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Listen to the Kids

December 6, 2012

“The teacher body are all inspiring. They make us well rounded. Notice the halls? At my old school, the halls are never quiet. You can’t even walk. There are fights everywhere.”

That was from Michael, a 15 year old freshman at Howe HS in Indianapolis, one of the four worst schools in the state, which thanks to legislation were able to be taken over from the district and turned over to new management. There is nothing like students to tell it like it is, and at Howe, Manual and Emma Donnan – 3 of the 4 I visited this week, order is more the norm than the exception these days. Pages could be written but this media piece tells part of the story as does this. If we just listened to the kids more we may actually make real progress some day.

by Jeanne Allen

New Jersey Charter School Achievement: The CREDO Report

A recent study by Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) found that charter school students in New Jersey had learning gains in reading and math that were 0.06 and 0.08 standard deviations greater than the averages of their virtual comparison panel, or students in conventional public schools. Overall, 30 percent of charters had significantly more positive learning gains in reading, and 40 percent had significantly more positive learning gains in math.

However, they found differing effects based on the “urbanicity” of the charter school. Students in urban charter schools performed better than those in suburban schools; students in urban charters scored about 0.12 standard deviations greater than the virtual twin in math, whereas students in suburban charters scored only 0.05 standard deviations greater than their virtual twin. Students in rural charter schools performed significantly worse, about 0.14 and 0.18 standard deviations lower than the virtual twin in math and reading, respectively. Charter schools were also found to be more effective than traditional public schools at closing racial achievement gaps for black and Hispanic students, and students in poverty performed better in charter schools than in public schools. No significant difference in achievement was found for special education students attending charter schools, though this is likely due to the small number of students in question.

This report used the same virtual control record (VCR) or “virtual twin” methodology as the 2009 report Multiple Choice: Charter School Performance in 16 States (New Jersey was not one of the 16 states analyzed). The Center commented on the problems with the methodology in this paper, although there are some differences with this report.

The problem that CER noted in the past about studies overly emphasizing new charter schools does not appear to exist here. The majority of the sample comes from students in schools operating for nine years or longer, and while there are plenty of observations from young charter schools, there is not as much room for systematic bias. On the other hand, when CREDO breaks the sample down by the student’s previous time in a charter school there are significantly more first-year (newly transferred) charter students than second or third year students. It’s hard to say whether this will cause bias because first, second, and third-year students only account for about 6,000/16,000 of the students in the sample, so there are plenty of unreported results that would help determine the amount of bias.

Looking through the appendix, there is not any information about the actual number of schools in each category, but they do break the samples down by number of students in the appendix. The sample has a lot fewer students in rural charter schools (about 700 vs. 8,600 and 7,200 in urban and suburban schools, respectively), but that is due to the nature of the charter school system in New Jersey, where schools are generally concentrated in urban areas. This may cause bias when breaking down the school achievement by urban, suburban, or rural because so few students are attending rural charter schools, each individual’s scores are weighted more heavily.

Indiana Turnaround Schools: Model for U.S.

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
December 5, 2012

In testimony before the Indiana State Board of Education today, Jeanne Allen, Founder and President of the Center for Education Reform lauded the move by Indiana lawmakers to turn over failing schools to new management and shared the progress she noted in the three “turnaround schools” she visited this week. The schools are now given over on a performance contract, which grants the operator, Charter Schools USA, four years to improve. The 2011 contract was made possible by legislation supported and signed by Governor Mitch Daniels.

“The schools I visited this week are orderly. Educators are in command of their classes,” said Allen. “Students are focused on their work, a stark contrast to the chaos and violence that plagued these schools before the takeover.”

This is a direct result of the provider being granted authority to replace most of the staff and implement their own programs. While the turnaround model has come under scrutiny, with skeptics wondering whether such restructuring of schools will stem the tide of school failure, it’s clear that a key ingredient is the absence of fixed labor contracts and an easing of cumbersome bureaucracy.

Charter Schools USA President Jon Hage also addressed the State Board of Education, saying, “The parents and community are seeing real results already and are highly supportive of our efforts. It’s amazing how quickly students respond to a highly supportive and engaged learning environment.”

Allen concluded, “It was a pleasure to visit these schools and see their great work firsthand. These schools were among the worst in the state. It is early in this process, but we know from research that strong discipline and high behavioral expectations of the sort I witnessed are vital factors in achievement. In addition to dramatically improved environments, I also observed a sense of hope and promise where there was once despair. It is no surprise that Indiana, consistently evaluated as the ‘reformiest’ state in the nation, is leading the nation, providing a model for turning around schools.”

Daily Headlines for December 5, 2012

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

Grants Back Public-Charter Cooperation
New York Times, NY, December 5, 2012

In an effort to encourage collaboration between charter schools and traditional neighborhood schools, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has awarded $25 million in grants to seven cities.

Transformed Teachers Unions Are Putting Focus of Quality
News Tribune, WA, December 5, 2012

We have all heard about the dramatic changes in the American electorate and how, because he spoke to the concerns of the growing numbers of Hispanic, black, female and younger voters, President Barack Obama was re-elected despite adverse economic conditions.

Raising The Bar For New Teachers
Washington Post, DC, December 4, 2012

Regarding the Dec. 2 news article “ Union to propose ‘bar exam’ for teachers”: I changed careers 13 years ago to become a teacher.

FROM THE STATES

ALABAMA

Whittington Wants Back On Committee
WJTV, AL, December 4, 2012

A state lawmaker at the center of a political fight over charter schools speaks out.

CALIFORNIA

Charter School Chosen By Parents To Take Over Failing Adelanto School Makes Pitch To Board
Contra Costa Times, CA, December 5, 2012

The charter school chosen by a group of parents under California’s “parent trigger” law finally got their chance to present how they’d remake a failing High Desert elementary school Tuesday night.

L.A. Unified Says Deal On Evaluations Meets Court Order
Los Angeles Times, CA, December 4, 2012

District files brief by judge’s deadline, but details remain unresolved in agreement with union on using student test scores to assess teachers.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Is Big Disruption Good For Urban School Districts?
Washington Post Blog, DC, December 4, 2012

My colleague Emma Brown has been looking closely at Chancellor Kaya Henderson’s plans to close one of every six traditional D.C. public schools.

FLORIDA

Three Finalists Are In The Running To Lead Education
Tallahassee Democrat, FL, December 5, 2012

The former head of two national school choice organizations, the outgoing education chief from Indiana and the president of a Kentucky university are the three candidates on the short list to be Florida’s next Commissioner of Education.

Charters Chart Big-Growth Course
Fort Myers Florida Weekly, FL, December 5, 2012

Charter schools — tuition-free schools funded by taxpayers, reviewed for quality by a nonprofit oversight board and often managed by a for-profit business or a public agency — have exploded with growth in Southwest Florida.

Wild Spending At Charter School Warrants Probe
Orlando Sentinel, FL, December 5, 2012

In June, NorthStar High closed after a sorry, years-long stretch of poor performance. During its pathetic run, the Orange County charter school rarely spent its taxpayer dollars on luxuries. Like computers. Or a school library. Or quality instructional resources.

Duval Board OKs 12 Charters, Suspension For Principal
Florida Times-Union, FL, December 4, 2012

Duval County will see 12 new charter schools in coming months.
The School Board approved the new schools Tuesday night during its monthly meeting. During the meeting, board members also denied two other charter school applications.

Forty Percent of School-Age Kids Enrolled In Ed Choice Programs
WFSU, FL, December 4, 2012

The number of children enrolled in Florida’s publicly funded school choice options has grown exponentially over the last decade. That’s according to state education officials giving updates to lawmakers in a House Education Sub-Committee.

GEORGIA

Charter School Contract Approved
Cherokee Ledger, GA, December 5, 2012

Cherokee Charter Academy’s funding arm unanimously approved on Nov. 28 a renewed management contract with Charter Schools USA , which was negotiated behind closed doors and voted on, without comment, in a public meeting. That contract was one of the documents presented to the state Department of Education as it heard the academy’s petition renewal request Nov. 29.

Charter Schools, Vouchers In BOE Legislative Goals
Douglas County Sentinel, GA, December 5, 2012

The Douglas County Board of Education (BOE) has introduced two legislative priorities or the 2013 session dealing with funding issues and the power of local school boards to manage schools in their system.

ILLINOIS

CPS Releases List of Underused Schools for 2012-13
Chicago Tribune, IL, December 5, 2012

Chicago Public Schools on Tuesday released a list of schools that are underenrolled according to this year’s attendance figures, providing additional data for a commission that is studying school closings but may not weigh in on which buildings should be shuttered.

INDIANA

Charter Schools a Great Education Option
Frost Illustrated, IN, December 5, 2012

Research suggests that neighborhood schools are valued highly by urban residents and represent an important part of neighborhood identity. Thurgood Marshall Leadership Academy is a neighborhood school right here in our community building a new sense of pride, culture and identity.

Teacher License Changes Under Review By Indiana Board
Indianapolis Star, IN, December 5, 2012

Republican state schools superintendent Tony Bennett will get the chance to sign off on changes to Indiana’s teacher certification and licensing process before leaving office.

LOUISIANA

School Voucher Decision Threatens Course Choice Initiative
Times-Picayune, LA, December 4, 2012

A recent ruling declaring Gov. Bobby Jindal’s school voucher program unconstitutional threatens another component of his administration’s education reform agenda: allowing students to take courses from non-traditional sources on the taxpayer’s dime.

Voucher Lawsuit Decisions Get Mixed Reactions
St. Tammany News, LA, December 5, 2012

“We strongly disagree with the ruling. We are optimistic this decision will be reversed on appeal.”— State Superintendent of Education John White.

New School Plan Advances
The Advocate, LA, December 5, 2012

A state panel Tuesday endorsed a new way to offer classes to public school students even though a district judge struck down the funding mechanism last week.

BESE Voting On Recommendation To End Charter Contracts With 4 New Orleans Schools
Times-Picayune, LA, December 4, 2012

It could be a rough holiday for students and teachers at four New Orleans elementary charter schools. The Louisiana Department of Education has recommended that Benjamin E. Mays Preparatory School, Pride College Preparatory Academy , Crocker Arts and Technology School and the Intercultural Charter School lose their charters at the end of the 2012-13 academic year.

MARYLAND

A New School Of Thought
The Diamondback, MD, December 4, 2012

There is a clear need for what the charter school offers — collectively, the Prince George’s County Public Schools Science and Tech high schools have just 500 spots for the 3,000 applicants they receive annually, and the charter school can help fill that niche. Most importantly, offering students the opportunity to gain college credit with a personalized and blended curriculum will help the city continue distinguish itself as a “smart place to live.”

MASSACHUSETTS

Boston Schools Win Gates Foundation Grant
Boston Globe, MA, December 5, 2012

Boston will receive a $3.25 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to foster collaboration among the city’s school system, charter schools, and parochial schools, the foundation plans to ¬announce Wednesday.

Raise The Charter-School Cap Again
Boston Globe, MA, December 5, 2012

IT WAS very good news for some families in Fall River and Lawrence, but Monday’s front-page Globe story also underscored an important reality about improving urban education. Although that reality will make teachers’ unions and their allies uncomfortable, it’s one policymakers will soon have to reckon with.

MICHIGAN

Island City Academy Showing Great Academic Success
Lansing State Journal, MI, December 5, 2012

Today, when you walk through the halls of Island City Academy with School Administrator Aaron Warren one thing is clear – a parent’s motivation can make things happen.

MINNESOTA

We Must All Fight To Close The Achievement Gap
Minnesota Daily, MN, December 5, 2012

The Dec. 3 article, “University aims to close K-12 achievement gap in Minnesota,” brought up a couple of things people must know.

Appeals Court Rejects Charter Lease Appeal
Star Tribune Blog, MN, December 4, 2012

The Minnesota Court of Appeals has quashed on a technicality an appeal by the Minneapolis school district in a dispute involving $960,000 in charter school rent, ruling that the district’s appeal of that action was too late.

MISSISSIPPI

Charters Could Affect Public Schools Pt. 2
WHLT, MS, December 4, 2012

Governor Phil Bryant and republicans are pushing for charter schools in Mississippi.
Charters are public schools that receive local, state and federal funding. However, those schools aren’t required to follow regulations like public schools. Superintendent of Hattiesburg Public Schools, James Baachus, explains.

NEW YORK

Plan To Push School For At-Risk Kids Out, To Move Well-Connected Charter In
New York Daily News, NY, December 4, 2012

The city is planning to create more space for the Moskowitz charter school by moving the Innovation Diploma Plus school to a Washington Heights building that lacks science labs and a gym.

Two Futures for NYC’S Schools
New York Post, NY, December 5, 2012

Where will the next mayor take the city’s public schools? The candidates have said as little as possible on the subject. But recent news in two other cities reveals the possibilities.

NORTH CAROLINA

Wake School Board Heeds Parents In Changes To Assignment Plan
News & Observer, NC, December 5, 2012

Amid a constant refrain of providing stability to families, Wake County school leaders backed off Tuesday on some proposed student-assignment changes and on moving the day of the week when students will have half days off for teacher training.

OHIO

Cleveland Schools CEO Eric Gordon Rolls Out Draft Plan Aimed At Lifting District’s Performance
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, December 4, 2012

Six failing schools in the Cleveland school district could be overhauled in the fall.

Education Reform Bills Moving This Way
Canton Repository, OH, December 4, 2012

Two bills making their way through the Ohio legislature will bring a number of changes to the way schools operate.

PENNSYLVANIA

Parents Groups, NAACP To File Ethics Complaint Over School District Consultant
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, December 5, 2012

Members of two parent groups and the city’s NAACP chapter plan to file a city ethics complaint Wednesday alleging that William Penn Foundation-funded work that a consulting firm did for the Philadelphia School District this year constituted lobbying.

Only the Bureaucrats
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, December 5, 2012

For the more than 34,000 Philadelphia children on waiting lists for charter schools, the School Reform Commission’s recent decision to restrict charter enrollment is one less thing to be thankful for this holiday season.

I-LEAD Seeks Charter Middle School In City
Reading Eagle, PA, December 5, 2012

After deeming their initial endeavor a success, operators of Berks County’s first charter school are eyeing an expansion.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Unfair Evaluation Format Can Give Good Teachers Bad Marks
Charleston Post Courier, SC, December 5, 2012

State Superintendent Mick Zals and his advisors at the South Carolina Department of Education want to give teachers letter grades of A, B, C, D or F based on their effectiveness, tied mostly to student performance on state and national test scores.

TENNESSEE

Nashville Schools Face Sweeping Changes
The Tennessean, TN, December 5, 2012

Four out of five lessons given in Metro Nashville classrooms aren’t good enough to keep students engaged.

Reform Can Make A Difference
The Tennessean, TN, December 5, 2012

Over the past several months in Nashville, the term “charter school” has been synonymous with discord and controversy. What has been lost in the chatter is the emergence of several great charter schools, where student gains have been occurring at a stunning rate. With data for 2011-2012 now available, those schools deserve accolades for their wonderful work.

Mississippi Leaders Get Close-Up Look At Helena KIPP School
Commercial Appeal, TN, December 4, 2012

Mississippi’s lieutenant governor, some legislators and the state education superintendent traveled just across the Mississippi River Tuesday to look at a successful charter school that they’d like to see replicated in their home state.

TEXAS

New Austin School Trustees Flex Muscle In Reconsidering Charter Contract, All-Boys School
Austin American Statesman, TX, December 4, 2012

Three months after the Austin district launched its first charter school partnership with IDEA Public Schools, school board members are now considering revamping the contract to keep IDEA from expanding into a second East Austin school.

Texas Education Commissioner Urges Charter Schools To Tout Work To Legislators
Dallas Morning News, TX, December 4, 2012

Charter school leaders should work to inform legislators about the education they provide and be better mentors for low-performing schools in their field, Texas Education Commissioner Michael Williams told charter advocates Tuesday.

TLCA Pushes For Funding
San Angelo Standard-Times, TX, December 4, 2012

Texas Leadership Charter Academy directors are among the hundreds of charter school advocates in Austin this week planning legislative strategies and taking part in education workshops.

Teacher Pay Threatens Student Achievement, Expert Testifies
Houston Chronicle, TX, December 4, 2012

Texas teacher salaries are not competitive, and teaching quality has declined, which threatens student achievement, a Harvard-trained economist testified Tuesday in an ongoing school funding lawsuit trial.

UTAH

Rating Schools
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, December 5, 2012

A new school assessment system designed to replace the federal No Child Left Behind eliminates some of the onerous weaknesses of the Bush-era NCLB. But Utah ’s education officials must be careful that it does not also throw out the federal program’s strength — forcing schools to focus on underachieving students.

WASHINGTON

Constitutional Charters?
Seattle Weekly, WA, December 5, 2012

If charter schools have a roadblock to starting up locally, it’s State Superintendent of Public Instruction Randy Dorn. After voters narrowly approved a charter-school initiative, Dorn announced that he was likely to sue over a provision in the measure that would establish a commission to oversee the new schools. His beef: The initiative puts the commission in the governor’s office rather than his.

ONLINE LEARNING

Challenge Heard To Oklahoma Virtual Charter School Law
The Oklahoman, OK, December 5, 2012

State Supreme Court referee hears arguments that the measure should be struck down because it violates a constitutional prohibition on placing multiple subjects into a single bill. An attorney for the state says the measure is legal because both fall under the same subject of education.

Future Of State’s Largest School May Be In Question
9NEWS, CO, December 4, 2012

For years, the Colorado Virtual Academy has been a part of the Adams 12 Five Star School District. The K-12 online school has about 4,400 students around the state. But, now Adams 12 leaders are wondering if the district should continue to authorize COVA’s charter.

Charter schools a great education option

by Jonathan Ray
Frost Illustrated
December 5, 2012

Research suggests that neighborhood schools are valued highly by urban residents and represent an important part of neighborhood identity. Thurgood Marshall Leadership Academy is a neighborhood school right here in our community building a new sense of pride, culture and identity.

Thurgood Marshall Leadership Academy, a charter school located at 2310 Weisser Park Ave., is an independent public school that is able to provide more innovation and flexibility than conventional public schools can. The charter is held by the Fort Wayne Urban League and we are sponsored by the Indiana Charter Board.

Our educational role is to simply offer parents an educational option. It is important to remember that charter schools educate a higher concentration of atrisk and disadvantaged students; which makes comparing charters to traditional public schools look bad in a simple comparison. However, according to the Center for Education Reform (2012 National Center for Policy Analysis):

  • “Charter schools are smaller than conventional public schools and serve a disproportionate and increasing number of poor and minority students.
  • However, test scores at charter schools are “rising sharply” and out-gaining conventional schools.
  • Charter school students are more likely to be proficient in reading and math than students in neighboring conventional schools, achieving the greatest gains among African American, Hispanic and low-income students.
  • Charter schools that have been open for years boast even higher achievement rates. A Harvard University study found charter schools that have operated for more than five years outpace conventional schools by as much as 15 percent.
  • Thurgood Marshall Leadership Academy and the Fort Wayne Urban League want to build neighborhoods and a strong community today’s urban generation can identify with. We have good teachers and a caring and dedicated administrative team. A charter school simply represents another educational option for parents to consider. One size does not fit all in life or in getting a good quality education.

    Jonathan C. Ray is executive director of the Fort Wayne Urban League.

    Mitch Daniels: Collaboration Isn’t Key to Real Reform

    “Getting along with unions to get reform done is an idea that’s been weaved into many conversations during this conference. Do you agree collaboration is key?”

    Mitch Daniels: “No.”

    That was Mitch Daniels’ answer to CER President Jeanne Allen’s question at this year’s Excellence in Action summit in Washington, D.C. Mitch Daniels is known for his tough stance on reform and ability to get meaningful reforms passed in Indiana, and recently ousted State Superintendent Tony Bennett shares this reputation as well.

    After a simple “No” answer, Daniels went on to explain some of the improper tactics used to defeat Tony Bennett in the 2012 election, and his remarks are still making waves in the press:

    “If you’re a fan of anything-goes politics, it was a creative use of illegal — but still creative use — of public resources.”

    “We got emails sent out on school time by people who were supposed to be teaching someone at the time, all about Tony Bennett. We have parents who went to back to school night to find out how little Jebbie is doing and instead they got a diatribe about the upcoming election.”

    Daily Headlines for December 4, 2012

    NEWSWIRE IS OUT TODAY! 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

    Union Calls For Teacher Certification Exam
    Associated Press, December 3, 2012

    Schoolteachers should have to pass a stringent exam – much like the bar exam for lawyers – before being allowed to enter the profession, one of the nation’s largest teachers unions said Monday.

    Teachers Union Idea Makes The Grade
    Venture County Star , CA, December 3, 2012

    Finally, there is a union that seems to be paying attention to more than just the next pay and benefits contract and personal well being of its members.

    A Valid Way To Use ‘Value Added’ In Teacher Evaluation
    Washington Post Bog, DC, December 4, 2012

    Value-added measures have played a valuable role in sparking this important debate, but they need not do all the heavy lifting for our reformed teacher evaluation systems. We need more than a number, but a process for identifying low-performing teachers and helping them get better.

    FROM THE STATES

    CALIFORNIA

    Charter School Chosen To Remake Failing Adelanto School Has History Of Fast Turnarounds
    Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, CA, December 3, 2012

    Once its charter application is approved, the charter school tapped to take over Adelanto’s failing Desert Trails Elementary School will have only months to hire a staff and set up a new school before the start of the 2013-14 school year.

    For Dropouts, A Way To Drop Back In
    Los Angeles Times, CA, December 3, 2012

    An increasing number of young people neither attend school nor work, a study finds. A new partnership between the city of Los Angeles and L.A. Unified aims to halt that ‘unacceptable’ trend.

    Planned Novato ‘Core Curriculum’ Charter School Raises Questions
    Marin Independent Journal, CA, December 3, 2012

    THE PROPOSAL to open another charter school in Novato has stirred controversy.

    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

    District Probes Residency of 80 Public School Students
    Washington Post, DC, December 4, 2012

    The District is investigating the residency of 80 students who attended school at D.C. taxpayers’ expense in 2011-12 but have not been able to prove that they live in Washington , according to city officials.

    GU Teams With Charter School Group
    The Hoya, DC, December 4, 2012

    Georgetown formally partnered Nov. 26 with the Knowledge Is Power Program, a national charter school system aimed at boosting college attendance among students from low-income, minority backgrounds.

    FLORIDA

    A ‘Value-Added’ Travesty For An Award-Winning Teacher
    Washington Post Blog, DC, December 3, 2012

    Here’s the crazy story of Kim Cook, a teacher at Irby Elementary, a K-2 school which feeds into Alachua Elementary, for grades 3-5, just down the road in Alachua, Fla. She was recently chosen by the teachers at her school as their Teacher of the Year.
    Evaluations of Teachers Need Reset
    News Press, FL, December 4, 2012

    There is time for the state to return to the blackboard and develop a merit pay program for teachers that is easier for everyone to understand and places more of an emphasis on the proven value of an educator rather than on predictions.

    Salary Increases For Pines Charter Teachers Could Throw System Into Financial Urgency
    Sun Sentinel, FL, December 3, 2012

    A salary increase for 329 teachers could throw the A-rated Pembroke Pines Charter School System into financial urgency.

    Closed Orange County Charter School Faces More Financial Accusations
    WFTV, FL, December 3, 2012

    More troubling questions surround a charter school that’s already under fire for a huge payout to the principal.

    GEORGIA

    Fulton Science Academy High School Could Lose Charter, Close in June
    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, December 3, 2012

    Fulton Science Academy High School in Alpharetta could lose its public school charter and be forced to close at the end of the school year, in part, for illegally making students pay for mandatory classes.

    ILLINOIS

    Build On Successes of Charter Schools
    Chicago Sun Times, IL, December 3, 2012

    It is easy to dismiss the Chicago Teachers Union’s latest assault against charter schools in Chicago.

    School Closing Meeting Sparsely Attended
    Chicago Tribune, IL, December 3, 2012

    About 100 people came to a cavernous South Side church Monday for a meeting of a Chicago Public Schools commission charged with gathering community input on school closings.

    INDIANA

    Indiana School Chief Tony Bennett Applies For Florida Post
    Courier-Journal, IN, December 3, 2012

    Less than a month after losing his re-election bid to Washington Township teacher Glenda Ritz, Indiana State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Bennett is seeking the same job in Florida .

    LOUISIANA

    Judge Deals a Setback to Louisiana’s Voucher Program
    New York Times, NY, December 4, 2012

    Last January, Gov. Bobby Jindal took the oath of office for his second term, declaring in his inauguration speech that anyone who stood in the way of his education reform efforts “must stand down.” On Friday, a judge in Baton Rouge said, in effect: not so fast.

    MARYLAND

    Baltimore’s Bold — And Necessary — School Plan
    Baltimore Sun, MD, December 3, 2012

    Alonso’s massive school repair, renovation and construction plan is exactly what the city needs to improve educational opportunities for students and attract new families to Baltimore

    MASSACHUSETTS

    Don’t Blame Critics For Charter’s Plight
    Gloucester Daily Times, MA, December 3, 2012

    Speaking about the Gloucester Community Arts Charter School last week, Secretary of Education Paul Reville stated, “We’ll never know, in the absence of that kind of implacable opposition to the school, if they would have succeeded.”

    MICHIGAN

    Mich. Educators Form Coalition To Oppose School-Reform Bill Giving EAA Power
    Detroit News, MI, December 4, 2012

    A coalition of Michigan public school officials is mounting stiff resistance to legislation that would strengthen the Educational Achievement Authority’s power to take over the state’s lowest achieving schools.

    Charter Schools Are Not A Solution
    Detroit News, MI, December 4, 2012

    Most people would agree that every child should have the opportunity at a high quality education. Unfortunately Republicans have become obsessed with making changes that don’t actually improve educational outcomes.

    MISSISSIPPI

    Charters Could Affect Public Schools
    WHLT22, MS, December 3, 2012

    Governor Phil Bryant is pushing for charters schools throughout the state. So what does that mean for your child’s school here in the Pine Belt?

    NEW JERSEY

    Mount Olive ‘Choice’ Costs District $2 Million In Added Aid
    New Jersey Hills, NJ, December 3, 2012

    The school district was approved as a “state choice district” in August meaning that for the 2013-14 school year it could enroll students from other districts and gain as much as $2 million in additional state aid to educate the new students.

    NEW MEXICO

    N.M.’s Small Districts Show How It’s Done
    Albuquerque Journal, NM, December 4, 2012

    Like “The Little Engine That Could,” a coalition of small school districts pulled together to make it into the last leg of the federal Race to the Top.

    NEW YORK

    NYC Kids Greet PM
    New York Post, NY, December 4, 2012

    When the prime minister of South Korea wanted to see a great city public school in action, he chose a Harlem charter.

    Readers Respond on Teacher Evaluations
    Newsday, NY, December 3, 2012

    How can New York State United Teachers president Richard Iannuzzi say that we are rushing into teacher evaluations and it will “cost” the taxpayers and students [“Teachers union: State rushed evaluations,” Letters, Nov. 26]?

    OKLAHOMA

    Douglass High School Mess Reflects A Systemwide Failure
    The Oklahoman, OK, December 4, 2012

    ON the first day Douglass High School students walked the halls of their new building, the Oklahoma City School Board chairman at the time stood before students with a message of hope.

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Two Groups Present Charter School Plans In North Penn School District
    The Reporter, PA, December 4, 2012

    Two groups that want to launch charter schools within the North Penn School District presented their plans to the school board, administration and the community Monday night.

    State Nominates Receiver for Chester-Upland School District
    Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, December 4, 2012

    Pennsylvania’s education secretary asked Delaware County Court on Monday to name the Chester Upland School District’s state-appointed chief recovery officer as receiver of the struggling district.

    RHODE ISLAND

    Providence Elementary School Files For Charter
    Brown Daily Herald, RI, December 3, 2012

    Frank D. Spaziano Elementary School recently became the only school in the Providence Public School District to vote in favor of becoming a district charter school.

    TENNESSEE

    Expert Training, Longer Day May Boost Nashville’s Lowest-Performing Schools
    The Tennessean, TN, December 4, 2012

    National education experts will descend on five of Nashville’s lowest-performing public schools in the coming months, seeking ways to improve their performance.

    School Voucher Proposal Must Be Carefully Crafted
    Knoxville News-Sentinel, TN, December 4, 2012

    Gov. Bill Haslam’s Task Force on Opportunity Scholarships — otherwise known as school vouchers — has given him a range of options for inclusion in a bill should he move forward.

    Pros And Cons Of School Vouchers
    Commercial Appeal, TN, December 4, 2012

    When it comes to giving children from low-income families a chance to attend a quality private school, tuition vouchers could be a great idea.

    TEXAS

    Austin School Board May Revamp Contract With IDEA, Keep Charter From Expanding Into Eastside Memorial
    Austin American-Statesman, TX, December 4, 2012

    Shortly after midnight Tuesday, Austin district trustees directed Superintendent Meria Carstarphen to bring up for review at its Dec. 17 board meeting the contract with charter operator IDEA Public Schools.

    WASHINGTON

    7 Apply To Be Seattle District’s First Creative Approach Schools
    Seattle Times, WA, December 3, 2012

    Throughout the campaign over this year’s charter-school initiative, a number of Seattle’s school leaders argued that Seattle didn’t need charters to build and nurture innovative teaching. By giving a number of schools new flexibility next fall, they hope to prove it.

    WISCONSIN

    Wisconsin: GOP Lawmaker Pridemore Launches Run For State School Superintendent
    Pioneer Press, WI, December 3, 2012

    Republican state Rep. Don Pridemore launched his campaign to become Wisconsin ‘s top education leader on Monday, saying he would bring a conservative approach to the job while refusing to talk specifically about what policies he would push.

    ONLINE LEARNING

    Discover Learning
    Albuquerque Journal, NM, December 4, 2012

    Parents got their first chance recently to take a look at Discovery Education, a classroom service that provides web-based resources like videos, interactive lessons, games and other digital learning tools.

    Newswire: December 4, 2012

    Vol. 14, No. 33

    LINCOLN v LOUISIANA. When Lincoln led the charge to enact the 13h amendment and abolish slavery, our world was forever changed. While it would be decades before most African-Americans would be treated equally, civil rights was set in motion. Does anyone want to fly Louisiana Judge Timothy Kelley to a private showing of Lincoln, the movie? He’s the guy who just Friday ruled against the progressive scholarship program that helps poor and mainly African-American kids to be treated like a whole person and actually get an education befitting a whole person. Kelley is hardly unbiased as judges go. As the Wall Street Journal opined, “Louisiana Judge Timothy Kelley sure is a fast writer. Only hours after the end of a two-day trial, the Balzac of the judiciary rolled out a 39-page opinion striking down the state’s pioneering voucher program as unconstitutional. Could it be that he knew how he was going to rule before the trial?” While LA governor Bobby Jindal, aided by the Institute for Justice, will appeal the decision, and while the US Supreme Court has already upheld an identical case like this for Ohio once setting precedents for state programs all over the country, isn’t it time that we consider a more Lincolnesque move to forever sanction education equity for kids? Just saying.

    MANDATE FOR CHANGE. Four years ago, leading thinkers and doers joined us to issue a Mandate for the then-new government of Barack Obama, giving evidence-based recommendations for how to sanction not just school choice nationally, but how to improve all education structures, from teachers, to standards to charter schools. Kevin Chavous said charters were closing the learning gap for millions of children. Former news editor Richard Whitmire implored us to consider teacher quality, something that is successfully in the education psyche today. Everything old is new again in Washington so dust off this important guide and get moving on solidifying a truly big mandate for change today.

    BOSTON PATRIOTS? Not more than 20 miles from the birthplace of revolution are schools that would have made the Founders turn and beg forgiveness from the King. Sound dramatic? Sorry, but it’s one thing when schools are failing and no one seems to be trying to help those kids do better. It’s another thing when a highly successful school provider wants to invest time and money to set up a full K-12 school to provide quality options for kids, and is met with hostility. Widely acclaimed by the local media, parents and teachers, SABIS Education has designed a school with local community leaders to arrest the decline of education in diverse, working class Brockton, which is in the bottom 10% of districts statewide based on the state MCAS exams, and a level 3 District, which means it is among the lowest 20% relative to other schools in their grade span statewide. “SABIS students in Holyoke and Springfield consistently outperform peers from similar socioeconomic backgrounds,” confirms the Boston Globe. But the former superintendent squashed earlier attempts for new SABIS schools, and now The International Charter School of Brockton is bracing for a fight by opponents who are running the group through a serious of typical charter “traps”; spreading misinformation and fear over everything from money to traffic and will culminate in a public airing on December 18th. None of the hearings before or now are about kids’ futures, mind you. None.

    DANIELS v PODESTA. No, it’s not a new legal case, but it might well represent the distinguishing argument between those who claim to be reformers, and those who truly are. Jeb Bush’s ability to attract super stars to his Foundation for Education Excellence’s conference allowed participants to see a real contrast in action. Former Clinton guru and Democratic strategist John Podesta delivered an engaging talk about education reform, but pointed out that reformers lost many battles, a fact he believes will only be solved when reformers learn to get along with teachers unions. Podesta argues the union leaders at the national level are becoming quite progressive. Of course, we’ve all heard the talk, but we haven’t seen the walk. Nor will we likely ever see a walk that puts parents first and takes a hard line against failure by a membership organization which has to, by nature, put employment issues above education ones. Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels agrees. When asked by this editor if he agreed with Podesta that reformers should moderate their message and their work to win battles, he said, simply “No.” He went on to tell the story of outright lies that the unions perpetrated to oust Education Super Tony Bennett, using tax funds to send kids home with distortions and lies like carrier pigeons. [Our words, not his.] This isn’t new to Indiana, so let’s all take a breath and remember that reform isn’t about getting along. It’s about getting educated.

    TURN ALL SCHOOLS INTO CHARTERS? That’s what the Washington Examiner’s Mark Lerner is asking, in light of yet more data that shows charters pummeling district school grad rates. “… Mayor Gray’s constant assertion that there is ‘One City, One Future,’ [is] quite different when it comes to public high school graduation rates. You see in 2011 the traditional schools recorded the percentage of students earning a diploma in four years at 59 percent, the smallest number across the entire United States. This compares to a rate of 77 for public charter schools, even though, as the editors explain, ‘more than half of all charter students live in Wards 7 and 8, which have the highest poverty rates in the city.’ At Friendship Collegiate Academy, in Ward 7, every senior was accepted to college and their overall graduation rate was an astonishing 90 percent.”

    In Other News…

    Information is power, and if you’re an educator or leader wanting to do more to engage lagging students, you might consider spending an hour on a webinar with the Appalachia Regional Lab who says they have a few answers. “Increasing Student Engagement in Low Performing Schools” will be held a week from today, December 11, from 1:00-2:00 EST. Sign up here.

    Final Thoughts…

    …The more we get to know the Common Core, the more it seems scholars and educators are finding predictable problems. Dec 2’s Washington Post exposes a rift between the standards setters who think more non-fiction is the key to better literacy and those who believe we can’t possibly scale back literature anymore than we already have. Incidentally, deToqueville was practically my boyfriend in College, but it’s great works of art and literature that drive truly thoughtful students to be able to even handle Democracy in America later on. And far from a commitment to the intellectuals who shaped our nation, requiring more “non-fiction” may result in newspaper reading over Plato.

    …And what about more time in class and school? That issue has been around since the 80s at least and somewhere along the lines reformers began to recognize that having more time is like having more food — unless it’s part of a menu of things you do, it doesn’t necessarily make you any more healthy or in this case, any more educated. Teachers with more time need more money, but do teachers who can do more with less get more money? When will time and achievement start going hand in hand?

    TCSA Press Release: Inaugural Nashville Charter School Enrollment Fair

    Contact:
    Lauren Hayes
    Tennessee Charter Schools Association
    615-927-6780
    lauren@tncharterschools.org

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
    November 28, 2012

    CITY-WIDE CHARTER SCHOOL FAIR TO BE HELD ON DECEMBER 8TH
    All fall 2013 Nashville charter schools will be present to help MNPS families apply for enrollment

    Nashville, TN- The TCSA Voice, a program of the Tennessee Charter Schools Association, will host the first Nashville Charter School Information and Enrollment Fair on December 8th at the TSU Main Campus. Representatives from all charter schools operating in fall 2013, ranging from kindergarten through 12th will be available to present information and help families immediately apply for enrollment. The program, including remarks by Mayor Karl Dean at 11:15 a.m., will include student performances and charter school information sessions.

    According to state data, Nashville area charter schools did an incredible job of increasing student performance this year. In both math and reading, the schools with the highest academic growth in Metro Nashville were public charter schools: STEM Prep in math and Nashville Prep in reading. Five charter middle schools were found among the top fifteen in terms of growth in math. In reading growth, five of the top seven middle schools were charter schools.

    With five new schools opening, a total of eighteen charter schools will serve the Metro Nashville community in fall 2013. Charter schools are public, tuition-free schools of choice with open to all students. In exchange for the autonomy they receive, charter schools are held to higher accountability standards than traditional public schools. With this autonomy, many charter schools offer longer school days, personalized learning programs, or a specialized curriculum, such as college prep, classical, or STEM-focused. If more students apply than the number of seats available, a public lottery is held on January 19th to determine enrollment.

    “We look forward to hosting this inaugural event for Metro Nashville families,” said TCSA Executive Director Matt Throckmorton, “where our primary goal is to help parents explore the charter school options and find a great fit for their child.”

    What: Nashville Charter School Information and Enrollment Fair

    When: Saturday, December 8th, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.

    Where: TSU Main Campus, 3500 John A Merritt Blvd, Floyd Payne Campus Center, Kean Hall

    Free parking will be provided for all attendees. A detailed agenda of day will be distributed to media closer to the event. For more information, contact Lauren Hayes or visit www.tncharterschools.org/enroll.

    The Tennessee Charter Schools Association (TCSA), founded in 1998, serves quality public charter schools by educating communities, empowering supporters, and promoting legislation to create an educational landscape of excellent options for all students.

     

    Daily Headlines for December 3, 2012

    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.

    5 States To Increase Class Time In Some Schools
    Associated Press, December 3, 2012

    Open your notebooks and sharpen your pencils. School for thousands of public school students is about to get quite a bit longer.

    Schools Ring Closing Bell
    Wall Street Journal, December 3, 2012

    At Davis Elementary in this city’s mostly poor southeast section, 178 students are spread out in a 69-year-old building meant to hold 450.

    Union Proposes ‘Bar Exam’ For Teachers
    Washington Post, DC, December 1, 2012

    A major teachers union wants to create a rigorous professional exam for K-12 teachers that would serve the same function as the bar exam for lawyers and board certification for doctors.

    American Education — Wrong Questions, Wrong Answers
    New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, December 2, 2012

    In the past decade, we have seen a growing litany of assertions proclaiming the belief that the system of American public education injures and/or ill-equips massive numbers of children. It is this belief that has spawned a Race to the Top to standardized curricula for our students and evaluation systems for our educators.

    FROM THE STATES

    ARIZONA

    Charter Purchasing Practices Under Scrutiny
    Arizona Republic, AZ, December 2, 2012

    The Arizona State Board for Charter Schools is considering possible changes to school procurement policies after an Arizona Republic investigation detailed how school-board members and administrators are profiting by doing business with their own schools.

    Crane Charter School To Offer New Approach
    Yuma Sun, AZ, December 2, 2012

    The Crane School District is embarking on a new approach to learning with the school board’s approval last week of a new charter school that will put emphasis on science, technology and mathematics.

    TUSD Has 13k More Seats Than Students
    Arizona Daily Star, AZ, December 2, 2012

    The Tucson Unified School District has about 13,000 empty seats – that’s more than the entire enrollment of most every other local district.

    ARKANSAS

    Debate Over Charter Schools To Continue In Ark. Legislature
    KUAR, AR, December 1, 2012

    With Republican majorities in the Arkansas House and Senate, some expect a surge of legislation during the coming session further expanding public charter schools in the state.

    CALIFORNIA

    Oakland County Education Leaders Lobby Against Legislation They Fear Would Create Statewide System Of Privately Run Charters
    Oakland Press, CA, December 2, 2012

    Oakland County education leaders have initiated a movement to fight the passage of proposed state legislation that they say would change how school districts operate.

    Student Scores May Be Used In LAUSD Teacher Ratings
    Los Angeles Times, CA, November 30, 2012

    Union leaders and LAUSD officials agree to make testing data part of evaluations. But some hurdles remain.

    COLORADO

    New Adams 50 STEM School Will Let Students See Science Everywhere
    Denver Post, CO, December 3, 2012

    When he was growing up, Colorado native Anthony Matthews had to put in effort — often outside of school — to pursue his interest in science and engineering.

    DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

    D.C. Paid $3 Million To Send Nonresidents To Private Schools
    Washington Examiner, DC, December 2, 2012

    The District spent about $3 million to send 47 special education students who were not D.C. residents to private schools last year, school officials told The Washington Examiner.

    FLORIDA

    Charter Schools Complicate Effort To Reduce Crowding
    Palm Beach Post, FL, December 1, 2012

    In simpler days, Palm Beach County, developers and the school district thought they had the solution to school crowding: Build schools where students are.

    Fairness Of Teacher Evaluation System Debated
    Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL, December 2, 2012

    Palmetto Elementary School teacher Sarah Winn was rated a highly effective teacher for 2011-12.

    Florida’s Education Reform Model Can Unite Us
    USA Today, December 1, 2012

    In the wake of one of our most divisive elections, Americans are looking to our leaders to bring the country back together. No issue has greater potential to unite the country than improving the way we educate our children.

    IDAHO

    Charter School Boosts Scores
    Bonner County Daily Bee, ID, December 2, 2012

    The Forrest Bird Charter School is moving into the holidays after charting some improved standardized test scores in 2012.

    Xavier to Stay Open this Year, Future Uncertain
    Magic Valley Times News, ID, December 2, 2012

    Xavier Charter School will remain open this school year, but the school board is working to find a longer-term solution to financial issues.

    LOUISIANA

    Lost in Louisiana
    Wall Street Journal, December 2, 2012

    Louisiana Judge Timothy Kelley sure is a fast writer. Only hours after the end of a two-day trial, the Balzac of the judiciary rolled out a 39-page opinion striking down the state’s pioneering voucher program as unconstitutional. Could it be that he knew how he was going to rule before the trial?

    Judge Blocks Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Signature School Voucher Program
    Christian Science Monitor, LA, December 1, 2012

    The nation’s boldest school voucher program made nearly half of Louisiana ‘s students eligible for taxpayer-funded vouchers to attend private schools. A state judge ruled the plan unconstitutional, setting up a funding fight in an age of austerity.

    White: LFT, LAE in Way of Student Achievement
    The Advocate, LA, December 3, 2012

    Louisiana’s two teacher unions are hindering efforts to improve student achievement in public schools, state Superintendent of Education John White said.

    Two St. Landry Schools May Be Affected By Ruling
    Opelousas Daily World, LA, December 2, 2012

    A ruling by a Louisiana State Judge that Gov. Bobby Jindal’s private school voucher program is unconstitutional may affect two St. Landry Parish schools.

    MASSACHUSETTS

    Worcester to Foot Bill for Millions in State Aid Cuts
    Go Local Worcester, MA, December 3, 2012

    state revenues in the gutter so far this year, Worcester is bracing for reductions to charter school funding and a $2.5 million cut in state aid, a gap the City will have to fill from its own coffers.

    Record Crowd At Mystic Valley Admissions Lottery
    Malden Observer, MA, December 2, 2012

    The Mystic Valley Regional Charter School held its annual Admissions Lottery on Nov. 14.

    MICHIGAN

    Keith Johnson Wins Detroit Teachers Union Election
    Detroit News, MI, December 2, 2012

    Keith Johnson was re-elected Saturday as president of the DFT, his third two-year term, the union announced.

    MINNESOTA

    St. Paul District: ‘High-Need’ Areas Among Changes Planned To School Choice
    Pioneer Press, MN, December 2, 2012

    St. Paul hopes to steer more students from neighborhoods facing the steepest challenges to its most popular elementary schools.

    Twin Cities: Bringing Method To Our Achievement-Gap Madness
    Pioneer Press, MN, December 1, 2012

    When it comes to efforts to narrow the achievement gap, the Twin Cities are “program-rich, but system-poor.”

    MISSISSIPPI

    Discourse About Charter Schools Should Be Based On The Truth
    Clarion Ledger, MS, December 3, 2012

    Individuals who appreciate facts and thoughtful discourse have always welcomed Charlie Mitchell’s columns.

    Visits Precede Charter School Push
    Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, MS, December 2, 2012

    Mississippi legislators have toured charter schools in Florida, New Orleans and Arkansas as they prepare to tackle the controversial issue again during the upcoming 2013 session.

    Response to Bryant’s Reform Plans Positive
    Clarion Ledger, MS, December 1, 2012

    If she could, Mary Bishop of Raymond would send her three children to Clinton High School. She’s willing to provide the transportation and already travels about that far to send her children to a private school.

    NEVADA

    New Ratings Leave No School Behind, Push Many To Top
    Las Vegas Review, NV, December 2, 2012

    On paper, Booker Elementary School is exceptional, exceeding standards with four out of five stars, according to the district’s assessment.

    NEW HAMPSHIRE

    Nashua Teacher’s Union Gives Blessing to Race to the Top Grant
    Nashua Telegraph, NH, December 2, 2012

    When the state tried to get millions in federal funding through the Race to the Top education grant two years ago, the application went nowhere.

    NEW JERSEY

    N.J. Charter School Study Shows Success, But Need For Close Monitoring
    Star-Ledger, NJ, December 2, 2012

    The latest study on charter schools shows promising results, especially in Newark.

    Fine Print: Newark’s Race to the Top Application
    New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, December 3, 2012

    Ambitious and expensive, the proposal from the state’s largest district wants almost $30 million to put “personalized learning” in the schools.

    NEW YORK

    State Deadline For Teacher Evaluations Looms
    Buffalo News, NY, December 3, 2012

    More than 90 percent of the school districts in New York State had submitted teacher evaluation plans to Albany as of Friday – the soft deadline that state Education Department officials had set if schools did not want to jeopardize any of their state aid.

    City’s Own ‘Fi-School’ Cliff
    New York Post, NY, December 3, 2012

    It’s crunch time. The city and its teachers union have just six weeks to reach a deal on a new teacher-evaluation system — or else forgo nearly $300 million in public-school funds.

    OHIO

    Group Calls For Charter Crackdown
    Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, December 2, 2012

    Charter schools are public schools operated by independent organizations. About 105,000 students statewide, or 6.5 percent of public school kids in the state, attend a charter school. There are 34 in Greater Cincinnati.

    OKLAHOMA

    With The Most Failing Schools, Tulsa Leaders Suspect Methods
    The Oklahoman, OK, December 2, 2012

    Of the 10 schools that received F’s in the entire state one was in Oklahoma City, one in Atoka and the other eight were in Tulsa .

    PENNSYLVANIA

    Feds’ Denial Of Charter AYP Rule Change Will Allow Closer Comparisons
    Philadelphia Daily News, PA, December 3, 2012

    Bache-Martin is a K-8 District-run public school in the Fairmount section of Philadelphia with about 400 students. People for People is a K-8 charter school with just over 500 students not too far away in lower North Philadelphia.

    No Child Left Behind Bears Unrealistic Expectations
    Patriot News, PA, December 3, 2012

    The No Child Left Behind Act is ideal for everyone except the thousands of children being left behind. The contentious law offers incentives that it fails to deliver and does not fund schools with the necessary means to accomplish the goals it has established. The government’s promised funding has fallen short by billions, and many schools are entering a state of financial decay because of the deficit.

    Charter School Funding Reform Must Address Pension
    Delaware Count Daily Times, PA, December 2, 2012

    There are several reasons why laws regulating charter schools should be examined and addressed by Pennsylvania lawmakers after they failed to accomplish that task this legislative session.

    TENNESSEE

    Nashville Charter School Fair Will Let Parents Compare Options
    The Tennessean, TN, December 3, 2012

    First, Nashville families got a look at all their choices in Metro schools. Now, they’ll get a look at something different: charter schools that promise to do more, thanks to freedom to deliver the curriculum they choose, the way they choose.

    McIntyre To Urge School Board To Vote Against Charter Application
    Knoxville News Sentinel, TN, December 3, 2012

    Knox County Schools Superintendent Jim McIntyre has recommended the school board reject the latest application that proposes converting the facilities at Vine Middle Performing Arts and Sciences Magnet School into a charter school.

    More Questions Than Answers With School Vouchers
    The Tennessean, TN, December 3, 2012

    A task force of nine people met numerous times over the course of a year, did massive research, wrote a 94-page report, and still couldn’t reach a consensus on how a school voucher system would work in Tennessee.

    Good Judgment Can Be Tough
    Commercial Appeal, TN, December 2, 2012

    The scenario: A charter school for poor kids is up for review. A judgment has to be made in the next few days on whether the school is failing or succeeding.

    Gov. Bill Haslam Expects Voucher Bill Legislation
    Commercial Appeal, TN, December 3, 2012

    Tennessee lawmakers will almost certainly approve some kind of voucher bill in the upcoming legislative season. And while Gov. Bill Haslam doesn’t know how broad it will be, he is not interested in a trial run.

    WASHINGTON

    We Must Continue to Race to the Top
    Seattle Times, WA, December 2, 2012

    Let’s hear it for the seven King County school districts in the running for up to $40 million in federal Race to the Top grant. Public-school students are the winners in this competition.

    As We Keep Students From Dropping Out …
    Seattle Times, WA, December 2, 2012

    Washington must tackle its pernicious dropout rate. Getting young people into college or careers means first keeping them in high school.

    WEST VIRGINIA

    Don’t Postpone School Reform
    The Intelligencer, WV, December 1, 2012

    There seems to be general agreement major reforms are needed in West Virginia ‘s public schools. But getting everyone “on the same page” about what to do is another story.

    WISCONSIN

    State’s Largest Teachers’ Unions Agree To Enter Merger Talks
    Wisconsin State Journal, WI, December 2, 2012

    The state’s two largest teachers unions will formally discuss a merger after the Wisconsin Education Association Council voted to do so at a special assembly in Madison over the weekend.

    Education Reform Talks On Tap
    Wisconsin State Journal, WI, December 3, 2012

    It’s a big week ahead, and the start of a big month, for potentially reshaping the future of our public schools.

    Beware Charter School Initiatives That Are A Trojan Horse For Dismantling Public Education
    Journal Gazette, WI, December 1, 2012

    Many urban educators have long warned that charter schools, along with vouchers, are being used to dismantle public education.

    Scores Show Voucher Schools Need Accountability
    Journal Gazette, WI, December 2, 2012

    Ceria M. Travis Academy is a private school that had 486 kindergarten through 12th-grade students as of September in two buildings, one on the west side, one on the north side. Its partner school, Travis Technology High School on the far northwest side, had 214 students.

    ONLINE LEARNING

    17 NY Districts Get Virtual Learning Grants
    Wall Street Journal, December 1, 2012

    New York high school students in several poor districts will have better access to advanced placement courses under a program featuring virtual classrooms.

    Digital Age Is Testing North Jersey Teachers
    The Record, NJ, December 2, 2012

    Spend a while at Pascack Hills High School in Montvale, one of the first in New Jersey to hand every student a laptop, and you’ll likely hear a teacher tell students to “forty-five it.”

    E-Schools: Innovative Niche Or Educational Bust?
    Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, December 1, 2012

    The Hingsbergen family of Fairfield Township is an e-school family. Four of the five Hingsbergen children went to high school at Ohio Connections Academy, a statewide online charter school.