do everything I can help make this better for you. There are great teachers out there, and one day you are going to be a great student like you always wanted to be.” As I explained to your student/my son the new learning plan I had for him, I could see a slight glimmer of hope in his eyes.

I found a tutor. I told you that from this point forward, my son was going to do my homework, and not yours. Most importantly, I found my voice. I got loud. I spoke to anyone that would listen about how my son was failing in first grade. Come to find out, there were other children not doing well in your class, either. My son was not alone, and parents that were feeling the same fear for their child as I was, were also no longer alone. In fact, seven of the children in your class were going to parent-paid, after-school tutoring because you had “nothing to offer.”

Your apathy towards my child’s academic achievement ignited a flame in me that continues to burn to this day. It is why I started Parents Advocate League. It is why I continue to speak out at board meetings and education hearings at the state for students and parents. I volunteer my time to help other parents that feel lost in this system because of you and teachers like you. Your apathy is also why I value the profession of teaching more as a parent than I ever understood as a teacher in my own classroom. I get it now.

I can say with confidence and undeniable proof that one bad school year really can have a profound and negative impact on a child. Eventually, my son made progress, but it has been a constant uphill struggle for him. He started feeling more comfortable, and was open to learning new things. He had some great teachers that helped him along the way, and we celebrate them every year at this time. His greatest improvement came in 6th grade when he enrolled in a new charter school. His state test scores went up over 100 points! Most importantly, he developed a love of learning that carries him to this day. His true colors are finally shining through, like I knew they could. I feel like I can honestly say he has finally recovered, and is on the road to achieving his dream of going to the Naval Academy.

So, going back to my son’s question as why we never talk about his first grade year. I explained to him that he had a point. We should talk about that year because of all the years he has been in school, THAT was the year we all learned the most important lesson of our lives: every child deserves a great teacher every, single school year. A great teacher really does make a difference in the life and future of a child.

This Teacher Appreciation Week, I want to recognize you and thank you. Thank you for teaching us such an important life lesson. Thank you for helping me understand that I can make a difference in my children’s education beyond making copies or holding bake sales. Thank you for inspiring me to find my voice, and to encourage other parents to stand up for their own children. Thank you for the unforgettable memory of the moment you gave up on my child. Horrible though it was to hear those words, it empowers me to this day to stay strong in difficult times and reminds me to never give up, because every child deserves a great teacher.

Thank you.

I truly hope you are well and that you learned a lesson from that year too.

Sincerely,

Julie Collier
Executive Director and Founder
Parents Advocate League

I should be curled up in the Fetal position…

May 9, 2013

I should be curled up in the Fetal position…

Diane Ravitch’s blog is full of comments about me and my family… apparently in an attempt to discredit my integrity. Weird. Apparently, I do not understand the constitution or the concept of federalism and need a civics lesson, too. Ugh. My head is moving quickly toward my feet…

Also, I’m married to a man who teaches at a parochial school (Oh my Lord, save me from the fires of hell!) and my own kids went to said school. It must have needed to be said – the suggestion being that I’m married to a radical and none of us like public education. Push me farther into the abyss of fetal centrism. I never realized how bad I was.

But I’m not curled up, at all. In fact, I’m amused. That Diane Ravitch hosts such people on her blog is a mystery, which I will explore in more detail in my book. In fact, I devote almost a whole chapter to Diane and our numerous communications during the 90s that I’ve cherished.

The blog comments noted above are allegedly related to my statement about the Louisiana Supreme Court decision, and my belief that it can and should be appealed to the US Supreme Court. 10th amendment not withstanding, I have good cause to suggest this, and plan to write a bit about it in the near future (though like any good competitive “team” I wont’ be sharing all my secrets – that would be akin to giving the other guys the playbook!). But before I can spend time doing that, I did find it flattering that so many people want to presuppose so much about my personal life that might explain why I who they apparently like to talk about might actually support a child’s civil right to a great education.

I guess at the heart of these comments is that people think something about me personally is interesting… or worth detesting… so they comment. If you want to know something about me, I suppose you should actually ask rather than pre-suppose, however. And about that husband of mine, and those parochially educated kids… let me just brag for a moment:

That husband of mine, Dr. Kevin Strother, is a recognized musician and music-education teacher who grew up attending the public schools of Edenton, NC, where his parents, both public school teachers, were and remain proud members of the North Carolina Education Association. It gets better. Shelby, his mom, is on the board of East Carolina State U, one of the best teacher ed prep schools in the south. Uncle Ken was the superintendent of a nearby town and other members of the Strother clan were school board presidents. Even in their retirement, they care deeply about public education, and bemoan the lagging conditions that leave kids unprepared. We debate what the causes are, but they never question my dedication to solving it.

Back to that husband of mine, he put himself through college, his masters and his PhD – in music AND education – and took a job at a school that allowed him to create the music program from scratch. He actually teaches not in a parochial school but an independent, catholic boys school, where my kids went for some years. I married the music teacher, in fact, and he married me, a widow, with four kids. Thank God for that private school, which supported and nurtured and cared for my boys during a difficult time the way few public schools could have at the time!

My boys actually learned about the Federalist papers in 10th grade, without an AP class. They learned Latin, English literature, about nature, biology, the Greeks, the Romans, the Europeans and yes, Native Americans. They learned about civil rights, the Constitution and the purpose of American government. They all went to college dramatically more knowledgeable about such subjects than most kids in even better public schools. I know. Their professors told me – constantly – and I’ve seen the data. So yes, my choice was a good one – and while anyone who has read my various tomes know I hardly think them perfect, they are also gentlemen – generous, kind and open-minded, having been schooled classically liberal.

My daughter had a similar experience. Throughout their childhood, my kids have toured public schools with me, charter schools, watched and participated in rallies, conferences and read the news – all the time. So when I share this with them, and the Ravitch blog comments, I know they will say what they always say, unprompted…

Mom, “who are these people?? And why do they care where we went to school?”

Patience, my children. Patience.

by Jeanne Allen

Daily Headlines for May 9, 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

A One-Size-Fits-All Education Model Doesn’t Cut It—And Never Will
Take Part, May 8, 2013

Education reformer Kevin Chavous speaks out about why America is still ‘A Nation at Risk.’

Study: Many Don’t Need Remedial Classes
Miami Herald, FL, May 8, 2013

Many students are needlessly sent to remedial math classes at community colleges to learn high school math they won’t need in their first-year programs anyway, according to new research on what it takes to be successful in community college.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

School District And Plumas Charter Will Continue Greenville Collaboration
Plumas County Beacon, CA, May 9, 2013

A draft memorandum of understanding between Plumas Unified School District and Plumas Charter School for 2013-14 was presented to the school board at the May 2 board meeting in Chester.

Fresno Unified Denies Charter Renewal For Troubled New Millenium School
The Fresno Bee, CA, May 8, 2013

Fresno Unified trustees voted unanimously Wednesday night to not renew a five-year charter for troubled New Millennium in west Fresno, agreeing with district staff and the county grand jury that the school had failed to fix itself.

Silenced By Teachers Union
San Diego Union-Tribune, CA, May 8, 2013

In California, where I’m a public school teacher, union bullying is enshrined in state law. The law requires that all teachers in public schools pay compulsory “agency fees” to support the agenda of the teachers unions — the most powerful political force in the state — thus allowing the union to dominate and skew political dialogue.

COLORADO

New Charter School Has A Home In District 51
KJCT, CO, May 8, 2013

A contract was signed Tuesday night that will finalize the location for Juniper Ridge Charter School. Tuesday night, the District 51 School Board thought they had made a decision to post-pone the school’s future, but they spoke too soon.

CONNECTICUT

Not All Votes Counted In Parent Council Election
CT Post, CT, May 9, 2013

Janet Gomes, a Thomas Hooker parent, won a three-way race for president of the District Parent Advisory Council Wednesday in a controversial re-do election in which the votes of parents whose children attend charter schools weren’t counted.

DELAWARE

It’s Time To Change The Conversation On Charter Schools
The News Journal, DE, May 9, 2013

Charter schools have gotten a lot of bad press over the last year. School closings. Teacher videos. Investigations about school leader qualifications. Financial crises. Governance issues.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. to Establish a Hybrid Traditional-Charter School in Southeast
Washington Post, DC, May 9, 2013

A long-struggling Southeast D.C. elementary school will undergo a renovation and then reopen under the management of a high-performing charter school, Chancellor Kaya Henderson announced Wednesday evening.

FLORIDA

‘Parent-Trigger’ Bill Is Just Special-Interest Legislation
TC Palm, FL, May 9, 2013

The Florida House of Representatives recently passed H.B. 867, which would establish a “parent trigger” that allows parents to force a failing public school to be closed or converted to a charter school when requested by a majority of parents. The Senate considered a similar bill.

ILLINOIS

Charter School Advocates Call For Fair Funding At Loop Rally
Chicago Tribune, IL, May 9, 2013

Thousands of people wearing bright yellow caps rallied in the Loop’s Federal Plaza on Wednesday evening in support of privately run charter schools, which are under more scrutiny because of the city’s plan to close 53 neighborhood schools.

Ald. Burke Wants Gov. Quinn To Restart Uno Charter-School Funding
Chicago Sun Times, IL, May 8, 2013

Ald. Edward M. Burke (14th) went to bat Wednesday for the embattled United Neighborhood Organization, urging his ally Gov. Pat Quinn to resume funding for an UNO charter school being built in his Southwest Side ward.

INDIANA

Indiana General Assembly Rewards Failure
NW Times, IN, May 9, 2013

Proponents of traditional public schools are upset about the Indiana General Assembly forgiving startup loans for charter schools — even schools that failed. They make a good point.

IOWA

Group Pushes For Reducing Education Gap
Des Moines Register, IA, May 9, 2013

Mark M. Jacobs once was a Fortune 500 CEO and soon may be a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate, but for the time being he’s leading a nonprofit group pushing for improvements in K-12 for Iowa’s education system.

LOUISIANA

Jindal Loses On Funding
The Advocate, LA, May 8, 2013

If a defeat for Gov. Bobby Jindal’s position, the governor and other backers of state vouchers for private school tuition can take considerable comfort in a narrowly focused decision by the Louisiana Supreme Court.

MAINE

Maine Charter School Commission Approves Three More Schools
Bangor Daily News, ME, May 8, 2013

The Maine Charter School Commission approved contracts for three new charter schools which are scheduled to open in the fall.

MARYLAND

Demand For Charter Schools Remains High
Frederick News Post, MD, May 9, 2013

According to local brief in Tuesday’s edition of The News-Post, Frederick County Public Schools’ two Montessori charter schools have far more applicants than their programs can accommodate.

MICHIGAN

Bill Would Link Michigan Teachers’ Pay To Student Growth
Michigan Public Radio, MI, May 8, 2013

New teachers in Michigan would be paid based primarily on student growth under a bill in Lansing.

Small School Districts Must Consolidate In Michigan
Detroit News, MI, May 9, 2013

The Buena Vista School District near Saginaw is an example of a small school system that no longer has adequate resources to serve its students, and it is time to end its financial struggles by dissolving. Other Michigan school districts that are facing looming deficits should also consider this cost-saving action.

MISSOURI

House Speaker Loses Again In Bid To Overhaul Educator Evaluations
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, May 9, 2013

In a stinging rebuke to Speaker Tim Jones, the heavily Republican House has rejected for the second time his drive to tie educators’ job evaluations to students’ academic progress.

NEVADA

Elaine Wynn Bemoans State Of Education In Nevada, Lobbies For National Search For New Superintendent
Las Vegas Sun, NV, May 9, 2013

Elaine Wynn called on the Clark County School Board to conduct a national search for its next superintendent during her keynote address Wednesday at a Las Vegas Metro Chamber of Commerce luncheon.

NEW MEXICO

UNM Hits ‘Reset’ On Teacher Education
Albuquerque Journal, NM, May 9, 2013

The University of New Mexico’s College of Education dean stepped down Tuesday in what administrators say is the beginning of a multimillion-dollar revamp with the goal of improving the quality of education in New Mexico.

NEW JERSEY

Camden Charter School To Open In September
Camden Courier Post, NJ, May 9, 2013

For Robin Ruiz, hope started as a thought that grew into a passion. Now it’s a charter school. Ruiz is the lead founder of Hope Community Charter School, described as a new elementary school with a focus on literacy.

NEW YORK

Teach-Eval Ball In State’s Court
New York Post, NY, May 9, 2013

The state’s top education official has been tapped to finally end the city and teachers union’s long-running dispute over a new ratings system for educators.

Teachers Union Loses Three Allies In School Board Races
Buffalo News, NY, May 8, 2013

Someone spent a lot of money in the last couple of weeks trying to elect union-backed candidates to the Buffalo School Board.

Enterprise Charter School Is Granted One-Year Extension
Buffalo News, NY, May 9, 2013

The Buffalo Board of Education voted, 6-2, Wednesday to renew the charter of Enterprise Charter School for only a year, despite objections by school leaders who wanted a longer renewal period.

NORTH CAROLINA

Rock Hill Might Get A Second Charter School
Charlotte Observer, NC, May 8, 2013

Pastor Brian Keith’s idea for a second charter school in Rock Hill began in talks with parents who wanted to see a different kind of education.

OHIO

Cleveland School District And Teachers Union Reach Agreement On Cleveland Plan Details
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, May 8, 2013

The Cleveland Metropolitan School District and Cleveland Teachers Union have reached a tentative agreement on how the two will work together to implement the Cleveland Plan for Transforming Schools.

OKLAHOMA

School Spending Should Actually Fund Reforms
The Oklahoman, OK, May 9, 2013

Over the past few years, school officials have repeatedly decried the education reforms that they claimed were unfunded. This year, schools are getting a not-insignificant budget increase. As lawmakers provide it, they should ensure the money actually goes to pay for the reforms school officials have often used to justify increased appropriations.

TEXAS

Top Senator Vows His Charter School Plan Will Pass
Lubbock Avalanche Journal, TX, May 9, 2013

The top proponent for school choice in the Texas Legislature vowed Wednesday that his much-watched effort to expand charter schools in Texas will become law — even though it could still face a tough road in the House.

Senate Democrats Block Texas Education Agency Bill Over Concern About Vouchers
Dallas Morning News, TX, May 8, 2013

Senate Democrats have decided to block legislation that would reauthorize the Texas Education Agency, citing concerns that the bill could become a vehicle for private school vouchers or other education measures they oppose.

WISCONSIN

Special Ed Vouchers Won’t End Discrimination
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, May 8, 2013

What do these children have in common? They all have disabilities, they all tried to participate in the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program and they all were denied admission, not served or pushed back into public schools by private voucher schools.

ONLINE LEARNING

Online Schools A Virtual Reality In Sacramento
News Review. CA, May 9, 2013

When Kelly Krug’s son Ben struggled academically, the Fair Oaks mom looked for options that provided computerized instruction.

Gila Vista’s Online Use Earns ‘Rock Star’ Status
Yuma Sun, AZ, May 8, 2013

Gila Vista’s success with online learning, and specifically the Plato courseware system, earned the Yuma junior high school an award from the curriculum’s provider, Edmentum.

Postcards from the Past — No. 2

May 8, 2013

Postcards from the Past 
A new, occasional blog post by CER President Jeanne Allen in commemoration of CER’s 20th Anniversary in business and the historical events that have taken place during our history.

It was January, 1997. It was Pennsylvania. The letter began:

“I recently read with considerable interest your account of the charter school debate in Pennsylvania…I’m not sure who your source was for that account but I thought I’d take the opportunity…to give you the rest of the story…”

The letter was from the president of the PA School Boards Association, Thomas Gentzel, and he was angry that we called the pending proposal in PA a “lousy” charter bill, because it vested all the authority to create charters with school boards. We said at the time, that doing so might make the Blob content, but that it would never lead to charters being created.


Indeed, back then, and even now, school boards associations are more antagonistic about charter school bills that spread the authority for chartering to other entities, like universities, or Mayors, or independent entities completely. The fact is that any division of power for them is a loss of power.

This recently played out again in Mississippi, as it does in every state when charters come up. Republican leaders who wanted desperately to do something about their state’s very weak charter school law admitted that the school board members and superintendents back home were putting heavy pressure on them to limit chartering to only the failing school districts, so that they would not have any schools opening in their districts. On top of that, they opposed multiple authorizers. They always do of course, but retaining sole authority of charter schools to school districts, as PA’s Genztel argued for in 1997, results in exactly the number of charter schools the school boards associations prefer. Zero.

“…the definition of ‘lousy charter bill’,” says Gentzel, “is a matter of taste. The version that passed the House…achieved a notable balance in our opinion: it afforded considerable relief from mandates to charter schools while ensuring that [only] school directors…were empowered to evaluate and act on charter applications.”

In the end, Gov Tom Ridge and his administration held firm and insisted on an appeals process to mitigate what we convinced them would be the effect of having school board only approval of charters. But to this day, the lack of multiple authorizing that was at the heart of that compromise plagues both existing, successful charters from growing as well as would-be schools from opening.

At the same time that effort was ongoing, founder of the L.A.-based Accelerated Charter School, Johnathan Williams, had traveled at our request to Indiana to meet with business leaders and then State Senator Teresa Lubbers who was leading the charge to enact a charter law, an effort that would finally see success some seven years later! Williams, coming from a state in which at the time only school boards could approve charters and even with an appeals process told the group that they should begin with multiple authorizers so as to avoid the hostilities that he had seen throughout his and other’s tenures in Indiana.

They listened and learned and year after year they chose not to adopt a weak law just to have a law and placate the Blob. In 2001, Indiana passed its charter law, with multiple authorizers including the Indianapolis Mayor and Universities, and it was strong, enabling dozens of new, robust schools to see the light of day and grow to serve students most in need.

Kudos to those policymakers who stand firm from the start, and recognize the importance of lessons learned.