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Parent-Driven Education Gains Ground in States

by Ashley Bateman
Heartland News
March 6, 2013

Ten states rank a cut above the rest in offering parents extensive opportunities to control their children’s education, according to the 2013 Parent Power Index from the Center for Education Reform.

Indiana ousted formerly first-ranked Florida for the top seat. Florida ranked second, followed by Ohio, Arizona, the District of Columbia, Louisiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Utah.

“Indiana surpassed Florida because they looked at Florida, saw their lessons, [and] tried to surpass them and do more,” said Kara Kerwin, a Center for Education Reform (CER) vice president.

Empowering parents increases student achievement, the center also found.

One Index to Rule Them All
A myriad of school reform organizations have taken to ranking states according to what policies they prefer.

“As more and more reports are out there it’s really hard for parents to understand what it all means,” Kerwin said. “We decided to take everything we’ve been looking at for all these years and put it into one simple and user-friendly index.”

The Parent Power Index (PPI) measures states five ways: school choice, charter schools, online learning, teacher quality, and transparency. It also provides summaries of state education laws and quick links to often-requested state sites, positioning itself as a parent-empowerment tool.

“We think that [the index] is asking all the right questions,” said William Mattox, a resident fellow at the James Madison Institute in Florida. “In the larger school choice movement, we want to see competition on all sorts of levels. …so that everyone is seeking to improve their quality and give students the kind of education they deserve.”

Recognizing, Serving Parents
The index recognizes “ the role of parents in selecting schools, not only being able to choose their own schools and escaping failure but to reinvent and restructure the schools that are in their community,” said education analyst RiShawn Biddle.

He recommended that future indexes measure Parent Trigger laws’ effectiveness, state teacher pension debt, and school choice for under-noticed groups such as Native Americans.

CER researchers and interns tested the user-friendliness of websites nationwide, rating websites on ease of navigation and intuitive design. Parents frequently ask to have easy-to-use education websites, said Virginia Walden Ford, a longtime parent activist and founder of the Black Alliance for Educational Options. Easy, quick access to information is key to empowering parents, she said.

“So many of those websites are so difficult to navigate, taking hours and hours to find one thing, and that discourages parents from getting involved and getting information,” Ford said.

Top States
This second publication of the index indicates pro-parent state policies have increased markedly. The index uses National Council for Teacher Quality rankings on teacher quality and Digital Learning Now metrics for online education.

Indiana gained points for improving its charter school law, a statewide voucher program for thousands of children, and strong online learning policy. Florida holds a bevy of charter schools and voucher programs, which have helped boost student achievement, especially for minorities, research has shown. Its user-friendly websites and high ranking for online learning opportunities also contributed to a high score. The index cited the lack of a Parent Trigger law—which allows parents to require one of several reforms at their children’s failing school—as a drawback.

“We are pleased that Florida ranks high in the rankings, but also pleased that they acknowledged that there is room for additional growth on our part,” Mattox said. “Dropping from one to two says we need to raise our game.”

Everyone Can Improve
Ohio ranked third, partly due to a recently passed Parent Trigger law. The state boasts hundreds of quality charter schools, above-average teacher quality, and extensive online opportunities.

No. 1 Indiana received a score of 84 percent out of 100, as even great states can improve, Kerwin said. Pennsylvania has some of the largest virtual schools in the country, but recent legislation to cut them will likely reduce family choices and be reflected in the next ranking, she said.

“Parents are very, very responsive to whatever information they can get, they’re hungry for it,” Ford said. “It makes for such a greater, more-informed citizen.”

Learn more:
Parent Power Index, Center for Education Reform: https://staging.edreform.com/in-the-states/parent-power-index/.

LePage bringing national teaching and learning experts to Maine for education summit

by Christopher Cousins
Bangor Daily Herald
March 7, 2013

School choice and education reforms championed by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush will get top billing later this month at an education summit set up by Gov. Paul LePage.

The summit, promised by LePage during his State of the State Address, will feature speakers from all over the country, according to new details about the summit released Thursday.

“We are bringing national experts to Maine to demonstrate what other states are doing and why we are being left behind,” said LePage. “We can no longer stand still, we cannot wallow in the status quo. The rest of the country and the world is passing us by.”

During his State of the State speech, the governor said he favors school choice and charter schools because they provide more choices for students, though opponents of those ideas say they funnel too much taxpayer money away from public schools. A LePage proposal to open up school choice in Maine failed to gain legislative approval, though his initiative to create charter schools in Maine passed. The state’s first two charter schools opened last year.

“School choice benefits all kids who deserve the best education that we can provide,” said LePage during the speech. “Giving students options such as charter schools is more than just a political position.”

LePage said he spends a lot of his free time studying education reform, which has been at the core of his priorities as governor. The education summit is billed as a venue to breed new ideas.

The March 22 summit at Cony High School in Augusta will feature keynote speaker Dr. Tony Bennett, the commissioner of education in Florida, and the first session is titled “The Florida Story.” Three employees of the Foundation for Excellence in Education, which was founded by Bush in 2008 as an education reform think tank, will speak during the morning session: Patricia Levesque, the foundation’s CEO, Matthew Ladner, its senior policy advisor, and Mike Thomas, who runs the foundation’s communications department.

The second session, titled “Stretching the School Dollar,” will feature Eric Lerum, vice president of national policy for StudentsFirst, another national think tank pursuing education reform. StudentsFirst was founded by education policy guru Michelle Rhee, author of “Radical: Fighting to Put Students First.” Also speaking will be Dr. Alden Monberg, a retired Maine Maritime Academy professor. In addition to her experience with the academy, Monberg is a former member of the Orono School Committee, served on the board of directors for the Region 4 United Technologies Center and was a director for the Maine School Board Association.

The third session is titled School Choice. LePage’s administration has been a vocal supporter of school choice, which allows students to pick the school they wish to attend and have public education dollars fund their tuition. The speakers in this session will include Jeanne Allen, president of the Center for Education Reform; Rep. Alisha Morgan, a Democrat in the Georgia House of Representatives, recipient of the “Champion for Choice” award from the American Federation for Children; and Rene Menard, head of school for Thornton Academy in Saco.

University Academy Tour in Missouri

March 7, 2013

Stephanie Heishman, CER’s senior development director, was in Kansas City on Monday and had the opportunity to tour University Academy, a Kansas City K-12 college prep charter school that serves approximately 1,000 students.

The mission of University Academy is to prepare students to succeed in an institution of higher education and to become leaders in society. The vision of University Academy is to be the best K-12 college-preparatory charter public school in the country, with an emphasis on college preparation, career development, community service and leadership.

All grade levels attend classes in the same building, teachers are masters in their content and each teacher’s classroom is identified by their university or college alma mater- giving students a clear focus on the importance of getting into and completing college.

At the entrance of the school is the “Wall of Honor,” showcasing University Academy graduates and the university or college they are attending.

Kudos to University Academy for all the work they are doing to uphold their mission and vision of providing kids a quality education that will prepare them for life after K-12 schooling.

Daily Headlines for March 7, 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

Rotten to the Core
Journal Gazette, IN, March 7, 2013

As soon as someone tells you something will save education, hide your children, hide your wife and check your back pocket. Because education deals with children and the American dream, it’s a land of magical thinking. The latest unproven fad is called Common Core.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Judge Delays Decision On Private School Tax Credit Bill
Montgomery Advertiser, AL, March 6, 2013

A Montgomery County Circuit judge Wednesday morning delayed a ruling on a bill extending tax credits to students who transfer from designated failing public schools to non-failing ones or private schools after attorneys representing Lt. Gov. Kay Ivey filed a motion to dismiss.

More Questions Raised About Tax Credit Bill
Daily Home, AL, March 6, 2013

More questions than answers have been raised by the Alabama legislature’s passage last week of a bill originally written to allow flexibility and innovation in the state’s K-12 public schools through the Alabama Accountability Act of 2013.

CALIFORNIA

Big Money Doesn’t Buy Much In L.A. School Races
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 6, 2013

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s PAC raised nearly $4 million, much of it from outside interests, on behalf of three school board candidates. But it secured only one seat.

Local Fixes For ‘Failing’ Schools
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 7, 2013

Nine California school districts are drawing up a more comprehensive way of measuring student progress.

COLORADO

Douglas County Schools Signs Unique Charter School Deal
9NEWS, CO, March 6, 2013

Over the past few years, strong emotions have surrounded the changes taking place within the Douglas County School District — from school vouchers to eliminating the contract with the teachers’ union. Now, there’s a project underway that may also be reflective of the new direction of the district.

FLORIDA

Charter School Plan Discussed
Tampa Tribune, FL, March 7, 2013

A meeting on potential environmental impacts of building a charter high school off Sunset Lane drew an overflow crowd of residents, many characterizing it as a bad fit that would adversely impact natural resources.

Charter School Lunacy
Orlando Sentinel, FL, March 7, 2013

Albert Einstein famously defined insanity as “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” A shuttered Orlando charter school that bore his name again proves the point.

Daniel Shoer Roth: Deadly Trigger For Public Schools
Miami Herald, FL, March 6, 2013

Florida legislators plan to exploit once again the good intentions of parents and their desire for a fine education for their children to advance lawmakers’ privatization crusade.

GEORGIA

400 Seek Dekalb School Board Seat; 1 Gives Hers Up
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 7, 2013

More than 400 people applied for the six openings on the DeKalb County school board by Wednesday’s deadline, and the governor’s office, under pressure to get the vacant positions filled fast, promised the process won’t be “weeks-long.”

Parent Trigger Law On Charter Schools Closer To Reality
Augusta Chronicle, GA, March 6, 2013

Parents and teachers in Georgia are a step closer to having more authority over who runs their children’s low-performing schools and how those campuses are structured.

IDAHO

Ed Alternatives: Idaho House Signs Off on Second Charter Schools Bill
Magic Valley Times News, ID, March 6, 2013

A measure giving organizations including Idaho public universities and non-profits power to open charter schools has passed the House.

ILLINOIS

CPS Panel: Up To 80 Schools Could Close
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 7, 2013

Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration could safely close or overhaul as many as 80 schools this year, according to the final report of a commission that just two months ago voiced misgivings about the district’s ability to close a large number of schools without major upheaval.

Minorities Doing Better In District 87
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 6, 2013

Officials at Glenbard High School District 87 in Glen Ellyn expect it will take another three to five years before significant gains are made in reducing minority achievement gaps.

IOWA

Senate’s Education Bill Flexible On Teacher Mentorship
Des Moines Register, IA, March 7, 2013

The Iowa Senate is advancing a statewide education reform initiative for Iowa’s public schools, although it’s not an identical blueprint of the proposal unveiled earlier this session by Gov. Terry Branstad.

KANSAS

Kansas Casts Eye On Teachers Unions
Kansas City Star, KS, March 6, 2013

The visceral battle over teachers’ unions has marched its way across the country. Ohio. Idaho. Wisconsin. Michigan. And now it advances into Kansas, greeted by Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his conservative allies in the Legislature.

LOUISIANA

Grading The Evaluation
Monroe News Star, LA, March 7, 2013

Many Louisiana teacher evaluations include an observation tool that some believe presents an incomplete view of job performance and could ultimately result in an inaccurate assessment.

Parents Get Second Shot At Applying For Jefferson Parish Magnet Schools
Times-Picayune, LA, March 6, 2013

In an effort to try to fill more than 500 vacant spots in the district’s eight magnet schools, Jefferson Parish school officials are opening a second application period from April 1-17.

MICHIGAN

Michigan School Districts Feel Pinch As Deficits Grow
Detroit News, MI, March 7, 2013

Only 11 of the 49 Michigan school districts in deficit expect to end the budget year in the black, while 13 have seen their deficits grow during the year, according to a report by State Superintendent Mike Flanagan.

MINNESOTA

Henderson Charter School Gets Approval To Include K-5 Grades
Mankato Free Press, MN, March 7, 2013

The third try was the charm for Minnesota New Country School, which will expand with a long-sought elementary curriculum next fall.

MISSISSIPPI

Charter Schools Part Of Omnibus Bill
Desoto Times Tribune, MS, March 7, 2013

Charter schools in Mississippi will be discussed as part of an omnibus bill in the Mississippi Senate on Thursday which will be a compilation of Gov. Phil Bryant’s education reform initiatives and charter school proposals.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Charter School Funding Bill Heads To House, Among Continued Uncertainty For Charter Futures
The Nashua Telegraph, NH, March 7, 2013

A few months back, Karin Cevasco and other founders of the Gate City Charter School for the Arts had March 1 in their sights as the target for state approval if they wanted to open their school next fall.

NEW JERSEY

Vote Tabled On School Closing
Courier Post, NJ, March 7, 2013

A Winslow charter school tabled a vote Wednesday to appeal a recent decision by the state Department of Education to close the school due to poor performance.

Christie Administration Unveils Details Of Teacher Evaluation Proposal
The Record, NJ, March 6, 2013

The Christie administration released the nitty-gritty details of its proposals for evaluating educators Wednesday, raising concerns from some critics that it was pushing its agenda too fast.

NEW MEXICO

Public Education Commission Appeals Skandera Decision On Charter Approvals
New Mexican, NM, February 6, 2013

The state Public Education Commission is appealing two decisions by Education Secretary-designate Hanna Skandera in which she went over commissioners’ heads and approved new charter schools.

NEW YORK

Buffalo School Board Renews Enterprise Charter School For 2 Years
Buffalo News, NY, March 7, 2013

The Buffalo School Board voted Wednesday to renew Enterprise Charter School for two years after its January vote approving three years was shot down by the state Board of Education.

NORTH CAROLINA

Bacon Academy Is Region’s Only Charter School Applicant
Star News, NC, March 6, 2013

Come 2014, there won’t be four new charter schools in Southeastern North Carolina.

Charter Schools Have Higher Risk For Fraud
The Reflector, NC, March 6, 2013

Jeb Bush, governor of Florida, was cited as a model for charter schools. But Florida’s charter school record is not pretty.

NC School Board Weighs Charter School’s Plagiarism
Charlotte Observer, NC, March 7, 2013

RALEIGH, N.C. North Carolina school officials are deciding whether to reject a Charlotte charter school set to open in August because it copied big chunks of its plan from another school’s application.

OHIO

Coleman’s Panel Asks: Is Elected School Board Best?
Columbus Dispatch, OH, March 7, 2013

Mayor Michael B. Coleman’s Education Commission will bring in experts later this month to explore whether an elected school board is the best governance model for Columbus City Schools, the commission’s director said yesterday.

OKLAHOMA

Oklahoma Senate Passes ‘Parent Trigger’ Bill On Low-Performing Schools
Tulsa World, OK, March 7, 2013

The Oklahoma Senate on Wednesday passed an Oklahoma version of what has been described as the “parent trigger.”

Oklahoma Legislator’s Bill Upbraids Districts Suing Parents Over School Vouchers
Tulsa World, OK, March 7, 2013

Jenks and Union school districts were taken to the woodshed on Wednesday by Rep. Jason Nelson, whose House Bill 2160 is a very thinly disguised jab at those two districts for their legal action against a voucher program Nelson championed.

PENNSYLVANIA

Judgment Day Thursday On 27 School Closings
Philadelphia Daily News, PA, March 7, 2013

EXPECT some fireworks Thursday night when the School Reform Commission is scheduled to vote on a plan to close 27 district schools.

Help With Scholarships
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 7, 2013

However, there is hope. There is an opportunity to help Philadelphia public school students attend OSTC-registered private schools or non-failing public schools through the use of state tax dollars. We just need businesses to take advantage of this opportunity.

TEXAS

Charter Or Public School? Laredoans Sound Off
Laredo Morning Times, TX, March 6, 2013

Charter or public school? This was the question Adriana Paredes and her husband considered before deciding to enroll their son at Alexander High School prior to the 2012-13 school year.

WASHINGTON

Washington State Senate Passes K-12 Principal Hiring Power Bill
KNDU, WA, March 7, 2013

Washington State principals could be able to kick teachers they don’t want out of their schools.
The Washington state Senate has passed a measure Wednesday giving veto power to principals over teachers assigned to their schools.

Strong Appointees Power State’s Charter-School Commission
Seattle Times, WA, March 6, 2013

The nine appointed to Washington’s new charter-school commission could offer a powerful vision on non-traditional public schools.

9 Named To Charter Schools Commission
Everett Daily Herald, WA, March 6, 2013

A former lawmaker, a school superintendent and a university expert on curriculum are among the nine people named today to the state commission that will help launch new charter schools in Washington.

WEST VIRGINIA

W.Va. Schools Are Failing Too Many Kids
Charleston Daily Mail, WV, March 7, 2013

It’s understandable that teachers unions, who helped write much of West Virginia’s education law, would react with alarm to the dismantling of some of that strangling overregulation.

WISCONSIN

Vouchers Plan May Change, GOP Says
Green Bay Press-Gazette, WI, March 6, 2013

Green Bay school officials say they are pleased that several Republican state senators want to take expansion of the school voucher program out of a proposed two-year budget.

Bishops Come Out In Favor Of School Vouchers
La Crosse Tribune, WI, March 7, 2013

The bishop of the La Crosse Diocese has joined other Catholic leaders in support of Gov. Scott Walker’s plans to expand school vouchers.

ONLINE LEARNING

Haverford Reviews Benefits Of ‘Blended School’
Delaware County Daily Times, PA, March 6, 2013

The school district’s blended school program appears to be curtailing cyber charter school enrollment and saving taxpayer money, officials said in a recent update to the school board.

District Discusses Developing Cyberschool
Reading Eagle, PA, March 7, 2013

The Exeter School Board Curriculum Committee is talking about revisions to the gifted program and cyberschool options.

TN Bill Sets Standards To Shut Down Failing Online Schools
The Tennessean, TN, March 7, 2013

A bill that would let education officials shut down failing online schools advanced in the Senate, but a plan to give parents vouchers for use in private schools was delayed Wednesday.

OCHS Flipped Classroom Engages Students
Ocean City Gazette, MD, March 7, 2013

In the traditional approach to teaching mathematics, students come to class and sit in rows, spending most of their time listening to a teacher’s lecture and taking notes. Then they go home and try to make sense of the material through homework assignments, including problem sets and other solo activities.

Barnes’ Bill Would Fund Online Education At Expense Of Schools
News Tribune, MO, March 7, 2013

Missouri students would have much better access to an online education, if a bill proposed by Rep. Jay Barnes, R-Jefferson City, is approved by the General Assembly. Under the terms of the bill, funding that goes to Missouri’s public school districts would become portable to the virtual school of a family’s choice.

Daily Headlines for March 6, 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

Parents ‘Trigger’ School Revolts
Boston Herald, MA, March 6, 2013

The latest innovation to come out of the Golden State that has legs to go national is “parent trigger,” a means by which parents can force reform of their local public school if they’re dissatisfied with it.

Time For An Education System Makeover
Forbes, March 5, 2013

Education budgets at the national, state, and local levels have all taken huge hits over the past few years. And while we all want our schools to have sufficient funding to educate our children, more money is not the magic bullet solution for what our educational system needs.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Judge Blocks Gov. Bentley From Signing School Choice Bill
WHNT News19, AL, March 5, 2013

A Montgomery Circuit Judge has issued an order blocking Governor Robert Bentley from signing a controversial school choice bill.

Public Education System In State Requires Reform, Not More Pathways Out
The University of Alabama Crimson White, AL, March 6, 2013

Recent events in the Alabama Legislature force me to address the lack of authentic reform in Alabama’s education system. As a part of a series, I intend to deconstruct certain myths surrounding school reform, beginning with vouchers and charter schools.

Officials From Schools, Legislature React To ‘School Choice’ Bill
St, Clair Times, AL, March 6, 2013

St. Clair County’s legislative delegation applauded a “school flexibility” bill that passed both houses late Thursday, while school officials said they were apprehensive about what the future would hold.

CALIFORNIA

In L.A. School Board Race, 2 Backers Of Deasy Take Early Leads
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 6, 2013

Monica Garcia and Antonio Sanchez are ahead of rivals in their districts. Both back the superintendent’s overhaul efforts, which have drawn national attention.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Nine Groups Apply For D.C. Charter Schools
Washington Post, DC, March 5, 2013

Nine aspiring charter school operators have submitted applications to open in the District as early as fall 2014, according to proposals posted on the Web site of the D.C. Public Charter School Board.

GEORGIA

Emotions Run Spectrum At Charter Lottery
Gwinnett Daily Post, GA, March 5, 2013

What got Keyauna McGee through the final hours leading up to Tuesday night? “Lots of crossing fingers and lots of prayer,” said the mother of five-year-old Kingston, whose number was the first called during the New Life Academy of Excellence charter lottery for students entering kindergarten.

House Passes ‘Parent Trigger’ Charter Schools Bill
Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA, March 5, 2013

The school-choice train chugged forward Tuesday with House passage of a bill to require local school boards to consider some petitions to convert traditional public schools into charter schools.

HAWAII

Senate Charter School, School Bus Bills Head to House
Honolulu Civil Beat, HI, March 5, 2013

Hawaii senators today passed Senate Bill 244, which would essentially revamp the state’s charter school system and make charter schools more accountable for their finances.

IDAHO

House Approves Additional Funding Mechanism For Charter Schools
Idaho Reporter, ID, March 5, 2013

“I’m asking each of you here to stand up with me and support the real future of education, and to vote no on this bill,” said Rep. Sue Chew, D-Boise, in opposition to House Bill 206. The legislation nonetheless passed the House, 42-27, on Monday.

School Boards Agree To Sunsets On 4 Teacher Bills
Idaho Press Tribune, ID, March 5, 2013

After a bold start the 2013 Legislature, the Idaho School Board Association, the group spearheading legislation to give districts more leverage in teacher contract talks, is now opting for a softer approach with its highly prized legislative priorities.

INDIANA

For Kids, A School’s Quality Matters More Than The Label
Indianapolis Star, IN, March 6, 2013

For Indianapolis to reach its potential as a city, we need to provide access to high-quality schools for every child. Improved educational outcomes will result in a better trained workforce, help recruit and retain residents, and strengthen our neighborhoods.

KENTUCKY

Kentucky Senate Approves Charter School Option
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY, March 5, 2013

The Senate on Tuesday approved a bill that would give low-achieving schools the option of becoming a charter school — a move that supporters say will help boost student success.

LOUISIANA

La. Schools Chief Promises Voucher Program Will Go On
The Daily Advertiser, LA, March 6, 2013

Louisiana Education Superintendent John White vowed that state officials will find a way to fund a voucher program next year, regardless of how the state Supreme Court rules on the matter later this month.

Neville Sends Letter For Charter to BESE
Monroe News Star, LA, March 6, 2013

The Neville Charter School has filed an appeal with the Louisiana Department of Education and is among schools filing letters of intent to apply for charters through the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education.

MARYLAND

Carroll County Parents Campaign For Charter School
Baltimore Sun, MD, March 5, 2013

Hoping to open Carroll County’s first Montessori public charter school by the fall of 2014, a group of parents is now working on an application to submit to the county by April 1.

MICHIGAN

Group Plans Charter School Serving Elite Athletes
Sentinel-Standard, MI, March 5, 2013

A group is seeking state support for its proposal to open a charter school in western Michigan aiming to meet the academic needs of elite athletes.

Bill To Allow EAA To Run Other Failing Michigan Schools Resurrected
Detroit News, MI, March 6, 2013

Republican lawmakers have resurrected legislation to let the Education Achievement Authority run chronically failing schools beyond the boundaries of Detroit.

MISSISSIPPI

A Glance At Bills In The Mississippi Legislature
WJTV, MS, March 5, 2013

Here’s a glance at the status of selected bills in the Mississippi Legislature. Tuesday was the deadline for House and Senate committees to act on general bills that have already passed the opposite chamber.

House Committee Strips Senate Charter School Bill
Clarion Ledger, MS, March 5, 2013

The House Education Committee today stripped the Senate charter bill and added the House version.

MISSOURI

Supreme Court Needs To Put Children First In School Transfer Case
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, March 6, 2013

It turns on a simple premise: Do children have the right to transfer to an adjoining school district if the one they live in has failed to provide them an adequate education?

NEW JERSEY

Teachers Union Looks Askance at New Regulations for Tenure Evaluations
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 6, 2013

Even before the new code is introduced, the state’s largest teachers union is pushing back against proposed regulations for implementing the state’s new teacher-tenure law and rekindling some of the old debates that led up to the new law.

NEW MEXICO

House Oks Changes In Ways Teachers Earn Advancement
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 6, 2013

Democrats and Republicans in the House wrangled on Tuesday about how teachers should be measured for purposes of licensure advancement, with the GOP trying to tie teacher promotions to student performance.

NEW YORK

Ruling Delays City Cuts
Wall Street Journal, March 6, 2013

A Manhattan judge ordered the city Tuesday to not make $260 million in schools cuts until he rules on whether Albany lawmakers had the right to withhold the money in the first place.

News Corp. Has a Tablet for Schools
New York Times, NY, March 6, 2013

For nearly two years, Joel I. Klein helped Rupert Murdoch and News Corporation weather a phone-hacking scandal at the company’s British tabloids with the promise that he would eventually be able to return to the role the company hired him for: to spearhead News Corporation’s new venture into the public school market. That day has finally come.

NY Schools: Money’s Not The Problem
New York Post, NY, March 6, 2013

The Alliance for Quality Education is at it again, rallying today in Albany for huge hikes in state education spending. But its claims don’t add up; indeed, the only grade an unbiased teacher would give AQE’s latest so-called report, “Confronting the Opportunity Gap,” is an F.

It’s About ‘Time’! Would-Be Charters Plan Longer Days, Year
New York Post, NY, March 6, 2013

Some schools might not be out for the summer. A group of charter school applicants are seeking to stretch their academic clocks by keeping students in school longer — including by scrapping the blissful two-month summer break.

Proposed Charter School In Greece Goes To Next Step
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY, March 5, 2013

Gauging from the sentiment at a public hearing held Tuesday about a planned move by a charter school from Irondequoit to Greece, the Discovery Charter School is in store for a warm reception.

OHIO

Charter School Earns Auditor’s Award
Middletown Journal, OH, March 6, 2013

Life Skills Center of Middletown is one of 15 entities to earn the Auditor of State Award for a “clean” audit for fiscal year ending June 30, 2012.

PENNSYLVANIA

Charter School Proposal Draws Friends And Foes To SDL School Board Meeting
Intelligencer Journal, PA, March 5, 2013

Allegations of intimidation and misrepresentation surfaced Tuesday at the final hearing on a charter school proposed for Lancaster city.

Private Schools Sign Up For Opportunity Scholarship Program
York Daily Record, PA, March 5, 2013

Private schools in York County have again signed up to receive students from public schools deemed low-achieving by the state through the Opportunity Scholarship Tax Credit program.

RHODE ISLAND

Gates Foundation Gives $10 Million Loan To Central Falls To Increase Seats At High Performing Schools
Providence Journal, RI, March 5, 2013

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given the city $10 million in low and no-interest loans that will allow public and charter schools that serve Central Falls children to make repairs and expand facilities so they can serve more students.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Feds Approve S.C. Teacher Evaluation Plan
The State, SC, March 5, 2013

A state plan to evaluate teachers based in part on how students improve on tests received approval from the U.S. Department of Education, according to a news release from the S.C. Department of Education.

TENNESSEE

Bill That Would Create State Authorizer For Charter Schools Advances
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 6, 2013

A House committee voted Tuesday to create a new nine-member board and give it authority to override local school boards statewide in deciding where charter schools can be established.

Tennessee House Committee Oks New Charter School Path
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, March 6, 2013

The House Education committee approved changes to a charter school bill that would give applicants turned down by a local school board 10 days to apply to a new state panel.

School Vouchers Bill Passes House Education Subcommittee
Clarksville Now, TN, March 5, 2013

The House Education Subcommittee heard testimony from concerned citizens and Education Commissioner Kevin Huffman on legislation that would create a private school voucher program in Tennessee.

TEXAS

Senate Panel Considers Voucher Plan For Students With Disabilities
Dallas Morning News, TX, March 5, 2013

Texas would join a handful of states that allow students with disabilities to attend private schools at state expense under legislation that was considered by a Senate committee on Tuesday.

A Voucher is a Voucher is a Voucher
Texas Weekly, TX, March 5, 2013

A rose by any other name is still a rose. And so too is a voucher. Having failed so many times in past legislative sessions to get a public school voucher bill out of the Texas Legislature and on to the governor who is willing to sign it, supporters have regrouped and developed a new strategy.

WASHINGTON

MAP Boycott Is About Keeping Test Scores Out Of Teacher Evaluations
Seattle Times, WA, March 5, 2013

Teacher unions across the country are fighting against using test scores as a factor in teachers’ performance evaluations, writes guest columnist Michelle Rhee.

State Lawmakers Should Support Education-Reform Bills
Seattle Times, WA, March 5, 2013

STATE senators should pass a mix of education reforms that focus attention and resources on the two biggest needs for Washington schools: helping struggling students and raising high-school graduation rates.

WEST VIRGINIA

Reforms Won’t Help, Teacher Unions Say
Charleston Gazette, WV, March 5, 2013

West Virginia teachers unions resumed their attack on Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s sprawling education reform bill Tuesday, alleging it wouldn’t improve student achievement.

WISCONSIN

Revisiting School Voucher Debate
Wausau Daily Herald, WI, March 5, 2013

Last week, I wrote about school vouchers, the policy by which the government pays parents the cost of sending their kids to private schools. Gov. Scott Walker’s budget would expand the program, which now is in effect in Milwaukee and Racine, to nine other cities with low-rated schools, including Green Bay, Sheboygan and a number of others — none in central Wisconsin.

ONLINE LEARNING

Penn Manor Extends Cyber School Contract
Lancaster Newspapers, PA, March 5, 2013

Penn Manor school board agreed to extend the district’s contract with Lancaster-Lebanon Virtual Solutions for three years, even though Superintendent Michael Leichliter on Monday said, “We don’t save money by sending a student to a virtual school.”

New Rules Needed For Online Schools
Reading Eagle, PA, March 6, 2013

Congratulations to state Sen. Judy Schwank for finally moving forward with an attempt to change the ridiculous policy that requires public school districts to pay the surprisingly excessive costs of students who opt to get their education through so-called cybercharter schools.

Online Instruction Can Complement Traditional Education
Charlotte Observer, NC, March 5, 2013

Whatever our worries about online education, our state should be braced for changes. Gov. Pat McCrory’s challenging remarks about the role of universities, new proposals for education vouchers, and a host of other possible “improvements” let everyone know that change, big change, is coming.

Pasco Backtracks On Rejection Of Charter School
The Tampa Tribune, FL, March 6, 2013

The Pasco County School Board plans to begin somewhat reluctant contract negotiations with a charter school the board previously rejected.

Hillsboro Online Academy Has Potential To Serve Students, Bring Revenue To Hillsboro School District
Hillsboro Argus, OR, March 5, 2013

Many of us have been excited to hear about the opening of the Hillsboro Online Academy, a new alternative school in Hillsboro.

Online Classes And Other Options For Students Good, But They Still Have To Work
Bellingham Herald, WA, March 6, 2013

“You need an education. We have choices.” Maybe that should be the new slogan for Mid-Columbia school districts.

Newswire: March 5, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 9

OK PINOCCHIO. Last week, Newswire sparked a mini-debate on what the sequester really means for education. But as CER president Jeanne Allen points out in today’s National Journal, “… that among all of these thousands of entities that spend and receive federal money, no one seems to know or to be even talking about how the almighty federal dollar flows.” The reality that CER continues to point out, is that most of the money has already been collected by states and districts. Thankfully we’re not alone in holding the Administration accountable for irresponsible rhetoric about a frenzy of “pink slips.” In fact, the US Department of Education has yet to produce any district-level evidence of lay-offs, according to the Wall Street Journal.

COVER UP. The Worcester County Teachers Association in Maryland has been making headlines as news broke of their botched attempt to cover-up the fact that Denise Inez Owens, the union’s former treasurer embezzled over $430,000 of teacher dues to fund her gambling addiction. In 2009 when the MSEA (state affiliate of the NEA) learned of the crime, they merely forced Owens to resign. We know these union contracts are ironclad, but come on, they sent a known-criminal back to teaching in a middle school classroom! Finally justice has been served, but where’s the accountability and “common good” that the union leadership supposedly values?

EXPANDING CHOICE. In a press conference last week Alabama Governor Robert Bentley applauded the legislature for sending an individual and corporate tax credit bill to his desk, “I truly believe this is historic education reform and it will benefit students and families across Alabama regardless of their income and regardless of where they live. I’m so proud we have done this for the children of this state and especially the children who are in failing school systems and had no way out. Now, they have a way out.” We couldn’t agree more Governor Bentley; now get back to the drawing board to finally bring charters to your state. There must be something in the water because in his 2013 Budget Address last week, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie proposed a $2 million pilot opportunity scholarship program for low-income students in failing schools. A small plan, but at least it’s a start.

ON CHARTERS. Charter schools will be all the buzz in Tennessee and Mississippi state houses today. The Volunteer state’s House Education Committee will take up HB 702, a very modest proposal that would allow the state board of education to authorize charter schools on an appeal. Currently only local school boards and the Achievement School District can authorize charter schools. Charter school leaders and parents are rallying in Nashville in support of the proposal.

Today, Mississippi lawmakers are poised to act on legislation expanding charter schools in the state, trying to resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of bills. Some issues include: whether school boards in districts with “C’’ ratings will be able to veto charter schools, whether students will be able to cross district lines to attend charter schools elsewhere, whether schools will be able to join the state pension system, and whether for-profit companies will be allowed to run charter schools.

VIRTUAL VINDICATION. Yesterday, the lead plaintiff in a class action securities lawsuit against K12 Inc. voluntarily and permanently dismissed their claims made about K12-managed schools, helping to drown out the often-unsubstantiated charges similarly made by critics and echoed repeatedly by the media. With a bit of luck, the dismissal of these claims will help put to rest these charges and serve as a sort of virtual vindication.

Daily Headlines for March 5, 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.

Duncan Says He Misspoke When Describing Pink Slips for Teachers
Wall Street Journal, March 5, 2013

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said Monday he chose the wrong words last week when he said teachers were already receiving “pink slips”—layoff notices—due to the spending cuts mandated by the sequester.

On School Choice
Huffington Post, March 4, 2013

Something remarkable is occurring in the arena of schools: shopping. Not late summer back-to-school specials or runs on novelty lunch-boxes, but shopping for schools themselves.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Voucher Bill Irks Educators
News Courier, AL, March 5, 2013

School leaders across the state are still fuming over a bill passed last week that will provide tax credits to parents who want to move their children from a failing public school to a private school.

Blow to Public Schools
Times Daily, AL, March 5, 2013

Republicans in the state Legislature embarrassed themselves Thursday with the covert passage of a law that funnels tax dollars from public schools to private ones.

CALIFORNIA

Late Donations Bolster Pro-Deasy School Board Candidates
Los Angeles Times Blog, CA, March 5, 2013

Two eleventh hour donations have added financial muscle to a campaign seeking to bolster Los Angeles schools Supt. John Deasy through the results of Tuesday’s Board of Education elections.

Potential Layoffs Tied To Temecula Valley Charter Changes
San Diego Union Tribune, CA, March 4, 2013

“It’s becoming too costly for the charter school to follow the district’s pay scale,” she said, adding that the Temecula Preparatory Charter School operates under a similar arrangement.

County Superintendent Frustrated By Snub Related To Charter Report
Contra Costa Times, CA, March 4, 2013

The latest flare-up occurred after the district superintendent and a couple of school board members secretly commissioned a financial analysis of the costs to the district from Clayton Valley High School’s conversion to a charter school.

California School Districts Are In Better Financial Shape, Officials Say
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 5, 2013

A state report shows that the number of districts at risk of not meeting financial obligations dropped to 124 from 188 last May. But 2 L.A. County districts joined the list of at-risk districts.

Students Learning Lessons In Social Responsibility
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 5, 2013

World-renowned inventors, explorers and artists encourage student teams participating in the Aspen Challenge to develop solutions to social problems.

Parents Allege Massive Enrollment Fraud at Carpenter Community Charter in Studio City
Los Angeles Daily News, CA, March 4, 2013

Los Angeles Unified will let schools use public records to verify student addresses after a high-performing charter in Studio City complained that scores of parents from outside the neighborhood committed fraud to get their kids admitted, officials said Monday.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Another Reason Charters Are Taking Over D.C.
Washington Examiner, DC, March 4, 2013

On Monday, The Washington Examiner’s Rachel Baye reported that the D.C. Public School system is negotiating with the Washington Teachers’ Union to implement longer school days and a longer school year.

FLORIDA

Another Failed Orlando Charter ‘A Disaster’ For Students, Teachers
Orlando Sentinel, FL, March 4, 2013

It was clear to teachers at the Einstein Montessori School in Orlando that something was very wrong when school opened for business last fall.

Bills Would Let Funds Follow Students
Tallahassee Democrat, FL, March 5, 2013

Legislation filed by committee chairmen in both the House and Senate would allow students to use state education funds to pay for private schools or other education options.

GEORGIA

Federal Judge Rules Against DeKalb School Board
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 4, 2013

A federal judge refused to prevent the replacement of six DeKalb County school board members who lost their seats over a threatened loss of accreditation, and now Gov. Nathan Deal must find appointees to mend the torn district.

INDIANA

More Need Flexibility Of Vouchers
Journal Gazette, IN, March 5, 2013

Indiana’s school voucher program is thriving, and lawmakers are looking for practical ways to increase access so that more families can benefit from high-quality education options. This is good news for Hoosiers – and here’s why.

IOWA

Iowa Senate Bill Would Raise Starting Teacher Pay To $35K
Sioux City Journal, IA, March 4, 2013

Starting teachers would earn $35,000 a year and districts would be required to adopt new professional career ladders under an education reform bill filed Monday.

KANSAS

Legislation Promotes Kansas Charter Schools
Kansas City Star, KS, March 4, 2013

Two bills in the Legislature would give charter schools greater freedom to open and operate in Kansas, where such schools have struggled to find a foothold.

LOUISIANA

Ruling Could Work Against Vouchers
Daily Advertiser, LA, March 5, 2013

Monday’s ruling striking down Jindal administration changes in teacher tenure may be used to attack the voucher system, which is already on its way to the state Supreme Court.

Judge Throws Out Tenure Law
The Advocate, LA, March 5, 2013

One of Gov. Bobby Jindal’s signature laws that makes it harder for teachers to earn and retain a form of job protection, called tenure, was declared unconstitutional Monday.

Algiers Charter Group Promotes Interim CEO To Permanent Status
Times-Picayune, LA, March 4, 2013

The Algiers Charter School Association board voted on Feb. 28 to hire Adrian Morgan as CEO, giving him a one-year contract. Morgan had served as interim CEO since August 2012.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Lift The Cap: Free The Charter Schools
Union Leader, NH, March 5, 2013

The House will have the opportunity this Wednesday to fix a recent mistake that has hindered the expansion of needed public schools. Legislators should pass it with no hesitations.

Voucher Program Takes Cash From Public Schools
Portsmouth Herald, NH, March 5, 2013

The more I learn about New Hampshire’s school voucher program, the more I realize it is a solution in search of a problem.

NEW JERSEY

State Board of Education to Release Regulations for Teacher Evaluations Tomorrow
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 5, 2013

Some wiggle room built in to give system room to evolve, but will it be enough to head off arguments over student test scores?

NEW MEXICO

Bill’s Merit Pay Idea Isn’t Best Solution
Albuquerque Journal, NM, March 4, 2013

Hidden within HB2, the budget bill now under consideration in our state Senate throws $3 million into a merit pay program based on proven failed policies.

NEW YORK

Just Another Hijacked Parents’ Group
New York Post, NY, March 5, 2013

Mind you, CPAC is supposed to be the voice of parents inside the city Education Department. But, like everything education-related, the teachers union successfully got its hooks into the group.

NORTH CAROLINA

New STEM Charter School Proposed in Winston-Salem
Winston-Salem Journal, NC, March 4, 2013

A proposal for a new K-5 charter school in Winston-Salem focused on science, technology, engineering and math is among 70 applications for new charters received by the N.C. Department of Public Instruction.

State Gets Record Number of Charter Applications for 2014
Durham Herald Sun, NC, March 4, 2013

Seven new public charter schools could be on the way to our region. The state Department of Public Education’s Office of Charter Schools Monday announced it had received 70 applications for charter programs that would, if approved, open in August 2014 throughout North Carolina.

29 Seek To Open Charter Schools In Charlotte Area
Charlotte Observer, NC, March 4, 2013

Charlotte’s charter boom is poised to keep growing, with 19 applications to open new schools in Mecklenburg County in 2014 and another 10 from surrounding counties.

NORTH DAKOTA

Baesler Withdraws State’s Application For Waiver
Minot Daily News, ND, March 5, 2013

“The idea of developing a state-determined plan was very inviting,” said Baesler in a press release. “The further we progressed through the waiver process the more we felt we were being asked to adopt another national, one-size-fits-all model. We discovered there is very little flexibility for us in the ESEA Waiver. Schools and teachers would actually see very little relief.”

OHIO

State Should Give Cleveland School Reform Plan A Chance To Work
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, March 4, 2013

The Cleveland and Lorain school districts have fallen into the academic doghouse, failing to meet federal standards for four years and earning the state’s lowest academic rating — “emergency,” essentially an F. Under state law, that triggers the creation of academic distress commissions for each district with the right to run both systems.

The Future Of Ohio Schools
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, March 4, 2013

But it is already clear that charter schools — or community schools as they’re called in Columbus — and parochial schools are potentially huge winners. This is both perplexing in the case of charter schools and troublesome in the case of parochial schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Senators Want Scrutiny Of Charter Schools In Pa.
Times Leader, PA, March 4, 2013

Some lawmakers on Monday called for stronger state regulation of Pennsylvania’s charter and cyber-charter schools, while others derided Gov. Tom Corbett’s plan to finance new school grants by privatizing liquor and wine sales as a political gimmick.

Proposed Pay Cuts Enrage PFT Members
Philadelphia Daily News, PA, March 5, 2013

The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers is looking at a grim future if school-district officials get their way in current negotiations.

Philipsburg-Osceola Area Board Members Reject Charter School Application
Centre Daily Times, PA, March 5, 2013

An application for a charter school in the Philipsburg-Osceola area has been officially rejected by the school board.

RHODE ISLAND

Achievement First Selects 176 Students From 1,150 Applicants
Valley Breeze, RI, March 4, 2013

Achievement First, a network of nonprofit public charter schools, held a blind lottery for its initial class of 176 kindergarten and 1st-grade students at Achievement First Providence Mayoral Academy last Friday. The results were verified by independent auditor Andsager, Bartlett & Pieroni, and a separate witness from the Rhode Island Department of Education.

TENNESSEE

KIPP Is Working
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, March 5, 2013

The results are in. And they are impressive. A new independent study of the KIPP schools operating in 20 cities and states, including Memphis, shows without a doubt that the KIPP method of educating at-risk kids works.

School Board Has Sticker Shock Over Increased Charter School Costs
Nashville City Paper, TN, March 4, 2013

A routine meeting to review Metro Nashville Public Schools’ nearly $765 million budget proposal for next school year Monday afternoon broke into a makeshift policy meeting about the financial effect of opening more charter schools.

House to Consider Broadening State Charter Authorizer
Nashville Public Radio, TN, March 4, 2013

The state House will consider creating an entirely new panel for authorizing charter schools at the state level. It’s part of a compromise set to be heard in an education committee Tuesday.

Fight Over School Voucher Bill Escalates In Tenn. Legislature
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, March 4, 2013

The legislative battle over school vouchers in Tennessee is escalating, with the bill set for committee votes in the House on Tuesday and the Senate on Wednesday, and the state Democratic Party chairman attacking it Monday.

New Democratic Chairman Roy Herron Criticizes Voucher Campaign By Outside Groups
The Tennessean, TN, March 5, 2013

The new leader of the Tennessee Democratic Party attacked “out-of-state guns” for trying to sway the state legislature on education issues through hefty political contributions and television advertising.

Schools Boost Budget Request
The Tennessean, TN, March 4, 2013

Metro Nashville school officials are looking to increase the district’s budget by $44 million for next year — a sizable bump they say is largely to replace money drained by new charter schools.

Charter School Compromise Under Consideration in Tennessee
WKYU, TN, March 5, 2013

The Tennessee House will consider creating an entirely new panel for authorizing charter schools at the state level. It’s part of a compromise set to be heard in an education committee Tuesday.

TEXAS

Senate Panel To Look At Proposal For Special Education Vouchers
Austin American-Statesman, TX, March 4, 2013

Underlying the expansive “school choice” debate roiling the Texas Capitol is the contention that a traditional neighborhood public school might not be right for every child.

VIRGINIA

Gov. Bob McDonnell to Lead School Choice Scholarship Foundation in Virginia
Washington Examiner, DC, March 4, 2013

Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell is helping organize a nonprofit foundation to provide voucherlike scholarships to Virginia students who want to attend private schools, capitalizing on a new law he championed last year.

Patrick Henry Charter School Gets Another 5 Years To Prove Itself
WWBT, VA, March 4, 2013

Parents, children and teachers at the Patrick Henry School of Science and Arts are breathing a collective sigh of relief. The Commonwealth’s first charter elementary school has been granted another five years to prove itself.

WASHINGTON

WEA Targets Initiative 1240
The Columbian, WA, March 4, 2013

As expected, the teachers union has filed a legal challenge to Washington’s new charter school law, Initiative 1240, which was approved by voters last fall.

WEST VIRGINIA

Grade: Incomplete: Tomblin’s Education Proposal Lacking Key Parts
Martinsburg Journal, WV, March 5, 2013

West Virginians need all the help we can get to improve our public school system. A massive education reform bill introduced last week in the Legislature includes at least one failure to seek help from a source ready, willing and very able to provide it.

Too Much Emphasis Put On Seniority In Teacher Hiring
The Herald-Dispatch, WV, March 5, 2013

One of the critical elements of Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s education reform package is giving local school officials more flexibility.

WISCONSIN

District Considers New Design Charter For High Schoolers
La Crosse Tribune, WI, March 5, 2013

A design-focused charter school in the La Crosse School District could expand to include high school students.

Gov. Walker’s Voucher System Problematic
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 5, 2013

Gov. Scott Walker recently announced plans to expand the school voucher program in Wisconsin, providing more students from underperforming school districts the option to attend private schools. He said doing so would allow all students in the state access to a quality education, “regardless of their zip code.”

WYOMING

Opinions Vary On Wyoming No Child Left Behind Waiver Application
Casper Star-Tribune, WY, March 5, , 2013

Wyoming Department of Education officials say feedback about an application to waive federal education requirements has been positive. However, Superintended of Public Instruction Cindy Hill opposes the waiver and says she’s not the only one with concerns.

ONLINE LEARNING

Schools Offer More Online
Port Huron Times Herald, MI, March 5, 2013

The 21st century classroom is evolving, and school districts are trying to keep up.

Bridges Virtual Academy In Merrill Continues To Attract Attention
Wausau Daily Herald, WI, March 5, 2013

Families are clamoring to get into the Merrill Area Public Schools charter school, which delivers public education resources to home-schooling families.

Virtual Public Charter School Opens Enrollment For The 2013-2014 School Year
KATC, LA, March 4, 2013

Louisiana Connections Academy. a fully accredited provider of high-quality, highly accountable virtual K-12 schooling, opens enrollment for the 2013-2014 school year today, March 4, and enrollment sessions with parents and students will begin across the state on March 5.

Grapevine-Colleyville’s ‘virtual Academy’ Won’t Be Easy
Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX, March 4, 2013

The Grapevine-Colleyville school district’s decision to offer a full-time, open-enrollment virtual academy puts it at the forefront of the merger between education and technology, offering students across Texas the chance of significant learning advantages.

USD 308 Considers Virtual School Option
Hutchinson News, KS, March 5, 2013

Hutchinson USD 308 could launch a virtual school, an online alternative for students in elementary school through high school, in 2014-2015.

Leadership Goes Beyond Pinocchio’s Noses

by Jeanne Allen
Response to “Arne Duncan’s Distracting Gaffe“, National Journal
March 5, 2013

Irresponsible Leadership That Goes Beyond Pinocchio’s Noses

The Center for Education Reform wrote last week about the Chicken Little behavior this administration is leading on education, along with countless school leaders and association spokespeople. We are happy to have sparked a mini-debate on the subject! But what remains absolutely astonishing is that among all of these thousands of entities that spend and receive federal money, no one seems to know or to be even talking about how the almighty federal dollar flows.

NEWS FLASH — there isn’t a pool of money sitting in the Department of the Treasury with educational purpose just waiting to be cut. The reality is MOST OF THE MONEY FOR THIS YEAR – almost 90% of it — has been drawn down or collected by states and districts!!! Some states — like New Jersey — already have all of their money for the year.

Of that which remains — limited Title funds, some Head Start, for example — between 5-8% of the remaining 10% will likely be reduced. That amounts to less a half a percent overall for the year!

I’ve personally called people who should know whether and how federal spending flows and what might be left that states need, yet they’ve been clueless. There is no public information available by the US Department of Education that shows what has been distributed to every state and district and what remains. Without data, no wonder school districts are in a tizzy!

It’s easy to incite outrage when our leaders — who the public presumes understand policy and budgets — tell people they are going to lose their beloved teachers, the arts, after-school, food, early childhood and more.

The reality is that while school and school district bean counters most likely know for certain what money they have, what funds they might lose and how, the US Education Secretary clearly doesn’t, and superintendents and school board officials aren’t saying. After all, it’s easier to create a problem than a solution.

That’s plausible, some might say, but what about the fiscal year that starts October 1?

Well, Congress must contend with pending budget issues regardless of sequestration, and yes the uncertainly of spending levels absolutely affects the plans some may have had. Schools and districts should prepare for the kind of reduction that is often caused by natural enrollment fluctuations when student populations change, either due to birth rate impact, changes in regional composition, or even competition.

Financial fluctuations are a fact of life for most public enterprises. It’s not new and it happens every few years for schools, regardless of who’s in power. In the all-important enterprise of education, it’s time we recognize that what we know and how we conduct ourselves is especially critical to the children and students whose lives we aspire to improve. We must demonstrate that truth, problem-solving, intellectual rigor and the ability to weather any storm are critical attributes worth having and worth learning, in and out of school.

Daily Headlines for March 4, 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

An Unfortunate Class Distinction In Schools
Washington Post, DC, March 3, 2013

Regarding the Feb. 25 Metro story “D.C. school choice creates a niche”: As a retired public school educator and a parent, I was particularly troubled by two quotes.

Study Says KIPP Student Gains Substantial
Washington Post, DC, March 3, 2013

KIPP, formerly known as the Knowledge Is Power Program, has had more success than any other large educational organization in raising the achievement of low-income students, both nationally and in the District. But many good educators, burned by hopeful stories in the past, have wondered whether KIPP was for real.

Standardized Testing Becomes The Great Divide In Schools Policy
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 3, 2013

Use of standardized tests in schools is growing, but so is push-back – an issue playing out in L.A. school board elections.

Should ‘Common’ Be Education’s Goal?
Detroit News, MI, March 4, 2013

That’s a fine aim, and it began as a states-led effort. Many states, including Michigan, approved the standards early on. Yet shortly thereafter, the U.S. Department of Education embraced the initiative and soon began pushing states to adopt the Common Core as a condition for being granted a waiver from No Child Left Behind requirements.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Educators Question New Tax-Credit Bill
Tuscaloosa News, AL, March 3, 2013

Local education officials are upset and wondering about the future of their school systems following the Alabama Legislature’s sudden passage of a bill Thursday giving tax credits to parents who move their children from failing public schools to private schools.

ALASKA

Senate Education Panel Takes Up Voucher Issue
Juneau Empire, AK, March 3, 2013

A Senate panel began hearings Friday on the subject of school vouchers, less than two weeks after the committee’s chair adamantly declared on the Senate floor that the issue needs to be thoroughly vetted.

CALIFORNIA

National Attention and Cash in Los Angeles School Vote
New York Times, NY, March 4, 2013

On Tuesday, voters in Los Angeles will go to the polls for a mayoral primary. But much of the attention will also be on the three races for the school board, a battle that involves the mayor, the teachers’ union and a host of advocates from across the country — including New York City’s billionaire mayor — who have poured millions of dollars into the races.

COLORADO

Appeals Court Upholds Freedom Of Choice For Accredited Private Or Religious Schools
Colorado Springs Gazette, CO, March 4, 2013

Institutional discrimination against poor and religious families in Douglas County has ended, at least for now.

FLORIDA

Parents Have High Hopes For Spot In Viera Charter
Florida Today, FL, March 2, 2013

Today, Latonik will be among 1,200 student applicants – and their parents – who will learn whether efforts to enroll in a new 650-student charter school in Viera will be rewarded with a slot at the school.

Florida Lawmakers File Bills That Focus On Teacher Pay, Parent Triggers, More
News-Press, FL, March 4, 2013

It’s going to be another wild ride for education: New bills in Tallahassee could shake up parents, teachers and students.

ILLINOIS

CPS Applies Charter Heat
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 4, 2013

In recent days, Chicago Public Schools CEO Barbara Byrd-Bennett has thrown some muscle behind her pledge to hold charter schools accountable for academic performance.

INDIANA

Beware Schools’ Charter Shopping
Journal Gazette, IN, March 3, 2013

In 2011, the Indiana legislature passed important legislation to expand the number of quality charter schools and to hold charter schools more accountable for their performance. Unfortunately, that legislation also created a loophole that allows failing charter schools to avoid that stronger accountability, a loophole that some of those schools are now trying to use.

Scholarships Add Layer To Voucher Debate
Journal Gazette, IN, March 3, 2013

Controversial school reform in Indiana that produced publicly funded vouchers for private school students also includes a lesser-known private school scholarship program, which critics say is another way that public funds end up supporting private schools.

School Voucher Expansion Bill Going Through Statehouse
Shelbyville News, IN, March 4, 2013

A measure that expands the choice scholarships in Indiana has cleared the house and is on its way to the Senate. Indiana House Bill 1003 cleared the house last week by a vote of 57-36, despite the fact that the Indiana Supreme Court has not issued a decision on vouchers. The measure is designed to allow more Indiana families to become more easily qualified for the two-year-old voucher program.

KANSAS

Is It Time For A Charter School Revolution In Kansas?
Topeka Capital Journal, KS, March 3, 2013

Some lawmakers are pushing for a new charter law to potentially bring the national ‘school choice’ movement to Kansas

MARYLAND

School Boards May Have To Heed Parents’ Petitions
Cumberland Times-News, MD, March 3, 2013

National education reform advocates support a Maryland bill that would mandate reform for failing schools whenever a majority of parents petition for intervention, but the state superintendent and the state teachers union oppose the idea.

MASSACHUSETTS

More Affirmation For Charter Schools
Lowell Sun, MA, March 3, 2013

A Stanford University study released this week provides great impetus to the state’s charter-school movement and encouragement to parents who seek options for their children.

Site Location Unknown For New Charter School
Boston Globe, MA, March 2, 2013

The Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education on Tuesday granted a charter to the founders of the Pioneer Charter School of Science, but it may not be located in Saugus as expected.

MISSISSIPPI

Young Talks Charter Schools
WTOK, MS, March 3, 2013

Lawmakers in Jackson continue to debate the issue of charter schools in Mississippi.

MONTANA

Education Claims Were Misleading
Helena Independent Record, MT, March 4, 2013

Joe Balyeat’s article in the Independent Record stated that Montana ranked 51st by the Center for Education Reform in its Parent Power Index. Their website showed the ranking had nothing to do with student results; it had to do with state laws giving choices for allocation of education funds.

NEVADA

Denying An Important School Choice
Las Vegas Review-Journal, NV, March 3, 2013

As written, the bill is a stunning attack on parental choice and judgment. Reducing the compulsory age has consequences beyond kindergarten.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Private Hurt N.H. Public Schools
Portsmouth Herald, NH, March 2, 2013

The voucher tax credit passed in the last Legislature would take money away from our public schools and send it to private, religious and home schools with no accountability to the public.

House Vote Could Set Stage For New Charter Schools
New Hampshire Union Leader, NH, March 4, 2013

The state House of Representatives is scheduled to vote Wednesday on charter school legislation that could set the stage for an end to a moratorium on new charters imposed in September by the Board of Education.

NEW JERSEY

Gov’s Proposed School Aid Has Officials Expressing Needs
The Trentonian, NJ, March 3, 2013

Gov. Chris Christie last week used his proposed State budget to push harder for more school choice for students in struggling districts. In his $32.9 billion spending plan Christie called for more state aid for school districts and also money for some of his favored programs that would make it easier for students to go to school elsewhere.

NEW YORK

Gifted Class Imbalance
Wall Street Journal, March 4, 2013

As New York City switches to a new test to identify children for its gifted-and-talented program, new data show that the overwhelming majority of these coveted, public-school slots still go to white and Asian students.

Inside the World of Charter Schools
New York Times, NY, March 4, 2013

Re “Better Charter Schools in New York City” (editorial, Feb. 23):
While rightly acknowledging the success of charter schools in New York City, you missed the mark in calling the national charter movement a “disappointment.”

Charter School Gearing Up For Fall Opening
Utica Observer Dispatch, NY, March 3, 2013

The Mohawk Valley’s first charter school has a home. The next step: hiring staff and enrolling students.

NORTH DAKOTA

North Dakota Home Schoolers Fight Testing
Grand Forks Herald, ND, March 4, 2013

North Dakota, one of a handful of states requiring high-stakes testing for home schoolers, has long been known for having tougher requirements compared to the rest of the nation. This bill is one step toward easing its reputation and giving home-school parents more freedom, said Theresa Deckert, spokeswoman for the North Dakota Home School Association.

OHIO

Westerville Schools Losing Kids, Funding To Charters
Columbus Dispatch, OH, March 4, 2013

Students are leaving Westerville schools at a rate that has alarmed district officials, spurring them to seek ways to draw students back and retain others.

Charter School Money Is Big Question Mark In Gov. John Kasich’s Education Budget
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, March 3, 2013

Much of the debate so far on Gov. John Kasich’s education budget has focused on whether he would give enough state money to public schools and how he would distribute it between poor and rich districts.

PENNSYLVANIA

School Reform Finds A Home
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 3, 2013

Teach for America, on whose board Manekin once sat, will be taking 13,000 square feet for its operations, and many of those renting apartments will be TFA teachers. There will be a coffee shop, outdoor courtyards, and free parking. The nonprofits will be given conference-room space, a lunchroom, and events designed to foster collaboration among groups that share a vision but have different missions.

Question Of The Week Responses: York Charter School Conversion13
York Daily Record, PA, March 3, 2013

I do not support York County’s proposal to make more charter schools. For one thing, taxes will go up. We need more buses and school buildings. What is happening to the buildings that we have?

Charter School Friends, Foes Air Their Feelings
Intelligence Journal, PA, March 3, 2013

Onal quaffed the energy drink prior to a Feb. 19 Lancaster school board hearing on the proposed Academy of Business and Entrepreneurship Charter School. The four-hour hearing got out of hand, with Onal — president of the charter school board — accusing opponents of lying. Other confrontations between charter school backers and foes prompted school officials to call police.

RHODE ISLAND

RI Charter Schools See Huge Increase In Applications
Go Local Prov, RI, March 2, 2013

Rhode Island’s public charter schools have seen a large increase in interest from parents deciding where their children should be educated, so much so that a total of 7,900 applications were sent in for the less than 800 openings available leading up to this year’s so-called “lottery day.”

TENNESSEE

Nashville Schools’ Stakes Are High For New Academics Chief
The Tennessean, TN, March 4, 2013

From his Bransford Avenue office, Jay Steele hears the skeptics — those who question his model for high school instruction and his ability to turn around a struggling school district, and his boss for not scouring the nation to fill the position he now holds.

Transition Panel’s Plan To Merge Memphis And Shelby Schools: Path To Success Or Tortuous Route?
Commercial Appeal, TN, March 3, 2013

If the unified school board would just “implement the Transition Planning Commission plan” for merging Memphis City and Shelby County schools, a popular refrain goes, everything would be fine.

Directors Oppose Vouchers
Cleveland Daily Banner, TN, March 3, 2013

A proposed school voucher bill by Gov. Bill Haslam has heated up one of education’s hottest topics among parents, legislators and educators of Tennessee.

Ads Touting TN School Vouchers To Top $800K
WSMV, TN, March 1, 2013

A national group advocating for a wide-scale school voucher program in Tennessee is launching a massive media campaign to persuade lawmakers to expand the program proposed by Gov. Bill Haslam.

TEXAS

School Vouchers Appear Dead This Session
Corpus Christi Caller Times, TX, March 4, 2013

There is waning interest by Texas legislators to consider the faux-voucher proposal that has been advocated for months by Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and Senate Education Committee Chair Dan Patrick, R-Houston. In fact, with no bill yet filed, and with a March 8 deadline looming for introducing legislation, if it is to be considered before the Legislature adjourns on May 27, the voucher proposal is clearly on “life support,” at best.

Area Opinions: Bill Could Help Charter Schools
Lubbock Avalanche Journal, TX, March 3, 2013

Let’s make this clear at the outset: There’s no magic formula for raising the achievement levels of Texas’ 5 million students, but state legislators and school districts can take various steps to give young Texans greater opportunities for a better education. One way is providing enough high-performing charter schools.

WASHINGTON

Senate GOP Scales Back Education Agenda
Seattle Times, WA, March 3, 2013

The Republican wish list is having to confront issues such as cost concerns to arguments that there already have been a lot of school reforms.

WEST VIRGINIA

Debate Over Education Bill Turns To Teacher Hiring
Bluefield Daily Telegraph, WV, March 4, 2013

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s bid to rewrite teacher hiring practices has sparked an early battle as the Legislature wades through his proposed overhaul of West Virginia’s public schools

WISCONSIN

Schools Need Boost, Budget Needs Balance
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 3, 2013

More autonomy for public charter schools. These schools are supposed to try new things. So giving them more freedom makes sense, as long as local school boards or some other public entity can stop charters if they’re not working after typically five years.

WYOMING

Teacher Evaluations: A Proposal
Casper Star-Tribune, WY, March 3, 2013

As various bills go forward restructuring Wyoming’s education system a key, if low level, issue is that of a teacher evaluation system. House Bill 72, Statewide Education Accountability – Phase II, directs development of such a system for teachers and administrators.

ONLINE LEARNING

First, Only Virtual School In Mass. Will Be Closed
Boston Globe, MA, March 4, 2013

The state’s first virtual school will shut its digital doors this summer after the Greenfield School Committee voted last week not to submit a proposal to run the Massachusetts Virtual Academy at Greenfield for another year.

Skeptics Of Online Schooling
Daily Free Press, MA, March 3, 2013

Online classes exist for a number of reasons: Nontraditional students (e.g. students who work full-time but need to complete a degree on the side), students who have trouble concentrating and thriving in traditional classroom settings, students who need to save money, students who are far away, etc. They’re a great option to have available to those students who simply cannot thrive in the standard school environment.

State Sen. Judy Schwank Introduces Bill That Would Change Rules On Cyber Charter Schools
Reading Eagle, PA, March 3, 2013

Public school districts in Pennsylvania have been complaining for years about the growing costs of cyber charter schools.

Bill Requiring Online Learning Amended Because Of Opposition
The Herald-Mail, MD, March 3, 2013

Maryland currently doesn’t have a requirement that high school students take an online class as a condition for graduation.

Tennessee Getting Schooled By K12
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, March 3, 2013

One business that’s been taking on a government job lately is K12, a publicly traded corporation that Tennessee has hired to teach more and more of our children online.

Grapevine-Colleyville District Will Offer A Fully Online School
Star-Telegram, TX, March 3, 2013

Students from across Texas could be enrolling in the Grapevine-Colleyville school district before next school year. Trustees recently approved a plan to provide $196,000 in seed money to create an open-enrollment virtual academy. The academy will serve 400 to 500 nontraditional full-time students and will boost the district’s declining enrollment.

Making Digital Leap Presents Real Challenges For Classrooms
The Oklahoman, OK, March 4, 2013

NOT so long ago, brick and mortar schools were about the only kind of schools that existed. Growing numbers of people choosing to home school have only slightly disrupted the traditional model. Even the increasing popularity of virtual schools is only slightly upending what we think of as “school.”

Online Charter School Offers Enrollment Information
Statesman Journal, OR, March 2, 2013

The Oregon Connections Academy has announced that its spring enrollment season begins Monday with a series of in-person and online information sessions.

First Fridays: Washington Yu Ying Public Charter School

March 1, 2013

First Fridays, a monthly charter school tour event sponsored by CityBridge Foundation, FOCUS and Charter Board Partners, gives people in the DC metro area a chance to see some truly amazing schools at work. Today, our VP of Research, Alison Consoletti, with 25 other choice supporters, checked out Washington Yu Ying Public Charter School, an elementary Chinese language immersion school.

This school, opened in 2008, now serves 439 students in grades PreK-5. While walking through the school halls, the 5th grade student tour guide explained how all subjects – even Chemistry – are taught in both English and Chinese.

Our group got to sit in on a PreK class, where 100% of their school day is taught in Chinese. Students from all walks of life were singing and acting out songs in Chinese, while also learning what the characters meant. It was truly a sight to see.

Since Yu Ying has been open, the school has performed stellar academically, and today is rated Tier 1 Status, according to DCPCSB’s Performance Management Framework.

There were over 700 applications for just 70 spots this last year. And because demand for a challenging immersion program is so high, Yu Ying is working with other immersion charter schools in DC to create DC International, a middle and high-school that would offer International Baccalaureate and continued foreign language instruction.

We can’t wait to see what school First Fridays is going to take us to next!