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Alabama public education is ranked low again

by Phillip Tutor
Anniston Star
April 17, 2013

Say this much about the Center for Education Reform: It’s not a fan of the quality of public education in Alabama.

The only proof you need is this passage from a recent CER report: “The only other thing this state has going for it is that its teacher quality index isn’t a complete failure. Parents also have access to a decent school report card to better understand their schools, but school board elections are held in October, a busy time for parents to get engaged.”

Ouch.

A recent CER effort ranked all 50 states in what it calls the “Parent Power Index.” Alabama ranked 46th — poorly, in other words, which is so customary in national reviews of states’ public education systems. At the heart of the poor ranking was the state’s lack of charter schools, which, as most Alabamians know, has been a hot legislative topic in Montgomery for some time.

From here, it’s interesting to view the two sides of the broader issue: In Alabama, proponents of our public education — such as the Alabama Education Association, local and state school boards, the governor’s office and the state Legislature — constantly talk of how proud they are of our schools and how convinced they are of their quality.

Yet, out-of-state agencies who study such things consistently point to real and obvious deficiencies. Rarely do the two sides agree.

Newswire: April 16, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 15

TRAGEDY IN BOSTON. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and families of yesterday’s tragedy at the Boston Marathon. As our nation grapples with yet another act of terror, children no doubt have questions and concerns of their own. We’ve pulled together a few resources for parents and schools to provide reassurance and guidance to children when talking to them about tragedy.

WAFFLING ON CHOICE. Last week, TN Gov. Bill Haslam killed a very modest voucher plan at a time when senate republicans were poised to expand the plan beyond just those students trapped in what the state defines as “failing” schools. Why pull your own bill that had increasing support in the legislature? Evidently, as the Wall Street Journal uncovered, “to please the teachers unions.”

Some lawmakers in the Tarheel State may be waffling on this same issue as the Opportunity Scholarship Act that would provide approximately 360,000 low-income and middle-class families with a scholarship to attend a school of their choice was filed in the NC General Assembly yesterday. Some speculate Speaker Thom Tillis (R-Mecklenberg) isn’t going to be pushing so as not to lose the favor of the establishment as he makes his bid for a seat in the U.S. Senate. We’ve seen political aspirations get in the way of doing what’s right for kids play out before. Hopefully the 60,000+ parents, educators and students that have already vowed their support for this effort will be enough to sway the Speaker in their favor and remind him that he works for them, not special interests. Join the effort and sign up to attend Answering the Call for Our Children on April 23 in Greensboro, NC.

10,000 STRONG. Last Wednesday, 10,000 parents, students, educators and community leaders rallied in Buffalo in support of the NY Education Investment Tax Credit bill that would allow up to $300 million in individual and corporate tax credits. The bill enjoys bi-partisan support in the NY General Assembly, and as Buffalo Bills Hall of Famer Jim Kelly remarked, “How often is it that Albany could pass one bill and everybody wins.” This editor couldn’t agree more, as a Buffalo native who knows far to well how desperately parents in the Empire State need choice. If passed, the bill would allow low-income and middle-class families to choose from a number of public, private and parochial schools. Help spread the word and help to secure the thousands of voices still needed to see this through to Governor Cuomo’s desk.

THROWING GOOD MONEY AFTER BAD. West Virginia—‘Wild’? Yes. ‘Wonderful’? That remains to be seen: the state ranks 43rd in affording parents power. Only 24% of the state’s eighth graders can read at proficiency. Rather than push for systemic change, the State Board of Education has decided to throw more money at 32 failing schools, essentially rewarding them for poor performance. State Superintendent Jim Phares said, “When schools continue to perform in the bottom 5 percent of the state and aren’t showing signs of growth, they need help.” With all do respect Mr. Phares, the children trapped in these persistently failing schools need the help finding a way out!

EVERY CHILD READY. Last week, Education Week, the national newspaper of record for education, profiled the DC-based AppleTree Institute for its evidenced-based preschool instructional model. Developed with federal Investing In Innovation (i3) funds, Every Child Ready has become a model for preschool instruction whose method is learning through play. AppleTree President and CEO Jack McCarthy explains in the article how the model is particularly effective for children from under-resourced communities, whose backgrounds may not have prepared them for the rigors of elementary school. “We’re really focused on the children who are starting the furthest behind. They’re the ones who make the most gains through our program,” says the edreform pioneer. Be sure to check out the full article to see how AppleTree is starting early to change the trajectories of hundreds of children.

DEVELOPING OUR IRREPLACEABLE TEACHERS. The National Academy of Advanced Teacher Education (NAATE), an intensive two summer program (10 days in residence each summer) designed specifically for experienced high-performing teachers from across the nation, is accepting applications from qualified candidates for the July 2013 program taking place in Providence, RI. The program is designed for high-performing Grade 3 – 12 teachers in their 3rd – 8th year of teaching in core subject areas with the goals of 1) further improving their classroom practice, 2) enhancing their ability to lead their peers and other adults outside the classroom, and 3) recommitting them to the profession of teaching. To find out more about the curriculum, the case study’s method and cost, and to learn about nominating teachers for the program, please call 401-371-0001 or e-mail info@naate.org.

Daily Headlines for April 16, 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

How Will Michelle Rhee’s Policy and Politics Work Fare in States?
Ed Week Blog, April 15, 2013

The biggest national education story of the past week was John Merrow’s discussion of a memo about possible, even likely cheating in D.C. Public Schools under former Chancellor Michelle Rhee, and how she may have swept the issue under the rug, or just passively let it get buried and lost under other paperwork, depending on how you look at it. (As my colleague Lesli Maxwell documents, Rhee claims not to remember the memo.)

Choice Rests With Schools, Not Parents
Roll Call, April 15, 2013

Kevin P. Chavous’ recent Guest Observer (“Congress Is Getting It Wrong on Parental School Choice,” April 5) is little more than a propaganda piece for the forces that seek to privatize elementary and secondary education in America.

Unions’ Charter-School Push
Wall Street Journal, April 16, 2013

Charter schools have spread across the country while generally keeping organized labor out, with operators saying they can manage schools better when their staffs aren’t unionized. But labor groups are now making a big push to get a stronger foothold in this educational realm.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

The Top 10 States For Educational Options; Arizona 6th
Arizona Business Journal, AZ, April 15, 2013

Arizona ranked sixth on The Center for Education Reform’s Parent Power Index, which means parents have access to quality education options and are provided with good information to make smart decisions about their children’s education.

TUSD Will Allow Charter School To Lease Closed Site
Arizona Daily Star, AZ, April 16, 2013

Acknowledging TUSD has to be more open-minded if it’s going to dispose of its vacant school sites, the Governing Board agreed to lease the shut-down Rogers Elementary to a charter school.

CALIFORNIA

Charter School Sees Success In Beaumont Even Before It Opens
Record Gazette, CA, April 16, 2013

It didn’t take long for parents to take advantage of an alternative option for their children: Highland Academy, Beaumont’s first charter school affiliated with the school district.

COLORADO

School Choice Economical, Gives Every Student Opportunity
The Coloradoan, CO, April 15, 2013

The system of “choice” makes it possible for any school or any kid to have advantages that may not otherwise exist and for children to have an education that meets their needs, whatever those may be. And it does so without draining money from the public school system, as vouchers would do.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C.’s Public Education Landscape Changing Rapidly
CBS Local, DC, April 15, 2013

Public education in Washington, D.C. looks much different than it did a decade ago. It continues to evolve, as traditional public schools close and new charter schools open every year.

FLORIDA

Florida Teachers Plan New Legal Challenge To Evaluations
Orlando Sentinel, FL, April 15, 2013

Florida’s teachers union plans to file a new legal challenge to the state’s teacher evaluation system Tuesday morning, a union spokesman said Monday.

Much Ado About ‘Parent Trigger’
Orlando Sentinel, FL, April 15, 2013

No matter what side you are on, the “parent trigger” bill is a lesson in the worst kind of politicking.

Grading Teachers: Put Legislators To Test
The Ledger, FL, April 16, 2013

A growing number of states are implementing teacher-evaluation systems to weed out weak instructors, reports The New York Times. But it found that the systems often produce glowing results.

ILLINOIS

CTU President Launches Effort To Oust Rahm
Chicago Sun Times, IL, April 16, 2013

Chicago Teachers Union president Karen Lewis isn’t waiting for 2015 to try to oust Mayor Rahm Emanuel, whom she blames for closing a historic number of public schools, she said Monday, announcing an aggressive campaign to train his possible replacement.

LOUISIANA

Plan Would Allow Some Charter Schools To Reserve Seats While Taking Part In OneApp
The Lens, LA, April 15, 2013

Under a much-anticipated plan that officials will present to the state education board on Tuesday, some charter schools participating in the city’s OneApp enrollment process would be allowed to hold seats for specific students.

MARYLAND

Seeking A Comeback For Catholic Education
Baltimore Sun, MD, April 15, 2013

Here’s hoping that under Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori’s innovative leadership, Catholic education will once again assume the priority status it deserves in the church’s new game plan. A lot of kids in our most challenging neighborhoods would benefit. The state (and country) would benefit, too.

Balto. Co. Budget Would Add New Seats For Crowded Schools
Baltimore Sun, MD, April 16, 2013

Baltimore County would add classrooms for thousands of students under a budget proposal unveiled Monday by County Executive Kevin Kamenetz — a plan advocates hope signals a commitment to solve the overcrowding that has plagued the school system.

MINNESOTA

Student Group Hopes To Bridge Achievement Gap
Minnesota Daily, MN, April 16, 2013

He and other members of Students for Education Reform will give local ninth graders a taste of life at the University of Minnesota on Thursday as part of their efforts to combat the educational achievement gap.

MISSOURI

Education Reform: Public Schools Don’t Need Grade Ratings
Springfield News-Leader, MO, April 16, 2013

StudentsFirst formed in 2010 as a grass-roots group and works to lobby elected officials, craft legislative bills and back political candidates. This is an “out of state” group trying to change Missouri public education policies.

NEVADA

Four CCSD High Schools Ranked Among Nation’s Most Challenging
Las Vegas Sun, NV, April 16, 2013

Sixteen Nevada high schools — including four from Clark County — have made the Washington Post’s list of the most challenging high schools in the nation.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

NH Charter School Funding Saga Continues: ‘Dollars And Cents’ Or Bargaining Chip?
Nashua Telegraph, NH, April 15, 2013

If the state passes its budget for the next biennium without money for new charter schools, the effects would be devastating, and long-lasting.

NEW JERSEY

Fine Print: Newark Charter School Revocation
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, April 16, 2013

What it is: The state Department of Education yesterday released its letter to the 100 Legacy Academy Charter School in Newark, informing the school that its state charter had been revoked after just seven months of operation. The April 11 letter cited a number of violations and findings concerning the school’s instructional programs, financial viability, and general operations.

Fixing Schools
The Record, NJ, April 15, 2013

GOVERNOR CHRISTIE continues his efforts to use vouchers to improve New Jersey’s educational system, arguing he wants to help some students in bad situations have access to better schools. However, keeping vouchers in the conversation does nothing but damage the futures of the majority of the state’s students. Christie needs to look at how he can help the whole state — not just a select few.

NEW YORK

King Charter Students Test New App For Getting Into College
Buffalo News, NY, April 15, 2013

A group of middle schoolers at King Center Charter School are testing a new app designed to help them get into college and succeed.

Ad Campaign Warns Families About Tougher Standardized Tests Awaiting New York Elementary Students On Tuesday
New York Daily News, NY, April 16, 2013

Officials predict a 30% drop in student scores because of the more challenging exams. Critics contend children are ill-prepared for the Common Core curriculum-based tests, which will help determine promotion to the next grade.

Pressure From Excessive Testing
Press Republican, NY, April 15, 2013

While it is, comparatively, a small number of parents who will opt their children out from the statewide exams today, the rebellion will continue to grow unless New York makes adjustments in what many deem as excessive testing.

NORTH CAROLINA

Why Tenure Is Important
Times News, NC, April 15, 2013

You want your child’s teachers to have tenure because .… only with tenure can they stand up for your child against inane and harmful directives issued by administrators and central office.

NC Charter School Bill Raises Questions
WFAE, NC, April 15, 2013

A charter school bill that would change the oversight of charter schools in North Carolina has raised a lot of questions and speculation.

School Voucher Bill Filed In House
News & Observer, NC, April 16, 2013

A bill that would give students who transfer from public to private schools up to $4,200 a year to pay tuition was filed Monday in the House.

OHIO

Strongsville School District Makes Offer To Striking Teachers, But No Settlement Yet
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, April 15, 2013

A bumped-up offer from the Strongsville school board early Monday morning to striking teachers was not enough bring the two sides to an agreement.

Metro School Extends Its Reach
Columbus Dispatch, OH, April 16, 2013

A plan to expand Metro Early College High School to include middle-school grades comports with a key idea in how to make better schools available to more kids: Take what works and do more of it.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma City School Could Lose Charter
The Oklahoman, OK, April 16, 2013

Oklahoma City Public Schools has put a northeast charter school on notice that it could lose its charter. Marcus Garvey Leadership Charter School, 1537 NE 24, received poor marks from the state Education Department this year, including Fs in reading and math.

OREGON

Board OKs Kids Unlimited VIBES plan
Mail Tribune, OR, April 16, 2013

Kids Unlimited Monday night was given the go-ahead by the Medford School Board to begin preparing to operate what will likely become the school district’s third charter school.

PENNSYLVANIA

Crowd Urges SRC To Approve Charter Renewals, Expansions
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 15, 2013

Waving placards and chanting, more than 250 charter school students, supporters, and parents urged the Philadelphia School Reform Commission on Monday to approve pending charter renewals and expansion requests.

Chester Township Against Tax Exemption For Charter
Delaware County Times, PA, April 15, 2013

Township officials say they will oppose a move by a local charter school to secure tax-exempt status.

TENNESSEE

Smithson-Craighead, Parents Sue MNPS To Prevent Charter School From Closing
Nashville City Paper, TN, April 16, 2013

A lawsuit filed by Smithson-Craighead Middle School and two parents on Monday aims to prevent the charter school from closing at the end of the year.

Tennessee Municipal School District Bill Passes Legislature, En Route To Governor
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, April 16, 2013

With suburban mayors from Shelby County watching in support, both houses of the state legislature approved the bill allowing the six Memphis suburban cities to create new municipal school districts Monday.

WISCONSIN

Neighboring School Districts Planning Health Care Charter School
Journal Sentinel, WI, April 15, 2013

Two Waukesha County school districts are pursuing a new joint charter school that would prepare students for careers in the health professions.

Voucher Backers’ Cash Detailed
Appleton Post Crescent, WI, April 15, 2013

Supporters of private school vouchers have spent about $10 million on political campaigns in Wisconsin since 2003, including $2.4 million in support of Republican Gov. Scott Walker, a new report released Monday showed.

ONLINE LEARNING

SRC To Vote This Week On $15 Million For New Cyber School
Philadelphia Notebook Blog, PA, April 15, 2013

On the agenda for Thursday’s School Reform Commission meeting is a resolution to approve $15 million to establish a District-run virtual school.

Dist. 203 Joins Others In Rejecting Virtual Charter School
Daily Herald, IL, April 15, 2013

Naperville Unit District 203 board members, hoping to avoid a “veritable disaster” Monday night, unanimously denied a petition for a virtual charter school hoping open in the coming school year.

Common Core meets the Reform Agenda

On March 25, 2013, American Enterprise Institute (AEI) hosted an event on Common Core and the education reform movement. Panelists concluded that the state-led initiative will face an uncertain future as it intersects with additional efforts to improve schooling, such as teacher accountability policies and charter schooling.

CER President Jeanne Allen was a featured speaker during the discussion on charter schools and social studies standards. During this panel, she introduced the new “three Rs” that fit the condition charters are finding themselves in regarding their fate with the Common Core. Those sentiments -– Rejection, Resignation and Relief — typify most charters today, and the challenge, she said, will be for state policymakers not to impose things on charter schools that are contrary to their unique approaches and the way they choose to teach content.

A live recording of the panel on charter schools and social studies standards is below.

AppleTree: Every Child Ready

Did you see AppleTree profiled in Education Week today?

The piece, titled “Preschool Network Puts ‘Innovation’ Grant to Test ,” highlights how AppleTree has used Investing in Innovation (i3) funds from the Department of Education to develop Every Child Ready , its evidence-based preschool instructional model. Education Week, the national newspaper of record for education, presents Every Child Ready as a model that uses learning through play to give children the social, emotional, and cognitive foundations they need for success in kindergarten and beyond.

To experience a day in the life of an AppleTree student, Education Week reporter Christina Samuels visited AppleTree’s Columbia Heights classrooms. What she saw reveals a carefully planned combination of social-emotional learning and early literacy skill building:

Ms. Twyman leads the children through a brisk review of letter sounds and tells them the plans for the day: Some will choose to dig through a sand table to discover dinosaur “fossils,” while others may play with classroom toys, like blocks. Still others can choose to work with clay, or stamp paper with the letter E with the help of the classroom’s second teacher.

While she noted that early academics are a key focus of Every Child Ready, Samuels also emphasized that AppleTree gives chidlren these cognitive skills in an intentional, fun, and engaging way.

AppleTree President and CEO Jack McCarthy explains in the article how the model is particularly effective for children from under-resourced communities, whose backgrounds may not have prepared them for the rigors of elementary school. “We’re really focused on the children who are starting the furthest behind. They’re the ones who make the most gains through our program,” he says.

It’s an exciting time for AppleTree, and the article accurately describes us as approaching the early education of our children with a “sense of urgency” at a time when preschool is entering the federal limelight.

Take a few minutes today to read the full Education Week article and get a sense for how AppleTree is changing the life trajectories of hundreds of children.

The Top 10 states for educational options; Arizona 6th

by Angela Gonzales
Arizona Business Journal
April 15, 2013

Arizona ranked sixth on The Center for Education Reform’s Parent Power Index, which means parents have access to quality education options and are provided with good information to make smart decisions about their children’s education.

The states were ranked on prevalence of charter schools, school choice, teacher quality, transparency and access to data, online learning, pro-reform governors and parent trigger laws, where parents have an opportunity to turn around failing schools.

The rankings pointed to Arizona’s scholarship program for students with disabilities and a tax credit that has helped more than 30,000 students opt into new schools. In addition, Arizona’s charter school law has provided more than 200,000 children with choices about their schooling.

Click here to see the top 10 states in The Center for Education Reform’s Parent Power Index.

Here are more specifics on Arizona from the index:

72%: Arizona’s graduation rate
1539: Average SAT test score
19.7: Average ACT score
33%: 4th grade National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) math score
31%: 8th grade NAEP math score
26%: 4th grade NAEP reading score
$8,006: Per pupil funding
1,077,831: Public school enrollment

Talking to Kids About Tragedy: Tips for Parents and Schools

As news of the Boston Marathon explosions dominate social media, television, and people’s thoughts and concerns, children across the nation are likely to have questions and concerns of their own. These resources offer suggestions and tips for providing reassurance and guidance to children when talking to them about tragedy:

Talking with Kids about News from PBS

A National Tragedy: Helping Children Cope from the National Association of School Psychologists

Talking With Kids About Tough Issues from Children Now

Talking to Children About Violence: Tips for Parents and Teachers from the National Association of School Psychologists

Daily Headlines for April 15, 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

Bush, Obama Focus On Standardized Testing Leads To ‘Opt-Out’ Parents’ Movement
Washington Post, DC, April 14, 2013

A decade into the school accountability movement, pockets of resistance to standardized testing are sprouting up around the country, with parents and students opting out of the high-stakes tests used to evaluate schools and teachers.

America’s Most Challenging Schools Are Facing Staff Cuts And Shut-Downs
Washington Post, DC, April 4, 2013

I have been ranking the most challenging schools in the country and this region for 15 years. Rarely have I encountered anything like the American Indian Public Charter High School of Oakland, Calif., the No. 1 school on my 2013 list. It has risen to the top just as its city school board is trying to shut it down.

Helping Teachers Learn
New York Times, NY, April 14, 2013

The school cheating scandal in Atlanta that led to criminal indictments against dozens of teachers, principals and administrators last month contains at least three lessons for states that are developing teacher evaluation systems.

Some States Dropping GED as Test Price Spikes
Associated Press, April 14, 2013

Several dozen states are looking for an alternative to the GED high school equivalency test because of concerns that a new version coming out next year is more costly and will no longer be offered in a pencil and paper format.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Charter Schools In Alabama Would Help Improve Broken Education System
Alabama Crimson White, AL, April 15, 2013

There has been a lot of debate on education in the state legislature this year. Largely, it has been centered on the Alabama Accountability Act and the vouchers it provides for private schools. While important, these vouchers are not the only creative avenues for education reform. The state needs to have a discussion on charter schools, which have the potential to help all students of the state of Alabama, and not just a few.

CALIFORNIA

Huachuca Mountain Parents Delve Into Charter Proposal
Sierra Vista Herald, CA, April 15, 2013

Speaking to more than 50 parents, five Huachuca Mountain Elementary School teachers explained why they support flipping the school into a district-run charter at a meeting in the school’s library last week.

L.A. School Reform Effort Draws Diverse Group Of Wealthy Donors
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 14, 2013

Republicans, liberals, Hollywood notables and global corporate executives are among those who gave to the Coalition for School Reform.

California Democrats Blast Efforts To Overhaul Schools
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 14, 2013

They call StudentsFirst and Democrats for Education Reform fronts for GOP and corporate interests. Also, Harris and Newsom tout stands on same-sex marriage.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Sidwell Friends Alumni Aim To Open Public Charter School In The District
Washington Post, DC, April 13, 2013

Sidwell Friends, the elite private school known for educating the children of presidents and members of Congress, has lent its support to a group of former students and faculty who are seeking to open a public charter school in the District.

Students Leaving Mid-Year Raise Questions For Charter School
Washington Examiner, DC, April 14, 2013

D.C. charter board staff are recommending that Basis Public Charter School should not be allowed to add 35 seats next year because a large number of students are leaving in the middle of the school year.

FLORIDA

Parents, Students Fight Shutdown Of Bradenton Charter School
Bradenton Herald, FL, April 14, 2013

Bradenton Charter School may be forced to close its doors this June. But since the Manatee school board voted for the nonrenewal of the school’s contract in March, parents, teachers and students have been scrambling to get another chance.

GEORGIA

Ga. May Standardize Teacher Evaluations
Cherokee Tribune, GA, April 14, 2013

Georgia is moving forward with a plan to standardize annual evaluations for teachers and principals based, in part, on student performance.

Ex-Senator Sets Up Foundation For Charter School Systems
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, April 13, 2013

The sponsor of legislation creating charter school systems has formed a taxpayer-supported foundation to lobby for the program his bill created.

LOUISIANA

The Direction of our Compass
The Advocate, LA, April 14, 2013

The founder of Microsoft has taken to tilting at philantrophic windmills, from malaria in Africa to public education in America. But if Bill Gates has an image as a Knight of Nerds, or Duke of Data, his message on a key policy problem in the latter sector is focused on the worker bees: teachers, and their roles as inspirers of the next generation in our classrooms.

Teachers Blast Louisiana Evaluation System, Say State Doesn’t Support Them
Times-Picayune, LA, April 15, 2013

Teachers attending a Saturday town hall meeting in New Orleans hosted by NBC’s Education Nation blasted new state evaluation procedures for teachers and Louisiana’s adoption of national education standards, saying the state Department of Education isn’t giving teachers enough support.

Teacher Unions Push Bills
The Advocate, LA, April 15, 2013

One or both teacher unions in Louisiana back bills that would require the state superintendent of education to be elected by voters, add new oversight to online schools and change testing rules for public school students.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter School Wait List: Take An Accurate Count
Boston Globe, MA, April 14, 2013

THE STATE’S 80-odd charter schools and their supporters point proudly to a 53,000-student waiting list as proof for the need to raise the state cap on these K-12 classrooms that operate outside the control of local school districts. It’s true that parents are queuing up to get their children a seat in charter schools known for impressive MCAS scores, flexible teacher hiring practices, and a longer school day. But the list is inflated by duplicate entries that arise when families join the lotteries for more than one charter school.

Underperforming Schools Take On Partners To Stave Off State Takeover
Boston Globe, MA, April 14, 2013

Boston and three other Massachusetts cities, in an attempt to stave off a state takeover of underperforming schools, are turning to nonprofit partners to jump-start flagging overhaul efforts.

MISSISSIPPI

Let’s Keep Promises Of Charter Schools Bill
Clarion Ledger, MS, April 14, 2013

When Gov. Phil Bryant places pen to paper on the recently passed charter school legislation, he won’t just be signing a bill, he’ll be signing a promise to Mississippi’s school children. This promise — that Mississippi will work to ensure that all children have access to an excellent public school — is one that we must all make, but especially those of us who have championed the charter school legislation.

MISSOURI

Charter Schools Want Flexibility In Pensions
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, April 14, 2013

Grand Center Arts Academy needed a reading teacher. So Principal Lynne Glickert began recruiting a candidate from St. Louis County, a teacher whom she calls “amazing.”

NEW JERSEY

Vouchers Not The Answer For Schools
Herald News, NJ, April 15, 2013

GOVERNOR CHRISTIE continues his efforts to use vouchers to improve New Jersey’s educational system, arguing he wants to help some students in bad situations have access to better schools. However, keeping vouchers in the conversation does nothing but damage the futures of the majority of the state’s students. Christie needs to look at how he can help the whole state — not just a select few.

Camden Charter To Be Managed By N.Y. Network
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, April 15, 2013

When Freedom Academy Charter School was put on state probation last year – its charter was in jeopardy because of poor academic results – it hired a New York charter management organization as an academic consultant while continuing a partnership with a local group to oversee its finances.

NEW MEXICO

Teacher Eval Criticism Doesn’t Add Up For N.M.
Albuquerque Journal, NM, April 14, 2013

Here’s a math quiz for the defenders of the status quo who are fighting the state’s new teacher evaluation system — a serious proposal put forth in the equivalent of an improvement and accountability vacuum.

District Pushes For Clear Info On Charters
Santa Fe New Mexican, NM, April 14, 2013

Santa Fe Public Schools plans to initiate a charter school performance management system that will provide more information, clarification and transparency about the four district-chartered schools’ status.

NEW YORK

Students Face Tougher Tests That Outpace Lesson Plans
New York Times, NY, April 15, 2013

At Public School 10 on the edge of Park Slope, Brooklyn, parents begged the principal to postpone the lower school science fair, insisting it was going to add too much pressure while they were preparing their children for the coming state tests.

New Teacher Evaluations Costly For School Districts
Utica Observer Dispatch, NY, April 14, 2013

Students aren’t the only ones subject to testing. A state mandated evaluation system now puts teachers and principals in the hot seat, but it’s about more than just a passing grade.

Shady Charter ‘$trips’
New York Post, NY, April 14, 2013

The city approved a politically connected charter school — whose founder went to prison and principal was once accused of fixing grades — to issue up to $23 million in tax-exempt bonds to relocate to a former Bronx strip club.

NORTH CAROLINA

Fitzsimon: Battle Over Vouchers
Daily Reflector, NC, April 14, 2013

The real battle for the future of public education is about to begin in Raleigh.
The leading think tank on the anti-public education Right set the stage this week with an “exclusive interview” with chief school privatizer and voucher proponent Rep. Paul Stam who talked about the voucher bill he would be introducing in the House.

Charters Benefit Legislators
News & Observer, NC, April 14, 2013

Senate Bill 337 comes directly from the American Legislative Exchange Council’s model legislation called “Charter School Growth with Quality Act.” In ALEC’s 2010 Report Card on American Education it called on its members and allies to “Transform the system, don’t tweak it.”

OHIO

Common Core: More Thinking, More Learning
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, April 14, 2013

The change will, advocates say, mark a fundamental shift in the way the nation’s children are educated. And it’s happening right now, in classrooms across Southwest Ohio and Northern Kentucky, as school districts work to train teachers and administrators how to educate students the Common Core way.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma City School Transportation Plan Adds Some Students, Omits Others
The Oklahoman, OK, April 15, 2013

Oklahoma City Public Schools developed a new transportation system to shuttle students across the district to attend new high school academies this year. But that shuttle hasn’t been open to students who attend alternative or magnet schools.

OREGON

A New School Or Back To The Drawing Board?
Mail Tribune, OR, April 15, 2013

The Medford School Board will vote today on whether to approve Kids Unlimited’s modified application to create the district’s third charter school.

PENNSYLVANIA

No Child Left Behind Gauge May End In Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, April 15, 2013

Adequate yearly progress has been the assessment measurement for schools and school districts in Pennsylvania since the enactment of the federal No Child Left Behind Law in January 2001.

TENNESSEE

Tennessee Voucher Fiasco
Wall Street Journal, April 15, 2013

Republicans claim to be looking for a way to support upward economic mobility without compromising their principles, and school choice is a natural. So it’s dismaying that Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam has decided to kill a voucher plan to please the teachers unions.

TN Lawmakers Push Education Bills In Final Days Of Session
The Tennessean, TN, April 14, 2013

As the 108th Tennessee General Assembly draws to a close, state lawmakers are hoping to push through education proposals that include creating a state panel to authorize charter schools for five counties and a measure that would clear the way for cities to begin forming municipal school systems.

Proposed Charter School Panel Would Oversee Knox, 4 Other Counties
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, April 14, 2013

A bill to create a new state panel that could authorize charter schools when local school boards reject them has been revised to apply only in five counties, including Knox, and remains a contentious issue as legislators push toward adjourning the 2013 session.

WASHINGTON

Charter Schools Should Ignite Change For The Better
News Tribune, WA, April 14, 2013

I applaud the Tacoma School Board for signaling an interest in becoming a public charter school authorizer. It’s time that our community learned more about public charter schools.

WISCONSIN

Madison School Board To Finalize Charter Policy
Madison State Journal, WI, April 15, 2013

The Madison School Board on Monday plans to finalize revisions to its charter school policy, which, according to advocates for the alternative public schools, will discourage future proposals from coming forward.

Madison’s Thriving Private Schools Buck National Trend
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, April 14, 2013

Private school enrollment has steadily declined across Wisconsin over the past 15 years, but that’s not the case in Madison and Dane County.

ONLINE LEARNING

Virtual School Puts Florida On Cutting Edge Of Digital Learning
Orlando Sentinel, FL, April 14, 2013

This time of year my heart grows fond for Florida, both for its pleasant spring weather and for the wonderful memories of serving in the Florida Legislature, particularly the time spent as the first Republican speaker of the Florida House in 122 years.

D-300 Vows To Fight Any Appeal
Northwest Herald, IL, April 14, 2013

Some District 300 board members already have dangled the threat of legal action if a state commission doesn’t fairly consider the district’s questions concerning a proposed online charter school.

Legislators Target Online Charter Schools
Daily Chronicle, IL, April 15, 2013

As area school boards rejected an online charter school that would draw students from its schools, state lawmakers appear poised to slap a hold on the creation of virtual schools until regulations and guidelines can be crafted.

Digital Learning Way Of The Future
Albuquerque Journal, NM, April 14, 2013

Last year, President Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan issued what has become known as the “digital mandate,” challenging schools to adopt digital technology by 2017.

Daily Headlines for April 12, 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

Common Core: Nationalized State-Run Education
American Thinker, April 12, 2013

Common Core, the new federal education standards, may look delicious; but before you take a bite out of the apple, it might be a good idea to know a razor is inside.

Common Core Will Raise The Bar Of Standards, But Scores Will Go Down At First
New York Daily News, NY, April 12, 2013

Students will no longer be learning at the lower standards set by No Child Left Behind. We can only hope students will be learning more with standards that compete internationally.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

Governor Vetoes Bill Adding Disabled Kids To Charters
KVOA, AZ, April 11, 2013

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer has vetoed a bill that would have allowed charter schools to enroll some disabled pre-school students because the Legislature didn’t include funding for the students.

CALIFORNIA

Greuel Vows School Reform As Garcetti Seeks End To ‘Division’
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 11, 2013

Los Angeles mayoral candidate Wendy Greuel laid out her plans to improve public schools on Thursday, pushing for tougher evaluations of teachers and principals, while opponent Eric Garcetti secured endorsements from a handful of African American leaders.

L.A. Teachers Vote ‘No Confidence’ In Supt. Deasy
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 12, 2013

In a referendum, 91% disapproved of the superintendent, the teachers union says. A measure sharply criticizing the union’s leadership and laying out priorities passes too.

Imagine That: Happy Ending To A ‘Parent Trigger’ Petition
Los Angeles Times, CA, April 11, 2013

The “parent trigger” movement underwent a maturation process in its latest campaign, a petition to restructure 24th Street Elementary in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

COLORADO

Plaintiffs In Douglas County School Voucher Fight Turn To High Court
Denver Post, CO, April 12, 2013

The American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado filed a petition Thursday with the Colorado Supreme Court, asking that it overturn the state appeals court ruling that found that Douglas County schools’ voucher program did not violate the state constitution.

Report States Reform Efforts In Denver, Aurora Lacking
9NEWS, CO, April 11, 2013

A group of community leaders called A+ Denver launched a comprehensive study into whether or not reform efforts in urban schools are working as well as district leaders are claiming. The report shows that despite targeted funding more students are not ready for college.

CONNECTICUT

A Few Words Of Advice For Charter Naysayers
CT Post, CT, April 11, 2013

Not all advocates appreciate their critics, but I do. As an advocate for charter schools, I’m grateful for the passion of our naysyers and respect their dedication to public education.

DELAWARE

Delaware Charter School Troubles: Pencader Parents, Students Dealt Another Blow
Newsworks, DE, April 11, 2013

First Pencader Charter High School lost its charter; now, less than two months later, Pencader parents received more bad news.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Memo Warns Of Rampant Cheating In D.C. Public Schools
USA Today, April 11, 2013

District of Columbia Public Schools officials have long maintained that a 2011 test-cheating scandal that generated two government probes was limited to one elementary school. But a newly uncovered confidential memo warns as far back as January 2009 that educator cheating on 2008 standardized tests could have been widespread, with 191 teachers in 70 schools “implicated in possible testing infractions.”

FLORIDA

No Need For “Parent Trigger.” Florida Has “Parent Empowerment.”
Palm Beach Post, FL, April 12, 2013

The image of crusading parents turning around their children’s failing public school is compelling. That’s why advocates of so-called “parent trigger” laws invoke it. But in most cases, the image is a simplistic sham.

ILLINOIS

Illinois School-Choice Supporters Disappear For Dem Bill
Chicago Tribune, IL, April 12, 2013

In certain corners of the national education reform movement, there is no prize more coveted than a voucher system that gives parents the freedom to choose and the tuition to pay for private school enrollment so their children don’t have to attend an academically deficient public school.

High-Performing School Finds Itself On Closing List
Chicago Tribune, IL, April 121, 2013

A big blue banner hangs on the brick exterior of Calhoun North Elementary boasting how the East Garfield Park neighborhood school provides a rich array of computer access for students and has logged some of the best math scores in the city.

KENTUCKY

Teachers Union Denies Holding Up Low-Performing Jefferson County Schools
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY, April 12, 2013

The Jefferson County Teachers Association is denying claims by Kentucky Department of Education officials that its teachers are resisting changes at some of the district’s persistently low-achieving schools.

LOUISIANA

Louisiana Parents Have Power In Their Children’s Education, Study Says
Times-Picayune, LA, April 11, 2013

Louisiana parents have more power in their children’s education than parents in nearly every other state, according to a new report card from the pro-charter Center for Education Reform.

MASSACHUSETTS

Students Ask For More Charter Schools
WWLP 22News, MA, April 11, 2013

Hundreds of western Massachusetts students, teachers and parents are asking state lawmakers to raise the cap on the number of charter schools that are allowed to open, especially in the state’s low-performing districts.

MICHIGAN

Over 100 Michigan Charter Schools To Be Represented At Job Fair At Novi Showplace
Oakland Press, MI, April 11, 2013

More than 100 charter schools will be represented at a job fair Saturday, April 20 sponsored by the Michigan Association of Public School Academies, including many of the new charter schools expected to open next school year.

EM Roberts Rolls Out Plan To Revive Detroit Schools
Detroit News, MI, April 12, 2013

Detroit Public Schools Emergency Manager Roy Roberts unveiled a plan Thursday to reverse a longtime enrollment slide and stabilize the district’s precarious finances.

MISSOURI

Missouri House Rejects Educator Evaluation Legislation
Missourian, MO, April 11, 2013

Missouri House members rejected legislation seeking to make changes to teacher tenure while requiring school districts to develop educator evaluation systems centered on student achievement.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Coalition Calls For Repeal Of N.H. Education Voucher Law
Portsmouth Herald, NH, April 12, 2013

A coalition of state educators, taxpayers and concerned citizens are calling for the repeal of what they call the “misguided Bradley-O’Brien education voucher law.”

NEW JERSEY

Opposition Muted as Christie’s School-Voucher Pilot Makes Public Debut
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, April 12, 2013

There were plenty of questions but little outright opposition as Gov. Chris Christie’s proposed school-vouchers program got its first public airing yesterday.

Traditional School Takeovers Aren’t Working
Daily Journal, NJ, April 12, 2013

As the state prepares to take over Camden schools, is it time to consider a different approach? One education policy think tank believes so.

For Failing Schools, There’s Another Option
Courier-Post, NJ, April 11, 2013

As the state prepares to take over Camden schools, is it time to consider a different approach? One education policy think tank believes so.

NEW YORK

Crown Heights Parents, Teachers Upset About Proposed School Closure, Co-Location
NY1, NY, April 11, 2013

A few dozen parents and teachers are fired up about a school closure and the proposed co-location of a charter school.

Lottery Nears For Utica Charter School; Staff Also Being Sought
Utica Observer Dispatch, NY, April 11, 2013

On Tuesday, April 30, Amela Pekmez hopes to win the lottery. The prize isn’t money. It’s a spot for her ninth-grader at the Utica Academy of Science Charter School.

NEW YORK

Walcott Faces Concerns Over Co-Location At West Harlem Town Hall
Columbia Spectator, NY, April 12, 2013

New York City Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott did little to assuage concerns about co-locations at a West Harlem town hall meeting Wednesday.

NORTH CAROLINA

Brunswick Must Repay What It Owes Charter School, Ruling Says
Star-News, NC, April 11, 2013

The Brunswick County school system has underfunded Roger Bacon Academy’s charter school operation and must repay the amount it shortchanged going back three years, according to a ruling Wednesday in Brunswick County Superior Court.

School Districts Could Create, Approve Charters Under New Bill
Winston-Salem Journal, NC, April 11, 2013

Two bills filed in the N.C. House this week could change the dynamic of charter schools in the state’s public education system.

OREGON

Armadillo Charter School Must Drop Its GED Program
Mail Tribune, OR, April 12, 2013

A popular GED program at the Armadillo Technical Institute may be dropped as the charter school and the Phoenix-Talent School District develop a new agreement to address concerns about low graduation and high dropout figures.

PENNSYLVANIA

Charter School Operators Defend Performance
Philadelphia Tribune, PA, April 11, 2013

While State Representative James Roebuck’s recent report and legislation is aimed at reforming the state’s charter school system – especially in light of several reports that have cast a pall of suspicion on numerous charter school operators – there are operators who view Roebuck’s legislation as an attack on properly run and executed alternative education programs.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Can School Choice Survive The SC Senate?
The Herald, SC, April 12, 2013

Supporters of a $39 million Senate plan to give parents tax deductions for sending their children to private schools are hopeful that the proposal will advance this year.

TENNESSEE

For-Profit Charters Still Alive, Taking Non-Traditional Route
Nashville Public Radio, TN, April 11, 2013

Governor Bill Haslam says for-profit charter schools are worth giving a look. He says a legislative proposal ending the state’s ban snuck up on him, but he’s open to the idea.

TEXAS

Senate Panel OKs Measure To Fund Tuition At Religious And Private Schools
Star-Telegram, TX, April 11, 2013

A state Senate committee on Thursday approved a high-profile school voucher plan, sending it to the full chamber for what could be a fierce floor fight.

Charter Schools Bill Advances
San Antonio Express, TX, April 11, 2013

Texas could have 100 more charter schools by 2019, and state officials could more easily close them if they perform poorly, under legislation adopted Thursday with broad bipartisan support by the Texas Senate.

ONLINE LEARNING

Teplitz Pushing For Six-Month Study On Fixing Charter School Tuition Rates
Patriot News, PA, April 11, 2013

State Sen. Rob Teplitz, D-Dauphin is pushing for a study he hopes will adjust tuition costs for Pennsylvania’s charter schools so they no longer burden public districts.

Online Learning Plan Out Of Line
Tampa Bay Times, FL, April 11, 2013

The Legislature’s stampede to significantly expand online learning for students in public schools has nothing to do with offering more options and meeting unmet needs.

Proposed Legislation Would Halt Local Virtual Charter School Plan
Elgin Courier News, IL, April 11, 2013

New legislation that has moved to the Illinois House floor for a vote would put a stop to a virtual charter school that’s seeking approval to open this fall in 18 Fox Valley districts.

Charters, Vouchers And Virtual
Northwest Herald, IL, April 11, 2013

K12 Inc., a virtual charter school corporation, is stalking the public schools in our region, attempting to get its hands on public education money.

State Lawmakers To Put Online Charter Schools On Standby
Northwest Herald, IL, April 12, 2013

As local school boards rejected this week a request from a proposed online charter school that would draw students from its schools, state lawmakers appear poised to slap a hold on the creation of virtual schools until regulations and guidelines to govern them can be crafted.

TX Senate Committee Approves Tax Credits

“Senate panel OKs measure to fund tuition at religious and private schools”
by Will Weissert, Associated Press
Star-Telegram
April 11, 2013

A state Senate committee on Thursday approved a high-profile school voucher plan, sending it to the full chamber for what could be a fierce floor fight.

Senate Bill 23 by state Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, would offer tax credits to businesses that provide scholarship funding for low-income students who want to transfer from low-performing public schools to private or religious schools.

The bill would allow businesses to write off 100 percent of their state business margins taxes, but it caps the total value of all donations at $100 million.

Patrick, who chairs the Senate Education Committee, says the plan could help as many as 10,000 students transfer.

His committee referred the bill to the Senate, but not before an important modification was approved: To qualify for scholarships, children have to be at risk of dropping out of school and come from low-income families. The measure originally allowed at-risk or low-income students to seek scholarships.

The amendment changing or to and was made by state Sen. Eddie Lucio, D-Brownsville.

“I understand the author’s intent with this bill,” Lucio said. “This could give those students who most need educational choice a voucher.”

Patrick accepted the change, saying his intent was “to help students who are poor and in failing schools.”

Lucio responded, “I am for helping poor kids, including keeping them in our public schools.”

To get scholarships, students must come from households with incomes less than 200 percent of that needed to qualify for the free and reduced-price lunch program. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has guidelines for who qualifies based on family size.

A family of three can qualify to get reduced-price or free lunches at school if their yearly income doesn’t exceed $36,000. Patrick’s proposal would allow families to seek assistance if they have income up to double that level.

Opponents say the plan will drain yet more funding from public schools still reeling from the $5.4 billion in cuts to public education that the Legislature approved in 2011. But Patrick said money for his plan would come from other portions of the budget — not out of funding already earmarked for public schools.

Although Patrick’s fellow Republicans control both chambers of the Legislature, his bill faces seemingly long odds. It has yet to be considered by the state House, which while passing its version of the state budget last week, the lower chamber overwhelmingly approved an amendment to keep public funding in public schools