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NEWSWIRE: December 3, 2013

Vol. 15, No. 45

POSITIVE CULTURE. We were on the ground today touring Democracy Prep Endurance Charter School in New York City, where it shares a building with a traditional public school. As we made our way towards Endurance’s classrooms, the cultural shift in the building’s atmosphere became abundantly clear. Detailed, colorful banners lined the hallways, students were more engaged and the overall positive feel made it obvious that a higher level of learning and education was taking place. However, co-located charters like Endurance could be constrained if Mayoral elect de Blasio keeps his promise to force charter schools to pay rent, diverting resources away from kids and towards City Hall. Charter schools like Endurance should be encouraged to expand so their culture of excellence is accessible to more students across the Big Apple, not inhibited by a system that limits their chances of success.

MAKING PISA MATTER. The 2012 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) scores were released today, and US students unsurprisingly fared worse than many of their international peers. Not only did US scores actually drop  from 2009, but they didn’t even break the top 20 highest-performing countries in math, reading and science. There was never a realistic expectation that American achievement was going to catapult to the top of the list, largely because lawmakers fail to enact real education reform to foster student growth. According to PISA’s own description, the purpose of administering the test in the first place is to motivate policymakers to re-examine their educational system and make necessary improvements based on results. The ongoing fixation with the US ranking is unproductive without the motivation to enact policies that revolve around choice and accountability. If anything, the drop in US test scores demonstrates that the system as it functions today is no longer viable.

GETTING THE WORD OUT. It’s one thing for lawmakers to implement parent empowering policies that foster choice and accountability, but it’s equally critical to actually make them aware of their power. We try to do our part with the Parent Power Index (PPI) as well as creating resources for parents to improve their child’s school, and many other groups take a similar initiative. There is often a disconnect between policy implementation and parental outreach, especially when it comes to education reform. Government bureaucrats often make misplaced efforts at informing parents, lacking the necessary fervor and grassroots mindset that make parents eager to explore alternatives and make a positive impact within their communities. On top of that, anti-reformers attempt to quell the excitement about the ability of parents to remove their child from failing systems and place them in schools better suited to their needs. It’s essential for all of us to get the word out, and ensure parents are knowledgeable about the power afforded to them.

A FAMILIAR CHALLENGE. A new report shows that charter schools in South Carolina are lacking the proper facilities necessary to provide the best education possible to the students they serve. In addition to being unable to sell bonds for facility funding like traditional public schools, the Palmetto State’s charter school law doesn’t allow for any additional facility funding. Public school funds also pass through the district, a surefire way to underfund charters and allow districts to manipulate education dollars as they see fit. Unfortunately, this is not a new obstacle for charter schools nationwide, and this report advocates for per-pupil allocation of funds that would be devoted to facilities. Hopefully lawmakers resolve to fix this glaring inequity within public education.

TODAY is #Giving Tuesday!  Please consider DONATING to CER now to help us accelerate the pace of education reform in our country. Click here to give.  You can help us raise $5,000 by MIDNIGHT tonight to support CER and our work to advance education reform – thank you!

The Adjunct Question

by Jeanne Allen
National Journal
December 3, 2013

Adjunct professors do indeed make higher education solvent, and are an important pipeline for schools and students. On one hand, “it” is a model for K-12, where rather than having only full-time teachers a more fluid, flexible human capital pipeline should include people whose lives might need or desire teaching or leading on a part-time basis to fill gaps, elevate students’ exposure to more content and generally expand the knowledge pool around schools. I remember meeting my first charter school “teacher” who was a full time Stanford Physics professor working part-time teaching science at California’s first charter in San Carlos, where then-superintendent and now Gates Foundation leader Don Shalvey was superintendent. The “adjunct” teacher was a full-time professor there and while this is still possible in charter and non-charter public schools, it is much more rare today “thanks” to the inflexible rules governing the hiring and certification of teachers which was a result of a a mis-regulated NCLB. But I digress. The point is that the method of using adjuncts is a good one, and should be emulated in all levels of learning. The notion of supplementing our schools will talent is no different than a business hiring a consultant to do things for which they have unique skills that supplements, not supplants, other vital positions in an organization. But how it’s constructed, as you raise, Fawn, is a serious issue.

As a consumer, I’ve watched my kids in college have adjuncts that are totally unqualified to teach or just disconnected from the entire university experience. Their schedules prevent them from being on campus or in touch to meet. A few Fordham University adjuncts “we” got to “know” taught courses that promoted their latest book or research (often agenda-driven) as opposed to what the course outline demanded. A St. John’s University adjunct sought to expose her students to the museums and sites of New York, on weekends, to fulfill some core requirement that “we” never quite understood. These folks – like so many others I’ve heard about — were filling gaps, plugging holes and merit very few benefits for their inadequate contribution to higher learning. I suspect the administrations for whom they work have too much on their plate to really worry, given the low cost, whether it’s effective. Perhaps that’s the problem — if it were a higher cost to the institution these professors might be taken more seriously, and more seriously vetted.

Not only have I been exposed to more than my share of adjuncts through kids and my own education, but I’m married to one. By day he teaches at a prestigious boys’ school. By night, he teachers at a university. He’s exceptional, of course, by even objective standards. The pay is not, but he does it to maintain and continue to use his expertise, and because he loves teaching. My adjunct professor-husband is not looking to get rich on this work, or become part of another system. Like him, most other adjuncts he knows also simply like keeping their hand in higher education and feel it’s professionally and personally enriching. I wonder if “systemizing” their employ and benefits wouldn’t do to these individuals what it did to K-12 education, which is create a factory model of hiring and benefits that has resulted in more mediocrity as the ability to make personnel decisions became diffuse and disconnected from whether quality matters.

Let’s not overthink this one. Like all aspects of education today, quality does matter and codifying pay and benefits at any level might improve the employee’s welfare but doesn’t necessarily result in our fulfilling the intent and purpose of educational institutions, which should be the ultimate and measurable goal of any changes we make, at any level.

2012 PROGRAMME FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSESSMENT (PISA)

CER Press Release
Washington, DC
December 3, 2013

Kara Kerwin, president of The Center for Education Reform, released the following statement on the 2012 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA):

“The United States’ dismal scores on the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) was once again expected due to the inability of lawmakers at all levels of government to adequately embrace proven reforms to increase student achievement.

“The whole point of PISA is to transfer the griping about our low placement into action that results in improving America’s education system; examining solutions that incorporate choice and accountability are paramount.

“The 2012 PISA scores of US students actually decreased in all three subject areas from 2009, with 18 education systems scoring higher in math, science and reading. This drop represents not only a threat to our economic competitiveness but also demonstrates that the system as it has been functioning for decades is no longer viable.

“As is the case with any release of test sores and other indicators of student growth, we continue to wait for more policymakers to recognize the potential for achievement gains when access to data and options is given to parents. But far too many families are currently trapped in failing systems, and don’t have the luxury of waiting for policymakers to enact real reform.

“With all the available resources and innovation that occurs within the United States, it’s inexcusable that we have not yet embraced the necessary reforms to significantly boost student outcomes.”

 

Daily Headlines for December 3, 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

Common Core education supporters want Obama administration to shut up
Washington Times, DC, December 2, 2013
The Obama administration’s cheerleading for the Common Core State Standards Initiative is designed to calm critics and rally supporters for the ambitious overhaul of the nation’s elementary and secondary school curriculums.

For critics of common core, educational folly
Associated Press, December 3, 2013
Critics are relentless in warning about what they see as the folly of the new Common Core academic standards, designed to prepare students for college or a job by the time they graduate from high school.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

Federal officials: Arizona must defend teacher-evaluation system
Arizona Republic, AZ, December 2, 2013
The U.S. Department of Education has threatened action against Arizona’s schools unless the state can prove that it has an acceptable teacher-evaluation system that uses students’ test scores as part of the rating.

CALIFORNIA

L.A. Unified accuses state of ‘shortchanging’ needy students
Los Angeles Times, CA, December 3, 2013
L.A. Unified accused state education officials Monday of “shortchanging” the school district’s impoverished students, saying they could be prevented from receiving all of the estimated $200 million due them under a new school funding system.

Parent involvement at L.A. schools getting new look
Los Angeles Times, CA, December 3, 2013
An increasing number of community and civil rights groups are reaching out to immigrants to boost activism in education.

CONNECTICUT

Superintendent seeks funds to close achievement gap
Greenwich Time, CT, December 2, 2013
As the Board of Education continues its review of Superintendent of Schools William McKersie’s proposed 2014-15 operating budget, a six-figure allocation to raise achievement at schools with large numbers of low-income students is attracting scrutiny.

GEORGIA

Atlanta voters return to polls today for critical school board elections
Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA
December 2, 2013
Atlanta residents return to the polls today to settle four races for Atlanta school board.

Audit: Additional Funding for Charter Systems Not Formally Tracked by State
WABE, GA, December 2, 2013
A new state audit says Georgia’s Department of Education does not track all of the supplemental funding given to charter school systems.

FLORIDA

For parents, finding the right magnet or charter school can be hard work
Miami Herald, FL, December 2, 2013
When Angel Pittman started to look into Miami-Dade magnet and charter schools for her sons, she quickly found herself frustrated.

Scott urges counties, including Palm Beach, to OK teacher pay hikes
Sunshine State News, FL, December 2, 2013
Gov. Rick Scott tried to light a fire Monday under two dozen Florida counties, including Palm Beach, which still haven’t approved the teacher pay raises he made his top priority during last spring’s legislative session.

IDAHO

1 of state’s top schools in Coeur d’Alene
Associated Press, December 1, 2013
From the outside, the Coeur d’Alene Charter Academy, built in two former commercial buildings in a non-descript industrial corner of town, hardly fits the prototype for a school that consistently ranks among the best in the state.

ILLINOIS

Northwestern to start program for CPS students
Chicago Tribune, IL, December 2, 2013
Five years ago, Northwestern University’s freshman class included just 28 graduates from Chicago Public Schools.

LOUISIANA

State school board to vote on Common Core pullback
Times-Picayune, LA, December 2, 2013
The state Board of Elementary and Secondary Education is set to vote this week on Superintendent John White’s plans to postpone the consequences of the Common Core English and mathematics standards until Gov. Bobby Jindal is almost out of office. White’s retreat was announced Nov. 21 amid a storm of opposition to the national education standards.

MICHIGAN

Charters elevate our public schools
Letter, Battle Creek Enquirer, MI, December 2, 2013
It’s unfortunate that the Enquirer chose to pit one type of public school against another in its Nov. 25 editorial (“Charters, choice are strangling our public schools.”)

NEW JERSEY

How we can improve charter school regulations
Opinion, The Record, NJ, December 2, 2013
IN 1996, Gov. Christine Todd Whitman signed the Charter School Program Act, allowing for the establishment of charter schools in New Jersey. At the time, this legislation made New Jersey one of the preeminent states for public school choice.

More Renaissance schools for state-controlled Camden district?
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, December 3, 2013
Camden issues RFP for up to three more ‘renaissance schools,’ even though its first is still to open

School Choice competition for students creates ‘shark tank’ atmosphere says Hampton board member
Hunterdon County Democrat, NJ, December 2, 2013
Competition among School Choice districts for incoming students has become fierce in Hunterdon County, where all but four elementary districts and two high school districts participate in the state Department of Education program.

NEW YORK

Bill de Blasio changes mind on public input into schools chancellor decision
New York Daily News, NY, December 3, 2013
Critics are saying that the Mayor-elect’s statement that he was ‘not going to put the different finalists on display’ contradicts a promise he made during his campaign.

STEAM Blends Science and the Arts in Public Education
Wall Street Journal, December 3, 2013
The pilot program in the public school is part of a growing national push to blend science and the arts—subjects that, at times, have seemed locked in a zero-sum game for school funding.

Study: Rich N.Y. schools spend 80% more than poor
USA Today, December 2, 2013
The wealthiest 10% of New York school districts spent 80% more per student last year compared to the poorest 10%, according to the state’s largest teacher union.

NORTH CAROLINA

A chance for governor, legislators to be heroes
Editorial, Charlotte Observer, NC, December 3, 2013
You’ve heard the outcry over teacher pay in North Carolina. But do you recognize just how much worse North Carolina has been than every other state in the nation over the past decade?

OHIO

Teacher evaluations, school disciplinary policies to be addressed by General Assembly this week
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, December 2, 2013
A bill that would change the state’s requirements for teacher evaluations is slated for a hearing and possible vote in a Senate committee this week.

OREGON

Federal decision could hobble state education reform
Editorial, Democrat Herald, OR, December 2, 2013
Oregon’s attempts to reform its educational system – from preschool all the way through college – hit a bit of a speed bump last week.

PENNSYLVANIA

Master’s degrees for teachers a matter of debate
Lehigh Valley Express-News, PA, December 2, 2013
Is a teacher with a master’s degree a better educator than one without?

State Senate should reject misnamed “charter school reform” bill
Opinion, Patriot News, PA, December 3, 2013
Legislation now before the state Senate — inaccurately referred to as the “Charter School Reform Bill” — would not only affect charter school students but also all 1.8 million kindergarten through 12th grade students in Pennsylvania.

Would Green mimic Vallas?
Editorial, Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, December 3, 2013
Some intriguing questions have been raised by the floating of Councilman Bill Green’s name as a possible successor to Pedro Ramos, who quit as chairman of Philadelphia’s School Reform Commission in October, three months before the end of his term.

SOUTH CAROLINA

S.C. should grant help toward charter schools
Editorial, Island Packet, SC, December 1, 2013
The state’s charter schools have long struggled to find appropriate and affordable school buildings.

TENNESSEE

Suburbs take historic step in start of municipal schools; former Shelby County superintendent withdraws from consideration in 2
Memphis Commercial Appeal, TN, December 2, 2013
Suburbs from Millington around the outskirts of Memphis to Collierville held ceremonies Monday night to swear in their new school boards, putting in office the people who will make decisions on the formation of six municipal education districts in Shelby County.

UTAH

Should parents pay extra for under-performing students?
Deseret News, UT, December 2, 2013
Sen. Aaron Osmond, R-South Jordan, sent a shot across the bow of Utah schools in July by calling for an end to compulsory education laws.

WASHINGTON

Washington Charter Opponents Turn to Lawsuit
Heartland.org, December 3, 2013
The first-ever charter school law in Washington has come under fire from a coalition arguing the voter-approved measure is unconstitutional.

ONLINE LEARNING

Brewster eyes education reform
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, PA, December 3, 2013
Sen. James Brewster, D-McKeesport, said he is sponsoring four bills that address the accountability of charter and cyber charter schools, and, he said, “ensure that the legislature moves toward a better comprehensive education system.”

Schools get grant to support digital initiative
Greenwich Times, CT, December 2, 2013
The school district has received a state grant of approximately $90,000 for educational technology, which will support the implementation of the second phase of the school system’s Digital Learning Environment initiative.

School tailored toward students with special circumstances
Las Vegas Review-Journal, NV, December 2, 2013
Traditional classroom settings are not made for everyone. Some children have busy schedules, while others do better in an isolated environment.

The Purpose of PISA

This week, we will learn the 2012 results of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), taken by 15 year-old students from all over the world. If 2009 is any judge, no one really expects the United States to catapult to the top of the list of participating countries, but 2012 results are guaranteed to indicate how much work we have to do in improving education.

In 2009, US students scored only in the “average” category in reading, below countries like Finland, Canada, Japan, Poland and Iceland. Thirty-one jurisdictions outperformed the U.S in mathematics.

But before examining 2012 scores, it’s important to know why PISA was created in the first place. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the group that administers PISA, test results are intended to show where countries stand, and motivate policymakers to identify shortcomings and remedy them with proper reforms.

The central finding based on PISA has been that students around the world, regardless of economic situation or cultural background, have the potential to learn when given the opportunity.

This coincides seamlessly with the need to create environments where parents are given access and options to schools, and to ensure schools are accountable to boosting student outcomes. When children are placed in the environment that’s right for them, their ability to learn and prepare themselves for the world beyond secondary education increases exponentially. (Which is why it’s critical for parents to know what options are available to them, and why we’ve created the Parent Power Index.)

What good is the fixation on how the United States stacks up against other countries if it’s not followed up by introspection and action?

This year, it’s paramount that policymakers, members of the media, and legislators identify the challenges facing our education system, and enact the necessary reforms to overcome them.

When the 2015 results come out, we’ll know whether things remain business as usual when it comes to education in America. And while we’ve certainly moved the reform needle in the last 20 years, we know there is much work to be done still.  Make it your New Year’s Resolution to take action and help better education in America – start by seeing how much power parents have in your state, and contact us for more ways to help!

 

School Choice Proponents’ Challenge? Educating Parents

Mary C. Tillotson, Watchdog.org

One of the greatest challenges for proponents of school choice is simply educating parents that they have a choice.

“If we’re going to really have parents engaged in knowing what all their options are, someone’s got to go and tell them,” said Jonathan Butcher, education director at Goldwater Institute.

His group has published a handy school choice guide for Arizona parents. The booklet has information on each choice — what education savings accounts are, for example — who qualifies, and how to pursue each option.

The Center for Education Reform keeps a Parent Power Index on its website, ranking states based on teacher quality, school choice, transparency and other information that could help parents make good choices.

“There’s a huge disconnect between policy implementation and practice, especially when it comes to educational choices,” said Kara Kerwin, CFER president. “There’s a lot of barriers. Once a law gets passed, you’ll have those that defend the status quo working hard to quell any excitement about it. Sometimes we put these options or these choices in the hands of bureaucrats who don’t know how to communicate with parents.”

School choice proponents are taking to the streets, and mailboxes, and community centers to get the word out. Here’s what some of them are doing.

Florida

Word of mouth marketing and community outreach has been the most sustainable and effective way to spread the word in Florida, said Alissa Ciaramello, vice president for marketing at Step Up for Students.

Step Up provides scholarships for Florida students who are homeless, in foster care or whose families make up to 185 percent of the federal poverty level, allowing those students to attend private schools if they choose.

“We want to empower those families, parents and caregivers to find the best educational option for their child because we’ve found that education is one of the ways to break generational poverty. It’s really what we believe in wholeheartedly,” Ciaramello said.

The effort isn’t intended to be anti-public school, she said, but pro-family.

“We don’t play into the failing school model,” she said. “We just want the families we serve to have choice about their child’s education, and a school may do well for one child but not for another. It’s all about finding the right learning environment for that particular child.”

The group works with community-based agencies, schools, families, employers and faith-based providers to connect information with families.

“Really, we try to find anyone and everyone who spends time with our families, but it’s a very multi-faceted approach — top down and bottom up,” Ciaramello said.

Step Up includes information about school choice in newsletters or on websites for community groups, she said. They’ve stuffed Happy Meal bags at McDonald’s and partnered with other groups that work with foster kids, homeless families or senior citizens who may be raising their grandchildren.

“[Scholarship families] felt empowered, humbled and grateful to have this opportunity for their children, and they’re very happy to spread the word,” Ciaramello said.

Arkansas

Lawmakers in Arkansas considered tax-credit scholarships and voucher programs at the most recent legislative session, but neither passed.

“People are just learning about school choice in this state, and I think there are a lot of questions,” said Virginia Walden-Ford, founder of theArkansas Parent Network. School choice bills are likely to return when lawmakers come back together, she said.

So Walden-Ford traveled the state giving presentations about school choice. The meetings were well-attended and parents were excited, she said. But they had a lot of learning to do.

“I said, ‘Let me give you information about school choice,’ and they’d ask, ‘Well, what is school choice?’” she said.

“We provided information about school choice and what states have school choice programs and how they’re working, particularly in Louisiana and Florida and D.C.,” she said. “We talk to parents about how effective school choice programs can be for kids who just aren’t doing well in a traditional setting.”

She gave parents opportunities to ask questions and discuss their feelings about their kids’ schools.

Walden-Ford had advocated for the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program for years, then returned to Arkansas.

“It was time to come home and see what I can do to help here,” she said.

National School Choice Week

Every community is different, and no one method of spreading the word will work everywhere, said Andrew Campanella, president of National School Choice Week.

The organization promotes a week in January — about the time parents are enrolling their children in school for the upcoming year — to celebrate “school choice regardless of choice,” Campanella said.

That includes traditional public schools, public charter schools, magnet schools, private schools, virtual schools and homeschooling.

Last year, the country saw about 3,600 School Choice Week events, and Campanella said he hopes for about 5,000 events for 2014.

School Choice Week is intentionally decentralized; participants plan events in their communities and don’t need permission from the organization. In the past, participants have hosted school fairs, rallies, roundtable discussions, movie screenings and community service activities.

“In a society where for so many years, parents didn’t have school choices for their kids, we almost become conditioned to know that you’re going to be assigned to a certain school, and if you don’t like it, there’s nothing you can do about it,” he said. “So when people hear they have a choice, they’re often very surprised.”

He said he hopes parents begin thinking about K-12 education the way many of them think about higher education: “What school are we going to send our child to?”

One of the biggest challenges in the school choice movement is parents not knowing their options, he said.

“The reform community has gotten a lot better at reaching parents and telling them of their options, but there still needs to be a lot of work done in reaching parents in the communities where they live and communicating with them in the ways they receive their news and information.”

 


Daily Headlines for December 2, 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

Hold to Core values
Opinion, New York Daily News, NY, December 1, 2013
The most important school reform drive in decades has triggered an obtusely wrongheaded backlash by a cynical alliance of right-wing extremists and self-styled progressives.

Louisiana Voucher Assault, Round 2
Review & Outlook, Wall Street Journal
December 1, 2013
The Justice Department campaign against Louisiana school vouchers gets curiouser and curiouser. Attorney General Eric Holder’s troops are now trying to prevent black parents from joining the case by amending their original lawsuit to block the vouchers in 22 districts.

Different wings of school choice
Editorial, The Advocate, LA, December 1, 2013
Anyone who thinks Eric Cantor, the Republican leader of the U.S. House of Representatives, is not shrewd should take a look at a mildly worded but penetrating question he asked in a New Orleans schoolroom the other day.

Caution on Education
Letter, New York Times, NY, November 29, 2013
“Advertisements for the Common Core” (editorial, Nov. 20) cites recent test results as evidence that the new “challenging” national curriculum and “tough” teacher ratings work. Long experience should have taught us all to be skeptical about early claims of educational success and failure.

Critical thinking hallmark of Common Core class
Associated Press, December 2, 2013
Welcome to a classroom using the Common Core State Standards, one of the most politicized and misunderstood changes in education for students and their teachers in kindergarten through high school.

STATE COVERAGE

ARIZONA

Charter school must repay $4.7 million over bogus enrollment claims
Arizona Daily Star, AZ, December 1, 2013
A now-closed Tucson charter school and its Phoenix affiliate must repay $4.7 million to the state for exaggerated enrollment claims that qualified them to get excessive education reimbursement funding from taxpayers.

Charter schools seek $135 million per year in additional state funding
East Valley Tribune, AZ, November 29, 2013
The state’s charter schools are demanding more money from taxpayers, to the tune of $135 million a year.

Somerton residents slow in showing support for charter school
Yuma Sun, AZ, November 29, 2013
A Phoenix-area foundation plans to collect at least 100 petition signatures from residents expressing support for a charter high school the organization wants to build in this city.

DELAWARE

Why we should give Reach Academy another chance
Opinion, Delaware News Journal, DE
Reach Academy for Girls will close and that is unfortunate. Reach is the only all-girl charter school in the state. Delaware families reflecting a growing trend to select alternatives to traditional public schools and single-sex schools, decided all-girl Reach Academy was best for their daughter.

GEORGIA

Audit determines state charter schools often going unmonitored
Marietta Daily Journal, GA, December 1, 2013
A new state audit determined no one is monitoring how Georgia’s charter schools spend almost $11 million in state funding.

Fulton County school district studying more school choice
Atlanta Journal Constitution, GA, November 29, 2013
Montessori schools where students learn more independently. Schools that house students from kindergarten to eighth grade. Language immersion schools where subjects are taught in Spanish or other languages.

MAKING THE GRADE? Ga. Parents Alliance uses education votes to grade local legislators
Douglas County Sentinel, GA, November 30, 2013
The conservative leaning Georgia Parents Alliance recently graded state legislators on education reform and school choice issues, and for the most part, the results were predictable.

FLORIDA

For thousands of Florida teachers, evaluations aren’t making the grade
Miami Herald, FL, November 29, 2013
When Miami-Dade’s 2012 elementary science teacher of the year finally got her annual evaluation last May, she was confused.

Rhema Thompson: Closing the achievement gap
Column, Pensacola News Journal, FL, November 29, 2013
Escambia County School District officials will soon be forming a new task force to help close the achievement gap among the district’s students.

Senator wants to tighten charter school focus
Florida Current, FL, November 27, 2013
A Palm Beach County senator wants to narrow the mission of charter schools. Sen. Jeff Clemens, D-Lake Worth, Wednesday, filed SB 452 — revising the guiding principles listed in statute creating charter schools to meet “a specific instructional need or a need for additional educational facilities.”

ILLINOIS

Building a bridge from CPS high schools to college
Chicago Tribune, IL, November 29, 2013
As the Tribune acknowledged in its initial call for a new Plan of Chicago, it may not have to look far for good ideas to tackle the city’s economic and social challenges. Many creative, workable ideas are out there already. Some have gained a foothold and are just looking, like business startups, to “scale up.”

LOUISIANA

Half of Louisiana’s voucher students at D or F schools in program’s first year, data shows
Times-Picayune, LA, November 28, 2013
At least 45 percent of students in Louisiana’s controversial voucher program last year attended schools with performance scores in the D to F range of the state’s grading scale, according to data the state released Wednesday.

New Orleans schools should stick with OneApp
Editorial, Times-Picayune, LA, December 1, 2013
Now it’s evident that some schools that are supposed to be open to any child wanted to handpick their students rather than take the ones assigned to them through OneApp.

MASSACHUSETTS

Boston teacher ratings don’t add up
Column, Boston Globe, MA, November 30, 2013
BOSTON’S TEACHERS are succeeding swimmingly in their chosen profession, with 93 percent landing in the exemplary and proficient categories on a new teacher-evaluation system. Yet about two-thirds of the city’s schools rank in the bottom 20 percent statewide based on student test data. What’s going on here?

Charter school divide widens
Andover Townsman, MA, November 28, 2013
A sharply divided crowd turned out last week to testify on a proposed charter high school in Andover that’s seeking a green light from the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

MICHIGAN

Choice is ultimate democracy
Column, Battle Creek Enquirer, MI, November 27, 2013
In its Nov. 23 editorial (“Charters, choice are strangling our public schools”), the Battle Creek Enquirer insinuated that charter schools are not public schools and that allowing students and parents to choose among schools is “doing immeasurable harm to our democracy.”

MINNESOTA

Bridging the achievement gap
Editorial, Minnesota Daily, MN, December 2, 2013
New research shows how small changes in the classroom can play a big role in reducing academic disparities.

Students with struggles find a place of their own at Rochester charter school
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN, November 30, 2013
When people talk about ROC, which is marking its 20th anniversary, they talk about the culture. But it’s easier said than described. When students show up at ROC’s doors for the first time, they may be homeless or from broken homes, suffering from drug addiction or battling depression.

MISSISSIPPI

Changes to charter school application process tweaked
Clarion Ledger, MS, November 28, 2013
Groups seeking to establish a charter school in Mississippi have until March 14 to submit their applications, though officials may continue to fine-tune the application forms.

MISSOURI

In debate over school transfers, it’s time to seek common ground
Editorial, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, November 30, 2013
Missouri’s most pressing public policy problem is what to do about school districts in urban areas that fail to make the grade.

NEW JERSEY

Newark’s big play on charter schools: Moran
Column, Star Ledger, NJ, December 1, 2013
Cami Anderson, the superintendent of Newark schools, has taken enormous heat for nurturing the growth of charter schools, which now educate roughly 1 in 4 kids in the city.

NEW YORK

A Charter School’s Struggle for New Students
Wall Street Journal, November 28, 2013
A Williamsburg charter school that tried to attract white and middle-class families needs to find more students in the next week, or it could be shut down.

For New York City’s Charter Schools, a Lesson on Paying Rent
New York Times, NY, December 2, 2013
As a rent-paying school, Bronx Community Charter may also offer a lesson to many New York City charter schools if the mayor-elect, Bill de Blasio, follows through on his campaign proposal that “well-resourced” charter schools pay rent.

Readers weigh in on education tax credit proposal
Opinion, Journal News, NY, December 1, 2013
If we encourage maintaining private schools, including those of various religious faiths, two important advantages come to mind: a healthy competition will benefit public schools; secondly, the public school districts in New York will save in per-student costs long term.

Students thrive at Newburgh charter school
Times Herald-Record, NY, December 2, 2013
Each dropped out of Newburgh Free Academy, and each could have stayed a dropout, statistically doomed to a life of low-wage jobs, or worse. Instead they took a chance on Newburgh Prep, the 3-month-old charter school created for dropouts.

The New Mayor and the Teachers
Editorial, New York Times, NY, December 2, 2013
Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio will take office facing the need to forge new labor agreements with the unions that represent nearly all of New York City’s 300,000 municipal workers.

NORTH CAROLINA

Chris Fitzsimmons says school vouchers are a bad idea
Opinion, Winston Salem-Journal, NC, November 30, 2013
Thanks to Gov. Pat McCrory and the current General Assembly, your tax dollars will soon be subsidizing discrimination across North Carolina and paying to teach children bizarre fundamentalist theories about dinosaurs and the age of the earth.

GOP finally notices needs of NC teachers
Editorial, News & Observer, NC, December 1, 2013
With the 2014 election coming, are North Carolina’s Republican leaders seeing chickens on the horizon, looking to come home to roost?

OHIO

Bill seeks to end Ohio’s adopting Common Core
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, November 29, 2013
Say what you will about the new Common Core academic initiative: Love it or hate it, everybody in education is talking about it.

Weed out the bad bets
Editorial, Columbus Dispatch, OH, December 2, 2013
Ohio lawmakers haven’t done much lately to improve oversight of charter schools, and a recent spate of rather spectacular failures shows how urgently change is needed.

OKLAHOMA

A-F study called ‘misleading’ by Oklahoma Education Department officials
Tulsa World, OK, December 2, 2013
A controversial study by researchers at two Oklahoma universities that deems the state’s A-F school grading system as flawed is “misleading,” according to an in-house analysis by staffers at the Oklahoma State Department of Education.

Urban Teacher Preparation Academy partners with Oklahoma City Public Schools
The Oklahoman, OK, November 30, 2013
The Urban Teacher Preparation Academy is an intensive clinical and mentorship program designed to train more qualified and effective teachers for urban schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Councilman Green among top picks to lead SRC
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, November 30, 2013
City Councilman Bill Green and former Convention Center head Al Mezzaroba are Gov. Corbett’s top choices to lead the School Reform Commission, multiple sources say.

Environmental Charter School wants to offer high school classes
Tribune-Review, PA, November 28, 2013
In a pair of Regent Square schools built at the beginning of the last century, students are learning through a 21st century model of education.

How education funding became Gov. Corbett’s big problem
Philadelphia City Paper, PA, November 28, 2013
Though Gov. Tom Corbett has never visited Feltonville School of Arts and Sciences, his presence there looms large.

Pittsburgh-area Title 1 reward schools go right to the head of the class
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, December 2, 2013
Students at the K-5 charter school are doing so well that the school has been designated as one of about 180 Title 1 reward schools across the state — including 20 in Allegheny County.

York Prep in new buildings but doesn’t own them
The Herald, PA, November 29, 2013
York County is home to one public charter school, with another set to open this fall.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Many S.C. charter schools lack facilities
Aiken Standard, SC, November 30, 2013
A new report said many public charter schools in South Carolina lack adequate facilities.
The report by the Charter School Facilities Initiative recommends that state lawmakers take action to help provide additional space, The State newspaper reported.

TEXAS

Deion Sanders’ Prime Prep Academy draws scrutiny from Texas Education Agency
Dallas Morning News, TX, December 1, 2013
The Texas Education Agency has yet to open a formal investigation into Prime Prep Academy, the charter school co-founded by former NFL star Deion Sanders.

Teacher merit pay plan might work, given other key factors now in play
Editorial, Waco Tribune-Herald, TX, December 1, 2013
Although the idea of merit pay has been championed by conservatives and liberals alike (and is generally opposed by teacher unions), studies of school systems in New York, Nashville and Chicago show little evidence that it results in better scores.

WASHINGTON

State’s charter school applications to be posted Monday
Bellingham Herald, WA, December 2, 2013
New details about proposals to open some of Washington’s first charter schools should be available Monday. The state Charter School Commission received 19 applications from 18 organizations hoping to launch the type of alternative public schools that already exists in most other states. Charter schools in Washington state are designed to be publicly funded and tuition-free but operated independently by nonsectarian nonprofit groups.

Legislature’s education issues not limited to money
Seattle Times, WA, December 1, 2013
When legislators reconvene in Olympia in January, the focus on education won’t be merely about money. If the teacher-evaluation system isn’t changed to meet federal standards, the state could lose its waiver from the No Child Left Behind law.

There’s no shame in being an education reformer
Column, Seattle Times, WA, December 1, 2013
I want to set the record straight and encourage other education reformers like me to speak out, writes guest columnist Kimberly Lasher Mitchell.

ONLINE LEARNING

Cuts proposed for cyber charter schools
Pocono Record, PA, December 2, 2013
The public charter school reform movement has split over its support for state Senate bill 1085.

More students switch to online schools to escape bullies
Dayton Daily News, OH, November 30, 2013
Krista Hooten saw “terror” in her daughter’s eyes as they started back-to-school shopping for seventh grade. Her daughter, Kelsey, had been bullied the previous year. It started emotionally: Other girls called her ugly and spread rumors about her. But it quickly turned physical: They pulled her hair and shoved her to the ground.

Our family thankful for online charter school
Letter, Lehigh Valley Express-Times, PA, November 27, 2013
This is the time of year when we sit around the table with our families and give thanks. One thing on my list is having the opportunity to choose the right education for my family.

Thank you for charter schools
Letter, Augusta Chronicle, GA, December 1, 2013
My child attends a public, free “virtual” charter school. I was interested in this because she suffers from Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a disability that affects stability in her arms and legs.

Virtual school proposal gains support
Metro West Daily News, MA, November 30, 2013
A proposed virtual school in the region is getting plenty of support from MetroWest lawmakers and school officials, who have told the state they have confidence in the education collaborative behind the plan.