Ed News

Education News for 01-31-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Standard tests will be done online (News-Sun)
  • SPRINGFIELD — Online testing would be cheaper and more efficient than the current tests, making it worth the cost to prepare schools for the change in coming years, said state Superintendent Stan Heffner. “The new test should actually cost less,” Heffner said. “They’ll get instant feedback and at a cheaper cost.” Heffner, the Ohio Superintendent of Public Instruction, was the featured speaker at the Springfield Rotary Club on Monday. Read More…

  • Officials look for ways to boost student use of free summer meal plans (Dispatch)
  • Kids get hungry in the summer, too. But when school lets out, the number of youngsters taking advantage of government-paid free-meal programs drops by about 80 percent. Federal, state and community officials gathered in a summit at a Mid-Ohio Foodbank location in Grove City yesterday to brainstorm about ways to boost the number of kids from low-income neighborhoods enrolled in free breakfast and lunch programs in the summer months. Read More…

  • Cleveland schools' New Tech program to be featured on national webcast (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND - Cleveland's New Tech high school serving the West Side will be one of the schools featured in a national Internet broadcast Wednesday celebrating Digital Learning Day with U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. New Tech West will be one of several schools showcased in short videos during a morning webcast. Then New Tech Principal Erin Frew, Spanish teacher Marixa Marriero and 11th-grader Britany Dickens will talk about the school live via Skype in a "Town Hall" discussion that afternoon. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Local businesses, organizations work to promote science and tech learning (Newark Advocate)
  • NEWARK - Two actresses from the Licking County Players pondered aloud last week how they could use six simple machines to knock over 10 bowling pins without using their hands. On the stage of the Midland Theatre, they rode a bike over a homemade ramp -- er, wedge -- and sat on a seesaw -- make that lever -- while they considered the possibilities with the help of a robot named Hal, voiced by fellow local actor Dennis Kohler. The actresses asked questions of the students in the audience. Read More…

  • Panel OKs Liberty cutbacks (Tribune Chronicle)
  • LIBERTY - Contentions popped up Monday between the Financial Planning and Supervision Committee appointed by the State Auditor's Office and the Liberty Local School District over staff cuts the school board approved last week. The board eliminated or reduced to part-time status 16.5 employees next school year, which would save the district $1.2 million. "There's no other plan you think would be better?" committee member and Liberty parent Kristen Rock asked Superintendent Stan Watson. Read More…

  • Westerville school board to vote on support-staff pay freeze (Dispatch)
  • The Westerville school board will vote today on a deal that would freeze pay for the district’s support-staff workers for the next two years. Union members also would shoulder the full burden of their health-care deductibles under the deal, but only if the district’s other employee unions follow suit. Board members called the 4 p.m. meeting after being briefed by the district’s bargaining team yesterday morning. District officials said the support-staff union came to them with the proposal. Read More…

  • Northridge principals' salaries, duties increase (Newark Advocate)
  • JOHNSTOWN - Northridge Local School District administrators are earning a little bit more money this year to go along with their new and expanded duties. The district removed its high school principal position this past summer, bumping middle school principal Amy Anderson to principal of grades six through 12, Robin Elliot up to assistant principal for grades 6-8 and Marisa Knopp to intermediate school principal and special education director. Read More…

Editorial

  • Giving dropouts reasons to return (Plain Dealer)
  • Forget about the GED certificate, the usual alternative for high-school dropouts. An innovative program being introduced at Owens Community College near Toledo this fall aims to help dropouts drop back into high school and move on to college. The combination of intensive counseling, flexible schedules and free tuition and books has worked elsewhere in the country, but this will be the first time it's tried in Ohio. Read More…

  • How to grade a teacher (L.A. Times)
  • We're teachers who believe that teacher evaluation, including the use of reliable test data, can be good for students and for teachers. Yes, yes, we know we're not supposed to exist. But we do, and there are a lot more of us. In February the membership of United Teachers Los Angeles will vote on a teacher-led initiative urging union leaders to negotiate a new teacher evaluation system for L.A. Unified. The vote will allow teachers' voices to be heard above the din of warring political figures. Read More…

Education News for 01-30-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio’s No. 1 elementary school succeeds in an area better known for hardship – (Columbus Dispatch)
  • For those driving into town on the “Dean Martin Highway,” old steel mills and run-down houses along a sliver of land between the freeway and the Ohio River are bleak reminders of the city’s economic woes. But decades of lost jobs and declining population are Steubenville’s past. The city has a new story to tell. Read More…

  • Cellphones put to use in some schools - (Dispatch)
  • In some classrooms, teachers confiscate smartphones from students caught texting or surfing social-media websites. Damon Mollenkopf doesn’t bother. The teacher at Westerville North High School actually encourages students to chat with each other on social-networking websites, with the hope that they’re talking about history. “The kids can be having a separate conversation, but it can be quiet, on Twitter,” said Mollenkopf, who keeps an eye on his tablet computer to watch their dialogue. “I can say, ‘Hey, this person makes a good point.’” Read More…

  • The right start for a brighter start - (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • More attention - and funding - for preschools will ensure that more kids are ready to succeed.
    Preschool is moving to the head of the class when it comes to education funding. Ohio in December won $70 million from the federal government’s $500 million Early Learning Race to the Top grants along with eight other states. It has joined a national movement to make preschool a top funding priority. The state plans to increase preschool offerings over the next several years to thousands of low-income youngsters while boosting quality standards for preschools. Read More…

  • School studies rank Ohio high - (Springfield News Sun)
  • Increased accountability credited, one school leader says.
    Ohio ranked 10th and 21st for its K-12 education performance and policy as compared to all other states and the District of Columbia for 2011, according to two national studies released this month. In a third study, released last week by the National Council on Teacher Quality, the state’s teachers tied for fifth in the nation. Read More…

  • Ohio officials: Plan to expand school voucher program has stalled - (Ravenna Record Courier)
  • Legislation that would expand the school voucher program to more students and allow them to use those vouchers at more schools is not going forward. “HB 136 is not going anywhere quickly from what I understand,” said Ohio Board of Education member Bryan Williams. State Sen. Tom Sawyer said legislators have not been hearing support to match the cries of protest against the bill. Read More…

  • Closing the gap in early learning - (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • With budgets tight, Ohio, Kentucky lag
    The children buzzing about Ethel M. Taylor Academy’s preschool class in Millvale appeared to be playing. Three youngsters scooped candy sprinkles into empty liter soda bottles for make-believe Kool-Aid. They were really learning to measure and estimate. Nearby, two boys shared cloth dolls and a stuffed horse; they were actually practicing “friendship words.” And a girl and boy stacked colored shapes onto various sized circles; they were solving problems. Read More…

  • Group supporting school choice ranks states – (Canton Repository)
  • Ohio’s education system ranks 21st in the nation, according to a new report by the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative public policy organization that advocates school choice. ALEC’s 17th Report Card on American Education ranks schools across the country (50 states and the District of Columbia) based on data from national test scores, state education policy, charter school regulations and other benchmarks. Read More…

  • Ohio still leaves sexual education to each district – (Columbus Dispatch)
  • National coalition issued guidelines for curriculum at every grade level
    A national group says schools should have specific guidelines for teaching sexual education, such as in which grades children should learn the proper names for genitalia, but Ohio doesn’t plan to follow the recommendations. Some school officials say that’s a mistake. “I’m hoping most people ... are using national standards,” said Jodi Palmer, girls athletic director for Upper Arlington schools. Read More…

  • Ohio seeks to get more kids in summer food program – Canton Repository
  • Ohio education and food program officials want to increase the number of children in low-income areas who participate in a program that offers them free breakfasts or lunches during the summer, when they’re not getting meals at school. Increasing access and participation in the federally funded Summer Food Service Program is the focus of a summit Monday in Grove City. It comes on the heels of news that a record high of nearly 841,000 Ohio students, or about 45 percent, are eligible for free or reduced-cost school lunches based on their family incomes. Read More…

  • Student Homelessness is on the Rise in Ohio – (State Impact Ohio)
  • Nineteen year old Leana and her two children are living with a friend’s family for now, until she gets an apartment of her own. Leana doesn’t want people to know she’s homeless, which is why she didn’t want us to take a picture of her face. Leana and her three siblings grew up in their grandmother’s two-bedroom house. By the time she was 18, Leana had one child, and was pregnant with her second. Read More…

  • Programs geared to helping high school dropouts, other students succeed in college – (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Innovative programs meant to help high school dropouts and students who are not academically prepared earn college degrees are debuting in Toledo and Columbus this year. They are likely to expand to other cities, including Cleveland. Owens Community College near Toledo will offer a dual-credit program on its campus this fall to 50 students who dropped out of the Toledo public schools. Those who complete the program will earn a high school diploma and an associate degree. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Learning differently - (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Going to school wasn't something Marco Dukes looked forward to each day. The process was all part of a routine the 14-year-old said he tried sticking to, but one for which he could never spark any enthusiasm. "I was just kinda there," the eighth-grader said. "Just there 'cause I had to be." This year, Dukes has a different view of the public school system - one that he said is helping him focus more on his own abilities. He is among some 30 Warren City Schools students attending the district's Alternative School. Read More…

  • Akron teachers’ negotiations under more scrutiny with November levy looming - (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • The Akron school board’s decision to sit out the March primary and instead try for a new-money levy in November raises the stakes at the bargaining table for teachers, whose two-year contract expires this year. Read More…

  • Maumee schools get head start on new state requirements - (WTOL)
  • A local school district is getting to work tackling some new state requirements. Maumee City Schools presented its plan to undertake several initiatives. Technology is just one of the many areas that will be changing. The year 2014 might seem far away, but Ohio schools have a great deal of changes to implement before then. Read More…

  • Changes in dress code debated - (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Vocal opposition to a uniform or restrictive dress-code policy during a recent meeting at Northridge High School is typical of how many such community conversations start, but it doesn’t always mean that a district won’t later adopt such a policy. About 50 parents and students turned out for a forum this week after administrators informed parents that they wanted to have a conversation about the district’s dress code. Read More…

  • Despite cost, Hathorn defends academic-recovery plan - (Vindicator)
  • The city school district spent more than $3.4 million on the state-required academic- recovery plan last year, and the costs keep mounting. With the exception of the $600,000 spent on consultants to provide leadership mentors, monitor school-district systems and oversight, the majority of the costs are expected to recur annually as long as the plan is in place. Read More…

  • West Side might get K-8 charter school this fall - (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Nearby city schools are rated poorly
    The state’s largest charter-school operator is eyeing Columbus’ West Side as the perfect spot to open its first K-8 building in the city. Akron-based White Hat Management hopes to open a Signal Tree Academy in Columbus this fall that will focus on “21st Century Learning,” including technology and media, project-based teaching and global awareness. The private, for-profit charter operator runs two Life Skills Centers for high-school dropouts in the city. Read More…

  • Debate heats up over school choice – (Massillon Independent)
  • Without the Ohio Educational Choice Scholarship program, Mary Sanchez would have sent her daughter, Shekinah, to kindergarten at Dueber Elementary five years ago. The school is one of nine in the Canton City Schools District considered low-performing, according to report-card data from the Ohio Department of Education. Read More…

  • Property tax decrease to hit school districts – (Hamilton Journal News)
  • All of Butler County’s 10 districts projected to receive less money.
    While local taxpayers will see a drop in their tax bills this year, it also means school districts will take a hit in the revenue they receive from the county. Each of Butler County’s 10 school districts are projected to receive less money in inside millage tax collection in 2012 than they did in 2011, and to make matters worse, tax delinquency rates are not included in those figures, a JournalNews analysis found. Read More…

Editorial & Opinion

  • Students should make career choices earlier – (Columbus Dispatch)
  • In response to the Jan. 23 Dispatch article “ Credit college kids after year or two,” Ohio Board of Regents Chancellor Jim Petro is on the right track, but his idea needs to be tweaked. Petro's notion is that college students should be awarded a career-readiness certificate after one year and an associate degree after two years. I managed enrollments at a college for 13 years and found that the primary reason students did not persist in college was because they arrived completely unaware of why they were there. Three of my largest majors were “undecided,” “general studies,” and “none.” Read More…

Education News for 01-27-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Charters’ treasurer owes Ohio $617,260 (Dispatch)
  • A New Albany man owes the state more than $600,000 because he mismanaged taxpayer dollars meant for kids at several charter schools, the state auditor said yesterday. At least two schools closed in financial ruin, including Montessori Renaissance Experience in Columbus. Carl W. Shye Jr. has been hit with 25 findings at three schools since last year, including the auditor’s announcement yesterday that he must repay $112,000 that he collected on behalf of Montessori Renaissance Experience — even after it no longer had students. Read More…

  • Fiscal emergency would be ‘ugly’ for Lorain Schools (Morning Journal)
  • LORAIN — The Lorain school board was told going through the steps to fiscal emergency is an “ugly” process. The board heard a presentation from Roger Hardin, assistant director for finance program services with the Ohio Department of Education, regarding what fiscal emergency is and what they can do. “Lorain Schools is in fiscal caution,” Hardin told them. “I will throw this out there in the beginning, everything we do at my office is to try and avoid fiscal emergency.” Read More…

  • School Choice Ohio program set to expand (Repository)
  • CANTON — Representatives from School Choice Ohio (SCO) hosted a news conference Thursday morning with families, teachers and students at Heritage Christian School to celebrate Ohio School Choice Week. Heritage Christian School has the most EdChoice students in Stark County with 87. The vouchers allow students in poor performing schools to attend private schools that accept the voucher. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Local parents sing praises of EdChoice scholarships (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - Through the EdChoice scholarship program, Cindi Hilson is able to send her three children to Youngstown Christian School. “Without [the EdChoice scholarship], even though my husband works, we wouldn’t be able to afford to send all three of them,” she said. “Maybe one of them could come here.” EdChoice allows children whose residential school is considered low-performing to attend a private school using a voucher. The Hilson family lives within the city school district. Read More…

  • Garfield Heights schools reduce staff, increase pay to play (WEWS 5 ABC)
  • GARFIELD HEIGHTS - Already faced with shortened school days and the elimination of art, music and gym classes, students in the Garfield Heights City School District will have to pay more to participate in extra-curricular activities next school year. The Garfield Heights school board voted Thursday to go to full pay to participate during the 2012-2013 school year, and to eliminate 48 positions in an effort to balance its budget. Read More…

Editorial

  • Realistic standards (Dispatch)
  • Charter schools that serve dropouts and students at risk of quitting school can’t fairly be judged by the same standards as other schools, but they should be judged. Families in the unhappy position of needing that sort of help for their children deserve to know which ones are most effective. To date, this has been hard to determine, because the state Department of Education had only one set of criteria for measuring charter schools’ effectiveness, and most dropout-recovery schools earned dismal marks. Read More…

Education News for 01-26-2012

State Education News

  • In Ohio, dropout law hard to enforce – (Columbus Dispatch)
  • During Tuesday’s State of the Union address, President Barack Obama urged states to require students to stay in school until they graduate or turn 18 — a law already in effect in Ohio and 19 other states. Still, at least 23,000 Ohio teens dropped out in the 2010-11 school year. Read More…

  • Reynoldsburg ex-superintendent to become Kasich’s education czar – (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Gov. John Kasich has tapped former Reynoldsburg school Superintendent Richard A. Ross to head the Governor’s Office of 21st Century Education. Read More…

Local Issues

  • SWCS audit goals nearly finished – (Grove City ThisWeek)
  • The recommendations of a performance audit issued by the Ohio Auditor’s Office in 2010 have led the South-Western City School District to cut expenses by at least $3.2 million a year, school officials said. The audit made 28 recommendations, and the school board on Jan. 23 was told the district has two left to address. Read More…

  • State Steps In to Help Struggling School District – (Fox8 Cleveland)
  • MEDINA COUNTY, Ohio— Cloverleaf Schools are in the red, declaring a state of fiscal emergency. Now, the State of Ohio is stepping in to help. Read More…

  • 200-plus jobs, sports could be cut – (Westerville ThisWeek)
  • Pinning the future on a March levy, the Westerville Board of Education on Jan. 23 approved $16.7 million in additional budget cuts, and at the same time approved a list of which programs would be first to return if voters approve Issue 10.Read More…

Editorial

  • Liberty faces up-hill climb– (Vindicator Letter to Editor)
  • Liberty school district, I pray for your recovery. You have been led down a dangerous path by the Ohio lawmakers and Department of Education. Please stay diligent and show them both that local control can work. Read More…

Education News for 01-25-2012

Statewide Education News

  • New voucher effort serves special-needs students (Dispatch)
  • Ohio is about to launch its fourth tax-funded education-voucher program, this one for students with special needs. The application process is expected to begin in early February for the Jon Peterson Special Needs Scholarship, named after the former state representative from Delaware who pushed for the program. The vouchers — up to $20,000 a year — will be available for the 2012-13 school year. Supporters say the program will give students with disabilities access to services tailored to meet their needs. Read More…

  • Cloverleaf school district placed in fiscal emergency, state oversight (Beacon Journal)
  • Ohio Auditor Dave Yost placed Medina County’s Cloverleaf school district in fiscal emergency Tuesday because the district cannot overcome a nearly $600,000 deficit this June. The following year, the deficit will balloon to $2.6 million. The declaration means the district can borrow money from the state, but must submit all financial decisions — including whether to put a levy on the ballot — to a state commission for approval. Within the next 15 days, a five-member commission will be formed to oversee Cloverleaf’s finances. Read More…

  • Ohio schools boost ranking in 2 U.S. studies (Dayton Daily News)
  • Ohio ranked 10th and 21st for its K-12 education performance and policy as compared to all other states and the District of Columbia for 2011, according to two national studies released this month. In a third study, released today by the National Council on Teacher Quality, the state’s teachers tied for fifth in the nation. According to the NCTQ, Ohio teachers earned a “C+” for 2011 in biennial report. The state had received a “D+” two years ago, making it one of the most improved states according to the most recent study. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Youngstown schools distress commission gets another new leader (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - The commission charged with developing a plan to move the city schools out of academic distress has a new leader for the second time in three months. Richard Ross, retired superintendent of Reynoldsburg Schools near Columbus, announced his resignation as commission chairman this week. Adrienne O’Neill, a commission member, will take his place. Stan Heffner, state superintendent of public instruction, had appointed Ross last November to lead the academic distress commission, the only one in the state. Read More…

  • Riverside Schools to cut 25 teachers (News-Herald)
  • In a situation becoming quite common in the area, another school district announced teacher layoffs to help balance the budget. At a school board meeting Tuesday night, Riverside Schools announced the district will cut 25 teachers to help make up lost revenue after three failed levies. The elimination of the teaching positions will save the district about $1.5 million of the $3.1 million deficit, Superintendent James Kalis said. Read More…

  • Youngstown board resolves union issues (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - The school board has resolved two unfair-labor practice charges filed by the teachers union. The Youngstown Education Association filed a charge last April with the State Employment Relations Board after the Youngstown Academic Distress Commission returned management rights to the school district. Some management rights had been relinquished in collective- bargaining agreements. But because the district was in academic emergency last year and under the commission’s control, the law allows the commission to restore those rights to the district. Read More…

  • Richmond Heights School Board terminates contract with lawyer investigating superintendent (News-Herald)
  • The Richmond Heights School Board voted 3-2 Monday to terminate the services of Charles Tyler, the attorney who had been working on the investigation of Superintendent Linda T. Hardwick. Hardwick was relieved of her duties with pay in November pending the investigation of her alleged misappropriation of district property, specifically confidential documents and emails. That investigation has come to a close, but pending issues still exist, and information from Tyler’s report has not been made public as of yet. Read More…

Editorial

  • Expert panel could revamp education in Ohio (Dispatch)
  • Albert Einstein told us that insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. Sound like our educational system? More and more money, a lot of tinkering, constant reforms and so little change. The recession and state budget woes set off alarms, warning that many education needs can’t be met if we keep this up. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan now talks about the New Normal. Read More…

Education News for 01-24-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Shared leader saves districts money (News-Sun)
  • MECHANICSBURG — Board members knew they were taking a risk last year when they hired Dan Kaffenbarger to serve simultaneously as the superintendent for two separate school districts in Champaign County. Several months into the job, the gamble seems to be paying off, although Kaffenbarger is less sure than before that the practice of sharing superintendents will become a common occurrence in the future. Read More…

  • Ohioan is nominated for federal schools job (Dispatch)
  • WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has nominated former Ohio schools superintendent Deborah Delisle to serve as the Assistant Secretary of Education for Elementary and Secondary Education, Sen. Sherrod Brown said yesterday. Delisle, who was named state superintendent under former Gov. Ted Strickland, resigned in March after it became clear that new members of the State Board of Education appointed by Gov. John Kasich would replace her. She had spent 2 1/2 years at the post. Read More…

  • National Park Service seeking teachers who want to spend their summer as park rangers (WEWS 5 ABC)
  • BRECKSVILLE - Teachers have an great opportunity to spend their summer outdoors learning and giving. Cuyahoga Valley National Park is seeking qualified teachers who would like to work as a park ranger this summer in the Teacher-Ranger-Teacher (TRT) program. The TRT program offers teachers eight weeks working in national parks across the country and developing lessons to connect their students to the park during the following school year. Teachers have the opportunity to earn graduate credit for the experience. Read More…

Local Issues

  • City schools brace for lean budget (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • CHILLICOTHE - Chillicothe school leaders again are taking the long view as they prepare for a series of lean budget years. The district is projecting a negative cash balance of $3.1 million in 2013. The forecast only gets bleaker after that, with projections showing negative cash balances of $7 million in 2015 and almost $12 million in 2016. The school board did its best to get ahead of the shortfall in April 2011, making $1.55 million in cuts to help stave off the projected multi-million dollar deficit in 2013. Read More…

  • Liberty BOE OKs $1.2M in cuts (Vindicator)
  • Liberty - The board of education on Monday unanimously approved $1.2 million in personnel cuts, a process Superintendent Stan Watson called “gut wrenching.” The cuts will take effect next fiscal year, which begins July 1. They include the layoffs of two administrative positions: supervisor of maintenance/transportation, and the cafeteria supervisor. In addition, seven teaching positions will be eliminated and several positions will switch to part time. Read More…

  • Lakota considers sharing services with ESC (Journal-News)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — In an effort to help address a $9 million budget deficit projected by the 2012-13 school year, the Lakota schools board of education is considering a proposal to restructure its preschool program. Under the proposal, the district’s preschool program would partner with the Head Start program, which is operated by the Butler County Educational Service Center. The restructuring of the preschool program would offer an opportunity to share services, reduce cost and generate multiple benefits, according to the district. Read More…

  • Digital academy could help city keep students (News-Sun)
  • SPRINGFIELD — More than $1.1 million in state funding follows nearly 200 Springfield students to online schools, but that could change as the district prepares to launch its own virtual school. “Drawing the students back will bring the funding with them, and that’s always a plus,” said Superintendent David Estrop. “But we also see this as clearly consistent with what the community wants to do.” A pilot program of up to 25 students will kick off the digital school this spring. Read More…

  • New Westerville levy means sports, art, band (Dispatch)
  • Westerville school officials announced last night which programs would be restored if voters approve a March tax issue. Sports, marching band and all other extracurricular activities are included, along with arts classes, electives and programs that help gifted students and programs for those who need reading help. The programs that would be restored are roughly the top half of a priority list that Superintendent Dan Good presented last week. All programs on his priority list are to be cut or reduced by next school year because of a November levy failure. Read More…

Editorial

  • Niles BOE should cut from the top (Tribune Chronicle)
  • The Niles City Board of Education will have a difficult time solving its fiscal crisis and its contract dispute with the teachers because the teachers have no incentive to settle. Employees hired before 2008 pay zero for their health care premiums and little toward their health care deductibles and co-pays. There is no way on Earth they're going to get a better deal, so continuing to work under the old contract that expired Aug. 28 suits them just fine. Read More…