The #1 Education Story of the Year

Having already published our two through five biggest education stories of the year, here is our considered number one.

1. The Education Busting Budget (HB153)

HB153 is perhaps the single most anti public education piece of legislation ever passed by Ohio's General Assembly, it passed on a party line vote with Republicans in the house and Senate voting for it. It was quickly ushered through while the contentious fight over SB5 was at full boil.

“One really good thing that I will tell you is that as a result of a lot of the hubbub around this issue, we were able to pass our budget with a minimal amount of problems, which is fantastic because it is that budget that has set the framework for the state of Ohio to rebuild,” Kasich told reporters following a speech at a Zanesville restaurant.

The bill sought to attack public education in three main ways

SB5 in the Budget

Much of the education provisions in SB5 were cloned into the budget. The budget contained some almost identical policies as SB5, from teacher pay to evaluations, seniority and continuing contracts. These policy riders were all snook into the budget for fear they would be eliminated if SB5 were repealed. By the time the bill had passed, some of these provisions had been changed, but school districts and the department of education would be left scrambling to both understand the meaning of many of the provisions, and figure out just how to implement them in the short timeframe set by law.

None of the provisions were developed with any collaboration or deliberation, instead they were worked out in a smoke filled conference committee room between just a handful of lawmakers, none of whom have any education policy experience or background.

Much of 2012 will be the story of how these provisions in the budget will be implemented. Thankfully with the repeal of SB5, educators will have a much larger say in that development and adoption than they otherwise would have.

Privatization

The budget also contained a host of provisions designed to shift public education dollars into private hands. The first means was to increase the availability of vouchers, reduce charter school accountability, and all but eliminate the cap on charter schools. So egregious was this plan, that it became the largest point of contention of the entire bill. Much like the fight over HB136, people from all sides of the education spectrum lined up to oppose these half-baked measures.

While the new state budget slashed education spending, it also expanded charters and vouchers in Ohio and modified charter accountability measures. Unfortunately, these changes do little to strengthen the quality of publicly funded, privately operated schools in Ohio, according to this August 2011 policy brief.

The budget also raised from the dead a previous policy that was so disastrous it was repealed - allowing ODE to sponsor charter schools, in the same budget bill that was slashing ODE's budget by $6.3 million.

As a consequence of this budget many students are going to be receiving a lower quality education in a system with less checks and balances, while simultaneously taking much needed monies away from school districts struggling to deliver quality to the other 95% of Ohio's students who attend traditional public schools. If people thought Ohio's charter experiment was bad before, it's about to get an awful lot worse.

That Giant Sucking Sound

None of the things mentioned so far had any reason to be included in a budget bill, other than political expediency, but legislators left the worst for last. While Republicans tried to portray the budget as a "Jobs Budget", in fact it is proving to be an opportunity and job killing budget. By shifting money away from schools to balance the state budget, Statehouse Republicans and the governor slashed over $2 billion from public education, despite vocal calls to stop the drastic cuts to services, especially our schools, that would threaten economic recovery and our children's success, and all this on top of transferring millions via vouchers and charter expansion.

We are now seeing the impacts of these cuts in educator job loss announcements such as this one. Voters are bound to see class sizes increase, opportunities for students will decrease and no doubt more levies will be appearing on the ballot to make up for the devastating cuts made by the state.

In order to deliver these cuts and excursive some political muscle the governor also abolished the evidence based funding formula developed by his predecessor, after months and months of wide collaboration. In its place was put a make it up as you go along "bridging formula" that appears to have no rhyme nor reason and leaves districts in a state of not knowing what their funding stream is going to look like in the near future. We're going to be headed well into 2012 with this uncertainty as the governor just announced that a new formula is going to be delayed. The complexity of funding Ohio's education system is perhaps something that ought to have been considered before scrapping a system that had taken thousands of collaborative hours to develop and deploy.

Over all then, the budget is going to have a lasting negative impact on Ohioans and their education system. It introduced ill conceived education policies, expanding the failed charter experiment, but most of all, slashed funding to below dangerous levels. This is why the budget is our #1 story of 2011.

More cheating exposed

No sooner had we pegged cheating scandals as our number 4 story of the year, than a new scandal emerges, this time in Georgia.

A new investigative report details a second major standardized test cheating scandal in a Georgia school system, implicating 49 educators, including 11 principals. A key reason for the “disgraceful” cheating, investigators said, was pressure to meet No Child Left Behind requirements.

The probe (see here and here) by the Georgia governor’s Special Investigators team into cheating in the Dougherty County School System concluded that “hundreds of school children were harmed by extensive cheating.”

“While we did not find that Superintendent Sally Whatley or her senior staff knew that crimes or other misconduct were occurring, they should have known and were ultimately responsible for accurately testing and assessing students in this system. In that duty, they failed,” the 293-page report says.

Wherever we have corporate education reforms we find unsavory corporate behaviors.

Education News for 12-21-2011

Statewide Education News

  • Monroe board asking for state probe of ex-treasurer's spending (Middletown Journal)
  • MONROE — The Monroe Board of Education is expected to file a letter of professional misconduct with the Ohio Department of Education’s office of professional conduct this week detailing the actions of former Treasurer Kelley Thorpe. The letter — drafted by the district’s attorney, William Deters — is expected to be submitted to the ODE by the end of this week, board member Brett Guido said. Read More…

  • TPS sees downgrade in bond rating (Blade)
  • Toledo Public Schools’ credit rating took a hit in recent days, as one rating agency downgraded the school district while another put the district on notice. Standard and Poor’s downgraded the district’s credit rating from AA- to A+, while Moody’s maintained its A1 rating, but added a negative outlook, which means it may face a future downgrade. Interim-treasurer Matt Cleland told Toledo Board of Education members Tuesday night that the agencies focused on the continued depressed economy and the district’s lack of a reserve fund. Read More…

Local Issues

  • East Holmes schools to reveal cuts (Times Reporter)
  • BERLIN — East Holmes Local Schools will make $500,000 in cuts in district spending in 2012 because of the failure of its last three levies and is considering another $500,000 in cuts if a 3.77-mill emergency operating levy is defeated in March. The board of education will hold its Jan. 9 meeting at Hiland High School because it anticipates a larger-than-normal audience. At that meeting, the board will review the planned cuts and will reveal what additional reductions will be needed if the levy fails again. The planned cuts are based on input from the staff and the community. Read More…

  • South Side schools plan adopted (Dispatch)
  • The Columbus Board of Education overcame concerns voiced at a meeting two weeks ago and voted 5-2 last night to go forward with a South Side school-closing and reorganization plan that will affect more than 3,000 students next school year. The board also handed Superintendent Gene Harris her first academic targets, voting 6-1 to, in effect, order her to boost the number of students proficient in reading to 75 percent by 2013. Read More…

  • Agency ordered to compete for Head Start cash (Blade)
  • The agency that administers Head Start in Toledo will have to compete for continued funding against other potential providers in the coming year. More than 2,000 Toledo children attend Head Start, a preschool program for low-income children, through the Economic Opportunity Planning Association of Greater Toledo. According to EOPA's most recent tax return, the agency received more than $13 million in federal revenue to run Head Start last year. Read More…

Editorial

  • Ohioans should be glad to see Teach for America (Plain Dealer)
  • Now that several foundations have raised more than $2 million to support the program and a helpful law from the Ohio General Assembly has swept away legal barriers that kept Teach for America out of Ohio's classrooms, the highly respected organization finally will get to work in Northeast Ohio next year. The popular organization, founded in 1990, recruits graduates from the nation's top-ranked colleges to teach youngsters in floundering inner-city and rural schools. Read More…

  • Local schools shine in hitting progress goals (Times Reporter)
  • Just like individual report cards for students, the quality of a local education is measured against various learning standards. And for the past decade, an important one has been the No Child Left Behind Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush. The original law set targets that all students be proficient by 2014. While that expectation has come under some criticism in recent years from educators who contend it is unrealistic, the idea of all schools should aspire for higher achievement by students is nevertheless a valid one. Read More…

EDUCATION NEWS FOR 12-20-2011

Statewide Education News

  • Olentangy to end daily all-day kindergarten (Dispatch)
  • Olentangy school officials plan to end a pilot program that offers daily all-day kindergarten classes and to convert its building into an elementary school. Officials said that will require drawing new attendance boundaries for the district’s elementary schools. A committee reviewing the kindergarten program decided that it is too expensive and that the building could be better used to ease crowding throughout the district. Read More…

  • District could face fiscal emergency (Journal-News)
  • MONROE — As the Monroe school district continues to deal with a financial crisis, the district may be just months away from the Ohio Department of Education declaring it in fiscal emergency, the superintendent said Monday night. The ODE notified Monroe on Dec. 15 that it is now on fiscal watch; it had been on fiscal caution since Oct. 1. “With what we owe right now, we could end up in fiscal emergency by the end of May,” Superintendent Elizabeth Lolli said at the board of education meeting. Read More…

  • Granville teachers appeal suspension of licenses (Newark Advocate)
  • NEWARK - Two English Language Learner teachers in Granville are appealing a one-year suspension of their teaching licenses imposed by the Ohio Department of Education. This past week, Mary Ellen Locke and Jane Pfautsch asked Licking County Common Pleas Court Judge David Branstool to stay the suspension imposed Nov. 15 for reportedly helping students cheat on the Ohio Test of English Language Acquisition in early 2010, according to appeals filed by attorney Eric Rosenberg. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Amherst schools look at ways to cut spending (Morning Journal)
  • AMHERST — With up to 30 jobs on the line, the Amherst school district will be looking to cut $2.5 million for its budget next year. “These are challenging times to serve in the public education,” Superintendent Steve Sayers said. The district began looking at making cuts last month after failing a levy earlier this year. “Our expenses are expected to exceed our revenue,” Sayers said. At yesterday’s school board meeting, he detailed what $2.5 million in cuts to the district would look like. Read More…

  • Findlay board OKs bus drivers' contract (Courier)
  • The Findlay school board voted Monday in special session to ratify a contract with district bus drivers. The board voted 5-0 to approve a two-year agreement negotiated with the Ohio Association of Public School Employees Local 010. Findlay City Schools employs 29 bus drivers, 22 of whom are union members. The union's ratification vote was held Thursday. The drivers agreed to no base pay or step raises in calendar year 2012. Read More…

  • Westerville schools may cut 221 jobs (Dispatch)
  • About 100 Westerville teaching jobs — or almost 1 out of 10 — would be lost by next school year under a list of potential cuts introduced by the district school board last night. Also scheduled to be cut: 95 of about 740 classified staff members — mostly school-bus drivers and custodians — and eight of 74 administrators. In all, the list includes 221 jobs. Board members took no action on the cuts last night but began discussing them, and they voted to enter into negotiations earlier than planned with each of the district’s four unions. Read More…

  • City schools consider restructuring elementary buildings by grade level (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • CHILLICOTHE - Chillicothe school officials are floating the idea of reconfiguring the district's elementary buildings by grade level. Superintendent Jon Saxton on Monday presented a report from an ad hoc budget reduction committee that offers two options for shuffling students -- neighborhood "sister" schools and grade band schools. The sister schools plan would house grades kindergarten through second in Allen and Tiffin and grades three through five in Worthington and Mount Logan with the idea that students could remain in the same area of the city where they now attend school. Read More…

Editorial

  • Reading readiness (Blade)
  • Ohio's race to the top has begun in earnest with the announcement that the state is getting $70 million in federal aid to prepare low-income children for kindergarten. State education officials must spend that money wisely. President Obama's signature education initiative, Race to the Top, aims to help states develop creative programs to make schools more effective. Ohio was one of 35 states that applied for a grant to help get youngsters ready for kindergarten, and one of nine states selected to share $500 million in federal funds. Children's success in life often depends on what they have learned and experienced before age 5. Studies show that the better prepared a child is to enter kindergarten, the more likely he or she is to do well in school. Read More…

  • L.A. Unified's food for naught (L.A. Times)
  • As any parent could have told the tastemakers of Los Angeles Unified School District, it's a long road from pizza to black-bean burgers, from chicken nuggets to quinoa salad. Kids like pizza and nuggets; they tend to balk at that other stuff. Unfortunately, the district forgot that when it radically changed its school lunches practically overnight to fare that was decidedly healthier but too exotic for many students — think Caribbean meatballs and pad Thai, in place of nachos and strawberry milk. Though some of the new meals have been a hit, too many end up in school trash cans. Read More…

Top 5 Ed stories of 2011

2011 has been a tumultuous year for education policy in Ohio. With a new administration and single party control of all the legislative levers, we have witnessed a lot of corporate education reform ideas rushed, with little discussion, into reality. We thought we would reflect on what has happened, and bring you our 5 top education stories of 2011.

5. Two Heads Are Worse Than One

The year started with Deborah Delisle as the State Superintendent, but pressure from the Governor and a board of education stacked with tea party activists, saw her quickly ousted.

"Last Friday, it was made known to me by two members of the governor's staff that my tenure was limited," Delisle said during the board's monthly meeting in Columbus. "They said they have the votes to replace me."

It was supposed to be a quick one-two step. Oust Delisle, install the Education Czar Bob Sommers. Somewhere along the line, for reasons still not wholly clear, there was a misstep and suddenly the administration was left scrambling to fill this critical roll. Candidates dropped out quickly and no new candidates from either far nor wide stepped forward. Almost by default, with one foot out the door, interim Superintendent Stan Heffner was appointed.

Heffner's first job was to implement the newly passed budget an axe staff to make up for a $6.3 million shortfall

“If we’re going to sponsor up to 20 schools and if we’re going to engage in the additional activities that House Bill 153 has charged us with, then there I already have an under-staffed office.”

He also still has Education Czar Sommers looking over his shoulder. It can't be easy working at ODE these days, not with greatly increased mandates, reduced budgets and two bosses.

4. Who me? Cheat?

With the rapid proliferation and implementation of corporate education policies came news of other corporate behaviors. Cheating.

The year started with serious questions being raised of the darling of corporate education reform, Michele Rhee, as evidence came to light that much of her success may have been a consequence of cheating. This was quickly surpassed by a massive cheating scandal unfolding in Atlanta

State investigators have uncovered a decade of systemic cheating in the Atlanta Public Schools and conclude that Superintendent Beverly Hall knew or should have known about it, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution has learned.

In a report that Gov. Nathan Deal planned to release today, the investigators name nearly 180 educators, including more than three dozen principals, as participants in cheating on state curriculum tests, officials said over the weekend. The investigators obtained scores of confessions.

New Jersey also fell under the shadow of suspicion

The Department of Education has ordered an investigation of 34 schools for possible cheating after an analysis of standardized test scores revealed irregularities.

It seems wherever one finds high stakes corporate education policies in effect, we find corporate types of behavior to bolster performance. With similar polices going into effect in Ohio, how long before these headlines hit home?

3. Not So Fast, Huffman

In one of the most audacious moves of the year, State Rep Matt Huffman threw up a legislative Hail Mary, in the hopes that the 1% could make a spectacular catch in the end zone. His bill, HB136 sought to privatize public education in Ohio, transferring hundreds of millions of dollars intended for public education to private schools. After blowing through committee on a party line vote, the radical nature of the bill caused the impossible to happen. Everyone in the education community in Ohio suddenly started to publicly oppose the effort. For a state where people can't agree on lunch, let alone education policy, this was unprecedented and caused Huffman to backtrack. HB136 looks dead for now, with the Hail Mary pass batted down, Huffman may still try for a field goal in the new year.

It's at this point we had to pause and consider. In which order should we place our top two stories? It was a very difficuly choice.

2. Senate Bill 5

If SB5 would have passed, it would have been the number one story. But having been resoundingly defeated it should put to bed the notion of dismantling collective bargaining rights in Ohio for at least another generation. The passage and subsequent repeal of SB5 was the most hotly contested political issue of 2011. In a campaign that went from protests and lock-outs at the Statehouse to signature collections in every neighborhood, to a $50 million campaign, each and every step of the way citizen efforts ate away the small portion of political capital governor Kasich had. The repercussions of SB5 will ripple through 2012, with the fight sure to continue for control of the legislature, but its defeat means it will not have lasting direct policy implications.

In any ordinary year, each of those stories would be huge news and carry great consequence for public education in Ohio, but there is one other story that will have a severe lasting impact on the state's education system.

1. To Be Continued...

Education News for 12-19-2011

Statewide Education News

  • Teacher evaluations tested (Dispatch)
  • This is what schools are learning about Ohio’s new teacher-evaluation system: It is time-consuming. It is much more complicated than the old one. And it has potential to help teachers improve. Statewide, 138 school districts or charter schools — a total of 265 school buildings — are using new evaluations this school year as part of a pilot program of the new Ohio Teacher Evaluation System. About 20 districts and charters in central Ohio are test-driving the new system, including Canal Winchester, Columbus, Hilliard, Pickerington and Worthington. Read More…

  • Growing STEM teachers (Enquirer)
  • UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS — Teaching physical science, Jordan Woods says, is the easy part. But it’s more difficult to learn to manage a classroom of ninth-graders at the Hughes STEM high school. “It was definitely the teaching part I needed help with,” said Woods, a 21-year-old from Independence who graduated in June from the University of Cincinnati with a degree in neuroscience (and also is planning her upcoming wedding). She originally wanted to be a doctor before changing her career plans. Read More…

  • Kasich’s new school-funding formula delayed (Dispatch)
  • Shortly after taking office this year, Gov. John Kasich scrapped his Democratic predecessor’s school-funding fix and pledged to replace it with his own formula for distributing tax money to schools. Kasich vowed to direct more money to classroom instruction, better serve the individual needs of students and expand school options by allowing more tax dollars to flow from traditional public schools to charter and private schools. A “bridge” formula was put in place for this school year, with promises of a new funding model for 2012-2013. Read More…

  • Student homeless rate up 82 percent (Dayton Daily News)
  • Area school officials say the foreclosure crisis and job losses are causing more students to become homeless. There were 21,849 homeless students attending public schools in Ohio during the last school year. That’s up 82 percent from 2005-06 when there were 11,977 homeless students, according to data school districts reported to the Ohio Department of Education. Paul Schneider, liaison for the McKinney-Vento Homeless Children and Youth program in Springfield City Schools, believes home foreclosures are behind the rising numbers. Read More…

  • Teach for America aiming to be in Ohio in the fall (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND-More than $2 million in grants will help bring Teach for America teachers to Northeast Ohio schools by the fall. The money from the Cleveland, George Gund, Nord and Stocker foundations, along with a contribution from the Lennon Trust, will pay for the national program to recruit and train highly educated college graduates who majored in subjects other than education and help them move to the area. Read More…

  • Ohio’s new schools going green (Journal-News)
  • Ohio leads the country with more green-school projects under way than any other state, the U.S. Green Building Council said in a report released last week. The Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit released its first Best of Green Schools list recognizing recipients from across the country — from K-12 to higher education — for a variety of sustainable, cost-cutting measures including energy conservation. Read More…

  • Districts lack minority teachers (Dispatch)
  • There were few other black teachers in Upper Arlington schools when the district hired her in 1979, but Kim McMurray Rhodes thought that, as time went on, there would be more. She never imagined that by the end of her career there would be fewer. “I was just breaking the mold. That’s what I was doing, and thinking I was opening the door for more and different minorities,” said McMurray Rhodes, 57, who retired in 2006. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Staff exodus costs Toledo Public Schools $11M (Toledo Blade)
  • Tense contract negotiations in Toledo Public Schools and a controversial state law led to a mass employee exodus this year. More than 400 employees retired from the 4,500-employee district between January and August, causing severance payouts to more than double those in prior years. The retirements continue to have both financial and academic effects, district officials said. Read More…

  • City schools may shop for ESC services (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • CHILLICOTHE - The Chillicothe City Schools Board of Education today could take the first step toward terminating its contract with the Ross-Pike Educational Service Center for special education services. The move is little more than a formality at this point, but Chillicothe school officials have indicated they might look to other ESCs if they can negotiate the same level of services at a lower cost. According to the biennial budget bill, which gives school districts more freedom in choosing an ESC, a district must notify its current ESC by Dec. 31 if it's even considering a switch. Read More…

  • Despite reports, schools say hazing problems rare (Dispatch)
  • Officials for many local school districts say they have policies and procedures in place to deal with hazing, but they say it’s not a problem they deal with often. In Westerville, where four high-school basketball players were charged this week with hazing, school officials couldn’t recall such an incident in recent times. “This is the first time we filed charges” for hazing, said Westerville Police Lt. Tracey Myers. “ It’s not something we come across often.” Read More…

  • Charter School opposition; Lorain School board passed a resolution against school vouchers (Morning Journal)
  • LORAIN — It has been an issue that has evoked a lot of strong emotions from those in public education, it’s Charter Schools. The Lorain School board passed a resolution Wednesday stating their opposition to pending legislation that would allow students to receive vouchers to attend charter schools. According to the school district, the legislation would allow any public school student to request an education voucher, with the only stipulation being that the family income is less than $95,000 a year. Read More…

  • Swanton Local teachers authorize issuing strike notice (Toledo Blade)
  • SWANTON - Teachers in the Swanton Local Schools have authorized their union's bargaining committee to send a 10-day strike notice to the board of education, but the actual notice has not been given. The action Thursday by the 88-member Swanton Education Association came two days after the board declared negotiations with the union at an impasse and imposed terms of its last offer. Steve Brehmer, a spokesman for the teachers' union, said union officials would wait until two new members join the board in January before calling a strike. Read More…

Editorial

  • Straight from the source (Dispatch)
  • A bill calling for the study of foundational historical documents, such as the U.S. and Ohio constitutions, the Declaration of Independence and the Northwest Ordinance, in Ohio schools will ensure that students will be exposed to the building blocks of American history. Such a law hardly should be necessary. It should go without saying that students need to understand the ideas expressed in those documents, which motivated and guided the founders of our state and nation. Read More…