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Voucher Victory in Indiana

“Indiana Supreme Court upholds school vouchers”
by Scott Elliott and Tim Evans
Indianapolis Star
March 26, 2013

Public tax dollars may be used to fund private school tuition under Indiana’s voucher program, the state Supreme Court unanimously ruled today.

“We hold that the Indiana school voucher program, the choice scholarship program, is within the legislature’s power under Article 8, Section 1, and that the enacted program does not violate either Section 4 or Section 6 of Article 1 of the Indiana Constitution,” the justices wrote in the 5-0 decision.

The ruling, on a teachers union-supported lawsuit from 2011, ends the legal challenge to the program at the state level. The case could be made again in federal court. But in 2002 the U.S. Supreme Court upheld a similar program in Ohio, making any further appeal a long shot.

The Indiana case began shortly after the program was created in 2011 when a group of teachers, school officials and parents who oppose vouchers sued the state, arguing the program was unconstitutional.

Vouchers allow low income families to redirect tax dollars from their local public school district to pay tuition when their children transfer to private schools.

In its second year, the program is the fastest-growing in history, jumping to 9,324 students receiving vouchers this school year from 3,919 last year. The program is redirecting more than $38 million in state aid from public schools to private schools, although officials say a provision that guarantees at least 10 percent of a school district’s per pupil amount be returned to the state resulted in a savings of $4.2 million that was redistributed among all public schools last year.

Opponents have argued that vouchers unfairly take away funds that public schools need to benefit primarily religious institutions, especially Catholic and Christian schools. The vast majority of schools accepting vouchers are religiously-affiliated. The lawsuit also claimed the program violated the state’s duty to provide a free and “uniform” public school system.

In 2012 a Marion County judge ruled the program was constitutional, prompting an appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court.

Indiana’s big voucher numbers are due in large part to the design of the program, which is less limited than those in other states. For example, Ohio also has a statewide program, but it restricts vouchers to communities with failing schools. Wisconsin, which has had vouchers for 20 years, limits them just to the city of Milwaukee. Indiana’s program is open to any student meeting the income guidelines — anywhere in the state.

Former State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett hailed the program’s popularity as demonstrating kids need avenues to attend the schools that best serve their needs. But Glenda Ritz, who defeated Bennett in November, opposes vouchers and originally was a plaintiff in the case. She removed herself from the lawsuit while she was running for office.

Ritz’s opposition to the voucher program has caused her political headaches at the statehouse. Earlier this year she had to fend off an effort by House Republicans to move administration of the voucher program from her office to Gov. Mike Pence’s supervision.

Indianapolis Public Schools have the most students within its boundaries using vouchers of any district in the state at 1,262, up from 644 last year. The number of students who have actually transferred from IPS is 947, up from 365 last year. The rest already were attending private schools using a state program that also made them eligible for vouchers.

But Republicans are aiming to expand vouchers further.

House Bill 1003, which passed the House and is being debated in the Senate, eliminates a requirement that students seeking vouchers to first attend a public school for at least two semesters for incoming kindergarteners. Any kindergartners who meet the income limits would be eligible. Other newly eligible for vouchers under the bill include students with disabilities, siblings of children receiving vouchers and children in foster care.

Eligibility for vouchers depends on family income and size. A family of four that earns less than $42,000 annually can receive up to 90 percent of the state aid for a child’s public school education. Families of four making $42,000 to $62,000 can receive 50 percent of the state aid amount.

The voucher law capped the number of students allowed in the program at 7,500 last year and 15,000 this year. But there is no cap going forward unless the legislature decided to add one. There has been no discussion of a cap during this legislative session.

Daily Headlines for March 25, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Research Shows School Vouchers Benefit Students
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 24, 2013

Tennessee is considering launching a private school choice program for certain K-12 students. If the proposal passes, the Volunteer State would join 17 others that are operating or have passed into law 33 such scholarship programs.

Debate On School Security Ramps Up
Washington Post, DC, March 24, 2013

Hoping to head off a push to expand police presence in the nation’s 100,000 public schools, a national civil rights group plans to issue an alternative this week to beefing up school security.

FROM THE STATES

COLORADO

Losing Focus On School Funding
Denver Post, CO, March 25, 2013

Legislators should remove a costly amendment from what was initially a bill to ensure fairness and equity.

Boulder Valley’s Higher Teacher Salaries Force Charters To Evaluate Pay
Daily Camera, CO, March 23, 2013

Keeping up with Boulder Valley’s teacher pay has been an ongoing challenge for the district’s charter schools — one that is now more difficult, thanks to the district’s recent salary increases.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter Schools Hold Lottery For Student Admission
WJLA, DC, March 24, 2013

For thousands of D.C. families today was the real March madness, the day charter schools announce who will be admitted in the fall.

Let D.C. Charters Move Into Closed Schools
Washington Post, DC, March 22, 2013

D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson’s plan to close 15 traditional public schools continues to cause controversy, sparking a series of meetings and protests and now the threat of a lawsuit.

No Need To Rush Decision On Randall Park
Washington Post, DC, March 24, 2013

Regarding the March 17 editorial “Giving a cold shoulder to success”: The proposed redevelopment of Randall Recreation Center by KIPP DC threatens to remove the community’s free and unfettered use of the largest comprehensive public park in Southwest Washington. N

FLORIDA

Florida Senators Eye Charter Schools Funding, Accountability
Tampa Bay Tribune, FL, March 25, 2013

Two state senators from opposite parties, sharing a professional interest in public education, are working on a compromise this week in Florida’s high-stakes political struggle over charter school funding and operation.

Rebranded Trigger Bill Doesn’t Give Real Power To Parents
Sun Sentinel, FL, March 24, 2013

Unfortunately, it’s a misnomer: The bill does not empower parents; it empowers out-of-state corporate interests and their lobbyists to siphon Florida tax dollars away from our already underfunded public school system.

GEORGIA

Should More Charters Close?
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 24, 2013

While Georgia seeks ways to open more high-performing charter schools, other parts of the country are engaging in a different challenge: How to close under-performing ones.

Reform, Expand Private School Tax Credit
Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA, March 25, 2013

The Georgia Senate recently took an incremental step toward responsible and accountable private school choice by unanimously passing a bill that shines more sunlight on the Peach State’s embattled tax credit scholarship program.

ILLINOIS

Unchain The Charters
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 25, 2013

Here’s a haunting statistic that we cannot repeat too often: Of all the school districts in the U.S., Chicago Public Schools has one of the longest waiting lists for admission to a charter school.

Not The Worst, But Still Bad
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 23, 2013

Chicago is not unique among large cities recently compelled by demographic changes, increasing pressure to deal with underperforming schools and competition from private and charter schools to close many campuses.

Able to Educate?
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 23, 2013

I have attended the board meetings at School District 159 in Aurora and District 101 in Batavia to hear representatives from K12 Inc. and the Virtual Charter School present their proposal to open a charter school in the Fox Valley.

Ready For Reform
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 24, 2013

Chicago Tribune, Last year, 8,781 students dropped out of Chicago public high schools. In our elementary schools, 51,106 children couldn’t meet state reading standards.

INDIANA

Indiana Voucher Debate An Ugly Divide
The Courier-Journal, IN, March 23, 2013

Something tragic likely will happen in Indiana’s ongoing fight about school vouchers.

KANSAS

Speaker: Education Reform Proposals Will Be Back
Topeka Capital Journal, KS, March 24, 2013

House Speaker Ray Merrick, R-Stilwell, acknowledged this past week that he didn’t get as far on public education reform this session as he would have liked to. But he isn’t giving up.

MAINE

LePage Conference Panelists: Use Public Funds For Private Schools
Morning Sentinel, ME, March 22, 2013

Gov. Paul LePage’s education conference Friday at Cony High School in Augusta draws audience of more than 200 legislators, school officials, and interested onlookers

Portland Mayor Wants State To Probe Allegations Of Financial Mismanagement At Charter School
Bangor Daily News, ME, March 22, 2013

Portland’s mayor is asking Maine’s attorney general to investigate allegations of mismanagement at the Baxter Academy for Technology and Science. The charter high school’s board of directors cited those allegations earlier this month in dismissing John Jaques, the school’s founder and former executive director.

MISSOURI

Bill Seeks School Reform Via Teacher Performance
Springfield News-Leader, MO, March 24, 2013

Kreider is opposed to my bill that would tie teacher evaluations to student performance and growth because he believes we don’t have a problem with our system of education. Instead he thinks the bill is an anti-teacher measure, and that I am “misinformed” on the issue.

MONTANA

Guest Opinion: Just Say No To Public Funding For Private Schools
Billings Gazette, MT, March 23, 2013

This session in Helena we’ve heard a lot of bills that bear a striking similarity to model bills from the legislative agenda of the corporate bill-mill ALEC. Whether a bill is an ALEC model bill, whether its subject is just high on the ALEC agenda, or whether it was written by a former ALEC member like the National Association of Charter Schools, a bad idea driven mainly by out-of-state interests is still a bad idea driven mainly by out-of-state interests.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

A Brazen Attempt By Rep. Eaton To Hold Schools Hostage
Foster’s Daily Democrat, NH, March 24, 2013

One committee chairman in the New Hampshire House admitted in a rare moment of candor that he intends to use schools as a political hostage in his grand negotiating scheme. This sort of cynical manipulation helps explain why average citizens have such contempt for politicians and their perverted sense of ethics.

NEW JERSEY

State Control Weighed For Camden’s Schools
Wall Street Journal, March 25, 2013

New Jersey is looking to take over the troubled Camden school district, with an announcement expected Monday from Gov. Chris Christie, two people with knowledge of the plans said.

NEW YORK

A Different School Bus
New York Times, NY, March 24, 2013

In its new incarnation, the bus will carry the message of a coalition of public school supporters called A+ NYC to New York City’s mayoral candidates, in hope of shaping their positions on the future of the nation’s largest public school system.

NORTH CAROLINA

Retry – Arts Charter School A Good Addition To Education
Fayetteville Observer, NC, March 24, 2013

Arts advocates in Fayetteville have long sought a downtown school to provide an art-based education.

Charter Schools Don’t Rob Others Of Money
Smithfield Herald, NC, March 23, 2013

What bothers me is the claim, made without context, that charter schools rob traditional public schools of money. The claim ignores how North Carolina funds its public schools and is emblematic of the half-truths that have come to characterize debate in this country.

Bill Would Eliminate Teacher Tenure
Carteret County News-Times, NC, March 23, 2013

The bill, introduced Tuesday by Senate President Pro Tem Phil Berger, R-Guilford and Rockingham, would end teacher tenure and adds several other measures he and other Republican bill sponsors said would hold schools and teachers more accountable for student progress.

OHIO

Kasich’s Funding Formula Fails Traditional Schools; Redrafting By The General Assembly Is Imperative:
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, March 24, 2013

The Ohio legislature ought to rewrite Gov. John Kasich’s flawed school-funding formula to reflect the state’s higher priority — adequate funding of the state’s traditional public schools, not undeserved rewards for some poorly supervised charter schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Washington County Senator Wants High Schoolers To Take Online Class To Graduate
Cumberland Times News, PA, March 24, 2013

Maryland currently doesn’t have a requirement that high school students take an online class as a condition for graduation. State Sen. Christopher B. Shank, R-Washington, said he thinks it’s time for such a requirement.

Is Pa. Ready for Statewide Charter Authorizer?
NBC Philadelphia, PA, March 24, 2013

Some charter backers say what’s missing is a provision for independent, statewide authorizers

Charter Backers Advocate For Authorizers
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA, March 25, 2013

With the cost and quality of charter schools dominating the state’s public education debate, lawmakers face at least a dozen bills seeking better accountability of the publicly financed but independently run schools.

TENNESSEE

Votes On School Vouchers, TennCare Draw Near
The Tennessean, TN, March 25, 2013

TennCare and school vouchers. For two of the biggest issues facing the Tennessee legislature, the next few days may be decisive.

TEXAS

Modified Charter School Bill Heads For Vote
San Antonio Express, TX, March 24, 2013

The Senate Education Committee is set to vote on a wide-reaching overhaul of the state’s charter school regulations at its meeting Tuesday.

VIRGINIA

Plans Move Fast On Va. Beach Charter School
Virginia Pilot, VA, March 24, 2013

School officials are moving fast on the new Green Run Collegiate. How fast? They’ve asked the state to expedite its approval, and they’re holding an information session Tuesday for interested students and parents.

WASHINGTON

Dollars Alone Won’t Ensure First-Rate Public Schools
News Tribune, WA, March 25, 2013

As the Washington Supreme Court noted 14 months ago, the state constitution mandates that the Legislature “make ample provision for the education” of all the state’s children.

State House Should Embrace Senate’s Education-Reform Ideas
Seattle Times, WA, March 24, 2013

The Senate Majority Coalition has been aggressive on education reforms, building a strong link between state spending and student outcomes.

WISCONSIN

School’s In Session On Voucher Expansion
Appleton Post-Crescent, WI, March 24, 2013

A statewide poll released last week showed that half of the respondents either had no opinion about voucher schools or hadn’t heard enough about them to have an opinion.

WYOMING

Teachers Will Soon Get Graded
Wyoming Tribune Eagle, WY, March 24, 2013

It’s just one of many changes ahead as Wyoming works on education accountability.

ONLINE LEARNING

Hultgren: A Virtual School Success Story
Metro West, MA, March 24, 2013

All students learn differently, and for those who have not or cannot learn in the brick and mortar school, whether it be for medical issues, unique learning needs or many other reasons, the virtual school option is enabling many to obtain a quality education which would otherwise be out of their reach (“School officials say virtual schools are tools with some red flags,” March 17).

Cyber Education Grows In Districts, Lowers Enrollment At Charter Schools
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA, March 25, 2013

Nancy Haines-Moskala is furious about the planned closing in June of her son’s cyber charter school.

Pottstown Cyber School Saving Taxpayers $650K This Year
Pottstown Mercury, PA, March 24, 2013

The Virtual Learning Academy run by the Pottstown School District is not only becoming increasingly popular, but between its function as an alternative to cyber-charter schools and use for alternative education, it has already saved taxpayers nearly $650,000 this year.

Virtual School Offers Freedom
The Gazette, IA, March 25, 2013

A quality virtual school program offers students a rigorous curriculum, dedicated and certified teachers, cutting-edge technology resources, clubs, activities and more. Yet one feature of virtual schools is often misunderstood: asynchronous learning — when a student engages curriculum on his or her own time and pace.

Online Classes Paired With Advocate For At-Risk Students
Everett Daily Herald, WA, March 25, 2013

Students at risk of dropping out of high school are taking classes online but also have an advocate who can address non-academic issues and keep them on task.

Debating Statewide Authorizer for PA

“Is Pa. ready for statewide charter authorizer?”
by Kathy Matheson, Associated Press
Lebanon Daily News
March 24, 2013

With the cost and quality of charter schools dominating the public education debate in Pennsylvania, lawmakers face at least a dozen major bills seeking better accountability and governance of such schools, which are publicly financed but independently run.

Much of the legislation focuses on funding formulas and audits. Yet some charter backers say what’s missing is a provision for independent, statewide authorizers—entities that can arguably weed out bad apples and ensure the operation of only high-quality charters.

“Great authorizing makes for great schools, both in terms of achievement and financial and operational accountability,” said Jeanne Allen, president of the Washington-based Center for Education Reform.

Allen is among those advocating for Pennsylvania to join states like New York, Michigan and Indiana, which use independent agencies to evaluate applications by would-be charter operators and monitor the schools’ progress before granting renewals.

Currently, charter operators in Pennsylvania apply to local districts for approval. It’s a process that some say has created a patchwork of standards and oversight because volunteer school boards don’t have dedicated experts or uniform guidelines for assessing proposals.

“It was sort of a Wild West situation, where some districts have done a very good job, and others have not,” said Robert Fayfich, executive director of the Pennsylvania Coalition of Public Charter Schools.

The quality of Pennsylvania’s 175 charters is a hot issue. Eight cyber charter applications were recently rejected due to academic and fiscal deficiencies; the auditor general this month alleged several improper charter school leasing arrangements; and state Rep. James Roebuck highlighted 44 troubled charters in introducing sweeping reform legislation last week.

Critics say charters drain resources from their district-operated counterparts without offering a better education. But supporters contend the alternative schools—which enroll about 5 percent of students statewide—offer innovative and sometimes safer alternatives to traditional schools.

The Pennsylvania School Boards Association opposes statewide authorizers because they give power to officials far removed from the ground-level effect of their rulings.

“They would be making decisions, funding decisions, for a local community and there would be no accountability back to those people,” said spokesman Steve Robinson.

About half of U.S. states have some kind of independent commission to sanction charters, according to the Chicago-based National Association of Charter School Authorizers. That includes autonomous boards, university institutes, nonprofit agencies and non-educational municipal entities.

Association president Greg Richmond conceded statewide authorizers can be “a hard sell” to legislatures because lawmakers don’t want to create more bureaucracy or ask districts to give up local control. But he said the trend is growing as more people realize this is “specialized work that needs to be done well.”

“It should be about making smart decisions, about who can run a good school,” Richmond said. “It shouldn’t be a power issue. It should be about only approving good school proposals.”

Some states allow districts to continue granting charters even with the presence of a statewide authorizer. That can lead to problems too, he noted, because operators turned down by one agency might simply apply to another.

“When there are too many authorizers in the state, it’s a race to the bottom,” Richmond said.

In New York, the only charter school authorizers are the state Board of Regents and trustees of the State University of New York.

SUNY trustees, through their Albany-based Charter School Institute, have been granting charters since 1999. Their approval rate is 36 percent, according to institute executive director Susan Miller Barker.

Each application is vetted by the institute’s education, financial and legal experts, who also solicit input from the affected district. The staff subsequently makes a recommendation to the trustees, who have a reputation for being “rigorous” authorizers, Barker said.

About 36,000 students attend 117 SUNY-approved charter schools, many of which outperform their district counterparts, Barker said. Institute staff members also monitor school progress, she said, noting trustees have revoked about 10 percent of charters for poor academic performance.

Fayfich said Pennsylvania is “behind the curve” in its lack of a statewide authorizer, noting the failure of two recent charter reform bills that included the provision. He predicted authorizing legislation will be introduced again this session.

The Corbett administration supports the concept of a statewide, independent authorizer but would have to review the specifics of any proposal, said Education Department spokesman Tim Eller.

David Hardy, founder of Boys’ Latin Charter School in west Philadelphia, welcomes the idea of university-based authorizers. Mismanaged charters that never should have been approved in the first place have unfairly tainted those that are doing good work, he said.

“Colleges know education, they know finance, they know operations. Because their name is going to be associated with the charter, they don’t tolerate poor performance,” Hardy said. “The college has a reputation to maintain.”

Chicago Teachers Union Leader Compares Windy City to Iraq

During an interview on PBS News Hour, Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union, refers to Chicago as “Chiraq” when being asked a question about teachers unions feeling attacked (12:07).

Daily Headlines for March 22, 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.

Charter Colony
Richmond Times-Dispatch, VA, March 21, 2013

While excellent in many areas, the public schools in the U.S. are not nearly as good as they should be. What’s more, the massive increases in spending on public schools have not produced any measurable improvement in performance.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

Parents: We Want Charter School – Now
Morgan Hill Times, CA, March 21, 2013

Hundreds of frustrated parents are fed up with Morgan Hill’s public education system, which they say is in a state of crisis and allows underperforming students to fall through the cracks.

COLORADO

Five Charter Schools Eye Douglas County
Our Colorado News, CO, March 21, 2013

The Douglas County School District received five letters of intent this month from would-be charter school developers. The letters came in response to DCSD’s March 15 deadline.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Names New Deputy Mayor For Education
Washington Examiner, DC, March 21, 2013

D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray appointed education consultant Abigail Smith as the District’s new deputy mayor for education, the mayor announced Thursday.

FLORIDA

Pay Raise Wisdom
Orlando Sentinel, FL, March 22, 2013

Florida ranks sixth nationally for overall educational quality in the Education Week’s annual “Quality Counts” report. Florida paced other states in the National Council on Teacher Quality rankings. And Sunshine State fourth-graders rank second internationally for reading scores.

GEORGIA

Lindsey Pulls Parent Trigger Legislation Amid Concerns
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 21, 2013

House Majority Whip Edward Lindsey, R-Atlanta, withdrew his parent-trigger charter school legislation Thursday as members in his own party expressed concerns about it.

IDAHO

Legislators Debate Stale Ideas That Don’t Improve Learning
Idaho Statesman, ID, March 22, 2013

Teachers are a resilient lot; it’s a hallmark of our profession and a key to long-term success in the classroom. This quality has come in handy the past few years, which have been turbulent with respect to education policy.

ILLINOIS

Chicago Moves to Close 11% of Elementary Schools in Fall
Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2013

School officials here said Thursday they plan to close 53 elementary schools and one high school, one of the largest mass school closings in the nation’s history, as Mayor Rahm Emanuel seeks to fill a gaping budget hole.

Chicago’s Proposed School Closings Called Unfair To City’s Poorest Students
Christian Science Monitor, MA, March 21, 2013

Citing a budget deficit and declining enrollment, Chicago proposed Thursday that 61 public schools be closed. Teachers and parents warn that the poorest students will be affected the most

CPS Schools Close, Charters Open
Chicago Sun Times, IL, March 21, 2013

Am I alone in finding it difficult to locate the shell that contains the school in which the children are hidden? The Chicago Public Schools board says there are 100,000 more seats than children and, for this reason, 54 schools must be closed. But under a different shell the board is opening new charter schools, funded by those same precious dollars.

Difficult Day, New Opportunity
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 22, 2013

Hearts pounded, tears streamed and frustration simmered Thursday as Chicago Public Schools waited all day and into the evening before unveiling the list of elementary schools it will close this fall.

INDIANA

Judge Orders Gary To Lease Vacant Elementary For $1 To Charter School
Post-Tribune, IN, March 21, 2013

Lake County Superior Court Judge John Sedia ordered the Gary Community School Corp. to immediately lease Ernie Pyle Elementary School building for $1 to LEAD College Preparatory Charter.

Let’s Make Sure Change Brings Us What Is Promised
News Sentinel, IN, March 22, 2013

Sen. Luke Kenley, R-Noblesville, has the right idea for the state’s ambitious school voucher system: Before expanding it, let’s “give it a rest for some time, say five years, and study it” to determine what effect it is having.

KANSAS

Truce Declared In Kansas ‘War’ On Teacher Bargaining
Kansas City Star, KS, March 21, 2013

Kansas legislators have dropped their pursuit of a proposal to narrow contract negotiations between teachers and school districts to give education groups a chance to work out a compromise.

LOUISIANA

Education Bills Challenge Teacher Evaluation Program
Times-Picayune, LA, March 21, 2013

Two bills filed this week in Baton Rouge are challenging Louisiana’s new statewide teacher evaluation program, called Compass. Implementation of the method, which rates teacher effectiveness based on classroom observations and student performance, would be delayed under one of the bills.

MARYLAND

Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker’s School Reform Bill Moves From Maryland House To Senate
Washington Examiner, DC, March 21, 2013

A bill allowing Prince George’s County Executive Rushern Baker to take over the county school system moved from the Maryland House to the Senate on Thursday, bringing the controversial proposal one step closer to a final decision as the legislative session winds down.

MICHIGAN

House Passes Bill To Grow School Recovery District
Detroit News, MI, March 22, 2013

The Michigan House narrowly passed legislation Thursday night expanding the reach of the Education Achievement Authority beyond the 15 Detroit schools the statewide school reform district operates.

Charter School Debate Rages On As Jackson-Area Education Officials Discuss The Issue
Jackson Citizen Patriot, MI, March 21, 2013

Three Jackson-area public schools officials sat on a panel that debated the issues concerning charter schools and the positive and negative aspects potential charter schools pose to traditional public schools.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Charter School Bill Halted In House On Party-Line Vote
Union Leader, NH, March 22, 2013

Charter school advocates hit a roadblock in their efforts to open new schools in Nashua, Plymouth and the Seacoast this fall, after a party-line vote by the House Finance Committee on Tuesday to table a bill that would have ended a moratorium on new charters.

NEW JERSEY

Podcast: Newark Gets Loud at School-Reform Forum
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 22, 2013

Newark was host to a lively — some would say raucous — forum Wednesday night about the city’s school reforms, ranging from efforts in the district schools themselves, to the big influx of charter schools, to the $100 million Facebook gift.

Camden Schools Budget Clears Final Hurdle With More For Charters
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 22, 2013

The influx of charter schools into Camden is continuing to drain more money each year from the city’s burdened Board of Education.

NEW YORK

Cuomo Seeks New Evaluation Deal
Wall Street Journal, March 22, 2013

A Change in State Law Could Allay Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s Concerns About a Teacher-Performance System Expiring

NORTH CAROLINA

Teacher Tenure Not As Simple As ABC
News & Record, NC, March 22, 2013

It’s no secret that many local teachers oppose renewed efforts by some state lawmakers to get rid of job-protecting tenure in the state.

PENNSYLVANIA

‘We’re Not Giving Up,’ Foes Of Phila. School Closings Say
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 22, 2013

Yes, the School Reform Commission has already voted to shut 23 Philadelphia public schools. But the pressure to halt those actions will continue, activists said Thursday.

TENNESSEE

The Coming Fiscal Cliff For Tennessee’s Public Schools
The Tennessean, TN, March 22, 2013

In Nashville, for every student enrolled, charter schools will receive about $9,100 next year. Approximately two-thirds of that is from Davidson County taxpayers and one-third is state tax funding.

Four New Charter Schools Coming To Memphis
Memphis Business Journal, TN, March 21, 2013

The Walton Family Foundation is investing $1 million to create four charter schools in Memphis through its Education Entrepreneurs Fellowship.

Tennessee Lawmakers Working To Expand Vouchers
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, March 21, 2013

The legislative battle over a school-voucher program in Tennessee is headed for a showdown next week.

Charter Schools Find Support With Public School Parents
The Tennessean, TN, March 21, 2013

I am a Metro Nashville Public Schools parent, and I stand with the Tennessee Charter Schools Association, Speaker of the House Beth Harwell, Rep. Mark White (R-Memphis) and Sen. Delores Gresham (R-Somerville) in support of the legislation to strengthen the state’s charter schools program.

School Vouchers Boost Achievement
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 21, 2013

Indisputably, decisions about education in Tennessee should be made by Tennesseans. Does that mean that Tennesseans should wall themselves off from all points of view offered from out of state, as Indya Kincannon implies in her guest column (“School vouchers do not improve student outcomes,” March 17.)?

TEXAS

Choosing Public School Abandonment
San Antonio Express, TX, March 21, 2013

Here is the operative feature of Sen. Dan Patrick’s voucher-by-any-other-name proposal.
Money that would otherwise go to the state treasury — and be used, oh, say, for public education or some other deserving use — is used instead for school vouchers for private schools.

Charter Limits Remain In Senate Bill
Austin American-Statesman, TX, March 21, 2013

The Senate’s Education Committee chief Thursday backed off his push for no limits on new charter schools in Texas, and argued with tearful indignation that politics is getting in the way of doing right by students.

WASHINGTON

Should We Take First Step To Become A Charter Authorizer?
News Tribune, WA, March 22, 2013

Some members of the Tacoma School Board are tiptoeing carefully around the idea of charter schools – and whether they want to signal their intent to become an authorizer of the independently run, publicly funded schools.

WEST VIRGINIA

House Denies Changes To Education Reform Bill
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 21, 2013

Following the 2012 general election, Republicans were optimistic their significant gains in the House of Delegates would give them more influence in reforming the state’s education system.

WISCONSIN

Evers Calls For More Public Education Money
Journal Times, WI, March 21, 2013

State Superintendent Tony Evers called on the Legislature’s budget committee on Thursday to take money that Gov. Scott Walker wants to spend on roads, an income tax cut and an expansion of Wisconsin’s private school voucher program and to give it to public schools instead.

ONLINE LEARNING

Greenfield School Committee Supports Virtual Academy
WGGB, MA, March 21, 2013

The Greenfield School Committee voted Thursday night to create a proposal for a new virtual academy.

LH Board Takes Aim At Cyber Charter Funding
Herald Standard, PA, March 22, 2013

Laurel Highlands School Board, on Thursday, adopted a resolution which takes aim at the Pennsylvania cyber charter school funding formula.

Educators Adjusting To 21st Century Learning Methods
WACH, SC, March 21, 2013

As education leaders and state legislators are considering approaches to fixing South Carolina’s education system, several people are already hard at work shaping the future of education.

School Board Discusses Charter School Concerns
Elburn Herald, IL, March 21, 2013

The Kaneland School Board on Monday held a public hearing on the charter school proposal submitted to the district by Virtual Learning Solutions (VLS). The board was also given a proposal presentation by a representative from K12, a management company that is seeking partnership with VLS.

Take Action To Support Texas Children – Even If You Don’t Live in Texas!

Did you know there are more than 100,000 children on waiting lists to get into charter schools in Texas?

Texas public schools are allowed to receive failing grades for up to 6 consecutive years before the bureaucratic intervention process takes serious steps to get that school on the right track. Currently, there are more than 500 Texas schools that are rated academically unacceptable – educating a total enrollment of 315,000 Texas students.

Too many Texas schoolchildren are trapped in failing public schools, and we cannot let this continue. Texas can turn this around with your help.

As a national organization advocating for quality education every day, Hispanic CREO is working along with Texans for Education Reform to help pass Senate Bill 2.

Please send a letter today to your Senator, asking for their support for Senate Bill 2.

Even if you don’t live in Texas, you can still write a letter of support to a senator in Texans through Texans for Education Reform portal.

If passed, Texas will begin to change the future of Texas’ public education by:

1. Eliminating the outdated cap on charter schools. Texas law currently allows for only 215 charters to be authorized across the state, and 209 have been authorized so far.

2. Putting the 100,000 children on those waiting lists into Texas public schools that are NOT failing.

3. Opening up more public education options for Texas families and place pressure on our failing schools to turn things around.

It’s time to stop talking about putting education first, and actually start doing it.

With your help, we can change the future of public education in Texas by tackling one initiative at a time. Help us get Texas children out of failing schools, and send a letter to your Senator asking that they support Senate Bill 2 and meaningful education reform!

Thank you,

Julio Fuentes
President/CEO
HCREO

Daily Headlines for March 21, 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.

More States Consider ‘Parent Trigger’ Laws
Education Week, March 21, 2013

The push for the “parent trigger” option for turning around struggling schools continues, with new laws under consideration in 12 states’ legislative sessions, even as such laws already on the books remain unused in all but one of the seven states that have them.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Superintendent On School Choice/Tax Credits Bill
Times-Journal, AL, March 20, 2013

Gov. Robert Bentley may have signed the Alabama Accountability Act into law March 14, but local school officials continue to speak out against it.

ALASKA

Lawmakers Should Be Wary Of School Vouchers
Anchorage Daily News, AK, March 20, 2013

As state lawmakers face the reality of declining oil revenues and calls from Alaska’s leading economist to spend billions less, one issue under consideration that should be given extensive public vetting is the proposal to fund private and religious schools.

ARKANSAS

Arkansas Lawmakers Debate School Transfer Changes
Little River News, AR, March 20, 2013

Removing race as the main factor in deciding whether a student can transfer to another school district in Arkansas would give parents more control on educational choices for their children, one lawmaker said last Wednesday, but opponents warned the idea could lead to segregation.

CALIFORNIA

Oakland To Close 3 Charter Schools
San Francisco Chronicle, CA, March 20, 2013

Three of the state’s highest-performing schools must shut down at the end of this school year after administrators failed to acknowledge and address illegal activity and serious lapses in financial and administrative oversight, the Oakland school board decided Wednesday night.

Incubator School in L.A. Sparks Discord Over Location, Teachers
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 20, 2013

The pilot middle school, which is slated to open next year but lacks a site, will teach students how to launch a business in addition to academics.

COLORADO

A Better Way To Fund Student Success.
Denver Post, CO, March 21, 2013

Over the last few years, Colorado has established itself as a national leader for education reform based on the transformational policies that have been adopted and implemented.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

A Bitter Lesson From ‘The Best And The Brightest’
Washington Times, DC, March 20, 2013

The Boston School Committee announced last week that it will finally end almost 40 years of forced busing — long after the policy effectively wrecked local schools.

FLORIDA

Athenian Academy Charter School Sparring Over Number Of Seats In Lottery
Tampa Bay Times, FL, March 20, 2013

The Athenian Academy charter school has a 108-student problem as it prepares for its open enrollment lottery this evening.

Struggling Milestones Charter School In Leesburg Works To Improve Grade
Orlando Sentinel, FL, March 21, 2013

Milestones Community Charter School has replaced teachers, lengthened the school day and trying to clean up recordkeeping woes

Parent Trigger Bill: A Trojan Horse of Corporate Charter Schools
Flagler Live, FL, March 20, 2013

First it was called the parent trigger bill but when that became a negative connotation, it was rebranded the ”parent empowerment act.” Whew, that’s much better.

Bucking Scott’s Plan, Senate Proposes Merit-Based Raises For Teachers
Bradenton Herald, FL, March 21, 2013

Less than three weeks into the legislative session, Gov. Rick Scott’s signature proposal to give across-the-board pay raises to teachers appears to be in serious trouble.

IDAHO

Senate Amends Charter School Bill
Idaho State Journal, ID, March 21, 2013

Nonprofit corporations would no longer be able to start charter schools, according to changes senators made to a bill that’s part of a package of reforms working its way through the Legislature.

House Passes Private School Tuition Tax Credit Legislation
Idaho Reporter, ID, March 20, 2013

The Idaho House Wednesday narrowly passed legislation that would extend tax credits to Idahoans who make donations to state-sanctioned “scholarship granting organizations.” The scholarships would in turn be granted to eligible children to enable them to attend private schools within the state, and the donors would receive a dollar-for-dollar credit against their annual state income tax bill.

ILLINOIS

CPS To Announce School Closings; Foes Say They Will Target Minorities
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 21, 2013

After months of hearings and debate, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration is ready to announce plans to close about 50 elementary schools, sources said, a number that quickly drew fire from aldermen and community leaders in the mostly African-American neighborhoods that will be hardest hit.

INDIANA

State Shouldn’t Blindly Accept Common Core
Courier & Press, IN, March 21, 2013

When right and left wing activists find themselves in agreement , it’s worth probing why. Such is the case with the Common Core academic standards being implemented in Indiana and 45 other states. Conservatives and progressives alike see problems with them.

Indianapolis Soon To See New Charter Schools
Indianapolis Star, IN, March 21, 2013

The Mind Trust’s charter school incubator will announce today that it has selected two new national groups to receive $1 million in aid to open new charter schools in Indianapolis.

Legislators Hear Hours Of Testimony On Expanding Indiana’s School Voucher Program
Courier & Press, IN, March 20, 2013

The state Senate Education Committee heard hours of testimony Wednesday on a bill to expand Indiana’s school voucher program.

KANSAS

Funding Questions Postpone Charter School Vote
Topeka Capital-Journal, KS, March 20, 2013

A vote on the charter schools bill was postponed another day Wednesday by opponents who continued their barrage of questions about how the measure would work.

LOUISIANA

Schools To Lose $422,000 To Charter School Funding
The Daily News, LA, March 20, 2013

The Bogalusa School Board learned Monday the district’s state funding will be decreased by nearly a half million dollars, with that money going to the Northshore Charter School.

MICHIGAN

New Charter Schools Find Niches
Detroit News, MI, March 21, 2013

At a school in Farmington Hills, kindergarteners spend the first half of their day learning core curriculum disciplines: Math, social studies, science. But each afternoon, they split up into two groups — those learning Mandarin Chinese and those learning Spanish. They then spend three hours immersed in either language.

Lansing Schools Comes Through For Charter
Lansing State Journal, MI, March 21, 2013

Competition between charter schools and traditional public schools isn’t as cutthroat as, say, Toyota vs. General Motors.

MINNESOTA

Lessons Of Teacher Bonus Program A Chance To Learn
Pioneer Press, MN, March 20, 2013

Did Minnesota get the results it wanted from the “Quality Compensation,” or Q-Comp, pay-for- performance system for teachers?

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Derry Charter High School Will Focus On Flexibility
Union Leader, NH, March 21, 2013

When the Next Charter High School opens in September, the school’s co-directors are counting on the key to its success being its flexibility; both flexibility of space and flexibility in what it can offer its students.

NEW JERSEY

Choice-School Transfer Rule A Winner
Daily Record, NJ, March 21, 2013

Sometimes the political process works efficiently — even in New Jersey. The state’s Choice School Program Act, which went into effect in 2010, allows students to transfer to a state-approved school within 20 miles of their home district, at no cost to parents.

NORTH CAROLINA

Berger’s Plan Is Unfairly Tough On Teachers
News & Observer, NC, March 20, 2013

One wonders whether a teacher once put state Sen. Phil Berger in the corner in first grade, causing him to say to himself: “One day I’ll be president pro-tem of the state Senate and I’ll pay ’em all back.”

Education Advocate: N.C. On The Wrong Path
News & Observer, NC, March 20, 2013

North Carolina is heading down a destructive path for its public schools, according to education author, researcher and advocate Diane Ravitch.

OHIO

Superintendent Hathorn Wants To Meet With Charter School Parents
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, March 21, 2013

City schools Superintendent Connie Hathorn wants to meet with parents of students attending charter schools to tout what the city district has to offer.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma State Schools Superintendent Janet Barresi Asks For More Time For Teacher Evaluation
The Oklahoman, OK, March 21, 2013

The state schools superintendent is asking lawmakers for extra time to implement a new teacher evaluation system.

PENNSYLVANIA

Ambler Parents Assail School District Over Redrawing Elementary School Boundaries
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 21, 2013

Ambler parents are again facing off against the Wissahickon School District, accusing officials of racism and classism in redrawing elementary school boundaries.

A Charter Denied
Intelligencer Journal, PA, March 21, 2013

In recent weeks, the debate surrounding the Academy of Business and Entrepreneurship Charter School’s application for a charter occasionally delved into the politics surrounding the school’s rumored links to Turkish-operated charter schools in this country — a link that has been repeatedly denied by Sait Onal, the president of the proposed academy’s founding board.

With Parent Demand Surging, 20 Charters Seeking To Expand In Philadelphia
Philadelphia Schools Notebook, PA, March 20, 2013

Chrissy Poper has been trying to get her 8-year old daughter into the popular MaST Community Charter School in Northeast Philadelphia for the last three years.

Pottsville Area Seeks State Reimbursement For Charter School Costs
Republican Herald, PA, March 21, 2013

Once upon a time, when the Pottsville Area School District used state subsidy to send a child to charter or cyber charter school, the state gave the district a bit of reimbursement, Superintendent Jeffrey S. Zwiebel said Wednesday.

TENNESSEE

Competing Voucher Bill Withdrawn
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 21, 2013

The sponsor of legislation that was competing with Gov. Bill Haslam’s to create a school voucher program withdrew her bill on Wednesday after proponents of a broader program decided they want to focus on the governor’s plan.

WEST VIRGINIA

House GOP Seeks Charter Schools In W.Va. Ed Bill
WTRF, WV, March 21, 2013

Republicans in West Virginia’s House of Delegates want to add charter schools to Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s education proposal.

WISCONSIN

Big Money Plays Part In Voucher Pitch
Fox 11, WI, March 20, 2013

A plan to expand school vouchers in the legislature has politicians taking sides and money being spent in the hopes of winning over their votes.

ONLINE LEARNING

Parents, Teachers Urge District 202 To Reject Online Charter School
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 20, 2013

Plainfield parents and teachers urged School District 202 board members to reject a proposal for an online charter school during a recent marathon public hearing.

Daily Headlines for March 20, 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

Minority Groups Remain Outnumbered at Teaching Programs, Study Reports
New York Times, NY, March 20, 2013

Despite major changes in the racial makeup of American public school students, the people training to be teachers are still predominantly white.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

Report Stirs Debate On Oakland Teachers
San Francisco Chronicle, CA, March 20, 2013

An independent group that evaluated policies in Oakland’s public schools will release a report Wednesday calling for an overhaul of the way the district compensates teachers and holds them accountable for their performance.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Henderson’s D.C. Schools Plan Calls For Equity Across The City’s Great Divide
Washington Post, DC, March 19, 2013

Provide equal educational opportunities across a city that is divided by one of the largest income gaps in the country — that’s the plan, according to D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson.

FLORIDA

Parent-Trigger Bill Bumping Forward in the House
Sunshine State News, FL, March 20, 2013

Controversial legislation known as the parent-trigger bill continues to spark debate at the state Capitol.

IDAHO

Charter School Bills Poised For Amendments
Magic Valley Times, ID, March 19, 2013

Two charter school funding bills that so far have been on a difficult path to passage may face another round of changes in the Idaho Senate.

Education Panel OKs Seniority Layoffs Bill
Idaho State Journal, ID, March 19, 2013

Seniority would no longer be used as the sole criteria when Idaho school districts determine teacher layoffs under a bill advanced by a Senate committee.

INDIANA

Statehouse Rally Aims to Move Lawmakers Against School Vouchers
93.1 WIBC Indianapolis, IN, March 19, 2013

The rally was put together by the Indiana Coalition for Public Education, which has long opposed vouchers and the expansion of charter schools. It also took place one week after an “Education Reform Rocks” rally at the Statehouse attended by Governor Pence and several pro-voucher activists, including former Indiana Pacer Jalen Rose.

KANSAS

Charter School Bill Nearing Vote
Topeka Capital Journal, KS, March 19, 2013

A bill to overhaul Kansas’ charter school system, rejected by the House Education Committee, could find new life in the Senate.

LOUISIANA

Voucher Funding In Court’s Hands
The Advertiser, LA, March 20, 2013

Whether the state constitution allows using funds dedicated to public schools to pay for private school vouchers is now in the hands of the Louisiana Supreme Court.

For Louisiana Parents, Failure Is Not An Option And Tomorrow May Be Too Late: Letter
Times-Picayune, LA, March 19, 2013

Joining parents in the fight to protect and save the Louisiana Scholarship program, the Louisiana Black Alliance for Educational Options has been working hard to rally supporters and empower parents to speak out and tell their stories.

Parents Find School Picks Slim
The Advocate, LA, March 19, 2013

A day after her children entered the halls of their fifth public school in five years, New Orleans artist and parent Anika Watson received two letters detailing something that came as no surprise: Two of her children had just begun a new school year in one of the city’s 32 failing public schools.

MARYLAND

Montgomery Schools, Unions Support Bill Postponing Reform Of Teacher Evaluation
Washington Post, DC, March 19, 2013

School administrators and teachers unions from Maryland will testify Wednesday in favor of a bill that would postpone state reform of teacher evaluation systems.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter Schools Work
Commonwealth Magazine, MA, March 19, 2013

CHARTER SCHOOLS ARE one of the great success stories of Massachusetts education reform, but thanks to a state law limiting enrollment, their growth is about to hit the wall.

MICHIGAN

Mich. Kids Deserve A Strong Educational Foundation
Detroit News, MI, March 20, 2013

A group of largely Republican lawmakers is backing a set of bills that would weaken Michigan’s Merit Curriculum. The new standards passed seven year ago and are starting to reap some results. It doesn’t make sense to gut them now.

MINNESOTA

Teachers Facing Achievement Gap Try Cross-Race Connections
Minnesota Public Radio, MN, March 20, 2013

All the bleak statistics about Minnesota’s achievement gap became personal to fifth-grade teacher Jen Engel, when she realized that gap was playing out in her own classroom.

MISSISSIPPI

Veto Of School Board Bill By Bryant Likely To Stand
Clarion Ledger, MS, March 19, 2013

Bryant on Tuesday vetoed a bill that would create a task force to study changing from appointed to elected school boards in Mississippi. Overriding the veto would require a 2/3 vote of both chambers of the Legislature.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

A Brazen Attempt To Hold Schools Hostage
Union Leader, NH, March 20, 2013

One committee chairman in the New Hampshire House admitted in a rare moment of candor that he intends to use schools as a political hostage in his grand negotiating scheme. This sort of cynical manipulation helps explain why average citizens have such contempt for politicians and their perverted sense of ethics.

Charter School Votes In Concord Anger Advocates
Nashua Telegraph, NH, March 20, 2013

Charter schools waiting for approval will have to wait a while longer.

NEW JERSEY

Charter School To Expand Its Garfield Location
The Record, NJ, March 20, 2013

The Bergen Arts and Science Charter School in Garfield is getting a second building, a former parochial school that will allow the charter’s elementary population to grow by 240 students in September.

NORTH CAROLINA

Push Resumes For N.C. Charter School Board
News-Record, NC, March 20, 2013

Republican legislators who helped eliminate a cap on charter schools in 2011 are pushing to create a new regulatory body to oversee such schools in North Carolina.

N.C. Sen. Phil Berger’s Bill Ends Teacher Tenure
News-Record, NC, March 19, 2013

The leader of the state Senate revived a proposal Tuesday to end job-protecting tenure rules for veteran schoolteachers and to move forward a pay proposal that seeks to reward the best-performing classroom instructors.

OREGON

VIBES Charter School Will Provide What Its Students Need
Mail Tribune, OR, March 19, 2013

Children living in poverty and English as a Second Language students are not successful in the standardized classroom across the United States, including right here in Medford.

PENNSYLVANIA

Education Group Eyes System For 1 Citywide School Application
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 20, 2013

WHILE the number of district-run and parochial schools shrinks and the city’s charter-school population booms, a group of education advocates is looking at a plan to implement a single, citywide enrollment process.

School District Of Lancaster Board Rejects Charter For Controversial Business School
Intelligencer Journal, PA, March 19, 2013

Citing “serious and pervasive deficiencies” in its application, the School District of Lancaster board has rejected a charter for the proposed Academy of Business Entrepreneurship Charter School.

Law Creating Charters Needs To Be Overhauled
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 20, 2013

A new report on Pennsylvania’s charter and cyber charter schools helps make the case for long overdue reforms in how they operate.

TENNESSEE

Rep. DeBerry Considers Allowing For-Profit Charter Schools In TN
The Tennessean, TN, March 20, 2013

As a state lawmaker considers legislation allowing for-profit charter school companies in Tennessee, he is being urged to build in financial safeguards that would prevent abuses seen elsewhere.

UTAH

Republicans Keep Starving Utah Public Education
Deseret News, UT, March 20, 2013

Education is underfunded in Utah, plain and simple. Utah spends the least per pupil of any state in the nation, by far.

WASHINGTON

2 Districts Plan To Apply To Be Charter Approvers
Longview Daily News, WA, March 19, 2013

The State Board of Education says two Washington school districts have formally expressed interest in applying to be charter school authorizers.

WEST VIRGINIA

House Panel Moves School Reforms Forward
Charleston Gazette, WV, March 19, 2013

House of Delegates members questioned state school officials Tuesday about a section in Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s education reform bill that removes the state superintendent’s $175,000 salary cap and strips down the post’s minimum qualifications.

WISCONSIN

School Officials Express Voucher Program Concerns
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 20, 2013

Representatives from four of the nine Wisconsin school districts that would be affected by Gov. Scott Walker’s budget proposal to expand the state’s education voucher system voiced concerns Tuesday in a conference call organized by state Rep. Sondy Pope, D-Cross Plains.

ONLINE LEARNING

Public Charter School Blazes Educational Trail With On-Site/Online Classes
Charleston City Paper, SC, March 20, 2013

The future home of Fairfield Charter High School doesn’t look much like a school. With 5,000 square feet of space on the second floor of a West Ashley business center, the school’s neighbors will include doctors’ offices and nonprofits.

Charter School Operators Drop Appeals In Orange, Seminole, Lake
Orlando Sentinel, FL, March 19, 2013

A network of online charter schools gave up on opening in Central Florida this fall when four rejected charter schools withdrew their appeal before the state Board of Education on Tuesday.

District 300 Leaders Question Charter Reps, Get Few Answers
Daily Herald, IL, March 19, 2013

If the Illinois Virtual Charter School at Fox River Valley opens in August, its students would be expected to log in to their computers for lessons, homeroom, labs and meetings with other students and teachers all working remotely. Each student would need a “learning coach” — a parent or guardian — to help him or her stay on task.

D204 Officials, Parents Scrutinized Online Charter School
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 19, 2013

A virtual charter school seeking to operate in 18 area school districts was scrutinized during an Indian Prairie District 204 hearing Monday.

Newswire: March 19, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 11

THE MAINE EVENT. Earlier this year, Governor Paul LePage expressed his outrage that Maine’s “school systems are failing.” And when the newly-created Charter School Commission rejected four out of five charter applications he called on “…those people, if they’re afraid to do the job, if they can’t put students first, then they ought to resign.” Vowing to go back to square one on reform efforts, the Governor jumping back in the ring to convene a conference this Friday, March 22. The conference will feature sessions on best practices from across the country like Florida’s school performance grading system, school choice, and stretching education dollars. CER President Jeanne Allen, will lead a panel discussion on “Multiple Pathways to Success.”

BATTLE IN THE BAYOU. Today, parents, students, educators and reformers rallied before the Louisiana Supreme Court to defend the Louisiana Scholarship Program. Over 4,500 students across the state benefit from the program which provides scholarships to qualifying students enrolled in underperforming and failing schools, to attend schools of their choice. Former DC Councilman, attorney, advocate, and CER board member Kevin P. Chavous addressed the masses today and said, “I know justice, and it is absolutely criminal to snatch away opportunity from children.” The debate is heating up and attorneys brought their arguments for a showdown today with oral ammunition before the state’s Supreme Court. A ruling on the appeal is not expected for several weeks.

MISSED OPPORTUNITY. As Newswire reported last week, a charter school proposal must still be negotiated in joint House-Senate conference committees. As it stands now, “Mississippi has yet to open the book on what charter schools can really do for the whole of education across the state. Not only is this not significant in any way, but it’s evidence that even the relatively new leadership in power is inept at withstanding the political power of the education establishment,” said CER President Jeanne Allen.

DEFENDING CHOICE. When recently blasting the current state of public education in New Jersey, Governor Chris Christie stated, “Nothing else in our society works without competition, and public education won’t work for everybody unless it does, too.” Reformers couldn’t agree more. This is the opportunity for Christie to put his money where his mouth is in backing meaningful voucher programs and serious reform of the states charter school law with multiple authorizers as it centerpiece.

IN GOOD COMPANY. Congrats to the legislators, advocates and CER’s own, Jeanne Allen, who were honored last week at Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO) Symposium.

BLENDED LEARNING IN ACTION. Check out how Oakland, CA’s Aspire ERES Academy is pushing the boundaries on innovation in teaching through blended learning.

Louisiana Vouchers Go To Court

“Louisiana’s high court to hear school voucher suit today”
by Mike Hasten
Alexandria Town Talk
March 19, 2013

Attorneys on both sides of the debate over using public funds to pay for students to attend private schools are honing their arguments for a showdown today with oral arguments before the Louisiana Supreme Court.

No witnesses may be called and each side has a limited amount of time to present arguments. Written arguments have been filed, so justices are familiar with the case.

Baton Rouge District Judge Tim Kelley’s ruling that using the funding formula, known as the Minimum Foundation Program, or MFP, violated a constitutional provision that says the fund can only be used for public schools has drawn national attention. Organizations on both sides of the issue are at loggerheads arguing for separation of church and state or for offering children the best chance for an education.

The Interfaith Alliance has joined an amicus brief in the appeal that challenges the program on the grounds of religious freedom. The brief, authored by another Washington, D.C.-based organization, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and also joined by the American Civil Liberties Union, argues that public funds should not be used to teach religious belief.

“Let me be clear,” said the Rev. Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, head of the Interfaith Alliance and pastor at Northminster Baptist Church in Monroe, “I am not bothered by a Christian school teaching its students the same tenets that children in my church learn every Sunday. What I find appalling is that these schools are teaching theology in science, history and math classes and, through school vouchers, are doing so with my taxes. I defend their right to teach future generations about their faith, and the right of any Louisiana citizen to choose a private religious school over a public one — but neither the parents nor the schools should receive financial support from our government to do so”

Many of the schools accepting voucher funds are religion-based and use religion-based curriculum.

“Louisiana legislators are siphoning money from tax-starved public schools to feed private schools that promote dogma and aren’t accountable to the taxpayers,” said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United. “It’s a travesty, and the court should put an end to it.”

The anti-voucher groups are on the side of the Louisiana Federation of Teachers, Louisiana Association of Educators and Louisiana School Boards Association, the organizations which originally filed suit challenging the Legislature’s Act 2 of the 2012 session as being unconstitutional.

The Washington, D.C.,-based Black Alliance for Educational Options, The Institute for Justice, the American Federation for Children and Stand for Children, national organizations pushing school choice, also are involved on the state’s side. They argue that children in failing schools deserve to receive vouchers so they can have a chance to receive better education.

Black Alliance President Kenneth Campbell said after Kelley’s ruling, “As a result of this decision, hope and opportunity have been taken away from families who are only trying to escape failing schools and gain access to better educational options.”

Gov. Bobby Jindal, the lead proponent of the vouchers and a larger education initiative, called Kelley’s ruling “wrong-headed and a travesty for parents across Louisiana who want nothing more than for their children to have an equal opportunity at receiving a great education.”

But this particular argument before the high court is over whether state money in a fund that has traditionally paid for public school education can legally be used to pay private schools to educate students who normally would attend public schools.

It’s not about church and state or whether children deserve a better education. It’s about the constitutional use of state funds.

Kelley did not rule that vouchers are unconstitutional; only that it’s unconstitutional to use the Minimum Foundation Program to fund them.

The attorney general’s office hired Jindal’s former executive counsel, attorney Jimmy Roy Faircloth of Alexandria, to represent the state in the case and the appeal to the state Supreme Court.

Faircloth maintains that it’s the state’s responsibility to provide the best education available and that schools graded C, D and F schools are failing to do that. The vouchers are available to students who are zoned to attend schools with those grades.

After Kelley’s ruling, a second Baton Rouge jurist, District Judge Michael Caldwell, threw out the other piece of Jindal’s education package, Act 1, which primarily deals with tenure, because the legislation contained too many objects. The Louisiana Constitution contains language that limits bills to a single object.

Besides making it harder for teachers to earn tenure and easier to lost it, the bill also stripped school boards of the authority to hire and fire teachers, required school systems to submit superintendents’ contracts to the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, eliminated salary schedules and eliminated layoff policies based on seniority.

The state also has appealed Caldwell’s decision.

Kelley didn’t rule that Act 2, the voucher bill, contained too many objects, but Steve Monaghan, president of the Louisiana Federation of Teachers union, said the organization is asking the Supreme Court to rule on the issue. He said the federation has filed a “cross appeal” to the one filed by the state asking the Supreme Court to rule.

Besides vouchers, Act 2 cleared the way for creation of numerous charter schools and set up a “course choice” program so outside sources can offer online and in-person classes that aren’t available in local schools.

“We are confident that we will win in the Supreme Court,” Jindal and White have consistently said, expressing confidence that Kelley’s ruling would be overturned.

But for the first time Thursday, Jindal said he would call the state Legislature into special session to re-approve the bills if the high court rules that House Bill 2 was unconstitutionally constructed.

The Black Alliance is sponsoring a Tuesday morning rally at the Supreme Court building in New Orleans to show support for vouchers. Parents of children enrolled in voucher schools are to tell of the successes their children are having in private schools.

The hearing is set for the court’s 2 p.m. session.

“We hope that the letter of the Louisiana Constitution will prevail,” said Joyce Haynes, president of the LAE. “Judge Kelly made the decision to uphold what is set forth in the constitution of the great state of Louisiana. It’s sad that our governor continues to ignore the constitution and spend money on attorneys and court fees all at the expense of Louisiana tax payers.

“We’ve been fighting for the 99 percent of Louisiana families who chose not to partake in the voucher program,” she said. “We need to adequately fund the institutions where the vast majority of our students learn, and a majority of Louisiana’s students learn in public school classrooms. As advocates for public education, it is our job to make sure that our public schools are adequately funded so that the educational experience is optimal for all of Louisiana’s children. This is their constitutional right.”

Monaghan says the Louisiana Department of Education is ignoring the state Constitution in its pursuit of its ideas of improving education.

White’s newest concept is “Louisiana Believes,” which is also the name of the Education Department’s website.

“It’s more of a belief system” he said. “If the research is there” proving something works, “they believe it. If it doesn’t, they ignore it.”

The new Minimum Foundation Program presented to the Legislature does not contain the traditional language referring to funding being in compliance with the Constitution.

If the Supreme Court upholds Kelley’s ruling, the funding formula will have to be reworked. It currently funds vouchers through the Minimum Foundation Program.