childhood

More Sen. Peggy Lehner Please

State Sen. Peggy Lehner (R-Kettering) is proving herself to be an unusual Republic legislator. One who has a keen understanding of education issues, and a willingness to listen and work with educators, not just tow the ideological line.

The first piece of evidence being her attempt to fix the problems with the 3rd grade reading guarantee law, via SB21 which she sponsored and shepherded through the Senate on a 30-1 vote, and then passage through the House (albeit with some questionable changes having been made).

Now comes news of her attempt to bring Ohio's preschool efforts back from the dead

A Senate Republican leader on education policy wants to create a $100 million voucher program over the next two years to allow thousands of low-income Ohio children to attend preschool.

For every dollar Ohio spends on early childhood education, the return is $10 or more, said Sen. Peggy Lehner, R-Kettering. The need to have students enter kindergarten prepared to learn is more vital than ever, she and others argued, especially as the state implements a new requirement that students pass a reading exam in third grade or risk being held back.

“So many of our children come to kindergarten two or three years behind their peers, and we’re trying to catch them up before third grade,” Lehner said. “If we don’t catch them up, they don’t have a prayer of passing that third-grade reading guarantee.”

This would be a welcome policy change of direction after the Governor's shameful evisceration of early childhood education in his previous budget, and unwillingness to restore those cuts in the current proposal

A decade ago, more than twice as many Ohio children were enrolled in the state’s preschool program than now.

According to a recent report by the National Institute for Early Education Research, in 2011-2012 total state enrollment for preschool was 9,379. The state only paid for 5,700 of those students; the rest were paid for by parents, local dollars or federal funds.

Compare that to the 2001-2002 school year when 23,599 Ohio children were enrolled in the state’s preschool program.

Although the situation isn’t unique to Ohio, the state did see the most drastic drop in early childhood education enrollment in the nation over the last decade.

According to NIEER, Ohio’s decline in the number of preschoolers in state funded programs is the result of state budget cuts over the last few years.

Kudos to Sen. Peggy Lehner, and here's hoping more of her colleagues follow her lead of listening to educators concerns.

We note that Steve Dyer at 10th Period has some concerns about this pre-school proposal.

Republicans oppose critical thinking

The 2012 Texas Republican Party Platform opposes the teaching of critical thinking skills. We had to read that twice too.

Knowledge-Based Education – We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student’s fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority.

They appear to oppose critical thinking being taught so that it doesn't undermine propaganda being instilled in them, to wit...

Early Childhood Development – We believe that parents are best suited to train their children in their early development and oppose mandatory pre-school and Kindergarten. We urge Congress to repeal government sponsored programs that deal with early childhood development.

Early childhood education is crucial to the future success of students, to ppose pre-school and kindergarten is extreme to say the least.

Is Texas an anomoly, or leading the way in rightward education thinking?

you decide, their platform document is below, with the education pieces starting on page 11

2012Platform Final

Education News for 12-27-2011

Christmas Holidays edition of education news

Statewide Education News

  • Preschool grant is a boon to Ohio: editorial – Plain Dealer
  • The federal government's decision to give Ohio nearly $70 million to improve preschool for disadvantaged Ohio youngsters easily earns an A. It was the largest of nineRace to the Top Early Learning Challenge prizes recently given to states after a competitive process. Now Ohio must plan for the long haul to get the most value out of the money. Read More…

  • New effort to make kids college-ready – Columbus Dispatch
  • Teachers in elementary, middle and high school often team up to help students prepare for the next level. In a new twist, some high-school teachers in Columbus City Schools will be paired with college professors to ensure that more students are college-ready. Read More…

  • Athens Meigs Resource Center Looks At Shared Services Possibility – WOUB - Athens
  • Every day, school districts in the 18 counties in the region send out busses to take kids to school, traveling more than 330,000 miles. The cost is enormous and it's something Rick Edwards knows all too well. Edwards is Superintendent of the Athens Meigs Educational Resource Center. "What we're looking at is, is there a way for us to leverage the mileage, the cost, the square miles, and all those aspects, to leverage a more efficient operation and reduce costs while serving school districts and students better in the region," says Edwards. Read More…

  • Ohio gets Race to the Top grant – Marietta Times
  • Funding focus on better access to and quality of early learning The latest federal Race to the Top funding received by Ohio will focus on improving access to and the quality of early childhood education, something local educators agree is vital. Research has been "overwhelmingly conclusive" in showing that students who learn basic concepts prior to kindergarten require less intervention as they get older, said Warren Local Schools Superintendent Tom Gibbs. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Cincinnati among districts moving away from isolating grades 7-8
  • Educators have long known that the middle school years are critical for a student’s academic development. What’s not known is the best way to group those students to get the most out of them academically. Studies on which system works best are inconclusive, at best. When Cincinnati Public Schools announced this month that it would expand Western Hills High School to grades 7 through 12, it was the district’s latest attempt to boost middle school achievement through grade reconfiguration. Read More…

  • Gifted students in Reynoldsburg ‘adopt’ one another to demonstrate their support and remain connected – Columbus Dispatch
  • Katie Samuelson sees her sisters in class and her moms at recess. All through school, she runs into other relatives — brothers, aunts, uncles and grandparents. By getting “adopted” by sixth-graders this year, Katie and other fifth-graders at Reynoldsburg’s Gateway Academy have a place in a family tree that teachers say stretches at least seven years. Read More…

  • Schools count a win – Columbus Dispatch
  • Hundreds of people gathered in Linden 10 years ago this month to take a leap of faith — breaking ground on the first new school building in the Columbus City Schools in more than a quarter century.

  • A band played and schoolchildren sang as construction of the $10.5 million Linden Elementary School was launched, replacing two buildings constructed in 1905 and 1920. The new building at 2626 Cleveland Ave. was designed to show wary voters that the district could manage a huge school-reconstruction plan being pushed by the state, which was offering a 30 percent funding match. Read More…
  • Free lunch participation skyrockets in past decade – Oxford Press
  • The number of Butler County children receiving free or reduced-price lunches in the United States Department of Agriculture National School Lunch Program has doubled over the past decade. In a March, 2001 report by the Ohio Department of Education, 10,326 county school children were participating in the program, 20 percent of the 51,003 children enrolled in public schools. In September, 2011, the ODE reports that 22,371 children, 38 percent of 58,119 students, are now receiving free or reduced-price lunches. Read More…

  • Voucher expansion opposed – Marion Star
  • Elgin and Ridgedale local school boards passed resolutions this week opposing House Bill 136. The bill would expand the state's school voucher program so students in any school district could receive public funds to pay for private or parochial school tuition. Read More…

  • North Royalton's Early Childhood Center readying for all-day K – Sun News/PD
  • Parents of incoming kindergartners have a choice to make for the next school year. Members of the school board approved the establishment of an all-day, tuition-based kindergarten option for the 2012-13 academic year. The Early Childhood Center, housing district preschool and kindergarten education, will designate two classrooms for the all-day program. Read More…

Editorial & Opinion

  • Ethnic and cultural changes in schools offer challenge, opportunity
  • The growing diversity of central Ohio’s population means that schools continue to change. It’s up to families and school officials to take advantage of the opportunities this presents, even as they deal with the challenges. Read More…

  • State leads the way in early childhood learning – Chillicothe Gazette – Op-ed
  • Democrats and Republicans don't agree on much these days. But there is one thing on which they do see eye to eye: the value of early childhood education. Once an afterthought of America's education system, early learning now is front and center as educators, governors and legislators grapple with ways to better prepare children for a lifetime of success. Read More…

  • Schools are mired down by mandates – Tribune Chronicle - Warren
  • In some state legislatures and Congress, it has been suggested one means of holding down spending would be to require that when new programs are mandated, budgets for existing ones be pared down. Taxpayers can afford only so much, after all. Perhaps state legislators should consider a similar strategy for public schools. Read More…

  • Team effort can lift poor black kids – Columbus Dispatch – Op-ed
  • Forbes writer Gene Marks got the Bill Cosby treatment in the blogosphere last week for his column titled “If I were a Poor Black Kid.” Marks describes himself as a “middle-aged white guy who comes from a middle-class white background.” He admitted that he knows nothing about being poor and black in America, and the solutions he proposes to help kids in West Philadelphia rise above their dire circumstances are not new. Read More…

  • Quality of a school is in the eyes of the beholder – Columbus Dispatch LTE
  • I thank Chester E. Finn Jr., president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, for his kind words about my part in contributing to Ohio’s school-choice movement (“Schools of choice need to be schools of quality,” Forum column, Dec. 14). Of course, the real heroes are the parents, students and staff, who have continued to believe in spite of enormous ridicule and unwavering criticism. Read More…