jackson

Education News for 01-11-2013

State Education News

  • Ohio’s public schools rate 12th in U.S. with B- grade (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Ohio’s public school system earned a better grade on the nation’s report card this year, but the state’s rank — fifth in the nation three years ago — fell to 12th…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Groveport schools offer 12 options for levy (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Groveport Madison school officials took their first steps to place a levy on the May ballot at last night’s school board meeting…Read more...

  • Huber Heights schools to cut 108 jobs, 64 teachers (Dayton Business Journal)
  • The board of the Huber Heights school district voted to cut 108 jobs and 64 teachers, according to WDTN-TV 2…Read more...

  • Lakota saves $1.5M after cuts to art, music (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • Elementary students within Lakota are getting less exposure this school year to subjects, including art and music…Read more...

  • Retired teacher group offering grants to current teachers (Lima News)
  • The Allen County Retired Teachers Association is accepting project proposals for teacher grants the group began giving last year…Read more...

  • Casino money: Not enough help for local schools (New Philadelphia Times)
  • Joe Edinger, superintendent of East Holmes Local Schools in Berlin, doesn’t plan on spending the $39,677.15 his district will receive as its share of state casino-tax revenue…Read more...

  • District facing state oversight (Springfield News-Sun)
  • Tecumseh Local Schools must further cut expenses and increase revenues or face a projected $1.6 million deficit and fiscal caution status in 2014, the state education department told the district this week…Read more...

  • Mathews student charged after describing school shootings as ‘easy’ (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Two buddies from Mathews High School were arraigned Wednesday on felony charges — one accused of making remarks that caused panic at the high school, the other accused of vandalizing a teacher’s house in Niles last week…Read more...

Editorial

  • Disruptive students (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • Tamika Williams has a problem. And so, unfortunately, does the Akron Public Schools, which has the responsibility to ensure a learning environment that is safe for all staff and students, including angry, young ones like Tamika…Read more...

  • Fine could have helped Jackson kids (Canton Repository)
  • Judge had noble idea, but ex-coach’s victims may need counseling, too. Scott D. Studer pleaded guilty last month for videotaping Jackson High School student athletes in the showers…Read more...

Education News for 10-11-2012

State Education News

  • Yost has found evidence of deceit in some schools (Columbus Dispatch)
  • As members of the Columbus Board of Education listened from the audience, state Auditor Dave Yost said that interviews have produced evidence of “mal-intent” behind the changing of student data…Read more...

  • More state report card concerns (WKYC)
  • Cleveland School officials were able to see firsthand more state report card data today. As expected, the district is in academic emergency and could face falling under an academic distress commission's control…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Grades mixed on CPS school-choice push (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Cincinnati Public Schools has been working for more than two years to bring successful charter schools into its portfolio. But to date it has zero partnerships to show for it…Read more...

  • Frank Jackson and Eric Gordon campaign for tax increase; opponents raise objections (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • Mayor Frank Jackson and schools chief Eric Gordon continue pushing their message that the proposed new school tax is needed to help the schools and, in turn, the city and region…Read more...

  • Newark high-schoolers on edge (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Officials continued to keep a close watch yesterday after a Newark High School student reported that she had been raped before school on Tuesday morning…Read more...

  • Children Told To Leave School After District Said They Did Not Prove Residency (WBNS)
  • Family members said that they provided the Westerville City School District everything it needed for their children to attend. Just more than a month ago, a teacher sent the siblings home with all of their books…Read more...

  • CMSD Report Card’s Property Value Implications (WJW)
  • It is almost report card time for the Cleveland Metropolitan School District. A second round of preliminary report card data will be released next week. “(Tuesday) night, the State Board of Education voted to release the spread sheets…Read more...

  • TCTC studies land deal for solar project (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • By the middle of this winter, a crop of solar-collection panels could begin to emerge on 10 of the 30 acres of farmland between the state Route 5 bypass and the Trumbull Career and Technical Center…Read more...

Editorial

  • Role reversal (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Recent developments in Ohio’s public schools make it clear that school boards should be more independent and watchful, not less, to guard against potential problems. More diligence by board members…Read more...

Dispatch dodge disappoints

The Columbus Dispatch has cheered on the Governor's education "reform" plans every step of the way, from the draconian budget cuts, to SB5 - the Governor has had the full support of the state capital's newspaper of record. A need to improve the quality of Ohio's public education system, challenge the "status quo" has been their rally cry.

We were shocked then, to not read any editorial in this weekend's Dispatch criticizing the Governor for his appointment of an unqualified candidate to the State board of Education.

According to the Dispatch's own reporting, the Governor appointed Stanley Jackson, without ever having seen his resume. The Governor claiming Mr. Jackson's involvement in a charter school was qualification enough, only to discover that the charter school does not yet exist, and before Mr. Jackson can even spend one day on that job, he will resign from his fake school in order to avoid legal complications.

Furthermore, according to reports from NPR,

Kasich spokesperson Rob Nichols said Jackson is currently a candidate for an elected seat on the State Board of Education. Nichols said Jackson’s candidacy was what brought him to the attention of the governor’s office.

However, Jackson has not actually filed to run for state Board of Education, according to the Allen County Board of Elections. The deadline to file is Aug. 8.

StateImpact also reports that Mr. Jackson was an OSU dropout and never obtained his degree.

The State board of education has a full plate of policy to implement and guide, from common core, to teacher evaluations, and a new reading guarantee just for starters - it needs to have qualified people with a deep understanding of the issues in order to be successful, something Mr. Jackson does not posses.

Given these facts, why then has the Dispatch editorial board remained silent? Does their support of the Governor's education policies stop at the waters edge once criticism of their implementation is warranted?

Instead what the Dispatch editorial board decided to publish this weekend was another rehash of the SB5 fight, a sign that the Dispatch cares more about it's partisan politics than policies, even those it allegedly supports.

UPDATE

The ABJ manages to publish an appropriate editorial on this subject.

Education News for 05-25-2012

Statewide Education News

  • $700 million in federal education grants coming (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • National education groups said this week that they’re putting their money where their mouths are when it comes to improving teacher effectiveness. Cincinnati Public Schools said Thursday it will join the growing cadre of districts applying for the $400 million latest round of federal Race to the Top school reform grants announced this week by the U. S. Department of Education. Read More...

  • Late changes stall education bill (Springfield News Sun)
  • State lawmakers aren’t finished revising Gov. John Kasich’s education reform bill and will continue to hash out their disagreements and attempt compromise after the holiday weekend. Senate Bill 316 was scheduled for a floor vote in the House on Thursday, but there was disagreement about changes that include:
    • Raising the minimum reading test score students need to pass third grade.
    • Scrapping the report card committee.
    • Creating a system of charter schools for gifted students. Read More...

  • Five Things You Can Learn Tomorrow About Ohio Teacher Evaluations (State Impact Ohio)
  • Ohio school districts are in the middle of making major changes to how public school teachers are evaluated. The changes come amid a national push to make teacher evaluation actually count. That means using it to help teachers improve and to tie performance to how teachers are paid and whether they keep their jobs. How important is this change to teachers and principals? So important that about 2,500 of them will descend upon Columbus tomorrow for a conference on what the new evaluations will look like and what they mean. Read More...

Local Issues

  • Ohio Graduation Test scores down, but still good (Mansfield News Journal)
  • Early reports indicate Ohio Graduation Tests scores at all Richland County public schools decreased this year. Lucas High School Principal Eric Teague said he wasn't surprised scores dropped a bit in his district. Last year, scores were phenomenal and students scored a 100 percent in reading, mathematics and writing, he said. Read More...

  • Inmates May Soon Work Inside Central Ohio School District (NBC-4, Columbus)
  • They've been sentenced to years in prison, but inmates may soon be working in and around schools in a Central Ohio district. Leaders with the Fairbanks Local Schools in Union County are currently working on a partnership with the Ohio Reformatory for Women. Read More...

  • Lane to be tried as adult in Chardon High shootings (News Herald)
  • T.J. Lane will be tried as an adult in the Chardon High School shootings, Geauga County Probate/Juvenile Judge Tim Grendell ruled Thursday. Lane is being held in the county Juvenile Detention Center without bond. Read More...

  • Special-needs students benefit from work-training program (Vindicator)
  • A year of hands-on vocational training has helped 10 special-needs students secure entry-level jobs. Corey and Brian Dyer, work-training coordinators for the Mahoning County Educational Services Center, brought the work-training program to Austintown Fitch High School and the Mahoning County Career and Technical Center. Read More...

  • Male teachers are rare in elementaries (Hamilton Journal News)
  • Men make up only 10 percent of the elementary school teachers in Butler County, a trend seen nationally and one that concerns education experts. The Hamilton JournalNews analyzed staff lists in 10 Butler County districts, and of the 1,603.8 full-time equivalent teachers in elementary schools, 164 — or 10.2 percent — are men, according to 2010-11 data from the Ohio Department of Education. Read More...

  • Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's education plan does not get legislative approval, but deal is made to pass it soon (Plain Dealer)
  • Mayor Frank Jackson did not get final approval from state lawmakers on his education reform plan, but they struck a deal late Thursday that it would be passed soon. Jackson was adamant he wanted his sweeping plan to pass Thursday so he could move ahead with a school tax campaign. Raising property taxes would help offset the school district's projected budget deficit. Read More...

  • Cleveland mayor reaches agreement to fix troubled schools (Dispatch)
  • Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson reached an agreement tonight with state legislative leaders on a bill to overhaul his struggling school district. House Speaker William G. Batchelder, R-Medina, said there will be a news conference on Friday to announce the details, but said it is his intent to pass House Bill 525 when the legislature returns to Columbus in mid-June. Read More...

Education News for 05-24-2012

Statewide Stories of the Day

  • Vote on Cleveland schools in doubt (Dispatch)
  • With his plan to overhaul the Cleveland school district stalled in the state legislature, Mayor Frank Jackson will return to Columbus today to urge lawmakers to approve the legislation this week before they leave for summer recess. But Republican leaders said House Bill 525 will not be put up for a vote this week. “We are not ready to move this bill,” Rep. Ron Amstutz, a Wooster Republican and co-sponsor of the legislation, said yesterday. Read More...

  • Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson plans to visit Columbus to encourage state lawmakers to approve his education reform plan (Plain Dealer)
  • COLUMBUS — With negotiations over his education reform plan reaching a tipping point, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson publicly called on state lawmakers to approve the proposal today so he can move ahead with a school tax campaign. But House Speaker William G. Batchelder had doubts that the mayor's timeline will be feasible, adding that the mayor might have to wait until mid-June. In an interview Wednesday, and later at a news conference at a Cleveland school, Jackson said he intends to be in Columbus today to help resolve any differences. Read More...

  • Actions by districts puzzling (Tribune Chronicle)
  • The Mahoning County Educational Service Center has been working with the Ohio Department of Education and Gov. John Kasich's administration on ways to operate more efficiently. The state has at times highlighted the efforts made by Mahoning's ESC. These include: Sharing a treasurer and merging fiscal departments with the Mahoning County Career and Technical Center beginning in August. Joining forces with 16 other government entities. Read More...

  • Schools facing trend of dropping traditional textbooks for digital versions (News-Herald)
  • In the future, will students be carrying backpacks filled with technological learning devices rather than textbooks? Area educators recently weighed in on the subject as well as on the Obama Administration’s recent release of the Digital Learning Playbook encouraging electronic textbooks to be placed in the hands of all students by 2017. Though West Geauga Schools use some online resources, high school principal David Toth said President Obama’s goal is “a lofty vision.” Read More…

  • Ohio auditor flags credit card purchases, busing bills in Warrensville Heights schools (Plain Dealer)
  • WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS — A former superintendent and treasurer of the Warrensville Heights city schools used district credit cards for $6,710 in purchases that weren't supported by required documentation, according to the Ohio auditor's office. Most of the money went to hotels and airfare, with the remainder spent at restaurants and retail stores. The state audit released Tuesday covered the period from mid-2007 to mid-2008. Read More...

  • Bold political thinking: Pizza’s not a vegetable (Dispatch)
  • WASHINGTON — The notion that Congress could consider pizza a vegetable might be just too much to digest. The SLICE Act, for School Lunch Improvements for Children’s Education, has been introduced in response to congressional action last fall ensuring that two tablespoons of tomato paste slathered on pizza could continue to be classified as a full vegetable serving in the federal school lunch program. Read More...

Local Issues

  • Akron mom convicted in school switch now education activist (Dispatch)
  • Kelley Williams-Bolar, the Akron mother of two who received clemency from Gov. John Kasich last year related to her school-switching conviction, has formed the Ohio Parents Union, an organization focused on education reform. Williams-Bolar has “morphed from a desperate mom to an impassioned activist,” according to a story about her in Colorlines, an online publication of the Applied Research Center, a “racial justice think tank.” Read More...

  • Riverside Schools to eliminate 23 teachers (News-Herald)
  • Riverside Local Schools will cut 23 teaching positions effective Aug. 21. The cuts to the 2012-13 school year come from across the district in social studies, science, language arts, physical education, computers, industrial arts and family consumer science. Superintendent James Kalis said that the administration has done its best to keep cuts as far away from instruction as possible and will seek an operating levy with hopes of restoring some positions. Read More...

  • Deal to freeze Springfield teachers' pay OK'd by board (Blade)
  • The Springfield Local Board of Education unanimously approved a contract Wednesday that calls for a pay freeze and for teachers to pay an increased share of health insurance premiums. Members of the Springfield Education Association voted to ratify the agreement Tuesday. The previous contract expired June 30, 2011. The new agreement takes effect July 1, 2011; the economic concessions begin July 1, 2012. The contract expires June 30, 2013. Read More...

  • Despite cutting teachers, new LH tax issue likely (Newark Advocate)
  • PATASKALA - Licking Heights has cut teacher positions and frozen teacher salaries, but officials contend they still might need to place a funding issue on the November ballot. The school board on May 15 approved a resolution suspending the contracts of four teachers, a consumer and family science teacher, a physical education teacher and two music teachers. District officials estimate the move could save Heights at least $120,000 next school year. Read More...

  • More Northeast Ohioans ‘Redshirting’ Kindergarten-Bound Kids (WJW 8 FOX)
  • AVON LAKE — Simply knowing their colors or days of the week isn’t always an indicator that your 5-year old child is ready for kindergarten. As a result, more and more families in Northeast Ohio are holding back their child from entering school: it’s a growing controversial trend called redshirting. “They would have been 10 months behind the oldest child in the class and now they’re 10 months ahead of those children. Read More...

  • Hubbard district faces cuts (Tribune Chronicle)
  • HUBBARD - Only weeks after winning a prestigious award for her work, Hubbard Elementary assistant principal Robyn Fette may be stripped of her administrative position as the district seeks to cut costs. Board of Education member Don Newell confirmed Wednesday that Fette's position may be eliminated but refused to comment further. Board President Dr. Benjamin Hayek told a reporter Tuesday that the reorganization plan is to be presented at next month's board meeting, which is scheduled for June 25. Read More...

  • Public schools' plan in jeopardy (WKYC 3 NBC)
  • CLEVELAND - The Cleveland public schools' reform plan is stalled out in the Ohio legislature and in jeopardy. Mayor Frank Jackson held a news conference Wednesday in an effort to pressure the legislature to act on the reform plan. He will be in Columbus today and says his plan was for the Ohio House to vote on the plan. The mayor says he expects the vote to take place. Part of the holdup in the legislature is concern over how charter schools will be reviewed by a local panel -- before they open in Cleveland. Read More...

  • Niles school board spares 15 teachers but lays off 19 other district workers (Vindicator)
  • NILES - A motion to eliminate 15 teaching positions in the city school district failed Wednesday when the five-member board of education deadlocked 2-2 with one abstention. A vote to lay off 19 non-teaching employees passed by a vote of 3-2. “We’ve just put ourselves in fiscal emergency,” said Superintendent Mark Robinson. “The only way out of this is to pass a levy this November that would [generate] enough money that we can collect in 2013. Read More...

  • Granville terminates teacher over test issues (Newark Advocate)
  • GRANVILLE - The Granville Board of Education this week terminated the contract of English language learner teacher Jane Pfautsch, on the recommendation of the referee who oversaw Pfautsch's school-district appeal hearing in March. Board members unanimously voted in favor of the resolution after an executive session during Monday's regular May meeting. In November, the board suspended the contracts of both Pfautsch and ELL teacher Mary Ellen Locke just after the Ohio Board of Education suspended their teaching licenses for one year each. Read More...

  • Big changes coming to Indian Creek (WTOV 9 NBC)
  • WINTERSVILLE — Today truly was the last day for students at Bantam Ridge Elementary in Wintersville. Changes coming to the district will close down the building to students for the next school year. The changes are all apart of district's attempt to consolidate because of cuts from the state. The students who went to Bantam Ridge this year will move to Wintersville Elementary for next year. Read More...

Done deal in Cleveland?

Deal reached.

The compromise struck by the mayor and union after several weeks of marathon negotiations, will bring major changes to the contract rules governing teacher assignments, seniority, pay, evaluation, layoff and recall that give the district more flexibility as it tries to improve schools.
[...]
Jackson, district officials and CTU representatives all said today that they negotiated an agreement on the plan because it will provide a better education for students.

As CTU President, David Quolke said, "This agreement is a testament to the idea that when collective bargaining trumps conflict, progress can be made that helps the children of Cleveland."

Frank Jackson got into this mess because he didn't show respect to the teachers in his school district, and didn't trust the collective bargaining agreement. He famously avoided involving educators in his reform plan because

Mayor Jackson said he did not talk to the union before coming up with his latest plan because he wanted to avoid further delay.

"We need to get something done," he said. "We've been in perpetual discussion about a lot of things. Our sense of urgency is such that something has to happen in a systemic way and it has to happen now."

How much delay was caused? A week? Maybe 2? If he had of respected the teachers and the process, imagine the good will that would have been garnered, instead of the acrimony.

If the defeat of SB5 wasn't a strong enough message, maybe politicians will look at this example and finally realize that collective bargaining and collaboration will get you far further, much faster than a my way, or the highway approach.

This should cause some pause for thought however

The plan has also gained wide support from business and political leaders in the city, with Cleveland City Council voting this week to endorse the plan and the cities' charitable foundations and the chamber of commerce, the Greater Cleveland Partnership, helping to write it and sitting in on negotiations with CTU.

Under what statute does the Greater Cleveland Partnership get to sit in on negotiations between public employees and their government employer? The GCP was front and center supporting the Governor's efforts via SB5 to dismantle worker protections, and they were instrumental in adding the union busting measures into the "Cleveland plan" too. Now a deal is done - let's see them step up to the plate and fund efforts to pass a much needed levy. That, after all, is still the biggest crisis facing Cleveland Municipal Schools.