Read the report, Teacher Quality in a Changing Policy Landscape: Improvements in the Teacher Pool, and/or view the slide presentation. Click: Full Report (PDF) and/or Press Briefing Slide Presentation (PDF)
December 21, 2007- Bits & Briefs
CHARTER SCHOOLS TOUT NEW 'VALUE-ADDED' GRADING SYSTEM Charter school advocates said Thursday the Department of Education's new "value-added" grading system, which attempts to measure student progress year-to-year, more accurately reflects the privately run, publicly funded schools' success. ...Gongwer News Service
PRINCIPAL KEY TO LEADING SCHOOL TO SUCCESS A new study by Advocates for Children and Youth (ACY), a Baltimore-based nonprofit child advocacy group, ties school performance to the experience of principals and calls for bonuses and other incentives to attract and retain the school administrators. "We believe the principal is key to leading a school to success. ... It's a matter of paying now or paying later. The cost is so much smaller if we pay now," the ACY education director said. Read the ACY studies, click: Baltimore City; Baltimore County; Prince George’s County.
U.S. NUMBER ONE IN GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS A report in the publication Straight A's from the Alliance For Excellent Education, said, "Rebounding from a sixth place finish last year, the United States knocked Switzerland off of the top spot in the World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Index (GCI). Of the twelve 'pillars' that the report tracks, the United States ranks first in labor market efficiency, market size, and innovation but is thirty-fourth out of 131 countries in health and primary education." View the index. Click: Global Competitiveness Index
HIGH COST OF HIGH SCHOOL DROPOUTS According to the Alliance For Excellent Education, only about 70 percent of all high school students nationwide graduate on time, and graduation rates for poor and minority students are even lower. The Alliance said the failure to graduate every child prepared for the twenty-first century has serious consequences for individual students and their parents, but it also has major repercussions for American society at every level. Read the report. Click: The High Cost of High School Dropouts: What the Nation Pays for Inadequate High Schools.
December 20, 2007- Ohio, U.S. Lag In High-Speed Internet
December 19, 2007- Ohio Facing Budget Shortfall?
December 18, 2007- Study: Middle School Math Teachers Ill-Prepared
MT21 studied how well a sample of universities and teacher-training institutions prepare middle school math teachers in the U.S., South Korea, Taiwan, Germany, Bulgaria and Mexico. Specifically, 2,627 future teachers were surveyed about their preparation, knowledge and beliefs in this area. Compared to the other countries, the U.S. future teachers ranked from the middle to the bottom on MT21 measures of math knowledge.
“What’s most disturbing is that one of the areas in which U.S. future teachers tend to do the worst is algebra, and algebra is the heart of middle school math,” the researcher said. “When future teachers in the study were asked about opportunities to learn about the practical aspects of teaching mathematics, again we ranked mediocre at best.”
Read the report. Click: MT21 Report
December 17, 2007- Status Quo Is An Unacceptable Goal
The Associated Press (AP) reported yesterday that Governor Strickland said, “The status quo does not result in things staying the way they are. The status quo results in things getting increasingly worse in comparison to the rest of the world.” He said that rule applies to initiatives he has in the works, including a plan for addressing the state’s unconstitutional school funding system. “This [fixing school funding] is my responsibility as governor. I’ve got a four-year term. I want to get it done,” the Governor said. “My self judgment and probably the judgment of the people of Ohio will be made based on whether I am able to do this. So I want to do it in a way that actually leads to positive results.”
AP said the Governor envisions a single statewide educational system that extends from preschool through adulthood where credits and courses are more uniform to eliminate confusion and disparities. He said has not yet figured out how he would pay for such a system in a state whose formula for paying for public education has been deemed inequitable because it relies too heavily on property taxes. But he said, through input from many interested groups, he is coming closer to a proposal. “I don’t want to just have another failed attempt,” Strickland said. “There have been sincere efforts in the past which I think have fallen short because they have not been adequately embraced by the parties involved.”
December 14, 2007- Value-Added Results
| The Cincinnati Enquirer reported today that students in nearly half of Ohio's public elementary and middle schools made more than a year's worth of progress in 2006-07, according to new data released yesterday by the Ohio Department of Education. Value-added is an attempt to measure individual students' progress over time rather than comparing overall performance. Schools are rated by color code. A school is rated "green" if its students showed more than one year of progress, "yellow" if students show one year of progress, and "red" if students show less than one year of progress. To determine a school's spot in the color scheme, the state compared its fourth through eighth graders' scores on the 2006 Ohio Achievement Test in math and reading to the same students' 2007 scores after they advanced to the next grade. Throughout Ohio, 1,358 schools are "green," 718 are in "yellow" and 694 are in "red," according to the Enquirer report. In the future, if a school stays in "green" for two consecutive years, it could boost its annual report card rating by one category. The value-added measurement would pull down a school's rating if it stays red for three consecutive years. View the value-added data on ODE web site. Click: Click here to access Power User value-added reports. Value-added data can be found in the “Ratings” folder. Sources: Cincinnati Enquirer and Ohio Department of Education |
December 13, 2007- Report Finds New Teachers More Academically Qualified
The study found that college grades of prospective teachers has improved. About 40 percent of the prospective teachers taking the licensing tests from 2002 to 2005 had a grade point average of 3.5 or higher on the traditional 4-point scale during college, up from 26 percent in the 1990s, according to the report. The percentage of candidates earning lower than a 3.0 G.P.A. decreased to 20 percent from 32 percent. “By this measure, we are witnessing a dramatic improvement in the quality of the teacher pool,” the report said.
The New York Times said, "The finding that the academic qualifications of teachers had risen significantly was encouraging news for federal and state education policy makers after a period of hand-wringing over teacher quality in the nation’s 90,000 public schools. The most successful educational systems in the world, like those in Singapore and Finland, recruit teachers from among the top third of their college graduates. By contrast, some studies over the years have found that the United States recruits from the bottom third."
Education researchers debate, however, whether teachers with higher academic qualifications are more effective, as measured by higher student achievement, the New York Times said.
December 12, 2007- CORAS Membership Approaching Record Numbers
CORAS membership includes 98 local, city and exempted village school districts, 11 educational service centers, 11 joint vocational school districts, 8 institutions of higher learning and three other education agencies. This marks the 8th consecutive year that CORAS has attained 125 members or more, and four consecutive years of topping 130 members.
To view a list of CORAS members, Click: Counties and Members
December 11, 2007- Code Of Conduct For Educators
December 10, 2007- Amendment Proposal "Draws Praise, Measured Support"
According to an Associated Press (AP) report yesterday, State Senator Kirk Schuring's proposed constitutional amendment that would dedicate at least 59.6 percent of income tax receipts and 71.2 percent of sales tax collections to fund Ohio schools is drawing praise from statewide education groups, and measured support from Democratic Governor Ted Strickland and Republican State Senator Joy Padgett, who heads the Senate's education committee.
The Associated Press printed the following comments. "It's a very positive thing because it tries to put children at the front of the line for state tax dollars," said Fred Pausch, a lobbyist for the Ohio School Boards Association. The Ohio Association of School Business Officials also approves. "In any school solution that we would advocate for, there's got to be a revenue source and a methodology to determine what it would cost to educate a child," said David Varda, executive director of the association. "Sen. Schuring's proposal is attractive to us in that it answers the revenue question." Strickland's spokesman said the governor found Schuring's proposal "admirable." Padgett called Schuring's plan "a novel approach."
AP reported that Senator Schuring said unlike the current system, the money earmarked for education under the amendment could not be diverted to other interests. The amount of money generated by the formula this year would equal what the state currently spends on education, Schuring said. However, as state revenue increases, the sales and income tax collections would automatically increase as well, yielding more money for Ohio schools. In the past 20 years, tax collections have grown 200 percent, he said.
AP said some education advocates question how the money would be divided between grades K-12 and higher education, and what would happen if lawmakers cut taxes. AP said Schuring wants to create a commission made up of education and business representatives that would recommend how the money is distributed to Ohio’s 613 school districts.
Read the AP article. Click: Proposed school funding plan to draw from state taxes
December 7, 2007- Teacher Experience Matters Most
The REPORT TO THE JOINT TASK FORCE ON BASIC EDUCATION FINANCE: School Employee Compensation and Student Outcomes, issued December 1st said, "In the first few years on the job, a teacher gains considerably in her or his ability to improve the academic performance of students." The researchers found a dramatic improvement in student achievement between one and five years of teacher experience and a more gradual boost in the years following. Student achievement was mostly tracked through scores on standardized reading or math tests. An analysis of studies concerning teachers getting graduate degrees found the degrees seemed to have little or no impact on student outcomes.
The report makes a preliminary recommendation that any changes in the way teachers are paid should emphasize financial rewards for experience rather than higher pay for teachers with graduate degrees.
Read the report. Click:
Full Report
December 6, 2007- Governor, Voters Reject Vouchers
The Akron Beacon Journal reported Monday that Governor Strickland said, ''I remain adamantly opposed to vouchers. I support a moratorium on any new charters schools until we get accountability and transparency standards in place.'' ''I'll never submit a budget that has voucher money in it,'' Strickland said. ''I think vouchers are inherently undemocratic. This is my deeply felt personal opinion. When public dollars are being allocated, there needs to be public oversight. The taxpaying public has no ability to influence decisions that are made by these institutions that accept vouchers.''
On a related note, The Leaders Edge, published by the American Association of School Administrators (AASA), said after a hard-fought battle, the proposed school voucher in Utah was defeated at the polls on November 6th. Voters rejected the program, which had been passed by the legislature and sent to the election ballot by the courts, by a margin of 62% to 37%. "It thus joins the long and distinguished line of voucher programs that have been continuously rejected at the polls, almost all of which by more than a two-thirds majority," AASA said. The list of voucher issues rejected by the voters include:
- 1970 Nebraska Tuition Reimbursement, Rejected 57 percent - 43 percent
- 1972 Maryland Voucher Program, Rejected 55 percent - 45 percent
- 1978 Michigan Voucher Program, Rejected 74 percent - 26 percent
- 1981 Washington, D.C., Tuition Tax Credit, Rejected 89 percent - 11 percent
- 1990 Oregon Tuition Tax Credit, Rejected 67 percent - 33 percent
- 1992 Colorado Voucher Program, Rejected 67 percent - 33 percent
- 1993 California Voucher Program, Rejected 70 percent - 30 percent
- 2000 California Voucher Program, Rejected 71 percent - 29 percent
- 2000 Michigan Voucher Program, Rejected 69 percent - 31 percent
- 2007 Utah Voucher Program, Rejected 62 percent - 37 percent
December 5, 2007- Around The Statehouse
BAN ON CORPORAL PUNISHMENT Two Ohio lawmakers Tuesday proposed banning corporal punishment in schools, a practice already rare in the state. Under the measure introduced yesterday by State Representatives Jon Peterson and Brian Williams, all school officials would be prohibited from using corporal punishment. Since 1993, the state has banned the practice unless a local school board specifically acts to allow it. Seventeen school systems in 16 counties still use corporal punishment, according to the Center for Effective Discipline, an advocacy group pushing the proposal. ....Cincinnati Enquirer
December 4, 2007- Another School Funding Amendment To Be Introduced Today
Schuring expects the proposal to relieve pressure on property taxes by increasing the state’s share of money. Schuring said a similar plan was passed in Michigan in the 1990s that dropped the local share of school funding from 60 percent to 20 percent, while the state contribution increased by a like amount. He expects that to happen in Ohio, according to the Repository.
The Repository said, based on current funding of $12.24 billion, Schuring’s proposal would fund schools using 59.6 percent of income tax receipts; 71.2 percent of sales and use tax receipts; 70 percent of the Commercial Activity Tax; 25.4 percent of the Kilowatt-hour Tax; and 100 percent of Lottery profits.
Senator Shuring said, “This is a complicated jigsaw puzzle. By introducing this now, it starts the process of the leadership in the Legislature and the Governor to work together to get something done.”
December 3, 2007- Governor Renews Commitment To Fix School Funding
Today, the Akron Beacon Journal reported that Governor Strickland said the issue [school funding] is active, not dormant in his administration, and rarely a day passes that he doesn't think or talk about school funding and reform with his staff. He said he would like the problem to be solved through a joint effort with the legislature, but he will support a ballot initiative to amend the Ohio Constitution if nothing materializes in the Ohio General Assembly. ''I owned this issue as a candidate. I have continued to own it as the governor. I am not interested in a failed attempt to solve the problem of school funding and school reform,'' the Governor said.
November 30, 2007- Education Bits & Briefs
Forty years ago, the United States ranked No. 1 in the percentage of people with a high school diploma; now the U.S. ranks 19th. Currently, Ohio ranks 38th out of the 50 states in the number of high school graduates academically ready for college. ...Akron Beacon Journal
November 29, 2007- Study: More Money Needed To Meet State And Federal Mandates
Education spending must increase by nearly 27 percent in Pennsylvania in order to reach its goal of bringing all students to proficiency in mathematics and reading by 2014 as mandated by the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act, according to a financial analysis ordered by state lawmakers. Pennsylvania spent an average of $9,512 per child in 2005-06, the study found, but should have spent $12,057 per child in order to meet its academic goals.
The study noted that Pennsylvania’s poorest districts had to raise taxes more than its wealthiest because they lack the tax base to support local schools. The state attempts to ease those disparities by sending more money to needier districts, but since state funds account for only about one-third of total school spending, the state cannot close those gaps. The study also found that 95 percent of Pennsylvania school districts are spending less than the recommended levels.
Similar, if not worse, conditions exist in Ohio. Ohio's average expenditure per pupil was $8,675 (EFM-Expenditure Flow Model) in 2005-06. However, some Ohio rural Appalachian school districts per pupil expenditure was as low as $6,653 that same year. Ohio school districts must also meet state and federal mandates.
Read the Pennsylvania study. Click: key
findings of a “costing-out” study![]()
November 28, 2007- Indiana Debates School Funding, Property Tax Relief
According to the Associated Press, property taxes in Indiana make up about 15 percent of the school general fund, which pays for things like instructional programs and teacher salaries in Indiana, while the state already pays for the other 85 percent.
Read newspaper articles. Click : Indianapolis Star Click: AP Click: Louisville Courier-Journal
Source: School Business Daily
November 27, 2007- College Board Targets Low-Income Students
The College Board is seeking to mobilize its more than 5,200 members in a national campaign to better help students from low-income families prepare for, get into, and succeed in college. Among the ideas put forward for action are setting student-aid policies that narrow the gap in enrollment between students from low-income and affluent backgrounds, waiving college-application fees for low-income students, and mounting college-awareness programs.
An October 2007 College Board report finds that nearly half of all college-qualified graduates from low- and moderate-income families do not enroll in four-year colleges because of financial barriers. It also points to other barriers, such as poor preparation, low expectations for students, and a lack of reliable information about college possibilities and the value of attending college.
"Put simply, our country cannot prosper without fully developing all of its human resources," the College Board president writes in the introduction. "It would be both morally wrong and competitively foolish to foreclose young people’s options for higher education, based even in part on income. And yet, that is where we find ourselves today."
Read the College Board press release. Click: “CollegeKeys Compact” For full report. Click: Final Report (.pdf/748K)
On a related note, a recent proposal from the Ohio Board of Regents for public four-year universities would reward schools with more first-generation students. The board said increasing degrees among those with no college graduates in their family "represents the greatest possible return on the state's investment."
Sources: Education Week and Cincinnati Enquirer
November 26, 2007- Needy Children Fare Poorly In Ohio
November 21, 2007- The Per Pupil Expenditure Gap
November 21, 2007- Where's the Money?
November 20, 2007- Another Local Chamber Of Commerce Enters School Funding Fray
November 19, 2007- Governor's Promises, School Funding, Education Reform, Proposed Solutions
- Combining funding and governance of pre-kindergarten through 12th-grade education with that of higher education.
- Providing more time for students who need it, and faster progression through the system for capable students, enabling them to gain college credits before graduation and realize tuition savings.
- Giving staff and parents authority over individual school budgets, along with training so that they could exercise the authority wisely.
- Improved early screening, followed by more-accountable prevention and intervention programs for all kids.
- Benchmarking Ohio's standards and tests to those of the National Association for Educational Progress, and eliminating low cut-off scores to increase passage rates.
- Expediting data-driven systems now available that can assess students' strengths and weaknesses, show teachers what each student needs to perform at grade level and guide better decision-making in our schools.
- Using technology to more widely promote on-line instruction, interactive television and presentations on DVDs by superstar teachers, computerized record-keeping, online teacher training and professional development and administering and scoring proficiency tests.
- Statewide collective bargaining and benefits, and a teacher career ladder that includes an internship required for licensure.
- Statewide implementation of the new Educational Region Service System to provide services more efficiently.
- Per-pupil funding based on student needs and following the student.
- Adopting a year-round quarterly calendar to gain instructional time now spent on review each fall, and tutoring students needing more time during quarterly breaks.
- Increasing apprenticeships and other school-to-work programs to better prepare students who want education alternatives.
- Of course, little of the above will be possible without remedying conditions that limit productivity — the high incidence of behavior problems, computer downtime, teaching to proficiency tests and interference with instructional time.
Read the Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: The all-inclusive task of education reform
Read additional related articles from Sunday newspapers. Click on the links below.
Editorial: Strickland's deeds on school finance fall well short of his words
(Cleveland Plain Dealer 11/18/2007)
EDITORIAL: A priority no more (Lima News 11/18/2007)
Proposals being pushed for Ohio's 2008 ballot could emerge as a key subplot if the state reprises its role as kingmaker (Toledo Blade 11/18/2007)
Per-student
spending rises in most of Ohio
(Toledo Blade 11/18/2007)
Schools that never were got millions (Columbus Dispatch 11/18/2007)
November 16, 2007- School Funding Problems: Ohio Not Alone
School
funding problems are prevalent across the country. Read some of the
headlines and/or related articles.
·
Despite
court ruling,
·
New Jersey
education commissioner expects new school funding formula "within a
week." Related
article. Click:
Star-Ledger
·
Maryland
legislature approves change to funding formula. Related
article. Click:
Gazette
·
Wisconsin
legislature may call for new funding formula. Related
article. Click:
WISC-TV
·
Report:
·
Pennsylvania
costing-out study may guide new funding formula. Related
article. Click: York
Dispatch
·
Report:
·
Arizona
schools object to construction funding system. Related
article. Click:
Daily
Star
· Task
force recommends new school funding formula to
On a related note, Pennsylvania state legislators
directed the state's Board of Education to commission the independent cost study
of the state's education system. The study, completed by Augenblick, Palaich and
Associates Inc., based in Denver, was released Wednesday. The study
asserts that school districts would have to spend on average $12,057 per student
every year for that student to meet the state's standards. The study put forth a
"base" amount for students who need no special services -- $8,003 per
year -- but added money to account for students with special needs.
Source:
School Business Daily
November 15, 2007- Statewide Healthcare Plan
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported today that one of the ideas the Northeast Ohio Universities Collaboration & Innovation Study Commission, made up of civic leaders and the heads of the region's five public universities, plan to present to Governor Strickland is to combine employees' health care plans.
Sources: School Business Daily and Cleveland Plain Dealer
November 14, 2007- Another Math/Science Study
The new study, published today (Nov. 14) by the American Institutes for Research, compares the performance of 8th graders in individual American states not against each other, but against students in top-performing foreign nations. Students in most U.S. states are performing as well as or better than most students in foreign countries in math and science, but the highest achieving states are still significantly below the highest achieving countries, according to the report. The study compared U.S. students' scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a test often called the "nation's report card," with how foreign students performed on the International Mathematics and Science Study. Twelve states and eight countries were ahead of Ohio in science, 17 states and nine countries in math.
On a related note, the Columbus Dispatch reported today that just less than 17 percent of degrees awarded by U.S. universities are in science, technology, engineering and math, compared with 52 percent in China, 64 percent in Japan and 41 percent in South Korea. What the Dispatch failed to say was how many degrees the percentage represents.
Read the news release and/or report: 8th Graders in Most U.S. States Performing Better in Math and Science than Students in Most Foreign Countries
Sources: American Institutes for Research and Columbus Dispatch
November 14, 2007- More Schools In Poor Communities Failing Under NCLB
The Gannett News Service reported today that about one fifth of schools in the nation's poorest communities were flagged as poor performers last year, and more are expected to make the list as a 2014 performance deadline approaches under the federal No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law. There are more than 51,000 high-poverty, or Title 1, schools in the country. According to the Education Department statistics, about 10,700 of those schools, or 21 percent, failed to meet the NCLB standard last year. That's up about 8 percent from the year before. The number of high-poverty schools identified as "needing improvement" last year rose in 26 states and the District of Columbia, according to federal education statistics.
School officials believe without greater flexibility to measure student growth, thousands more schools will be labeled as failing even if 99 percent of the kids at each school score well on standardized tests. As most know, a school can miss making "adequate yearly progress" if: (1) Its students, as a whole, fall short of targets on state math and reading tests; (2) Individual subsets of students fall short (Subsets consist of students who, for example, are low-income, don't speak English as a first language, have disabilities or belong to a distinct racial or ethnic group); or (3) More than 5 percent of students eligible to take the tests fail to do so.
Source: Gannett News Service
November 13, 2007- "The Turnaround Challenge"
Read the Executive Summary of the report. Click: The Turnaround Challenge -- EXECUTIVE SUMMARY for an eight-page summary that provides an overview of the main points and recommendations in the report.
The Turnaround Challenge is part of a larger, multi-phase initiative of the Mass Insight Education & Research Institute, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The initiative is aimed at helping states, districts, schools, and partners to successfully address the issue of chronically under-performing schools – and to use failing school turnaround as the entry point for fundamental change more broadly in public education.
November 12, 2007- Ohio Charter Schools In National News
November 9, 2007- Most Voters Say "No" To "New Money" For Schools
While 54% of Ohio's 200 school tax issues passed in the November 6, 2007 election, the 29 Ohio Appalachian counties fared less well. The Ohio Appalachian counties had 24 issues on the ballot with only 9, or 37.5%, passing. The 24 school tax issues in the 29-county region included 17 requests for "new money" with only 3, or 17.65%, passing. The approval rate statewide for "new money" school tax issues was about 30%.
November 8, 2007- November 6th School Election Results
| Results by county | Close issues summary |
| Results summary | Income tax results |
| Historical summary | JVS issues |
| Detailed historical summary |
Source: Ohio Department of Education
November 7, 2007- Men In Classroom At All-Time Low
November 6, 2007- CORAS Members Discuss School-Funding and Education Reform
November 5, 2007- Proposal to Consolidate Local Public School Administrations
November 2, 2007- International Report: Teachers Matter Most
A new international report says high-quality teaching for every child is at the heart of school improvement. School system success, the report says, hinges on getting the right people to become teachers, helping them learn to teach, and crafting a system that ensures every child will get access to the teaching needed to keep from falling behind. At least that's the conclusion drawn when examining the practices of the 10 top performers and another seven rapidly improving systems on the 2003 administration of the international tests known as PISA (Program for International Student Assessment). The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development commissioned the September report.
Read the report. Click: a
report ![]()
Sources: Education Week, November 7, 2007 and "How the World's Best Performing School Systems Come Out On Top", September 2007
November 1, 2007- School Funding Top Priority
On
Tuesday, at a meeting in Urbana, Governor Strickland said again that school
funding is a top priority of his administration. The Governor said the
current system of school funding "does not pass constitutional
muster." "We haven't solved the school funding problem yet,
but I'm committed to doing that," he said. "I want to win the
issue and not just the argument," he added. "There's been a lot of
arguing about educational funding for a long time. I'm trying to find a way that
will cause people to come together and agree on solutions. It's a tough thing to
accomplish but it's the only way it can ultimately be solved."
Source: The Urbana Daily Citizen
October 31, 2007- Report: Ohio Neglecting Rural Schools
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported yesterday that a new study, Why Rural Matters 2007, suggests that Ohio policy makers need to pay more attention to students who attend schools in rural communities. The report, conducted by The Rural and Community Trust, said Ohio has the fifth largest rural student population in the nation at nearly 440,000. Schools serving these students are characterized by moderately high levels of poverty. Ohio’s rankings in terms of policy context are among the nation’s worst, with the second lowest level of rural per pupil instructional spending nationally, the report said.
Read an overview of the report and state-by-state results. Click: Why Rural Matters 2007
October 30, 2007- The Science Education Myth
Yet, the Business Week article said, a new report by the Urban Institute tells a different story. The report disproves many confident pronouncements about the alleged weaknesses and failures of the U.S. education system. The authors of the report show that math, science, and reading test scores at the primary and secondary level have increased over the past two decades, and U.S. students are now close to the top of international rankings.
October 29, 2007- School Tax Issues On Nov. 6th Ballot
The Ohio Secretary of State website has a list of school districts with tax issues on the November 6, 2007 ballot. According to the website, there are 228 school issues to be decided. They include 38 bond issues, 154 property tax issues and 36 income tax issues.
Including the 228 issues on the November ballot, a total of 443 local school tax issues will have been on Ohio ballots in 2007. In February 2007, 30 school tax issues were decided, with 30% passing. May 2007 saw 164 school tax issues on the ballot with 54.3% passing. In August 2007, voters approved only 14.3% of the 21 local tax issues for schools.
The 228 school tax issues are the most on a November ballot since 2004. There were 206 school issues in November 2006, with 53.4% passing.
To view a list of school districts voting on tax issues in November 2007, click: Local Issues Summary November 6, 2007
Sources: Ohio Secretary of State and Ohio Department of Education
October 25, 2007- House Hearings On Teacher Conduct
According to the Columbus Dispatch, State Board of Education member Virgil Brown told the House Education Committee Tuesday that the state should:
- Automatically strip the licenses of educators convicted of serious crimes -- including murder, rape and kidnapping.
- Force school districts to immediately remove teachers from the classroom if they have been arrested. In some school districts, educators have been allowed to keep teaching while police investigations and court cases played out.
- Give the Education Department access to two specialized law-enforcement databases. One would notify the department when a licensed educator is arrested. The other would give a comprehensive arrest record and criminal history for any Ohio offenses.
- Require federal background checks for anyone applying to be an educator. Now, all would-be teachers must submit to a state check. Those who have lived in Ohio for at least five years can skip the federal one.
- Punish superintendents, prosecuting attorneys, law-enforcement agencies and Children Services if they fail to report allegations of teacher misconduct to the state.
- Mandate an official code of ethical conduct for educators that would define what kind of conduct is "unbecoming the profession."
The Dispatch said State Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan T. Zelman vowed to give the public greater access to teachers' disciplinary records. Zelman told the committee that, as promised, an online database will launch November 1st that will give the public information about educators who have been disciplined by the state. She also said the department will start posting a calendar of disciplinary hearings online. The database will list the reasons educators had their licenses revoked or suspended. But for now, at least, details about reprimands won't be listed. Parents and school leaders still would have to call the state to learn why those educators were disciplined.
October 24, 2007- School Funding: What Are States Doing?
OHIO
The state’s system for funding public education was ruled unconstitutional four times. The order to fix the system has been largely ignored by state leaders who have, instead, put more state money into education through a program to build new schools. The state is still heavily reliant on property owners to fund schools.
MICHIGAN
The state’s education leaders and politicians couldn’t agree if money alone, or a change in the structure of public education, was needed to fix the school funding system.
WEST VIRGINIA
The state was named among the top in the nation last year for its equal funding of public education.
KENTUCKY
Complied with a court order to lower reliance on property taxes to support schools by removing the state’s education department and rebuilding it for a more efficient operation. The state’s legislature and governor were given one year to devise a new system for funding schools and did so without question.
PENNSYLVANIA
Taxpayer Relief Act was passed last year allowing some property tax revenue for schools to be replaced by $1 billion generated annually from the gaming industry. But even that won’t be enough. Property owners pay about $6 billion a year to fund schools.
October 23, 2007- Students From Poor Families Struggle To Meet College Costs
October 22, 2007- More Rural Children Growing Up Poor
Sources: Columbus Dispatch, Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire and the U.S. Census Bureau
October 19, 2007- Schools of Promise
October 18, 2007- State Senator Says State Left With Weak Support At The Local Level
- Since 2000, more than 1,700 educators have been disciplined, but two-thirds were returned to the classroom or issued licenses.
- Districts often fail to report to the state and other school districts allegations of educator misconduct.
- The state has withheld information about hundreds of disciplined educators from superintendents and parents.
- The state has no fail-safe system to catch teachers charged with crimes. The Dispatch found 35 educators and coaches who have not been investigated by the Education Department. Many of them had been convicted of crimes including sexually abusing children; some have been in prison for years.
October 17, 2007- CORAS/Hicks Program Set For April 29
October 16, 2007- Teacher Licensure And Special Ed Voucher Bills Introduced
Read bill analyses. Click: Bill Analysis - HB 347 - As Introduced [.html format] [.pdf format]
HB 348 SPECIAL EDUCATION VOUCHERS To create the Special Education Scholarship Pilot Program to provide scholarships for disabled children in grades K through 12 to attend alternative public or private special education programs in fiscal years 2009 through 2014. The bill also requires the Ohio Department of Education to develop a document that compares rights under state and federal special education law and rights under the Special Education Scholarship Pilot Program, and requires school districts to distribute that document to parents of all special education students.
Read bill analyses. Click: Bill Analysis - HB 348 - As Introduced [.html format] [.pdf format]
Both bills were introduced in the Ohio House last week and assigned to the House Education Committee.
October 15, 2007- Academic Progress In Appalachian Counties And Cities
October 11, 2007- Lotteries Across The Nation Fall Short Of Promises To Schools
An examination of lottery documents, as well as interviews with lottery administrators and analysts, finds that lotteries accounted for less than 1 percent to 5 percent of the total revenue for K-12 education last year in the states that use this money for schools. In some states, including Ohio, lottery dollars have merely replaced money for education. The New York Times, conducting the examination, said lottery proceeds for schools have been popular among lawmakers who, since states began legalizing lotteries more than 40 years ago, have sold gambling as a savior for cash-starved public schools and other government programs.
There are 42 states that have lotteries, while 23 earmark all or some of the money for education. State lotteries raised more than $56 billion and returned $17 billion to the state governments last year, the Times said. Most of the money raised by lotteries is used simply to sustain the games themselves, including marketing, prizes and vendor commissions. And, the article said, as lotteries compete for a small number of core players and try to persuade occasional customers to play more, nearly every state has increased, or is considering increasing, the size of its prizes, further shrinking the percentage of each dollar going to education and other programs. In addition, last year $460 million was spent on advertising, making them one of the nation’s largest marketers.....and the 197,000 retailers that sell lottery products earned $3.3 billion in commissions in 2006, according to the newspaper.
Source: New York Times, October 7, 2007
October 10, 2007- Are Private High Schools Better Than Public High Schools?
October 9, 2007- "....underperforming charter schools rob students."
Source: Dayton Daily News, October 7, 2007
October 8, 2007- "....more to do with Zaire than Zanesville."
- There are school children in Ohio receiving a $6,653 education, while the state average (not the most expensive) per pupil expenditure is $8,675. (EFM Expenditure Flow Model) This $2000 shortfall translates into $40,000 less annually per classroom of 20 students or $2 million less annually for a school district with 1000 students than the state average.
- There are school districts in Ohio with local property valuation per ADM as low as $36,271, while the state average (not the highest) is $122,444. These numbers illustrate the lack of ability for some local communities to raise revenue to support education for their school children.
- There are school districts in Ohio with average annual teacher salaries as low as $32,271, while the state average (not the highest paid) teachers salary is $48,050. The $16,000 less annually translates into $480,000 in lost income for those teachers over a 30-year career.
- Ohio had the largest percentage increase, almost 7 percent, in rural child poverty between 2000 and 2006, according to the Carsey Institute at the University of New Hampshire.
October 5, 2007- Extended School Day/Year
October 4, 2007- "The Proficiency Illusion"
| Test subject | Raw score to pass | Maximum score | Percent needed to pass | |
| Third grade | Reading | 31 | 49 | 63% |
| Fourth grade | Math | 31 | 52 | 60% |
| Fourth grade | Reading | 21 | 49 | 43% |
| Fourth grade | Math | 26 | 52 | 50% |
| Fourth grade | Writing | 19 | 39 | 49% |
| Fifth grade | Reading | 25 | 49 | 51% |
| Fifth grade | Math | 25 | 52 | 48% |
| Fifth grade | Science | 24 | 48 | 50% |
| Fifth grade | Social studies | 26 | 48 | 54% |
| Sixth grade | Reading | 18 | 49 | 37% |
| Sixth grade | Math | 20 | 50 | 40% |
| Seventh grade | Reading | 20 | 47 | 43% |
| Seventh grade | Math | 16 | 50 | 32% |
| Seventh grade | Writing | 21 | 41 | 51% |
| Eighth grade | Reading | 22 | 48 | 46% |
| Eighth grade | Math | 16 | 46 | 35% |
| Eighth grade | Science | 21 | 48 | 44% |
| Eighth grade | Social studies | 23 | 48 | 48% |
Source: Ohio Department of Education
October 3, 2007- Governor's Education Policy Advisory To Speak At Oct. 30th CORAS Meeting
October 2, 2007- Linking Teacher Pay To Student Test Scores
Experimentation with tying teacher pay to what students learn may be gaining momentum, "as states and districts start to crack open the traditional salary schedule by providing teacher bonuses based at least in part on student test-score gains," Education Week reported recently.
According to the Education Week article, at least half a dozen states have statewide or pilot programs that provide financial incentives to teachers based on achievement growth at the classroom or school level. And hundreds of districts are experimenting with such programs, including Denver, Houston, and Nashville. The article said, "The U.S. Department of Education has spent nearly $100 million to promote the idea through the federal Teacher Incentive Fund, which supports the development and implementation of performance-based pay in high-need districts." Other than Denver, few districts have entirely eliminated pay increases based solely on years of experience and course credits, the report said.
October 1, 2007- State Per Pupil Funding To Traditional Schools Less Than Half Charter Schools
PER-PUPIL STATE FUNDING PAID TO TRADITIONAL SCHOOLS IS NOW
LESS THAN HALF THE AMOUNT THAT IS PAID TO CHARTER SCHOOLS.
Fiscal Years Traditional Schools Charter Schools
2002………….……....$3,016…………………...$5,881
2003………………………$3,114……………………..$5,996
2004………………………$3,205……………………..$6,417
2005………………………$3,268……………………..$6,737
2006………………………$3,335……………………..$6,683
2007………………………$3,394……………………. $6,902
Source: ODE SF3 State Funding Reports
September 28, 2007- The American Public Speaks!
~ For the first time since 2003, more Americans have an unfavorable view (40%) of NCLB than a favorable one (31%).
~ Similarly, for the first time, more Americans (49%) would blame the law if large numbers of schools fail to meet the requirements than would blame the schools (43%).
Testing
~ In just the last five years, the number of Americans who believe there is too much emphasis on testing in their local schools has jumped by 12%.
~ Eight in 10 Americans prefer that school effectiveness be measured by improvement in student achievement rather than the current method that calculates adequate yearly progress (AYP).
Narrowing the Curriculum
~ One of every two Americans believes that NCLB’s focus on reading and mathematics has reduced instructional time in other subjects.
~ Nine in 10 of those who feel that NCLB has resulted in a narrower curriculum are concerned about it.
Improve NCLB Treatment of Special Needs Students
~ Nearly 8 in 10 Americans feel that English-language learners should be required to pass an English proficiency test before their reading and math scores are used to measure school performance.
~ Seven in 10 Americans question holding special education students to the same standards as all other students.
Globalization
~ Nearly 6 in 10 Americans think that students need to spend more time learning about other nations and cultures.
~ Nearly 9 in 10 Americans believe that all children should become proficient in a second language in addition to English; 7 in 10 believe that foreign language instruction should begin in elementary school.
High Marks for Our Public Schools
~ Nearly 5 in 10 Americans grade the schools in their community with an A or B, and nearly 7 in 10 public school parents give the schools their children attend an A or B.
Source: Phi Delta Kappa website, September 2007
September 27, 2007- More Students Taking Advanced Placement Exams
September 26, 2007- Ohio In Top 10 Nationally On NAEP Reading, Math Tests
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported today that Ohio's public school students were near the top of the class in National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reading and math scores released yesterday. The Plain Dealer said Ohio ranked among the top 10 in fourth- and eighth-grade reading and math scores and posted the fourth-highest mark in the nation in eighth-grade reading. The state also registered the sixth-highest scores in fourth-grade reading and math, according to the Plain Dealer.
The New York Times reported that nationally the average math score for fourth graders is at its highest level in 17 years, and the percentage of fourth graders scoring at or above proficiency rose to 39 percent this year, up eight points since the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) law took effect. The latest results also show that eighth-grade students’ math performance has improved, although not as quickly as among younger students.
September 25, 2007- NCLB 2013-14 Goal For Reading, Math Under Debate
The Education Trust, a Washington research and advocacy group that is one of the law’s strongest supporters, has suggested that the deadline could be extended in states that adopted standards ensuring that students were ready to enter college or the workplace. So far, 26 states are working to align their standards with the college and workforce-readiness expectations being developed under the American Diploma Project (ADP), Education Week said. The ADP is an initiative launched by Achieve Inc., in partnership with The Education Trust and the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation.
The NCLB law’s staunchest defenders, including Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings, do not want to relax the 2013-14 proficiency goal because they believe any such change would remove an incentive for schools to improve their students’ performance.
September 24, 2007- Are States Setting Standards Too Low?
September 21, 2007- Bill Introduced To Increase STRS Contributions
House Bill (HB) 315, sponsored by State Representative Scott Oelslager, was introduced in the 127th General Assembly Tuesday. HB 315 is a proposal by the State Teachers Retirement System (STRS). The bill is supported by professional and retiree organizations representing Ohio's public K-12 and higher education teachers. OSBA and OASBO oppose the bill.
HB 315 seeks to increase both the employee and employer shares to STRS by 2.5% of certificated staff payroll for an overall increase totaling 5%. The idea is to create an ongoing, dedicated revenue stream for the STRS Ohio Health Care Preservation Fund. These increases would be phased in over a five-year period, in 0.5% increments. Currently, employers contribute 14% and employees contribute 10% of payroll to pay for retirement benefits.
Read HB 315. Click: As Introduced
September 20, 2007- Debate Over Merit Pay For Teachers
The chairman of the U.S. House education committee criticized the National Education Association (NEA) President for rejecting a merit-pay for teachers proposal, according to report last week by the Associated Press (AP). AP said merit pay for teachers is included in a draft proposal for the No Child Left Behind reauthorization legislation circulating on Capitol Hill in Washington. The proposal would give bonuses, worth up to $10,000 in most cases, to "outstanding" teachers. The proposal doesn't spell out who would be eligible for the extra money but says raising student test scores must be a factor, AP said.
The NEA President said that level of detail should be bargained locally, not spelled out by Congress. "The NEA has long opposed linking individual student scores to teachers' pay, though many local teachers unions across the country are agreeing to such proposals," the AP article said. "Most notable is a popular plan in Denver."
On Monday of this week the Dayton Daily News reported that Governor Strickland said he supported merit pay for teachers.
September 19, 2007- School Districts Cannot Charge For All-Day Kindergarten
Public school districts cannot require parents to pay for all-day kindergarten, according to an opinion issued by the Ohio Attorney General. The Cleveland Plain Dealer said the opinion most likely means districts that charge for the full-day kindergarten will have to stop the practice, and they may have to reimburse families who have already paid for this school year.
The attorney general's opinion was based on the law that requires districts to provide free education to all children. The state mandates only half a day of kindergarten and pays toward that cost, as well as helping fund a full-day program in high-poverty districts. The law does not spell out any exceptions regarding full-day kindergarten programs, the Plain Dealer said.
The Ohio Department of Education requested the opinion after parents questioned tuition fees.
Read the Plain Dealer article. Click: Ohio public school districts can't charge for all-day kindergarten, attorney general says
September 18, 2007- Governor Talks About School Funding And Reform
Governor Strickland told the Dayton Daily News (DDN) editor that he won't be rushed to overhaul of primary and secondary education. This issue is the "most important" one facing him, and it is "more important to do it well than quickly," he said. "I don't want to have a failure." The Governor said he will address school funding and reform at the same time and that he's "not convinced that we need a lot more money." How resources are used is the bigger question, he said.
Asked what he expects to disagree with teachers' unions about, he said he favors a longer school year and a longer school day and that he supports merit pay. He said that he rejects the belief of some that teachers' unions are at the heart of public education's problems. "If that's where the discussion starts and ends, we are at an impasse," he said, referring specifically to some business leaders whose input he said he wants.
He said he also would like schools to have a structure that gives more authority and autonomy to principals.
In addition, the DDN editor said the Governor was offended that some on the state school board recently got exercised because certain wealthy school districts are being rated poorly by the state for not achieving "adequate yearly progress" under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. The Governor recalled that he was in Congress when the No Child Left Behind legislation passed and that he voted for it. He said he had reservations at the time and testified that, as a psychologist, he objected to making standardized tests the be-all-and-end-all. Now that wealthy districts are being rapped for not making sufficient progress with difficult-to-educate students, he said people suddenly see the unfairness. "If they (the tests) are unfair, they've been unfair all along," he said. "Suddenly there's a recognition that these tests don't measure what we think they measure."
Source: Dayton Daily News, September 17, 2007
September 17, 2007- Study: America Failing High Achieving Students From Lower-Income Families
- They start school with weaker academic skills and are less likely to flourish over the years in school than their peers from better-off families.
- They enter school with a disadvantage that shows up in their national test scores. More than 70 percent of 1st graders who score in the top quartile are from higher-income families, and fewer than three in 10 are from lower-income families.
- In the ensuing years, the higher-achieving lower-income children are more likely to lose ground. For instance, 44 percent fall out of the top quartile in reading between the 1st and 5th grades, compared with 31 percent of high achievers whose family income is above the national median, which was $48,200 in 2006, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
- They are also more likely to drop out of high school or not graduate on time than those from economically better-off families. The difference persists through college and graduate school, with lower-income students less likely to attend the most selective colleges or to graduate
“By reversing the downward trajectory of their educational achievement, we will not only improve their lives but strengthen our nation by unleashing the potential of literally millions of young people who could be making great contributions to our communities and country,” the report says.
Read the study. Click: study
September 14, 2007- "Asterisk" For Districts Not Achieving AYP?
September 13, 20-07- Charter School Woes
- Out of the 330 charter schools listed in the Ohio Department of Education's 2006-07 Local Report Cards released in August, 85 were in academic emergency, 54 in academic watch, 80 in continuous improvement, 16 effective, and eight excellent.
- Attorney General Marc Dann filed separate lawsuits Wednesday seeking to close two charter schools, saying both had failed to meet academic standards over the past six years. New Choices Community School, a middle school, has received more than $6.6 million in public funds, and Colin Powell Leadership Academy, which teaches preschool through eighth grade, has received more than $10.5 million, the lawsuits said. New Choices Community School met only 1 of 29 academic performance standards in its six-year existence, according to court document.
- Three Columbus charter schools run by Mosaica Education Inc. got more heavily into debt during the 2006 fiscal year, according to state audits released yesterday. The schools, Columbus Arts and Humanities Academy; Columbus Humanities, Arts and Technology Academy; and Columbus Preparatory Academy, had combined operating losses of almost $2.6 million. The schools served 1,200 students. Mosaica runs 90 charter-school programs in eight states; Washington, D.C.; and the Middle East, according to the company's Web site.
Read the Columbus Dispatch article. Click: Debt mounting for three charter schools
September 12, 2007- Big City Schools Getting Smaller
September 11, 2007- "Education At Its Worse"
September 10, 2007- Opposes Proposal To Ease NCLB Penalties
The Post said Education Secretary Margaret Spellings is against that approach. "To move from reasonable accommodations to big loopholes would be a huge mistake," she said. However, in a speech to the Business Coalition for Student Achievement, Spellings said she is willing to consider proposals to allow states to use more than just annual tests in reading and math to rate schools and to treat differently schools that fall only slightly short of targets. But she said she is not willing to bend if the changes mean struggling students won't get the extra help they need.
September 7, 2007- 10 Years After DeRolph: "...one of the great embarrassments of our age.
By Bob Dyer
Beacon Journal columnist
Published on Thursday, Sep 06, 2007
Highland High School is about six miles from the Akron city limits. Springfield High School is about two. In remedial math, they'd tell you that's a difference of four miles. Actually, it's a lot more. The distance between Highland High and Springfield High is life-altering. Northwest of Akron, in the heart of Medina County's Granger Township, Highland boasts a gorgeous, $37 million school that opened in 2003. It looks more like a small private college. A winding driveway leads through beautifully landscaped grounds to a sprawling building that is open and airy, with skylights and huge windows. Each day, shiny buses deliver the students to classrooms that offer every modern convenience.
Now venture southeast of Akron, just past Wayside Furniture on Canton Road. Part of Springfield's high school was built in 1931. That would be the part with classrooms that feature brown plastic wastebaskets lined up on window sills, ready to catch the water that flows in every time it rains. Sometimes, the wastebaskets aren't enough. Last week, several computer keyboards got soaked. There's a big, ugly, plastic awning above the sidewalk leading to the ''new'' part of the school that directs rainwater away from the foundation. Walk the dank lower hallway and you can smell the mold. A student with asthma was such a wreck after his first day that he now gets home instruction. Although Springfield has multiple students in wheelchairs, one building isn't handicap-accessible and the other is only if the elevator is working, which it isn't. In mid-tour, the principal cautions a visitor to be careful lest he trip down a stairwell in a main hallway where a big chunk of tread is missing. The door to the old gym sticks so badly that the visitor needs to help the principal yank it open. That gym isn't used much anymore because large clumps of material occasionally fall from the ceiling. The buses? Well, there aren't many. About 1,000 Springfield kids have been without rides for a year.
Principal Cynthia Frola tries to walk an impossible tightrope between not damaging school morale and communicating just how bad things can get when a district defeats five levies in two years in a state where the educational funding system has repeatedly been ruled unconstitutional but nobody seems to do anything about it. She says she fears test scores may soon plummet because of mandated cuts in the number of classes and because ''we've lost the cream of the crop'' to private schools. ''We still have very capable students here,'' she says. ''I don't want to say anything negative, because I love these kids to death. But it's tough.''
The situation isn't much better at the elementary schools. To the east, at Roosevelt, the bright red bricks of 1931 have turned dark red and are now accented by hundreds of feet of gray caulk snaking its way across the front, attempting to seal the cracks of 76 years' worth of freezing, thawing and settling. On the third floor of the old section, water drips in above the windows whenever it rains.
Average age of Springfield's school buildings: 67 years. Now, you don't need to study in a Taj Mahal to get a good education. But you ought to be able to keep the rain out and the ceilings intact and the mold at bay. How can we consistently turn our backs on kids whose only sin was being born to parents who live in places like Springfield Township rather than places like Granger Township?
It is one of the great embarrassments of our age.
September 6, 2007- Poverty Biggest Factor In Poor Student Achievement
September 5, 2007- Should School Year Start Later?
Sources: Cleveland Plain Dealer and Market Data Retrieval
September 4, 2007- Report: U.S. Workers Are More Productive
This past Labor Day weekend the Columbus Dispatch reported the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) for 2006, meaning the value of all the goods and services produced in the nation, was $13.2 trillion, tops in the world. Japan, a distant second, had a GDP of $4.4 trillion, and Germany, No. 3, had a GDP of $2.9 trillion.
The United Nations also released a report yesterday. The report said the United States "leads the world in labor productivity." American workers stay longer in the office, at the factory or on the farm than their counterparts in Europe and most other rich nations, and they produce more per person over the year. They also get more done per hour than everyone but the Norwegians, according to the report. The U.S. beats all 27 nations in the European Union (EU), Japan and Switzerland in the amount of wealth created per hour of work - a second key measure of productivity. Norway, which is not an EU member, generates the most output per working hour, $37.99. The U.S. is second at $35.63, about a half dollar ahead of third-place France.
It would appear that the American public school system, under continuously criticism from many corporate leaders, should receive some recognition for educating this highly productive work force.
August 31, 2007- "Strickland Vows Education Overhaul"
The Governor said his commitment to invest and reinvest in education spans from the early childhood level to higher education. And, he said his legacy as governor will be determined by his commitment to tackling the issue of funding public education. ''I'm owning this problem, " Governor Strickland said. ''We need to do two things: Reform our schools and provide adequate, equitable funding.''
August 30, 2007- Ohio Leads Nation In Percentage Increase In Rural Child Poverty
August 29, 2007- Proposal Would Revise How AYP Is Calculated
The leaders of the U.S. House of Representatives Education Committee yesterday released a draft of a plan for reauthorizing the No Child Left Behind Act, outlining proposals that would revise how adequate yearly progress (AYP) is calculated and overhaul the interventions for schools failing to meet achievement goals.
An 11-page summary of the draft bill details many of the ideas that may be included in the reauthorization proposal, such as using so-called growth models to calculate AYP, adding measures other than statewide tests to allow schools to reach their progress goals, and differentiating interventions based on schools’ achievement levels.
In outlining the use of growth models, the document says that states would need to measure schools’ and districts’ progress toward the goal of universal proficiency in reading and mathematics by the end of the 2013-14 school year. The draft adds a clause that could extend the deadline, saying that students in all the demographic, racial, and ethnic subgroups that the current law tracks would need to at least be “on a trajectory” toward proficiency for a school or district to be determined to be making AYP.
Although reading and mathematics scores on statewide tests would remain the key indicator for AYP purposes, under the draft plan states could choose to allow their schools and districts to earn credit for improvement on other measures. States could, for example, choose to consider a school’s or district’s results on science and social studies tests; passing rates on high school end-of-course exams; and graduation and college-enrollment rates, according to the document.
The draft also proposes a 15-state pilot project that would allow districts to create their own assessments that are “rigorously aligned with state standards to augment the AYP determination.” If the pilot project proved successful, the U.S. Department of Education would have the authority to allow other states to adopt locally developed tests for AYP purposes.
Read the proposal summary. Click: An
11-page summary of the draft bill![]()
August 28, 2007- NCLB: Help Or Hindrance
The 38th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll of the "Public’s Attitudes Toward the Public Schools," released yesterday, found that 68 percent of American adults who say they are familiar with the No Child Left Behind Act believe it has had no effect or is actually hurting public schools.
Despite the negative public perception of No Child Left Behind, the poll showed an overall positive view of the nation’s public schools. When asked how educators should attempt to improve education, 71 percent of respondents preferred improvements in the existing public school system, rather than establishing an alternative system.
In addition, the poll asked people whether they favored or opposed allowing parents to choose to have their children attend private schools at public expense. Of those surveyed, 36 percent favored the idea while 60 percent opposed it.
To read the poll report, click: 38th Annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll
SOURCE: Phi Delta Kappa International and Education Week
August 27, 2007- Turnover Creating Teacher Shortage
- In North Carolina, turnover has become so severe in some high-poverty schools that principals were hiring new teachers for nearly every class, every term. They are offering one of the nation’s largest recruitment bonuses, $10,000 to instructors who sign up to teach Algebra I.
- New York, which has the nation’s largest school system, recruited about 5,000 new teachers by mid-August, attracting those certified in math, science and special education with a housing incentive that can include $5,000 for a down payment.
- Los Angeles has offered teachers signing with low-performing schools a $5,000 bonus.
- In Kansas, schools are working to fill “the largest number of vacancies” the state had ever faced.
- California is projecting that it will need 100,000 new teachers over the next decade from the retirement of the baby boomers alone.
- Texas is offering recruitment bonuses and housing allowances.
- An Indiana school attracts teachers with a $2,500 bonus.
- A hard-to-staff school in Philadelphia offers $10,000 bonus for teaching Algebra I.
In June, the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future estimated that teacher turnover was costing the nation’s school districts $7 billion annually for recruiting, hiring and training. The commission has calculated that nearly a third of all new teachers leave the profession after just three years, and that after five years almost half are gone, a higher turnover rate than in the past. According to the most recent U.S. Department of Education statistics available, about 269,000 of the nation’s 3.2 million public school teachers, or 8.4 percent, quit the field in the 2003-4 school year. Thirty percent of them retired, and 56 percent said they left to pursue another career or because they were dissatisfied.
August 24, 2007- FYI: A Capsule View Of Ohio School District Data
August 23, 2007- Lawsuit, Report Challenge NCLB Highly Qualified Teacher Rules
| STATES | DISTRICTS | |
| Great Extent | 6% | 4% |
| Somewhat | 10% | 28% |
| Minimally | 46% | 17% |
| Not at all | 10% | 49% |
| Don't know | 28% | 3% |
August 22, 2007- Average And Beginning Teacher Salaries
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
August 21, 2007- Shortage Of Substitute Teachers
August 16, 2007- Class of 2007 ACT Scores Show Slight Improvement
August 15, 2007- 2006-07 Local District Report Card Data
6 Excellent
83 Effective
37 Continuous Improvement
1 Academic Watch
0 Academic Emergency
The six Ohio Appalachian school districts receiving an Excellent rating are: Bethel-Tate Local (Clermont), Columbiana E.V. (Columbiana), East Holmes Local (Holmes), Garaway Local (Tuscarawas), Milford E.V., (Clermont) and River View Local (Coshocton).
School Year 2006-07
How did the Ohio Appalachian school districts compare, by percentage in each category, to all school districts in Ohio and to the non-Appalachian Ohio school districts in 2006-07?
| All Ohio Districts | Appalachian Districts | Non-Appalachian Districts | |
| (610 Districts) | (127 Districts) | (483 Districts) | |
| Excellent | 22.8% (139) | 4.7% (6) | 27.5% (133) |
| Effective | 56.9% (347) | 65.4% (83) | 54.7% (264) |
| Continuous Improvement | 18.5% (113) | 29.1% (37) | 15.7% (76) |
| Academic Watch | 1.8% (11) | 0.8% (1) | 2.1% (10) |
| Academic Emergency | 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) | 0.0% (0) |
Rating factors in 2006-07 included 30-Performance Indicators, Performance Index, Performance Index Improvement,and Adequate Yearly Progress. In addition, school districts that miss AYP for three consecutive years in more than one student group in the most recent year can be rated no higher than Continuous Improvement.
| Click Below to View Ratings for All Ohio Schools and School Districts You will be able to find the designation for each school and district that will receive a Local Report Card in Ohio using this application. In addition to seeing the designation, selecting the option to see details will allow you to view the percentage of proficient students on the statewide indicators, graduation and attendance rates, the AYP determination, and the performance index scores. Click to search by district. Search By District Click to search by school. Search By Building |
August 15, 2007- More Charter School Woes
August 14, 2007- Report: One In Four Students Fail To Earn Diploma
Read the10-page report (with data for Ohio). Click: Graduation Matters: Improving Accountability for High School Graduation
August 13, 2007- Taking The Shortcut To Certification/Licensure
August 10, 2007- Proposal Would Add Four Counties To Ohio Appalachian Region
August 9, 2007- What High School Seniors Know About Economics
Results of the first nationwide economics test for high school seniors, which was administered last year, were released yesterday. The nation’s high school seniors performed significantly better on the economics test than they did on other recent national exams in history and science, the New York Times said today.
The U.S. Department of Education translates student scores on the test into three achievement levels: advanced, proficient and basic. On the economics test, 3 percent of 12th graders performed at the advanced level, 42 percent performed at or above the proficient level, and 79 percent performed at or above the basic level. An economics course is required for graduation in only 17 states. Ohio is not one of those states.
What students know about Economics |
| Market Economy |
| 72% described a benefit and a risk of leaving a full-time job to further one’s education |
| 52% identified how commercial banks use money deposited into customers’ checking accounts |
| 46% interpreted a supply and demand graph to determine the effect of establishing a price control |
| 36% used marginal analysis to determine how a business could maximize its profits |
| National Economy |
| 60% identified factors that lead to an increase in the national debt |
| 36% identified the federal government’s primary source of revenue |
| 33% explained the effect of an increase in real interest rates on consumers’ borrowing |
| 11% analyzed how a change in the unemployment rate affects income, spending, and production |
| International Economy |
| 63% determined the impact of a decrease in oil production on oil-importing countries |
| 51% determined a result of removing trade barriers between two countries |
| 40% determined why industries can successfully lobby for tariff protection |
| 32% identified how investment in education can impact economic growth |
Click here to read report.
Download
the complete report in a PDF file for viewing and printing. (949K PDF)
August 7, 2007- Charter Schools "Unauditable"
The state auditor has declared 29 Ohio charter schools "unauditable," meaning that their financial records are not adequate to complete an audit. Charter schools that can't show how their tax dollars are spent will stop receiving tax dollars, according to an story in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "A change in state law that just took effect could shut down the publicly funded, privately operated schools when they can't balance their books. Schools declared 'unauditable' by the state auditor will have 90 days to get their financial houses in order, or close their doors," the Plain Dealer said.
August 6, 2007- Study: Lawsuits Get Schools Built and Renovated
A new, first-of-its-kind study by the Tax Foundation, a Washington-based nonprofit, non-partisan, fiscal policy research and public education organization, reveals that lawsuits targeting "inequitable" or "inadequate" school funding have failed to produce long-term increases in school spending. Eighteen states had sufficient data to analyze the long-term fiscal impact of court mandates on recurring spending (operating money) compared to a baseline measured by spending trends before the court mandate. The data show these eighteen states averaged $284 less per pupil on recurring spending in 2004 dollars than would have been expected based on growth trends before the court mandates. However, 14 states, including Ohio, showed an increase in recurring spending. In addition, the study confirms that school-funding lawsuits, such as Ohio's DeRolph case, have helped get schools built and renovated.
Ohio ranked fourth among the states, behind Vermont, North Dakota and Massachusetts, with increased spending per pupil for operations. Capital spending among the five states with sufficient data showed an average increase of $164 per student over pre-ruling projections. Ohio ranked first in the nation in increased capital spending.
According to the report, nine of the 27 state court rulings since 1977 that have found education spending unconstitutionally inequitable or inadequate, lawmakers have raised taxes. The rest, like Ohio, shifted existing resources.
Sources: Tax Foundation
Read the report: Click: Background Paper No. 55
August 2, 2007- College Educated Lags In Appalachian Ohio
August 1, 2007- Countywide Consolidation Proposed
July 31, 2007- "Fix School Funding? The Time Is Now"
July 30, 2007- SF 3 Aid Amounts For Fy08 and FY09
Click here for projected funding spreadsheet (Excel) (Last Modified July 26, 2007)
Source: Ohio Department of Education
July 26, 2007- "What Gets Tested Gets Taught"
The report says that of the districts reporting, elementary schools are spending on average 37 minutes more per day on reading, math or both since the NCLB law was passed. While 44 percent of the districts surveyed reported cutting time from one or more non-tested subjects in elementary school. On average, the cuts amounted to 30 minutes a day.
About 25 percent of middle schools reported increasing time spent on reading or English. One in five said they increased time spent on math. The report found at the high school level, students have been taking more math and science coursework, which may be driven by state graduation requirements.
The President of Washington-based CEP said, "Clearly what this is showing is, what schools are held accountable for is what they put the emphasis on."
To read the report, click: Center on Education Policy Then click No Child Left Behind on left side of screen.
July 25, 2007- Jobless rate Up In Ohio
With the new school year about to begin it may be worth noting that Ohio had the second highest unemployment rate in the nation in June 2007, according to a report issued last week by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Michigan recorded the highest unemployment rate at 7.2 percent, followed by Ohio at 6.1 percent and Mississippi at 6.0 percent. Nine states reported statistically significant over-the-year jobless rate increases. The largest of these occurred in Illinois, Minnesota, and Ohio, each with a 0.7 percent point increase. The overall rate of unemployment in the United States was 4.5 percent.
Five Ohio Appalachian counties lead the state in unemployment, according to the latest Civilian Labor Force Estimates released by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services yesterday. Pike County, at 10 percent, has the highest unemployment rate in Ohio. Meigs County is second in unemployment with 9.8 percent, with Monroe at 9.6 percent, Morgan at 9.4 percent and Muskingum at 8.4 percent rounding out the top five Ohio counties.
July 24, 2007- Governors Seek New Education Authority
A recent Education Week article said many of the nation’s governors are seeking more authority over colleges and universities, as well as K-12 public schools, in what appears to be a an effort to create a seamless system from pre-school through college. Here are some examples cited in the article.
- In Utah, Governor Jon Huntsman Jr., in May made the rare move of giving district superintendents seats, and voting rights, on the governing boards of their local colleges.
- In Ohio, Governor Ted Strickland persuaded legislators to give the governor the authority to appoint the chancellor for the Ohio board of regents, which oversees the higher education system. Before the change, the regents made the pick.
- In Washington State, Governor Christine Gregoire created P-16 or P-20 councils. Such panels are designed to better align public education from prekindergarten through college or graduate school.
- In Massachusetts, Governor Deval Patrick appointed a special advisor on education, set up task forces to study the state’s K-12 and higher education systems, and is backing a plan to add more members to the state board of education, which would give him more control over precollegiate education.
- In New York, Governor Eliot Spitzer issued an executive order in May creating a new higher education commission charged with improving the quality of the state’s colleges and universities.
- In New Mexico, Governor Bill Richardson persuaded the legislature in 2005 to abolish the state’s higher education commission in favor of a Cabinet-level department and secretary of higher education under the governor’s control.
- In Tennessee, Governor Phil Bredesen said that next year’s legislative focus will be on higher education.
- In Indiana and South Carolina, legislatures and governors have pushed to turn their elected state school superintendencies into positions appointed by the governor, but have been unsuccessful so far.
July 23, 2007- "School Funding Could Give Strickland's Popularity A Real Test"
July 20, 2007- Voucher Students In Ohio Double
The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported today that it appears at least twice as many students as last year will start getting tax-funded vouchers for private-school tuition this fall. Almost 8,000 students statewide have applied for the state money. The Plain Dealer said based on last year's rates, at least 6,000 new students can be expected to be approved this year for renewable vouchers. About 2,900 students received vouchers last school year.
The Toledo Blade reported in June that several private elementary schools in the Toledo area "doubled their tuition over last year, putting the 'cost of education' just under the maximum amount that the state will pay in taxpayer money for students coming from failing public schools." The state pays up to $4,250 for elementary school and $5,000 for high school under Ohio's voucher program.
July 19, 2007- "Left Behind By Design"
A new study released this month suggests that the federal No Child Left Behind Act may indeed be leaving behind the least able students and those who are gifted. The study, conducted at the University of Chicago, provides some support to the common perception that schools are focusing on students in the middle in order to boost scores on the state exams used to determine whether schools are meeting their proficiency targets.
The study begins with the following quote from a anonymous middle school staff member. "We were told to cross off the kids who would never pass. We were told to cross off the kids who, if we handed them the test tomorrow, they would pass. And then the kids who were left over, those were the kids we were supposed to focus on."
“The whole point is that the details of how you calculate 'adequate yearly progress' matter for how teachers will allocate their effort across students,” a University of Chicago researcher said. “Anytime you keep score by looking at the number of kids who pass some proficiency standard, that will shape whom teachers teach.”
To read the study, Click:
“Left
Behind by Design: Proficiency Counts and Test-Based Accountability,”
July 18, 2007- Summer Learning Gap
- Attempting to close the gap after it has opened wide is a rear guard action. Most of the gap increase happens early in elementary school, which is where corrective interventions would be most effective, or even before.
- Once in school, disadvantaged children need year-round, supplemental programming to counter the continuing press of family and community conditions that hold them back.
- The school-year pattern of achievement gain parity (or near parity) across social lines flies in the face of widely held assumptions about the learning abilities of poor and minority youth. It also flies in the face of widely held assumptions about the failures of the public schools and school systems burdened by high poverty enrollments.
- A seasonal perspective on learning also has implications for school accountability. The No Child Left Behind (NCLB) standard of “adequate yearly progress” is intended to monitor school effectiveness based on annual achievement testing in grades 3 through 8. Schools that chronically fall short need help; however, the punitive cast of NCLB may be misplaced.
July 17, 2007- Senator Targets March Primary For School-Funding Proposal
July 16, 2007- Governor: "...now has time to focus on...school-funding..."
Read the Saturday, July 14th Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: Strickland says task is to build a consensus
July 13, 2007- September 11, 2007 CORAS Program
MARK TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2007 ON YOUR CALENDAR. Dick Maxwell, school finance expert and BASA Senior Fellow, will be featured on the first CORAS program of the new school year. His presentation will focus on FY 08-09 school-funding. The meeting will be held at the Olde Dutch Restaurant in Logan from 9:00 AM to 1:00 PM. Registration materials will be mailed to CORAS members in August. You don't want to miss this one, so get it on your calendar today.
July 12, 2007- Report On Teacher Quality
Ohio missed 11 of 27 teacher quality goals and fully met only four, according to a report released in late June by the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ). The three-year study sought to evaluate state policies on preparation, certification, licensure, compensation and effectiveness of teachers. To do that, the group examined laws and regulations in every state. Ohio fared best in the teacher licensure category, but has the most work to do in preparing special education teachers, the report concluded.
HOW NCTQ GRADED OHIO
Meeting NCLB Teacher Quality Objective.....................................D
Teacher Licensure.................................................................................C
Teacher Evaluation and Compensation..............................................D
State Approval of Teacher Preparation Programs........................D
Alternative Routes to Certification.................................................D
Preparation of Special Education Teachers....................................F
Read the National Report and/or the Ohio Report. Click: Download National Report | Ohio Report
Sources: National Council on Teacher Quality and Cincinnati Post
July 11, 2007- No Additional States Approved For Growth Model Project
The U.S. Department of Education said last week that it will permit two more states, Arizona and Alaska, to use growth models to measure student progress for this past school year. Six other states, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Iowa, North Carolina, and Tennessee, have already been fully approved to participate in the department’s growth model pilot project. Ohio has received conditional approval for "growth model" or "value-added" project, according to Education Week. No additional states will be considered for approval to participate in the pilot project, according to an U.S. Department of Education official.
Growth models allow states to receive credit under No Child Left Behind Act for improving individual students’ academic performance over time. By contrast, states adhering to the standard accountability requirements under the federal law compare test scores of groups of students against those of students in the same grade during the previous year, to gauge whether they are making progress toward bringing all students to proficiency by the 2013-14 school year.
Source: Education Week
July 9, 2007- Report: How Special Education Students Fared Under NCLB
July 3, 2007- Increase In Lottery Profits
Recent newspaper headlines said, "Ohio Lottery Reports Increase In Sales, Funds To Schools." Hopefully, at some point, Ohioans will began to realize that an increase in lottery profits doesn't provide additional dollars to local school districts. An increase in lottery profits only replaces already allocated funds. In addition, many people are not aware that, according to an Ohio Department of Education official, lottery profits account for less than 6 percent of local, state and federal funds spent on public education in Ohio. All news media should include this information when reporting that an increase in lottery profits benefit schools!
July 2, 2007- Speech-Language Pathology Student Permit
Senate Bill 143, to establish a limited student permit category for speech language pathology interns, and to declare an emergency, was signed by the Governor on June 30, 2007. The law becomes effective immediately.
SENATE BILL 143 SUMMARY
The bill requires the Board of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology to issue a two-year, renewable speech-language pathology student permit. This permit authorizes graduate students in speech-language pathology programs to practice speech-language pathology on a limited basis. To receive the permit, an applicant must meet the following conditions:
(1) Be enrolled in a graduate program at an Ohio institution of higher education that is accredited by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology;
(2) Have completed at least one year of postgraduate training in speech-language pathology, or equivalent coursework as determined by the Board, and any student clinical experience required by Board rules;
(3) Have submitted a plan approved by the applicant's graduate program that satisfies Board rules for the plans; and
(4) Payment of the permit fee.
A permit holder may practice speech-language pathology only under the supervision of a fully licensed speech-language pathologist acting under the approval and direction of the permit holder's graduate program. The Board must adopt rules governing the manner of this supervision. The Board also must adopt rules establishing limits on permit holders, including limits on caseloads and scope of practice. In limiting a permit holder's scope of practice, the Board must consider the coursework and clinical experience completed by the person and the graduate program's recommendation. Finally, the permit holder must display the permit in a conspicuous place wherever the person practices speech-language pathology.
June 29, 2007- WTVN-TV: Governor Likely To Veto Special Education Voucher
June 28, 2007- FY 08-09 State Budget
Property tax cut:
A property-tax cut for 775,000 homeowners age 65 or over and the disabled, exempting the first $25,000 of their homes' value.
Tobacco money plan:
Will raise about $5 billion by selling off bonds against future income from the 1998 nationwide tobacco settlement.
The money will pay for the property tax cut and school building construction.
Higher education:
$100 million in college scholarships for Ohio students worth $1,500 to $4,600 a year in the science, technology, engineering, medical and math fields. Private schools will be allowed into the program only if they collaborate with public institutions.
A two-year tuition freeze at all public four- year colleges.
Will increase state aid to public colleges 5.6 percent the first year, and 9.8 percent above that number the second year.
$10 million in scholarships for community college students.
$50 million a year to attract top scientific research teams to Ohio colleges.
K-12 education:
A 3 percent-a-year jump in state aid along with a 7 percent increase for poorer districts. Assistance to districts with a high concentration of poor students will increase 22 percent. More than 200 school districts are flat-funded and no significant changes were made to the current funding formula.
$20 million for special science-based primary schools.
Funded five new STEM schools for grades 6-12 and provided millions to help existing schools improve their math and science programs.
Health care:
Will expand Medicaid coverage to children whose parents make 200 to 300 percent of the federal poverty level.
Parents at 300 to 500 percent of the federal poverty level with children who can't get coverage because of pre-existing conditions will be able to buy into the state's Medicaid program.
Foster children will have health insurance up to age 21 instead of 18.
Early childhood care:
A $22.5 million expansion for public preschools.
An 11.5 percent increase in child-care provider rates.
A $22.5 million expansion of the "Help Me Grow" program for children from newborns up to age 3.
Vouchers and charter schools:
A school voucher program across the state will continue.
A new voucher pilot program for 8,000 special education students worth up to $20,000 a year.
Charter schools may expand in certain cases.
Sources: Cleveland Plain Dealer and Columbus Dispatch
June 26, 2007- Some Private Schools Doubled Tuition
The Toledo Blade said today that several private elementary schools in the Toledo area "doubled their tuition over last year, putting the "cost of education" just under the maximum amount that the state will pay in taxpayer money for students coming from failing public schools." According to the Blade, one private elementary schools tuition was $1,800 in 2006-07 and the cost will officially increase to $4,019 for 2007-08....and three other private schools will also collect $4,019 from taxpayers through Ohio's voucher program, while parents without vouchers will pay a greatly reduced cost. The state pays up to $4,250 for elementary school and $5,000 for high school under Ohio's voucher program.
There were 2,829 vouchers awarded statewide for 2006-07 out of 14,000 available, according to the Blade. The Ohio Department of Education said it received nearly 8,000 voucher applications by the April 20 deadline for the 2007-08 school year.
Read the Toledo Blade article. Click: Tuition hike at parochial schools makes TPS leaders wary
June 25, 2007- CORAS Summer Meeting
June 22, 2007- The Cost Of Teacher Turnover
Read the NCTAF report, summary and press release.
June 21, 2007- Special Education Voucher Program
June 20, 2007- Public Opinion Surveys On No Child Left Behind
Three major surveys conducted over the past year have examined public attitudes toward the federal No Child Left Behind Act. Here are the results.
Educational Testing Service
“The No Child Left Behind Act provides federal funds for school districts with
poor children in order to close achievement gaps. It also requires states to set
standards for education and to test students each year to determine whether the
standards are being met by all students. In addition, No Child Left Behind
provides funding to help teachers become highly qualified. It also provides
additional funding and prescribes consequences to schools that fail to achieve
academic targets set by their state. Based on this statement and anything else
you may have heard, would you say that you have a favorable or an unfavorable
opinion of the No Child Left Behind Act?”
Phi Delta Kappan/Gallup Organization
“From what you know or have heard or read about the No Child Left Behind
Act, do you have a very favorable, somewhat favorable, somewhat unfavorable, or
very unfavorable opinion of the act—or don’t you know enough about it to
say?”
Scripps Survey Research Center
“Based on everything you’ve heard, do you want Congress to renew the No
Child Left Behind law, do you want Congress to make changes in the law, or do
you want Congress to cancel the law?”
June 19, 2007- Study Tracks Impact of NCLB
- Most administrators thought that inadequate funding was hampering their school-improvement efforts, and many said that they did not have adequate numbers of highly qualified teachers in mathematics or science.
- Administrators and teachers alike saw insufficient instructional time and insufficient planning time as barriers.
- Teachers reported that students’ lack of basic skills, inadequate support from parents, and student absenteeism and tardiness hampered their efforts.
Read the report (275 pages) and/or
summary. Click:
Full Document
Summary
Only
June 18, 2007- New School Buildings and Academic Progress
June 15, 2007- Budget Bill Passes Senate
The Senate unanimously approved the new two-year, $52.3 billion budget Wednesday. According to the Dayton Daily News, Ohio House Speaker Jon Husted said House members have not ruled out concurring with the Senate version of the budget. If the House does not concur, a House-Senate conference committee must agree on a compromise version. Education-related highlights of the Senate-passed budget bill include:
Grades K-12 education
• Increases the base per-student funding 3 percent per year.
• Provides no state funding increase for more than 200 school districts.
• Increases parity aid -- money designed to reduce disparities among poor and wealthy districts -- 8 percent. Limits funding to the poorest 60 percent of schools, instead of the current 80 percent.
• Guarantees no district gets less overall state funding than it did this year.
Higher Education
• Freezes tuition at all public universities for two years.
• Creates a $100 million scholarship program for students pursing degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
• Devotes $50 million to assist universities in attracting top scientists.
• Earmarks $10 million for the creation of the James A. Rhodes Scholarship program, providing money for students attending two-year colleges.
Taxes
• Includes the new commercial-activities tax on business and the phased-in 21 percent income-tax cut.
• Exempts the first $25,000 of a home's market value from property taxes if the homeowner is at least 65 or disabled.
Sources: Legislative Service Commission; Senate documents, Columbus Dispatch and Dayton Daily News
June 13, 2007- Ohio Senate To Vote On Budget Bill
The Columbus Dispatch reported today that the Ohio Senate Finance Committee has passed its version of the two-year state operating budget by a 13-0 vote. The bill now moves to the full Senate for a vote. The Dispatch said the Governor's budget office is expected to announce soon that initial revenue estimates were more than $200 million too high, which will put the Senate's budget instantly out of balance. The Associated Press listed the following as "education related" highlights of the Senate bill.
ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION
Provides almost $16.5 billion for primary and secondary education
Restores $27.4 million for school districts to develop improvement plans required under by federal law
Provides $750,000 beginning in July 2009 to train Advanced Placement teachers; provides $10 million each year to after-school and summer youth programs
HIGHER EDUCATION
Freezes tuition at public colleges and universities; increases state aid to institutions by $253.8 million
Creates a $10 million scholarship fund for students at two-year and technical schools
Establishes a partnership to attract top educators and increase student participation in science, technology, engineering and math
TAXES
Supports governor's plan to provide property relief to disabled Ohioans and those over 65 through the sale of Ohio's tobacco settlement proceeds; eliminates tax exemption on cigarettes and tobacco brought from out of state for personal consumption, raising $36 million
Commits to Ohio schools 70 percent of revenues after 2018 from the Commercial Activity Tax on businesses
June 12, 2007- Transition From High School To College
June 11, 2007- Poll Shows Support For Constitutional Amendment
Read the article is Sunday's Cleveland Plain Dealer. Click School financing plan has support
Sources: Associated Press and Cleveland Plain Dealer
June 8, 2007- Report Says STRS Obsolete, Needs An Overhaul
See a supplementary PowerPoint presentation. Click here.
June 7, 2007- Growth In State GRF Aid To Education
In the last decade, state increases in school funding were larger in the first five years and much smaller during the last five. Following is a chart provided by the Education Tax Policy Institute (ETPI) that shows the State GRF education spending increases from year to year.
Growth in State GRF Aid to Education
FY 1998......... 9.8% (NOTE: In March 1997 the Ohio Supreme Court declared Ohio's school funding system unconstitutional [DeRolph].)
FY 1999.........10.0%
FY 2000......... 7.0%
FY 2001......... 8.8%
FY 2002......... 9.8%
FY 2003......... 3.1% (NOTE: In December 2002 the Ohio Supreme Court relinquished jurisdiction over the DeRolph case.)
FY 2004......... 3.4%
FY 2005......... 2.7%
FY 2006......... 1.3%
FY 2007......... 2.8%
Source: House Bill 119 Testimony, Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee, on May 29, 2007 by the Ohio Association of School Business Officials, the Ohio Education Association, the Ohio School Boards Association and the Buckeye Association of School Administrators
June 6, 2007- Report Says Students Doing Better
June 5, 2007- Disagreement Over College Readiness
The Op-ed article went on to say Ohio ranks 38th out of the 50 states in the number of high-school graduates academically ready for college.
For ACT Reports: www.act.org/path/policy/index.html.
June 4, 2007- "Everybody In The Pool"
Not really a new or novel idea, but it may be for the Columbus Dispatch. A Dispatch editorial on Sunday suggests a school funding option to explore is pooling the state's commercial and industrial taxes. The editorial said, "There is inherent inequity in the fact that Franklin County in 2005 had $7.5 billion in commercial and industrial tax base, generating $506 million in tax revenue, while Meigs County had $41.8 million worth of property, generating $1.9 million in revenue." Does anyone disagree?
While the Dispatch is wrong in its assessment of the proposed constitutional amendment, the ideal of pooling the state's commercial and industrial taxes could help reduce the school funding inequities created by the over reliance on local property taxes. The Dispatch went so far as to offer a way to make pooling "politically palatable." "One possibility, in practice in Minnesota, is to pool only the growth, beyond a set baseline year, in commercial and industrial property taxes. That allows significant sharing without requiring any school district to give up revenue it is accustomed to receiving," the editorial said.
The Columbus Dispatch has been overly critical of most proposals for reducing school funding inequities, and equally reluctant to offer solutions. Therefore, it's somewhat refreshing to see a glimmer of support for an idea that could help property-poor school districts across the state.
June 1, 2007- Post-Secondary Enrollment Option Program
Last year, about 11,000 Ohio students were enrolled in the Post-Secondary Enrollment Option (PSEO) program at a cost of more than $17 million. Students have been known to earn as much as two years' worth of college credit by participating in the PSEO program.
Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
May 31, 2007- Ohio's Per Pupil Expenditure Gap
May 30, 2007- Maryland Model, Ohio's "Getting It Right" Amendment Similar
"Under Maryland's groundbreaking school-funding system, students.......are assured the resources they need to be successful in the classroom. It's an approach remarkably similar to one being pitched to Ohio voters via a constitutional amendment that probably will be on the November ballot. Maryland's plan, approved by the legislature in 2002, called for $1.3 billion a year in additional school spending through 2008. It pumped more money into the poorest schools and established a minimum dollar figure needed to assure every child a quality education." ....Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 28, 2007
Read the article. Click: Ohio school reformers say Maryland is a model
May 29, 2007- The Education Of A Governor
"Listen carefully to Ted Strickland, and you detect the evolution of his thinking about education. He is less the House member who joined colleagues in a friend of the court brief, decrying the unconstitutionality of the way Ohio pays for public schools. He is more the governor who the past five months has delved deeper into the problem and confronted its maddening breadth and complexity." ... Michael Douglas, Akron Beacon Journal editorial page editor, May 27, 2007
May 25, 2007- Ohio Appalachian School Districts Shortchanged?
May 24, 2007- School-Funding Bill Introduced In Ohio House
May 23, 2007- Nearly 7% of Ohio Seniors Fail To Qualify For Graduation
May 22, 2007- NAEP History And Civics Progress Report
Fourth-grade average scores for U.S. History were higher in 2006 than in 2001 and 1994 with 70% of students performing at or above the Basic level.
(more info)
May 21, 2007- Some Editorial Comments
"[Governor] Strickland is well aware a constitutional amendment such as the Campaign for Ohio's Future proposes could reduce the state's financial flexibility. That possibility should spur the governor to step ahead of the game and put forward a comprehensive plan to stabilize funding for Ohio's school districts." ...Akron Beacon Journal editorial, May 18, 2007
Read the editorial. Click: Trapped in Springfield
"Consider this idea that floated up from House Republicans, for example. It would put an extra $6 million in the budget as incentive to school districts that earn an 'Excellent' rating on the state's academic report card..... The problem here is that the wealthy districts don't have any trouble achieving excellence.... On the other side, the not-so-rich districts that need all the incentives they can get to achieve excellence, ....are forced to slash the very staff and programs that will move them to excellence." ...Laura Ofobike, Beacon Journal chief editorial writer, May 15, 2007
Read the editorial, Click: A House formula for mediocre schools
May 18, 2007- Study: Quality Instruction Necessary In Core Curriculum
Only a quarter of high school students who take a full set of college-preparatory courses, four years of English and three each of mathematics, science and social studies, are well prepared for college, according to a study of last year’s high school graduates released Wednesday by ACT, the Iowa testing organization. The study analyzed about 1.2 million students who took the ACT, along with the SAT, and graduated from high school last June. The study predicted whether students had a good chance of scoring a C or better in introductory college courses based on their test scores and the success rates of past test takers. Only 26 percent were ready for college-level work in all four core areas. Another 19 percent were not adequately prepared in any of them. ACT said 54 percent of last year’s graduates who took the ACT exam said they had taken at least the core curriculum. Those who did not fared even less well; only 14 percent were judged ready for college work in all four areas, while 36 percent were not prepared in any.
“Course titles don’t matter nearly as much as what is taught and how it is taught,” said Michael Cohen, president of Achieve. “There is tremendous variation in what is taught in a course called Biology or Algebra 2.” Kati Haycock, director of the Education Trust, said she finds many schools not offering challenging work.
To read the study, click: Rigor at Risk: Reaffirming Quality in the High School Core Curriculum (pdf) Executive Summary of Report (pdf)
Sources: New York Times and ACT
May 17, 2007- Pennsylvania Rejects Reducing Property Taxes For Income Taxes
The Governor promoted the plan, saying homeowners could increase the size of property tax cuts they will receive when an anticipated $1 billion in revenue from 14 new casinos that are being built around the state is used for financing schools. The Pennsylvania School Boards Association had opposed the tax shift, claiming the state needed to place less emphasis on local financing of schools.
Source: New York Times
Read the article. Click: Pennsylvania Voters Reject Tax Plan to Finance Schools
May 16, 2007- The Physical Education Debate
Supporters argue that physical education standards aimed at teaching children lifetime fitness skills have become a moral issue when 17 percent of students are overweight and 31 percent are at risk of becoming so. Setting statewide standards allows children attending public schools to develop lifetime exercise skills, said State Senator Teresa Fedor, who has sponsored bills for the past six years calling for daily physical education classes in schools.
May 15, 2007- New Poll Yields Difference Results Than Last Year
A poll conducted in late April-early May 2007 by the Institute for Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati shows Governor Strickland with a 68 percent approval rating, the highest initial rating of any new Ohio governor in the poll's 26-year history. In addition, 59 percent of the people polled approved of the job the Republican-controlled Legislature is doing. Education was not among the top three issues facing the state, however improving quality and financing K-12 public education in Ohio was mentioned by over 50% of those polled. The people surveyed listed improving the state's economy as the number one issue facing Ohioans, with jobs being second and reducing the cost of health care third.
In May 2006 Governor Taft’s approval rating of 26 percent was the lowest gubernatorial approval rating ever recorded by the Ohio Poll. A September 2006 poll showed education as the top issue facing Ohio, followed by the economy (including minimum wage) and taxes. The 2006 polls were also conducted by the Institute for Policy Research at the University of Cincinnati.
| Click to view April-May 2007 poll results |
May 14, 2007- State Senator Proposes School-Funding Fix
In addition to “Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future,” backed by 12 state education organizations, this latest school-funding constitutional amendment proposal called “Education Funding Reform,” was developed by Republican State Senator Kirk Schuring. According to the Repository, Schuring developed his proposal by putting together a coalition of businesses, unions and education groups. Last Thursday's Repository said Senator Schuring met with Governor Strickland's chief of staff the previous week to go over a constitutional amendment he intends to propose. Drafting the proposal's language is now underway.
The following summary of Schuring's proposal was printed in Sunday's Canton Repository.
OVERALL
• Amends the Ohio Constitution to establish a fundamental right of education.
• Establishes a constitutional standing for higher education.
ORGANIZATION
• Ohio Knowledge and Economic Empowerment Commission, a partnership of business and education communities, with seven to 19 members appointed by the governor and the majority and minority parties of the Legislature. There must be equal representation between business and education and a simple majority of members is required to approve a recommendation.
OPERATION
• Initial funding would be $11 billion, the current budget for education in Ohio.
• Creates the Education Trust Fund and earmarks revenue streams to fund it from state income and sales taxes.
• Requires a specific percentage of revenue for education be put into the Ohio Education Stabilization Fund each year for unforeseen shortfalls and emergencies.
• Requires the stabilization fund to maintain a balance equal to 5 percent of the total education budget each year.
• Requires a three-fifth vote of the commission to use stabilization money for an emergency.
• Assures funding for education will increase every year at an acceptable level.
OTHER MEASURES
• Has quasi-legislative and executive powers. The General Assembly can reject a commission’s recommendation with a two-thirds majority, but cannot amend or substitute a recommendation.
• Makes recommendation for investment of the trust fund and accountability mechanisms to ensure maximum return.
• Recommends ways to streamline operations to increase efficiencies.
• Establishes a long-term education-economic development plan with objectives and timelines.
• Devises a plan to invest money to create a system that stimulates innovation for new economic opportunities.
• Encourages a partnership among primary, secondary and higher education.
• Encourages higher education to develop a system of educational and research opportunities.
• Establishes a standard of excellence for education and a distribution formula to equitably and adequately provide resources to meet those standards.
• Acknowledges the role of independent colleges and universities as well as publicly-funded colleges and universities.
• Uses the Ohio Board of Education, Board of Regents and state departments and agencies for resources and support.
• Holds public hearings.
May 11, 2007- Graduate Rates: "...the statistics paint a dire portrait."
On Wednesday of this week, national education leaders unveiled an online database that promises to provide the first accurate appraisal of how many students graduate from high school on time in each school system. The Washington Post said, "the statistics paint a dire portrait." Only 70% of students nationwide earned diplomas in four years as of 2003, the latest data available nationally. This is a much lower rate than that reported by the vast majority of school systems. According to a new data-base, Ohio's graduation rate falls between 70 and 80 percent.
Education Secretary Margaret Spellings "scolded state and local education officials for masking the problem by publishing inflated graduation rates based on bad math," the Post said. Spellings also announced that graduation rates will be incorporated into the federal No Child Left Behind law by 2012 as a measure of adequate yearly progress for every high school.
The new national database signals a change in how graduates are counted. The site tabulates graduation data for school systems based on simple attrition, tracking the dwindling size of a high school class from the fall of freshman year to graduation day. The Web-based application allows users to easily map out graduation rates by zooming in on any of the nation’s individual school districts. Users may download a special report for the district, with detailed information on graduation rates that includes an analysis of where students are lost from the high school pipeline. The reports also compare district results with state and national figures. To view online data for your school district, click and follow directions: to map graduation rates.
Sources: Washington Post and Education Week
May 10, 2007- 74% Seeking New Operating Funds Fail
May 9, 2007- Today's Headlines From Ohio's Major Newspapers
May 8, 2007- Unlicensed Teachers
Read the Dispatch article. Click: Teacher licenses under review
May 7, 2007- Additional Money For "Excellent" Schools
"Basing funding on academic success will send money to some wealthy districts that would get no funding increase under the House-passed budget, which uses the poverty-focused school-funding plan crafted by Governor Strickland," the Associated Press said.
May 4, 2007- CORAS/Hicks Executive-in-Residence Program
May 3, 2007- Pay-To-Play Growing Rapidly
The Canton Repository reported last week that a 2005 study for the Ohio High School Athletic Association showed that more than one-quarter of the 428 Ohio public schools responding to a survey were charging students fees to participate in extracurricular activities. According to the study, that number could rise to nearly one-half by 2009. "School officials blame failed levies and a failed state school funding system for the growth of pay-to-play," the Repository said.
May 2, 2007- Highlights Of Budget Passed By Ohio House
K-12 Education
Rejects proposed moratorium on new charter schools and prohibition on for-profit companies running charter schools.
Rejects proposal to eliminate school voucher program in all cities but Cleveland.
School funding.
- K-12 education: Increases of 3 percent in each year.
- Early education: $75.6 million for preschools.
- Earmarks $10 million each year to create academies focused on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).
- Creates a new health care pool for public school employees.
Creates $100 million Choose Ohio First college scholarship program in science, technology, engineering and mathematics students who attend Ohio colleges and universities.
Permits students in families with incomes of $95,000 (now $45,000) to receive Ohio School Choice grants for attending private colleges and universities.
Increases instructional aid to higher education 2 percent in 2008 and 10 percent in 2009.
Caps tuition growth at 3 percent in 2008 and freezes tuitions statewide in 2009.
Tax relief
Keeps Governor's plan to take one-time lump sum payment of $5 billion from Ohio's share of national tobacco settlement to provider property tax relief to all Ohioans 65 and older and the permanently disabled. Tax break: A property tax rollback for 775,000 elderly and disabled homeowners that would cover the first $25,000 of a home's value.
What happens now?
- Senate Finance Committee expected to vote by June 13; followed by full Senate vote.
- Formation of House-Senate Conference Committee to craft compromise budget.
- House and Senate vote on conference committee budget and send to Governor.
- Governor must sign budget before July 1, the start of the new fiscal year.
May 1, 2007- School Tax Issues On May 8th Ballot
- 32 Bond Issues (26 are also school issues)
- 293 Tax Issues (126 are school issues)
- 25 Local Option questions
- 69 Miscellaneous questions (please see breakdown below)
- 49 tax changes (30 are school issues. Tax changes & school issues can be the same issue)
- charter amendments
- miscellaneous issue
- 12 zoning changes
April 30, 2007- Governor Says Ballot Initiative May Be Only Fix Available
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said Governor Strickland told education leaders in Aurora Friday that while he remains cool to a proposed constitutional amendment on school funding, he's less and less hopeful about getting a legislative fix.
According to the Plain Dealer, the Governor said, "The current ballot initiative, I'll share with you candidly, I have some concerns about. That doesn't mean you should interpret that I'm opposed to it. It may be the only initiative available to the people of Ohio. I would hope to deal with it legislatively. That approach does not look particularly hopeful."
Read the Cleveland Plain Dealer article. Click: Governor pessimistic on school-funding fix
April 27, 2007- House Budget Plan
- Overturn an outright ban on new charter schools proposed by the Governor.
- Restore the school voucher program outside Cleveland, which the Governor dropped.
- Offer a $100 million college scholarship program that would be need-based and emphasize science, technology, engineering and math.
- Offer $33 million more in state aid for higher education than the Governor did.
- Eliminate the Governor's proposed Medicaid expansion that offers health insurance to working parents up to 100 percent of the federal poverty level instead of the current 90 percent.
- Eliminate the Governor's proposed expansion of health insurance for uninsured children whose parents make more than $61,950 a year for a family of four.
- Fully restore a discount that vendors receive for sending in their sales tax payments in a timely fashion.
April 26, 2007- Public Education The "It" Topic In 2008 Presidential Race
In November 2006, U.S. News &World Report said Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Eli Broad Foundation have teamed to make public education the "it" topic in the 2008 race. More recent media reports say the two Foundations will spend up to $60 million on a campaign to ensure strong billing for education, and to help shape debate on the issue. They will not endorse candidates, but will instead focus on three main areas: (1) a call for stronger, more consistent curriculum standards nationwide; (3) lengthening the school day and year; and (3) improving teacher quality through merit pay and other measures. TV, radio and other media ads are already underway.
April 25, 2007- At The Statehouse
SB 151 TEXTBOOK PRICES (Roberts) - With respect to textbook pricing at state institutions of higher education.
To read more about these bills, click Ohio General Assembly and follow instructions.
April 23, 2007- Facilities Aid Out Of Reach For Some Schools
The commission's policy, the Beacon Journal article said, has been intact for more than a decade despite four rulings from the Ohio Supreme Court that the state, and not local property owners, is responsible for ensuring each child receives a thorough and efficient education in a safe and secure facility.
Read the Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: Ohio's aid for repair of schools out of reach
April 20, 2007- It's Long Past Time for Change....
April 19, 2007- More On The Achieve Inc. Report
• Align academic-content standards with real-world expectations and improve testing, including implementing end-of-course exams in core subjects, and comparing Ohio’s standards against those of countries with which the state competes.
• Empower principals to serve as instructional leaders, with performance incentives tied to student achievement.
• Improve teacher quality with clear teaching expectations, increased training, rewards for meeting benchmarks, and penalties for failure to do so. A performance-based pay system is encouraged.
• Set high expectations for students and provide support and rewards. Launch a marketing campaign to raise the aspirations of students and communities, and provide positive incentives such as college scholarships for low-income students who take challenging courses.
• Fund schools in a fair way. Ohio’s school funding system, already ruled unconstitutional by the state supreme court, needs to rely less on local property taxes and be more transparent so the flow of money can be tracked from the state to districts, to schools, and to classrooms.
• Improve intervention in low-performing schools. Steps could include expanding the student-achievement measures that are used to identify struggling schools.
• Streamline the patchwork of traditional, charter, and private schools that receive voucher students. All schools that receive public money should be subject to the same accountability system.
April 18, 2007- At The Statehouse
Click: Budget numbers can say anything to read an article by State Senator John Carey published in today's Hillsboro Times Gazette
April 17, 2007- Congress To Begin Textbook Investigation Hearings
April 16, 2007- Not Much Return On Math, Reading Software Investment
A major federal study of reading and mathematics software has found no difference in academic achievement between students who used the technology in their classrooms and youngsters who used other methods. Several officials, including Education Secretary Margaret Spellings, have commented recently that the public has not seen much of a return on the federal government’s investments of millions of dollars in grants to states and school districts for educational technology.
Read the report by the Mathematica Policy Research Inc., an independent research organization based in Princeton, New Jersey. Click: report to Congress
April 13, 2007- No Support For Proposed Calamity Days Bill?
| According an article in the Wapakoneta Daily News, several school superintendents in western Ohio say "a proposed Senate bill allowing schools to eliminate the need for make-up days for the calamity days exceeding the state maximum does not take into account the overall value of education." “We need more time with kids in school, not less,” one superintendent said. "I value the time we have with kids period,” another superintendent said. “When you talk about reducing the number of hours by reducing the number of days they are there, you’re talking about losing effectiveness.” "The number of hours students attend school should remain the same. If they are allowed five calamity days by law, then that’s where the limit should stay. Anything over that, they need to reschedule," he said Senate Bill 130, sponsored by State Senator Joy Padgett, would permit school districts to count time that schools are in session beyond the required minimum number of hours each day, in order to make up days of school canceled beyond the five days permitted each year by law. The bill would apply to hours of school attended beyond what was required starting with school days after March 1. Those hours would be added together to account for any days missed that need to be made up. The bill is currently in the Senate Education Committee. Read the Wapakoneta Daily News article. Click: Cutting calamity days |
April 12, 2007- OBM Revises School-Funding Projections For FY08-09
April 12, 2007- Usefulness of Education Research
Read the USA Today article. Click: Usefulness of education research questioned
April 11, 2007- Governors, NASBE Recmmend Changes For NCLB
The National Governors Association, the Council of Chief State School Officers, and the National Association of State Boards of Education are recommending that Congress implement a number of changes in the No Child Left Behind Act, which is due for renewal this year. They include:
State accountability systems:
Permit states to use “growth models” to complement existing measurements.
Rewards and consequences:
(a)
Allow states to differentiate consequences and penalties for schools that do not
make adequate yearly progress under the NCLB law.
(b) Let states offer supplemental educational
services before public school choice.
Special populations:
(a)
Allow states to determine student progress using alternate or modified
assessments, based on a student’s individualized education program, for a
limited number of students with disabilities.
(b) Provide English-language learners with adequate
time to overcome language barriers and use alternate or modified assessments to
ensure that data accurately reflect their performance.
International benchmarking:
Offer grants to states to support
analyses of state content standards against the skills being measured on
international tests.
April 10, 2007- ODE Contracts To Testing Companies Continue To Grow
April 9, 2007- State (OBM) School-Funding Estimates Being Revised
Read the Columbus Dispatch article. Click: State revising school-funding disbursement plan
April 5, 2007- New Regulations For Assessing Students With Disabilities
The tests may also allow some schools to make adequate yearly progress (AYP) under the No Child Left Behind Act when they had not before. Up to 2 percent of students’ proficient and advanced scores on these particular tests, which the department calls “alternate assessments based on modified achievement standards,” may be counted when measuring AYP, according to Education Week. Two percent of all students is equivalent to about 20 percent of students with disabilities, the article said.
Read the new regulations. Click: New Regulations for Assessing Students with Disabilities or go the U.S. Department of Education website.
April 4, 2007- Study: "Highly Qualified" Has Little To Do With Quality
April 3, 2007- The Teacher Gap
Read the Boston Globe article: Click: The teacher gap: prepare now
April 2, 2007- Governor Signs New School Bus Regulations Bill
The Governor has signed the bill containing new regulations for school bus drivers, but used the line-item veto on a provision that would have allowed charter schools to create their own transportation districts. State money for busing would have followed charter school students from their traditional public school districts, just as the educational money does. The new regulations prohibits someone convicted of drunken driving and other major traffic violations from driving a school bus for seven years and requires initial background checks on school bus drivers going back seven years, following by annual background checks.
March 30, 2007- Ohio Ranks 39th In Four-Year College Degrees
According to the Associated Press (AP), Governor Strickland said, "Of every 100 students who enter ninth grade in Ohio, 32 don't graduate from high school, 28 graduate but don't enroll in college, 13 start college but don't return for their sophomore year and 9 leave college between their sophomore year and their final semester." "Only 18 of those original 100 ninth graders put on a cap and gown and receive a bachelor's degree within six years of graduating," the Governor said.AP said eight in 10 Ohio teenagers say they expect to get a four-year college degree, however only 22.9 percent of the state's population has one, ranking the state 39th in the country. College tuition in Ohio has risen 9 percent a year on average since 1996, the AP article added.
March 29, 2007- Education-Related Bills, Plus "Angry Exchange"
SB 130 CALAMITY DAYS (Padgett) - To permit school districts and nonpublic schools to count time that schools are in session beyond the required minimum number of hours in order to make up "calamity days" missed during the 2006-2007 school year in excess of the number of days permitted by law, and to declare an emergency.
SB 131 PHYSICAL EDUCATION (Fedor) - To require the State Board of Education to adopt instructional standards in physical education, nutrition and dental care; to specify physical education requirements for grades kindergarten through eight; to require physical education teachers to be licensed in their subject area and to make other changes relative to physical education.
For more information on these bills, click: Ohio General Assembly and follow instructions.
Read Cleveland Plain Dealer account of "angry exchanges" at Statehouse over school-funding. Click below:
March 28, 2007- Budget Proposal Prohibits Laying Off Teachers For Financial Reasons
Another policy change included in the Governor's budget bill would eliminate a second count of Ohio students each school year, a measure that was also added in the last budget.
March 27, 2007- Disruptive Behavior Linked To Day Care
On the positive side, the researchers also found that time spent in high-quality day care centers was correlated with higher vocabulary scores through elementary school.
Click the following for related information. N.I.C.D. Study of Early Child Care
Source: New York Times
March 26, 2007- Another Charter School Lawsuit Filed
The lawsuit, filed in Franklin County Common Pleas Court on behalf of parents of Dayton Public School students and the Dayton Education Association President, charges that the Ohio Education Department and the state board of education have not properly monitored the performance of charter schools nor required charter schools to comply with terms of their contracts or state law.
The Plaintiffs are asking the court to find that the state has enacted a funding plan for charter schools that "unconstitutionally diverts public money from traditional public school districts, including the Dayton City School district" in a way that denies the "thorough and efficient public education" required by the Ohio Constitution. The lawsuit also alleges that, since 2000, Dayton has lost $189 million in state funding because of local charter schools.
In a 4-3 decision in October, the Ohio Supreme Court upheld the state's charter-school law. The Ohio Federation of Teachers filed that suit, arguing that charter schools violated the state's constitutional requirement of a "thorough and efficient system of common schools" because they were not held to the same standards as traditional public schools.
March 23, 2007- Education-Related Bills
HB 117 SCHOOL TAXES (Raussen) - To authorize school districts to enter into agreements with the Department of Taxation or other entities for the collection and administration of school district income taxes.
SB 118 PHYSICAL EDUCATION (Gardner) - To require daily physical education instruction in grades kindergarten to six, to require completion of one unit of physical education in grades seven to twelve, to require physical education teachers to be licensed in their subject area, and to make other changes relative to physical education.
SCR 3 EDUCATION FUNDING (Miller, D.) - To urge the President and the Congress of the United States to amend the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 to ensure more flexibility and to fully fund the appropriations authorized in the Act.
To read more about each bill, click on the following link and follow instructions. Ohio General Assembly
March 22, 2007- America's Perfect Storm
Our nation is in the midst of a perfect storm, according to Education Testing Service (ETS) researchers, and the forecast is grim unless we invest in policies that will change our perilous course.
A report from ETS's Policy Information Center, America's Perfect Storm: Three Forces Changing Our Nation's Future, looks at the convergence of three powerful socioeconomic forces that are changing our nation's future:
- substantial disparities in skill levels (reading and math)
- seismic economic changes (widening wage gaps)
- sweeping demographic shifts (less education, lower skills)
ETS said, "There is little chance that economic opportunities will improve among key segments of our population if we follow our current path. To date, educational reform has not been sufficient to solve the problem. National test results show no evidence of improvement over the last 20 years. Scores are flat and achievement gaps persist. Hope for a better life, with decent jobs and livable wages, will vanish unless we act now."
We must raise our learning levels, increase our reading and math skills and narrow the existing achievement gaps, or these forces will turn the American Dream into an American Tragedy, putting our nation at risk, ETS said.
For more information click:
Source: ETS.org
March 21, 2007- Proposal To Override Collective Bargaining Contracts
Education Week said there were attempts to undercut collective bargaining when the No Child Left Behind law was first approved by Congress in 200, but failed to gain support. Some education analysts point to what they contend is a change in the atmosphere this year because of a growing chorus against teachers’ seniority rights, from voices both within and outside public education, EW said.
Collective bargaining agreements currently have protection under the NCLB law, which says that districts cannot pursue options to restructure schools that conflict with existing contracts.
Read the EW article. Click: Administration Wants Districts Free to Transfer Teachers
March 20, 2007- Governor's Comments Align With "Getting It Right For Ohio's Future"
During his State of the State address Wednesday, Governor Strickland outlined his vision for addressing school funding, which align with Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future provisions in the following ways:
ACCOUNTABILITY
Governor Strickland:
“…we must create a better system for knowing what we’re getting for our money.”
Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future:
“…the Education Accountability Commission… shall monitor and annually report to the Governor, the General Assembly, the State Board of Education and the public regarding… the components of a high quality education… are being delivered in a cost efficient and effective manner…”
QUALITY EDUCATION
Governor Strickland:
“…too many teachers can still say, without fear of contradiction, that their districts lack the resources necessary to provide their students with the quality education they deserve as citizens of Ohio.”
Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future:
“Each public school pupil has the fundamental right to the opportunity for a high quality public education.”
STUDENT NEED
Governor Strickland:
“…we
(will) focus our aid formulas to put the emphasis on meeting students’
needs.”
Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future:
Establishes a school funding system based on student need, consisting of “all of the necessary resources to provide a high quality public education for all public school pupils at every level and for every type of pupil…”
TARGETED PROPERTY TAX RELIEF
Governor Strickland:
“For those over 65, and the disabled, regardless of income, (expanding the Homestead Property Tax Exemption) will mean no property tax… on the first $25,000 of value in their homes.”
Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future:
Exempts senior homeowners and disabled homeowners from property tax on the first $40,000 of the market values of their homes.
For more information about Getting It Right for Ohio’s Future, visit www.rightforohio.org.
March
19, 2007- Supreme Court Justice: "Strickland's Plan...A good Start..."
| Ohio Supreme Court Justice Paul Pfeifer, a Republican who sided with the majority in ruling Ohio's school-funding system unconstitutional, said Governor Strickland's plan was a good start to help "attack the problem in school funding." "Part of the problem in disparities from school district to school district is the reliance on the property tax," Pfeifer said. Schools in wealthy areas unfairly end up with more money than those in poorer areas when schools must rely on property taxes, the justices said. ...Associated Press
|
March 16, 2007- Governors Budget: FY08-FY09 School Funding Projections
According
to the Columbus Dispatch, Governor Strickland's budget would increase
the state's share of funding for schools from about 45 percent this
year to 48 percent by 2009. On average, per-pupil funding would
increase by 3 percent a year, from the current $5,403 to $5,565 in
2007-08 and $5,732 in 2008-09. Parity aid would increase by about 8
percent. Parity aid is now spread over 80 percent of districts. The
budget would limit it to the poorest 60 percent, as the governor
targets aid to lower-income districts.
Statewide, 311 of the 613 districts would get increases next year and
371 districts would receive more funding in 2009, the Dispatch said.
According to projections by the Office of Budget and Management, 302 of
the 613 school districts in Ohio will receive no increase in state
dollars in the 2007-08 school year and 242 school districts will see no
increase in state funding in 2008-09. The Toledo Blade said more than
one in three, or 229, school districts in Ohio will not receive any
additional funding from the state over the next two years.
To view FY 08 and FY 09 school-funding projections under the Governor's budget, click below.
FY2007-2008 Executive Budget Proposal: School District-by-School District Projections for the Foundation Program
March 15, 2007- Early Childhood Education: Ohio Ranks 33rd of 38
Let’s talk about one of the best investments we can make – early childhood education.
But while every child deserves a fair start on their way to school, too many of our children begin the race not only well behind the starting line, but facing in the wrong direction. We cannot afford to abandon those children who face a poverty of resources and a poverty of experiences. We must recognize the facts: we have a readiness gap that leads to an achievement gap that results in an outcome gap. So let’s fix it by increasing access to early childhood education.
Today we have a hodgepodge of confusing rules which makes it difficult for parents to take advantage of existing programs. For example, a child may be eligible for our Early Learning Initiative, but ineligible for subsidized child care. We need one easily understood standard. In my budget, if a child’s family is under 200 percent of the poverty level, that child will be eligible for any early care and learning program we have.
We also need to expand our public pre-school offerings. My budget provides a $10 million expansion of public pre-school, expanding the number of 3 and 4 year olds taught by 66 percent. This is the first expansion of the program since 1989.
As we expand access, we must increase the quality of a child’s educational experience as well. My budget increases child care provider rates which will help attract and retain experienced and well-trained staff. And we will make funds available for professional development and training, the hiring of specialists in early childhood development, and interventions to promote school readiness.
And we will expand efforts to provide information and support to Moms and Dads. Our Help Me Grow program serves families with children from newborn to 3 years old. As early as just a few weeks into their lives we offer an in-home visit from a nurse to help new parents in the crucial first days of a newborn’s life. The program provides vital information and resources on health, safety, and development. In my budget, we will expand the program to reach thousands of additional children.
Text: Read the full speech by Gov. Strickland
March 14, 2007- What Did The Governor Say Today About K-12 Public Education?
And as we seek improvements in higher education, and early childhood education, we will not abandon our constitutional responsibility for primary and secondary education. To be sure, the legislature, previous administrations, local school boards, educators and our students have achieved significant progress in our schools. SAT scores and ACT scores top the national averages. Proficiency tests reveal that our students exceed the national average in reading, in math, and in science. Our high school graduation rate is up 8 percent over the last 8 years.
President Harris, Speaker Husted, Leader Fedor, and Leader Beatty, you and your colleagues are to be thanked for the role you’ve played in improving Ohio’s schools. But there’s much work left to be done. Too many Moms and Dads, and too many of our teachers can still say, without fear of contradiction, that their districts lack the resources necessary to provide their students with the quality education they deserve as citizens of Ohio. We can do better. And under my budget plan we will.
My proposals do not solve all the problems of our schools, but they represent a major advance toward providing adequate and equitable funding for our primary and secondary schools. To begin, we must create a better system for knowing what we’re getting for our money. My budget addresses that need with a pilot project in which participating school districts will adopt a standard fiscal reporting system. In the second year, the Board of Education will be required to implement this transparent accounting system in every district in the state. This will finally let us see exactly where our money goes and what it accomplishes. And just as we must closely and realistically track local spending, we must accurately acknowledge the full contribution the state makes to local schools. Currently we don’t include the full range of tax relief – which is real cash for local schools – when we calculate the state’s share of education spending. My budget will change that as well.
A true accounting of education spending reveals that less than half of local school funding currently comes from state resources. Under my plan, our investment in schools will bring the state’s support for local school districts to nearly 54 percent in 2009. This likely reflects the largest percentage contribution of state resources to local school districts in the modern history of Ohio. How do we do this?
- First, we increase the amount of foundation funding per student by 3 percent in each of the next two years.
- Second, we focus our aid formulas to put the emphasis on meeting students’ needs. In the process, many districts will receive additional funds, and no school district, not one, loses any state funding from what they have today.
- Third, over two years, we will increase parity aid by more than 7 percent. And to ensure that that aid has the greatest effect, we will target the money to the 60 percent of districts most in need rather than spread it out among the 80 percent of districts as is now the practice.
- Fourth, we will increase poverty based assistance by 22 percent over the biennium – adding both flexibility for schools in how they use the funds and the expectation that they demonstrate results.
- And, finally, my budget will authorize securitizing Ohio’s tobacco settlement funds for approximately 5 billion dollars.
Armed with those resources, we will help firm the financial foundation of our school systems for at least a generation. With 2.2 billion of that money, we will meet all current commitments of the school facilities commission. Within five years, every dollar will be in the hands of local school districts as they create facilities of the future. The remaining resources – just over 2.8 billion dollars – will allow us to forego issuing bonds that are currently scheduled for the next three years. As a result of not incurring this debt, avoiding principal and interest payments, 250 million dollars in general revenue funds will be made available each year for the next 20 years. We will dedicate that yearly savings to the largest targeted property tax cut in the history of Ohio by expanding the Homestead Property Tax Exemption. For those over 65, and the disabled, regardless of income, this will mean no property tax, not one penny, on the first $25,000 of value in their homes. That’s a tax cut, a property tax cut for one in every four Ohio homeowners.
How does this help our schools? Well, the state will replace the tax revenues lost due to the expansion of the Homestead tax cut. In other words, schools will have local property tax dollars replaced with state dollars. Paying for our local schools is a responsibility that has been largely borne by local property tax payers. Many have argued, and the DeRolph decision agreed, an education system primarily dependent on the wealth of the local community is inherently unfair. Because where you grow up in Ohio should not determine where you end up in life. With this plan we ease the burden on some of our most vulnerable property taxpayers and we strengthen the financial base of our schools.
Let me underscore, by 2009 the state will provide almost 54 percent of the funding for our local schools. That would be the highest level of state funding for local schools in the post-DeRolph era. With additional funding, with additional parity aid and poverty based assistance, and with the Homestead property tax cut, we are making the biggest single advance toward an equitable education system in our state’s history.
A generation of Ohio students will benefit. And so too will parents. And taxpayers. But this is possible only by making the tough decisions I spoke of earlier. Even as we stabilize the funding foundation of our schools, we must reinvent the mission and performance of our education system. Today, the goal is not to outshine Pennsylvania, or Indiana, or Kentucky. We must set high standards to prepare our young people to compete with the world, to win in the Global economy. We must build educational systems that are fluid enough for creativity and innovations, and agile enough to adapt to the demands of our changing state and world.
We will weigh seriously the recommendations of experts – including a recent report from Achieve that was commissioned by the state Board of Education and financed by the Gates Foundation. Their recommendations include:
- Placing more responsibility with, and expectations on, our school principals in their role as instructional leaders.
- Giving teachers more opportunity to learn and collaborate with their colleagues on effective teaching methods.
- Using achievement and proficiency tests as a means of helping students move to higher levels of learning, and not just as a means of sorting and labeling students and school districts.
- And they pointed out the unfairness of demanding more and more of our public schools while demanding less of charter schools supported with public tax dollars.
I believe the standards gap between our traditional public schools and other schools receiving public money is so glaring that we must act immediately. My budget imposes a moratorium on new charter schools and prohibits for-profit management companies from running charter schools. My budget eliminates the voucher program except for the means-tested voucher initiative in Cleveland. I am also requiring that we closely monitor all charter schools to determine if they meet educational and fiscal standards of accountability.
As we take on questions of reform, as we take on questions of funding, the goal must be absolutely clear. We will have public schools that serve our children’s needs. All of our children. I ask you to work with me today, tomorrow, and every day. So that together we can build an education system that every Ohioan is proud of. As my Lt. Governor, and my great economic development director, Lee Fisher often says, “our success will depend on our willingness to make strategic investments in the unbreakable link between educational achievement and economic prosperity.”
I am well aware, the process does not end with these proposals, it begins. President Kennedy often told of the general who asked a gardener to plant a sapling for him. The gardener objected that the kind of tree the general chose would grow slowly, and would not reach maturity for 100 years. So the general replied, “Well, in that case, there is no time to lose; plant it this afternoon.”
Text: Read the full speech by Gov. Strickland
March 14, 2007- State Board Approves School Bus Driver Standards
The state school board on Tuesday unanimously approved tougher standards for school bus drivers. The changes were outlined in an email message to CORAS members yesterday.
SB 110 STUDENT HEALTH TEST (Boccieri) - To require public and chartered nonpublic schools to test students for dyslexia and related disorders and to provide intervention services to students identified as having dyslexia or a related disorder.
To read more about the bill, click: Ohio General Assembly and follow instructions.
March 13, 2007- Tougher Standards For School Bus Drivers Proposed
The Ohio Department of Education (ODE) Associate Director of Pupil Transportation laid out a proposal to make sweeping changes to state pupil transportation rules and laws to a State Board of Education committee yesterday.
According to the Columbus Dispatch, the proposal includes:
- Take a tougher stance against drivers with prior driving-under-the-influence convictions. Currently, a driver can't have a DUI conviction in the past two years. The proposal keeps those with a conviction in the past six years from behind the wheel.
- Make sure school districts and private busing companies have access to lifetime driving histories through the ODE, instead of the limited three-year view they now have.
- Require drivers and the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation to report criminal convictions as soon as they happened to employers. That way drivers won't be able to hide convictions between scheduled background checks, which take place every six years.
- Put ODE in charge of monitoring compliance with state rules and law. To date, the department monitored largely financial and safety issues. It was also recommended that the department begin collecting data on all bus drivers, including those who drive for private companies. Currently, the state Highway Patrol collects such data.
- Allow fewer moving violations and fewer serious traffic offenses in the two years before drivers are hired.
- Check driving records more often. The state requires annual checks now but would begin checking twice a year.
ODE also recommended other bus-related rule changes yesterday. They include prohibiting diesel buses from idling for more than five minutes, banning the use of cell phones by drivers except in emergency situations and requiring at least four hours of training for drivers each year.
Read the ODE action plan. Click: Document: Proposed standards
March 12, 2007- For Your Information
March 9, 2007- "windfall for public schools"
March 8, 2007- Teachers Average 15.5 Hours Per Day To Meet NCLB Demands
Hawaii public school teachers are putting in an average of 15.5 hours of work per day, much of it on tasks demanded by federal mandates. The results of the first-of-its-kind study was reported recently by the Honolulu Advertiser. More than half of that time is unpaid, according to the study by a joint committee made up of teacher union and state Department of Education members. Almost two years were spent investigating the effect of increased demands by the Hawaii Department of Education and the federal No Child Left Behind Act on the time teachers spend doing their job, including hours before and after school and into the evening. The report to the State Board of Education said if teachers were paid for all their extra hours, they'd be earning an extra $63,000 a year, based on the average salary paid the state's public school teachers. Starting pay in Hawaii for a teacher right out of college is around $40,000 annually, according to the report.
March 7, 2007- Nathan DeRolph Isn't Satisfied With What's Been Done
According to the Akron Beacon Journal, Nathan DeRolph, the DeRolph lawsuit's lead plaintiff, isn't satisfied with what's been done to address school-funding in Ohio......and he and his wife are considering sending their daughter to private school in the fall.
The Beacon Journal article said, with the 10th anniversary of the Supreme Court's first school funding decision a few weeks away, Nathan DeRolph isn't sure what will happen. There is renewed interest in the issue, with newly elected Governor Ted Strickland pledging to tackle the problem and an effort under way to put a school-funding constitutional amendment on the November ballot. "We've seen politicians come and go,'' DeRolph said. "We've heard promises...." His father, Dale, is heartened by the rejuvenated attention, the Beacon Journal said. "We've got everybody back working in the (right) direction,'' Dale DeRolph said.
Read the Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: Schools still show gap between rich and poor
March 6, 2007- Study: Spend More On Schools
A study by a team of researchers at the University of Washington, funded in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, suggests that Ohio should spend between 16 percent and 31 percent more on public education for such changes as longer school years, lower pupil-teacher ratios and significant improvements in early education, according to the Akron Beacon Journal. A working draft of the study, called Education Policy and Finance Project for Ohio: Investments to Improve Student Performance, was used by the Ohio Department of Education last week to brief Governor Ted Strickland's administration, legislative leaders and a policy committee within the agency, the Beacon Journal said.
March 5, 2007- State "Aggressively" Shifting Funding To Local Property Taxes
A recent Akron Beacon Journal analysis of school-district data shows that since the Ohio Supreme Court relinquished control of the DeRolph school-funding case in December 2002, the State of Ohio has reversed its progress in complying with the court's order regarding the over-reliance on local property taxes to support public schools.
Read the Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: Districts' school funding burden growing
March 2, 2007- Education-Related Bills
The following education-related bills were introduced in the Ohio House and Senate this week.
HB 82 SCHOOL BUSES (Chandler) - To require all school buses purchased, leased, or rented after January 1, 2010, to transport students to and from school to be equipped with a seat belt assembly for all passengers.
SB 89 SCHOOL CALENDAR (Gardner) - To prohibit public schools from opening for instruction prior to Labor Day except in specified circumstances.
HB 85 BOARD OF REGENTS (Webster) - To expand the authority of the Ohio Board of Regents to regulate the programs and tuition of state institutions of higher education, to require the Governor's approval of the Board of Regent's selection for Chancellor, to restructure the terms of members of the Board of Regents, and to establish the Ohio Higher Education Purchasing Commission.
To read more about each bill, click: Ohio General Assembly and follow instructions.
March 1, 2007- U.S. Chamber of Commerce Grades States on Education
Titled “Leaders and Laggards: A State-by-State Report Card on Educational Effectiveness,” the 84-page assessment gives letter grades to each state based on indicators related to student achievement, teacher quality, and school management. A “return on investment” grade rates states on student performance per dollars spent, controlled for poverty. The following is the chamber's assessment of education in Ohio.
February 28, 2007- Who Makes It Through College?
"For young people today good jobs increasingly require at least some postsecondary training with the greatest advantage going to those with a Bachelors degree or better. In the last decade, college-going rates skyrocketed." Below are several indicators of postsecondary trends in Ohio compared to the performance of the top states on each indicator. The data is from the Education Trust report, 2006 Education Watch State Summaries.
Participation and Persistence in Postsecondary Education
H.S. freshmen enrolling in any U.S. college w/in 4 years, 2002..........Ohio....41% *Top States....53%
1st year community college students returning their 2nd year, 2004.....Ohio....51% *Top States....62%
Freshmen at 4 year colleges returning their sophomore year, 2004......Ohio....73% *Top States....82%
First-time full-time freshmen completing a BA within 6 years, 2005.....Ohio....56% *Top States....67%
To access more report findings, click below.
| Education Watch State Summary Reports
| ||||
|
| ||||
February 27, 2007- State Senator To Introduce Constitutional Amendment
---- Create a separate education budget - starting at $11 billion - for primary, secondary and higher education.
---- Finance the budget through an Ohio Education Trust Fund made up of a percentage of Ohio's income, sales and some excise taxes. The fund would be created by a constitutional amendment so its money could not be frozen or changed by the Legislature.
---- Allow the fund to grow as Ohio's revenue collection grows.
---- Allow the state to contribute more to local school districts, decreasing the dependence on local property taxes.
---- Establish a "rainy-day" fund for schools.
---- Create an Ohio Knowledge and Economic Empowerment Commission, which would be a partnership between the business and education communities and make recommendations for the use of the funds.
February 26, 2007- 16 Million Americans Living In Extreme, Severe Poverty
February 23, 2007- NAEP: H.S. Seniors Reading Scores Lowest Since 1992
Students proficient in reading dropped to 35 percent from 40 percent in 1992 and remained essentially flat since students previously took the exam in 2002. In math, only 23 percent of all 12th graders were proficient, but the exam has been revamped, so the results could not be compared with those from earlier years. About 39 percent of 12th graders lacked even basic high school math skills, according to the reports.
The reports said the disparity between rising grade-point averages and tougher coursework on the one hand and stagnant reading scores on the other may be due to “grade inflation, changes in grading standards” or the possibility that student grades were being increasingly affected by things like classroom participation or extra assignments.
The study included 21,000 high school seniors from 900 schools. Researchers also examined the transcripts of 26,000 graduates.
Read the reports. Click: The Nation's Report Card: Reading and Math The Nation's Report Card: Transcript study
February 22, 2007- Science and Mathematics Recommendations
February 21, 2007- In The Ohio House of Representatives
February 20, 2007- In Today's News...
| |
STATE NEEDS TO SCRUTINIZE TAX BREAKS "The state needs to scrutinize the billions of dollars in tax breaks it allows and scrap those that aren’t needed or can no longer be justified, a study concluded last week. Ohio provides tax credits and other deductions to encourage economic development or for other reasons. Those exemptions were estimated to reach $6.27 billion in fiscal year 2006 and $7.12 billion this fiscal year, although the value of many has changed since tax reform took effect in 2005." ...Columbus Dispatch, February 20, 2007
| |
OHIO SPENDS TOO MUCH ON ADMINISTRATION "Strickland was asked at a conference of newspaper editors whether he favored consolidating the state’s 614 school districts. He didn’t say there are too many districts but said he thinks Ohio spends too much on administration compared with other states. 'Quite frankly, looking at that data … Ohio seems to be somewhat top-heavy when it comes to administrative levels,' he said. 'I think it’s important that we allow schools to maintain their personal identities; it’s a part of our Ohio heritage. But I do believe that there are ways we can consolidate administrative functions (and) purchasing power, that will significantly cut costs' " ...Columbus Dispatch, February 20, 2007
| |
OEA TO VOTE ON ONETIME INCREASE "Roughly 1,300 delegates to the Ohio Education Association’s convention April 20 in Columbus will vote on a onetime $25 increase in membership dues to help pay for the campaign to pass a schoolfunding constitutional amendment proposed for the November statewide ballot. 'The other organizations are all working internally in an attempt to secure funding,' [Gary} Allen [OEA President} said, calling $2.5 million 'a fair share' for the OEA." ...Columbus Dispatch, February 20, 2007
February 19, 2007- "Creating a World-Class Education System in Ohio"
A newly released report, "Creating a World-Class Education System in Ohio," calls for sweeping changes in Ohio's K-12 education system. The report, prepared by the education policy group Achieve Inc., and financed by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation at a cost of $500,000, contains seven recommendations. An excerpt from one of the recommendations says, "Financial support for principals, teachers, and students is the bedrock of high support for an education system, but it is well established that Ohio’s school funding system is broken..........Ohio should also simplify and redesign its funding formula to account for the true costs of efficiently educating each student to the level of the new standards. Ohio should then reform its tax system to deliver the funding for the redesigned formula to each school on a predictable and stable basis. The two most important things this tax reform must accomplish are: (1) to increase stability by reducing the number of local levies that districts must ask for each year and (2) to reduce inequalities in district revenue. "
The authors say Ohio can’t pick and choose its reforms—that all seven areas must be improved if Ohio wants to compete globally.
Read the report. Click: "Creating a World-Class Education System in Ohio"
February 13, 2007- BMV Registrar: Older Driver Information Available to School Districts
Read the Associated Press/Cincinnati Post article. Click: Checking bus drivers' pasts difficult
February 12, 2007- Linking Reforming the System With Funding the System
FUNDING INCREASE FOR LOW-INCOME COLLEGE STUDENTS. The President's 2008 budget will include a proposal to increase Pell grants for low-income college students. According to the report, the budget will contain a proposed increase of $550, to a maximum award of $4,600. The U.S. House passed a $260 increase last week. Senate Democrats have introduced a proposal, that calls for an immediate increase to $5,100. Pell grants have not been increased in the past five years. A College Board report said maximum Pell grants, twenty years ago, covered about 60 percent of the average cost of attending a public four-year university. In 2005-2006, the maximum grant covered just one-third of that cost. Education advocates cautioned that Pell grant increases could come at the expense of other financial aid programs. ...Associated Press
CHANGES FOR BOARD OF REGENTS PROPOSED. The Ohio Board of Regents has endorsed letting the governor select its chancellor and requested expanded powers to coordinate higher education statewide, including the authority to set the range for college tuition increases. The proposal would make the chancellor a cabinet-level position, but the regents would decide the chancellor's salary and duties. According to the Governor's spokesperson, the regents' proposal failed to satisfy the governor's standards, because the chancellor would continue to serve at the direction of the board. The Ohio House Speaker and Governor's proposal would have the chancellor report directly to the governor. The board's resources would be under the authority of the chancellor. The board would not be abolished, but could serve as an advisory board. ...Toledo Blade
February 8, 2007- February 2007 School District Levy Results
| Type | # Passed | Passed % | # Failed | Failed % |
| Operating: | ||||
| Property Tax - New | 2 | 16.7% | 10 | 83.3% |
| Property Tax - Renewal | 0 | 0.0% | 3 | 100.0% |
| Income Tax - New | 1 | 50.0% | 1 | 50.0% |
| Income Tax - Renewal | 0 | n/a | 0 | n/a |
| Operating Total | 3 | 17.6% | 14 | 82.4% |
| Capital: | ||||
| New | 5 | 41.7% | 7 | 58.3% |
| Renewal | 1 | 100.0% | 0 | 0.0% |
| Capital Total | 6 | 46.2% | 7 | 53.8% |
| Miscellaneous | 0 | n/a | 0 | n/a |
| Grand Total | 9 | 30.0% | 21 | 70.0% |
February 7, 2007- Politics: Speaker Expects School-Funding Fix In Governor's Budget
February 6, 2007- Study Warns Of Growing Inequality In Income, Skills
According to the report, if trends continue, the average literacy levels of the working-age population in the United States will decrease by about 5 percent by 2030. In a labor market that increasingly rewards education and skills, the report said, that could mean tens of millions of Americans who are unable to qualify for higher-paying jobs.
Read the report. Click:
Full Report
Executive Summary
February 5, 2007- Ballot Board To Discuss Proposed Amendment
On Wednesday, February 7th, the state ballot board will meet to discuss a proposed constitutional amendment that would change how Ohio pays for primary and secondary education. Today's Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that the ballot board, headed by Secretary of State Jennifer Brunner, must decide whether the proposed language should be contained in one amendment. Once the proposal's "singularity" is approved by the ballot board, petitions will be made available and signature gathering to place the issue on the November ballot will begin. Last week the Attorney General's office gave approval that the proposed amendment was properly drafted.
February 2, 2007- March 13th CORAS Meeting
February 1, 2007- Poll: Voters Favor Constitutional Amendment to Change School-Funding
The Associated Press reported today that a poll of Ohio voters, conducted by telephone January 23 to January 28 by the independent Quinnipiac University Polling Institute in Hamden, Connecticut, found that 65 percent of voters said they could support a proposed constitutional amendment to change the way Ohio pays for public schools and were evenly split on raising taxes to pay the bill. When voters were asked if they favored giving more money to public schools in struggling communities, 70 percent said yes. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points.
January 31, 2007- Panel Urges Pooling of School Districts Health Care Plans
January 30, 2007- High Cost of High School Dropouts
January 29, 2007- The Forum for Education and Democracy
January 26, 2007- Diverting Tax Dollars From Public Schools to Schools Not Held to Same
January 25, 2005- Who Likes School?
January 24, 2007- NCLB Changes Needed
January 22, 2007- Merit Pay and Student Test Scores
Douglas N. Harris, a professor of education policy studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said a broader question looms. “Accountability systems and incentives will almost certainly make test scores go up,” he said. “What we don’t know in the long run is whether students are learning more.”
January 19, 2007- Missouri School-Funding Lawsuit
The Show-Me Institute, a conservative think tank, recently intervened on the side of the state defendants in Committee for Educational Equality v. State, Missouri’s school funding lawsuit. In addition to arguing that education funding is a political question and does not belong in the court system, these defendant-intervenors have been instrumental in procuring expert witnesses to provide testimony that there is no relationship between school funding and student achievement.
To read article, click: Read Full Story
January 18, 2007- Reminiscent of DeRolph
- February 5, 4 p.m. Hopewell Sercc, 5350 W. New Market Road, Hillsboro, Oh 45133
- February 6, 4 p.m. Logan-Hocking Middle School, 50 North St., Logan, OH 43138
- February 6, 4 p.m. Athens High School Auditorium, 1 High School Road, The Plains, OH 45780
- February 8, 4 p.m. Minford High School, 491 Bond Road, Minford, OH 45653
- February 7, 6 p.m. Muskingum Valley ESC, 205 N. 7th St., Zanesville, OH 43701-3791
- February 14, 4 p.m. Union Local High School, 201 W. Cross St., Morristown, OH 43759
- February 15, 4 p.m. Tuscarawas, Carroll, Harrison ESC, New Philadelphia ESC, 834 E. High Ave., New Philadelphia
January 17, 2007- Over 100 Attend CORAS Meeting
January 16, 2007- Communicate, Analyze and Think Critically
January 12, 2007- Strickland Transition Team's Report On Education
The Associated Press (AP) reported today that the Strickland transition team's report on K-12 education found that Ohio's public schools have done a good job developing educational standards and creating a system for measuring their progress. However, the report said, "There has been little significant progress on issues related to school funding and Ohio Department of Education has not been seen as being a positive force in the resolution of these issues."
According to AP, the transition team's report on higher education suggested replacing the two boards [State Board of Education and the Ohio Board of Regents] with a Cabinet-level employee who would report directly to the governor. "This new Department of Education should have two major components: (1) preschool through high school, and (2) post-secondary education." The report on higher education said the benefits of having two separate boards supervising education from kindergarten through college seem to "be outweighed by the obvious disadvantages, namely a fragmented and disjointed education effort that is unable to garner the resources and political will necessary to address the very disturbing indicators of performance for the state's economic health."
A posting on the Governor Ted Strickland website says, "John D. Stanford, of Blacklick, Ohio, who most recently served as the special assistant to the Superintendent of Columbus Public Schools, will serve as the Governor's education policy executive assistant."
Sources: Associated Press and Governor Ted Strickland website
January 11, 2007- National Board Certified Teachers
Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer
January 10, 2007- Move Toward National Standards Gaining momentum
January 9, 2007- Faulty Work Plagues Some New Ohio Schools
Read the article. Click: Faulty work plagues some new Ohio schools
Ohio school facilities commission, At a Glance
-- The Ohio School Facilities Commission was created in May 1997 as the result of the passage of Senate Bill 102 (122nd General Assembly).
-- The commission has seven members. Three are voting members: Department of Administrative Services director, Office of Budget and Management director, and Ohio Department of Education superintendent. The four non-voting members are two members (one from each political party) of each chamber of the General Assembly.
-- Current commission members are Office of Budget and Management Director Tim Keen; Department of Administrative Services Director Carol Nolan Drake; state school Superintendent Susan Zelman; Sen. Larry Mumper, R-Marion; Sen. Teresa Fedor, D-Toledo; Rep. Clyde Evans, R-Rio Grande; Rep. Timothy Cassell, D-Madison.
-- The commission has 52 full and part-time employees.
-- The General Assembly has appropriated more than $5 billion to the commission since its inception.
-- An average of $2 million a day in state and local funds is spent on commission projects.
-- The commission manages the largest capital building program in Ohio — at least $12 billion in projects has been approved.
-- Nearly 500 school building projects have been overseen by the commission.
-- At the end of 2005, 411 buildings in 187 districts in 70 counties were opened.
Source: Ohio School Facilities Commission and Canton Repository
January 8, 2007- College-Preparatory Curriculum and College Remediation
January 5, 2007- STRS Seeking Increase
Read the December 10, 2006 Plain Dealer article. Click: Ohio teachers' health-benefits fund drying up
January 4, 2007- Current Curriculum vs. Ohio Core/How Ohio Compares
| CURRENT CURRICULUM VS. CORE (20 units*) | |
|
Education Week's Quality Counts 2007 annual study ranks all 50 states to determine which are doing the best job of providing their young people with the opportunity to succeed in their academic and professional lives. The study was released yesterday. Ohio is ranked 27th in the nation for its students' chances for success (below the national average) and 10th in the nation for K-12 achievement (well above the national average).
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said, "Ohio's children do well in school, but factors outside the classroom could be hurting their chances for productive careers."
January 3, 2007- STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) High Schools Top Priority
January 2, 2007- Report: Title I Money Not Reaching Students Who Need It Most
In short, the report said, Title I tends to reward wealthy states that can raise funds for education with relatively little effort while shortchanging poorer states, including those that make relatively greater effort to fund education. “Poor children are concentrated in relatively poorer states. Instead of providing relatively more help to these kids, Title I provides less,” said Goodwin Liu, Assistant Professor of Law at the University of California at Berkeley, who analyzed the distribution of Title I funds.
Click links below to access report findings.
Funding Gaps 2006 Technical Appendix
December 21, 2006- Guidelines For Closing Poor Performing Charter Schools
The state legislature has established guidelines for closing chronically poor-performing charter schools after the 2008-2009 school year. The guidelines will be applied as follows:
- Schools serving grades K-3 - Must close if in academic emergency for four consecutive years.
- Schools serving grades 4-8 - Must close if in academic emergency for three years without a year's worth of improvement in reading or math.
- Schools serving grades 9-12 - Must close if in academic emergency for three years while failing to meet a variety of other testing benchmarks. Dropout recovery schools, those serving students who have already left traditional high schools, are exempt.
SOURCES: Ohio General Assembly and Cleveland Plain Dealer
December 20, 2006- Ohio Core Passed, Vouchers Expanded
OHIO CORE. The Ohio Senate concurred with the House version of Ohio Core, sending the bill to Governor Taft for signature. House amendments added $16.9 million for Ohio Core-related teacher recruitment and retention in fiscal year 2007, and pushed back the first high school graduating class for which the new requirements apply from 2012 to 2014. The Senate vote was 21 to 12.
VOUCHERS. An expansion of the state-funded school voucher program also passed the House and Senate Tuesday. Currently, students attending public schools that have been in "academic emergency" or "academic watch" for three straight years are eligible to use a publicly funded voucher to attend a private school. The bill changes that to two of the last three years. The change means that students in 236 buildings, compared with 99 this year, will be eligible for private-school vouchers. The vouchers provide tuition up to $4,250 for students up to eighth grade and $5,900 for high school students. There are currently 14,000 voucher slots in Ohio, but only 3,141 are being used this year.
Sources: Gongwer News Service and Columbus Dispatch
December 19, 2006- Health Care Savings Account/Alternative Retirement Plan
| Two bills that could impact STRS and SERS have been introduced in the Ohio House of Representatives. Below are excerpts from the proposed legislation. Click Bill Analysis and As Introduced for more detailed information.
H.B. 272 was introduced May 19, 2005 and passed the House on December 6, 2006. H.B. 272 authorizes each state retirement system to establish a voluntary health care savings account program under which members, employers, and, in some cases, retirants may make deposits that are in addition to regular contributions and may be used for medical expenses. Read a summary of H.B. 272. Click: Bill Analysis - HB 272 - As Passed by House [.html format] [.pdf format]
House Bill 700 would require school boards to establish alternative retirement plans for teachers and school employees. It was introduced in the Ohio House on December 6, 2006. Excerpts from H.B.700 says: "Each person who on the effective date of this amendment is an eligible employee employed by a school board may, not later than one hundred twenty days after the employee's employer adopts an alternative retirement plan, make an election to participate in that plan if on the day immediately preceding the effective date of this amendment the employee had accrued less than five years of service credit in a state retirement system."
|
December 18, 2006- CORAS Update
December 15, 2006- New Report: "Tough Choices or Tough Times"
December 15, 2006- Ohio Core House Vote Postponed Until Next Week
The Ohio House of Representatives did not vote on the Ohio Core plan yesterday. Gongwer News Service said, Ohio Core "was abruptly pulled from a planned floor vote" and "House officials said it was a matter of educating members on various aspects of the legislation and that they expect the bill to be delivered to the governor next week. However, Governor Taft was working the phones in earnest Thursday to bolster support for the package."
December 14, 2006- House To Vote On Ohio Core Today
According to the Gongwer News Service, in order to get the Ohio Core bill out of committee, House Speaker Jon Husted replaced five House Education Committee members who were either a solid "no" on the bill or absent Wednesday with five loyalists. Gongwer said Republican Representatives Diana Fessler, Ron Hood, Mary Taylor, Derrick Seaver and Jeff Wagner were removed from the committee. They were replaced by GOP Representatives Jim Carmichael, Kevin DeWine, Larry Flowers, Tom Raga and Michelle Schneider. The result was a 12-8 committee report on mostly party lines, with Republican Representatives Clyde Evans and Scott Oelslager joining all Democrats in opposition. The Ohio Core bill is set for a floor vote today.
December 13, 2006- Stae Board: School Funding, Achieve Inc., Report
"Our work is to provide a framework on which to analyze actual school funding proposals," said Jennifer Stewart, a member of the board committee. The report, according to the Plain Dealer, calls for school-based budgeting to ensure that money gets to the buildings that need it most; says the state should align financial decisions with "best practices"; calls for the state to more aggressively "weight" funding so the children who are hardest to educate get the most money; and underscored the need to establish what it costs to educate a child, and what that child will probably achieve as a result of the extra money.
Read the Cleveland Plain Dealer article. Click: State Education Board wants say in school-funding reform
ACHIEVE INC., REPORTS TO STATE BOARD. The Columbus Dispatch said today that Ohio public schools stack up fairly well with other states, but not so well with other nations? According to the Dispatch, a report by Achieve Inc., said, "Required coursework is less rigorous, the high-school graduation test is too easy and too few students are ready for college." "The system reflects the standards of the past, yet we’re sending students out into the future. We’ve lost track of cutting edge," an education consultant told the state board yesterday, The final report with recommendations is expected in January.
Read the Columbus Dispatch article. Click: Other nations surpass Ohio in quality of schools
December 12, 2006- Poll: Voters Say No To Higher Property Taxes To Pay For Ohio Core
December 11, 2006- Teachers Buy Classroom Materials
According to a study by Quality Education Data, The Scholastic Company, teachers in grades K-12 spend an average of $475 of their own money each year on classroom materials and supplies. Elementary-school teachers spend the most at $539. Middle-school teachers tend to spend the least, at $393. High school teachers spend an average of $427. The study found that 44% of respondents spend over $500 on their classrooms, with 20% spending over $1,000.
Source:
Quality Education Data, The Scholastic Company
December 8, 2006- Grant-Matching Program For College Scholarships
| |
| * Four years and billions of dollars after the Ohio Supreme Court last declared the state school funding system unconstitutional, outgoing Gov. Bob Taft said Wednesday it is a "very fair question to ask" if justices would rule that way today. ...Gongwer News Service * A bill to start the implementation of a major initiative for science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education garnered both praise and concern Wednesday in the legislature, where Speaker Jon Husted said he hopes to engage Democrats in forging a bipartisan agreement. ...Gongwer News Service * The Ohio Core curriculum passed the Ohio Senate yesterday by a 20 to 11 vote. Ohio Core requires high school graduates to have a broader background in mathematics and science if they want to attend a public four-year college or university. ...Toledo Blade * The tourism industry in Ohio is starting to float the idea of a law that would forbid the start of public school until after Labor Day. Later vacation days would provide more opportunities for family outings at amusement parks. ...Canton Repository |
December 6, 2006- Today's Education News
OHIO CORE. The Senate Education Committee voted along party lines Tuesday night to forward the Ohio Core curriculum proposal for consideration by the full Senate.
CHARTER SCHOOL LEGAL CHALLENGE DROPPED. The Coalition that challenged the constitutionality of Ohio's charter school system said yesterday it would drop remaining parts of a legal challenge in favor of working for legislative and regulatory changes. State Representative Scott Oelslager and State Senator Kirk Schuring said they will introduce substitute versions of their House Bill 213 and Senate Bill 129, respectively. Both bills were originally introduced in April 2005.
December 5, 2006- CORAS Membership
Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools membership for 2006-07 now stands at 130 school districts, institutions of higher learning and other education agencies.
December 4, 2006- Taft To Appoint State Board Members
December 1, 2006- Studies Say Local Districts Curb NCLB Reform
The Boston Globe said the collection of studies, produced in preparation for the expected renewal of the NCLB law next year by Congress, warns lawmakers to lower their expectations for the federal government's ability to improve the nation's system of locally run school districts.
November 30, 2006- ...it creates a "real conundrum"...
November 29, 2006- NCLB Ruling Appealed
The three-judge appeals court panel took the case under advisement and did not say when it will rule. The outcome would apply directly to the districts in the case, but could affect how the law is enforced in schools across the country, the AP article said.
Read the AP article. Click: Schools Appeal Ruling on No Child Suit
November 28, 2006- In The News
School districts in 145 small towns in Maine that have no high schools currently offer tuition for 17,000 students to attend high schools of their choice, public or private, in-state or out-of-state. But religious schools are no longer on the list. In upholding the exclusion of religious schools from the system, the Maine court relied on a 2004 U.S. Supreme Court ruling upholding a Washington state college scholarship program prohibiting the use of scholarship funds for pursuit of a devotional theology degree, according to AP.
Read the Associated Press article. Click: High court takes pass on school choice case
BILL WOULD REIMBURSE DISTRICTS FOR BUSINESS TAX. H.B. 562, introduced in April 2006, had its first committee hearing November 14th in the Ohio General Assembly, indicating a fair chance of passage during a crowded lame-duck session of the legislature that ends December 31, 2006. H.B. 562 would reimburse school districts for business tax losses. The bill would extend the reimbursement for the life of existing levies. "The bill extends the full reimbursement of school district and joint vocational school district revenue losses indefinitely," state documents from the Legislative Service Commission. "Reimbursement will continue beyond (currently scheduled elimination in) fiscal year 2018 until a levy expires and the reimbursement amount will not be phased down after fiscal year 2011."
Read House Bill 562 analysis. Click: Bill Analysis - HB 562 - As Introduced [.html format] [.pdf format]
November 27, 2006- Agricultural Property Tax Under Growing Scrutiny
Larry Gearhardt, the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation's director of local affairs and a member of the Department of Taxation's agricultural advisory committee, said agricultural land still pays more in taxes than it requires in services. "We're subsidizing the services rendered in residential areas." Still, he said, lawmakers "are desperate to fix the school funding. This fits into the picture." The Daily News said Gearhardt predicted CAUV values could as much as double in a couple of years, but said that would still be less than the value assigned to farms a decade or so ago.
Read the Dayton Daily News article. Click: State tries to reverse farmland tax decreases
November 22, 2006- 2007 Hicks Executive-in-Residence Award
November 21, 2006- Ohio Core: Cost, Two-Tiered System Emerging Issues
Read the Akron Beacon Journal article. Click: Critics fear plan will cost schools
November 20, 2006- High School Grades Creep Up
· November 17, 2006- CORAS Membership Surpasses 125 for 7th Consecutive Year
The Coalition of Rural and Appalachian Schools (CORAS) membership renewals are running ahead of past years with 127 active members as of early November 2006. Fourteen of the 29 Ohio Appalachian counties have already achieved 100% membership in the Coalition. They are Athens, Pike, Gallia, Hocking, Vinton, Perry, Meigs, Morgan, Noble, Monroe, Muskingum, Holmes, Jefferson and Harrison. Five counties, Coshocton, Guernsey, Ross, Belmont and Jackson, are just one school district short of having 100% membership. Scioto and Washington counties lack only two districts of having 100% membership.
CORAS membership includes 91 local, city and exempted village school districts, 12 educational service centers, 12 joint vocational school districts, 8 institutions of higher learning and four other education agencies. This marks the 7th consecutive year that CORAS has attained 125 members or more.
To view a list of CORAS members, Click: Counties and Members
· November 16, 2006- More About Renewed Effort To Pass Ohio Core
· November 15, 2006- Ohio Core On Fast Track?
The second draft of Ohio Core was released by the House Education Committee yesterday. Ohio
Core was first announced by Governor Taft in January 2006. Under the newest version of the
plan, high school students planning to attend Ohio public, four-year universities would have to pass
four years of math, including Algebra 2, and three years of a lab-based science along with the four
years of English already required. The graduating class of 2012 would be the first to be subject to
the new requirements.
The following are highlights of the current draft of Ohio Core printed in today's Columbus
· November 14, 2006- On Average, Colleges Accept 70% Of Applicants
· November 13, 2006- Improving Achievement: Longer School Day/Year?
A report by the Center for American Progress says communities and educators that want to improve student achievement should look closely at increasing the length of the school day and/or year. The Washington-based think tank examined high schools that use additional learning time as one way to raise student achievement. The report explores particular issues related to expanding time at the high school level, presents examples of how schools accomplish this, and analyzes the implications that would arise for school design, capacity, and financing if such approaches were applied on a more systemic scale. It does, however, caution educators to recognize that high school students also need time to pursue work or other interests outside school.
Read the Center for American Progress news release. Click: Expanding Learning Time
Read the report. Click: Center for American Progress report (PDF)
· November 10, 2006- Election Reshapes State School Board
· November 9, 2006- Passed-Failed Rated For School District Levies
There were 206 issues on the November 7, 2006 ballot. 176 school districts had 1 issue on the ballot;10 school districts had 2 issues on the ballot; 1 school district had 10 issues on the ballot. The November election resulted in 110 issues passing and 96 issues failing (a 53.40% passage rate), according to the Ohio Department of Education. (Note: Eleven of the issues that passed included 10 issues in one district and one issue in another district that reduced millage by .01 mills each. In both districts, the reductions were placed on the ballot to protect district revenues. It was feared that tax opponents were planning to ask voters to repeal a much larger millage. Once a levy reduction is put before voters, no matter the amount, another request cannot be made for five years.)
View the November 7, 2006 results by county. Click: Results by county
Passed-Failed Rate for Ohio School District Tax Levies 2003-06
Year Levies Requested Passed Failed Percent Passed
2003 439 229 210 52.16%
2004 618 279 339 45.15%
2005 534 275 259 51.50%
2006 442 239 203 54.07%
2003-06 2033 1022 1011 50.27%
Sources: Ohio Department of Education, Ohio School Board's Association and the Columbus Dispatch
· November 8, 2006- New Data On School Bus Injuries
N New national data show school bus-related accidents send 17,000 U.S. school children to emergency rooms each year, more than twice the number in previous estimates that only included crashes. Nearly one-fourth of the accidents occur when children are boarding or leaving school buses, while crashes account for 42 percent, the new research shows. Slips and falls on buses, getting jostled when buses stop or turn suddenly, and injuries from roughhousing are among other ways kids get hurt on school buses, the data found. Injuries range from cuts and sprains to broken bones, but most are not life-threatening and don't require hospitalization. However, they represent only a small fraction of the 23.5 million children who travel on school buses nationwide each year, the researchers said. The researchers said the results provide a strong argument for requiring safety belts on school buses, something industry groups say is unnecessary and is more than many school districts can afford.
A study on school bus injuries by Children's Hospital's Center for Injury Research and Policy in Columbus appears in November's Pediatrics.
· November 6, 2006- CORAS Program Features Value-Added
Nearly 60 superintendents and other educators attended the CORAS program, Value-Added: The Next Generation Tool for School Improvement. What have we learned? Where is it going? in Logan on October 31, 2006. Dr. James W. Mahoney, Executive Director, Battelle for Kids and featured speaker, provided an excellent presentation on the merits of value-added. In addition, those attending heard reports from Dr. Barbara Hansen (Muskingum College) regarding the Martin Essex School for the Gifted, Ann Day (Foundation for Appalachian Ohio) discussed "I'm a Child of Appalachia Scholarship Challenge" and Dennis Leone (State Teachers Retirement System Board of Directors) presented an update on STRS issues. Charles Bizzari, CORAS President, presided over the program/meeting. The next CORAS meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, January 30, 2007, with the program and location to be announced in December.
· November 3, 2006- Virtual Schools And Online Learning
As of this
September 2006, 38 states had either statewide virtual schools or significant
policies on online education, according to Education Week. Of those
38 states, at least five had either created virtual schools or passed laws on
online learning in the 2005-06 school year. State-led virtual schools has grown
quickly, according to the report, "Keeping
Pace," slated for release this week at the Virtual School
Symposium in

For more information, Click: http://www.learningpt.org/pdfs/tech/Keeping_Pace2.pdf
Sources: Evergreen Consulting Associates,
· November 2, 2006- Twenty-Two of 23 OHSAA Referendum Issues Pass
Twenty-two of the 23 proposed Ohio High School Athletic Association Constitution and Bylaw revisions passed as voted upon by OHSAA member schools. A two-week period to vote on the proposals ended Monday.
Want to read the issues and voting results? Click to view the referendum voting results for October 2006.
November 1, 2006- Superintendents Leaving Their Job
On average, roughly 2,000 to 2,200 of the country’s 13,500 school superintendents (about 15 percent) leave their jobs annually, according to data from the American Association of School Administrators.
October 31, 2006- School Districts Turning To Earned Income Tax Levies
More
There are 36 income tax-related levies on the November 7, 2006 ballot. In May 2006, 35 income taxes levies were on the ballot and 17 were approved by voters, according to the Associated Press.
Sources: The Associated Press and Ohio Department of Education
October 30, 2006- "Tools For Teachers"
The Ohio Department of Education announced recently that it has created the electronic mailing list, "Tools for Teachers," to provide information to teachers about professional development, lesson-planning help, state tests and academic-content standards. To join, e-mail toolsforteachers@ode.state.oh.us.
October 27, 2006- ODE Says 206 School Issues On November 7th Ballot
The Ohio Department of Education (ODE) website has a list of school districts with issues on the November 7, 2006 ballot. According to the ODE, the list contains 206 issues in 176 school districts. The 206 issues compares with 222 tax issues in November 2005 and 286 in November 2004. From 2001 to 2005 an average of 55 percent of levies on the November ballot passed.
View the ODE information to find where, what kind of levy and for how much? Click: Preview by county
Source: Ohio Department of Education
October 26, 2006- Private School Enrollment
Private school
enrollment grew more slowly in the
Source:
October 25, 2006- Ohio Supreme Court Upholds Charter School Program
The Ohio Supreme Court today upheld the constitutionality of the state's charter school program. The Court ruled that opponents had not shown constitutional defects in the law that provides state financing for privately owned and operated charter schools. Justice Judith Lanzinger, who wrote the majority opinion, said that such policy decisions are within the purview of legislative responsibilities. "After full consideration, we cannot say that the concept of community schools itself violates the Ohio Constitution," she said.
The vote was 4-3. Joining Lanzinger in the majority were Chief Justice Thomas Moyer, Justices Evelyn Stratton and Maureen O'Connor. Justices Alice Resnick, Paul Pfeifer and Terrence O'Donnell dissented.
Read the majority opinion. Click: lead opinion
Source: Gongwer News Service
October 24, 2006- State Education Leaders Recommend Changes For NCLB
The Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) wants the federal No Child Left Behind Act altered so that state officials would have more authority to oversee the law's testing and accountability measures. In a policy statement issue last week, the CCSSO said its members should be able to determine whether schools and districts are meeting their achievement goals by measuring individual students’ academic growth, and that they should be able to use results from a variety of tests to make those determinations. The states also will need extra federal money to help improve failing schools, the CCSSO said in a list of guidelines for improving the law. The changes would include:
• Letting states design assessments that are "more instructionally based … to inform best practices in teaching and learning."
• Allowing states to develop accountability systems that measure students’ academic growth, using data from more than just test scores to determine whether schools are meeting achievement goals.
• Establishing lesser consequences than in the law currently for schools that fail to reach achievement goals by small margins.
• Giving state education agencies a larger share of federal funds so they have the resources they need to turn around consistently failing schools.
SOURCES: Council of
Read the CCSSO policy statement. Click: "ESEA Reauthorization Policy Statement"
October 23, 2006- Ohio To Receive $5.5 Million To Reward Teachers
The U.S.
Education Department plans to announce today the first of 16 grants worth $42
million to be used to reward teachers who raise student test scores. The
grants are also aimed at luring teachers into math, science and other core
fields. One of the first grants is $5.5 million to the Ohio Department of
Education, to be shared among schools in
For more information, read the Associated Press article: Teacher bonuses for test scores presented starting today
October 20, 2006- High School Sports Injury Rates
A study conducted by the Center for Injury Research and Policy, based at Children’s Hospital in Columbus, found that high school football players had an overall injury rate of 4.36 athletes injured per 1000 participants, compared with 2.5 athletes injured per 100 for wrestling, slightly less than 2.5 for boys’ and girls’ soccer; 2.01 for girls’ basketball; and just under 2 for boys’ basketball. Volleyball, baseball and softball were all near 1.5 or less. Data was collected from 100 high schools across the country during the 2005-06 school year. The study included the injury rates at practices, in competition and overall for all sports. See table below.

According to the
report, high school sports participation has grown from an estimated 4 million
participants during the 1971--72 school year to an estimated 7.2 million in
2005-06.
Read the report. Click: "Sports-Related Injuries Among High School Athletes—United States, 2005–06 School Year"
October 19, 2006- Value-Added: The Next Generation Tool For School Improvement
REGISTER NOW FOR VALUE-ADDED PROGRAM! (Program, Directions and Registration information below.)
VALUE-ADDED COMES TO
Value-added chronology
1980s:
1992:
2002:
Battelle for Kids begins a value-added pilot program in
2003:
2006:
2007: All
2008: Value-added data will appear on school and district report cards.
Reprinted from the Cleveland Plain Dealer
Battelle for Kids: Bringing clarity to school improvement............. www.BattelleforKids.org
PROGRAM INFORMATION: On Tuesday, October 31, 2006 CORAS will present the program,Value Added: The Next Generation Tool for School Improvement......What have we learned? Where is it going?

