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Education News for 04-26-2013

State Education News

  • Columbus schools auditor slows plan to expand office (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The Columbus City Schools’ internal auditor proposed a scaled-back plan last night to boost her staff and help protect the district against future problems like the data-rigging…Read more...

  • Ramos balks at recording Academic Distress Commission meetings (Lorain Morning Journal)
  • Most bylaws of the Academic Distress Commission that will oversee Lorain’s school system were approved Monday, but commission member Raul Ramos…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Cleveland names 'investment schools' slated for turnaround (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • The Cleveland school district this afternoon named 13 low-performing schools to receive intensive help next school year…Read more...

  • LCC will issue all students iPads (Lima News)
  • Lima Central Catholic High School students will be handed an iPad when they arrive to school next year. They will keep the devices all year, which school officials believe will improve their education…Read more...

  • Lima schools promise free lunch for all (Lima News)
  • Come next school year, every pupil in the Lima schools will be eligible for free lunches…Read more...

  • Hilliard officials rip schools deal to sell land for homes (This Week News)
  • Hilliard city officials say the Hilliard school board acted hypocritically when it approved selling 124 acres to Rockford Homes for almost $5 million, given the district’s past complaints…Read more...

Education News for 11-27-2012

State Education News

  • Kasich offers Coleman help with school reform (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Gov. John Kasich pledged to assist Columbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman with efforts to reform the city’s school system, much like the support he gave this year to Cleveland…Read more...

  • New buildings may doom school levies in elections (Dayton Daily News)
  • Voters who approved bond issues in recent years to build new schools rejected requests for new operating levies in those same districts earlier this month…Read more...

  • Title IX 40th anniversary: High school, college athletes, coaches see benefits and challenges (Willoughby News Herald)
  • As an All-Ohio volleyball player at Lake Catholic High School as well as a University of Florida recruit, Abby Detering has felt the effects of Title IX. And she likes what the future holds…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Bomb threat holds up Dublin classes (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Dublin school officials took the unusual step of delaying the start of school throughout the district yesterday after emails said there were bombs in several buildings…Read more...

  • Free school lunch numbers continue to rise (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • During the past decade, the percentage of students participating in the Free and Reduced Lunch program has nearly doubled in some Butler County school districts…Read more...

  • Reynoldsburg Police Pull Dare Officer Out Of Schools (WBNS)
  • The new administration at the Reynoldsburg Police Department has decided to implement term limits for its school resource officer…Read more...

  • Teens steal iPads, laptops (WEWS)
  • Eleven iPads were stolen from an Akron middle school…Read more...

Education News for 07-31-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • State probe doesn't worry school chiefs (Courier)
  • Area superintendents said Monday they are not worried about their districts as Ohio's auditor expands an investigation into schools falsifying attendance records to improve their state report cards. "We're not concerned at all," Findlay Superintendent Dean Wittwer said. "We work extremely hard on our practices." The statewide review by Auditor Dave Yost comes after reports recently surfaced that staff, first at Columbus and Toledo schools, then at a suburban Cincinnati school, falsified attendance records. Read more...

  • State TPS investigation update (WTVG 13 ABC)
  • Dr. Jerome Pecko was on vacation when new developments broke in the State investigation into whether TPS tweaked attendance numbers on the state tests. The Auditor's office has announced it will investigate ODE, since several school districts may have violated state regulations. Dr. Pecko tells 13abc, "I am pleased that the auditor is going to take a look at not only what the school districts are doing but also what is going on down in Columbus." TPS has hired a legal team to look into the case. TPS leaders believe the law is unclear on whether districts can throw out data. Read more...

  • Kasich wants answers from inquiry into data manipulation at schools (Blade)
  • Ohio Gov. John Kasich said on Monday that he wants answers on the investigation into school-data manipulation at two of the state's largest school systems — with one being Toledo Public Schools — as well as the Ohio Department of Education. "I know there are things in the paper now about the data affecting our schools. Got to get to the bottom of it," the governor told an audience of more than 200 people at the Toledo Rotary Club meeting in the ballroom of the downtown Park Inn. Read more...

  • Teachers Retiring In Greater Numbers As Pensions Change (WBNS 10 CBS)
  • COLUMBUS - Some local school districts are seeing two or three times the usual number of teacher retirements. Cathy Williams said that she is one of many giving up her post. “I am retiring before I lose most of my pension," Williams said. Williams spent 35 years teaching, much of it at Champion Middle School in Columbus. She taught students who have special needs. "I am a caretaker. I am a nurse. I am a doctor, a lawyer, a judge,” Williams said. “I make sure that my students are protected.” Read more...

Local Issues

  • Opposing sides debate how to solve Monroe fiscal emergency (Middletown Journal)
  • Both sides agree the Monroe School District has to deal with its financial issues. Why the problem exists and how it should be fixed appears to be where the two sides part. Placed in “fiscal emergency” by the state auditor’s office in May, and facing a $2.2 million operating deficit and a bond retirement debt of $3.1 million, Monroe schools will ask voters to approve a five year, 7.05-mill emergency property tax levy during the Aug. 7 special election. The levy will raise $2.5 million a year for the district. Read more...

  • DPS to provide busing to fewer students (Dayton Daily News)
  • Dayton — Dayton Public Schools will bus about 3,000 fewer students this year than last under a plan district officials say should eliminate transportation problems, including late or sporadic bus service, that have plagued the district. That means more students will be walking to school after the district tightened eligibility requirements for bus service. The changes take effect with the start of school on Aug. 15. Last year, the school district transported students who live farther than 1.5 miles from their school. Read more...

  • At Crayons to Computers, teachers shop for free (Enquirer)
  • Carmie Boesch looks forward to the days she gets to shop at Crayons to Computers. Besides picking out supplies for her Woodford Paideia Academy students, Boesch gets ideas from other educators shopping at the free store for teachers. And it saves her money. In the past two years Boesch has shopped for supplies that would have cost $5,300, said Robbie Atkinson, Crayons to Computers’ director of operations. Because her school is one of 258 in a 16-county region where 60 percent or more of the students qualify for free or reduced meals, she shops for free. Read more...

Editorial

  • Diving Into How Students Learn Best (Education Week)
  • In a fortunate turn, advances in research and theory are emerging at a long-awaited moment in U.S. education: the agreement of 46 states and the District of Columbia to adopt the Common Core State Standards. The standards were developed with the recognition that global socioeconomic imperatives, combined with the dizzying pace of technological innovation, create new urgency for the development of engaging and challenging ways to educate our nation’s young people. Read more...

Investment loser

Via the Public Education Network

In a costs-benefit analysis of testing mandates under NCLB and Race to the Top, Peter Smagorinsky on the Answer Sheet blog in The Washington Post writes accountability is profitable for publishing companies and school superintendents who cheat, and expensive for everyone else. The expense isn't merely the $20 billion annually in taxes to support the testing apparatus.

Teachers increasingly dislike their jobs, and according to one survey, 40 percent of new teachers nationwide are likely to leave within five years. For students, education has been reduced to the ability to fill in bubble sheets. Smagorinsky would invest the same $20 billion in a nursing staff in all schools, so kids in poverty can undertake studies with a reasonable degree of health and balance. He would expand free and reduced-price meals, and work to improve the healthiness of the offerings under these services. He would also staff school libraries with knowledgeable, helpful media specialists to direct students to books that benefit their educational development.

In general, he would invest in school infrastructure, so schools aren't falling apart at the seams. He notes he offers this proposal entirely for free, unlike in Colorado, where 35 percent of federal education money goes to consultants.

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Education News for 06-21-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • Ohio’s school funding fares well in report (Dispatch)
  • As the Ohio House prepares for another series of hearings on the school-funding formula next week, a new report shows that, from a national perspective, Ohio schools are doing better than most financially. When ranked on four criteria relating to how the state allotted and distributed funding in 2009 — the most-recent year of data available — Ohio was one of three states to receive an A in distributing funds fairly among districts of varying income levels. Read more...

  • Cleveland schools bill among several sent to Gov. John Kasich for signature (Plain Dealer)
  • COLUMBUS — A bill containing Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson’s schools reform plan is among 16 bills that officially were delivered to Gov. John Kasich Wednesday for his signature. Kasich, a Republican, is expected to publicly sign the Cleveland schools bill in the near future alongside Jackson, a Democrat, in Cleveland. The bills sent to Kasich all were passed last week in a flurry of legislative action before lawmakers went on their lengthy summer break. Read more...

  • Summer Reading Program Focuses On State Standards (ONN)
  • CINCINNATI - The National Underground Railroad Freedom center is one of four organizations hosting the Freedom Schools this summer in Cincinnati. Officials said 50 students are at each school, learning to love a good book. Adonya Streat, 9, will be in fourth grade this fall and enjoys reading Dr. Seuss books, like Green Eggs and Ham. The Children's Defense Fund are running these six week schools which is free for low income students, reported ONN's Lot Tan. Read more...

  • Treasurers accused of mishandling $1.4 million (Dayton Daily News)
  • Two treasurers listed on a state audit released Tuesday of a now-closed local charter school are responsible for a combined $1.4 million in allegedly mishandled public funds, according to a Dayton Daily News analysis. Carl Shye and Edward Dudley were both named in an audit released Tuesday of the Carter G. Woodson Institute, which closed in July 2010. The audit singled out $168,772 in allegedly mishandled public funds in that school’s waning months. Read more...

Local Issues

  • Probe might hinder Columbus schools’ levy (Dispatch)
  • A citizens committee is leaning toward recommending that Columbus City Schools place no levy on the ballot in November, saying that voters might not see past the cloud created by an investigation into why district employees changed thousands of student-attendance records. Eight of the 11 members who were present yesterday on the 14-member panel said they favored or leaned toward delaying a levy request until at least spring. Three other members wanted to go forward or appeared wary about waiting. Read more...

  • Board approves increase in insurance premiums (Vindicator)
  • Canfield - School board members approved a 5 percent increase in medical-insurance premiums for the upcoming school year. They approved the increase during Wednesday’s meeting where four of the five board members were present. Three voted yes with board President Adrianne Sturm abstaining because she purchases the district’s insurance. Sturm said it’s standard for premiums to increase each year, and a 5 percent increase is fairly low. Read more...

  • Reynoldsburg may shut charter school (Dispatch)
  • A local charter school could be suspended next week for suspected nepotism and a poor financial outlook. Reynoldsburg school board members voted Tuesday to suspend operation of Virtual Community School of Ohio, the online charter school that the district sponsors. To keep the school open, its officials must prove it was legal to hire relatives of the superintendent and that the school can make financial ends meet. Read more...

  • Lakota losing principals at high rate (Enquirer)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — The financial woes of one of the area’s highest-rated school districts has helped drive away more than half its principals in the last two school years. Of Lakota Schools’ 20 building principal positions, seven – 35 percent – have recently resigned due to retirement or other jobs. That follows the 2010-11 school year, which saw four principals depart, leaving Lakota with a 55 percent turnover rate among its school building leaders since spring 2011. Read more...

  • City school students may get free lunches this fall (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - It turns out there is such a thing as a free lunch. All city school students will get a free lunch beginning this fall if the district’s application for a new program is approved. The Community Eligibility Option provides free reimbursement to districts for all students if the district includes 62.5 percent students who are directly certified as eligible through food stamps. In the city school district, 76 percent of students are directly certified while 93 percent of students qualify for free and reduced lunches under federal guidelines. Read more...

  • Proposed bond issue for Cleveland Heights-University Heights schools' master facilities plan reduced to 5.9 mills (Sun News)
  • UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS - It appears the Cleveland Heights-University Heights school board is moving forward with Plan C, the comprehensive master facilities plan that would require a bond issue on the November ballot. Steve Shergalis, the district’s director of business services, presented a list of funding options for the plan to the board at a work session June 18 at Wiley Middle School. The primary expense is a proposed 5.9-mill bond issue that would generate $137.2 million over a 37-year period. Read more...

Editorial

  • Gone studyin’ (Beacon Journal)
  • The Ohio House Finance Committee spent the spring brushing up on the basics of the school funding system. The House plans several regional hearings on the issue during the summer break. When it comes to funding public education, it is hard to say Ohio legislators have not done due diligence in one aspect: studying the issue. Since the Ohio Supreme Court first ruled the state’s funding system unconstitutional, a succession of governors and legislators have promised earnestly to come up with a plan that would fix funding inequities. Read more...

  • Teacher prep (Chicago Tribune)
  • The best way to boost public education in Illinois is to make sure only the best teachers lead classrooms. Two years ago, Illinois took a huge stride toward that goal: The Illinois State Board of Education dramatically lifted standards for college students who want to become teachers. The board required college students to correctly answer about 75 percent of questions on a basic skills test in math, reading and language arts — as well as master a writing test — before they can be admitted to their colleges' teacher prep programs. Read more...

Politics and Education Don't Mix

Governors and presidents are no better suited to run schools than they are to run construction sites, and it's time our education system reflected that fact.

A central flaw of corporate paradigms, as is often noted in popular culture, is the mind-numbing and dehumanizing effect of bureaucracy. Sometimes we are horrified and sometimes we laugh, but arguments for or against the free market may be misguided if we fail to address bureaucracy's corrosive role in the business model.

Current claims about private, public, or charter schools in the education reform movement, which has its roots in the mid-nineteenth century, may also be masking a much more important call to confront and even dismantle the bureaucracy that currently cripples universal public education in the U.S. "Successful teaching and good school cultures don't have a formula," argued legal reformer Philip K. Howard earlier in this series, "but they have a necessary condition: teachers and principals must feel free to act on their best instincts....This is why we must bulldoze school bureaucracy."

Bureaucracy, however, remains an abstraction and serves as little more than a convenient and popular target for ridicule -- unless we unpack what actions within bureaucracy are the sources for many of the persistent failures we associate erroneously with public education as an institution. Bureaucracy fails, in part, because it honors leadership as a primary quality over expertise, commits to ideological solutions without identifying and clarifying problems first, and repeats the same reforms over and over while expecting different results: our standards/testing model is more than a century old.

Public education is by necessity an extension of our political system, resulting in schools being reduced to vehicles for implementing political mandates. For example, during the past thirty years, education has become federalized through dynamics both indirect ("A Nation at Risk" spurring state-based accountability systems) and direct (No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top).

As government policy and practice, bureaucracy is unavoidable, of course. But the central flaw in the need for structure and hierarchy is that politics prefers leadership characteristics above expertise. No politician can possibly have the expertise and experience needed in all the many areas a leader must address (notably in roles such as governor and president). But during the "accountability era" in education of the past three decades, the direct role of governors and presidents as related to education has increased dramatically--often with education as a central plank in their campaigns.

One distinct flaw in that development has been a trickle-down effect reaching from presidents and governors to state superintendents of education and school board chairs and members: people who have no or very little experience or expertise as educators or scholars attain leadership positions responsible for forming and implementing education policy.

The faces and voices currently leading the education reform movement in the U.S. are appointees and self-proclaimed reformers who, while often well-meaning, lack significant expertise or experience in education: Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, billionaire Bill Gates, Michelle Rhee (whose entrance to education includes the alternative route of Teach for America and only a few years in the classroom), and Sal Khan, for example.

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