bullying

Education News for 12-18-2012

State Education News

  • Local schools look at a different disaster plan (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The staff members at Sandy Hook Elementary did what they were supposed to do: The principal and school psychologist tried to stop the gunman when he blasted his way into the building…Read more...

  • Overseer of state’s colleges to retire (Columbus Dispatch)
  • After nearly 30 years of public service, Ohio Board of Regents Chancellor Jim Petro will retire on Feb. 1 to spend time lecturing about one of his passions: the problem of wrongful imprisonment…Read more...

  • Attendance probe holds up teacher bonuses (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Potentially hundreds of Columbus City Schools teachers are waiting on bonuses until after a state audit of the district’s data reporting is complete…Read more...

  • Train, arm teachers for defense (Marion Star)
  • Having responsible adults with guns in schools should be part of a comprehensive effort to protect children from tragedies, according to the chairman of the Ohio’s gun lobby…Read more...

  • Cleveland State University criminologist says schools are still the safest place (WEWS)
  • The mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown…Read more...

  • Fiscal panel OKs contract (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • The current contract between the city school district and its teachers union was approved by the state fiscal commission before going to the school board for approval…Read more...

  • State Commission isn't ready to approve a new district treasurer (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Liberty school board is ready to bring on a new district treasurer, but the state-appointed commission needs more time before giving its OK…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Cleveland school students can succeed in college, officials say (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • More Cleveland students will head to college ready to succeed and will leave campus with their degrees if members of a strong, evolving partnership have their way…Read more...

  • Bullying prevention an on-going task for schools (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • The battle against bullying is a daily, on-going activity, according to local educators…Read more...

Editorial

  • Youngstown school system’s problems continue (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • In what universe is it acceptable in this day and age for one of the most troubled school districts in the state of Ohio to have one of the most expensive health insurance plans? …Read more…

Education News for 10-10-2012

State Education News

  • School report card date set (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Ohio will be handing out state report card ratings for districts and schools Oct. 17, state officials said Tuesday, now that State Auditor Dave Yost’s investigations into enrollment…Read more...

  • State to release new report cards (Columbus Dispatch)
  • A second round of preliminary school report-card data that includes school ratings and attendance rates will be released next week. The State Board of Education voted 12-3 yesterday to make the additional data public…Read more...

  • Parent attacks dress code policy (Dayton Daily News)
  • A Tippecanoe High School student’s mother isn’t happy with the new principal’s interpretation of the dress code…Read more...

  • State board to release some report-card data (Toledo Blade)
  • The state board of education voted Tuesday to release some of the school report card information it has withheld pending a state auditor’s investigation of attendance-data manipulation in some districts…Read more...

  • Ohio officials discuss Ledgemont Schools' fiscal emergency (Willoughby News Herald)
  • Community and staff members filled Ledgemont Elementary School’s cafeteria Monday to hear an Ohio Department of Education official outline the ramifications of the school district’s fiscal emergency status…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Riverdale, teachers union reach contract settlement (Findlay Courier)
  • Contract agreements have been reached between Riverdale school's administration and the teachers union, officials…Read more...

  • Schools, families adjust to healthier school lunches (Hamilton Journal-News)
  • Many students and parents have reacted strongly to National School Lunch Program updates introduced this year that mandate calorie limits and more fruits…Read more...

  • Parents cite bullying issue as reason to reject Lima schools levy (Lima News)
  • Bullying is at the center of an effort to defeat next month’s Lima schools levy. Three families upset about what they say is a bullying problem in the district called a news conference…Read more...

  • Switzerland of Ohio schools paring $1M from budget (Marietta Times)
  • The Switzerland of Ohio Local school district is working to cut $1 million from its budget. The district has already laid off three employees and instituted a teacher hiring freeze…Read more...

  • Career center banks on surplus (Marietta Times)
  • The Washington County Career Center is projected to be in the black for the next five years, even as expenses overtake revenue, according to a forecast approved…Read more...

  • Catholic teachers will vote on union (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • About 100 Catholic elementary school teachers will decide later this month whether to be part of a union…Read more...

Editorial

  • Why secrecy? (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The Dispatch has filed a lawsuit against the Columbus Board of Education for a simple reason: Public meetings should be open to the public. The board has ignored repeated requests by the newspaper to honor that legal requirement…Read more...

Education News for 05-15-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Big hurdles hold up new way for state to grade schools (Dispatch)
  • Few argue that Ohio needs a more-demanding way of rating schools and districts on annual state report cards. But fierce debate has broken out among educators and political leaders over how new A-through-F grades are calculated and when new report cards will be issued. Read More…

  • Ohio School District Has Teens Watch 'Bully' Film (AP, NBC-4)
  • About 9,000 Cincinnati Public School students are seeing an anti-bullying documentary that stirred debate over its initial rating restricting children under 17 from seeing it without an adult. The district intends to use the film, which has since been lowered to a PG-13 rating, as a teaching tool to help prevent bullying. The film, "Bully," follows five kids over a school year in an attempt to demonstrate the toll bullying takes on children and families. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Allison hired as Canton Schools assistant superindendent (Repository)
  • The City Schools Board of Education approved a number of administrative changes Monday night, including the naming of Adrian Allison as its new assistant superintendent. Allison, a 1990 McKinley High School graduate, returns to Canton after serving as an associate superintendent with the Ohio Department of Education. Before that, he was Canton City Schools’ director of school improvement. Read More…

  • Kasich reading proposal could have greater impact on combined Athens elementaries (Athens Messenger)
  • At a time when the state is talking about making it tougher for third-graders with poor reading skills to advance to fourth grade, the Athens City School District is combining the two elementary schools with the lowest third-grade reading scores in the county. Read More…

  • How the casino tax money will be divided among schools, cities, counties and other governments (Plain Dealer)
  • Ohio's casino operators promise tax dollars -- millions of tax dollars -- for schools, cities, counties and other services. So what governments will get how much money? That's difficult to say because it depends on how well the casinos do, and if they end up facing competition down the line from horse tracks offering slot machines. Read More…

  • Cuts park buses (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Citing financial constraints, the school district is cutting busing for out-of-district private and charter schools. They will instead providing public transit passes to residential students who attend those schools. Superintendent Vincent Colaluca said the move meets state requirements to provide transportation for students living within the school district. The change will not impact students attending schools within Austintown's borders such as Immaculate Heart of Mary School, he said. Read More…

  • Crowd implores board to 'let Cory walk' at graduation (Newark Advocate)
  • The Licking Valley senior class wants Cory Ryan to walk across the stage during commencement. Students have collected 722 signatures supporting the "Let Cory Walk" movement -- with 100 members of the senior class signing on, said Marissa Klein, a junior who helped create the petition and shirts. Read More…

  • Farm-to-School catches momentum (New Philadelphia Times Reporter)
  • The first local Ohio Farm-to-School program inspired Buckeye Career Center to plant a garden outside the school. The next Farm-to-School event, “Making the Connections in Your Cafeteria,” looks to stimulate other ideas for indoors. Read More…

Editorial & Opinion

  • City schools must act boldly (Vindicator, Op-Ed from Judge Nathaniel Jones)
  • A decade ago, KnowledgeWorks came to Youngstown with an audacious idea: Youngstown high school students could not only graduate on time and be prepared for college, but they could also master college material and earn college credits — all while in high school. From that idea in 2004 was born the Youngstown Early College High School, now rated excellent — the best school in the Youngstown City School District, and one of the best in the region. Read More…

Education News for 04-20-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Raising the bar at Ohio pre-K’s (Dispatch)
  • Thousands of poor youngsters start kindergarten unprepared to learn and behind their peers, delays that can cause them to struggle throughout their school years. A proposal being considered by Ohio lawmakers aims to reduce those learning gaps by requiring all tax-funded preschool and childcare programs to participate in a rating system to help guide parents and ensure high standards. Read More…

  • Turn in a bully anonymously (Marietta Times)
  • Anonymous phone lines to report bullying and other behavior could be coming to local school districts. Providing some means to anonymously report bullying, harassment and intimidation is part of House Bill 116, signed into law by Ohio Gov. John Kasich earlier this year. It requires schools to expand their anti-bullying policies and include possible suspension for cyberbullying. Read More…

  • Rallying cry of city students: Do your best on state test (Vindicator)
  • Students at Williamson Elementary School got rousing support as they prepare to take the Ohio Achievement Assessment next week. "We want them to bring on the OAA because we are ready," Principal Wanda Clark shouted at a Thursday morning rally at the school. "Are we ready?" Students shouted back that they are. First- and second-graders marched in the school gymnasium, holding posters and cheering, "Do your best, pass the test." Read More…

  • Cyberbullying Law Now In Place; Students Note Positive Changes (NBC-4)
  • Bullying doesn't stop when your kids leave school, and as many as half of American teenagers said they've been bullied online. But now, there is something schools can do about it. Ohio's new law, The Jessica Logan Act, prohibits cyberbullying whether or not it's on school property, and schools are required to alert students and parents about discipline options if cyberbullying occurs. Anonymous reporting is also part of the act, but are schools changing their policies? Read More…

Local Issues

  • Newark High School to get iPads, laptops
  • Newark City Schools administrators plan to add 400 laptops and 100 iPads to the high school this fall, with the goal of getting them into students' hands as much as possible. Superintendent Doug Ute envisions a time when teachers are more fully integrating technology into their lesson plans and students will carry their devices rather than heavy books in backpacks to and from school. Read More…

  • Oregon Schools working on alternative energy project (WTOL )
  • Oregon City Schools put the massive blades for its 900 kilowatt wind turbine in place on Thursday, and they will help provide more than 80% of the energy for Clay High School. The turbines serves as a working monument to the district's commitment to the environment and taxpayers. Read More…

  • Beavercreek district plans 30 layoffs, extensive cuts (Dayton Daily News)
  • The Beavercreek City School District plans to eliminate more than 50 full- and part-time jobs and cut academic courses across the district following a third-straight levy defeat. About 30 of the job cuts will come through layoffs and the rest through attrition, said Beavercreek Superintendent Nick Verhoff. Read More…

  • Reality Check gives students glimpse of adulthood (Hamilton Journal News)
  • Students at Fairfield Freshman School had kids, bought a car, a house, insurance and other necessities — all within the space of 45 minutes or less. Granted, the children were represented by ping-pong balls. That’s because the students were participating in Reality Check, an annual event coordinated by the Fairfield Chamber of Commerce. Read More…

  • CPS busing costs go up, up, ouch! (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Transportation cost overruns are blowing up Cincinnati Public Schools budget. The state’s third-largest school district expects to spend a whopping $29.5 million this year just to transport 21,000 kids to and from school each day. That’s 9 percent, or $2.3 million, more than budgeted and $1.3 million more than last year. Read More…

  • KSU delegation visits Senior High to see Algebra Project work (Mansfield News Journal)
  • A delegation from Kent State University watched this week as Mansfield Senior High School math teacher Amanda Clawson led her Algebra Project junior class in analyzing two equations. "How are they different? How are they the same?" Clawson asked. Read More…

  • Lorain City School layoffs; District cuts 182 positions, notices sent next 2 days (Lorain Morning Journal)
  • Lorain City Schools will be sending layoff notices today and tomorrow as the district cuts 182 positions, according to Interim Superintendent Ed Branham. “Letters are going out to be passed out to (today),” Branham said. The first group receiving the letters today will be secretaries, media clerks and health professional, with teachers and teachers and the remaining people being laid off get notices Friday, he said. Read More…

  • State admonishes teacher fired for viewing porn on school laptop (New Philadelphia Times Reporter)
  • Howard “Mike” Winland, a former Strasburg elementary teacher, has been admonished by the State Board of Education for viewing pornographic images on a district laptop computer. Unless he engages in additional conduct unbecoming to the teaching profession, however, Winland will retain his teaching license. Read More…

  • Unioto, ACLU near deal to avert bullying lawsuit (Chillicothe Gazette)
  • Five months after the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio threatened legal action against Union-Scioto Local Schools for allegedly not doing enough to address anti-gay bullying, the two sides are said to be close to an agreement that would stave off a lawsuit. What began as an incident Oct. 17 between two Unioto High School students flared into national news this past fall after a video of the attack went viral online. The mother of the victim, a 15-year-old freshman, said her son was attacked because he's gay and that the school had not done enough to protect him. Read More…

  • Updated academic plan approved for Youngstown schools (Vindicator)
  • State Superintendent Stan Heffner has approved an updated plan to get the city school district out of academic distress. Though the plan in place since July 2010 focused on elementary schools, the updated document aims more at the district’s high schools. The plan was approved last month by the city schools’ academic-distress commission and submitted to Heffner, state superintendent of public instruction. Read More…

Education News for 03-30-2012

Statewide Education News

  • State audit faults Columbus schools’ tutor spending (Dispatch)
  • The Columbus school district paid tutoring groups for serving children who weren’t enrolled in Columbus schools and for services that were never provided, a state audit says. The district does “actively monitor” the federally required tutoring program, auditors said. Yet auditors “identified several inaccuracies and falsified vendor documents,” particularly on the invoices that tutoring groups submitted to the district. Read More…

  • Ohio legislators aim to introduce Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's schools plan next week (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND — Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's sweeping plan to transform Cleveland schools won't reach the Statehouse launching pad this week as the mayor had hoped. Instead, legislators are giving him and the Cleveland Teachers Union one more chance to reach agreement first. Four legislators who have been working with the two sides announced Thursday they will hold off until after the union and the mayor's office meet again Tuesday. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Cleveland schools, teachers union plan rally Saturday to showcase district's successes (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND — The Cleveland School District and the Cleveland Teachers Union will hold a "Rally for Excellence" on Saturday, showcasing success in the city schools. The event, scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at East Technical High School, 2439 East 55th St., will feature author and Oprah Winfrey Network TV host Wes Moore as the keynote speaker at 11:45 a.m. A youth advocate, he is the author of the bestseller "The Other Wes Moore." Read More…

  • ACTION demands answers from leaders (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - State and local leaders were placed on the hot seat at Thursday’s ACTION meeting, where community members requested from them specific levels of commitment toward fixing the education system in Youngstown. At the meeting themed “Save Our Children,” state Sen. Joe Schiavoni of Canfield, D-33rd, Youngstown Superintendent Connie Hathorn and Larry Ellis from the Youngstown Education Association sat at a table in front of a packed Elizabeth Missionary Baptist Church on the city’s east side. Read More…

  • Southeastern teens' anti-bullying video goes national (News-Sun)
  • SOUTH CHARLESTON — What started as a school project on bullying is gaining national attention. Tyler Gregory and Scott Hannah, both members of the Family Community Career Leaders of America, made an anti-bullying video as part of a project for the organization. The idea came following the national attention surrounding the suicide of 14-year-old Jamie Rodemeyer. “I never thought that we could stop bullying,” Gregory said. “But we wanted to do something that would alleviate it, help it out a little bit so people think before they do it.” Read More…

  • Warren Schools may expand (Tribune Chronicle)
  • WARREN - Not even two years after the city school district opened two of its new buildings, officials are considering options to expand those buildings, at a cost of about $1 million. William A. Schurman, executive vice president at Hammond Construction, presented plans to the Warren City Schools Board of Education during a recent work session. Plans call for the addition of several classrooms at each of the Jefferson and McGuffey K-8 schools on the city's west side. Read More…

Education News for 03-14-2012

Statewide Education News

  • State education board mum on Cleveland plan (Dispatch)
  • The Ohio Board of Education had no immediate response to Gov. John Kasich’s request that the panel support a controversial plan to turn around Cleveland schools. At its monthly meeting in Columbus yesterday, the board decided to discuss the issue at its April meeting. Traditionally, the board has not waded into political and legislative debates, but on Monday the governor pleaded with members to pass a resolution or provide some sort of backing to Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson’s plan. Read More…

  • Ohio 3rd-graders who can't read at grade level could be held back under Gov. John Kasich's plan (Plain Dealer)
  • COLUMBUS — Third-graders who are not reading at grade level would be held back a year under a midterm budget plan Gov. John Kasich will announce today. The policy will be part of a handful of education initiatives the Republican governor will unveil, the administration confirmed to The Plain Dealer. Other items in the plan, which would require legislative approval, include revamping teacher evaluation metrics and overhauling the state's school report card because the administration believes it encourages mediocrity. Read More…

  • Gridlock in Congress threatens Ohio programs (Dispatch)
  • Automatic spending cuts triggered by gridlock on a bipartisan congressional “supercommittee” could cost Ohio nearly $313million next year, with a large chunk being pulled from funds for poor students and those with special needs. The overall reduction in federal funding for the state — 1 percent — might be small, but it would hit certain programs hard. Head Start faces a nearly 9 percent cut. So do special-education grants for K-12 schools, work-study payments for needy college students and extra nutritional aid for low-income pregnant women and children, according to an analysis done last month by the Ohio Legislative Service Commission. Read More…

Local Issues

  • City, county, schools join in drive to prevent bullying (Blade)
  • Local city, county, and school officials announced a joint public awareness campaign Tuesday to combat bullying. Calling the impact of bullying on communities "devastating," Lucas County Commissioner Tina Skeldon Wozniak said that children can't be effective learners if they feel threatened in school. "We want to prevent the bullying," Ms. Skeldon-Wozniak said. "We want the schools to feel safe." Students, faculty, and staff of area schools will be asked to sign anti-bullying pledges, where they will vow to monitor for bullying and support victims, among other promises. Read More…

  • Community split on whether Richmond Heights students should wear uniforms (News-Herald)
  • The Richmond Heights community is split on the topic of whether the school district should have students wear uniforms. Interim Superintendent Robert J. Moore, at Monday’s school board meeting, shared the results of a survey sent out to families which showed that almost 50 percent are for student uniforms and 50 percent against. Moore said he plans to revisit the issue and propose a sport coat or jacket with the Richmond Heights logo on it in order to create a sense of unity within the community and district. Read More…

  • Lakota eyeing unemployment claims, severance after cutting 141 jobs (Journal-News)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — The Lakota Board of Education, which approved $10.5 million in cuts and a reduction of 141 positions Monday, is now turning its attention to unemployment compensation and severance pay. Treasurer Jenni Logan said the district wants to make sure to give those employees enough lead time to find gainful employment elsewhere. “Our hope is to have that process firmed up and to formally take action on all of that at our final board meeting in April,” she said. Job cuts for the 2012-13 school year will be based on seniority and licensing, Logan said. Read More…

Editorial

  • Raising the bar (Courier)
  • Whether or not our children decide to compete for a job in another state or country, or stay home, they must have the best education possible. And it must start well before they get to a university, community college or trade school. Signs show good things happening in most schools in Ohio. More than half of the 609 schools that received a state report card for the 2010-2011 school year got "excellent" or "excellent with distinction" marks. And more than a handful of those schools are in our area. Read More…

  • Cleveland school-reform bill needs teachers' input (Plain Dealer)
  • When the usually reserved Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson says he would trade his office for "quality education for our children," all of the other adults involved in the high-stakes discussion on school reform ought to determine what they would give up as well. So far, judging from the Cleveland Teachers Union's tepid response to the mayor's Cleveland-only school reform package, the answer appears to be little or nothing. Read More…