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WSJ: The Evil Empire Strikes Back

“The Evil Empire Strikes Back”
Review & Outlook
Wall Street Journal
November 18, 2012

Education reformers had good news at the ballot box this month as voters in Washington and Georgia approved measures to create new charter schools. But as the reform movement gathers momentum, teachers unions are giving no quarter in their massive resistance against states trying to shake up failing public education.

In Georgia, 59% of voters approved a constitutional amendment that creates a new statewide commission to approve charter schools turned down by union-allied school boards. Instead of absorbing the message, charter opponents are planning to sue. The Georgia Legislative Black Caucus said last week it will join a lawsuit against Governor Nathan Deal to block the change. According to Caucus Chairman Emanuel Jones, because the ballot measure’s text didn’t discuss the details of how the schools were selected, “people didn’t know what they were voting for.”

This is the legal equivalent of sending back a hamburger because you didn’t know it came with meat. Georgia voters rallied around the charters because they want something better for their children than the dismal status quo. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that as of April only 67.4% of the state’s freshmen graduated from high school in four years. Last year a state investigation of Georgia schools found that dozens of public educators were falsifying test results to disguise student results.

A different battle is unfolding in Chicago, where the city’s teachers union is getting ready for its second showdown with Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel. In September, teachers went on strike and won a pay raise and limits on test scores in teacher evaluations. Now the union is fighting the city’s plan to close underused schools in an effort to consolidate resources.

Chicago Public Schools have some 600,000 seats but only 400,000 kids, while the district faces a $1 billion deficit next year and over $300 million of pension payments. Yet at a protest rally last week, Chicago Teachers Union Vice President Jesse Sharkey declared that the union was “serving notice to elected officials, if you close our schools, there will be no peace in the city.” Remind you of Selma, circa 1965?

The tension is especially acute for black parents whose children are trapped in the worst public schools. In other states, black organizations that march in lockstep with Democrats and their union allies have also been slow to catch up, but the message is getting louder. In Harlem last year, thousands of parents protested the NAACP’s role in a lawsuit to block school closings and the expansion of charter schools.

No reform effort is too small for the teachers union to squash. In this month’s election, the National Education Association descended from Washington to distant Idaho, spending millions to defeat a measure that limited collective bargaining for teachers and pegged a portion of teachers’ salaries to classroom performance. In Alabama, Republican Governor Robert Bentley says he’s giving up on his campaign to bring charter schools to the state after massive resistance from the Alabama Education Association.

Unions fight as hard as they do because they have one priority—preserving their jobs and increasing their pay and benefits. Students are merely their means to that end. Reforming public education is the civil rights issue of our era, and each year that passes without reform sacrifices thousands more children to union politics.

Now that the election is over, is it too much to ask that President Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan drop their union coddling and speak truth to union power? Alas, it probably is.

The Evil Empire Strikes Back

Review & Outlook
Wall Street Journal
November 18, 2012

Education reformers had good news at the ballot box this month as voters in Washington and Georgia approved measures to create new charter schools. But as the reform movement gathers momentum, teachers unions are giving no quarter in their massive resistance against states trying to shake up failing public education.

In Georgia, 59% of voters approved a constitutional amendment that creates a new statewide commission to approve charter schools turned down by union-allied school boards. Instead of absorbing the message, charter opponents are planning to sue. The Georgia Legislative Black Caucus said last week it will join a lawsuit against Governor Nathan Deal to block the change. According to Caucus Chairman Emanuel Jones, because the ballot measure’s text didn’t discuss the details of how the schools were selected, “people didn’t know what they were voting for.”

This is the legal equivalent of sending back a hamburger because you didn’t know it came with meat. Georgia voters rallied around the charters because they want something better for their children than the dismal status quo. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that as of April only 67.4% of the state’s freshmen graduated from high school in four years. Last year a state investigation of Georgia schools found that dozens of public educators were falsifying test results to disguise student results.

A different battle is unfolding in Chicago, where the city’s teachers union is getting ready for its second showdown with Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel. In September, teachers went on strike and won a pay raise and limits on test scores in teacher evaluations. Now the union is fighting the city’s plan to close underused schools in an effort to consolidate resources.

Chicago Public Schools have some 600,000 seats but only 400,000 kids, while the district faces a $1 billion deficit next year and over $300 million of pension payments. Yet at a protest rally last week, Chicago Teachers Union Vice President Jesse Sharkey declared that the union was “serving notice to elected officials, if you close our schools, there will be no peace in the city.” Remind you of Selma, circa 1965?

The tension is especially acute for black parents whose children are trapped in the worst public schools. In other states, black organizations that march in lockstep with Democrats and their union allies have also been slow to catch up, but the message is getting louder. In Harlem last year, thousands of parents protested the NAACP’s role in a lawsuit to block school closings and the expansion of charter schools.

No reform effort is too small for the teachers union to squash. In this month’s election, the National Education Association descended from Washington to distant Idaho, spending millions to defeat a measure that limited collective bargaining for teachers and pegged a portion of teachers’ salaries to classroom performance. In Alabama, Republican Governor Robert Bentley says he’s giving up on his campaign to bring charter schools to the state after massive resistance from the Alabama Education Association.

Unions fight as hard as they do because they have one priority—preserving their jobs and increasing their pay and benefits. Students are merely their means to that end. Reforming public education is the civil rights issue of our era, and each year that passes without reform sacrifices thousands more children to union politics.

Now that the election is over, is it too much to ask that President Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan drop their union coddling and speak truth to union power? Alas, it probably is.

Daily Headlines for November 19, 2012

The Evil Empire Strikes Back
Wall Street Journal, November 18, 2012

Education reformers had good news at the ballot box this month as voters in Washington and Georgia approved measures to create new charter schools. But as the reform movement gathers momentum, teachers unions are giving no quarter in their massive resistance against states trying to shake up failing public education.

What We Learned About School Reform
Press Democrat, CA, November 18, 2012

Teachers unions remain the Goliath to the school reformers’ David, even in red states. That was the lesson from votes this month in Idaho and Indiana , where unions successfully took on or took out Republican school superintendents.

FROM THE STATES

ARIZONA

Critics: Arizona Lax On Charter Purchasing Practices
Arizona Republic, AZ, November 17, 2012

Education experts and some legislators are critical of Arizona’s lack of oversight when it comes to how charter schools purchase goods and services.

Insiders Benefiting In Charter Deals
Arizona Republic, AZ, November 17, 2012

Board members and administrators from more than a dozen state-funded charter schools are profiting from their affiliations by doing business with schools they oversee.

CALIFORNIA

Charters Are A Strategy, Not A Solution
Press Democrat, CA, November 18, 2012

Almost one of every four K-12 students in Sonoma County attends a charter school. That figure has practically doubled in just two years, and it’s likely to keep growing for a couple of reasons.

COLORADO

Appellate Court To Hear School Voucher Case
Denver Post, CO, November 19, 2012

The Colorado Court of Appeals will hear arguments in the Douglas County School District ‘s voucher program.

CONNECTICUT

Voters Have Spoken: No Corporate School Reform
Stamford Advocate, CT, November 18, 2012

In this age of instantaneous global communication, it is incredible that a simple message sent by voters in Bridgeport has not reached leaders in Hartford, just 50 miles away.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Quality Controls Lacking For D.C. Schools Accepting Federal Vouchers
Washington Post, DC, November 17, 2012

Congress created the nation’s only federally funded school voucher program in the District to give the city’s poorest children a chance at a better education than their neighborhood schools offer.

Henderson Aims To Avoid Mistakes Of Prior D.C. School Closings
Washington Post, DC, November 18, 2012

D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson faces twin challenges as she prepares for the second public hearing Monday on her plan to close 20 of the city’s schools: Persuading skeptical parents and politicians that a smaller school system will be stronger, and that she will avoid mistakes her predecessor made during the most recent round of closures.

What Will Come Of The Buildings On D.C.’S Closed-School List?
Washington Post, DC, November 18, 2012

It prompted hours of D.C. Council testimony, public shouting matches at neighborhood meetings and street demonstrations where protesters called on the mayor to be jailed.

Looking At Charter Schools, Apples To Apples
Washington Examiner, DC, November 18, 2012

Not all charters are created equal. Some of them outperform the schools in Ward 3. Some of them — about 10 of the 57 in town — appear to be completely failing. But one reason the charter system works, and will continue to improve, is that its independent board can (and does) shut down worst laggards each year and replace them with new and better charter schools.

FLORIDA

St. Johns Schools Superintendent Votes Against Charters’ Public Money
Florida Times-Union, FL, November 18, 2012

A state-appointed group of public school and charter school officials and parents deadlocked Friday on a proposal that would have forced public school districts to raise taxes to pay for privately operated charter school construction, or take money out of public school operational funds to build charter schools.

Charter Schools Look To Raise Staff, Teacher Pay
News Chief, FL, November 18, 2012

In the wake of Polk County School District teachers getting a “step” raise this year, Lake Wales Charter Schools officials are looking at ways to compensate their teachers and support staff.

GEORGIA

Georgia Schools Lay Unequal Foundations For College
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, November 18, 2012

The paths of these top students illustrate the uneven preparation for college provided by Georgia schools.

Charter Evening School Proposed
Madison Journal GA, November 19, 2012

The charter high school would give students at risk of dropping out another classroom alternative, allowing them to work at their own pace to complete school. Likewise, students could maintain a day job while going to school at night.

Charter Schools, Dual Enrollment Concepts On The Rise
Rome News Tribune, GA, November 17, 2012

Local school officials went overtime in discussing the hows and whys of developing a charter school system and completely separate charter college and career academy during day two of the College and Career Academy Summit in Rome on Friday.

IDAHO

How To Help Our Teachers
Coeur d’Alene Press, ID, November 18, 2012

Tom Luna stepped in it again. At least, that’s what some critics claim after Idaho’s superintendent of schools called anew for stronger teacher evaluations and rewards before the dirt on education reform’s grave had properly hardened.

ILLINOIS

Chicago Public Schools: A Tale Of Two Schools Reflects Our Economic Woes
Washington Times, DC, November 18, 2012

Lincoln Elementary and Salazar Elementary schools are located about two miles away from each other on Chicago’s affluent near-north side. Both schools are part of the same district and have access to the same resources, and deal with the same bureaucracy, provided by the district.

IOWA

Iowa Teacher Unions Face New Challenges
KCRG, IA, November 19, 2012

The question reads like one featured on a standardized test: What is the solution to fixing America ’s education system? People on all sides of the debate favor various solutions — increased funding, smaller class sizes, longer school days — but increasingly one group of people is at the center of the debate: teachers.

LOUISIANA

Questions Raised About Nonpublic Schools’ Approval
Monroe News Star, LA, November 19, 2012

Louisiana’s Constitution and a court decision require that for any nonpublic school to receive state funds the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education must certify that it has “curriculum or specialized course of study of quality at least equal to that prescribed for similar public schools.”

Louisiana’s Educators Enter A New World With Evaluations And Their Consequences
Times Picayune, LA, November 17, 2012

Teachers in Louisiana have all but lost the tenure rules that once protected their jobs. Beginning this year, all 50,000 of them will be evaluated and ranked on an annual basis, often with test scores factoring in heavily. Soon, consistently “ineffective” teachers will no longer be welcome in the classroom.

MASSACHUSETTS

Boston Schools Asking Parents For A Leap Of Faith
Boston Globe, MA, November 18, 2012

Central to the agita over remaking Boston’s byzantine school assignment system is a chicken-and-egg conundrum. The city wants more parents to choose schools close to home, believing that will help improve them. But many parents want to see those schools improve before they’ll send their kids to them.

MICHIGAN

Romulus Cheats Kids In Blocking Charter
Detroit News, MI, November 19, 2012

For the past month, a charter school company based in West Michigan has had its sights on a school building for sale in Romulus . PrepNet currently runs three high schools in the state and would like to expand.

Critics Say School Funding Overhaul Is ‘Cart Before Horse’
Detroit News, MI, November 19, 2012

State policymakers and educators will get their first look today at a massive overhaul of Michigan ‘s public education funding system that already is being labeled a vehicle for school vouchers.

MINNESOTA

Minneapolis School Election Has National Implications
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN, November 18, 2012

The campaign that put Josh Reimnitz on the Minneapolis school board this fall may go down as the one that brought money from national school-reform advocates to bear on a contest traditionally dominated by DFL endorsements and union money.

NEW JERSEY

Newark Contract Marks High Point of Christie Education Agenda
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, November 19, 2012

Gov. Chris Christie clearly placed education at the top of his priorities from the day he was elected three years ago, making his very first stop a Newark charter school and promising a host of reforms to come.

NEW MEXICO

Charter Objectivity Questioned
Albuquerque Journal, NM, November 19, 2012

School board members squared off Friday after one board member pressed another on whether her position as a charter school administrator creates a conflict of interest on charter issues.

NEW YORK

Private School Goes All In With Tech
Wall Street Journal, November 18, 2012

Educators have experimented with technology for decades, starting with dusty computer carts shoved into corners in the 1970s, but perhaps no school in the nation has integrated digital tools into the classroom on the scale of Avenues, which opened in September.

Charter Proposal Has To Win The Support Of Parents
Buffalo News, NY, November 18, 2012

By and large, we are in favor of any and all strategies that will improve the education that Buffalo school children are constitutionally entitled to receive.

As Deadline Nears, Contract Talks Hold Up Evaluations
Star Gazette, NY, November 18, 2012

Disagreements over school employees’ salary and benefits — not the new state-mandated teacher evaluations — are what’s stalling some New York districts and their union partners from submitting performance assessment plans by a January approval deadline.

Charters Upset Learning Balance
Albany Times Union , NY, November 17, 2012

Chris Bender of the Brighter Choice Foundation insults proponents of public school education in Albany when he writes in his commentary (“Charter accountability paying off,” Nov. 12), “Oh, by the way, the failure of all 15 schools in the City School District of Albany is obvious.”

NORTH CAROLINA

Charter Schools Board Makes Move Toward Careful Expansion
Winston Salem Journal, NC, November 18, 2012

In a little-noticed move, the State Board of Education has reinforced North Carolina’s charter schools expansion. With our political leaders firmly behind charters, the state is clearly headed towards a greater reliance on them. The 100-charters cap that stood for more than a decade is gone and there could be as many as 130 charters operating next year.

News 2 Investigates Whether Charter Schools Are Working In NC
WFMY News 2, NC, November 18, 2012

We’ve all heard criticism about our public schools over test scores, class sizes or staff. As an alternative, the state started dozens of charter schools.But are they working?

Fund, Reform Public Education
The Daily Reflector, NC, November 19, 2012

North Carolina Republicans’ historic success on Nov. 6 gave the party control of both the executive and legislative branches for the first time in more than a century, empowering GOP leaders to advance their agenda without interference. Reform of the state’s public education system has long been among those priorities and lawmakers have already signaled their willingness to tackle that issue when they convene in Raleigh .

OHIO

A School-Rating Revamp?
Columbus Dispatch, OH, November 19, 2012

Changes over two years would include going to A-F system, raising academic standards

Charter School Is About ‘Choice,’ Say Staff at Believe to Achieve Academy
Canton Repository, OH, November 18, 2012

The gorgeous marble main floor of what was once the famed Stern & Mann department store now reverberates with the echo of school children.

PENNSLYVANIA

Camden’s Use Of State Funds To Help Charter Debated
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 18, 2012

As part of the $175 million state takeover fund given to Camden in 2002, $7 million was set aside for business lease grants to stimulate business growth throughout the city.

Three Charter Schools Could Open In Erie Area
Erie Times-News, PA, November 19, 2012

Three new charter schools are hoping to open in the Erie area for the 2013-14 school year, including one led by a former Erie School Board member.

New Charter Schools Hoping To Take Wing In City, County
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, November 19, 2012

As many as four new charter schools could open in Pittsburgh next fall, and others are in the works for elsewhere in Allegheny County.

Ambitious Plan Questioned As Chester Upland Looks To Rebuild School System
Delaware County Times, PA, November 18, 2012

There has not been a lack of proposals to rescue the Chester Upland School District during the last two decades as it has often wallowed in a pool of red ink — both financially and academically.

Failure To Reform Charter Funding Leaves Pa. Pension Bubble On The Table
Mercury News, PA, November 18, 2012

The legislative quagmire that is Pennsylvania’s charter school funding formula once again went unaddressed this legislative session.

TEXAS

School Vouchers No Bargain For Students
San Antonio Express, TX, November 19, 2012

I desperately wanted out of that Southern California high school, which was demanding when it came to safety but undemanding, it seemed to me, when it came to academics.

WASHINGTON

Up Next For Charter Schools: Plans, Panels And Lawyers
The Columbian, WA, November 18, 2012

Now that voters have spoken about charter schools, will the new, independent public schools be an option at the beginning of the next academic year? It seems unlikely.

It’s Time To Make Charter Schools Work For Washington State
Seattle Times, WA, November 17, 2012

Voters have spoken on charter schools. Gov.-elect Jay Inslee and other leaders should get started creating innovative, high-quality charter schools.

WISCONSIN

22% Of Potential MPS Students Now In Charter Schools
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, November 18, 2012

At many traditional public high schools, the last bell of the school day signals the imminent transition to extracurricular activities, from musical rehearsals to sports practices.

State Upgrades Principal Evaluations
Wausau Daily Herald, WI, November 19, 2012

Several Wausau School District principals are participating in a pilot program created to refine and standardize the way school leaders are evaluated.

ONLINE SCHOOLS

Manchester Plan Would Put Students In ‘Virtual’ Courses, Could Stem Overcrowding
New Hampshire Union Leader, NH, November 18, 2012

Could technology help solve the problem of crowded classrooms? The district is poised to find out as soon as next semester, when it plans to offer “virtual” classes that students at the three high schools would be able to take without physically being in the same room as a teacher.

PA Cyber CEO’s Consulting Work Questioned
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, November 17, 2012

In May 2010, one of the top managers at the Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School wrote to his leadership team about what he called a “new and exciting program.”

What the Demise of Hostess and Twinkies Mean for U.S. Schools

November 16, 2012

News of Hostess, the company that produces Twinkies, Wonderbread, and other food items close to the hearts of many Americans, has surely hit your ears or eyes by now. Although there’s more to the story, the company essentially called it quits because its current cost structure was no longer profitable. A large part of that unprofitable structure? Union wages and pension costs.

Well it just so happens that pension costs are also wreaking havoc on the traditional public education system in America. Spending on education is increasing while American students are falling behind, yet stories of teachers paying for supplies out of pocket still permeate the media, fueling this notion that any sort of cuts to education is just wrong. Stories of what is eating up large education budgets and why ever-increasing spending never actually reaches students, however, are few and far between.

The reality is the current cost structure of the U.S. education system is, like Hostess, no longer profitable, and it’s coming at the expense of taxpayers and students. At least Hostess can shut down and say enough is enough…

by Michelle Tigani

Daily Headlines for November 16, 2012

School Districts, Eyeing Looming Debt Crisis, Brace for More Cutbacks
New York Times, NY, November 16, 2012

During the campaign, both President Obama and Mitt Romney repeatedly extolled the value of schools and teachers. Mr. Romney, in their first debate last month, even vowed, “I’m not going to cut education funding.”

Former Entertainment Properties Gets Good Returns With Diverse Portfolio
Kansas City Star, MO, November 15, 2012

The most unusual new real estate venture being taken on by EPR is the business of financing charter schools. It’s a growing national industry with an estimated 500 charter schools coming on line each year across the country valued at $2.5 billion.

A Little Perspective On Finland’s Educational Success
Seattle Times, WA, November 15, 2012

We are right to feel inspired by the educational successes of countries like Finland. Borrow an idea or two, but let’s not contort ourselves into Finland.

FROM THE STATES

COLORADO

School Board Leans Toward Rejection Of New Charter School
Glenwood Springs Post Independent, CO, November 16, 2012

The Roaring Fork School District Re-1 board and state charter school officials are both leaning toward denying a new charter expeditionary learning school in Glenwood Springs that has been proposed to open next year.

CONNECTICUT

Bridgeport’s School System Is Still Broken
CT Post, CT, November 15, 2012

In the past 17 months, there was more chatter about the embarrassing state of the Bridgeport public school system than there had been in a long time. There was also more action taken, right and wrong, to try to address the fact that so many kids here are trapped in failing schools.

State Falls Short On School Desegregation Requirements
Connecticut Mirror, CT, November 15, 2012

Connecticut has run out of time to comply with a court order to reduce the inequities caused by the segregation of Hartford ‘s largely black and Hispanic school population.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Embracing the Hollywood Model: The Opportunities Emerging from D.C.’s School Closings
Dropout Nation, November 15, 2012

Certainly one can expect traditionalists in the nation’s capitol to be vexed by Tuesday’s decision by D.C. Public Schools to shut down 20 of its schools with low enrollment over the coming two years. After all, the district has long-existed as a jobs program for the American Federation of Teachers’ Chocolate City affiliate and for politicians such as the ever-embarrassing Marion Barry, who used his tenure on the school system’s now-defunct board as a stepping stone to his long (and often-undignified) political career.

D.C. School Closures Are Focus Of Hearing
Washington Post, DC, November 15, 2012

Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson’s plan to close 20 under-enrolled schools across the District drew a throng of parents, teachers and activists to a packed D.C. Council hearing room Thursday evening, the first opportunity the public has had to weigh in on the proposal that would close one in six of the city’s schools.

Seeds Of School Choice Are Now Blooming In D.C.
Washington Examiner, DC, November 15, 2012

Why has DC Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson announced plans to close 20 underenrolled D.C. public schools — one of every six DCPS campuses — even though the District’s population has been growing at its fastest pace in 60 years? Henderson ‘s decision — which makes economic sense — is a tacit admission that the school choice movement has gone mainstream in the unlikeliest of places.

FLORIDA

Don’t Raise Taxes For Charters
News Press, FL, November 15, 2012

No right-thinking school board of any public system in Florida is going to take the political knife and raise property taxes to help fund capital projects for privately-run charter schools.

Lake Wales Charter System, School District at Odds Over Records, Student Eligibility
The Ledger, FL, November 15, 2012

There is no ruling yet on a dispute between Lake Wales Charter Schools and the Polk County School District on distribution of students’ information.

Pembroke Pines Charter School Teachers Win Raise Through Arbitration
Sun Sentinel, FL, November 15, 2012

The city-run charter school system must give 323 teachers back pay by the end of the state legislative session in May, an arbitrator ruled Thursday.

Researcher: Florida District Schools Outperform Charter Schools On Average
StateImpact NPR, FL, November 15, 2012

While charter schools are an increasingly popular option for Florida students, a University of Central Florida researcher says they don’t perform as well as district schools.

GEORGIA

Cairo May Convert To A Charter School
Albany Herald, GA, November 15, 2012

The Grady County Board of Education has petitioned the Georgia Board of Education to convert Cairo High School to a charter school to be called the Grady High School, a College and Career Academy (CHS/CCA).

IDAHO

Teachers To Receive $38M In Bonuses
Idaho Mountain Express and Guide, ID, November 16, 2012

Regardless of the defeat of education reforms by Idaho voters in the Nov. 6 general election, school teachers in Idaho will soon be receiving $38 million in “pay-for-performance” bonuses.

LOUISIANA

OneApp Includes More La. Schools
The Advocate, LA, November 16, 2012

The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education approved policy changes at a meeting in New Orleans on Wednesday night regarding the new “OneApp” process and the effort to expand the streamlined enrollment to more schools.

Orleans Parish School Board Committee Approves One New Charter, Denies Another
Times Picayune, LA, November 15, 2012

The Orleans Parish School Board on Thursday gave tentative approval to a new charter school focused on engineering and innovation. The board’s accountability committee also denied a charter to a proposed arts school, and recommended changing the management of two existing charters.

Charter School In Kenner Will Focus On Health Sciences
Times Picayune, LA, November 15, 2012

Kenner officials gushed enthusiasm Thursday about plans to open a charter school in their city. Kenner Discovery Health Sciences Academy expects to start classes in August with students from prekindergarten through third grade, plus fifth and sixth grades, and steadily add grades each year.

NEW JERSEY

School Reform in Newark
New York Times, NY, November 16, 2012

Newark and its teachers’ union deserve praise for the groundbreaking contract that the two sides have hammered out. The relatively calm negotiations that led up to the union’s ratification vote this week stood in sharp contrast to the vitriol that surrounded a similar agreement earlier this year in Chicago that led to a polarizing strike.

Newark Union Embraces Merit Pay
The Record, NJ, November 16, 2012

MOUNTAINS can move. It happened Wednesday, when Newark teachers approved a contract that includes merit pay.

NEW MEXICO

Teacher Pay Plan Failed To Hike Scores
Albuquerque Journal, NM, November 16, 2012

New Mexico’s three-tier teacher licensure system, which has cost the state more than $330 million, has little connection to whether teachers boost their students’ test scores, according to a new Legislative Finance Committee report.

NEW YORK

School Board Protests Chameleon Charter Conversion Bid
Buffalo News, NY, November 15, 2012

The Buffalo Board of Education is vowing to protest attempts by a nonprofit group to convert East High and Waterfront Elementary schools into charter schools. The board Wednesday voted to register its complaints in a letter to State Education Commissioner John B. King Jr.

SUNY Works To Better Prepare Teachers For State Standards
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, NY, November 15, 2012

Education professors from New York’s public university system gathered in Albany on Thursday to brainstorm how they can better prepare future teachers for classroom demands, particularly several new or upcoming state-mandated requirements.

Teachers Union Sues To See Joel Klein Emails
New York Daily News, NY, November 15, 2012

The union sued the city once before for access to emails between Klein and charter school proponents, but the documents it received were heavily redacted with entire pages blacked out.

NORTH CAROLINA

Cape Lookout High School Charter Renewed Until 2014
Daily News, NC, November 16, 2012

A lesson in perseverance paid off for a Carteret County charter school that has successfully fought to stay open.

OHIO

Charter School Could Close Soon
Columbus Dispatch, OH, November 16, 2012

A struggling Columbus charter school could be forced to shut down by the end of the month, leaving more than 100 students searching for new schools on short notice.

Charter Schools Attracting Larger Share Of Students In Cleveland
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, November 16, 2012

Cleveland and several other Ohio cities are among those with the highest concentration of charter enrollment in the country, according to a newly released report.

Districts: Funding Loss Unfair
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, November 16, 2012

Just three months in existence, a new state scholarship program for disabled students is angering some Greater Cincinnati school officials, who say their districts are forced to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars on private school tuition for students who have never attended public schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Lawmakers Walk Away From $500M
Scranton Times-Tribune, PA, November 16, 2012

Now that the state Legislature has finished its two-year session, lawmakers should reflect on their keen sense of priority. The majority rapidly passed a voter identification law designed to serve partisan political goals, but failed to reform the state and school pension systems – the single largest financial issue facing the state government and 500 local school districts.

Philadelphia School Reform Commission Suspends Parts Of State Public School Code
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 16, 2012

The Philadelphia School Reform Commission voted to suspend portions of the state public school code Thursday night, saying it needed room to cap charter enrollment and shorten the timeline for closing schools.

East Allentown Charter School Agrees To Cap Enrollment
Allentown Morning Call, PA, November 15, 2012

Lincoln Leadership Academy Charter School has a new five-year charter. But the renewal cost the east Allentown charter school major enrollment concessions in an agreement approved Thursday by the Allentown School Board.

TENNESSEE

Tax Dollars Better Spent On Traditional Public Schools
The Tennessean, TN. November 16, 2012

If charter schools have such a great model, then why doesn’t the Metro school board adopt it for all schools? If millions of tax dollars are invested in failing charters, something very wrong is going on.

Vouchers Prompt Mixed Reactions From Parents
Nashville Public Radio, TN, November 15, 2012

Some state lawmakers say Tennessee’s consistent ranking in the mid-forties for education means it’s time to consider a school vouchers program. It would reroute money meant for public schools, to instead help some parents pay private school tuition. WPLN’s Daniel Potter heard opinions from several parents about vouchers, and has this story.

TEXAS

Schools To Be Graded On Achievement Gap
San Antonio Express, TX, November 16, 2012

Education Commissioner Mike Williams said Thursday that the state’s yet-to-be-labeled rating system, to be unveiled in March, will include a measure of how well schools and districts are doing in closing the achievement gap that persists among poor and minority students.

HISD May Delay Teacher Parts Of Evaluation Plan
Houston Chronicle, TX, November 16, 2012

HISD leaders are considering another delay in implementing part of a highly anticipated teacher evaluation system after facing problems with the rollout this year.

WASHINGTON

Charter Schools Measure May Face Court Challenge
Everett Daily Herald, WA, November 16, 2012

Washington is laying the groundwork for its first charter schools even as the head of the state’s public school system looks to challenge the legality of the ballot measure that would allow them.

Election 2012 Sends Mixed Signals On Education Reform
Seattle Times, WA, November 15, 2012

Washington’s so-called education reformers scored a significant victory when voters narrowly approved charter schools last week, but they suffered across-the-board losses in candidate races

WEST VIRGINIA

State School Chief Fired
The Intelligencer, WV, November 16, 2012

The West Virginia Board of Education fired Schools Superintendent Jorea Marple on Thursday, and two board members who opposed the decision said they will resign.

ONLINE SCHOOLS

Blended Learning Pilot Met With Praise
Union Leader, NH, November 15, 2012

Bedford’s pilot Blended Learning program was met with warm sentiment at the School Board meeting, Tuesday, Nov. 13. After two trial classes over the summer, the program is progressing toward an installment for a whole semester in the spring.

Easton Agrees To Launch Cyber School
Allentown Morning Call, PA, November 15, 2012

Students in the Easton area who have a serious illness, work a full-time job or have other issues could soon have an option to earn a degree from the district without showing up to class every day.

Newark Union Approves Merit Pay

“Newark Teachers Vote ‘Yes’ on Precedent-Setting Contract”
by John Mooney
NJ Spotlight
November 15, 2012

After a year of negotiations and three weeks of sometimes-brutal internal debate, Newark public school teachers and other staff ratified a historic labor agreement yesterday that will reshape pay and many rules for New Jersey’s largest school district.

Nearly 2,900 members of the Newark Teachers Union voted in the day-long balloting at the NTU’s downtown offices, a nearly unprecedented turnout, and the vote was closer than many expected. The final tally was 1,767 in favor to 1,088 against, or roughly 62 percent to 38 percent.

Union leaders who had backed the deal appeared as much relieved as celebratory when the numbers were announced, citing both the accomplishment of the pact but also the sizable numbers not on board.

Joseph Del Grosso, the NTU’s longtime president, said the agreement is only the first step in developing a workable system to fulfill it. That includes new teacher and staff evaluations and a program for performance bonuses to the most exemplary members, the controversial centerpiece of the deal.

“It’s a great vote, but it’s going to take a lot of work to put this together, that’s the tough part,” Del Grosso said.

Looking tired from a long day in which voting started at 6:30 a.m., Del Grosso said he didn’t entirely blame a third of his voting membership for casting “no” votes.

“It’s a difficult contract; it’s a leap of faith, it really is,” he said. “They took the leap, which I am grateful for. But we now have to show the members how it will work.”

Job Well Done

The plaudits came in from elsewhere, including Newark Superintendent Cami Anderson, who had staked much of her own standing on final passage of the deal.

“Congratulations to the teachers, parent coordinators, teacher’s aides, child study teams, and paraprofessionals who will benefit from the success of this contract, and especially to the students and families of Newark,” she said in a statement released by her office.

“As a lifelong educator, I am thrilled for our teachers here in Newark and for the teaching profession as a whole,” she said.

Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, the national union for the NTU, issued her own press release within minutes of the final vote. Weingarten, one of the country’s preeminent labor leaders, had participated in the final negotiations.

“This contract demonstrates the willingness of Newark’s teachers and the school district to find innovative ways to ensure that quality and experience are recognized and rewarded, making it a full, professional compensation system,” Weingarten said.

“When you put all this together, you come out with a unique, innovative plan that will help boost teaching and learning and will strengthen the teaching profession,” her statement said. “Newark can now be added to the growing list of districts nationwide that are using collective bargaining as vehicles for education reform.”

Beyond Bonuses

The five-year contract has a number of highlights beyond just the performance bonuses, which would bestow an extra $5,000 to those gaining the highest evaluation ratings. They would gain an additional $5,000 on top of that if they work in a low-performing school, and another $2,500 for working in a high-need field like science and math.

In addition, it includes an average pay raise of close to 13 percent over the next three years, one of the higher increases in the state. At the same time, the union would gain a say in those evaluations, with teachers part of the actual evaluation teams, and checks and balances for monitoring the results and providing a process for appeals.

But the membership’s misgivings were evident in interviews with nearly a dozen teachers and other staff as they left the union hall after voting in the late afternoon, many with their children in tow.

Most of those willing to talk said they voted in favor of the deal, but some with concerns over a number of uncertainties still to be resolved with the development of the evaluation system and the peer-review process.

And most concurred it was likely the best deal they were going to get in the state-run district with Gov. Chris Christie at the helm.

“It really was a no-win for us,” said a kindergarten teacher with 20 years in the district who asked not to be identified. “We either turn it down and start over with a governor who won’t hear anything else from us. Or we vote ‘yes,’ and we take whatever they give us.”

“At least we now have something on the table, like it or not,” she said.

Others weren’t so hesitant in their support, including Rosemary Taylor, a psychologist at the McKinley Elementary School and 25-year veteran of the district. She said the performance pay was worth attempting, noting that the extra money could prove a powerful incentive.

“I think it is something that should be tried,” she said. “I think people are worried about who will be judging them, will they be judged fairly. I just trust enough to say let’s try it. Nothing is set in cement.”

And still others said after two years without a contract or any raises, it was time to get what they could. Teachers with advanced degrees could opt to remain on a standard salary track that would not have the performance pay, with 30 days to decide.

“We have been without a contract for so long,” said Leonie Cammock, a fourth grade teacher at the Hawthorne Avenue Elementary School. “For those like us who went back to school and have student loans to pay, we have an added burden and what we have can stretch so far.”

Selling Out

A dissident faction of the NTU had emerged out of the protracted negotiations, openly challenging Del Grosso and the union’s leadership for what they said was selling out their members. Called the Newark Education Workers Caucus, the group has become an ever-vocal presence in public meetings, contending that the deal will only split the union at a time when Anderson is closing and consolidating schools.

Several of its leaders were on hand for much of the balloting yesterday, acting as unofficial poll watchers.

“If we had a multimillion national organization behind us [the national AFT], we would have had a much better outcome,” said Brandon Rippey, a history and sociology teacher at Science Park High School. “They spent a lot of money to convince their members.”

“But the members are scared, fearful, ambivalent,” he said. “I think ambivalent is the best word. They had no confidence in the leadership to do anything better. This is the best we could get.”

Push by D.C. Teachers Union Sign of Worsening Environment for Charters

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
November 15, 2012

Center for Education Reform Founder and President Jeanne Allen provided the following statement on the announcement by D.C. teachers unions that they would press to unionize charter school teachers.

“Washington, D.C. has traditionally provided the fertile ground charter schools need to thrive, but the push by the D.C. teachers unions is another ominous sign that D.C. is becoming a less hospitable environment for charters. A fundamental reason for charters succeeding where traditional schools have failed is the freedom from onerous union restrictions.

“This announcement followed closely on the heels of news that D.C. Public Schools would close 20 public schools without giving them a surplus designation. The school system would be able to allow the buildings to decay rather than allowing charters to open, despite a law that says that charter schools should receive equal operational dollars and equity in facilities.

“The forces arraying against charter schools are not strong enough to thwart the will of parents, who insist on better choices for their children. But it’s a shame there must always be a fight.”

Daily Headlines for November 15, 2012

Race, Class and Schools
Huffington Post Blog by Kevin P. Chavous
November 14, 2012

We must ensure that integrated schools and integrated classrooms are available to all students no matter their race or their class, and we must also start embracing and learning from our differences.

The Suburban Education Gap
Wall Street Journal, November 15, 2012

Parents nationwide are familiar with the wide academic achievement gaps separating American students of different races, family incomes and ZIP Codes. But a second crucial achievement gap receives far less attention. It is the disparity between children in America ‘s top suburban schools and their peers in the highest-performing school systems elsewhere in the world.

New Measures Demand Attention
Daily Trojan, CA, November 14, 2012

Last week voters across the country approved measures that will change the face of American education.

How Education Could Plunge Off The ‘Fiscal Cliff’
CNN Blog, November 15, 2012

Sequestration: The word strikes fear in the hearts of school boards and administrators nationwide, and with good reason.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Charter Schools Unlikely In Alabama’s Future
Sand Mountain Reporter, AL, November 14, 2012

Gov. Robert Bentley said he doesn’t plan to propose the legalization of charter schools again in the 2013 session of the Legislature.

ARIZONA

Arizona Charter-School Enrollment Is On Rise
Arizona Republic, AZ, November 14, 2012

The number of students enrolled in charter schools has increased in Arizona , with many school districts feeling the impact as they lose more students to charters.

CALIFORNIA

Not All Desert Trails Parents Happy With Charter Choice
High Desert Daily Press, CA, November 14, 2012

The decision to convert Desert Trails Elementary School in Adelanto to a charter was decided by a mere 53 votes — a sign many say underscores the controversy surrounding the “parent trigger” movement at the struggling school.

L.A. School Board Rejects Charter Oversight Measure
Los Angeles Times Blog, CA, November 14, 2012

A majority on the Los Angeles Board of Education wanted no part of a resolution that sought to impose more oversight on charter schools.

Twenty-one California School Districts Apply For Controversial Federal Grant
Los Angeles Times Blog, CA, November 14, 2012

Twenty-one California school districts and educational consortiums have applied for a $400 million federal grant program that has been strongly opposed by many teachers unions.

COLORADO

Reviewers: D-11 Charter Applicants Meet Requirements
Colorado Springs Gazette, CO, November 14, 2012

Parents, teachers and community members spent about two hours during a public hearing Wednesday praising three charter schools seeking to open in Colorado Springs School District 11.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

After D.C. School-Closure Proposal, A Flurry Of Activity
Washington Post, DC, November 14, 2012

A day after D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson announced her plan to close 20 schools, parents across the city signaled their intent to protest, labor leaders said they would push to unionize charter schools and charter-school advocates vowed to fight for control of vacated buildings.

D.C. Schools Chief, Watch Your Back
Washington Times, DC, November 14, 2012

While it seems as though Ms. Henderson is trying to clear out schoolhouses to help make way for the two things that matter most — teaching and learning — it’s clear not all stakeholders are on the same school-reform road.

D.C. Teachers Union Wants To Unionize City’s Charter Schools
Washington Post, DC, November 14, 2012

Washington Teachers’ Union President Nathan Saunders said Wednesday that he wants to unionize the city’s charter schools and will push for legislative changes to make it easier to organize their teachers, who educate a growing number of D.C. students.

FLORIDA

Superintendent Address Exodus To Charter Schools
ActionNewsJax, FL, November 14, 2012

Among the topics discussed, Duval County’s fight against the student exodus to Charter Schools.

Education Panel Backs Property-Tax Hike
News-Press, FL, November 14, 2012

A state-appointed education task force is recommending increasing property taxes in an attempt to make funding more equitable between charter and traditional schools.

GEORGIA

Sometimes It’s Not Just A Matter of ‘Perception’
Columbus Ledger Inquirer, GA, November 14, 2012

To state the quantifiably obvious: Georgia voters’ resounding approval of the charter schools amendment was unmistakable evidence of dissatisfaction with the status quo in public education.

ILLINOIS

Charters Not Immune From Closings, CPS Says
Chicago Tribune, IL, November 15, 2012

Chicago Public Schools officials say they plan to get tough with privately run charter schools that are failing academically this year and could shut down those that aren’t making the grade.

Parents Call For More School Options As CPS Mulls Neighborhood Campus Closings
Medill Reports: Chicago, November 14, 2012

As Chicago Public Schools officials consider closing up to 100 schools, a group of parents and community leaders called on the district to offer more alternative educational options like charter campuses.

INDIANA

New Superintendent Glenda Ritz Likely To Face Obstacles From GOP Foes
Journal Courier, IN, November 14, 2012

Glenda Ritz didn’t take it personally when, less than 24 hours after she won the Nov. 6 election, Republican lawmakers felt the need to announce that they wouldn’t try to eliminate the position of elected state superintendent — for now.

IOWA

Board Looks For Ways To Bolster Teacher Preparation Programs
Des Moines Register, IA, November 15, 2012

A tiered accreditation program and more rigorous student teaching requirements are two reforms being considered by the state Board of Education as it searches for ways to strengthen Iowa ’s teacher preparation programs.

LOUISIANA

Voucher Funding Provisions Challenged
The Advocate, LA, November 15, 2012

The state Department of Education’s attempt to avoid a Nov. 26 hearing in federal court ignores a century of U.S. Supreme Court rulings confirming that a federal court can take action to ensure state officials comply with federal law, Tangipahoa Parish School Board attorneys say.

BESE Gives Preliminary OK To Expanding Unified Enrollment System In New Orleans
Times Picayune, LA, November 14, 2012

The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education, meeting in New Orleans on Wednesday evening, gave preliminary approval to policy changes touching on two of the more pressing issues facing the state-run Recovery School District: the push for a unified enrollment system that encompasses all of the city’s public schools, and the possibility that some of the district’s schools may return to the local School Board for the first time since Hurricane Katrina.

MARYLAND

College Park Academy Opening Date In Flux Despite Location Choice
Maryland Gazette, MD, November 15, 2012

A new charter school in College Park initially planned to have classrooms filled by next school year may not be ready until 2014, officials said.

MICHIGAN

State Lays Out Plans For New EM Law
Detroit News, MI, November 15, 2012

The race to find a workable replacement for the controversial emergency manager law is bearing down on a six-letter word — choice.

Teachers Union Sues DPS Over Layoffs
Detroit News, MI, November 15, 2012

The union representing Detroit Public Schools teachers sued the district Wednesday over what it calls improper layoffs based on performance evaluations.

Can Detroit’s Schools Be Fixed?
Detroit News, MI, November 15, 2012

The Detroit News’ Nov. 14 report, “Detroit Public Schools board votes to cut ties to educational authority”: As far as I’m concerned it’s now time for them to break the ties with all the things that cloak their incompetence and stupidity.

Bashing Of Current Schools By Backers Of Proposed Charter School Hurts Community As A Whole, Jackson County Superintendents Say
Jackson Citizen Patriot, MI, November 14, 2012

The bashing of current K-12 school districts by proponents of a new charter school is disappointing and unnecessary, Jackson County school superintendents say.

Focus On Achievement Gap Hurts Students
Eastern Echo, MI, November 14, 2012

While it is certainly undesirable that black and Latino students consistently score significantly lower than their white classmates on standardized tests, the hyper-focus on closing this gap is a waste of time and is causing far more harm than good.

MISSISSIPPI

Lawmakers Renew Charter School Fight
Desoto Times Tribune, MS, November 15, 2012

Last Legislative session, the House Education Committee, with votes as narrow as 16-15 at times, killed a bill to expand charter schools, led in part by three DeSoto County lawmakers who serve on the House Education Committee, State Rep. Wanda Jennings, R-Southaven, Rep. Pat Nelson, R-Southaven and Rep. Forrest Hamilton, R-Olive Branch.

MISSOURI

Charter Schools Thrive In St. Louis
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, November 15, 2012

St. Louis was one of the top five districts in the nation for highest percentage charter school enrollment in the 2011-12 school year, according to a new report.

NEBRASKA

Explain Grading System Clearly
Omaha World-Herald, NE. November 15, 2012

More school systems are moving to adopt standards-based grading. The Westside and Council Bluffs school districts have it in place. So does Omaha Public Schools, which is adjusting it this year.

NEVADA

Report: Clark County’s Charter Schools Fastest-Growing In Country
Las Vegas Sun, NV, November 15, 2012

The number of Clark County students enrolled in public charter schools grew by 64 percent from the 2010-11 to 2011-12 school years, according to a national report released Wednesday.

NEW JERSEY

Teachers Clear Newark Pact
Wall Street Journal, November 15, 2012

The Newark Teachers Union approved a groundbreaking contract Wednesday that introduces a form of merit pay and gives teachers input into each others’ annual performance evaluations.

Newark Teachers Vote ‘Yes’ on Precedent-Setting Contract
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, November 15, 2012

After a year of negotiations and three weeks of sometimes-brutal internal debate, Newark public school teachers and other staff ratified a historic labor agreement yesterday that will reshape pay and many rules for New Jersey’s largest school district.

OHIO

Quarter of Youngstown’s Students Attend Charter School
Youngstown Vindicator, OH, November 15, 2012

A quarter of the students living within the city school district attend public charter schools.

Nine Schools Held Up For Praise
Columbus Dispatch, OH, November 15, 2012

Eastmoor was one of nine Ohio schools highlighted in a report released yesterday that examined the attributes and practices of high-performing schools serving large populations of poor students.

Local Charter School Wins Six-Figure Counseling Grant
Springfield News Sun, OH, November 14, 2012

The K-6 charter school this fall won a competitive grant from the U.S. Department of Education for $504,713 to dramatically expand its limited school counseling program.

PENNSYLVANIA

CU Road To Recovery Is Going To Be Rocky
Delaware County Times, PA, November 14, 2012

Call it Rocky Road. The Chester Upland School District did not get into its current dismal state — annually among the worst-performing school districts in Pennsylvania — overnight. It will not dig out of this morass anytime soon.

SOUTH CAROLINA

S.C. Education Board: Teacher Letter Grades Won’t Happen
The Herald, SC, November 14, 2012

State education board members assured teachers Wednesday that the Education Department’s proposal to give teachers letter grades will not be part of South Carolina’s performance-based evaluation system, which is set to start statewide in 2014-15.

New Charter School Has Environmental Approach To Learning
Georgetown Times, SC, November 14, 2012

For students at the new Cape Romain Environmental Education Charter School, the Lowcountry’s newest charter school, the earth is the biggest classroom.

TENNESSEE

Great Hearts Charter Won’t Reapply With Metro Nashville Schools
The Tennessean, TN, November 15, 2012

Great Hearts Academies will not reapply to operate a charter school in Nashville until Tennessee has a statewide charter school authorizer, a company official said Wednesday.

Memphis Charter School Growth Ranks Nationally
Memphis Daily News, TN, November 14, 2012

The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools ranks Memphis City Schools as having the ninth-highest growth rate for charter school enrollment in the country.

Vouching for Education
Commercial Appeal, TN, November 15, 2012

No doubt there will be hand-wringing in some quarters over the idea of offering vouchers to low-income families in Memphis so their kids can go to high quality private schools.

UTAH

Lawmaker Looking At Ways To Bring New Charter Schools To State
Deseret News, UT, November 14, 2012

With the number of students in Utah’s charter schools growing steadily, a Utah legislator is considering a law that would allow educators to pursue new types of charter schools, rather than wait for them to be proposed.

School Finance Transparency Proposal Gets Mixed Reaction
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, November 14, 2012

Lawmakers should take action to ensure parents and taxpayers are able to see exactly how much their schools are spending, Sen. Daniel Thatcher, R-West Valley City , told fellow Education Interim Committee members Wednesday.

I-1240’s Excruciatingly Close Vote: Money Can’t Buy You a Landslide
Seattle Weekly Blog, WA, November 14, 2012

While charter school Initiative 1240 supporters declared victory over the weekend, opponents have refused to concede. “Not until every vote is counted,” Marianne Bischel, People for Our Public Schools spokesperson tells Seattle Weekly.

ONLINE SCHOOLS

Georgia Cyber Academy: Is Virtual Charter Ignoring Real Problems With Special Ed Services?
Atlanta Journal Constitution Blog, GA, November 14, 2012

The last time we discussed Georgia Cyber Academy was in response to parent comments about their significant roles as academic coaches under the online school’s instructional model.

State Education Board Criticizes Online School
WTVC, GA, November 14, 2012

State education officials are criticizing the Georgia Cyber Academy , saying the online school is failing to meet the needs of its special education students.

Schools Look To Add Virtual Course Options
Gainesville Times, FL, November 14, 2012

With more students, fewer teachers and less money, school systems are searching for ways to stay competitive with what they offer students.

Students Take Lesson Home, Do Work In Class
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, November 15, 2012

Zoller is one of a small but growing cadre of teachers nationwide who are “flipping” classroom lessons to better engage students and deepen their learning.

Teachers’ Unions Win a Defensive Victory

by Mike Antonucci
Intercepts
November 2012

I toyed with the idea of writing an entire blog post this morning on how the GOP recaptured the Wisconsin state senate, since NEA seemed to think control of that chamber was such a big deal back in June, but I won’t be (such) a wise-ass.

The unions did what they needed to do. They helped re-elect the President and they brought to a halt any momentum there may have been for more serious and wide-ranging threats to their power base. They defeated hostile ballot measures in California, Florida, Idaho, Michigan and South Dakota, and were even able to put a tax hike over the top in the Golden State. There will be no mass movement into voucher systems, merit pay, tenure reform and collective bargaining limits. Those are big wins.

From a practical standpoint, however, we have the same President, the same Secretary of Education, virtually the same Senate composition, virtually the same House composition, virtually the same split of governorships, and virtually the same split of state legislatures. And unlike 2008, there is no prospect of card check, stimulus packages and edujobs bills on the horizon.

Where NEA and AFT tried to gain ground, they experienced very tough sledding. They couldn’t get tax hikes for education passed in South Dakota or Arizona. They failed to enshrine collective bargaining in the Michigan constitution. Spread thin, they couldn’t stop charter initiatives in Georgia or Washington. It’s too soon to evaluate the effect of all the state legislative races, but nothing indicates an ideological shift toward renewed public sector hiring – the only thing that can replenish union membership.

In short, the unions drove the barbarians from the gates, but not across the border. NEA and AFT spent a lot of money to ensure another four years like the last four. Is that a good thing for them? We’ll see.

Mike Antonucci: Defensive Victory for Teachers Unions

The unions did what they needed to do. They helped re-elect the President and they brought to a halt any momentum there may have been for more serious and wide-ranging threats to their power base. They defeated hostile ballot measures in California, Florida, Idaho, Michigan and South Dakota, and were even able to put a tax hike over the top in the Golden State. There will be no mass movement into voucher systems, merit pay, tenure reform and collective bargaining limits. Those are big wins. READ MORE