Kasich reappoints four members to State Board of Education

Ohio Gov. John Kasich is making no changes in his appointments to the State Board of Education.

The Republican today reappointed four at-large members whose terms expired yesterday -- Cathye J. Flory of Logan, Teresa A. Elshoff of New Knoxville, Thomas W. Gunlock of Centerville and Joseph L. Farmer of Baltimore in Fairfield County. Their new terms expire on Dec. 31, 2018.

The State Board of Education, which oversees state K-12 school policy and the superintendent of public instruction, consists of 11 members elected in nonpartisan races and eight members appointed by the governor.

The Republican-dominated board made headlines last year with its vote to abolish school-staffing requirements that critics contend would allow districts to eliminate art teachers, librarians, counselors and other staff members. The decades-old "5 of 8" rule mandated that schools have at least five of those eight positions for every 1,000 students.

(Read more at the Dispatch)

The Trouble with Having Trouble with the Common Core

2015 is the year when the Common Core rubber finally hits the road, and maybe even goes off the rails. 2014-15 is the first full year of the standards, and this spring will see those standards put to the standardized common core test. The results are likely to be ugly. The standards are new, challenging, with little time to prepare, and technology infrastructure is no where near where it needs to be. These are just some of the reasons we'll be hearing a lot about the impact of common core once the tests are wrapped up and results are in.

Couple this with a sizable shift to the right in state legislatures across the country, including Ohio, and we're certain to see more efforts to repeal or otherwise change the common core.

Andy Smarick at Bellwether Education Partners, a right wing corporate reform think tank, believes there are serious challenges ahead for Common Core

Rather than addressing conservatives’ intellectually serious concerns, too many proponents, time and time again, have antagonized the right. Skeptics have been told their opposition is a “circus,” just “political,” and “not about education,” and that they must be “comfortable with mediocrity,” “paranoid,” and/or “resistant to change.”

Just weeks ago, Secretary Duncan caricatured opponents as “politicians who want to dummy down standards…to make themselves look good.” The reliably liberal NPR just ran a laudatory piece on the professor from “an elite liberal arts college in Vermont” who authored Common Core math. The world’s most influential philanthropist called the substance of what we teach our kids “a technocratic issue”—that is, a matter for technical experts wielding political power—akin to standardizing electric outlets.

All of this inflames, not enervates, the conservative opposition.

The problem with having a problem with the common core however, is what to do instead of it? Going back to old standards isn't an option - that's something everyone agrees on. Developing new standards is costly and time consuming (as the CCSS have demonstrated) and k-12 education is a ship that doesn't turn easily, or quickly. This leads opponents offering up all kinds of bizarre solutions, Here's what the Ohio tea party legislators dreamed up last year

Shame on GOP members of the Ohio House Rules and Reference Committee for bowing to partisan pressure and voting out of committee a deeply flawed bill to eliminate Ohio's Common Core educational standards and replace them on an interim basis with old Massachusetts standards. The committee voted 7-2 along party lines Wednesday to approve the controversial plan.
[...]
The bill envisions dumping Common Core next year, switching to pre-2011 Massachusetts standards for the next three academic years and then imposing a new standard that Ohio would develop. The nonpartisan Legislative Service Commission estimates the one-time cost of developing the new standards at up to $15.75 million.

Needless to say, it didn't go anywhere. But your first idea often contains the kernels of your best - and if this is the best idea opponents of Common Core have, they are in even deeper trouble than the standards themselves.

Education, long-term policy changes favored by GOP Statehouse leaders

Kasich's budget will likely contain small business and income tax cuts balanced in part with tax hikes on tobacco and oil and gas producers, renewing Medicaid expansion and charter school reforms.

Leaders in the GOP-controlled House and Senate gave some hints of what they want to focus on beyond Kasich's budget.

Newly elected House Speaker Cliff Rosenberger, a Clarksville Republican, said he's working on a group of policy changes dubbed "Ohio 2020." Rosenberger said the plan will touch on everything from education to infrastructure to workforce development, with the goal of getting lawmakers to think long-term.

"Take education, for example -- you can't keep moving the goal posts every two years," Rosenberger told reporters after leading his first session. He added he's concerned about the rate at which Ohio high school students take remediation courses in college.

(Read more at Cleveland.com)

Racial divide widens in Ohio classrooms. Minority students less likely today to be taught by own race

In a kindergarten classroom in Akron, students eagerly raise their hands as Chelsea Griffin, a recent Kent State University graduate, leads a lesson on her last day of student teaching.

The kids want to be first in everything. And they want to please their teacher.

Griffin, 23, likes to think that she once shared her students’ carefree outlook on life.

She grew up in a supportive middle class family with great friends and teachers. But she first noticed around third grade that her race set her apart.

Her chances of confiding in a teacher who also identified as multiracial were slim. In 2006, only 20 multiracial teachers worked in Ohio’s public schools, according to state data.

In the predominantly white suburb where Griffin grew up, 136 of the 137 teachers remain white.

Griffin admits to internalizing bits of her sometimes confusing search for racial identity. The experience wasn’t all negative, she added, but she figures a few students or, at the least, a single teacher who looked like her might have given her more comfort and confidence.

“You know when you wake up that you’re black. When you’re the minority, you feel like you’re constantly reminded of that,” Griffin said. “And going to not as much of a diverse school, I think you’re reminded of that more. And so that may have been something that I struggled with — not feeling like part of the whole culture of the school.”

(Read more at the Akron Beacon Journal)

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ECOT Is Lucrative For Columbus Politicians

Plunderbund has some interesting ideas, prompted by a Dispatch article, on how to reform ECOT - Ohio's largest charter school network. Here's the heart of the Dispatch piece

ECOT now has more students than Canton, Dayton, Dublin or Westerville schools. It is the state’s 10th-largest district. And growth came for ECOT despite its consistently low state report-card results: It ranks among the worst-performing schools in the state.

“The growth has been huge,” said Aaron Churchill, who is Ohio research director for the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. It has offices in Columbus and Dayton and sponsors charters but criticizes weak oversight and poor-quality schools. “There are clearly a lot of questions about the quality of the education they’re putting out. I’d be curious to know why parents are selecting it.”

ECOT’s tax revenue grew in step with its enrollment, to $112.7 million, 90 percent of which is funded by the state. Charter schools are funded with tax dollars but often are privately run.

According to a state financial audit made public last week, ECOT paid $21.4 million last year to the two for-profit companies Lager formed to serve the school — nearly one-fifth of the school’s total revenue.

IQ Innovations, Lager’s software firm, sells the IQity online-learning platform to ECOT as well as to other schools and districts elsewhere in the country. Altair Learning Management is Lager’s school-management firm, and it oversees ECOT’s day-to-day business, including hiring and firing.

ECOTs poor performance is nothing new to those who have been paying attention, but the criticism coming from the Dispatch is.

Plunderbund has some suggestions to reform ECOT

  1. Change The Leadership: It’s evident, based on the long history of underachievement at ECOT, that new leadership is needed. We recommend that the Governor create a commission to replace the existing ECOT school board. In addition to the school board, ECOT’s management company, Altair Learning, which has received over $56 million dollars over the past 14 years, has demonstrated no proven ability to improve the learning environment in order to improve the graduation rate, so should be fired immediately.
  2. Change The Curriculum: Bolstering the case that the school’s contract with Altair Learning should be terminated immediately is the management company’s adoption of IQ Innovations as the sole provider of an online curriculum. In FY14, IQ Innovations was paid $17.3 million for providing the curriculum for the 6th straight year, upping their total compensation to $69,846,154. Spending just shy of $70 million on a curriculum that is resulting in students demonstrating significantly below expected growth (based on Ohio’s value-added measures) is a gross misuse of public dollars and should cease immediately. Six years of low growth, low achievement, and low graduation rates is more than enough to demonstrate that the curriculum is wholly ineffective at obtaining the desired outcomes.
  3. Open The Books: State Auditor Dave Yost should be called on to immediately conduct a multi-year and comprehensive review of ECOT’s financial operations. With Altair Learning and IQ Innovations having the same principal owner (William Lager, also the founder of the school), Ohio’s taxpayers need to be assured that the contracts between ECOT and the two companies followed all appropriate laws surrounding the use of public monies and any and all contracts were bid appropriately. In addition, Yost needs to conduct a multi-year investigation into ECOT’s attendance and grading practices to ensure that all enrollment numbers have been reported with the highest integrity as it is these self-reported figures that dictate the allocation of taxpayer dollars to ECOT (and away from other school districts).
  4. Parent Takeover: ECOT should be immediately subjected to a parent takeover provision in state law and a non-partisan entity, say StudentsFirst, should be empowered to help coordinate the effort. ECOT will be required to notify all parents of the opportunity, with StudentsFirst serving to help organize the interested parties.
  5. Break It Up: In order to best facilitate a parent takeover and manage the district more effectively, ECOT should be broken up from one large, single school, into regional entities or sub-districts, each of would then be eligible for a takeover by parents, who could then bring in their own management company or more effective charter school organization.

There's some pretty good ideas there. But we're skeptical any meaningful change is going to come. Ohio is at a crossroads with charter schools. We can either have a smaller number of higher performing schools ran by non-profit sponsors, or we can continue to have a for-profit low performing wild west. Any sensible person would ick the former, but sensible people aren't plied with hundreds of thousands of dollars to think otherwise.

Back to the dispatch piece again

And ECOT’s founder, Lager, has spent at least $1.13 million on Ohio campaigns in the past five years alone. Lager could not be reached for comment, and his spokesman said he couldn’t reach him, either.

That’s more — on Ohio politics, anyway — than was spent by David Brennan, the well-known Akron charter entrepreneur who lobbies heavily on behalf of his White Hat schools group. During the same time period, Brennan donated about $820,000, according to campaign-donation records kept by the Ohio secretary of state.

For the past three years, Lager has funneled more than $200,000 per year to mostly Republican officeholders, including William G. Batchelder of Medina, the outgoing speaker of the Ohio House. The largest single donations went to the Ohio Republican Party.

Political contributions also were made through Lager’s two privately held companies. Since 2009, IQ Innovations has sent more than $154,000 to Ohio political candidates and groups. Altair’s contributions totaled about $38,000.

The Dispatch understates the largesse of Lager. We took at look at the campaign finance reports, published on the Secretary of States website (which inexplicably only go back to 2009)

Candidate Total Contributions
CITIZENS FOR CHERYL GROSSMAN $46,310
BATCHELDER FOR REPRESENTATIVE COMMITTEE $42,500
MATT HUFFMAN FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE $42,500
CITIZENS FOR SEARS $40,000
FRIENDS OF FABER $32,981
CITIZENS FOR BUCHY $31,544
CITIZENS FOR AMSTUTZ $30,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT JOHN ADAMS $30,000
THE COMMITTEE TO ELECT CLIFF HITE $29,156
COMMITTEE TO ELECT CHRIS WIDENER $24,500
COMMITTEE TO ELECT CLIFF ROSENBERGER $24,311
CITIZENS FOR STEPHANIE KUNZE $23,044
CITIZENS FOR OBHOF $21,500
FRIENDS OF TOM PATTON $21,500
CITIZENS FOR DUFFEY $15,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT PETER STAUTBERG $15,000
CITIZENS FOR MIKE DOVILLA $12,156
CITIZENS FOR REZABEK $12,156
CITIZENS TO ELECT KYLE KOEHLER $12,156
FRIENDS OF BILL REINEKE $12,156
FRIENDS OF RYAN SMITH $12,156
TIM GINTER FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE $12,156
OELSLAGER FOR OHIO COMMITTEE $11,500
CARLE FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE $11,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT NIEHAUS $11,000
ELECT DEVITIS $10,500
CITIZENS FOR CALLENDER $10,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT JEFF MCCLAIN $10,000
FRIENDS OF ARMOND BUDISH $10,000
FRIENDS OF JAY GOYAL $10,000
GARRISON FOR OHIO $10,000
VOTE DAMSCHRODER (REX) $10,000
YOST FOR AUDITOR $10,000
LAROSE FOR SENATE $8,000
CITIZENS FOR WAGONER $7,000
FRIENDS OF GARY W. CATES $7,000
ROMANCHUK FOR STATE REP $5,500
BRIAN D HILL FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE $5,000
BUTLER FOR OHIO $5,000
CITIZENS FOR BROWN $5,000
CITIZENS FOR MCKENNEY $5,000
CITIZENS FOR SCOTT RYAN $5,000
CITIZENS TO ELECT TONY BURKLEY $5,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT BLESSING $5,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT DOUG GREEN $5,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT LYNN WACHTMANN $5,000
FRIENDS OF TIM DERICKSON $5,000
LATOURETTE FOR OHIO $5,000
PETERSON FOR GOOD GOVERNMENT $5,000
STEBELTON FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE $5,000
TERRY JOHNSON FOR STATE REP $5,000
TROY BALDERSON FOR STATE SENATOR $5,000
CITIZENS FOR BUEHRER $4,000
FRIENDS OF SHANNON JONES $4,000
CITIZENS FOR STINZIANO $3,500
O'CONNOR FOR SUPREME COURT $3,450
RE-ELECT JUSTICE LANZINGER COMMITTEE $3,450
RE-ELECT JUSTICE O'DONNELL (TERRENCE) $3,450
CITIZENS FOR KEVIN BACON $3,000
CITIZENS FOR GARDNER COMMITTEE $2,500
CITIZENS FOR MCCOLLEY $2,500
TEAM BURKE $2,500
FRENCH FOR JUSTICE $2,000
CITIZENS FOR CAREY $1,395
DAVID YOST FOR AUDITOR OF STATE $1,395
COMMITTEE TO RE-ELECT JUDGE SUSAN BROWN $1,000
FRIENDS OF MARLENE B. ANIELSKI $1,000
COMMITTEE TO ELECT BILL HARRIS $725

For those counting, that's a couple hundred dollars short of $800,000 - all to Republican candidates. What begins to give the game away is who is getting the money. For the longest time, Speaker Batchelder received the biggest share, but with his retirement, that benefit now goes to incoming Speaker, Cliff Rosenberger. Despite being elected to the House in 2011, Lager only began contributing to Rosenberger once he became Speaker - the most powerful legislative office in the General Assembly.

The Story of Lager's political contributions do not end here, however. He has also contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Republican party since 2009

Year Contribution Date Amount Committee
2014 11/3/14 $12,155.52 REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE (RSCC)
2014 10/27/14 $10,000.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE ACCOUNT
2014 10/14/14 $10,000.00 OHIO HOUSE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITTEE OHROC
2014 4/25/14 $36,000.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL & EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE CANDIDATE FUND
2014 4/25/14 $20,000.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE ACCOUNT
2014 4/25/14 $4,000.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE ACCOUNT
2014 12/20/13 $13,750.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL & EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE CANDIDATE FUND
2014 12/20/13 $13,750.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE ACCOUNT
2013 6/20/13 $1,500.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE ACCOUNT
2013 6/5/13 $15,000.00 OHIO HOUSE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITTEE OHROC
2013 5/30/13 $15,000.00 REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE (RSCC)
2013 5/23/13 $411.50 REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE (RSCC)
2012 10/5/12 $17,000.00 OHIO HOUSE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITTEE OHROC
2011 12/31/11 $17,000.00 OHIO HOUSE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITTEE OHROC
2010 10/21/10 $11,000.00 FRANKLIN COUNTY REPUBLICAN STATE CANDIDATE FUND
2010 10/18/10 $17,000.00 REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE (RSCC)
2010 10/1/10 $17,000.00 OHIO HOUSE REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITTEE
2010 8/10/10 $24,000.00 OHIO REPUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL & EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE STATE CANDIDATE FUND
2009 5/18/09 $17,093.00 REPUBLICAN SENATE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE (RSCC)
2009 2/26/09 $10,000.00 HOUSE DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS FUND

You'll notice the sole contribution to the Democrats in 2009 - a year they briefly held the House

. All told well over a million dollars in political contributions in just 5 years. None of this accounts for contributions from other E-COT employees, such as Scott Kern the CEO of ALTAIR, or Melissa Vasil the Director of Operations. These contributions add up to tens of thousands of dollars too - again all to Republican candidates.

This is why we remain skeptical that Columbus lawmakers are going to be willing to do what is necessary to truly reform Ohio's charter school boondoggle, the current racket is simply too lucrative.

We'll be proven wrong when William Lager and David Brennan need to find new lines of business.