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Daily Headlines for March 19, 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

Guess When This Was Written
Washington Post Blog, DC, March 19, 2013

For well over two decades now, public schools have been subjected to wave after wave of reform in which the results of standardized tests have had increasing stakes for students, teachers, schools, districts and even states. The promise was that the test data would “drive” instruction and “drive” things to improve.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Preparing Teachers For Classrooms
Times Daily, AL, March 19, 2013

Alabama ranks among the top four states in the nation for preparing new teachers for the classroom, according to a recent study.

ARKANSAS

School Choice Bills Fails In Arkansas Senate
Log Cabin Democrat, AR, March 18, 2013

A proposal that would have allowed students who have transferred to other districts under the Arkansas school choice law to remain in those districts has narrowly failed before the state Senate.

CONNECTICUT

Conflict On State School Board
Stanford Advocate, CT, March 18, 2013

Andrea Comer is a successful executive in the state charter school business. She has worked for the charter management company Achievement First, and in October was appointed chief operating officer of Family Urban Schools of Excellence, a management/expansion company created by Hartford’s Jumoke Academy charter school.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Charter Schools Can’t Fill Education Void
Washington Post, DC, March 18, 2013

The controversy aroused by KIPP DC’s proposal to build a high school on public land in Southwest Washington [Metro, March 12], with expedited city transfer of the land, highlights the negative consequences of allowing even a good charter operator to fill a geographic education void.

FLORIDA

Senate Education Committee Looks To Merge Competing Charter School Bills
WFSU, FL, March 18, 2013

Florida Senator David Simmons (R-Maitland) wants to strengthen state laws governing financial transparency and accountability for charter schools.

Bill Would Tweak Teachers Evaluations
Tallahassee Democrat, FL, March 19, 2013

A Florida Senate panel on Monday took an early step to address a major source of anxiety for Florida’s teachers.

GEORGIA

Georgia Charter-School Law Would Be Different From Other States’
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 18, 2013

Georgia could become the only state to force local school boards to consider petitions to transform non-failing traditional public schools into charter schools.

INDIANA

FWCS Opposes Plan To Expand Vouchers
The Journal Gazette, IN, March 19, 2013

Fort Wayne school board members on Monday reviewed pending state legislation and decided to oppose expansion of Indiana’s voucher program.

More Thoughtful School Reform Debate Needed From The Indiana Legislature
Evansville Courier & Press, IN, March 19, 2013

In a Courier & Press Sunday opinion column three weeks ago, political writer and commentator Abdul Hakim-Shabazz chose quite an offhand manner to address the difficulties new State Superintendent of Education Glenda Ritz is facing.

KANSAS

ALEC-Based Charter School Bill Getting Second Chance
Lawrence Journal World, KS, March 18, 2013

Specifically, the Kansas Senate Education Committee worked through a pile of bills Monday, including one that would create new opportunities for establishing charter schools in Kansas.

House Bill Creates $10M Aid Program For Private Schools
Topeka Capital Journal, KS, March 18, 2013

Critics contend measure lacks academic accountability, unfair to disabled students

MAINE

Speech Outlines Challenges Ahead For Portland Schools
Portland Press Herald, ME, March 18, 2013

Portland’s public schools must do everything they can to stay competitive against charter schools, including investing in buildings, improving students’ achievement and changing their culture.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter Grants To Help Pay Creditors
Gloucester Daily Times, MA, March 19, 2013

The Gloucester Community Arts Charter School is gearing up to repay some of the school’s lingering $89,266 in debts through a federal grant and an assets sale that the state approved this month, as trustees wrap up the closing procedures.

MICHIGAN

Detroit Schools Seeks Community’s Help For Strategy To Boost Enrollment
Detroit News, MI, March 19, 2013

School closures, layoffs and debt service payments are the norm at Detroit Public Schools, a district that every year loses thousands of students and millions of dollars.

MISSOURI

Study Points The Way To Better Public Schools
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, March 18, 2013

There’s a study recently completed that examines the record of the highly touted Knowledge is Power Program (KIPP) charter schools. It should be mandatory vacation reading for education policy makers.

NEVADA

Who’s In Charge Of Education In Nevada?
Las Vegas Sun, NV, March 19, 2013

It could have been a “Beauty and the Beast” story of unlikely love. In 2011, Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval joined the Democratic legislative leadership — your call who’s beauty and who’s beast — in an effort to turn around Nevada’s failing education system by passing a number of education reforms for which they could both be proud.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

More Nashua Students Choosing Traditional Over Charter High School
Nashua Telegraph, NH, March 19, 2013

While she did not have exact numbers, high school guidance director Maureen O’Dea said she’s seen more and more students, particularly at the high school level, interested in returning to North or South for their last four years of schooling in the city.

NEW JERSEY

From ‘Failing’ To Flourishing: One School’s Successful Journey
Burlington County Times, NJ, March 19, 2013

Let the politically charged postmortems begin on the experience and impact of No Child Left Behind on America’s schools and children. But we should be as empirical in our analysis as we are in our leadership. Would schools like Rancocas Valley have had laser-focused programs of identification, support and remediation if not for No Child Left Behind?

NEW MEXICO

Charters Held To Higher Standards
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 19, 2013

This month, we continue with our series of articles on dispelling myths about charter schools. Last month’s column focused on clarifying that charter schools do not hurt a local school district’s graduation rate, are not private schools and that charter schools “cherry pick” their students.

Taos’ Student Numbers Updated As Charter Lotteries Near
Taos News, NM, March 18, 2013

As charter schools prepare to hold their lotteries and a challenge to a new charter school in Taos heads to District Court, enrollment numbers recently reported to the state shed light on the populations local charter schools serve.

NEW YORK

11% of Schools Never Flunk Their Teachers
Wall Street Journal, March 19, 2013

Principals at more than one in 10 New York City public schools didn’t flunk a single teacher for at least eight years, according to an analysis of city data by The Wall Street Journal.

NORTH CAROLINA

Lee Charter School Future Uncertain After Management Company Pulls Out
Chapel Hill News, NC, March 19, 2013

National Heritage Academies has pulled out of the proposed Howard and Lillian Lee Scholars Charter School. “We’re very disturbed and disappointed,” board member Danita Mason-Hogans said Monday. “Right now we’re trying to decide what we’re going to do as a board.”

PENNSYLVANIA

Advocate Of Pa. Charter Overhaul To Release Report On Abuses
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 19, 2013

To bolster his argument that Pennsylvania’s laws covering charter schools and cyber schools need overhaul, the Democratic chairman of the House Education Committee will release a report Tuesday that catalogs instances of fraud, financial irregularities, mismanagement, and test-score cheating at charter schools across the state.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Revoked Charter School Remains Open, SLED Investigating
WLTX, SC, March 18, 2013

Classes continued Monday at a Sumter school with a revoked charter and a restraining order.

TEXAS

Controversial Bill Would Open Door For More Charter Schools
Austin American-Statesman, TX, March 18, 2013

Harmony Public Schools, the state’s largest charter school system, cannot keep up with the demand for seats in its 38 campuses across the state.

WEST VIRGINIA

Senate Approves Compromise School Reform Bill
Charleston Gazette, WV, March 18, 2013

State senators passed Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s education reform bill Monday, after making a flurry of last-minute changes to win support from West Virginia’s teachers unions.

WISCONSIN

Hold Voucher Schools To The Same Standards
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 18, 2013

As a teacher in Beloit, am I supposed to sit back and accept the idea, promoted by groups such as Americans for Prosperity, that my school is failing, that I am failing?

Governor, School Board Both Hold Events on School Vouchers
WBAY-TV, WI, March 19, 2013

The debate over the expansion of Wisconsin’s school voucher program continued Monday night as the Green Bay school board and Governor Walker held separate events in Green Bay discussing the issue.

Feast For Private Schools, Famine For Public Schools
La Crosse Tribune, WI, March 18, 2013

The 2011-2012 state budget handed our public schools one of the biggest funding cuts they have ever been asked to endure. Funding for public education was slashed by $1.6 billion, causing many school districts to eliminate teaching positions and cut educational programs.

ONLINE LEARNING

U46 Committee, Most Residents At Public Hearing Oppose Online Charter School
Elgin Courier News, IL, March 19, 2013

The last time a charter school proposal came to the Elgin School District U46 Board of Education, it was missing information, data, background – “the very pertinent questions simply were not asked,” said board member Joyce Fountain.

Online Charter School Officials: No Special Rules For Us
Daily Herald, IL, March 18, 2013

A virtual charter school that could siphon about $600,000 of state funding away from St. Charles Unit District 303 received a lengthy cross examination from district officials Monday night. But people at the meeting left it with just about as many questions as when they walked in.

New Statewide Virtual Charter School Board Has First Meeting
Tulsa World, OK, March 19, 2013

The board responsible for the new statewide virtual charter school met for the first time Monday, just months before classes are set to begin.

Daily Headlines for March 18, 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

More Teachers Are Grouping Kids By Ability
USA Today, March 18, 2013

New findings based on more than 20 years of research suggest that despite decades of controversy, elementary school teachers now feel fine placing students into “ability groups.”

No Child Left Behind
New York Post, NY, March 17, 2013

Gifted and talented programs have been the target of criticism ever since the concept took hold in the 1970s, as huge demographic changes were transforming urban school districts and white, middle-class families were fleeing to the suburbs.

FROM THE STATES

ARKANSAS

Lawmakers Mull Options On School Choice Law
Log Cabin Democrat, AR, March 16, 2013

A testy exchange during a Senate committee hearing last week illustrates the sensitivity of the school choice issue in a state still trying to move beyond its history of racially separate public education.

CALIFORNIA

Leaders Of Charter Movement Seek Higher Standards
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, March 16, 2013

After two decades of offering educational choice to families, leaders of the charter-school movement in California are touting accomplishments but also calling for higher standards in light of some underperforming and mismanaged schools.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

$43,056 Bonus To Charter Teacher At ‘D’-Rated School
Washington Post Blog, DC, March 18, 2013

The obsession among school reformers with standardized test scores and merit pay has led to this: A fourth-grade teacher at a charter school in New Orleans won a $43,056 bonus because her students’ scores skyrocketed at a school with a “D” state rating. But there’s more.

District Officials Oddly Unwelcoming To A KIPP Charter High School
Washington Post, DC, March 16, 2013

“KIPP is a great school, they do good work, they’re a valuable part of the District. But that doesn’t mean that we’re simply going to hand over a parcel of land to them.” So said Mayor Vincent C. Gray’s spokesman, explaining why there has been no action on a proposal by the high-performing public charter network to build a high school in Southwest D.C.

Closing The Achievement Gap In Education
Washington Times, DC, March 16, 2013,

Recently, the Equity and Excellence Commission — a commission of the Department of Education — released recommendations on how to close the persistent achievement gap that exists among 22 percent of children attending substandard schools and living in poverty. Although it’s a product of 27 first-rate minds, the report is remarkable for what it doesn’t address.

FLORIDA

CER President: Florida Charter Schools Need Less Regulation, Better Authorizing And Supervision
Orlando Sentinel Blog, FL, March 14, 2013

Bills in the state legislature that would give school districts and the state more power to regulate charters would be a move in the wrong direction, said Jeanne Allen, founder and president of the Center for Education Reform, in an interview with School Zone.

Charter Schools Deserve No Help From School Boards
Palm Beach Post, FL, March 17, 2013

Regarding the push to expand charter schools, I do not understand why the Palm Beach County School Board would hesitate to close charter schools, which are free and receive public money, that have questionable financial practices, substandard math programs, and inadequate or non-existence reading programs (“Should district save charter schools?” March 11).

Charter School Supporters Plan To Tone Down Lobbying Strategy In Tallahassee
Miami Herald, FL, March 17, 2013

After suffering bruising defeats during last year’s Legislative session, charter school advocates have descended upon the capital city with a revamped strategy.

Parent Trigger Laws Won’t Help Students
Palm Beach Post, FL, March 16, 2013

Florida Education Commissioner Tony Bennett has warned that “parent trigger” bills expected to pass the Legislature are flawed. He’s right, but for the wrong reasons.

GEORGIA

Blackmon: ‘Parent Trigger’ Is Wrong Approach To Education Reform
Athens Banner-Herald, GA, March 16, 2013

I just can’t see where a parent trigger will do anything but generate discord and instability and waste money that could be used on actual education, only to create “transformed” schools that continue to get the same results. The evidence from other states supports my conclusion.

IDAHO

Idaho Public Schools Take Fresh Hits In Legislature
Spokesman Review, WA, March 16, 2013

Unbowed by the defeats of Propositions 1, 2 and 3 last November, Idaho lawmakers have renewed their efforts to undermine public school education.

LOUISIANA

Bobby Jindal Will Call Special Legislative Session If Education Overhaul Ruled Unconstitutional
Times-Picayune, LA, March 16, 2013

Gov. Bobby Jindal confirmed Thursday he will call the Legislature into special session if his education overhaul is ruled unconstitutional by the state Supreme Court.

Vouchers go to Supreme Court on Tuesday
Opelousas Daily World, LA, March 18, 2013

Attorneys on both sides of the Louisiana voucher debate are honing their arguments for a showdown Tuesday before the Louisiana Supreme Court.

Orleans Parish School Board Committees Focus On Charter Control
The Advocate, LA, March 17, 2013

The Orleans Parish School Board discussed new legislation at its committee meetings Thursday to work toward convincing more Recovery School District charter schools to return to local control.

MARYLAND

Prince George’s County Reacts To Rushern Baker’s Plan To Take Over The School System
Washington Post, DC, March 17, 2013

A newly elected Prince George’s County school board member said Sunday that she strongly supports County Executive Rushern L. Baker III’s plan to take over the county’s struggling school system, saying the board is hampering the schools and is averse to accountability.

MICHIGAN

Enrollment Falls At Detroit School For Teen Mothers
Detroit News, MI, March 18, 2013

Nearly two years after Detroit Public Schools cut ties with Catherine Ferguson Academy, the charter school for pregnant students and teen mothers is experiencing some challenges.

MINNESOTA

If Most Teachers Get A Bonus, Does Minnesota’s Q-Comp System Work?
Pioneer Press, MN, March 16, 2013

Minnesota’s pioneering teacher pay-for-performance system has grown into one that awards a bonus to nearly every teacher who participates.

MISSISSIPPI

In Mississippi, a Gray Area Between Black and White
Wall Street Journal, March 15, 2013

But nearly a half century after a federal judge ordered Cleveland to begin school desegregation, government attorneys have returned to court to argue the district must, once and for all, “fully dismantle its racially identifiable one-race schools,” in a legal battle that is again dividing the town.

Landmark Education Reform Needed
Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, MS, March 17, 2013

Gov. Phil Bryant laid out a bold education reform package for the Legislature calling this the “Education Session.”

MONTANA

Who, And What, Are Behind School-Choice Movement In Montana?
Billings Gazette, MT, March 18, 2013

Advocates for “school choice” — the use of tax credits or public money to help finance public-school alternatives in Montana like charter or private schools — have hit a high-water mark this Legislature, getting a major bill through a chamber for the first time.

MEA-MFT’s Feaver: School Choice Rips The Fabric Of Public Education
Billings Gazette, MT, March 18, 2013

Eric Feaver, the leader of MEA-MFT, the union representing teachers and other public workers, says it’s no coincidence the entire public-education community is battling hard against school-choice bills this Legislature.

NEW JERSEY

From Pilot Teacher Evaluation Systems, Words of Encouragement, Warning
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 18, 2013
With every New Jersey school district tasked with having a new teacher evaluation system in place by next fall, the experiences of the handful of districts that have been testing the tools for the past two years are in high demand.

NEW YORK

Nine High Schools, One Roof
New York Times, NY, March 17, 2013

Still, only 14 percent of students graduated with a Regents degree from Stevenson in 2005; at the five schools with graduating classes in 2011, 40 percent did.

OREGON

Take The Long View
Mail Tribune, OR, March 17, 2013

Tom Cole says he hopes Medford School Board members can look beyond financial concerns when they decide whether to approve a new charter school operated by Cole’s Kids Unlimited organization. We hope so, too.

SOUTH CAROLINA

SC Moves To Close Failing Charter School After A Year Of Trying
The State, SC, March 16, 2013

At the same time, the state’s charter school district was moving forward with steps – on hold for a year by court order – to shut the school down for failure to improve its academic performance, financial reporting problems and alleged violations of state law.

TENNESSEE

Rocketship’s Nashville Charter Schools May Fall Short On Diversity
The Tennessean, TN, March 17, 2013

The California charter school company approved by the state to put new schools in Nashville gets high performance marks from education leaders, but its stated mission could run afoul of a diversity policy aimed at charter schools.

School Vouchers Do No Improve Student Outcomes
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 17, 2013

Which is more important, providing a high-quality education to all children, or promoting an ideology with questionable benefits to kids? If you agree that children’s needs come first, contact our state legislators and ask them to vote no on school vouchers.

Nashville’s Battle Over Charter Schools Authorizer Shifts To Costs
The Tennessean, TN, March 18, 2013

As Metro schools officials dig in to halt legislation that would create a new state panel able to authorize charter schools, their final argument is a fiscal one: protecting the purse of Metro government.

School Voucher Program Is Not A Good Idea
Leaf Chronicle, TN, March 17, 2013

The currently pending school voucher legislation is a terrible idea for these reasons:

TEXAS

Sweeping Effort To Expand Charter Schools Faces Hurdles
Texas Tribune, TX, March 17, 2013

When former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush told Texas lawmakers recently to “go big or go home” on education reform, he offered advice that state Sen. Dan Patrick had already embraced.

Two-Stepping to Excellent Schools
Wall Street Journal, March 18, 2013

As parents of Texas public-school students and founding members of Texans Advocating for Meaningful Student Assessment, we were surprised to see Tamsa described as “anti-testing” (“Doing a Texas Two-Step Around Education Reform” by Charles Cook and Terrence Moore, Cross Country, March 9).

WASHINGTON

Commit To Poor Kids To End The Achievement Gap
Seattle Times, WA, March 16, 2013

We must move past the notion that poor kids will never achieve academic success until poverty is addressed, writes guest columnist Chris Korsmo.

WEST VIRGINIA

Don’t Stymie School Reform
The Intelligencer, WV, March 18, 2013

Officials of West Virginia’s two teachers’ unions scored something of a victory last week, in delaying a state Senate vote on Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s school reform bill.

Teacher Seniority Bill Nears Big Hurdle
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 17, 2013

Teachers union officials, state lawmakers and the governor’s office resumed talks over the weekend on an education reform bill expected for a vote on the Senate floor today.

WISCONSIN

Green Bay Expands Traditional Education With Specialty Schools
Green Bay Press-Gazette, WI, March 16, 2013

For some Green Bay students, school no longer is about sitting behind a desk listening to a teacher lecture.

ONLINE LEARNING

Pass Reforms For Charters
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 18, 2013

However, I believe Pennsylvania needs major reforms in the governance, financing, and accountability of charter and cyber schools. The estimate of $365 million in savings is conservative – the increased transparency and accountability requirements in this bill may reveal further savings.

Public School Districts Using More Online Classes
Washington Examiner, DC, March 17, 2013

As Southwood High School Principal Jeff Roberts sat next to his fellow principals for a virtual school sales pitch three years ago, he said he couldn’t sign up for the program fast enough.

Online School Pays Kids To Take Graduation Test
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, March 15, 2013

Thousands of Ohio students got an added bonus for taking state-mandated graduation tests this week. Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, the largest online charter school in Ohio, is paying students up to $100 to take the Ohio Graduation Test.

Online School Public, Run By New Mexicans
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 17, 2013

There has been a lot of discussion in the New Mexico Legislature lately about online public charter schools. Rather than talking about how these public schools can benefit certain types of students, some are trying to abruptly take these education options away from families through legislation.

How Does The Carpe Diem Charter Model Work, In Practice?
News-Sentinel, IN, March 16, 2013

Full disclosure: I had never heard the phrase “blended learning” before a recent public hearing to discuss the proposed Carpe Diem Summit Campus, a charter school that will be located on the former campus of Taylor University.

Online Charter Program Seeks Inroad Into Local Schools
Elgin Courier News, IL, March 17, 2013

Residents of more than a dozen Fox Valley school districts will get their chance to ask questions about a proposed charter school that would serve students online, rather than in a classroom.

Virtual School Providing Options For Education
Silver Pinyon Journal, NV, March 18, 2013

Most parents are aware of at least two options for educating their children – public school and homeschooling. There is another option – virtual public schooling.

CER President Jeanne Allen Honored At BAEO Annual Symposium

Allen Recognized for Dedication to Providing Families Access to Options in Education

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
March 18, 2013

The Center for Education Reform (CER) President Jeanne Allen was honored with the “Chairman’s Award” by the Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO), a school choice advocacy group that focuses on minorities, for her dedication to providing all families with access to educational options and choice. The alliance gives this award for “moving the agenda forward” and giving low-income and black families more choices for their children’s education, BAEO spokesperson Tanzi West said.

When presenting the award to Allen, BAEO president Dr. Howard Fuller stated: “We thought it was a good time to honor Jeanne Allen and to thank her. Many, many years ago Jeanne honored me. It was a statement I made at her dinner, that led us to actually form BAEO.”

“I’m humbled and grateful to BAEO, whose many members are my own heroes; people I’ve had the honor of working along side in our shared fight for better opportunities for all children. Their efforts in the battle for educational freedom are inspirational and it is I who am honored to know them. We must continue to work hard – and work together – as a nation to ensure every child is served well, “said Allen.

As the president and founder of CER, Allen has been instrumental in leading the charge and advocating for education reform since 1993. For the past twenty years, Allen has been key in forging what is now mainstream acceptance of school choice by uniting diverse voices and communities. Under her leadership, her efforts have inspired millions of parents to take action and hundreds of policy makers have responded. Allen’s award honors her role as a long-standing proponent of parental choice and education reform.

The award was presented to Allen, along with fellow inductees T. Willard Fair (Urban League of Greater Miami) and Virginia Walden Ford (Heritage Foundation) at the BAEO 2013 Symposium in Orlando, Florida on Thursday, March 14. More than 650 black leaders in the education reform movement were gathered at The Peabody Hotel from March 14-16 for the annual symposium. In its 13th year, the BAEO Symposium is the largest gathering of black education reformers in the country. Each year the organization hosts its annual symposium to provide a platform for focused conversations around the critical need of ensuring that all children, especially children from low-income and working class black families, have access to a high-quality education.

Daily Headlines for March 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.

School Revamp Debated
The Advocate, LA, March 14, 2013

A former federal education official and the president of Louisiana’s top school board Thursday clashed over vouchers, charter schools and the need for changes in public schools.

When Third-Graders Can’t Read
Washington Post, DC, March 14, 2013

Thank you for the thoughtful March 10 news article “States issue third-grade ultimatum on reading,” on mandatory retention laws for third-graders reading below proficiency levels.

Common Core as Trojan Horse
National Review Online, March 15, 2013

Last week, I reported on the federal government’s massive new student-tracking database, which was created as part of the nationalized Common Core standards scheme.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Gov. Robert Bentley Calls School Choice Bill Historic; AEA Vows Legal Fight Not Over On Alabama Accountability Act
Alabama News, AL, March 15, 2013

Gov. Robert Bentley has signed into law a controversial school choice bill that gives families zoned for “failing” schools tax credits to pay tuition at a private school or better public school.

Lawmakers Undermine Local Schools
Decatur Daily, AL, March 15, 2013

Gov. Robert Bentley’s decision to sign a school tax-credit and voucher law Thursday was less surprising than the votes the bill received from local legislators.

ARKANSAS

Bill To Give Districts More Time To Fix Fiscal Woes Passes House
Log Cabin Democrat, AR, March 14, 2013

The House advanced bills Thursday that would give fiscally distressed school districts more time to get their financial houses in order and would create a new state panel to decide the fate of charter schools.

CALIFORNIA

Have Charter Schools Grown Too Fast?
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, March 14, 2013

After two decades of offering educational choice to families, leaders of the charter-school movement in California are touting accomplishments but also calling for higher standards in light of some underperforming and mismanaged schools.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

DCPS Achievement Gap Widens
Washington Examiner, DC, March 15, 2013

If it took Hurricane Katrina to improve New Orleans’ failing public school system, one shudders to think what it will take to improve Washington’s. A recent study by the DC Fiscal Policy Institute underscores this grim reality.

FLORIDA

House Budget Committee Approves Sweeping Charter School Bill
Tampa Bay Tribune Blog, FL, March 14, 2013

The House Appropriations Committee on Thursday approved a sweeping charter school bill that would, among other things, require traditional public schools to share empty classroom space with charter schools.

ILLINOIS

U-46 Candidates Split On Charter School Support
Daily Herald, IL, March 14, 2013

The six candidates in a race for Elgin Area School District U-46 school board agree better communication will help improve the district’s image, forge strong relationships with its unions, avoid future lawsuits and engage the community. Where the candidates’ platforms differ is on charter schools.

INDIANA

Vouchers’ Untold Story
Journal Gazette, IN, March 15, 2013

Monday’s school choice rally at the Statehouse packed a powerful energy boost for Indiana lawmakers considering a sweeping expansion of the nation’s most expansive voucher program.

LOUISIANA

Orleans Parish School Board Hopes To Lure State Takeover Schools Back To Local Control
Times-Picayune, LA, March 14, 2013

The Orleans Parish School Board is addressing a key roadblock this legislative session after two years in which no state takeover schools chose to return to local control.

MINNESOTA

Should School Districts Both Oversee And Lease To Charters?
Daily Planet, MN, March 14, 2013

A disagreement between the state and some school officials about charter school leases could be resolved by a bill heard in the House Education Finance Committee on Wednesday.

MISSOURI

New Standards In Math, English Cause Furor In Jefferson City
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, March 15, 2013

The teachers from across the St. Louis area had come to learn about changes afoot — state education officials have approved a new national set of standards in math and English, called the Common Core.

Group Challenges Public Employees, Aims To Privatize The Public Schools
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, March 15, 2013

Puppets of ALEC cannot say outright they seek to abolish (privatize) public schools where 90 percent of our students attend. They seek, some wittingly and some unwittingly, to take small steps..

Mo. Senate Passes Bill Allowing ‘Incompetent’ St. Louis Teachers To Be Fired
St. Louis Public Radio, MO, March 14, 2013

Teachers with tenure in St. Louis could be fired for incompetency under a bill that was passed Thursday by the Missouri Senate.

NEW JERSEY

Looking Beyond Vouchers
Herald News, NJ, March 15, 2013

THE GREATEST drama generated during Governor Christie’s town hall meeting Tuesday in Paterson came when a single parent spoke out, without being called upon, for the governor to “fix the public schools.” The outburst and subsequent exchange with the governor came near the end of a more than hour-long give-and-take with about 700 residents at the city’s St. Luke Baptist Church.

NEW MEXICO

Gov. To Veto Teacher Pay Scale Revisions
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 15, 2013

Gov. Susana Martinez will veto a bill that would have revised the criteria for teacher pay scales, a spokesman for her office said Thursday.

NEW YORK

Slap At Charter-School Discipline
New York Post, NY, March 15, 2013

Charter schools are being unnecessarily harsh in disciplining students with special needs — suspending some for days and weeks on end, parents and an elected official charged yesterday.

New York’s Education Deficit
New York Times, NY, March 15, 2013

Gov. Andrew Cuomo and state legislative leaders are hammering out the $142 billion state budget for the 2013-14 fiscal year, which must be approved by April 1. It is crucial that more financing be allocated to public schools, both in upstate areas and in New York City.

Teacher’s Union Takes Aim At Bloomberg’s Control Of Public Schools
New York Post, NY, March 14, 2013

The teachers’ union today proposed to gut one of Mike Bloomberg’s signature legislative achievements: the ability of the mayor to run New York City’s public school system.

OHIO

Don’t Believe Charter Critics
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, March 15, 2013

Unfortunately, the commentary by Janetta King of Innovation Ohio (Vindicator, March 11) contains a great deal of misinformation about charter schools that must be addressed.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma House Crams Education Bills On Deadline
Tulsa World, OK, March 15, 2013

A fistful of education bills – including two that would give school districts more flexibility in dealing with state mandates and another that creates a task force to study the controversial A-F school grading system – limboed under the deadline for House passage.

OREGON

Private School Enrollment Falling In Oregon And Nationally, Charter Schools May Be The Cause
The Oregonian, OR, March 14, 2013

Enrollment in private schools has fallen during the past 10 years, both nationally and in Oregon, and the growth of charter schools seems to be one big cause, the Census Bureau reported Thursday.

PENNSYLVANIA

Charter School Reform Legislation, Audits Grab State’s Attention
Herald Standard, PA, March 15, 2013

The money Pennsylvania’s school districts are required to pay to charter schools came under fire on Thursday.
First, the House Education Committee listened to support and some sharp criticism about legislation that would change the way districts fund charter schools.

Public’s Take On Recovery: Give Our Schools Another Chance
York Dispatch, PA, March 15, 2013

It’s usually hard to get a general consensus when dozens of people speak at a public forum.
But there was a theme during the at times insightful, dramatic, personal and always passionate public comments Thursday at the York City schools advisory committee forum.

School Lane Among Auditor General’s Charter Lease Targets
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 15, 2013

State Auditor General Eugene DePasquale said Thursday that regular audits of six charter schools across Pennsylvania found they had improperly received a total of more than $550,000 in taxpayer money from the state’s charter lease-reimbursement program.

TENNESSEE

Rocketship’s Plans To Open Charter Schools Blindsides Metro
The Tennessean, TN, March 15, 2013

Metro school officials were shocked to hear a California charter school group had state permission to open the first of eight planned schools in Nashville in 2014.

Charter Schools About Options, Casada Says
The Tennessean, TN, March 15, 2013

Rep. Glen Casada, R-Franklin, supports a state authorizer panel and believes it would usher in more charter schools for the state and ultimately give students more options.

UTAH

Nearby Charter Schools Boost Public School Performance, Researcher Says
Deseret News, UT, March 14, 2013

Public schools may see a jump in math, science and language arts test scores — if a charter school is in the same neighborhood.

WASHINGTON

Tacoma Could Be Charter Authorizer
News Tribune, WA, March 15, 2013

During last fall’s campaign for charter schools, members of the Tacoma School Board voted to oppose the ballot initiative.

New Charter School Commission Can Learn From Other States
News Tribune, WA, March 15, 2013

Based on 20 years of experience in other states, the nine members of the recently appointed State Charter School Commission are in for hard work, long hours and difficult deliberations.

ONLINE LEARNING

Greenfield School Committee May Reconsider Ending Online School
The Republican, MA, March 14, 2013

After learning more information about a 3-month-old law that will regulate online schools, some members of the School Committee said they want to reconsider a decision to end the virtual school it started four years ago.

In Cyber-Charter Funding Debate, Educators On Predictable Seesaw
WITF, PA, March 14, 2013

If school districts are up on an idea, cyber-charter school groups are down. If the cyber-charter groups swing skyward, the traditional school boards careen to the ground.

TN Senate Approves Virtual-School Enrollment Cap
The Tennessean, TN, March 15, 2013

Gov. Bill Haslam’s proposal to tighten enrollment requirements at privately run online schools has passed the Senate.

McCrory Signing 2 Digital Learning Bills Into Law
WBTV, NC, March 15, 2013

Gov. Pat McCrory wants to join state legislators in getting more electronic and online learning into North Carolina’s public schools.

Virtual Charter School Would Be First Of Its Kind In State
Naperville Sun, IL, March 14, 2013

As 18 school districts in the region prepare to make a decision about a proposed virtual charter that would serve their students, school officials are trying to figure out just how such a multi-district online charter — which would be the first of its kind in Illinois — would work.

Daily Headlines for March 14, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Michelle Rhee: Not All Charters Created Equal
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, March 13, 2013

Michelle Rhee, the former chancellor of schools in Washington, D.C., brought her controversial brand of reform to San Diego on Wednesday when she was featured as the keynote speaker at the California Charter Schools conference at the convention center.

Standard Tests Do Reveal Which Teachers Are Best
Allentown Morning Call, PA, March 13, 2013

Improving the quality of education delivered through our public schools can not only boost economic growth but also help to narrow income inequality in the U.S. And the best way to improve education is to identify and promote the most talented teachers.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Failure To Repeal Common Core Will Become Re-Election Issue For Republicans, Activists Say
Alabama News Blog, AL, March 13, 2013

Supporters of a failed bill to repeal Alabama’s common core curriculum standards vowed today their fight will become a re-election issue for Republicans who helped defeat the bill in committee.

ARKANSAS

Ark. House Takes Up Charter School Law Changes
Log Cabin Democrat, AR, March 13, 2013

The House on Thursday was scheduled to vote on a bill by Republican Rep. Mark Biviano of Searcy that would designate the state Education Department and not the Board of Education as the primary authorizer of charter schools.

Ark. Panel Considers School Choice Law Rewrite
Gurdon Times, AR, March 13, 2013

The Senate Education Committee on Wednesday is expected to consider Republican Sen. Johnny Key’s proposal to rewrite a 1989 school choice law that a federal judge struck down last year.

GEORGIA

Deal Appointees Join DeKalb School Board
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 13, 2013

The six new members of the DeKalb County school board have backgrounds in business, education and, maybe just as importantly, mediation. Now, they must use their skills to save the state’s third-largest system from losing accreditation.

ILLINOIS

Educational Experiment
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 14, 2013

The effort at Harlan is the first foray into a high school for the Clemente Course, which teaches the humanities to low-income adults nationwide. The format is as important as the content. Classes are Socratic seminars, with students sitting in a circle and discussing a text through a teacher’s questions.

Closing Time
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 14, 2013

In the next week or so, Chicago Public Schools officials will announce a list of underused schools to be closed or overhauled this year. A battalion of CPS officials has spent months whittling down the list and evaluating each of the 129 schools that could be closed. They’ve listened to more than 20,000 parents, students and community members in 29 community meetings.

INDIANA

Evidence On Voucher Success Scant As Lawmakers Move To Expand Program
The Statehouse File, IN, March 13, 2013

Welcome back to voucher wars. For the better part of 20 years, much of the educational energy in this nation and state have been consumed by an endless debate about whether giving parents choices as to where they send their children to school would improve education.

LOUISIANA

Department Of Education Announces $5 Million To Turn Around Failing Schools
Times-Picayune, LA, March 13, 2013

State Superintendent John White announced Wednesday that the state will use $5 million in federal professional development funds to train educators interested in turning around failing district-run schools.

State Asks 5th Circuit To Overturn Tangipahoa Voucher Ruling
The Advocate, LA, March 14, 2013

The Louisiana Department of Education filed its appellate brief to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday, arguing for reversal of a lower court ruling that the state’s voucher program conflicts with court orders in Tangipahoa Parish’s decades-old desegregation case.

MAINE

School Choice Offers Incentives To Improve Public Education
Portland Press Herald, ME, March 14, 2013

Mainers in a survey show support for the freedom families would gain from a voucher program.

MASSACHUSETTS

Boston School Committee Approves New Student-Assignment System
Boston Globe, MA, March 14, 2013

The Boston School Committee, in a momentous vote Wednesday, scrapped a school assignment plan developed under court-ordered desegregation almost a quarter century ago and embraced a new system that seeks to allow more students to attend schools closer to home.

MICHIGAN

Statewide Teacher Evaluations Could Be In Place By Fall 2014
Detroit News, MI, March 14, 2013

Lawmakers by June should receive a report recommending a statewide teacher evaluation system that could be in place for the 2014-15 school year.

Authority Gives Kids At Worst-Performing Schools Chance To Grow
Detroit News, MI, March 14, 2013

As a mother of four with kids in public schools, and as chair of the House Education Committee, I have a great interest in public education and an immense passion for the kids in our schools.

MISSISSIPPI

Fate Of Charter Schools Bill Uncertain
Clarion Ledger, MS, March 14, 2013

The state Senate on Wednesday passed its version of a charter schools bill for the second day in a row, while the House appeared to send a message with inaction on the issue.

MONTANA

Cookie-Cutter Legislation
Missoula Independent, MT, March 14, 2013

How a corporate bill mill plays into Montana politics–and why you should care

NEW JERSEY

Teacher Evaluation Plan Gets Mixed Reviews in First Public Forum
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 14, 2013

The Christie administration took its new teacher-evaluation system on the road yesterday — and the maiden trip left few doubts there are going to be some bumps along the way.

NEW MEXICO

Charter Schools Four-Year Grad Rates Low, Data Reflects
Silver City Sun-News, NM, March 13, 2013

Monika Robinson got caught up in high school’s drama and social hierarchy. She fell behind in classes and took a year off to work and figure out what she wanted to do.

NEW YORK

Liberty Parents Suggest Charter School Option
WETM, NY, March 13, 2013

A group of Tioga County neighbors are making it clear they’re unhappy with the Southern Tioga School District.

NORTH CAROLINA

School Vouchers: A Threat To Our Very Foundation
News & Observer, NC, March 13, 2013

Superintendents, principals and teachers were invited recently to the General Assembly to share their ideas about improving and protecting public education in North Carolina.

Bill Proposes $3,000 Grant To Send Disabled Students To Private Schools
News Observer, NC, March 13, 2013

Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake County, is behind a bill introduced this week that would give students with special needs taxpayer-funded scholarships to attend private schools or be home-schooled.

Education Establishment Runs From Its Own Customers
Carolina Journal, NC, March 14, 2013

If only more policymakers and politicians understood that a willingness to compete can also transform the public sector. But instead of embracing the opportunity, some public officials fear competition and heap scorn on those who champion it.

OHIO

Charter School In Youngstown Continues Its Academic Success
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, March 14, 2013

Charter schools in Ohio are, by and large, a failure, with only two dozen out of the nearly 300 scoring above the state average on performance measures. Even so, there is no sign that the charter schools initiative, which was launched 15 years ago, has lost the support of Republican Gov. John Kasich and the GOP controlled General Assembly.

Charters Get Additional $34.8 Million In Kasich Plan
Columbus Dispatch, OH, March 14, 2013

Despite getting less base funding per student, Ohio charter schools would receive nearly $34.8 million more from the state under Gov. John Kasich’s proposed education-funding plan, according to an analysis from the Legislative Service Commission.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma Educators Wait To See How State Question 766 Will Affect Funding
The Oklahoman, OK, March 14, 2013

Educators throughout the state know tens of millions of dollars in school funding will disappear because of a new property tax law, but no one is exactly sure what the real impact will be.

PENNSYLVANIA

Phila. School Partnership To Announce $3.4 Million In Grants For 2 Charter Groups
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 14, 2013

The Philadelphia School Partnership will announce grants totaling $3.4 million Thursday to help two charter organizations with long waiting lists expand in the northern and western parts of the city.

McKeesport Area School Board Denies Charter School Application
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, March 14, 2013

Although the board of the McKeesport Area School District voted at a special meeting Tuesday to deny the application of the Young Scholars of McKeesport Charter School, the matter is far from closed.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Two New Charter Schools Hope To Open In Downtown Charleston In 2014-15
Post and Courier, SC, March 13, 2013

Community members hoping to open two new charter schools downtown will host informational meetings during the next two weekends.

Evaluation Plan Ignores Teachers’ Challenges
Greenville News, SC, March 13, 2013

As a citizen of this state, I cannot sit idly by while the state Superintendent Mick Zais appears to show little respect for the public school teachers of South Carolina. His plan to assign letter grades to teachers ignores the background of poverty, lack of parental support, conflicting social mores, and other issues that teachers must deal with daily.

SC Senate Panel OKs Students Attending School In Another District
Island Packet, SC, March 13, 2013

A bill that would allow children to attend the public school of their choice – regardless of where they live – passed a state Senate committee Wednesday.

TENNESSEE

Senator Offers School Voucher Plan To Rival Gov. Haslam’s
The Tennessean, TN, March 14, 2013

A senior Republican in the state Senate has filed a rival plan to Gov. Bill Haslam’s proposal to create a school voucher program — one that would raise income limits and the number of vouchers available at the outset.

State Charter School Authorizer Would Provide Education Options
The Tennessean, TN, March 13, 2013

FRANKLIN Rep. Glen Casada, R-Franklin, believes a state authorizer panel would serve to usher in more charter schools that would ultimately give students more options.

WEST VIRGINIA

The Conversation Is About W.Va. Students
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 14, 2013

A legislative conversation that was supposed to center on what West Virginia students need – an education – has focused once again on what education unions demand instead.

Senate Could Approve Education Bill By Week’s End
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 13, 2013

The Senate could send Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s education reform bill to the House as early as Friday.

WISCONSIN

Proposed Charter School Changes Cause for Concern for Some
WUMN, WI, March 14, 2013

MCarrie Bonk is all in favor of the governor’s plan to create a state board that could approve more chartering entities. Bonk heads the Wisconsin Charter School Association.

State Schools Debate: Superintendent Candidates Clash Over Education
Leader Telegram, WI, March 14, 2013

State schools Superintendent Tony Evers and challenger Don Pridemore outlined their very different visions for Wisconsin’s schools during a debate Wednesday, disagreeing over the governor’s proposed expansion of the state’s voucher system and proposed freeze in public school spending.

Voucher Schools’ Finances Must Be Well Vetted
Journal Times, WI, March 13, 2013

Last year, in its very first year of operation, St. John Fisher Academy, a voucher school, was forced to close its doors from lack of funding. The Northwestern Avenue school had counted on various grants and other funding coming in. But they didn’t come through and, after months of teachers working without pay, the school announced its closing.

ONLINE LEARNING

Hearing Set On Charter School Plan
Naperville Sun, IL, March 13, 2013

If a Virginia-based company has its way, Naperville students will get a chance to attend a virtual charter school next fall.

Year-Round, Blended Learning Classroom Bill Fails In Utah House
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, March 13, 2013

A bill to create a pilot program for schools to blend online learning into year-round schedules got slapped down in the House on Wednesday, amid concerns that it didn’t get enough public discussion and that it would mainly fund a consultant.

Senate To Take Up Virtual School Measure
WSMV-TV, March 14, 2013

Gov. Bill Haslam’s proposal to tighten enrollment requirements at privately run online schools is scheduled to be heard on the Senate floor Thursday.

Virtual Charter Schools Are A Great Idea
Gaston Gazette, NC, March 14, 2013

I am writing in response to Mr. Fleming’s column supporting a virtual charter school option and I couldn’t agree more. Virtual charter schools are a more affordable alternative than traditional schools and would allow North Carolina parents to maximize the individual potential of their student.

Everything You Need to Know About Teaching

Teach.com is a comprehensive educational web resource dedicated to discovering, discussing and encouraging great teaching around the world.  Like certificationmap.com, Teach.com also provides a map outlining the steps to become a teacher, including information on teacher salaries, teacher preparation and certification requirements for all 50 states as well as information on teaching abroad.  The site also profiles great teachers from around the country and highlights the need for more great teachers.

Teach.com

 

Certification Map is a comprehensive resource for teacher certification information.  It provides state specific information on how to become a teacher, teacher salaries, teaching credentials, teacher certification tests, alternative teacher certification, and teaching certificate reciprocity.  Their aim is to provide all the information necessary to become a teacher no matter where you live.

Certificationmap.com

Mississippi Moves Closer On New Charter School Measures

Yet Student Opportunity And Choice Are Still Limited

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
March 13, 2013

Calling their passage of a broad education bill “the most significant in 30 years,” the Mississippi state senate moved closer to adopting new measures to open charter schools, yet yielded to pressure from school districts in limiting the opportunity for students across the state to have substantive, meaningful choices.

“Mississippi has yet to open the book on what charter schools can really do for the whole of education across the state,” said Center for Education Reform (CER) President Jeanne Allen: “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.”

The charter school law in Mississippi ranks as one of only four “Fs” on the national ranking of charter laws, an analysis that for 16 years has been measuring the impact of components of law on creating actual charter school opportunities for students. First enacted in 1997, the initial law permitted school districts to convert schools. Only one did so. That law expired in 2009, and in 2010 a new charter law was enacted, but this law allows only for the conversion of low-performing public schools. No charters were opened subsequently.

Once enacted, this bill will give a new state-level commission authority to approve new charter schools in districts currently rated as D & F, but not without prior “evidence” of local support. Proposed charters in A, B and C districts must be endorsed by a majority of the local school board members. There is no appeal for such decisions and it’s still not clear if full funds follow children to their school of choice.

“Many in and outside of Mississippi will say that this proposal is a good step forward, incrementally. The reality is that not all progress is good, and it’s unlikely that the legislature which has taken 16 years to even move charter schooling forward would improve upon this measure in enough years to save the 80 percent of children still not proficient in reading across the state,” says Allen.

Daily Headlines for March 13, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Education Programs Are Bad For Education
Washington Examiner, DC, March 12, 2013

Schools of education, whether graduate or undergraduate, tend to represent the academic slums of most college campuses. They tend to be home to students who have the lowest academic achievement test scores when they enter college, such as SAT scores.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

New Poll Finds Strong Overall Support For School Choice, Support Slips When Tax Dollars Go To Private Schools
Alabama Blog, AL, March 12, 2013

A poll commissioned and paid for by Republicans has found solid support for a school choice plan passed by the Legislature Feb. 28.

ARKANSAS

Changes Could Come To The Charter School Process
THV11, AR, March 12, 2013

A House committee has approved legislation that would change the way Arkansas approves charter schools applications.

CALIFORNIA

L.A. Charter School Aims To Toss Out Students With Fake Addresses
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 13, 2013

Officials at Carpenter Community Charter, a top-notch elementary, think 120 children are enrolled fraudulently. They want to make room for students who live in the neighborhood.

Divided over L.A. Unified
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 12, 2013

One nasty election later, there is no sign that the divisiveness in the Los Angeles Unified School District will abate. If anything, it looks likely to increase, with activists in United Teachers Los Angeles announcing that teachers will vote on a passel of anti-reform positions.

Parent Trigger Group Gets Proposals To Remake LAUSD School
Contra Costa Times, CA, March 12, 2013

A group of Los Angeles parents who successfully invoked a state law to take over their failing school have received four proposals on how to remake the school, including one from the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Manteca Unified, Charter Schools Compete For Pupils
Manteca Bulletin, CA, March 13, 2013

Manteca Unified School District’s competition was fairly small just a few years ago. Primarily Christian schools such as St. Anthony’s, Plumfield Academy, Ripon Christian Schools, and Manteca Christian Schools competed with the district for students. And given parents had to come up with the tuition, the numbers of students who opted out of public school was small.

Students, Parents, Teachers Voice Support Of Imagine Imperial Valley To Local School Board
Imperial Press, CA, March 13, 2013

In an effort to ensure Imagine Imperial Valley stays open for years to come, parents and students alike pledged the charter school’s good work to the El Centro Elementary School District board of trustees at a meeting Tuesday.

COLORADO

Double Talk On Lobato Case Before The Colorado Supreme Court
Denver Post, CO, March 13, 2013

So if the Colorado Supreme Court upholds a district judge’s ruling that we grossly underfund our public schools, how long will judges, rather than elected lawmakers, dictate funding decisions?

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Median D.C. Charter School Outperforms Median Traditional, Study Finds
Washington Post, DC, March 13, 2013

Student proficiency in math and reading improved at the median D.C. public charter school over the past five years, while student proficiency at the city’s median traditional school declined, according to a new analysis of school data.

GEORGIA

Regional Charter School Idea Floated
Jackson Progress-Argus, GA, March 13, 2013

Area school officials are considering establishing a regional charter academy that would serve students from multiple counties, delivering a curriculum at least partly based around area business and industry needs.

Evaluation Process For Teachers Gaining Momentum Through Legislation
North Fulton, GA, March 12, 2013

State legislators are getting serious about the competency of teachers and administrators in local schools, and are putting political clout behind the drive. However, the legislation leaves more questions than answers for local school systems as they move toward full implementation.

INDIANA

Left In Dark On Charter Appeals
Journal Gazette, IN, March 13, 2013

Charter schools are public schools, financed with your tax dollars. Yet when Ball State University – a public, taxpayer-subsidized school – hears appeals from three local charter schools trying to save their Ball State-authorized charters, the hearings will be secret.

MASSACHUSETTS

Charter School’s Debt Shows Need For State Reforms
Gloucester Daily Times, MA, March 13, 2013

And the truth is, the schools debts once again point, more than anything else, to a dire lack of oversight on the part of the state’s Department of Education, and the need to reform the manner in which the state funds and then tends to its charter schools.

MICHIGAN

Charter School Boards Need More Training, Guidance
Bridge Magazine, MI, March 13, 2013

Since the new Legislature convened in January, more than 40 bills related to public education have been introduced. These bills cover a wide range of topics, from funding for pre-kindergarten programs to high school graduation requirements.

MISSISSIPPI

Senate Oks Ed Reform Bill In Close Vote
Clarion Ledger, MS, March 13, 2013

The Senate on Tuesday passed a comprehensive education reform bill that includes charter schools, but the vote was closer than expected and its fate in the House is uncertain.

NEVADA

Grants Save Rainshadow Community Charter School In Reno From Closing
Reno Gazette-Journal, NV, March 12, 2013

When news of the closing of Rainshadow Community Charter School came out last month, the community stepped up.

NEW JERSEY

Hatikvah Accuses E.B. Board Of Misusing Taxpayer Dollars
East Brunswick Sentinel, NJ, March 13, 2013

The Hatikvah International Academy Charter School’s board of trustees last week called upon the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office and the state commissioner of education to probe the East Brunswick Board of Education for what the charter school board described as a “gross misuse of taxpayer dollars to fund its ongoing campaign against the dual-language charter school.”

Student Achievement, The Real Goal of Educator Evaluation
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 13, 2013

On March 6, the New Jersey Department of Education submitted to the State Board new teacher and principal evaluation regulations, which will be required to be fully implemented beginning in September 2013. Before we begin a spirited debate on the details of the department’s proscriptive approach in the code, we should take a moment to focus on the goals of educator effectiveness and the realities of implementing school reforms, on the ground-floor level, in New Jersey schools.

NEW MEXICO

Charter School Sex Case Is Shrouded In Secrecy
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 13, 2013

The people running Bataan Military Academy seem to forget that it is a public school using taxpayer dollars to keep it in operation.

NEW YORK

Walcott Urges Principals To Engage Parents On New Academic Standards
New York Daily News, NY, March 12, 2013

Principals should do a better job engaging parents, city Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott admitted Tuesday.

OHIO

Kasich’s Pick Is Named State Schools Chief
Columbus Dispatch, OH, March 13, 2013

A divided state Board of Education yesterday named Gov. John Kasich’s top education adviser as Ohio school superintendent.

Court Orders Charter-School Manager To Open Books
Columbus Dispatch, OH, March 13, 2013

The Franklin County Court of Appeals upheld an order requiring Ohio’s largest for-profit manager of charter schools to share detailed financial records.

Gov. John Kasich’s School Funding Formula Would Increase Charter School Aid By 4.5 Percent
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, March 12, 2013

Charter schools would receive about $35 million more from the state — a 4.5 percent increase — under Gov. John Kasich’s proposed school funding formula than they have over the last two years, according to an analysis by the Legislative Service Commission.

OREGON

Supporters Of Kids Unlimited’s Charter School Proposal Pack House At Hearing
Mail Tribune, OR, March 13, 2013

The Medford School Board meeting room overflowed Monday night with supporters of Kids Unlimited’s proposed charter school, VIBES.

PENNSYLVANIA

Philly Charter School Lottery Shows Effects Of District Closures
6abc, PA, March 12, 2013

A thousand kids applied to get in, but there’s only room for a little more than 100. On Tuesday night, GLA, Global Leadership Academy Charter School in West Philadelphia, held its lottery for grades kindergarten through 8.

TENNESSEE

Charters Drain Funds From Other Students, Board Chairwoman Says
The Tennessean, TN, March 13, 2013

Charter schools are expected to siphon about $40 million from the Metro Nashville school budget next year, school board Chairwoman Cheryl Mayes said, leaving the district with a shortfall close to $30 million.

Tennessee House Committee OKs Voucher Bill
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, March 12, 2013

With heated discussion on both sides, a school-voucher bill passed 9-4 Tuesday in the House Education committee, moving Tennessee a step closer to allowing income-eligible children in failing schools to attend private schools with tax dollars in the fall.

WEST VIRGINIA

Education Bill Clears Senate Education Committee
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 12, 2013

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin and supporters of his education initiatives won the first round on Tuesday as the Senate Education Committee approved a moderately altered version of his massive bill.

WISCONSIN

Arnold, Carstensen, Arnesen And Brien: Keep Public In Public Education
Capital Times, WI, March 13, 2013

Gov. Walker’s budget proposals for K-12 education continue to undermine local control of public education, while elevating private schools.

State Law Allows Unaccredited Voucher Schools To Stay In Program
Journal Sentinel Blog, WI, March 12, 2013

Three private schools in Milwaukee that have accepted millions of dollars from taxpayers through the voucher program are no longer accredited, but may continue accepting students because of a loophole in state law, records show.

ONLINE LEARNING

As I See It: A Solution To Cyber-Charter School Funding
Patriot News, PA, March 13, 2013

Next year, Pennsylvania’s public school districts will send $1 billion to charter and cyber-charter schools across the state. But what if Pennsylvania taxpayers could save $1 billion next year and every year after that. A bill now before the state Senate would do just that.

Cyber School Funding Reform Urged
The Sentinel, PA, March 12, 2013

Legislators can save $4.6 million in taxpayer dollars just by fixing the formula school districts use to fund cyber-charter schools, says a report from Education Matters in the Cumberland Valley.

Caution In Authorizing Online Schools Makes Sense
Jackson Sun, TN, March 13, 2013

A proposal by Gov. Bill Haslam to put limits on privately-run online schools in Tennessee is set to be taken up in a Senate committee this week. Better known as “virtual schools,” online education is a new approach to education that has potential, but still is in the developmental stage. Haslam is right to take a go-slow approach to bringing online education to Tennessee.

Fox Valley Districts Set Hearings On Proposed ‘Virtual’ Education Effort
Aurora Beacon News, IL, March 12, 2013

Residents of 17 Fox Valley school districts will get their chance to ask questions about a proposed charter school that would serve students online, rather than in a classroom.

Online Charter School Proposed for District 427
Daily Chronicle, IL, March 13, 2013

Sycamore School District 427 could add an online charter school next school year if the Board of Education approves.

BDHS Expands Virtual Classes
Beaver Dam Daily Citizen, WI, March 12, 2013

Beaver Dam High School principal Mark DiStefano said the Virtual Academy program at the school will expand next semester.

Virtual Charter School Enrolling Students
KNOE, LA, March 12, 2013

There’s no need to wait for the bell to ring to start learning, a group of educators have a different way to help students learn and they don’t have to go far to do it.

DC Charter Schools Outperform

“New study finds that median D.C. charter schools outperform median traditional schools”
by Emma Brown
Washington Post
March 13, 2013

Student proficiency in math and reading improved at the median D.C. public charter school over the past five years, while student proficiency at the city’s median traditional school declined, according to a new analysis of school data.

The study, which the nonprofit D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute expects to release Wednesday, also found geographic trends. In more-affluent wards, proficiency rates at the median school rose over the past five years, while in poorer wards the median school’s proficiency rate fell.

The findings suggest that charter schools are slightly outperforming traditional schools and that to meet ambitious improvement goals, city school leaders will have to make greater strides over the next five years than they have in the past five, a period of rapid and wide-ranging reform efforts.

“We still have a long way to go to see citywide performance go up,” said Soumya Bhat, the study’s author. “That theme is consistent.”

Public officials often assess school progress by tracking the average scores of students in charter schools, in traditional schools and citywide. Between 2008 and 2012, the share of all D.C. students proficient in math and reading rose five points, from 42 percent to 47 percent.

Bhat instead examined the trajectories of individual schools. Using the results of annual standardized tests at 152 schools that existed in both 2008 and 2012, she analyzed the share of students who scored proficient or advanced at each school. She then tracked how the median school — the one squarely in the middle of the pack, with the same number of schools doing better and doing worse — performed.

Citywide, that middle-of-the-pack performance did not improve over the past five years, dropping slightly from 41.8 percent to 41.2 percent.

Proficiency rates at the median charter school rose from about 44 percent in 2008 to about 50 percent in 2012. At the median traditional school, proficiency rates fell from 40 percent to 37 percent over the same period, chiefly because of declines in reading.

Bhat said those numbers suggest the traditional school system might need to consider substantial changes to boost achievement, particularly at the 40 lowest-performing schools, where the goal is to raise proficiency rates by 40 percentage points by 2017.

School system spokeswoman Melissa Salmanowitz was provided with an advance copy of Bhat’s analysis. She said officials could not comment, because they have not had an opportunity to fully review the data.

Median school proficiency rates dropped in poorer parts of the city, including east of the Anacostia River and east of Rock Creek Park in Wards 4 and 5. They rose across Wards 1, 2, 3 and 6, which include the more affluent Upper Northwest and Capitol Hill neighborhoods.

The study points out that performance trends varied widely within every category of school. Since 2008, proficiency rates have risen significantly — by at least five percentage points — at about one-third of all traditional and charter schools. They have declined by that much at another one-third of schools. And one-third of the city’s schools have had modest changes of less than five percentage points.

Newswire: March 12, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 10

RACISM & GREED? Should our public services be used for people who really need them? Aren’t prisons a place for criminals who defiantly break the law? And how exactly does intentionally breaking the law help children understand the importance of schooling? These and more questions are on our minds as we ponder the actions by President of the AFT union Randi Weingarten this past Thursday, who, upon her arrival in Philadelphia to protest the closing of 23 FAILING (yes that was caps intentionally) schools got herself arrested. Make no mistake — this was planned. Anyone with a big time PR shop like the AFT has doesn’t do these things without much consideration. You could just see her — boarding the plane, arriving in Philly, taking her car to the site, getting poised to protest and WHAM, standing in front of the door to the School Reform Commission meeting just to be carried away to the Klink, the pen – prison! The cheering and hizzahs were incredible, thanks to the adult members of the union who joined her. “This is about Racism and Greed” one sign said. Actually — he’s half right. It’s about the not so subtle racism that pervades a system that makes someone want to keep a bad school open and keep poor kids of color from getting a good education and it’s about the greed of the unions who just can’t let it go.

BABIES TO THE CORE. Those cute little kindergartens we all like to fawn over are apparently getting the shaft in schools that have already started implementing the Common Core standards for young children. It’s not intentional, as Harlem Village Academies Founder & Author (and CER 2006 Honoree) Deborah Kenny writes in a fabulous op-ed. It’s that teaching requires more than a handbook or list of instructions from even the most respected and well-funded efforts to ensure better learning happens in the classroom. The law of unintended consequences that many have been predicting may occur from a national effort to ensure common learning state by state seems to be cropping up all over the place. Hold your fire. Just saying. One could argue that the perverse reaction to NCLB was a bit the same as that to Common Core. Perverse or not, it happens, and we need to be prepared.

CER president Jeanne Allen will join a crowd of experts and researchers on March 25 at the American Enterprise Institute to discuss these issues and more.

SEQUESTER – REVISITED. Each day continues to reveal distorted predications of doomsday in our nation’s schools due to the sequestration. First there was the Arne flap and across the country school districts are crowing that they’ve had to cut millions from their schools. Our investigative eyes are on it, and we have discovered a few more Pinocchios in recent coverage. One example is the report which says that schools on Indian Reservations and Military facilities are hardest hit given their percentage of federal funds. The Washington Post provides evidence in Arizona’s Navajo based Window Rock School District, whose superintendent just last week said that closing schools, cancelling bus routes and cutting positions are among the things she has to do ASAP. “We may have to close those schools — we don’t have any other avenues at all,” Superintendent Debbie Jackson-Dennison said, adding that she will cut five administrators, 25 support staffers and 35 certified teachers by the end of May. School bus routes, vital in a large rural setting, will be reduced beginning this month, guaranteeing that some children will be riding an hour to and from school. But a closer look reveals that this district has had financial problems long before the sequester, and most are a result of bad management. First, the district’s impact aid which the Superintendent says in this press release from September 2012 was likely to be cut because of the sequester back then, and yet, all of that aid has already flowed to the district. Then, apparently the county treasurer was found at fault with his investments causing the district to lose money. Much of the story is outlined here. It’s another example that very often the actual story is much more complex than what is commonly thought.

WHY CAN’T JOHNNY STILL READ? Or at least, why can’t we reach the estimated 33% of kids in this country that are below basic come fourth grade? Just weeks from the 30th Anniversary of A Nation at Risk, we have a nation still at risk and states are grappling with whether to retain or promote. Meanwhile, thousands of schools, which ARE accountable for how their students perform year to year in most states that have charter schools and robust authorizing, are doing it well. And yet…

OPPOSITION REMAINS FIXED ON CHARTERS. …Despite their success, the mainstreamness of it all, the Kumba-ya between both political parties, charters are under constant attack in communities and at some state levels. If they are not under attack, they face an uphill fight to even get approved much less enacted. To wit:

• Maine — Knowing that his charter law is weak and it’s time to educate the public better on the issues, Governor La Page is holding a major summit one week from Friday, March 22, to grow support for the importance of charters. He would not need to do this if his law had not been a political compromise with the establishment.

• Mississippi – Legislators are working on a compromise bill that would allow charters to open in failing school districts under certain limitations, and yet even this very modest bill which is riddled with restrictions is having a tough time gaining traction as a “don’t worry be happy” crowd of Republicans in that state just thinks everything is great for their kids.

• Pennsylvania – Reports of Philly notwithstanding, legislators have introduced poison pill bills to withhold more funding from already underfunded charters. Reform bills are coming, but the powerful school boards lobby remains fixed in Harrisburg.

• Tennessee – An effort to improve and expand that state’s charter bill is wavering, while a proposal by the Governor would create a limited voucher program for 5,000 low-income students in 83 failing schools across the state. If passed, the cap would rise to 20,000 students by 2016. A modest proposal at best, and some lawmakers would like to see a much more expansive program.

Alaska, Alabama, and Georgia have all seen action recently on charters, tax credits and a parent trigger bill, respectively. Scaled back or compromised by the special interest clout, the progress isn’t near what it should be if Johnny and Jane and Jose and Josephine are expected to read well.