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Triggering reform

Opinion
by Steve Williams, Opinion Page Editor
Victorville Daily Press
January 22, 2013

The reasons for the fierce teachers union opposition to successful completion of California’s Parent Trigger law by parents of Desert Trails students were obvious, particularly to the unions themselves. They knew that if the Adelanto school was converted to charter status, unhappy parents all over the state would be encouraged to follow suit.

And they also feared that if a reorganized Desert Trails school performed successfully — i.e., if its students improved and performed better on state-mandated tests — even more parents would start pulling the trigger.

Those fears have been, it turns out, justified. During the week the Los Angeles Unified School District accepted Parent Trigger petitions from parents of children who attend 24th Street Elementary School, one of the worst-performing schools in the district. According to the Los Angeles Times (a down-the-line union backer, it should be noted), John Deasy, superintendent of the LAUSD, pledged to work with the parents to enact “fundamental and dramatic change” at the school.

The victory for LAUSD parents came little more than a week after the Adelanto School Board unanimously approved a Parent Trigger plan by parents of students at Desert Trails Elementary after more than a year of delays. Union-supported delays, obviously.

The Parent Trigger, for those whose attention has been occupied elsewhere, is a reform mechanism begun in this state in 2010, in which parents of failing schools may force a school district to undertake specific reforms, including sending their children to a different public school, converting the school into a charter school, or receiving opportunity scholarships to send their children to the private school of their choice.

As we said, teachers unions nationwide have been fighting Parent Trigger and charter schools for years, claiming charters are mostly failures and that they bleed funding from the public school system. To less and less avail, judging by increasing evidence.

Last last week, the Center for Education Reform, a Washington, D.C., organization, released its 14th annual Charter School Laws Across the States Ranking and Scorecard. It showed that more than two million students are now attending in excess of 6,000 public charter schools. Still, the Center noted that only four states improved their laws since the first report card on the movement was issued last year. In other words, union opposition has kept most of the country from improving the system designed to reform and reinvigorate K-12 education. Thankfully, California is one of the four.

What the teachers unions in particular (and unions generally) oppose is individual choice. In education, unions fiercely oppose vouchers, which are designed to allow parents to pick the school they want their children to attend. They also, obviously, fiercely oppose charters, which allow parents who can’t pick the schools they want their children to attend, to at least change the schools their children must attend. What they instead seek is to monopolize education.

We would be remiss if we failed to point out that if the present public education system performed even adequately, let alone excellently, there would be no outcry for reform. Sadly, it doesn’t. And parents are finally demanding change. And choice.

Parent Power Index Scoring Rubric

January 22, 2013

Download or print your PDF copy of the Parent Power Index Scoring Rubric

Click here for more on Parent Power Index Methodology.

Daily Headlines for January 22, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

High-School Graduation Rate Inches Up
Wall Street Journal, January 22, 2013

Percentage of Students in Public Institutions Getting Diplomas Reached 35-Year High in 2010, But Country Still Lags Peers

National Public High School Graduation Rate At A Four-Decade High
Washington Post, DC, January 22, 2013

The percentage of students at public high schools who graduate on time has reached its highest level in nearly 40 years, according to the most recent federal government estimates released Tuesday.

FROM THE STATES

ARIZONA

2 Tucson Charter Schools Approved
Arizona Daily Star, AZ, January 22, 2013

Two new charter schools are slated to open in Tucson this fall. The Arizona State Board of Charter Schools approved the applications on Jan. 14 for Model Community Learning Center and The Rising School, according to board documents.

CALIFORNIA

Chico School Board Faces Hefty Agenda, Including Ruling On Blue Oak’s Fate
Chino Enterprise-Record, CA, January 22, 2013

In their first meeting of the new year, the Chico Unified School District board of trustees will face a hefty agenda that includes the fate of a charter school, consideration of a pair of maintenance projects that have become “serious” health and safety issues, and a report on a community-based group laboring to help the schools.

Parents Plead For Charter Students To Play On Same Team
Tehachapi News, CA, January 22, 2013

Despite the recent explosion of charter school expansion and their accompanying success, there remains one component of charter schooling that falls short. The limitations on charter school student’s access to sports.

CONNECTICUT

Charter Editorial Was Too Vitriolic
Stamford Advocate, CT, January 22, 2013

Your editorial, “Charter school push fails math test” (Jan. 15), exemplifies a major problem with the education reform debate, which is the vitriol that ruins the opportunity for any reasoned conversation about how to better educate children, particularly ones who are underserved by the existing options.

Charter Schools The Right Investment
Connecticut Post, CT, January 21, 2013

As the pastor at Cathedral of the Holy Spirit — and as a member of the Bridgeport Board of Education — I found the Connecticut Post’s recent editorial “Wrong way to spend education dollars,” Jan. 14) to be misleading and insulting to those of us attempting to better the lives of children in our community.

FLORIDA

State Plan To Help Charter Schools Irks Palm Beach County School Board
Palm Beach Post, FL, January 21, 2013

Some Palm Beach County School District officials are incensed at a state proposal to offer once again millions of dollars next year for capital improvements at charter schools — and none at traditional public schools.

Downtown Miami Charter School Helps Students Succeed
Local 10, FL, January 21, 2013

Florida Trend Magazine named Charter Schools USA CEO John Hage its ‘Floridian of the Year’

GEORGIA

Members Selected For Georgia Charter School Panel
Augusta Chronicle, GA, January 21, 2013

The Georgia Department of Education last week approved the new State Charter Schools Com¬mission, a seven-member body that has the power to authorize charter schools even over the objection of local school boards.

INDIANA

Signature School Lottery Produces Stressful, Edge-Of-Seat Clutching Afternoon
Evansville Courier & Press, IN, January 21, 2013

It was a stressful, clutching-the-edge-of-your seat afternoon for the Schmidt family when Evansville’s Signature School held its lottery Jan. 15 for next fall’s incoming freshman class.

IOWA

New Paths To Teaching, Administrating
Spencer Daily Reporter, IA, January 22, 2013

Only one week into the 2013 legislative session, Gov. Branstad’s proposed bill to reform Iowa’s education system is already generating discussion. In the 157-page bill, Branstad focuses on changing four key areas of the education system: teacher compensation and career development, recruitment of educated professionals to become teachers, the “career or college ready” seal and online learning opportunities for students.

LOUISIANA

City School Board To Discuss Property Use
Monroe News Star, LA, January 22, 2013

Less than five hours after the Monroe City School Board added an agenda item that could have impacted charter schools the district has approved to open, the item was reworded and changed from an action item to only discussion.

Closing Of Achievement Gap For New Orleans Schools ‘Premature’
WWLTV, LA, January 21, 2013

In her commentary for WWLTV.com, Leslie Jacobs informs the public, “in case they missed it,” that “we have closed the performance gap” in New Orleans’ schools. Not only is this “gap” closed; it happened two years ago, in 2010-11. Somehow we missed it for two years.

MAINE

Proposed Harpswell Charter School Draws Heavy Support From Community
Bangor Daily News, ME, January 21, 2013

When the nearly 60 people who attended a public hearing Friday were asked if they support a proposed charter school in town, almost every hand went up.

MASSACHUSETTS

Incomplete Assignment: 20 Years Of School Reform In Bay State
Enterprise News, MA, January 22, 2013

Two decades after a sweeping law ushered in MCAS exams, charter schools and other major changes in the classroom, state leaders and experts say Massachusetts still has more homework to do on education reform.

Education Secretary Reville Closes Chapter On Public Service
Lowell Sun, MA, January 22, 2013

Education Secretary Paul Reville is leaving the governor’s cabinet this month after guiding the state through a series of major education reforms that are still being debated today.

MICHIGAN

Don’t Miss The Chance To Give Kids A Brighter Future
Detroit News, MI, January 22, 2013

They’re grown up before you know it. Moms everywhere understand how it can feel like just yesterday that we brought our kids home from the hospital; then before we realize it, they’re going off to school, taking driver’s training and looking at colleges. As a mother myself, I marvel with each New Year at how quickly the time flies as our children age, learn, mature and grow into exceptional people.

Charter School Firm Buys Vacant Warren Target Building
Detroit News, MI, January 22, 2013

A charter school may soon set up shop in a vacant Target store on Dequindre between 11 Mile and 12 Mile in Warren.

MISSISSIPPI

Miss. House Looks at Charter School Proposal
Local 15tv, MS, January 22, 2013

State House members are poised to take up their own version of charter school legislation.

Allow Charter Schools In Mississippi
Clarion Ledger, MS, January 22, 2013

For decades, Mississippi has shuffled and reshuffled its children through a public education system that lacks accountability, choice and innovation. As a result, many of Mississippi’s children are stuck with an education that fails to prepare them for life.

Comparing The House And Senate Charter School Bills
Clarion Ledger Blog, MS, January 21, 2013

Getting information out of the House leadership about their charter school bill is tough sledding today, but I’ve had a chance to read the entire House bill (pdf version) and compare it to the Senate version (pdf version). Here’s a quick-and-dirty analysis.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Teacher Evaluation Changes In Nashua Up For Discussion
The Nashua Telegraph, NH, January 22, 2013

The Board of Education’s Human Resources Committee is meeting Tuesday night to discuss a proposed revision to the teacher evaluation process in the city.

NEW MEXICO

Charter Authorizers Play Crucial Roles
Albuquerque Journal, NM, January 22, 2013

Recently I was asked, “Who approves or oversees charter schools and to whom are they accountable?” That is a great question! Like traditional public schools, charters are accountable to their students, parents, communities, the Public Education Department, the Legislature and to the taxpayers of New Mexico.

NORTH CAROLINA

Phoenix Academy to Expand
High Point Enterprise, NC, January 21, 2013

An expanding Phoenix Academy will start serving middle school students this fall as leaders begin construction planning.

A New N.C. Push For Teacher Tenure Reform
Charlotte Observer, NC, January 22, 2013

N.C. Senate leader Phil Berger didn’t spend much time on education last week in his preview of the upcoming legislative session, but the Eden Republican provided a new clue about how his party will pursue the delicate issue of how we reward and dismiss our teachers.

OKLAHOMA

Editorial Oklahoma Policymakers Shouldn’t Retreat From A-F Grading System
The Oklahoman, OK, January 22, 2013

FOR months, some administrators have loudly objected to the state’s new A-F grading system for schools. Now, the Cooperative Council for Oklahoma School Administrators and the Oklahoma State School Boards Association have released a study declaring the grades “have statistical limitations that jeopardize their validity, reliability and usefulness.”

TENNESSEE

Tuition Vouchers Boost Competition In Education
Commercial Appeal, TN. January 22, 2013

Let’s shift the intensity of competition from “school systems” to schools and principals and teachers. Competition helps everyone — except those who give up. Competition helps us all become better, as individual people, as companies that produce products and services, and as entire nations and civilizations.

WASHINGTON

Teachers’ Test Boycott Draws Growing Support
Seattle Times, WA, January 21, 2013

Support is growing for Garfield High teachers in their boycott of a district-required test. Seattle Public Schools officials, while saying the test has value, also are acknowledging that some of the teachers’ concerns have merit.

Teachers Union Shouldn’t Go Against Voters
Bellingham Herald, WA, January 22, 2013

Washington voters approved a citizen’s initiative to experiment with charter schools by the narrowest of margins – 50.6 percent statewide, 50.19 percent in Thurston County – but that’s no justification for the teachers union to launch a lawsuit.

WISCONSIN

New Network of Charter Schools Coming
Urban Milwaukee, WI, January 21, 2013

A plan to open a network of charter schools has been delayed at least a year until funding can be secured by organizers, who continue to say their educational model will ultimately help close the city’s achievement gap.

Utah praised for abundance of charter school options

by Ray Parker
Salt Lake Tribune
January 18, 2013

Utah ranks 11th in the nation when it comes to charter school programs, according to a new national study.

The Beehive State earned an overall “B” grade in charter education, according to the Center for Education Reform, a pro-charter Washington, D.C., nonprofit.

The group’s latest evaluation of states’ charter laws includes other categories deemed important for education reform: parental choice, online learning, teacher quality and transparency.

“These are the hot-button issues in education reform today,” Jeanne Allen, the center’s president, said Thursday. “We’ve been ranking charter schools for 14 years.”

Still, there is one area the group does not specifically look at that’s of interest in Utah: graduation rates.

Recently, Utah education officials looked at charter high school graduation rates, which ranked among the highest and lowest in the state: from 27 percent to 100 percent. The overall state graduation rate is 78 percent.

State officials said charter schools need to do a better job of tracking students if they leave the school before graduating. The students could have graduated at another school, but were posted as not graduating from their charter schools.

Allen said the same problem exists on a national level.

“We don’t have a level playing field as far as data,” Allen said. “Are charter schools doing poorly because they’re doing poorly or because of the [inadequate] data?”

The center has studied and evaluated each state’s charter school laws since 1996.

In its latest evaluation, the center had mostly positive comments about Utah in four of its five categories.

Under “charter schools,” center officials wrote of the state on its website: “Utah’s charter school law is considered strong because it provides equitable funding to charter schools, facilities funding and a strong authorizing system that includes capable independent bodies such as universities and the semi-independent state charter board.”

As for “school choice,” center officials wrote: “Utah has one private school choice program [special-needs vouchers]. The state does have a charter school law. Utah allows for limited public virtual schooling. Open enrollment exists, both for intradistrict and interdistrict public school choice.”

The group praised the state’s online learning: “Due in large part to the leadership of the Utah Legislature, Utah has adopted multiple student-centric policies designed specifically to harness the power of technology.

Primarily through the passage of SB65, the Statewide Online Education Program, and charter policy enacted over the last decade, digital learning has become available in some form to all Utah students.”

Its “transparency” also was praised: “Utah has a very parent-friendly website that provides easy to understand school report cards as well as information on the Carson Smith Special Needs Scholarship and charter schools. The 40 local school boards in Utah are elected during the November general election.”

But when it comes to “teacher evaluations,” the group said Utah has some work to do. “Neither tenure decisions nor license advancement and renewal are based on effectiveness,” the group wrote. “Eligibility for dismissal is not a consequence of multiple unsatisfactory evaluations in Utah, and ineffective classroom performance is not a ground for dismissal. The state does not ensure that the appeals process for dismissed teachers is expedient; however, a last hired, first fired policy is prohibited during layoffs.”

Among the nation’s 43 states with charter school laws, the center ranked them as follows: four states earned an “A,” nine got a “B,” 19 received a “C” and 11 states were given a “D” or “F.”

Allen said it’s not only charter school laws but the other four categories that make for education reform.

“As policymakers consider changes to their charter school laws, they also need to be mindful of what it takes to have truly great education reform policies across all issues,” Allen said.

The center’s 2013 Charter School Laws Across the States Ranking & Scorecard can be found at Edreform.com/in-the-states, which will be available to the public Tuesday.

“Charter and traditional schools don’t have to be on opposite sides anymore,” said Kim Frank, of the Utah Charter Network. “The main reason to see charter schools in Utah grow is you have smaller schools. And with new and innovative programs, that information can be shared with all schools, and all ships rise.”

Group gives Michigan ‘A’ for support of charter schools

Detroit News
January 18, 2013

Michigan earned an “A” for its charter school laws, according to a report card issued this week by the Center for Education Reform.

The organization issues the assessment annually, ranking states according to the strength and quality of their charter school laws.

Michigan was ranked No. 4 on this year’s list, up from No. 5 last year. The top four all received a letter grade of “A” on the report card, including Washington, D.C., Minnesota and Indiana.

Michigan received high marks in the areas of authorizer quality, school autonomy and teacher freedom. It got low marks for facilities and funding equity.

Michigan has passed a number of charter school reforms in the past two years, including lifting the cap on university-authorized charter schools and removing many of the limits on cyber charter schools, along with strengthening accountability measures for all charter schools.

“Michigan’s ‘A’ is very well-deserved,” said Dan Quisenberry, president of the Michigan Association of Public School Academies.

“This report card is an accurate reflection of the positive strides we’ve made and the work that still needs to be done. The climate for quality public education in Michigan is much better now than it was a couple years ago, but as the report card points out, charter schools still aren’t being treated equally when it comes to equity in funding and facilities. We’re an ‘A’ now, but we need to be an ‘A-plus’ if we want our educational system to be truly great.”

On Monday a report released by an independent analyst of charter schools shows charter school students in Michigan and Detroit are out-learning their public school counterparts.

The study, done by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, found the typical Michigan charter school student school gained more learning in a year than a district school peer — an advantage of about an additional two months of reading and math learning.

The learning advantage was even greater for students in Detroit charter schools, which make up 27 percent of the state’s charter students, on average gaining nearly three months achievement for each year they attend charter schools.

National Report Card for Parents Released

Top Ten States on Parent Power Index© provide roadmap for lawmakers 

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
January 22, 2013

The nation’s “Top Ten” states that provide more expansive opportunities for parents also tend to yield higher growth rates in student achievement, according to the most recent national rankings on the Parent Power Index© (PPI) released today by The Center for Education Reform (CER). Indiana ranks No. 1, followed by Florida, Ohio, Arizona, D.C., Louisiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Utah, in enacting policies that allow for more parental empowerment, expansive educational choices, sound teacher quality measures, wider access to digital learning and more transparent data. These states’ policies correlate highly with increased student growth, particularly among lower socio-economic students, over time.

The PPI is an interactive, web-based tool that ranks the United States based on how much power a parent has over their children’s education. While there is a growing body of data and information available to parents, policymakers, educators and the general public, the PPI is the first and only comprehensive evaluation of state education policy that is geared towards parents, continuously updated in real-time, and now, provides an arsenal of state and local resources.

“All across America, parents are demanding more power over their children’s education, but the task of sorting through all the information out there is daunting,” said Jeanne Allen, president of CER. “There are a variety of resources available to evaluate how students are achieving, but there is widespread disagreement about what constitutes sound education reform policy.” Allen continued: “As the mother of college students, I liken the PPI to a cumulative GPA, which is a composite of grades from varying professors. In this case, these professors are among the nation’s leading authorities and critical evaluators of education policy.”

The latest rankings on the Parent Power Index© are a resulte of the release of CER’s 14th annual Charter School Laws Across the States Ranking and Scorecard 2013. Washington became the 43rd state to allow charter schools and only four other states made improvements to their charter laws last year.

In addition to charter schools, the Index evaluates states on school choice using data and analysis provided by the The Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, The National Council on Teacher Quality’s detailed analysis in its annual State Teacher Policy Yearbook, Digital Learning Now’s evaluation of state policies based on 72 metrics, transparency of data, school board elections and Parent Revolution’s analysis of parent trigger laws. It also looks at local media reliability on education issues and if state executives are reform-minded. Further evaluation across all of these Elements of Power is ongoing and continuously updated at https://staging.edreform.com/in-the-states/parent-power-index/.

The Parent Power Index© also reveals that a majority of states are barely making the grade when it comes to policies that allow parents to exercise choices, engage with local school boards and have a voice in the education systems that surround their children.

“The Index’s ‘Top Ten’ prove that when parents have access to options and good information all children can succeed,” Allen said. “Lawmakers need to look to these exemplars and the policies that have afforded parents greater power elsewhere and act fast to bring real education reform to their respective states. Parents and voters have declared that mediocrity is no longer acceptable, and our elected officials have a mandate to fix our educational and economic problems for good.”

Daily Headlines for January 21, 2013

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

NATIONAL COVERAGE

Time To Put Education Spotlight On Parents
San Angelo Times, TX, January 21, 2013

Turnabout is fair play, and in no arena as much as that of student academic achievement.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

Teachers OK LAUSD Evaluation Standards
Daily Breeze, CA, January 19, 2013

After months of negotiations, the Los Angeles Unified School District and its teachers union have reached a compromise that will now use a controversial multifactor system to evaluate teacher performance.

COLORADO

Truancy Court As A Last Resort
Denver Post, CO, January 20, 2013

Commerce City should consider a system of community and school interventions before sending truant children to court.

GEORGIA

New Evaluations Might Be An Improvement, Teacher Says
Dalton Daily Citizen, GA, January 21, 2013

Sometimes, 20 minutes is all an employee has to impress a boss. That can be especially true for public school teachers.

Teacher Evaluations: Is There Really Enough Time For Reliable Classroom Observations?
Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA, January 19, 2013

A middle school teacher I admired for her innovation pulled me aside once to tell me she was leaving the district. Her tendency to stray from the script put her at odds with the new principal.

Legislation May Prompt Charter For Cobb School District
Marietta Daily Journal, GA, January 21, 2013

Cobb’s school board is eyeing a state bill that would require school districts to apply for charter system status or be deemed one of two performance-based systems.

Backed by State Money, Georgia Scholarships Go to Schools Barring Gays
New York Times, NY, January 21, 2013

As the nation works its way through the debate over vouchers and other alternatives to traditional public education funding, a quieter battle over homosexuality, religious education and school tax money is under way in Georgia.

HAWAII

Charities Help Guide Charters On Better School Leadership
Star Advertiser, HI, January 20, 2013

As Hawaii’s charter schools adjust to a new law demanding more accountability, they are getting a helping hand from a coalition of charities led by the Chamberlin Family Foundation, which was created by two Roosevelt High School alumni.

ILLINOIS

A Victory For Charter Freedom
Chicago Tribune, IL, January 21, 2013

In 2011 we told you about the high-profile legal fuss kicked up when some teachers at the Chicago Math and Science Academy, a North Side charter school, said they wanted to join a union.

INDIANA

Do Indiana Charter Schools Measure Up, Outperform?
South Bend Tribune, IN, January 21, 2013

Elijah Magruder attended three schools before he found one where he finally feels at home.

Branstad: Education Reform Must Precede More State Aid
Indianapolis Star, IN, January 19, 2013

Gov. Terry Branstad said Friday he’s willing to consider additional state aid for schools on top of what he has proposed for education reform. He’s still insisting, however, that legislators make decisions on reform first.

LOUISIANA

Teachers’ Groups Disagree On Changes
The Advocate, LA, January 21, 2013

While two unions are vehemently opposed to the new teacher evaluations, a third teachers’ group is embracing the overhaul and instructing educators on how it works.

MASSACHUSETTS

Gloucester Schools Welcome 98 Charter Students After GCACS Closes
Cape Ann Beacon, MA, January 20, 2013

While it’s not uncommon for a student or two to transfer to a new school during the middle of the school year, the closing of the Gloucester Community Arts Charter School on Jan. 9 required the handling of this transition on a whole different level.

MARYLAND

No Single Way To Advance Student Achievement
Capital Gazette, MD, January 21, 2013

Recently released data that tracks student academic success at every school across the state has generated a considerable amount of discussion about the value of standardized testing and the methodology by which schools are held accountable.

MICHIGAN

Beating The Odds: Three Oaks Charter School Thriving After Closure Threat
Muskegon Chronicle, MI, January 20, 2013

On the verge of closure nearly three years ago, Three Oaks Public School Academy has turned itself around, winning a new eight-year charter school contract as well as special recognition from the state for its improved test scores.

Jackson Community College Board Should Say No To Proposed Charter School
Jackson Citizen Patriot, MI, January 20, 2013

The Jackson Preparatory and Early College charter school sounds like an excellent idea. But not now. Not in Jackson County.

Michigan’s Charters Make The Grade
Detroit News, MI, January 20, 2013

A study showcasing student growth at Michigan charter schools indicates state is on the right track

Group Gives Michigan ‘A’ For Support Of Charter Schools
Detroit News, MI, January 18, 2013

Michigan earned an “A” for its charter school laws, according to a report card issued this week by the Center for Education Reform.

MISSISSIPPI

If State Can’t Fund MAEP, How Will It Fund Charter Schools?
Hattiesburg American, MS, January 19, 2013

As a school board member in the Lumberton School District, I feel compelled to ask a question regarding charter schools.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Charter Schools Snared In N.H. Budget Process
Exeter News-Letter, NH, January 20, 2013

A proposed Exeter area regional charter school that aspired to open in September continues to find itself at mercy of the state.

NEW JERSEY

Some Newark Schools Succeed With Most Troubled Students, Data Shows
Star Ledger, NJ, January 20, 2013

Many of the children who attend Miller Street School in Newark’s South Ward walk to school through scarred and troubled neighborhoods. They pass rusted auto-body shops, people dealing drugs and transactions for sex before their school day even begins.

NEW MEXICO

End To Golden Parachutes One Of Many School Reform Bills This Year
Las Cruces Sun-News, NM, January 19, 2013

Golden parachutes are draining money from New Mexico’s classrooms, says a state legislator who wants to limit school superintendents to one-year contracts.

NEW YORK

Better Learning Costs Money
Albany Times Union, NY, January 21, 2013

Gov. Andrew Cuomo has endorsed a number of initiatives proposed by his education reform commission, on which I serve — including full-day prekindergarten, extended learning time, community schools for high-needs districts and more effective teacher recruitment.

Department Of Education Chancellor Dennis Walcott: I Blame UFT Boss For Teachers Evaluations Disaster
New York Daily News, NY, January 19, 2013

Teachers union and the department of Education have failed to reach an agreement of evaluations. The impasse cost the city at least $450 million in government funding.

King Flunks On Teacher Evaluations
New York Daily News, NY, January 20, 2013

New York City’s schoolchildren face dire consequences after Mayor Bloomberg and teachers union President Michael Mulgrew missed the deadline for negotiating a teacher evaluation system.

NORTH CAROLINA

Triangle Faces Wave Of New Charter Schools
News & Observer, NC, January 20, 2013

Nearly 30 new charter schools could open in the Triangle in 2014, shaking up the region’s public-education landscape and providing additional competition for local school districts.

Bill Would Make Forsyth County Schools State’s First ‘Charter School District’
Winston-Salem Journal, NC, January 19, 2013

State Rep. Donny Lambeth, R-Forsyth, said he plans to co-sponsor a bill in the N.C. House that would convert the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools to the state’s first charter-school district, aiming to reduce state regulatory control and allow more innovation by administrators and teachers.

OHIO

Cleveland Schools Go Back To Full Days With Extra Reading And Math Classes For Struggling Schools
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, January 20, 2013

Cleveland students will go back to full school days Tuesday, with most of the music, art, gym and library classes brought back after voters passed a new school tax in November.

School Rules Guide Whistle-Blowers
Columbus Dispatch, OH, January 21, 2013

Amid a statewide investigation into data manipulation in schools, districts are creating rules to guide employees if they want to report workers who violate laws or ethics.

PENNSYLVANIA

Parents Who Waited For Penn Alexander Kindergarten Spots Vow To Fight On
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 21, 2013

Parents who had prepared to camp out for four days to register their children for kindergarten in one of the city’s best neighborhood schools have packed up their tents and gone home.

Souderton Charter School Growing
The Intelligencer, PA, January 20, 2013

As the Souderton Area School District goes through the controversial process of shuttering one of its seven elementary schools due to a downward trend in enrollment, one small charter school in its borders is making plans to grow.

TENNESSEE

Haslam Addresses School Vouchers Issues
The Memphis Daily News, TN, January 21, 2013

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam says the third year of significant education reform legislation in the Tennessee General Assembly will include vouchers but added that “ultimately our efforts in Tennessee are going to be around the vast majority of kids that are in public schools.”

UTAH

Utah Praised For Abundance Of Charter School Options
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, January 18, 2013

Utah ranks 11th in the nation when it comes to charter school programs, according to a new national study.

WISCONSIN

Three Ex-GOP Speakers Now Lobby For School Choice
Janesville Gazette, WI, January 21, 2013

Several former Assembly speakers looked on Jan. 7 as the 75th speaker, Republican Rep. Robin Vos, was elected to lead that half of the Legislature.

Democracy In The Way of Vouchers
The Oshkosh Northwestern, WI, January 20, 2013

Leave it to Sen. Mike Ellis to hit the nail on the head: The expansion of school vouchers is a non-starter in northeast Wisconsin. In our view, such is the case across Wisconsin. The Senate president, in typically blunt language, called last week for local referendum votes on any expansion of the state’s school voucher program outside of Milwaukee and Racine.

Deciding Voucher Issues Is Job of Legislators
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, January 20, 2013

When it comes to whether this or any other state should provide students with taxpayer-funded vouchers to attend private school, there is no shortage of opinion, study, vested interest, ideology and passion to help guide our elected officials.

ONLINE LEARNING

Views Differ On Virtual Education
Boston Globe, MA, January 19, 2013

A new state law opening the way for more virtual schools in Massachusetts is drawing mixed reactions from area school officials, with some welcoming it and others voicing concern.

Many Alle-Kiski School Districts Challenge Private Charter, Cyber Schools
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA, January 20, 2013

Many Alle-Kiski school districts are tired of footing the bill for students who decide to go to private charter and cyber schools, so they‘re fighting back.

State Trend Of Cyberschools Opening Learning Centers Comes To Lehigh Valley
Lehigh Valley Express-Times, PA, January 19, 2013

Achievement House Cyber Charter School has opened a learning center in South Bethlehem that the school says is the first of its kind in the Lehigh Valley.

New Trend In Classroom Instruction
Northwest Arkansas News, AR, January 19, 2013

Some teachers in Fayetteville and other districts are using a new model called flipped instruction. They said it helps students keep up with classroom work and provides more time for concentrated work exercises in the classroom.

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Daily Headlines for January 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

In Pursuit of Safety, Schools’ Paths Diverge
Wall Street Journal, January 18, 2013

A month after a gunman massacred 20 students in Newtown, Conn., school districts nationwide are struggling with safety issues and taking widely divergent approaches.

FROM THE STATES

ARKANSAS

Judge Finds No Violations Of School Deal
Northwest Arkansas News, AR, January 18, 2013

U.S. District Judge D. Price Marshall Jr. on Thursday ruled that the establishment of nearly a dozen state-approved charter schools in Pulaski County did not violate a 1989 desegregation settlement terms between the state and the three Pulaski County school districts.

Billionaires’ Bill Filed To Strip State Education Board Of Charter School Review
Arkansas Times Blog, AR, January 17, 2013

The long-expected bill originating from the Billionaire Boys Club to strip the state Board of Education of its oversight of charter school applications and performance was filed today.

CALIFORNIA

Charter Schools See Largest Boom Since Their Inception 20 Years Ago
Daily Breeze, CA, January 17, 2013

Charter schools across the United States are proliferating and expanding at a record pace, with the trend particularly pronounced in California and Los Angeles County.

Green Dot Charter Group To Reorganize Locke High
Los Angeles Times, CA, January 18, 2013

Green Dot hopes the changes will counter the slumping academic performance of incoming ninth-grade students.

Parents At Troubled School Take Reform Petitions To LAUSD
Los Angeles Times, CA, January 18, 2013

After about 100 parents from 24th Street Elementary drop off the parent trigger petitions, Supt. John Deasy pledges to work with them to improve the school.

CONNECTICUT

Editorial Wrong About Charter Schools
Stamford Advocate, CT, January 17, 2013

Your recent editorial “Charter School Push Fails the Math Test” (Jan. 14) ignores the evidence and distorts the facts about public charter schools. Charters are publicly funded schools that cannot pick and choose who gets in. Every child is free to enroll in a charter school. When there are more students applying to enroll than seats available, a lottery is held.

DELAWARE

4 New Charter Schools Seek OK
News Journal, DE, January 18, 2013

Four new charter schools were proposed to the state Department of Education.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Chancellor Kaya Henderson Names 15 D.C. Schools On Closure List
Washington Post, DC, January 17, 2013

More than one in 10 D.C. public schools will close as part of a plan Chancellor Kaya Henderson put forth Thursday, a retrenchment amid budget pressures, low enrollment and growing competition from public charter schools.

FLORIDA

Clay School Board Turns Down Charter School Application
Florida Times Union, FL, January 17, 2013

The Clay County School Board voted 4-1 to deny the charter school application of Orange Park Performing Arts Academy because it failed to meet state standards for opening.

Pasco Schools Not Equipped For New Teacher Evaluation System
Tampa Bay Times, FL, January 18, 2013

While the legal battle is under way over a controversial 2011 state law that bases teacher evaluations and pay on student test scores, the Pasco school district is looking at what it would take to implement the law.

GEORGIA

School Board Approves 5-Year Charter Renewal
Cherokee Tribune, GA, January 18, 2013

Along with 13 other charter schools in Georgia, Cherokee Charter Academy received approval Thursday from the state Board of Education for a five-year charter renewal.

State Charter Schools Commission Appointed
GPB, GA, January 17, 2013

The State Board of Education on Thursday appointed a new seven member Charter Schools Commission. Officials hope it will spur creation of charter schools across the state.

ILLINOIS

CPS Principals Will Be Formally Evaluated On Student Academic Growth
Chicago Sun Times, IL, January 17, 2013

Just as evaluations of Chicago Public School teachers are partly based on the test scores of their students, principals also will be formally evaluated as of February on student academic growth, with bonuses going to the ones who thrive, the schools chief announced Thursday.

INDIANA

Pence, GOP Legislators Push Expanding School Vouchers, Pre-Kindergarten To Top Of Agenda
Evansville Courier & Press, IN, January 17, 2013

Expanding Indiana’s voucher system and beginning to fund pre-kindergarten are the central planks of an education legislative agenda being driven by Gov. Mike Pence and House leaders.

IOWA

Senate Democrats Pledge 4% Bump In Aid To Schools
Des Moines Register, IA, January 17, 2013

Iowa Senate Democrats, ignoring a demand from Gov. Terry Branstad, said Thursday that they would approve a 4 percent increase in basic state aid to schools for the coming academic year at a cost of about $135 million.

LOUISIANA

Successful Charters Can Now Open New Schools Without State OK
Times-Picayune, LA, January 17, 2013

The state is making it easier for successful charters to open new schools while tightening financial and management oversight of the charters it approves.

Charter School Could Help Improve Local School System
The Daily News, LA, January 18, 2013

A new era in Bogalusa education will be ushered in with the opening of Northshore Charter School in August. Although no site has been selected, the school is scheduled to welcome kindergarten, first-, second- and ninth-grade students for the 2013-14 school year and is expected to house up to 620 students in a K-12 facility by the 2017-18 school year.

New Orleans’ Graduation Rate Is On The Rise
Times-Picayune, LA, January 18, 2013

In another indication that post-Katrina education reforms are paying off, New Orleans high schools had a better 2011 graduation rate than the state and national average. In city schools, 76.5 percent of students graduated within four years. That was higher than the state average of 70.9 percent and significantly higher than the rates in Jefferson Parish, Baton Rouge and Shreveport, according to an analysis by Educate Now.

MASSACHUSETTS

Patrick’s Education Proposal Should Reform More
Boston Globe, MA, January 18, 2013

In his Wednesday state of the state speech, Governor Patrick claimed his education proposals will help the state prepare for the challenges of the future.

More Charter Schools Sought
Boston Globe, MA, January 18, 2013

A group of charter school advocates, business leaders, and legislators is pushing to abolish a state-imposed cap on the number of charter schools that can operate in Boston and other low-performing school districts, under legislation expected to be filed Friday on Beacon Hill.

MISSISSIPPI

Adopt-A-School Is Making A Difference
Jackson Clarion Ledger, MS, January 18, 2013

Charter schools are proposed as a solution for failing public schools, yet there are ways to strengthen these schools without diverting resources.

NEW JERSEY

School Choice Program Growing With Each Year
New Jersey Herald, NJ, January 17, 2013

Since its inception two years ago, the state’s Interdistrict Public School Choice program has more than doubled.

NEW YORK

NYC, Union Trade Harsh Words Over Plan Impasse
Wall Street Journal, January 18, 2013

The issue of teacher evaluations, which has been contentious around the country, brought New York City and its teachers’ union to an impasse and harsh war of words that has put the city at risk of losing up to $450 million in state aid and grants.

Doomed to Fail
New York Daily News, NY, January 18, 2013

Why teacher evaluation talks fell apart: Because state law gave the union the power to block a deal

No Deal on Teacher Evaluations; City Risks Losing $450 Million
New York Times, NY, January 18, 2013

The Bloomberg administration and New York City’s teachers’ union said Thursday that they had failed to reach a deal on a new system for evaluating 75,000 public school teachers, putting the city into immediate danger of losing out on up to $450 million in state and federal money and raising the possibility of cuts to staff and programs.

Staten Island’s Students Are The Losers As Teachers, City Throw Away $450M
Staten Island Advance, NY, January 18, 2013

As the midnight deadline came and went, nothing had changed.
And that’s bad news for students on Staten Island and in the rest of the city.

The City’s School Bus Strike Hits Disabled Students The Hardest
New York Daily News, NY, January 17, 2013

With several subways missing elevator access and cabs lacking adequate storage space for wheelchairs, parents of special needs children already grow frustrated.

OHIO

Yost Seeks Periodic Head Count Of Students
Columbus Dispatch, OH, January 18, 2013

Conducting official head counts of schoolchildren several times a year would discourage the “scrubbing” of student data, the state auditor says.

PENNSYLVANIA

Philadelphia School Reform Commission Votes Not To Renew City’s Oldest Charter School
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, January 18, 2013

The Philadelphia School Reform Commission said Thursday night that the district’s oldest charter school did not deserve to be renewed because of low test scores and financial problems.

School-Closing Arguments Highlight SRC Meeting
Philadelphia Daily News, PA, January 18, 2013

MORE THAN 70 people signed up to air their grievances at the School Reform Commission meeting Thursday night, an unusually high number reflective of the controversy surrounding the district’s decision to close 37 schools.

TENNESSEE

Answers Needed On School Voucher Plan
Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, January 18, 2013

Gov. Bill Haslam announced Monday that he will be pushing for vouchers for low-income students in “lower-performing schools.”

TEXAS

School Board Opposes Vouchers
Victoria Advocate, TX, January 17, 2013

The Victoria school board does not support private school vouchers.
On Thursday, the board voted unanimously to approve a resolution opposing the bill that is pending with the state Legislature.

Students In Low-Performing Schools Have Way Out — Maybe
Star-Telegram, TX, January 17, 2013

It has been argued for decades that no student should be “trapped” in a bad school, and in 1995 the Texas Legislature passed a law to provide students so ensnared a way out.

VIRGINIA

Va. Senate Panel Endorses 4 Schools Bills
Richmond Times-Dispatch, VA, January 17, 2013

Gov. Bob McDonnell’s attempt to leave a legacy of education reform as his four-year term winds down received a modest boost from a Senate committee Thursday.

WISCONSIN

GOP Senator To Push For Voucher Vote
Herald Times Reporter, WI, January 17, 2013

The president of the Wisconsin Senate said Thursday that he will oppose any expansion of school vouchers unless local residents vote on such a move, a proposal that could jeopardize growth of the program outside of Milwaukee and Racine.

Milwaukee School Choice Beats The Alternative
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, January 17, 2013

Education expert Diane Ravitch wrote in a Jan. 11 op-ed that Milwaukee should abandon its long-running school choice programs involving private and public charter schools and instead concentrate all education resources on a single, monopolistic public school system.

ONLINE LEARNING

NW Area Oks Cyber, Charter School Pact
Wilkes Barre Times-Leader, PA, January 18, 2013

In addition to approving a new teachers contract at Wednesday night’s meeting, the Northwest Area School Board entered into a contract with Virtual Learning Network to provide cyber and charter school curriculums that will coincide with those of the district.

Medina High Students Are Making History As Blended Learning Program Produces Website, App Bringing City’s Heritage Into Digital Age
Sun Star Courier, OH, January 17, 2013

Students enrolled in a blended educational course at Medina High School presented an app and website that is all student-built to City Council Monday night.

Oklahoma Supreme Court Refuses To Take Up Legal Challenge To Charter School, Textbook Law
The Oklahoman, OK, January 18, 2013

The Oklahoma Supreme Court has refused to hear a legal challenge to a law passed last year that authorized a statewide virtual charter school and $30 million for textbooks for public schools.

Montana Digital Academy Picking Up Steam
Billings Gazette, MT, January 18, 2013

The obvious appeal — taking a required math class in your pajamas — is trumped only by the fact that almost any class, from Chinese to oceanography, is available upon request.

School Choice is — and was — Bipartisan

January 17, 2013

We’ve got a treat for you this Thursday afternoon with this blast from the past letter we found in our archives and couldn’t help but share, especially with National School Choice Week only 10 days away and an Arkansas Senator just yesterday proposing new school choice legislation :

(click on the image to see a copy of the actual letter)


 

October 18, 1990

Representative Polly Williams
State Capitol
Room 18 East
P. O. Box 8953
Madison, Wisconsin 53708

Dear Polly:

I read Don Lambro’s recent column about your version of the school choice bill in Milwaukee. I am fascinated by that proposal and am having my staff analyze it. I’m concerned that the traditional Democratic Party establishment has not given you more encouragement. The visionary is rarely embraced by the status quo.

Keep up the good work.

Sincerely,
Bill Clinton