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MI Teachers Accuse Union of “deception and intimidation”

On the eve of the Legislature’s Thanksgiving break, three teachers went before a Senate committee to accuse their union of deception and intimidation.

“I just felt I needed to say something because I felt there was something unfair going on,” said Novi special education teacher Susan Bank regarding her unsuccessful effort to stop paying dues under the state’s new right-to-work law to the Michigan Education Association. “People are very intimidated by union goings-on.”

Her testimony at the Nov. 13 meeting came during the first of several right-to-work-related hearings slated for a new committee whose chairman said will explore other issues but is vague about what they will be.

A spokesman for the state’s largest teachers union argues the organization is complying with state law, which allows it to set membership rules. For four decades, the MEA has required members seeking to resign to do so between Aug. 1 and Aug. 31, and the right-to-work law doesn’t change the situation, said Doug Pratt, the union’s public affairs director.

“It says we can have our own policies as to membership,” Pratt said. “The August window has existed for more than 40 years.”

State Sen. Arlan Meekhof, R-West Olive, the Senate’s majority floor leader, said the four-member Senate Compliance and Accountability Committee will look into rights violations resulting from misapplication of new laws.

“Republicans and Democrats have everybody’s civil rights in the backs of their minds,” he said.

Veteran political observer Bill Ballenger called the committee “extremely unusual” in a Capitol where lawmakers normally use temporary committees to explore special issues and permanent committees to craft legislation.

State Sen. Hoon-Yung Hopgood of Taylor, the lone Democratand vice chairman of the committee, said he suspects “some level of political motivation” for the committee’s formation almost halfway through a two-year legislative session.

Hopgood said his suspicions were aroused when the teachers were joined at the witness table by Mackinac Center Legal Foundation director Patrick Wright. The foundation is an arm of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a nonprofit think tank that argued for the right-to-work law hurried through the GOP-controlled Legislature and signed by Gov. Rick Snyder in December.

The legal foundation said the MEA is using “threats and intimidation” to collect dues from teachers coerced into remaining union members. The 11-month-old law says workers no longer can be compelled to pay union dues or representation fees as a condition of employment.

Two of the three testifying teachers are represented by Wright and the legal foundation in an unfair labor practices complaint lodged against the MEA in October with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission.

Bank, the Novi teacher, said she is in her 39th year as a educator and union member, but grew disillusioned with MEA representation.

Bank testified the MEA asked teachers last spring to sign a form allowing union dues to be deducted automatically from bank accounts or charged on credit cards. Under new law, school districts no longer can deduct dues from paychecks.

She said she thought it was clear she wanted out of the MEA when she refused to turn in the dues collection paperwork, but also expected the union to tell her if anything else was necessary.

“The rules are different now,” Bank said, “and yet somehow I was never informed how they had changed.”

Bank testified the MEA never told her she had to file a notice she was dropping union membership during a one-month August resignation “window” that also is being contested.

As a result, local union leaders have implied her credit rating will be harmed if she doesn’t pay dues to the MEA, Bank told the committee.

Miriam Chanski, a kindergarten teacher for the Coopersville School District in Meekhof’s legislative district, said she indicated on her MEA dues withdrawal form in May or June that she planned to leave the union.

Chanski said a union official acknowledged her desire to leave the union in a July letter. Yet, she said, the local union president showed up in her classroom in September and asked whether she had filed a separate withdrawal letter.

“I said I wasn’t aware that was required,” Chanski said. “Then she told me that I had missed the August window.”

“I think it was actively hidden from us,” Chanski testified.

Meekhof said the MEA will get its chance to respond when lawmakers return in December. But the MEA’s Pratt said the teacher and legal foundation complaints are based on misconceptions about the right-to-work law.

Since 1973, an MEA form all teachers receive has stated their union membership is ongoing but they can resign between Aug. 1 and Aug. 31 each year, Pratt said. About 1,500 teachers resigned in August, he said.

Wright testified at the Nov. 13 hearing that the legal foundation sent 30,000 emails about how to resign from the union — a fact Pratt noted to argue the union’s resignation window wasn’t a secret.

About the dues collection effort, Pratt said the MEA believes a contract is a contract.

“The MEA, at our core, believes in the sanctity of contracts,” he said, and it goes for contracts between the union and its members, too.

The Senate panel seems redundant, Pratt added, since the teachers and the legal foundation have the same issues pending before the state Employment Relations Commission.

The commission upheld the MEA’s August resignation period in a May 2004 decision involving West Branch-Rose City teachers.

Wright is arguing the 2004 decision was improper and teachers no longer can be required to stay in unions under membership cards they signed before the December 2012 passage of the right-to-work law.

“We do have every intention of participating in the committee hearings,” Pratt said.
Gary Heinlein, The Detroit News

Daily Headlines for November 21, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

Campaign Seeks to Recruit Top Students to Become Teachers
New York Times, NY, November 21, 2013
Seeking to combat such sentiments, the Department of Education — in partnership with the Advertising Council, Microsoft, State Farm Insurance, Teach for America, the nation’s two largest teachers’ unions and several other educational groups — is unveiling a public service campaign this week aimed at recruiting a new generation of classroom educators.

Is President Obama against black kids getting a decent education?
Daily Caller, DC, November 20, 2013
After the Obama Administration filed suit against the state of Louisiana over a school voucher program allowing low-income kids in low-performing schools to attend other institutions, it appears the Wall Street Journal’s Jason L. Riley can make that assertion.

Jindal criticizes feds’ new school voucher review plan
The Advocate, LA, November 20, 2013
The U.S. Department of Justice proposed a new plan to review Louisiana’s private-school voucher program, setting off a wave of claims and counterclaims Tuesday over what the shift in approach means.

No Choice for You!
National Review Online, November 21, 2013
The Obama’s administration impairs opportunity for students by opposing parental choice.

STATE COVERAGE

ALABAMA

Evaluating Alabama’s teachers
Times Daily, AL, November 21, 2013
Alabama education officials are divided over whether the teacher evaluation process places enough importance on student achievement.

CALIFORNIA

L.A. Unified committee votes to curtail expansion of iPad program
Los Angeles Times, CA, November 21, 2013
A bond oversight committee authorizes $45 million instead of the $135 million sought by district officials. The vote is advisory, but Supt. John Deasy has been unwilling to oppose the panel.

Vacaville Unified School District trustees to consider charter
The Reporter, CA, November 21, 2013
Will Vacaville Unified leaders embrace another charter school in the 12,500-student district?

COLORADO

Rankin: What’s next for education reform?
Opinion, Aspen Times, CO, November 21, 2013
The $ 1 billion tax increase to enable Colorado Senate Bill 213, a major change to school financing, was defeated by a 65 percent to 35 percent vote.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. attorney general seeks repayment of Options school funds
Washington Post, DC, November 20, 2013
D.C. prosecutors have asked a judge to force Exceptional Education Management Corp., a for-profit company founded by the former managers of Options Public Charter School, to begin repaying $753,569 allegedly owed to the school, according to court documents filed Tuesday in D.C. Superior Court.

FLORIDA

Black leaders encouraged, but not convinced by plan to close achievement gap
Tampa Bay Tribune, FL, November 21, 2013
To improve the academic fortunes of black students, Pinellas County needs a high-level administrator to focus on the achievement gap and an outsider to take a hard look at the entire school system, two leaders in the black community said Wednesday.

ILLINOIS

Chicago parents press for solution to overcrowded schools
Chicago Tribune, IL
November 21, 2013
Parents whose children attend overcrowded Chicago schools complained to the Board of Education on Wednesday that their buildings deserve improvements just as much as an elementary school in the affluent Lincoln Park neighborhood that is in line for a $20 million annex.

MASSACHUSETTS

BPS teacher reviews biased, union charges
Boston Herald, MA, November 21, 2013
The Boston Teachers Union cried foul last night over the unprecedented release of teacher performance evaluations, calling them discriminatory and demanding a probe into race and age bias.

Charter schools split crowd
Daily Item of Lynn, MA, November 21, 2013
Superintendent Catherine Latham called charter schools “insidious and destructive” to the public school system but many parents called them blessing during Wednesday’s public hearing in City Hall.

Residents to push charter school for Windham
Eagle Tribune, MA, November 20, 2013
Some residents are pitching a charter school to alleviate classroom crowding, as officials await engineering reports and analyze tax impacts from a potential middle school expansion.

Parents learn who makes the grade at New Bedford charter school
South Coast Today, MA, November 20, 2013
Berta and Mario Herrera won the lottery Tuesday night. Their daughter, Melissa, was picked in a random drawing out of 150 applicants for one of 27 open slots for next year’s kindergarten class at the Alma del Mar Charter School.

MICHIGAN

Some Michigan teachers protest union’s actions
Detroit News, MI, November 20, 2013
On the eve of the Legislature’s Thanksgiving break, three teachers went before a Senate committee to accuse their union of deception and intimidation.

Strong leaders make charter school thrive
Column, Livingston Daily, MI, November 21, 2013
What happens to great ideas a few years after they’re hatched? That question was on my mind when I drove to Detroit last week to visit University Preparatory Academy, the public charter school launched in 2000 by my old friend, Doug Ross.

MISSOURI

Missouri education chief advised ballot group
Springfield News-Leader, MO, November 21, 2013
Missouri’s education commissioner provided advice to a group crafting a ballot proposal that would end tenure protections for public school teachers and instead make their employment contingent on student achievement.

NEW MEXICO

Teachers aim to shift reform focus to joy of learning
The New Mexican, NM, November 21, 2013
It’s all about the demise of creativity and joy in the classroom, Jennifer St. Clair said. In her 21 years of teaching in New Mexico public schools, she’s never seen teacher morale so low. Teachers fear for their jobs, she said.

Teachers protest reforms
Albuquerque Journal, NM, November 21, 2013
Chanting slogans like “A child is more than a test score” and carrying signs that read such things as “Take back the joy of learning” and “Stop blaming teachers,” more than 100 people demonstrated in front of the Public Education Department in Santa Fe on Wednesday.

NEW YORK

The teachers union’s cynical gambit
Opinion, New York Daily News, NY, November 21, 2013
Lately, student testing has become everyone’s favorite political punching bag. Just this week, New York State United Teachers, the state’s powerful teachers union, issued a statement decrying the proliferation of new tests and insisting on a moratorium for their use in teacher evaluations.

NORTH CAROLINA

Charter school celebrates its growth
Winston-Salem Chronicle, NC, November 20, 2013
Quality Education Academy celebrated the opening of its new high school building last Thursday with a slate of special events, including a spirited parade.

OHIO

Ohio’s Common Core opponents vent their concerns with the new education standards
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, November 21, 2013
Passion over the changes the Common Core standards are bringing to Ohio classrooms poured out at the Statehouse for six hours Wednesday night, as a hearing on a bill to halt the multi-state standards stretched past 1 a.m.

Two more Columbus charter schools in trouble
Columbus Dispatch, OH, November 20, 2013
Two more new Columbus charter schools are in peril, one for failing to open as planned and the other for money problems, unsanitary conditions and teacher-licensing issues.

OKLAHOMA

Barresi promises no double-testing as state prepares for Common Core
Tulsa World, OK, November 21, 2013
Some Oklahoma third- to eighth-graders will be given separate “tryout” questions on English and math tests in the spring as the state transitions to Common Core standards next year, the state Board of Education was told Wednesday.

PENNSYLVANIA

Debate rages over formula for city school funding
Philadelphia Daily News, PA, November 21, 2013
ADMINISTRATORS from the Philadelphia School District implored City Council yesterday to lobby Harrisburg for a permanent funding solution to bear the cost of the city’s public-school system and avoid “year-to-year begging.”

New Hope parents file lawsuit, allege conspiracy by York City school officials
York Dispatch, PA, November 21, 2013
A group of New Hope Academy parents have filed a federal lawsuit alleging conspiratorial actions among York City School District officials that, they allege, “shock the conscience.”

Rutgers scholars program extended to all LEAP grades
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 21, 2013
CAMDEN The schoolchildren, most younger than 10, waited with little feet dangling off the folding chairs in a bright auditorium as they listened for their names. Then, one by one, they came forward and reached out tiny hands to accept their ticket to college.

TENNESSEE

Charter schools group blasts Metro proposal to limit future growth
The Tennessean, TN, November 21, 2013
As Metro school officials defend their move to limit charter school growth, the other side of a raging debate — not surprisingly — says the district should do more to embrace the model.

Study: 1 Out Of 7 MNPS Students Has Access To High Quality Education
WTVF-TV, TN, November 20, 2013
A vast majority students in Metro Schools don’t have access to a high quality education. That’s according to a new report commissioned by the Tennessee Charter School Center.

TEXAS

Cheers to charters
Editorial, Houston Chronicle, TX, November 20, 2013
The list of Texas “brags” is long enough to stretch from Orange on the east to El Paso on the west – or so most of us shameless Texas partisans would like to believe.

WASHINGTON

2 Seattle middle schools focus on attendance, see scores climb
Seattle Times, WA, November 20, 2013
EDUCATION LAB: Missing just a few days of class in sixth grade can predict whether you’ll graduate from high school. That research powers a national anti-dropout effort that’s making a difference at Seattle’s Aki Kurose and Denny International middle schools.

Seattle School Board OKs boundary plan
Seattle Times, WA, November 20, 2013
The Seattle School Board took up the final proposal for a complex school-assignment plan to ease overcrowding Wednesday night.

ONLINE LEARNING

ETextbooks: The future of classroom learning
WVEC, VA
November 20, 2013
From the playroom to the classroom, digital devices and downloadable textbooks are revolutionizing the classroom experience.

FOX6 investigates whether virtual schools are working
WITI-TV, WI, November 20, 2013
More than 7,000 students in Wisconsin attend “virtual” charter schools, which means they “attend” school online. Enrollment in these virtual schools is skyrocketing — and taxpayers are footing the bill.

UW Oshkosh student becomes first virtual student-teacher
Advance-Titan, WI, November 21, 2013
Education majors were offered an opportunity to be a virtual student teacher this fall for the Wisconsin Virtual Academy, and UW Oshkosh student Michael Wilbert took on the challenge.

Daily Headlines for November 20, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

Anti-Truancy Efforts Notch High Marks
Wall Street Journal, November 19, 20132
As it turns out, students really do better in school if they actually go to school. A study to be released Wednesday found that New York City students with major attendance problems were able to turn things around academically if they started showing up to class.

On the compatibility of education choice and centralization
Opinion, Minneapolis Post, MN, November 20, 2013
Those who oppose the centralization of education (via national standards and federally regulated funding mechanisms) often argue that doing so will result in two things: first, a severe degradation of quality and, second, the limiting of school choice.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

L.A. ‘Public School Choice’ Program Swaps Competition for Collaboration
Huffington Post, November 19, 2013
Four years ago, the Los Angeles Unified School District embarked on a bold, perhaps reckless, program called Public School Choice to allow charter school operators and other community groups to compete for running many of its schools.

STREAM Charter School wants use of Eastside campus in Oroville
Mercury-Register, CA, November 20, 2013
Over the next few months, officials at the Oroville City Elementary School District and STREAM Charter school will be negotiating for use of a facility for the new school.

Teachers union members, parents protest $1-billion iPad plan
Los Angeles Times, CA, November 19, 2013
More than a dozen Los Angeles teachers on Tuesday staged their first protest of a $1-billion plan to provide iPads to every student and teacher, calling the effort misguided and unsustainable.

COLORADO

Parker charter school gets national spotlight
Our Colorado News, CO, November 19, 2013
Parker’s North Star Academy gained national recognition for its character education program, which emphasizes personal development as well as community service.

DELAWARE

What we can learn from Reach Academy’s closing
Column, Delaware News Journal, DE, November 20, 2013
“Potential new life for Reach Academy Charter School can’t just turn on the fact that nearly 200 girls would be thrust into the traditional public school system, well after school choice options have closed.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. preparing a new unified enrollment lottery for its traditional and charter schools
Washington Post, DC, November 19, 2013
The majority of the District’s charter schools and all of the city’s traditional public schools plan to participate in a single, unified lottery to determine enrollment for next fall, a shift education officials hope will streamline what has often been a frustrating and chaotic process for families.

Harmony, Democracy Prep schools approved by D.C. charter school board
Washington Post, DC, November 19, 2013
Two charter school operators, including a Texas-based organization whose business practices have drawn scrutiny, have won permission to open schools in the District next fall.

The lack of oversight at D.C.’s school voucher program
Editorial, Washington Post, DC, November 19, 2013
THE DC CHILDREN and Youth Investment Trust Corp. is making news again. The nonprofit organization first gained notoriety as the enabler in the scheme by former D.C. Council member Harry Thomas Jr. (D) to defraud the city.

GEORGIA

Georgia Charter School Association officials give Doughtery Rotary Club charter primer
Albany Herald, GA, November 19, 2013
When Georgia voters approved the reconstitution of the State Charter School Commission (SCSC) during last year’s November election, many educators and administrators anticipated a flurry of new charter school applications from around the state.

FLORIDA

Pinecrest Preparatory Charter in Orange makes complete turnaround
Orlando Sentinel Blog, FL
November 19, 2013
Pinecrest Preparatory Charter School in Orange County has made a big turnaround, going from what would have been an “F”grade in its first year (it was too small to be officially graded) to a current grade of “A.”

Superintendents want more prep time for Common Core
Florida Current, FL, November 19, 2013
It remains unclear whether Florida will adopt Common Core State Standards next fall and which standardized tests will be used the following spring to measure student performance. And on Tuesday school district superintendents told the State Board of Education to slow down the transition to new academic standards for public schools.

ILLINOIS

Charter fight goes deep
Capital Fax Blog, IL, November 19, 2013
State Rep. Linda Chapa LaVia, D-Aurora, has contempt for the state charter school commission, even though she voted for its creation more than two years ago.

Parents concerned about privacy in new student-data storehouse
Chicago Sun Times, IL, November 20, 2013
Parents concerned about student privacy are gearing up to fight a controversial data storehouse that has already been dropped in several states.

MASSACHUSETTS

State OK’s trial of new education tests
Boston Globe, MA, November 20, 20113
Thousands of Massachusetts students next spring will try out a new state standardized testing system — many of them answering questions online — under a plan approved by state leaders Tuesday that pushes most MCAS exams closer to extinction.

MICHIGAN

Michigan schools’ financial crisis growing
Detroit News, MI, November 19, 2013
A growing number of Michigan school districts face higher borrowing costs after downgrades this year by Moody’s Investors Service, which cited financial pressure stemming from falling enrollment and charter school growth in a report issued Tuesday.

One charter school’s example – strong leaders, strong school
Opinion, Bridge Magazine, MI, November 19, 2013
What happens to great ideas a few years after they’re hatched? That question was on my mind last week when I drove to Detroit last week to visit University Preparatory Academy, the public charter launched back in 2000 by my old friend, Doug Ross.

MISSOURI

Catholic school looking to charter school option for survival
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, November 20, 2013
As an eighth-grader, William Howard starts the school day by clasping his hands and bowing his head in prayer. In two years, such an expression of faith at De La Salle Middle School may be prohibited.

NEW MEXICO

NM teachers plan protests over evaluation system
San Antonio Express, NM, November 20, 2013
New Mexico officials of the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers are encouraging teachers to wear black on Wednesday and participate in rallies in a number of communities, including Carlsbad, Hobbs, Roswell, Santa Fe and Las Cruces.

NEW YORK

Nine ways to improve schools in the nation’s largest district

Washington Post Blog, DC, November 20, 2013
The election of Bill de Blasio, a progressive Democrat, as the next mayor in New York City could mean big changes in the nation’s largest school district, which for 12 years has been the subject of corporate-influenced and standardized test-based school reform.

United Federation of Teachers charter schools are a tale of two cities
New York Daily News, NY, November 19, 2013
High schools in the Bronx and Brooklyn are doing well. But an elementary program in East New York is a flop.

Teachers Unions vs. Charter Schools
Opinion, Wall Street Journal, November 20, 20132
The Beginning With Children charter school in New York City announced that it will close next year because operating under union work rules has made it impossible to provide students with a decent education.

NORTH CAROLINA

A concern for teachers
Shelby Star, NC, November 19, 2013
Changes to state education standards may put Cleveland County teachers’ job security in doubt. After the 2013-14 school year ends, teachers will lose their tenure, a program that previously provided more employment security.

OHIO

New analysis alters comparisons of school districts’ spending
Columbus Dispatch, OH
November Comparing per-pupil spending hasn’t always been a straightforward matter and rarely showed how much money was spent on educating a typical student.

OREGON

Small West Linn charter school seeks funding boost, hoping to grow
The Oregonian, OR, November 19, 2013
Twelve years after moving into an old bank building in West Linn, a small charter school is ready to grow, but administrators say they need more funding from the district.

PENNSYLVANIA

Alternative school seeks contract extension with city
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, November 20, 2013
Kenneth Huston, community liaison for Specialized Education Services Inc., had the $2.8 million question about students at the city alternative school his firm operates on the North Side.

Article about district hiring “raises alarm bells”
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 20, 2013
EUGENE DEPASQUALE, the state’s auditor general, said Monday’s Daily News story about the school district’s practice of hiring personnel without approval of the School Reform Commission “raised concerns.”

Charters need a better law
Editorial, Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 20, 2013
How bad is Pennsylvania’s charter school law? So bad that it required the destitute Philadelphia district to pay $305,000 to a dysfunctional charter that has been shut down. The state Senate may vote this week to replace the 1997 act, but the legislation has flaws that must be corrected.

Divisive charter school reform bill headed toward vote in PA
Pocono Record, PA, November 19, 2013
A vote in the state Senate this week could decide the fate of public charter schools in Pennsylvania.

Group Calls PA Charter School Bill “Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing”
Public Service, November 19, 2013
A wolf in sheep’s clothing: That’s how a Pennsylvania public education advocacy group describes a bill in the state legislature that would change the way charter schools are authorized to operate.

New Hope Academy parents file lawsuit
York Daily Record, PA, November 19, 2013
Several New Hope Academy Charter School parents and one student have filed a federal lawsuit against the York City School District and several current and former school board members, alleging that the decision not to renew the school’s charter violated their rights.

TENNESSEE

Good data can be key to education success
Editorial, Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN
November 20, 2013
Tennessee and Arkansas are among the most advanced states in what should be one of the least controversial products of the education reform movement.

Nashville school leaders defend move to limit charters
The Tennessean, TN, November 20, 2013
A controversial new policy that limits where charter school operators can apply to open in Nashville next year has troubled Mayor Karl Dean and prompted Gov. Bill Haslam to suggest a sit-down in the latest chapter of an ongoing fight over publicly financed, privately operated charters.

UTAH

Utah’s new schools superintendent goes light on politics, shares own story
Salt Lake Tribune, UT, November 20, 2013
Martell Menlove, Utah’s newest superintendent of public instruction, put politics on a shelf Tuesday in his first State of Education address.

ONLINE LEARNING

Northwest list cyber school expenses
Times Leader, PA, November 19, 2013
The cost of charter cyber school came into focus again on Tuesday night when the Northwest Area School Board approved $452,891 in expenses in November, over $50,000 of which was remitted for students receiving instruction via the internet rather than attending regular classes.

Provost Academy offers a ‘click and brick’ hybrid learning environment for students
Cola Daily, SC, November 19, 2013
The Provost Academy of South Carolina is introducing a new learning experience for South Carolina students.

Purcell happy with blended learning results
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, November 19, 2013
This year, Purcell Marian High School in East Walnut Hills embarked on an ambitious project. It became one of the few traditional high schools in Greater Cincinnati – and the first local Catholic school – to use a “blended learning” model for its math classes school-wide.

URGENT ACTION REQUIRED PA SB 1085

The PA Senate Appropriations Committee is close to passing a charter school bill that could negatively impact schools. We continue to be concerned with the proposal because the goal of any legislative effort to reform Pennsylvania’s charter school sector should be one that ensures quality growth. As currently written SB 1085 does not.

To grow good charter schools, the evidence is abundantly clear that quality charter schools are directly correlated to quality authorizers. States with multiple, independent authorizers — independent legally and managerially from existing local and state education agencies — produce more and better opportunities for students.

In Michigan, university authorizers are constitutionally autonomous from the state department of education. The State University of New York’s Charter Schools Institute is also autonomous and is accountable to taxpayers and the legislature for the schools they authorize and manage.

These are just two models that prove independence from existing structures should be encouraged and valued in order to attract high quality universities that are also progressive, forward–thinking, and looking for opportunities to be distinctive. If the goal is to bring strong higher education institutions into the fold to improve K-12 student outcomes, the Pennsylvania Department of Education can’t be controlling every move. As currently written, SB 1085 regulates at an unprecedented level.

Over 15 Articles (including over 100 provisions)  already apply to charter schools under PA Code Section 1732-A, yet the current proposal adds dozens of pages of increased regulation for charters and authorizers.

We encourage you to read through the current proposal and contact your legislators.

For your convenience, we have marked up a copy of Pennsylvania Senate Bill 1085 to show on the same document where language is wrong, bad for chartering, or the cause of additional, punitive or damaging oversight. Download it here.

This proposal would need to be significantly amended before it goes to conference and that is highly unlikely. It is time to scrap this bill and work to build a consensus on what will help improve outcomes for Pennsylvania’s students.

NEWSWIRE: November 19, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 43

WHY THEY EXCEL. Earlier today, we were very fortunate to receive a tour of Excel Academy,  an all girls charter school that is deliberately located in the Anacostia section of Washington, DC. The school staff, mission and most of all the young scholars are nothing short of a quintessential example of a well run charter, and what happens when a school is mission-driven and devoted to empowering families. “You really have to be crazy” to start a charter, Kaye Savage, Excel’s founder and CEO told us, while maintaining that DC is one of the more charter-friendly environments in the country. But what’s crazy is that high-performing charters like Excel, despite being public schools, can have such tremendous outcomes for students when they all too often get less money than traditional public schools. Savage takes seriously the role of school administrators as stewards of public money and resources, and this understanding combined with providing a much-needed option for low-income girls leaves little room for underperformance. It’s critical for the American public to recognize mission-driven schools like Excel, and the need to create the necessary policy environment for like-minded school leaders to create better opportunities for kids.

COMMON GOALS. Concerns have arisen over the potentially adverse effects of Common Core Standards on charter schools’ ability to deliver the unique and quality educational experience they strive to offer their students. Regardless of where one stands on Common Core, there is already an established 72 percent of Americans who support charter schools. That type of consensus, along with the proven track record of success enjoyed by charter schools across the country, makes it easier to identify what’s worth preserving. For charter schools, that’s their accountability and autonomy, and accountability and autonomy are best achieved through laws  that allow charters to stay true to their mission and create a viable alternative for students in need, and take action and hold charters accountable when they fall short of their mission.

SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT. At a policy discussion in Washington State,  Spokane Superintendent Shelley Redinger took full advantage of an opportunity to dispel some of the most common myths  surrounding charter schools. Redinger flatly rejected the misconception that charter schools “cream” the best students from other schools, and are instead made to serve the students most in need of another option. Earlier this year, Washington voters approved the introduction of charter schools, and lawmakers so far have yet to employ best practices such as independent charter authorizers, and ensuring funding equity. But after discussing her experience in Oregon with the “ripple effect” that occurred when the introduction of a charter school compelled surrounding schools to perform better, Redinger pointedly asked, “Why not pursue it?”

HOLLOW VICTORY. In its ongoing assault on the Louisiana Scholarship Program, the Department of Justice has merely decided to switch tactics that will still curtail the power of parents to choose a better education for their child. Instead of placing an injunction of the Scholarship Program’s operation, DOJ now wants to require the state of Louisiana to provide detailed information on each income-eligible scholar 45 days prior to their enrollment, creating burdensome red tape that does nothing to facilitate the ability of a student to escape a failing school. As school choice proponents point out,  this is nothing but a cynical stall tactic that allows the lawsuit to continue, and creates uncertainty for an overwhelmingly popular program. Unless DOJ forgoes the entire lawsuit and allows the Scholarship Program to operate properly, the civil rights of Louisiana families will continue to be under attack.

BIG BULLY. US Education Secretary Arne Duncan has been put in the hot seat (rightfully so!) by parents, bloggers and the press for a controversial statement made last week that has sparked a major debate  around the Common Core standards with regards to race and class. Duncan is apparently “fascinated” by the fact that there’s any opposition from the American public to the Common Core and especially, “white suburban moms who — all of a sudden — their child isn’t as brilliant as they thought they were, and their school isn’t quite as good as they thought they were.” The fact is moms and dads, urban, suburban or rural, have every right to express legitimate concerns over the Common Core and the nation’s top education official has no business bullying them. Many parents find the push for Common Core a distraction from addressing the fact that only 34% of our nation’s 8th graders are proficient in math and reading. This sort of bullying is apparently becoming commonplace for this Administration when it comes to education. Attorney General Eric Holder’s actions to block Louisiana families from making choices is an attack on parental rights. So while Duncan takes on “white suburban moms” and Holder continues to bully black low-income families in the Bayou state, little to no progress is being made to ensure great outcomes for all our students. More parents should be questioning authority. Oh the nerve! 

ONLY TWO WEEKS until #GIVINGTUESDAY. Are you in? CER will participate in #GivingTuesday on Dec. 3, a national day dedicated to generosity. Following Black Friday and Cyber Monday, people around the world are encouraged to give back for Giving Tuesday. Our goal is to raise $5,000 towards making schools better for ALL children. You can donate early here. Follow our progress on Twitter and Facebook and tell us why you #Give2edreform on #GivingTuesday.

Daily Headlines for November 19, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

Arne Duncan’s Search for More Teachers
US News & World Report Blog, November 18, 2013
This week, Education Secretary Arne Duncan will re-launch a campaign he initiated a few years ago to get more college students interested in becoming teachers. Funded by Microsoft and State Farm, and supported by Teach for America and the teachers’ unions, the effort will draw attention to the importance of teaching through public service announcements that encourage the best and brightest to consider entering the profession.

Duncan tries to quell uproar over Common Core comments
Washington Post, DC, November 18, 2013
Education Secretary Arne Duncan tried Monday to quell the outrage sparked by his comments that injected race and class into the debate about the Common Core academic standards taking root in classrooms across the country.

Obama to Unveil Competition to Overhaul High School
Wall Street Journal, November 19, 2013
President Barack Obama will unveil a $100 million competition Tuesday aimed at finding new ways to better prepare high-school students for the global high-tech economy, a senior administration official said.

Testing Teachers: States Struggle To Evaluate Educators
TIME Blog, November 18, 2013
Though teacher evaluation is on the rise, teachers reps say there is still a need for more resources on how to improve instructio

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

L.A. school board’s us-versus-them dynamic doesn’t help students
Column, Los Angeles Times, CA, November 19, 2013
The polarizing question has become: Which poor children matter most in a district that can’t call on much of a middle class?

Oakland charter school battle rages
San Francisco Chronicle, CA, November 18, 2013
Oakland is the charter school capital of California. And that might be a problem.
This year, more than a quarter of the city’s 49,000 students are attending one of its nearly 40 alternative public schools, far more per capita than anywhere else in the state.
Oakland: Fewer special-needs students in charter schools
San Francisco Chronicle, CA, November 18, 2013
State law says that all public schools, charter or traditional, are required to serve all children regardless of disability or behavioral challenges.

San Fernando Valley charter schools unite to form advocacy council
Los Angeles Daily News, CA, November 18, 2013
After a change in Los Angeles Unified’s funding policy sent their numbers soaring, the 42 affiliated charter schools in the San Fernando Valley have formed an official council that will work as a bloc to communicate with district officials.

FLORIDA


Einstein School breathes a sigh of relief after FCAT change

Gainesville Sun, FL, November 18, 2013
A Gainesville charter school will not be graded on the A-to-F scale after receiving an alternative rating from the state.

KANSAS

Brownback says litigation over school finance is ‘dumb way of handling this’; only Republicans invited to discussion
Lawrence Journal-World, KS
November 18, 012
Facing a possible court-ordered increase in public school funding, Gov. Sam Brownback has called for opening up the dialogue between legislators and school leaders.

KENTUCKY

Going to bat for school choice would yield triple play for Kentucky’s students, school districts and taxpayers
News-Democrat & Leader, KY, November 18, 2013
In the early days, school-choice opponents frequently got away with baseless allegations that usually carried some variation of the following theme: public charter schools and private school voucher and tax-credit programs are radical ideas that harm traditional public schools and fail to offer their students a better education.

LOUISIANA

Charter Schools in Lafayette (Part One): What Are They?
KATC-TV, LA, November 18, 2013
Although the deal is done, charter schools remain a controversial topic. Last month, the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education approved the applications of both the National Heritage Academies and Charter Schools U.S.A. to break ground.

MASSACHUSETTS

Fitchburg school board approves resolution against proposed charter school
Sentinel & Enterprise, MA
November 18, 2013
The School Committee has unanimously approved a resolution against the proposed grade K-4 Academy for the Whole Child Charter School.

MICHIGAN

Detroit schools sheds high-risk status; state to relax financial oversight
Detroit Free Press, MI, November 18, 2013
The Michigan Department of Education is relaxing its oversight of Detroit Public Schools’ finances because of what officials are calling five years of “systemic improvements in its administrative and financial procedures.”

EMU pressured to end partnership with Education Achievement Authority
Detroit News, MI, November 18, 2013
Faculty members and the teachers unions are lobbying Eastern Michigan University to cut ties with the Education Achievement Authority, the state-run system formed two years ago to turn around low-performing schools in Michigan.

MISSISSIPPI

Superintendent: State takeover of schools not an option
Natchez Democrat, MS, November 19, 2013
Waiting for a state takeover of two schools in the Natchez-Adams School District in September shouldn’t even be an option on the table, Superintendent Fredrick Hill told community members on Monday.

NEW YORK

Colleges could lead city schools
Poughkeepsie Journal, NY, November 18, 2013
Colleges could soon be taking over some of the city’s most struggling schools under a new proposal Superintendent Bolgen Vargas presented to the school board on Monday.

?Is New York’s charter-school area waning?
New Yorker, NY, November 18, 2013
Under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, New York City has become a powerful incubator for the charter-school movement. The number of charter schools citywide has grown from seventeen in 2002 to a hundred and eighty-three this year

NYC education officials hurry to close city’s worst-performing charter school
New York Daily News, NY, November 19, 2013
Brooklyn’s Fahari Academy Charter School faces closure before Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio takes over on Jan. 1. De Blasio has promised to end school shutdowns.

Williamsburg charter school closing over contract impasse
New York Post, NY, November 19, 2013
A Williamsburg charter school’s board has voted to voluntarily close it in June — citing a contract impasse with the teachers union.

NORTH CAROLINA

Haley: Education plan going to lawmakers next year

Aiken Standard, NC, November 18, 2013
Gov. Nikki Haley said on Monday she will be taking on what she called “the big bear in the room” when she presents a package of bills to improve public education in South Carolina to state lawmakers in January.

OHIO

Taxpayers’ $1.2 million propped up owner’s 2nd charter-school bust
Columbus Dispatch, OH, November 19, 2013
After resigning this year as superintendent of a financially troubled Internet charter school amid allegations of nepotism, James McCord had a new plan, and it again involved a charter school employing him and his family.

OKLAHOMA

Tulsa Public Schools see dramatic decrease in dropouts
Tulsa World, OK, November 18, 2013
Tulsa Public Schools saw a nearly 18 percent decrease in middle school, junior high and high school dropouts last year, district officials reported Monday.

PENNSYLVANIA

Differing opinions on how to improve schools
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 19, 2013
The numbers don’t lie, Superintendent William R. Hite Jr. said: Most Philadelphia School District students aren’t in “good” schools, if “good” is defined as half of all students reading and doing math at grade level.

Divisive charter school reform bill headed toward vote in PA
Watchdog.org, November 19, 2013
A vote in the state Senate this week could decide the fate of public charter schools in Pennsylvania.

VIRGINIA

Tuition-free private school attracting more students
WTVR-TV, VA, November 18, 2013
Some parents of middle school students in the city of Richmond consider their children’s educational options bleak. Only one of Richmond’s nine public middle schools is fully accredited by the state. Six of the nine schools experience a drop in Standards of Learning test scores in 2013, according to the Virginia Department of Education.

WISCONSIN

Taxpayers shouldn’t have to support parochial schools
Letter, Wisconsin State Journal, WI, November 19, 2013
The Monday letter “Vouchers no threat to public education” claims the school voucher program is primarily aimed at union busting. Maybe, but I support it to some extent if the school in question sticks to conventional curriculum.

WYOMING

House panel narrows superintendent investigation
Jackson Hole Daily, WY, November 19, 2013
A special House committee investigating state schools Superintendent Cindy Hill has narrowed its focus to mainly issues involving possible misappropriation of funds and resources, although it’s looking into some personnel matters that are being kept out of the public view for now.

ONLINE LEARNING

Pike County BOE approves Virtual High School application
Troy Messenger, AL, November 18, 2013
The Pike County Board of Education elected officers for the 2014 year at its Monday meeting. The Board elected Greg Price as its president and Chris Wilkes as vice president.

California Students Post Top Test-Score Gains

California students posted the biggest gains on a national standardized test last year, placing the state in the unfamiliar position of being the best rather than among the worst when it comes to anything related to education.

Students here topped those in the 49 other states with a seven-point gain in eighth-grade reading, according to results released Thursday.

California’s normal academic neighbors, Mississippi and Alabama, lost a point and tied for the bottom spot.

The achievement wasn’t enough to raise California from its overall below-average position on what’s called the Nation’s Report Card, which includes math and reading test scores from a sampling of fourth- and eighth-grade students every two years.

Still, California looked really good at the top of a list – even if it was in only one category.

“Literacy is at the core of a child’s education, and it’s remarkable to see such a major gain in scores in just one year,” said Mike Kirst, president of the state Board of Education, in a statement announcing the results.

The state’s eighth-graders posted a score of 262 points in reading – four points shy of the national average – on the 500-point scale. Massachusetts posted the highest middle school reading score, 277.

More than 700 schools and 16,000 California students participated in the tests during the 2012-13 school year, and, overall, scores went up in most categories, which are broken down by grade, ethnicity and income. It’s an improvement from largely stagnant state scores on the national test.

Built-in difference

Still, California scores lagged behind those of most other states, in part because of the higher number of English learners and low-income students enrolled in the state and included in the sample of those tested.

And, following recession-era cuts to education funding, the scores were that much sweeter, state officials said.

“The resilience and tenacity of our schools have seen them through some challenging years, and I’m glad to see this validation of the hard work of educators, students and their families,” state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson said in a statement.

Reason unclear

Of course, the lingering question was why eighth-grade reading scores jumped so much.

“We are looking into this issue, but have no conclusions now,” Kirst said.

At a national level, U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan noted that states already incorporating the new Common Core standards showed impressive gains. The new standards change what is taught in each grade level and encourages deeper understanding of the topics that are taught.

Under the new standards, eighth-grade reading emphasizes analysis of texts and literature, including determining themes and central ideas in short-answer or essay form.

The national assessment also requires students to explain their answers rather than simply pick from multiple-choice answers.

California is among the states that have adopted Common Core standards, offering a possible explanation for the big gain in middle school reading.

Inching up

Overall, scores in the state inched up, although there were clouds with California’s silver lining.

In fourth grade, the reading score was up two points to 213 and remained stagnant at 234 in math. Eighth-grade math students scored 276 points, up three points from 2011.

Yet significant gaps remained between high-achieving students and African American, low-income and Latino peers. Eighth-grade African American students, for example, scored 33 points lower than white students in math, a gap that hasn’t changed much since 1990, according to the 2013 Report Card.

Nationally, scores continued a slow rise, drawing praise from Duncan.

“Our national progress makes me optimistic that local leaders and educators are showing the way to raising standards and driving innovation in the next few years,” Duncan said. “It is encouraging to see progress in tough economic times, when so many states and local communities have struggled with significant cuts to their education budgets.”

Less upbeat view

Others weren’t so upbeat, given overall numbers showing that the majority of students across the country scored below proficiency in math and English.

According to the results, just over a third of eighth-grade students across the country were proficient or above in math and reading, while 35 percent of fourth-graders were proficient in reading and 42 percent were proficient in math.

The proficiency rates are “a disgrace and truly incomprehensible,” said Kara Kerwin, president of the Center for Education Reform, a national organization that supports charter schools, in a statement. “The stagnant results of (the national test) should make us all much more uncomfortable perpetuating excuses.”

Jill Tucker is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.

#GivingTuesday


  
In just 2 weeks… You can participate in #GivingTuesday and help us raise $5,000 to make schools work better for ALL children on December 3.

What is Giving Tuesday?

Giving Tuesday is a one-day online and social media campaign dedicated to giving back and showing how Americans can do more with our wallets than just consume on Black Friday and Cyber Monday – we can give back to the causes that we care most about.

Our Goal:

To raise $5,000 on (and prior to) #GivingTuesday towards making schools better for all children!

Are you In?

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Daily Headlines for November 18, 2013

Click here for Newswire, 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

New York’s stalled pre-K initiative could get federal jump-start
Journal News, NY, November 17, 2013
Stalled efforts in New York and other states to provide universal prekindergarten for 4-year-olds would get a jump-start under a new congressional proposal.

Vouchers must be monitored to ensure school integration, U.S. says
Times-Picayune, LA, November 17, 2013
The U.S. Justice Department says Louisiana’s private school voucher program must be monitored to make sure it doesn’t make public school segregation worse. To that end, it wants the state to submit extensive student and school demographics each year.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

‘Parent trigger’ foes seek a shiny new lock
Opinion, Sacramento Bee, CA, November 16, 2013
California’s landmark parent empowerment law is one of the most innovative education policy reforms to come along in years. Letting parents take control of their children’s failing school is simply unheard of – revolutionary, divisive, status-quo-shattering and fraught with peril.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Let’s celebrate D.C. learning gains, but let’s also keep things in perspective
Column, Washington Post, DC, November 17, 2013
It’s no surprise that news of big increases in D.C. public school scores on the much-respected National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) tests has been greeted with as much suspicion as applause. Those who care about D.C. schoolchildren have been disappointed too many times by gains that were not sustained.

School voucher group under fire for ‘untimely information’
Washington Times, DC, November 17, 2013
The Government Accountability Office has criticized the group that administers the District’s school voucher program, saying the agency provides “incomplete and untimely information” about schools to participating families, and calling for both internal improvements and a helping hand from outside agencies.

FLORIDA

Charter school oversight needs to come from St. Johns County school board

St. Augustine Record, FL, November 17, 2013
Last week The Record reported on concerns by local school officials that a new law could change the way charter schools are regulated in Florida.

IDAHO

Idaho’s top school isn’t for everyone
Coeur d’Alene Press, ID, November 16, 2013
The Coeur d’Alene Charter Academy is not a school for everyone. Three of the leader’s own children tried it, but returned to a traditional high school.

KANSAS

With competition around, Kansas City Public Schools plan recruitment fair
Kansas City Star, KS, November 17, 2013
Kansas City Public Schools are stepping up efforts to recruit families, hoping to get a jump on charter school competition and head off potential student transfers. A recruitment fair Dec. 7 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Paseo Academy, 4747 Flora Ave., will put all of the district’s schools, services and partners on display, spokeswoman Eileen Houston-Stewart said.

LOUISIANA

Magnet proposal irks board members
The Advocate, LA, November 17, 2013
Superintendent Bernard Taylor is once again looking to leverage the popularity of the East Baton Rouge Parish school system’s magnet program to attract more middle-income students to its schools.

MASSACHUSETTS

Officials on edge over charter school
The Daily Item of Lynn, MA, November 16, 2013
There will be a public hearing in City Hall Chambers on the Fenix Charter School, which is seeking to open in Lynn and will likely only heighten the already tense relationship school officials have with the alternative education systems.

Salem Academy turns 10
Salam News, MA
November 18, 2013
Charter school embraces culture where ‘it’s cool to be smart’.

State orders Boston to release teacher ratings
Boston Globe, MA, November 18, 2013
The Secretary of State’s Office has ruled the Boston public schools wrongfully withheld overall ratings of teacher performance at individual schools this summer in violation of the state’s public records law and ordered officials to release the data.

MICHIGAN

Proposed legislation upsets school board members
Press & Guide, MI, November 28, 2013
Dearborn Public School trustees expressed growing frustration at more possible state dictates and asked residents to call the legislators sponsoring the bills.

MISSOURI

How should teachers’ effectiveness be evaluated?
Springfield News-Leader, MO, November 17, 2013
While today’s approach is more subtle, teachers in Missouri are on the cusp of again being evaluated by student performances.

NEW MEXICO

Educators blast evaluation software program
Albuquerque Journal, NM, November 17, 2013
Teachscape, the $3.76 million software program at the heart of the state’s new teacher evaluation system, has become one of the most contentious aspects of the much-maligned process.

NEW YORK

At Forums, New York State Education Commissioner Faces a Barrage of Complaints
New York Times, NY, November 18, 2013
He has been shushed, booed, called imperious and mocked as the incomprehensible teacher who bleated on and on in Charlie Brown’s classroom.

Charter school leaders seek dialogue with de Blasio
Newsday, NY, November 17, 2013
Charter school leaders say they’re seeking an open dialogue with New York Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio and hoping he’ll reconsider his proposals to curb their growth and start charging rent to those the city decides can afford it.

Network of all-boys NYC public schools growing
Wall Street Journal, November 17, 2013
Once seen as sexist and outdated, the all-male educational model had been resurrected to serve New York City’s poorest boys, a group feared to be more likely to go to prison than college.

NORTH CAROLINA

Student 6 battles the achievement gap in CHCCS
Herald Sun, NC, November 17, 2013
Porras is a sophomore at East Chapel Hill High and one of about 20 of her peers working to help bridge the achievement gap in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools by teaching teachers the reality of many of their minority students when it comes to education.

OHIO

Ohio school-choice movement hinges on whether parents are capable of parenting
Akron Beacon Journal, OH, November 15, 2013
Parents. How good are they? The 15-year-old school choice movement has prevailed in Ohio, shifting more than $1 billion in state taxes and more than 150,000 students to charter and private schools on this premise: Parents are capable of making good decisions about the education of their children.

State school board business is private business, too
Akron Beacon Journal, OH, November 17, 2013
Sometimes the private business of state school board members overlaps into their roles deciding policy for Ohio.

PENNSYLVANIA

3 charter schools apply to open in city next fall
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, November 15, 2013
In a district already expecting to spend $54.9 million on charter schools in 2014, Pittsburgh Public Schools has received applications from three new charter schools for next fall and a request to expand an existing one.

Allentown School District bombarded with applications for new charter schools
The Express Times, PA, November 16, 2013
Two new Allentown charter schools have been proposed, at a time when district officials are already concerned about the thousands of students and millions of tuition dollars they are losing to existing cyber and charter schools.

Corbett ads defend his education record
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 17, 2013
The radio ad is called “Looking out.” As inspirational music plays in the background, a female voice declares that Gov. Corbett believes deeply in public education and that his administration is funneling more state dollars into classroom instruction than ever before.

SRC remains leaderless, does most business as usual.
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 18, 2013
For four weeks now, the body that runs the troubled Philadelphia School District has been leaderless.

Unchartered territory
Editorial, Philadelphia Daily News, PA, November 18, 2013
PARENTS considering sending their kids to charter schools – or Pennsylvania lawmakers who are considering sending charter-school bills out of committee for a vote – should answer the following questions:

SOUTH CAROLINA

District’s choice process is fairer
Editorial, Greenville News, SC, November 17, 2013
The Greenville County School District has made a wise and equitable decision by abandoning a first-come, first-served policy for public school choice slots at the district’s schools.

Report: SC charter schools have inadequate access to facilities, amenities

Island Packet, SC, November 17, 2013
Public charter schools are made to be different. They create a unique school environment, develop different teaching methods, and allow parents and teachers to be innovative, advocates say.

TENNESSEE

Brainerd High raises the bar: Emphasis on academics breathes new life into the school
Times Free Press, TN, November 18, 2013
Brainerd’s perpetual poor performance landed the school in the state’s crosshairs. After finishing in the bottom 5 percent of all Tennessee schools academically, Brainerd is now operating within a federal school turnaround effort called the iZone. That effort brought new money to Brainerd, but also mandated changes.

Charter schools prompt concerns about money in Tennessee
WRCB-TV, TN, November 17, 2013
Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools officials say they’re under financial siege from rapidly multiplying charter schools. And the state’s three other large school districts — including Hamilton County — fear they’re next.

WASHINGTON

Charting a new course for Washington public schools
Daily Sun News, WA, November 15, 2013
“To have been in a charter school is to believe in a charter school,” says Dr. Shelley Redinger, superintendent of Spokane Public Schools.

WISCONSIN

School voucher advocate, community activist face off for Assembly seat
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, WI, November 17, 2013
A special election Tuesday to fill a south suburban Milwaukee Assembly seat pits a Republican school voucher advocate against a Democratic community activist and newcomer to the district.

ONLINE LEARNING

Board gets face time with East Ridge’s ‘blended learning’ program
Woodbury Bulletin, MN, November 17, 2013
An East Ridge High School program that supporters say offers a new dimension of learning but critics say departs too greatly from a traditional classroom experience got a full hearing Thursday at District 833 School Board.

Flipped” math classroom a hit in Fulton
Valley News Blog, NY, November 16, 2013
Two Fulton Junior High School math teachers presented on their new system to teach seventh- and eighth-graders math at the Nov. 12 school board meeting.

Lawmakers: Some virtual charters should be exempt from district report card ratings
Milwaukee State Journal, WI, November 18, 2013
The performance of Wisconsin virtual charter school students would no longer affect their school district’s overall state report card rating if more than half of the virtual school’s enrollment is from outside the district, under legislation proposed last month.

Response to “Brooklyn Councilman Steve Levin Calls for Moratorium On New NYC Charter Schools”

Alarming and disturbing – two words that are not normally associated with New York City charter schools.  Two words that in no way describe the choice public schools that continually provide the most innovative options and stellar achievement for students.  In fact, a study by Caroline Hoxby shows that the longer NY students are in charter schools, the higher they achieve.

Yet, Brooklyn-based Council member Steve Levin, clearly emboldened by Bill de Blasio’s mayoral victory, has called recently for a moratorium on all new charter schools in the city.  He claims that everyone should be alarmed by the projected budget increase for charter schools across the city.  To be clear, he called the increase “a bee in his bonnet”.

The inability of Levin to A) recognize that an increase in the budgets of charter schools will improve parents’ ability to free their children from mediocre at best traditional public schools and B) deal with the bee in his bonnet presents a threat to parent power in the nation’s largest city.  New York City’s parents must be aware that the reign of charter-ally Michael Bloomberg is giving way to a hostile environment for high performing and innovative public schools of choice – and de Blasio hasn’t even been sworn in yet.

Not only are the proposals by de Blasio to charge charter schools rent, end all new charter co-locations, and now Levin’s call to halt the establishment of new charters in general threatening to the charter schools themselves, but also to parents.  The power of parents to choose and to liberate their children from dismally achieving traditional schools is being damaged.  Parents who know how great their children’s charter schools are working also know that establishing more great charters schools is necessary to spread power, choice, accountability, and achievement to other families.  The Big Apple’s new political leaders, however, don’t understand that, and are bolstered to damage parent power and choice for our kids.  That is what is truly alarming and disturbing.