Dispatch must apologize

The school attendance erasures issue continues to be a scandal that isn't. Despite finding nothing more than bureaucratic missteps in his first interim report, the State Auditor has now released a second interim report that has found no evidence of wrongdoing at a further batch of schools.

Just two weeks before school districts across Ohio ask voters for more money, state Auditor Dave Yost reported that his team has not uncovered any more evidence of scrubbing student attendance data.

In the latest update, Yost said auditors examined records at 81 schools in 47 districts and cleared all but eight of the 81. Testing at those eight buildings as well as 15 other buildings from the first interim report is still underway, Yost said. A final report is due sometime around Jan. 1.

Twenty of the 81 schools examined in this round had reporting errors but not enough to suggest scrubbing.
[...]
“Odds are most districts are reporting their attendance data accurately and they’re not scrubbing,” Yost said at a press conference Tuesday.

Again, simply some bureaucratic missteps caused by "the sheer complexity of the accountability system" as the Auditor himself describes it, in his conclusion.

This is a far cry from the irresponsible reporting and opinionating that the Columbus Dispatch has engaged in for a number of months now. Time and time again they have failed to wait for the evidence, and instead jumped to conclusions and made inferences that turned out to be incorrect.

Rather than bemoan the slipping away of a potential Pulitzer, they surely thought they were earning, they ought to have some serious introspection on how they could have gotten a story so very wrong and caused Ohio's schools systems so much trouble.

They have slandered and smeared thousands of public school employees up and down the state with their reckless allegations and accusations. They need to apologize and accept responsibility.

Second Interim Report on Student Attendance and Accountability System

Education News for 10-24-2012

State Education News

  • Attendance audit: More 'clean' schools (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Ohio Auditor Dave Yost’s office found no evidence of attendance rigging in the second batch of Ohio schools he reviewed as as part of a statewide probe into potential data tampering…Read more...

  • Northeast Ohio schools come up 'clean' in state auditor's attendance review (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Ohio Auditor Dave Yost's test of school districts with tax requests on the Nov. 6 ballot shows no evidence in Northeast Ohio of "scrubbing,"…Read more...

  • 47 school districts cleared of ‘scrubbing’ (Columbus Dispatch)
  • A second round of auditing found no evidence that more school officials unlawfully “scrubbed” their student data…Read more...

  • Auditor probe fails to turn up more problems (Dayton Daily News)
  • Just two weeks before school districts across Ohio ask voters for more money, state Auditor Dave Yost reported that his team has not uncovered any more evidence…Read more...

  • State inquiry into school districts’ tinkering with data progresses (Toledo Blade)
  • The second phase of a statewide audit into possible manipulation of school attendance data found no new instances of improper “scrubbing.”…Read more...

Local Education News

  • North Baltimore officials pleased with report card (Findlay Courier)
  • Not unlike a proud parent, North Baltimore school officials Tuesday released preliminary data on a district report card from the state…Read more...

  • School District To Offer Cardiac Screenings For High School Athletes (WBNS)
  • The Olentangy Local School District is offering cardiac screenings to high school athletes in an attempt to reduce the number of deaths from undetected heart disorders…Read more...

  • Failure of district’s levy renewal would mean loss of $5.3 million (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • If the 10.4-mill city school district renewal levy doesn’t pass, the district would lose about $5.3 million…Read more...

  • Tutoring program aids Struthers kids (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Two students sat across from each other in the art room at Struthers Elementary School on Tuesday and contemplated the task before them…Read more...

Editorial

  • Lima schools need to think change (Lima News)
  • Jill Ackerman sent a strong message last week that the status quo won’t be good enough for Lima City Schools…Read more...

Education News for 10-23-2012

State Education News

  • Canton school administrator among 9 named in ethics probe (Canton Repository)
  • Nine Ohio education officials — including the current assistant superintendent of Canton City Schools — failed to properly disclose trips to locations including Washington…Read more...

  • In Ohio, 2 of 3 school levies seek new revenue (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Two-thirds of school levies on the ballot in the state next month are asking voters to approve additional local dollars for education, the highest percentage…Read more...

Local Education News

  • New Albany seeks bond-levy combo (Columbus Dispatch)
  • New Albany schools have run out of classroom space, district administrators say. After adding an average of 225 students a year over a decade…Read more...

  • Forecast shows district in black, but with concerns (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • While the five-year forecast for Fairfield City Schools projects the district will remain in the black through 2017, thanks partly to an influx of levy…Read more...

Education News for 10-22-2012

State Education News

  • School chiefs making exodus from districts (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Almost half the school districts in Franklin County will lose their leaders this school year, an educational brain drain for central Ohio…Read more...

  • 2004 schools audit died quiet death (Columbus Dispatch)
  • In the fall of 2004, Andrew J. Ginther, who was then on the Columbus Board of Education and is now Columbus City Council president, received two anonymous messages…Read more...

  • School levies ruling ballot (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Two-thirds of the school levies on the Nov. 6 ballot are seeking additional local revenue to support public education, the highest percentage of new tax issues…Read more...

  • In some school districts, about 40 percent of their third-graders could be held back by a new state law (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Ohio school districts have started to tell some parents that their child is behind in reading, offering a glimpse of how many students could be held back under the state’s new third- grade reading-guarantee law…Read more...

  • Schools districts find ways to incorporate digital textbooks (Middletown Journal)
  • When U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said this month that all schools should convert to digital textbooks, some less affluent school districts cried foul…Read more...

  • Ohio e-book purchasers in line (Portsmouth Daily Times)
  • If you purchsed certain electronic books (e-books), you should be looking for an email…Read more...

  • State remaking the grade on report cards (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Like other local administrators, Lakeview Schools Superintendent Robert Wilson said that his district will work to hit the state's academic target regardless of where it stands…Read more...

  • Patrol prepares for Bus Safety Week (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Area Ohio State Highway Patrol posts are participating in National School Bus Safety Week, which starts Monday…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Trial in Chardon High shootings postponed until January (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • The trial of T.J. Lane, the teenager accused of killing three students and shooting three others at Chardon High School, has been rescheduled to Jan. 14…Read more...

  • Group wants Columbus schools’ seclusion-room doors removed (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Take the doors off seclusion rooms before more children are harmed, a disability-rights group told the Columbus school district…Read more...

    http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2012/10/20/group-wants-columbus-schools-seclusion- room-doors-removed.html

  • Former Perrysburg woman indicted, accused of stealing from school, community groups (Toledo Blade)
  • A former Perrysburg woman accused of stealing thousands of dollars from school and community groups was indicted this week on charges she stole from three other organizations…Read more...

  • TPS’ challenge will get tougher without new tax (Toledo Blade)
  • This wasn’t the October surprise that Toledo Public Schools wanted. Even as TPS is pleading with voters to approve a big tax increase this fall, school leaders are scrambling to explain why a new state-issued report card has downgraded…Read more...

  • iPads no longer going home with Cleveland Heights students after thefts (WEWS)
  • A dozen thefts in the past two weeks have robbed middle school students…Read more...

  • Perry Schools' 5-year forecast points to deficit spending (Willoughby News Herald)
  • The Perry School District has approved a five-year forecast that projects deficit spending in 2016. Treasurer Lew Galante explained that each year, the time frame for when deficit spending could be expected has been delayed…Read more...

Editorial

  • Awash in excellence (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • What’s all the grousing about an underperforming public school system in Ohio? Take a look at the latest state report cards, and the impression is that the public is needlessly critical of the quality of public education…Read more...

Where the polls stand - 2 weeks to go

With just one Presidential debate to go, and a little more than two weeks remaining, campaign 2012 continues to be a close affair. Real Clear Politics has the race essentially tied, with Obama favored to win 201 electoral college votes and Mitt Romney 206, with 131 up for grabs.

Despite the narrowing of the national polling, President Obama continues to enjoy a small but persistent lead in swing states, including the all important Ohio

The NYT calculates that this persistent lead is generating a 70.3% chance of President winning Ohio on November 6th

These persistent swing state leads have 538 projecting the President to win 288 electoral votes to Mitt Romney's 255.

What's in your portfolio?

A reader pointed out this exchange and segment on CNBC, a business channel. There can be no doubt that the financiers that brought us the great recession see education as the next area ripe for looting

Anchor: Charter schools have become very popular... But are charter schools a wise addition to your investment portfolio? Well let’s ask David Brain, President and CEO of Entertainment Properties Trust. David, why would I want to add charter schools into my portfolio?

DB: Well I think it’s a very stable business, very recession-resistant. It’s a high-demand product. There’s 400,000 kids on waiting lists for charter schools, the industry’s growing about 12-14% a year. So it’s a high-growth, very stable, recession-resistant business. It’s a public payer, the state is the payer on this category, and if you do business with states with solid treasuries then it’s a very solid business.

Anchor: Well let me ask you about potential risks, here, to your charter school portfolio, because I understand that three of your nine “Imagine” schools are scheduled to actually lose their charters for the next school year. Does this pose a risk to investors?

DB: Well, occasionally—our Imagine arrangement’s on a master lease, so there’s no loss of rents to the company, although occasionally there are losses of charters...In this case it’s a combination of relationship with the supervisory authorities and educational quality; sometimes the educational quality is very difficult to change in one, two, or three years. It’s a long-term proposition, so there are some of these that occur, but we’ve structured our affairs so this is not going to impact our rent-roll and in fact you see this is maybe even a good experience as the industry thins out some of the less-performing schools...

I don’t—there’s not a lost of risk...the fact is this has bipartisan support. It’s part of the Republican platform and Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education in the Obama Administration, has been very high on it throughout their work in public education. So we have both political parties are solidly behind it, you have high demand, high growth, you have performance across the board...it’s our highest growth and most appealing sector right now of the portfolio. It’s the most high in demand, it’s the most recession-resistant. And a great opportunity set with 500 schools starting every year. It’s a two and a half billion dollar opportunity set annually.