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NEWSWIRE: March 18, 2014

Vol. 16, No. 11

ROOM FOR GROWTH. The 15th Edition of Charter School Laws Across the States: Rankings & Scorecard is here,providing a definitive snapshot on whether or not states have taken meaningful action in expanding charter schools since the first charter law passed in 1991. Experience in seeing how policies have played out over the last 20 years puts the Center in a unique position that allows us to rank states based not only on the language of the law, but how that policy plays out on the ground. This year, less than half of state charter laws received above-average grades, and even those earning top spots are far from perfect. Strong charter laws feature independent, multiple authorizers, few limits on expansion, equitable funding, and high levels of school autonomy. Elected officials need to step up to the plate and fashion laws after success, not theory, now that we know what works. Without strong laws, schools fall prey to the whims of politicians, as we are seeing right now in New York City with Mayor Bill de Blasio, and that’s not something we can afford as a nation when the average charter school wait list has increased to nearly 300 students, and the U.S. Census predicts an influx of 11 million school-aged children in the coming future.

CEILING REACHED. The legislative deadline to lift the cap on the number of charter schools that can be created in Massachusetts is fast approaching, and parents are making their voices heard in support of having more choices. Over 4,000 letters from parents and community members have been sent to Bay State lawmakers and members of the media, rightfully demanding access to the best education possible for their children. And if the 4,000 letters aren’t enough to show demand, consider the fact that there are over 13,600 applicants for 2,200 charter spots, as sizable districts are now closing in on the current limit! Ranking 25th out of the nation’s 43 charter school laws, Massachusetts needs to do much more to create a friendly environment for charter schools, but removing arbitrary limits on the number of permitted schools would represent a positive first step.

VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES. A bit further south, Tennessee finds itself at a tipping point this week where state lawmakers will decide whether choice and accountability will be allowed to meet increasing demand.  With positive developments on Governor Haslam’s voucher proposal underway and improvements to the charter school law expecting a vote this week, Tennessee is poised to bring about much-needed change. Who could forget the battles over Great Hearts Academies last year, when the Nashville School Board refused to authorize the charter even after the state board demanded its approval on appeal. The local school board still said no, clearly violating the law, the state withheld funds and the Nashville School Board still wouldn’t budge. Hopefully, with the passage of SB 830 this kind of behavior will be a thing of the past coupled with efforts to repeal language preventing public-private partnerships. Currently, Tennessee’s charter school law suffers when ranked in comparison with other states due in large part to its emphasis on local control. And while lawmakers are taking a renewed focus towards charter schools, more safeguards need to be in place to protect against the whims of state and local entities.

YES, CHARTERS ARE ACHIEVING. A recent study revealed charter high school students have a seven to 11 percent higher graduation rate than their traditional school peers, and were more likely to enroll in college and finish at least two years of education after high school. This study is just one of many in a body of research highlighting the positive effects charter schools have on providing a foundation for student achievement. With so many states with below-average charter school laws on the books, it begs the question why lawmakers aren’t doing more to encourage quality schools. After over two decades, legislators now have access to blueprints of chartering best practices, so parents can have access to schools that serve their child in a way that fits their needs. Charter growth and enrollment is highest in states with strong laws, emphasizing the need for legislators to recognize just how integral they are to allowing for the same type of student success to finally arrive to their own state.

SYMPOSIUM 2014 hosted by The Black Alliance for Educational Options (BAEO) is THIS WEEK from March 20-22 in New Orleans. The Symposium will feature informative sessions on school choice mobilization and advocacy, and can’t-miss speakers including, former U.S. Education Secretary Rod Paige and the irreplaceable Howard Fuller. Click here for more information.

State Laws Need to Allow for More Charter School Growth, Report Says

Allie Bidwell, U.S. News & World Report

Most states throughout the country need laws that give charter schools more flexibility to grow in order to accommodate the demand and anticipated growth of school-aged children during the next two decades, according to a report released Monday from the Center for Education Reform.

In its annual report evaluating charter school laws across the country, the pro-school choice organization said that of the 43 states with charter school laws, fewer than half earned above-average grades. The organization assesses charter school laws based on their construction and implementation and whether they yield the desired outcomes for charter school policy. Today, more than 2.5 million students attend 6,400 charter schools in the United States, but the authors of the report said the growth seen during the last 20 years is not enough, given the fact that census data predict that during the next two decades, more than 11 million children are expected to start school.

Overall, the report found a lack of specificity in many state charter school laws leaves charter schools “subject to the whims of politicians.” The organization said strong charter laws would allow for multiple independent charter school authorizers, few limits on expansion, equitable funding and high levels of school autonomy.

“With the length of the average charter school waiting list increasing to nearly 300 students, there absolutely needs to be a sense of urgency around creating strong charter school laws that will accelerate the pace of growth to meet demand,” said Kara Kerwin, president of the CER, in a statement.

Topping the list was the District of Columbia, closely followed by Minnesota, Indiana, Michigan and Arizona, which all received A’s. Another nine states earned B’s, 18 earned C’s, eight earned D’s and three – Virginia, Iowa and Kansas – received F’s. Alison Consoletti Zgainer, executive vice president of CER and lead author of the rankings said in a statement the highest levels of charter school and enrollment growth occur in areas with strong charter school laws.

According to data from the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, the District of Columbia experienced a 62 percent growth in the number of charter schools between the 2003-04 school year and the 2013-14 school year, up to 60 from 37 schools. Likewise, charter schools in Minnesota grew by 47.5 percent during the same years, from 101 schools to 149.

By comparison, the number of charter schools in Kansas has actually decreased in the same time, from 14 in 2003-04 to 11 in 2013-14.

While neither Minnesota nor Kansas cap charter school growth, state law in Kansas allows for just one authorizing option for charter schools (the local school board and the state board of education), whereas Minnesota’s law allows for seven different options, such as local school boards, charitable nonprofits that meet certain criteria, private colleges and public postsecondary institutions.

While the CER report said even the highest-rated states have a long road ahead before allowing charter school options to “flourish,” Billy Easton, executive director of the New York-based Alliance for Quality Education, says state laws need to be stricter when it comes to charter schools.

“There’s been a dramatically rapid growth of charter schools in New York and in other states that does not address a lot of important issues,” Easton says. “They serve less English language learners, less students with disabilities, less students with serious family issues. There are issues about high turnover rates, high suspension rates in charter schools.”

“I think it’s important that state laws hold charter schools to the same standards that we hold public schools to, that they can’t cherry pick students, that they can’t counsel students out, and that the books have to be open and transparent for the public,” Easton adds.

Critics have said charter schools threaten the infrastructure of America’s public school system because they take away much-needed public funds from schools that often times are already struggling financially.

Several studies have also questioned whether students at charter schools perform any better than their peers at traditional public schools, with some finding charter schools had no significant impact, or that they only worked well in urban areas. A report released Saturday by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Economic Outcomes found charter school students in Los Angeles learned more than those in traditional public schools, for example.

Public education advocates, such as education historian Diane Ravitch and American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, have also expressed concern that the charter school movement has departed from its original mission of identifying best practices to help public schools drifted toward a movement to privatize public education.

Still, Americans’ views on public charter schools remains supportive. The 2013 Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll on the public’s attitudes toward public education found nearly 70 percent of Americans support public charter schools, and about 66 percent support new public charter schools in their communities. More than half also said they would support a large increase in the number of public charter schools in the United States and that they believe students receive a better education at public charters than at other public schools.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is facing several lawsuits relating to his recent decision to block three charter schools from sharing spaces with public schools. Supporters of the nonprofit charter school operator Success Academy Charter Schools, run by Eva Moskowitz, blasted de Blasio’s decision. The operator is filing two separate lawsuits: a federal civil rights lawsuit regarding one middle school that would be prevented from opening, and a separate effort to reverse the decision to keep two elementary schools from opening.

One de Blasio supporter, Public Advocate Letitia James, also said the mayor didn’t go far enough in curbing the schools’ growth, as he left a majority of charter space-sharing proposals untouched, and said she would sue to shut down all co-located charter schools.

But New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo  voiced his support during a March 4 rally for charter schools in Albany, N.Y.

“We know that too many public schools are failing,” Cuomo said. “The education industry has said the same thing for decades: more money, and more money, and more money, and it will change. We spend more money per pupil than any state in the nation; we’re number 32 in results. It’s not just about putting more money in the public school system, it’s trying something new and that’s what charter schools are all about.”

Cuomo said that although “not every charter school has been great,” the movement overall has been a success.

“I am committed to ensuring charter schools have the financial capacity, the physical space, and the government support to thrive and to grow,” Cuomo said.

Daily Headlines for March 17, 2014

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

Editorial: New York, Chicago, and the war on charter schools
Chicago Tribune, March 17, 2014
As we discuss in another editorial on this page, innovative school choice efforts have been launched in several other states but have been stifled here. The rhetoric against charter school expansion is so strong in some quarters, you’d think they were crack houses or strip clubs angling to come in and pollute a neighborhood.

Send in the “ban bossy’ brigade for De Blasio
Opinion, March 17, 2014, New York Post
Here’s hoping Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg brings her “Ban Bossy” campaign to New York. Maybe she can get Mayor de Blasio to find a healthier response to Eva Moskowitz, and to end his war on charter schools and the children whose lives have been ever changed by them.

Vouchers proposed for kids in Tennessee’s worst schools
Watchdog.org, March 17, 2014
More than a thousand Tennessee parents trekked to Nashville in January to rally in favor of school choice.

STATE COVERAGE

ALASKA

Private school principals hopeful but leery of voucher impact
March 16, 2014, Juneau Empire
Although nobody knows for sure what a school choice program would look like in Alaska, one buzzword has been thrown around quite a lot since the start of session: vouchers.

ARIZONA

Editorial: Don’t dismantle public schools yet
March 17, 2014, Arizona Republic
Educators are a notoriously independent lot. Getting more than 230 school leaders to agree on anything is quite a feat. So, it says something that all but eight of Arizona’s public-school superintendents endorsed a letter critical of efforts to “dismantle our local public schools, endanger the health of our communities and diminish decision-making at the local level all the while undermining the fabric of our democracy.”

CALIFORNIA

“Dozier-Libbey teachers, district battle over effort to convert to charter school
March 16, 2014, Antioch Herald
At issue was the petition filed by the teaching staff of Dozier-Libbey Medical High School (DLMHS) to convert to a public charter school, and, once the meeting started, it didn’t take long before Superintendent Dr. Don Gill began to attack the teachers responsible for the petition.

COLORADO

Colorado school leaders act in unison to pressure lawmakers on funding
March 17, 2014, Denver Post
School superintendents across the state are employing a rare, unified message that has intensified the pressure on lawmakers to significantly bolster education funding this legislative session.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

Bill Gates calls on teachers to defend Common Core
March 17, 2014, Washington Post
Bill Gates, the Microsoft co-founder who is spending part of his considerable fortune trying to improve U.S. public education, called on teachers Friday to help parents understand the new Common Core academic standards in an effort to beat back “false claims” lobbed by critics of the standards.

D.C. parents press city to help fund building renovation for D.C. International school
March 15, 2014, Washington Post
Parents are calling on Mayor Vincent C. Gray to restore city funding meant to help provide a permanent home for D.C. International, a new foreign-language-immersion charter school for students in grades six through 12.

FLORIDA

Charter schools break new ground with Doral College
March 15, 2014, Miami Herald
Doral College offers courses to high school students as a full-service, in-house college. But the school district has lots of questions.

Editorial: Stop flipping coins
March 14, 2014, Pensacola News Journal
Thanks to a legal challenge by the Florida Times-Union, Floridians now have yet another glimpse at just how dysfunctional and absurd school accountability standards are in this state.

School choice bills spark much debate, plenty of controversy
March 16, 2014, Miami Herald
Republican lawmakers in the House and Senate have ambitious plans to provide the state’s 2.7 million schoolchildren with more choices in education. Their focus: fostering the growth of charter schools and voucher programs.

ILLINOIS

Editorial: Making school choice a priority
March 17,2014, Chicago Tribune
Candidates for governor and the General Assembly have spent a great deal of time debating the state’s fiscal woes, and justifiably so. But the direction of education policy in this state deserves equal time. This state needs a more urgent push for choice and innovation.

LOUISIANA

Close to 1,300 students apply to Lafayette charter schools
Nearly 1,300 students have applied so far to the three charter schools set to open in August, according to information provided by the schools’ organizers.

East Baton Rouge school audit finds ‘uncommon,’ ‘troubling’ discrepancies in district’s academic rec
March 17, 2014, The Times-Picayune
Last school year, at one school in the East Baton Rouge Parish School System, there were 29 students in the graduating class who had problems with their academic records.

MAINE

Multinational giant set to run first virtual school in Maine
March 17, 2014, Portland Press Herald
Some educators worry about outsourcing control, but supporters say a global company can reduce costs by serving so many users.

MARYLAND

Editorial: Balto. Co. should have a hybrid school board
March 17, 2014, Baltimore Sun
That said, the desire for elected members on the school board in Baltimore County has been so consistent for so long that it cannot be ignored. Given that there are pros and cons to all of the possible configurations for a school board, it is hard to argue against one that allows for the direct participation of the voters. The lengthy deliberations about this idea appear to have produced a bill that addresses many of the concerns of previous proposals, and the legislature should give the measure its approval.

MASSACHUSETTS

Cash vs. kids in battle over more charter schools
March 16, 2014, The Eagle-Tribune
Tens of thousands of kids are on waiting lists for charter schools in Massachusetts. The lists are long for a simple reason. Parents desperately want to give their children a chance at a better education and a better life, and they see charters as the way out of substandard public schools and a life of dependency.

Gov. candidates put conditions on support for charter schools
March 16, 2014, Fall River Herald News
Lifting the cap on charter schools in certain underperforming school districts is a question that may test Gov. Deval Patrick this year or his successor next year, and a News Service survey of contenders for the Corner Office found broad, but qualified support that crosses party lines.

Letter: For sake of her daughter, parent calls for lifting charter cap
March 16, 2014, Boston Globe
AS A graduate of a Boston public school, and the parent of a student in the Boston Public Schools, I have been looking for an alternative education for my youngest child. I was upset to read the article stating that the bill to increase the number of charter school seats might not make it by the end of the session (“Bid to add charter school has stalled,” Metro, March 9).

Op-Ed: Hub lawmaker should listen to voters, not unions
March 16, 2014, Boston Herald
Since last year, legislation to lift the cap on public charter schools in Boston and other low-performing Massachusetts school districts has been stalled. If the Legislature’s Education Committee opts not to act by March 19, the bill dies.

What new seats at charter schools could mean for Fall River’s existing schools
March 16, 2014, Fall River Herald News
It remains to be seen just how the addition of 1,227 new public charter school seats will impact the other schools citywide.

MINNESOTA

Commentary: Reforming the status quo of K-12 mediocrity
March 14, 2014, Star Tribune
The mediocrity of K-12 education in the United States originates in departments, colleges and schools of education wherein professors do not believe that systematically acquired knowledge of the liberal arts is important. They believe, instead, in so-called “constructivist” approaches that begin with the knowledge base and life experiences of the student as a foundation for seeking information that is relevant to each particular young person.

MISSISSIPPI

Dozen applicants seeking to open charter schools in Miss.
March 16, 2014, Hattiesburg American
A dozen groups have filed applications for the first charter schools in Mississippi. Charter School Authorizer Board Chairman Tommie Cardin released Saturday the list of groups that met the 5 p.m. Friday deadline.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Nashua’s arts-based charter school seeks to accelerate enrollment schedule
Officials at a new charter school in Nashua with an emphasis on arts-based curriculum hope to add spots for another 40 students when it opens in the fall.

NEW JERSEY
March 17, 2014, New Jersey Spotlight
Figuring out exactly how New Jersey’s public school teachers will be rated under the state’s new evaluation system has been a little vexing, so the state Department of Education has put out an online “calculator’ for teachers to figure out how they might fare.

NEW YORK

Critics fault city school district on delays in submitting choice plans
March 16, 2014, Buffalo News
Buffalo education leaders have struggled for years to turn around their lowest-performing schools, and in October, it seemed they had come up with a new way to revamp two of their struggling programs.

Editorial: Charter Schools
March 17, 2014, New York Times
Mayor Bill de Blasio campaigned on the promise of re-evaluating the practice of co-locating charter and noncharter schools in public school buildings. Critics of charter schools were encouraged; charter enthusiasts feared he would damage schools that served students well.

Rivalry between Mayor de Blasio and Eva Moskowitz stretches beyond charter schools
March 16, 2014, Daily News
The two figures share a heated, political rivalry that goes much deeper than the charter school issue they are currently fighting over.

NORTH CAROLINA

Families wait as voucher program faces uncertain future
March 16, 2014, WRAL
Medina applied for a voucher through the state’s Opportunity Scholarship Act, a bill that grants up to $4,200 in vouchers to parents to enroll their child in a private or religious school rather than a public school. “I want him to have the same thing I had — the opportunity to go to college,” Medina said. Now, that opportunity is in limbo.

Some NC charter schools violate open meetings law
March 16, 2014, Charlotte Observer
When Kathey Dailey asked about attending a charter school board meeting, she says administrators at her son’s school said those meetings were closed to the public. They were wrong.

OHIO

Editorial: Extend reading guarantee to all
March 16, 2014, Columbus Dispatch
The Dispatch has supported the state’s EdChoice program of private-school tuition vouchers as an important way for students stuck in failing public schools to have another option. This doesn’t mean, however, that students attending private schools with taxpayer-paid vouchers should be exempt from the standards designed to hold schools accountable.

OKLAHOMA

Intersession classes help Oklahoma City students facing upcoming state tests
March 17, 2013, The Oklahoman
While most students in the Oklahoma City school district spent the first week of spring break relaxing, more than 5,000 attended voluntary classes to prepare for upcoming tests that could determine whether they repeat the third grade or receive a high school diploma.

PENNSYLVANIA

Advocates debate charter school accountability at A.G. hearing
March 16, 2014, Philadelphia Daily News
EDUCATION ADVOCATES CALLED for increased oversight and transparency of the state’s charter schools, while sparring over a state Senate proposal that would allow universities to authorize new charters during a public hearing yesterday at City Hall.

Commentary: Grading teachers: Union resistance to more useful evaluations perpetuates mediocrity or worse
March 15, 2014, Trib Live
Every student in our city deserves the highest quality teaching possible and we must be willing to do everything to provide it. Fairness for both the provider and receiver of services is the prime motivator for any effective evaluation system, whether it is for something as mundane as finding a coffee shop or as vital as finding excellent teachers and great schools.

Erie schools take stance against charters
March 16, 2014, Erie Times-News
Members of the Erie School Board answered one by one, each giving the same response Superintendent Jay Badams wanted to hear: no.

Pittsburgh schools promoting rewards for attendance
March 17, 2014, Pittsburgh Post Gazette
Pittsburgh schools are among those throughout the county engaged in a “Be There” campaign as part of a partnership with the United Way of Allegheny County, the Allegheny Intermediate Unit and others.

SOUTH DAKOTA

South Dakota’s low teacher pay in ‘crisis’
March 16, 2014, Capital Journal
Roehrich’s story is one many school districts in the state hear, and low teacher salaries has become an increasing problem, school district officials say. It’s no secret that South Dakota’s teacher pay never has been at the top when comparing average teacher pay across the nation, but school officials say the state continues to fall further behind.

TENNESSEE

Metro Nashville Public Schools wants Common Core test even if Tennessee delays it
March 15, 2014, The Tennessean
If the Tennessee General Assembly halts the state’s conversion to a new test aligned with Common Core, Metro Nashville Public Schools would seek special permission to start using the assessment this fall anyway.

Push to reverse teacher licensure policy picks up steam in statehouse
March 17, 2014, The Tennessean
A proposal to prohibit students’ standardized test scores from influencing Tennessee teacher-licensing decisions has gained momentum as state lawmakers look to upend a controversial education policy of Gov. Bill Haslam’s administration.

TEXAS

Charter Serving High School Dropouts Fights Closure
March 17, 2014, The Texas Tribune
As a wide-reaching law intended to encourage the growth of high-quality Texas charter schools and shutter underperforming ones takes effect, the state is facing questions over the guidelines used to decide which schools to close.

WEST VIRGINIA

Editorial: Don’t further tie hands of school principals
March 16, 2014, Charleston Daily Mail
It’s been covered so many times before. The report completed in January 2012 by Public Works LLC after its comprehensive audit of West Virginia’s education system put it bluntly: “West Virginia has one of the most highly centralized and impermeable education systems in the country: no other state education system is so highly regulated in code.” With that fresh in mind, why then, would the Legislature pass a bill to further restrict the ability of principals from effectively running their schools?

ONLINE LEARNING

Hamden teachers ‘flip’ classrooms to stay on track after snow days
New Haven Register, March 16, 2014
Several snowstorms may have forced many schools to close and left teachers and students pushing back against the weather. However, students at Sacred Heart Academy are right on track by “flipping their classrooms” to stay on track.

Editorial: K12 Inc. is part of the evolving role of education
March 17, 2014, The Daily Times
Education in the United States is in a state of flux. Advances in technology. Explosive growth in access to information. Instant and broad-based communications available almost anytime, anyplace. Increasing international cooperation and competition. Concern about the academic achievement of U.S. students compared to their peers overseas.

Opinion: NY needs online public education policy
March 15, 2014, The Journal News
It’s time for New York state to develop a progressive statewide online public school education policy. Students in New York should have access to free online K-12 public school education.

Severe winter weather not a problem for cyberschools, officials say
March 16, 2014, Lehigh Valley Express-Times
For many public school students, falling snowflakes spur hopes of closings, delays or early dismissals. The opposite is the case at cyberschools.

Vouchers proposed for kids in Tennessee’s worst schools

Mary C. Tillotson, Watchdog.org

More than a thousand Tennessee parents trekked to Nashville in January to rally in favor of school choice.

Lawmakers there are listening.

The state is likely to pass a school voucher law, which would allow students in Tennessee’s worst schools access to private schools, according to those watching the Legislature. Vouchers would be worth about $6,500.

Gov. Bill Haslam proposed a more limited program last year, but legislators wanted a more expanded program. Failing to reach a compromise, neither program was passed.

Of the several school choice bills proposed this session, the governor’s bills from last year are gaining the most traction. Sponsored by Rep. Gerald McCormick and Sen. Mark Norris, the bills are not yet identical, but lawmakers will likely find a compromise, said Stephanie Linn, state programs and government relations director for the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice.

The bills would award scholarships of about $6,500 to low-income students assigned to the state’s worst performing schools. The first year, 5,000 students could receive the vouchers; in the second year, 7,500; in the third year, 10,000, and in the fourth and all following years, 20,000.

One version of the bill allows students who qualify for free and reduced-price lunches, based on family income, to qualify for vouchers if they are assigned to a school that falls in the lowest performing 5 percent of the state’s schools.

Another version removes the income requirements, and opens the program to students in the lowest performing 10 percent of schools if scholarships are still available after students in the lowest 5 percent have had their first pick.

“Most students in those schools are low-income, but it’s a great benefit because it’ll be easier for parents to understand if they’re eligible for the program or not, and it will allow some people who are lower-middle-income to still take advantage of the program,” Linn said. “It would be easier for the administration and Department of Education to administer as well.”

Either way, it’s a step in the right direction,” said Kara Kerwin, president of Center for Education Reform.

If the program passes, it would be first private school choice program in the state, where there’s high demand for options in education.

“If you look at some of the waitlists for charter schools, it’s phenomenal. People camp out and are signing up for these things,” Linn said. “The demand for choice is there.”

2014 Charter School Law Rankings & Scorecard

2014 Charter School Law Rankings & Scorecard: The Rationale Behind the Rankings

Press Release

Download or print your PDF copy of the 15th edition of Charter School Laws Across the States: Ranking & Scorecard here

Daily Headlines for March 14, 2014

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

Duncan says Mass. can’t be complacent about education
Column, Boston Globe, MA, March 14, 2014
SECRETARY OF Education Arne Duncan has a message for Massachusetts: Yes, education reform has been a success here, but we still have a long way to go.

Study: Later school starts improve student grades
Denver Post, CO, March 13, 2014
A new study found that when high schools switch to a later start time, there is an improvement in student grades, attendance and overall student health. The three-year study by the University of Minnesota examined data from more than 9,000 students at eight high schools in Minnesota, Colorado and Wyoming.

STATE COVERAGE

CALIFORNIA

Parents seek support for opening KIPP and Rocketship charter schools in Redwood City
Mercury News, CA, March 14, 2014
When Redwood City parent Maritza Leal tried five years ago to find a public school that would academically challenge her 7-year-old daughter, she wasn’t satisfied with the school district’s options.

COLORADO

Parent receives wait list letter from every school
KBTV, CO, March 13, 2014
Marie Heaton just wants to get her son into a middle school in the Montbello area. But, after going through the Denver Public Schools’ SchoolChoice process, she received a letter with unexpected news.

CONNECTICUT

Charter school plan a call for open minds
Column, Stamford Advocate, CT, March 14, 2014
As a long-ago member of the Board of Education, Michael Guroian was intrigued to learn about a proposal to open a charter elementary school in Stamford.

New Haven charter school proposal draws support from parents
New Haven Register, CT, March 13, 2014
Before having children, Veronica Douglas-Givan traveled the state, witnessed the anxiety parents faced over education in the areas of the “have-nots,” and said that would never be her.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. schools see progress under Mayor Gray, but questions linger
Washington Post, DC, March 13, 2014
The day after Vincent C. Gray defeated Mayor Adrian M. Fenty in 2010, then-Schools Chancellor Michelle A. Rhee warned that the election results would be “devastating for the schoolchildren of Washington, D.C.”

INDIANA

IPS ‘charter school’ bill heads to governor
Indianapolis Star, IN, March 13, 2014
Legislation that would allow Indianapolis Public Schools to hire charter companies or independent management teams to run low-performing schools in the district is headed to Gov. Mike Pence for consideration.

IOWA

High school graduation rate climbs across state
Des Moines Register, IA, March 14, 2014
Iowa’s high school graduation rate inched upward, a sign that efforts to identify struggling students and keep them in school is paying off, officials said.

FLORIDA

Duval school board divided over open enrollment
Florida Times-Union, FL, March 13, 2014
The Duval school board is divided over a plan to allow parents to enroll students in schools outside their neighborhoods.

Editorial: Voucher expansion wrong-headed
St. Augustine Record, FL, March 14, 2014
One of the first, and most curious, “big bills” churning through Florida’s Legislature is one that would allow massive expansion of school vouchers in Florida. And it’s being thrashed out along typical party lines. The Republicans are pushing the bill, Democrats are resisting.

Gov. Scott targeted by Common Core foes
Bradenton Herald, FL, March 14, 2014
With their bill to suspend Florida’s new education benchmarks stalled in the Legislature, opponents of the Common Core State Standards are pursuing a new strategy. They are turning the heat up on Gov. Rick Scott.

MASSACHUSETTS

Freedom now
Editorial, Worcester Telegram & Gazette, MA, March 14, 2014
The growth of charter schools has been the most promising and liberating development in public education in recent decades, and has been embraced with fervor by urban and minority families for whom charters have offered a pathway out of the sometimes hopeless public schools that have trapped generations.

Winning the ed lottery
Editorial, Boston Herald, MA, March 14, 2014
Charter schools throughout the state held their annual lotteries Wednesday afternoon — randomly selecting students for the limited number of slots in their starting grades.

LOUISIANA

In move toward cooperation, New Orleans’ two school systems consider agreement with millions for troubled youth
Times-Picayune, LA, March 13, 2014
New Orleans’ two school systems could be on the verge of an unprecedented collaboration to benefit the city’s neediest children. The Orleans Parish School Board’s legal committee approved a cooperative agreement Thursday with the state Recovery School District that would help students with severe disabilities, persistent school absences, prison histories and other issues.

MARYLAND

Accord reached on county school board bill
Baltimore Sun, MD, March 13, 2014
Parents who have fought for years to get an elected school board in Baltimore County have won key support for a compromise measure that is given a good chance of passage in the General Assembly.

MICHIGAN

Schools should stop blocking reform
Editorial, Detroit News, MI, March 14, 2014
Michigan lawmakers passed several laws in 2011 directed at improving the quality of teaching in public schools. Supporters of education reform saw these measures as a significant victory and one that would impact how students learn in this state. But it turns out many districts are ignoring the reforms.

MINNESOTA

Eliminate antiquated teacher-tenure provisions
Editorial, Star Tribune, MN, March 13, 2014
Losing great educators because of union contracts is not in the best educational interests of Minnesota kids and families. Quality of instruction is the most important in-school factor in student achievement, and Minnesota needs the best and brightest in its classrooms. To that end, a handful of proposed legislative measures that would give school districts more staffing flexibility during layoffs deserve hearings.

MISSISSIPPI

Concordia school board files against charter school
Natchez Democrat, MS, March 14, 2014
The Concordia Parish School Board authorized its attorney to notify the federal courts that Delta Charter School is out of compliance with the district’s desegregation order.

MISSOURI

St. Louis schools plan includes nonprofit takeover of failing schools
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO, March 14, 2014
City schools Superintendent Kelvin Adams proposed a move Thursday that could involve handing the reins of some of the city’s most chronically troubled schools to outside groups — taking a lead from urban school systems in cities such as Chicago, Philadelphia and New York.

NEW YORK

Charter schools are here to stay: Cuomo
New York Post, NY, March 13, 2014
The war over charter schools shifted from City Hall to Albany Thursday as Gov. Cuomo pledged to protect the besieged schools and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver blasted charters as tools of “Wall Street billionaires.”

Charter schools break the education monopoly
Opinion, Queens Chronicle, NY, March 13, 2014
I am a retired educator with 38 years of experience in the New York City public school system. I write the following in support of charter schools and in opposition to Mayor Bill de Blasio’s efforts to close them.

Judge rules that state comptroller Thomas DiNapoli cannot audit charter schools
New York Daily News, NY, March 14, 2014
Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Thomas Breslin ruled DiNapoli did not have authority to audit any New York charter school.

Thank you, Mr. Mayor
Editorial, New York Post, NY, March 14, 2014
New York owes Bill de Blasio a thank you. In trying to squash charter schools, he might just have made them stronger. That will certainly be the case should a bill that emerged in the Senate Thursday become state law.

The Wisdom in the Middle
New York Times, NY, March 13, 2014
In recent days, as the debate over education has produced so many glowering expressions on so many faces all over the city, I have heard people say, in a spirit of both bafflement and confession, that they “don’t know what to think about charters.”

Tricks of a phony parent advocate
Opinion, New York Post, NY, March 13, 2014
Ansari was on NY1 this week in an effort to prop up Mayor de Blasio’s rescinding of previously approved co-locations for three Success Academy charter schools.

PENNSYLVANIA

Act now on city schools
Opinion, Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 14, 2014
Putting Philadelphia public schools on par with their suburban counterparts is a huge task, but dramatic improvements can be made almost immediately if City Council acts and the School Reform Commission and the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers compromise.

Charter lawsuit challenges SRC suspension of School Code
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, March 14, 2014
A charter school is taking aim at the Philadelphia School Reform Commission’s efforts to rein in soaring charter costs.

TENNESSEE

Common Core dealt a blow
Jackson Sun, TN, March 14, 2014
Tennessee lawmakers voted to delay the Common Core education program for two years, as opponents staged an ambush Thursday morning on the floor of the state House.

VIRGINIA

Editorial: Another Tool
Leesburg Today, VA, March 13, 2014
The landmark vote by the Loudoun County School Board to permit the century old Middleburg Elementary School to continue its educational mission as the region’s first public charter school should be applauded. The action should not, however, be viewed as a singular model for serving students in rural Loudoun.

WASHINGTON

Teacher evaluation change to keep No Child waiver dies in Legislature
Bellingham Herald, WA, March 13, 2014
Washington lawmakers adjourned Thursday without changing the state’s teacher evaluation system, which probably means Washington will lose its waiver from the federal No Child Left Behind Act, education leaders said.

WISCONSIN

Assembly Republicans make final push for broad school accountability reform
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 14, 2014
Assembly Republicans are making a last-ditch effort to reshape the state’s school accountability system after the Senate passed a stripped-down bill that pushes more sweeping changes into the future.

Major political proposals in limbo: Common Core, voucher school bills likely to die
Appleton Post-Crescent, WI, March 13, 2014
Proposals to rewrite Common Core academic standards, increase reporting of private schools in the voucher program and limit regulations on sand mining in Wisconsin appear unlikely to pass as the Legislature nears the end of its session.

ONLINE LEARNING

Online education company bringing 300 jobs to Blount Co.
WBIR, TN, March 13, 2014
More money and more jobs are soon coming to Blount County. An education technology company announced it is opening a new facility in Alcoa which will initially create 300 jobs.

Parents explain why they’ve spent countless hours to bring a controversial virtual charter school to Maine
Bangor Daily News, ME, March 13, 2014
The push to bring a virtual charter school to Maine has been rife with tension. Opponents of the movement say virtual charter schools will siphon money away from already struggling public schools into the hands of out-of-state, for-profit corporations and contribute to declining student enrollments at brick-and-mortar schools across Maine.

Schools want to do online end-run around old man winter
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 14, 2014
State meets with district officials talk about ways students and teachers might work from home via Internet to make up snow days

Eagan: City kids take fall in charter school limitation battle

Margery Eagan, Boston Herald

In “Waiting for Superman,” the famous documentary about charter schools, hundreds of parents and kids wait, rapt, in a packed auditorium. They’re hoping to hear their names in a lottery and be among the chosen few to escape bad district schools for better charters.

In the real-life lottery yesterday at the City on a Hill charter in Roxbury, there were just 100 openings for 940 applicants. But not a single parent, and only one applicant, showed up.

“It’s too hard. To sit there and hear all these names and your child is not called. And that’s it, it’s over,” said Natasha Brown, 38, of Mattapan, who’s gone to the lottery twice and filled out 36 charter applications for her three children. “But no luck, not once.”

Then Brown detailed her frustration, and it was heartbreaking. A Boston public school graduate, she said she expected the district schools to “still be OK.” But her children came home with ever more upsetting stories. And now she feels trapped, unable to afford to move from Boston and unable to do her “best by my kids.”

So this year she’ll wait for the lottery results in the mail, and hope for a miracle. There are 13,600 applicants for 2,200 charter spots.

You know there’s something disgraceful about all this — something made worse when you hear City on a Hill kids contrast their new school with the district schools they left. Chaos, fistfights, swearing, screaming, weed and even knives in backpacks. That vs. “more structure, more focus and 100 percent college acceptance,” said senior Aser Louissaint, 18, standing beside a trophy case where the biggest one is not for sports but for attendance.

The deadline is Wednesday to lift the cap on charter schools. But charter advocates aren’t hopeful. They blame Gov. Deval Patrick, Mayor Marty Walsh and most of all state Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz of Boston, whose committee could lift that cap but probably won’t.

Yesterday, Chang-Diaz told me almost exactly what she tells everyone who asks: She’d like charters to expand “while not taking tools out of the toolbox of district schools.”

The fact that thousands are desperate to escape those district schools, tools or no tools, apparently does not move her.

But one who made her escape yesterday — at the urging, incredibly, of her district school teacher — is Asia Rose Winbush, 14, lucky No. 85. Smiling ear to ear, she said her teacher told her City on a Hill “would push me to do better and be a better person, and I want to get pushed.”

Daily Headlines for March 13, 2014

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

In defense of Common Core
Editorial, Los Angeles Times, CA, March 13, 2014
What matters most is whether the new curriculum standards are an improvement. They are.

Why the New York Charter School Fight Is Way Off-Base
Opinion, Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2014
It’s a gripping drama, but one that misses the true story about improvements in public-education outcomes—and the grass-roots reform movement that has made such positive changes possible in New York and across the country.

STATE COVERAGE

ALASKA

School voucher bill pulled from Senate floor, avoiding fatal vote
Alaska Dispatch, AK, March 12, 2014
Senators said the body was divided on Senate Joint Resolution 9, meaning it was short of the two-thirds majority vote needed to ask the public to amend the Alaska Constitution to allow public funds to go to private and religious schools.

ARIZONA

Arizona lawmakers renew push to dump Common Core education standards
Arizona Star, AZ, March 13, 2014
Unable to kill outright the Common Core program, state senators now are moving to let schools opt out of the national education standards.

CALIFORNIA

L.A. school board approves amended contract for Supt. John Deasy
Los Angeles Times, CA, March 13, 2014
The L.A. Unified schools chief’s performance will now be based on measures that require him to increase enrollment and revenue.

Oakland’s charter schools are delivering on their promise
Opinion, Oakland Tribune, CA, March 12, 2014
Oakland charter middle and high schools are renewing the promise of a high-quality public education and changing what is possible for students of all demographic backgrounds to achieve in their lives.

School success part of broader strategy to target urban poverty in Los Angeles Promise Zone
Hechinger Report, March 13, 2014
Classes for parents offered at the charter school are all part of the plan there and at other schools in some low-income neighborhoods of Los Angeles to connect students’ families and other community residents with the help they need to find housing, health care, counseling and job training.

COLORADO

Succeeding and failing at same time in Sheridan schools
Opinion, Denver Post, CO, March 11, 2014
The tiny school district of Sheridan, just outside Denver, has a lot of the classic problems educators struggle to overcome.

FLORIDA

Bill Would Make Thousands More Low-Income Florida Students Eligible for Scholarships
Sunshine State News, FL, March 13, 2014
Thousands more Florida students from low-income families could have access to private schools if lawmakers approve a bill to expand the state’s tax-credit scholarship program.

Duval Superintendent Nikolai Vitti wants open enrollment for all public schools
Florida Times-Union, FL, March 12, 2014
Parents in Duval County may soon be able to freely pick their child’s public school for the next school year, regardless of neighborhood or school feeder pattern, thanks to a new proposal by Superintendent Nikolai Vitti to open enrollment for all Duval’s public schools.

Lawmakers balk at three-year delay on school standards
Herald Tribune, FL, March 12, 2014
Local school districts likely will not get a three-year delay they want in moving to new school standards, a new statewide assessment test and other accountability measures.

GEORGIA

House committee votes down anti-Common Core bill
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, GA, March 12, 2014
The House Education Committee rejected anti-Common Core legislation Wednesday, likely dealing a death blow to its chances of being passed this session.

ILLINOIS

Number of Illinois school districts in financial distress doubles
Chicago Tribune, IL, March 12, 2014
A disturbing number of Illinois school districts are in poor to dire financial shape, with 121 getting low or dismal ratings in the state’s annual financial report card for schools.

LOUISIANA

Bill to enhance authority of principals approved
The Advocate, LA, March 13, 2014
Despite a rift in the education community, a state Senate panel approved a bill Wednesday that supporters said would give Louisiana’s top-rated principals new authority.

MASSACHUSETTS

A strong pick to run schools
Opinion, Boston Globe, MA, March 13, 2014
THE SEARCH for a new Boston school superintendent will easily uncover candidates with more charisma than interim superintendent John McDonough. But so would leafing through a phone book. Undoubtedly, there are more accomplished educators out there.

City kids take fall in charter school limitation battle
Column, Boston Herald, MA, March 13, 2014
In the real-life lottery yesterday at the City on a Hill charter in Roxbury, there were just 100 openings for 940 applicants. But not a single parent, and only one applicant, showed up.

Education reform has worked for Mass.; it’s time for the next round
Editorial, Boston Globe, MA, March 13, 2014
EDUCATION REFORM has been one of Massachusetts’ greatest success stories of recent decades. It has put the state’s students at the very top in the nation by virtually all measures of achievement. It’s played a major role in attracting high-paying jobs, because employers recognize that Massachusetts’ commitment to educating students continues.

School finance issues influence debate on charter cap lift
WWLP, MA, March 12, 2014
With the press on from charter school advocates to lift or eliminate the cap on charter enrollment in poorly performing school districts, the battle brewing over the issue in the Legislature appears to have as much, if not more, to do with the distribution of state education aid than the merits of charter schools.

MICHIGAN

2 state school board members come out against EAA expansion
Detroit News, MI, March 12, 2014
Two members of the State Board of Education issued a statement Wednesday saying legislation to expand the Education Achievement Authority should not move forward because it creates an “unregulated marketplace” that is damaging to school performance.

MISSOURI

Plan would bring a public charter school to midtown Kansas City
Kansas City Star, MO, March 13, 2014
A move toward collaboration between Kansas City Public Schools and public charter schools is about to be put to the test.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

Don’t overlook impact of charter school departures
Letter, Daily Hampshire Gazette, NH, March 12, 2014
Moreover, the city’s cost for each outgoing charter school student is more than double what Northampton receives for each incoming inter-district public school student, resulting in a net loss of more than $1 million this year.

NEW JERSEY

Jersey City schools chief: No ‘One Newark plan’ in Jersey City
The Jersey Journal, NJ, March 12, 2014
A massive and controversial plan to overhaul Newark’s school district by closing some schools will not be replicated here in Jersey City, according to Schools Superintendent Marcia V. Lyles.

Ras Barka- The best thing to happen to NJ school reform
Opinion, New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, March 13, 2014
Unapologetically old school in his attitude toward education, Baraka might actually galvanize NJ’s dispirited reform community into taking action

NEW YORK

A Study Seeks to Determine What Makes Prekindergarten Successful
New York Times, NY, March 13, 2014
As Mayor Bill de Blasio prepares to greatly expand New York City’s preschool offerings, much debate has focused on how the expansion should be paid for, and less on what actually constitutes an effective prekindergarten program — one that will, as the mayor says, shrink the achievement gap between children of different racial and economic backgrounds.

Gilded Crusade for Charters Rolls Onward
New York Times, NY, March 13, 2014
To call Eva S. Moskowitz a walking lightning rod is to deeply understate the matter. Electricity all but arcs and leaps off her scalp.

Moskowitz: Charter school booted from ‘not overcrowded’ building
New York Post, NY, March 13, 2014
The Harlem public-school building that critics say is too overcrowded to accommodate a new charter school actually has 15 percent fewer students than anticipated, according to a legal complaint.

State senate makes bid to undo anti-charter school moves
New York Post, NY, March 13, 2014
The state Senate will propose sweeping measures in its budget bill to undo Mayor de Blasio’s ­moves against charter schools, sources familiar with the plan said.

Teachers fleeing city schools to the suburbs is growing: union
New York Daily News, NY, March 13, 2014
It has been one of the worst “brain drains” in the history of city schools says Michael Mulgrew, union president. Resignations among teachers with six to 15 years of experience more than doubled the last five years.

Yes, NYC charter schools are working
Opinion, New York Daily News, NY, March 12, 2014
Critics frequently argue that New York City’s charter schools are no more effective than its traditional public schools. As proof, they almost invariably point to research by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO) showing that charter schools and nearby traditional public schools are equally effective on average.

PENNSYLVANIA

Waiting for Philly charter school lotteries and hoping for a kindergarten slot
Newsworks.org, March 12, 2014
For many Philadelphia parents with kids about to enter kindergarten or first grade, March is a very stressful time. Moms and dads ― hoping their children will be selected to attend charter schools ― worry about how this one month could hold the key to their kid’s future.

SOUTH CAROLINA

Scott scounds the charge for school choice
Editorial, Charleston Post Courier, SC, March 13, 2014
And when Sen. Scott pitches the importance of helping young people through school choice, he often cites his own learning experience as a ninth-grader at North Charleston’s Stall High School.

TENNESSEE

Senate panel opposes Haslam on teacher licenses
Times Free Press, TN, March 12, 2014
A legislative revolt over the Haslam administration’s attempt last year to tie teachers’ licenses to student achievement spread to the Senate on Wednesday.

WASHINGTON

Grading the teachers
Pacific Northwest Inlander, WA, March 13, 2014
Washington teachers have adopted a brand-new teacher evaluation system — but it doesn’t have the one thing the federal government wants

WEST VIRGINIA

Teacher pay still a factor
Charleston Gazette, WV, March 12, 2014
In Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin’s State of the State address in January he said he would work to make starting teachers’ salaries more competitive with neighboring states. He proposed a 2 percent pay raise for all teachers and service personnel. It would be the first across-the-board pay raise for teachers in three years.

WISCONSIN

120 schools sign up for second year of statewide private voucher program
Wisconsin State Journal, WI, March 12, 2014
In its second year, the state’s new private voucher school program has drawn 120 interested schools, 30 more than last year, the Department of Public Instruction announced Wednesday.

ONLINE LEARNING

Goshen students learn from home on snow day
WSBT, IN, March 12, 2014
It’s a snow day kids in Goshen don’t have to make up. Bethany Christian Schools did something different on Wednesday. They closed school, but kids still had class in a virtual classroom

Virtual Schools online program OK’d
News-Herald, CO, March 12, 2014
The Lake Havasu Unified School District’s Governing Board said yes to give a Virtual Schools online pilot program a go ahead Tuesday night.

Jonathan Hage Joins CER Board of Directors

CER Press Release
Washington, DC
March 12, 2014

(WASHINGTON, DC) – The Center for Education Reform (CER) announced the election of Jonathan Hage, founder, chairman, president and CEO of Charter Schools USA, Inc. to its Board of Directors. From his service in the U.S. Army to his creation of Charter Schools USA, Hage’s personal life and professional career have been dedicated to service, leadership and creating systemic change.

“It’s an honor to join The Center for Education Reform’s Board of Directors, who for over two decades have tirelessly fought for the positive reforms we have seen take hold all across the country,” said Hage. “I look forward to advancing CER’s mission in giving parents the fundamental power to access better educational opportunities for their children and most importantly working with leaders across the country to put students first.”

In 1997, Hage founded Charter Schools USA, which has since become one of the premier charter management entities in the country, demonstrating a steadfast dedication to student achievement and parental involvement. Prior to Charter Schools USA, Hage worked to improve education as director of research at the Foundation for Florida’s Future.

Hage was named “Floridian of the Year” by Florida Trend Magazine in 2012, and recently founded The Giving Tree Foundation, dedicated to providing learning tools to low-income students and their families.

“The contributions of Jonathan Hage to bring positive change to our nation’s schools cannot be overstated, and we are thrilled he is joining our already distinguished and diverse board of directors,” said Kara Kerwin, president of The Center for Education Reform. “Jon’s leadership and experience in facilitating quality schools across the country will be an integral asset to the strategic priorities of the organization.”

For more information on The Center for Education Reform’s leadership and Board of Directors visit https://edreform.com/about/people/board-of-directors/.

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About CER

Founded in 1993, to bridge the gap between policy and practice, The Center for Education Reform is the pioneer and leading voice for substantive change that transforms learning opportunities and outcomes for America’s children. Additional information about CER and its activities can be found at www.edreform.com.

About CSUSA:

Charter Schools USA is the first education management company in the nation to receive district accreditation through the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) and is one of the nation’s leading charter school management companies. In the fall of 2014, the company will manage 58 schools in seven states serving more than 50,000 students in Kindergarten through 12th grade. CSUSA educational advantages include integrated technology, parental involvement contracts, student uniforms, enforced discipline policies, highly qualified and motivated staff, community focus and high academic performance.

Raising the Bar: The Role of Charters in K-12 Education

Testimony before the House Education and the Workforce Committee of the United States Congress.

Raising the Bar: The Role of Charters in K-12 Education

Kara Kerwin, President of the Center for Education Reform