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Education News for 05-22-2013

State Education News

  • Little Miami regains its independence (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • Today is Independence Day for the financially embattled Little Miami Schools. Once Ohio’s poster child for school district monetary woes, the Warren County school system will be autonomous…Read more...

  • Coleman, Gee pitch Columbus school proposal to legislators (Columbus Dispatch)
  • State legislators drew attention to academic failures of the Columbus school district and to its ongoing data scandal last night in the first talks over a bill that…Read more...

  • Special-needs aides still fighting dismissal (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Two Columbus special-needs aides who were fired last summer are still fighting to get their jobs back. The final day of hearings before the Columbus Civil Service Commission…Read more...

  • Northridge out of fiscal caution, but levy needed (Newark Advocate)
  • The Northridge School District is out of fiscal caution. However, the district will have to renew its 8.86 mill levy by the end of 2014 to remain in the black long term…Read more...

  • As prepared as we can be for Tornadoes (Portsmouth Daily Times)
  • An enormous tornado ripped through Moore, Okla., Monday, killing more…Read more...

Local Education News

  • Families of the victims of Chardon School shooting are suing the United Way over access to Chardon (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • The families of the three Chardon High School students who were killed in 2012 are suing the United Way of Greater Cleveland and its Geauga County chapter…Read more...

  • Reynoldsburg takes over charter e-school (Columbus Dispatch)
  • The Reynoldsburg school board is taking over the charter e-school that it placed on probation last year…Read more...

  • Groveport Madison levy still losing by 12 votes (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Groveport Madison’s school levy gained four votes but is still behind after elections officials counted provisional ballots and added in an uncounted…Read more...

  • Columbus school board votes to back report of Coleman’s education panel (Columbus Dispatch)
  • A resolution supporting the recommendations of the Columbus Education Commission passed a divided Columbus school board last night, after a lengthy debate that centered largely around whether…Read more...

  • Brunswick school officials close all buildings in response to norovirus (Sun Newspapers)
  • Although symptoms of the condition itself last, in general, little more than 24 hours, a norovirus outbreak at the Brunswick City Schools this past week led to the closer of every building…Read more...

  • Maysville students benefit from early college courses (Zanesville Times-Recorder)
  • Skylar Novaria might achieve his goal of becoming a business manager or CEO sooner than expected because of being a proactive teenager…Read more...

Education News for 12-07-2012

Local Education News

  • Buchtel students experience day on job with AT&T (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • Buchtel High School juniors Elijah Graise, Tylor Williams and DeMontrell Hill got a first-hand look Thursday at trouble-shooting a problem on the job…Read more...

  • T.J. Lane's admission about Chardon High shooting should not be used at trial, his lawyers argue (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
  • T.J. Lane's admissions that he killed students at Chardon High School should not be used at his trial next month because the youth failed to fully understand his rights when officers questioned him…Read more...

  • Olentangy may not need new school (Columbus Dispatch)
  • New enrollment forecasts in the Olentangy school district cast doubt on the need for a new school approved by voters last year…Read more...

  • Berea schools' new hours next year concern some parents (Sun Newspapers)
  • Parents showed up at Monday’s school board meeting to express concerns about the district’s new time shifts, which begin next year…Read more...

  • Toledo Public Schools weighs 3 candidates to audit its performance (Toledo Blade)
  • As Toledo Public Schools ramps up efforts to have an audit of its operations performed, the process of hiring an organization to conduct the audit has widened…Read more...

  • Champion plans cuts if next levy fails (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • While the Board of Education will wait until January to officially act on placing a school levy on the ballot in 2013, a plan to slash finances by $602,000 was mapped out this week…Read more...

  • Math Night brings kids, parents together in Springfield (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Springfield students and parents went on a camping adventure Thursday night. Although the tent was indoors, there were real problems. Math problems, that is…Read more...

Education News for 05-09-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Kasich upset education plan altered (Dispatch)
  • Again at odds with fellow Republicans, Gov. John Kasich blasted Senate leaders yesterday for altering his third-grade reading guarantee, arguing the changes “weaken efforts to improve education for Ohio’s children.” Kasich said he was “troubled by moves under way in the Senate,” specifically efforts to delay for a year a requirement that third-graders pass the state reading test before moving up to the fourth grade, and dropping the cut score so that fewer students are affected. Read More…

  • Biometric Scanner Use At Schools Prompt Parent Concerns (WBNS, Columbus)
  • Central Ohio schools’ use of new technology has prompted safety concerns for some parents, 10TV’s Tanisha Mallett reported Tuesday. Biometric scanners store information that can be accessed when a finger touches a scanner. Tina, a mother of a middle school student, said that she was concerned about privacy rights. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Cleveland School Board Considers Selling Administrative HQ (Fox 8, Cleveland)
  • The Cleveland School Board considered a resolution Tuesday night to put the district’s administrative headquarters up for sale. The idea is part of a plan to consolidate six buildings used for administrative purposes into one building, possibly leasing space in a downtown building. Read More…

  • Cleveland schools will bus more students next year while saving money (Plain Dealer)
  • Thousands more Cleveland schoolchildren will have bus rides to school in the fall under a new busing plan presented to the school board Tuesday night. Elementary school students would have to walk no more than a mile, instead of the 1.75-mile maximum now, under the plan. And high school students won't have to walk up to three miles to school anymore. Their walks would be cut to a mile and a half at most. Read More…

  • School Cracks Down on Prom Dress Code (Fox 8, Cleveland)
  • With necklines plunging lower, and hemlines getting shorter, are dresses too sexy for prom?
    No matter the answer to that question, sexy dresses will not make it through the dance doors at Jefferson High School come prom night. “Over the past years, there were a lot of comments about the dresses the students were wearing,” said Principal John Montenaro. Read More…

  • Springfield teachers authorize call to strike (Toledo Blade)
  • Negotiations that have stretched for a year could spiral out of control between the Springfield Board of Education and its teachers' union, which has passed a strike authorization measure. Members of the Springfield Education Association unanimously voted Monday to allow negotiators to serve the school board with a 10-day strike notice. That notice could come as soon as Friday, union President Marty Perlaky said, if district negotiators don't give the union a counterproposal. Read More…

  • Teen bullied to point of suicide, Mentor hosts seminar to combat bullying (WEWS, Cleveland)
  • Sen. Sherrod Brown hosted a seminar at Mentor Memorial Junior High School Tuesday night aimed at helping schools address bullying. The goal of the event was to teach administrators, staff, bus drivers and educators to recognize and report bullying and the harassment of students. The seminar focused on promoting healthy, safe and productive schools for students. Read More…

  • Walnut Hills rated top Ohio high school (Enquirer)
  • Several local schools placed well in U.S. News & World Report’s 2012 Best High Schools rankings, which came out Tuesday. Walnut Hills High School was ranked the top school in Ohio and the 90th best in the nation. Others in Ohio’s top 10 included Indian Hill (3) and Wyoming (4) high schools. They ranked 104 and 143 nationally. Read More…

  • Teacher’s aide grabs student, is fired (Dispatch)
  • A teacher’s aide for special-needs students at Livingston Elementary School was fired last week because she grabbed a girl who was spitting at her face. The child had been spitting on aide Linda M. Finch for days before the March incident for which she lost her job, documents show. Read More…

Editorial & Opinion

  • Schools in crisis (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • Policy Matters Ohio released early this year findings from a survey of Ohio school finance officials showing “alarming levels of fiscal distress” in districts across the state. The Cleveland-based think tank found that roughly two-thirds of the respondents face budget shortfalls, and those projecting shortfalls above 5 percent had almost tripled since 2010. Hard-pressed rural, urban and suburban districts planned to manage the budget gaps by cutting staff, programs and extracurricular activities, freezing wages and reducing spending on benefits, supplies and equipment. Read More…

Education News for 04-06-2012

Local Issues

  • Cleveland Teachers Union and Mayor Frank Jackson to continue negotiations next week over schools plan (Plain Dealer)
  • They'll be back at it again next week. Mayor Frank Jackson and the Cleveland Teachers Union concluded more than six hours of negotiations Wednesday night over the disputed parts of Jackson's school plan without reaching a final agreement, deciding to take a break from the talks over Easter weekend. Read More…

  • Cleveland education reform plan discussed at community meeting (News Channel 5)
  • CLEVELAND - Mayor Frank Jackson and Cleveland Schools CEO Eric Gordon outlined the plan for transforming schools at a community meeting Thursday night. "We're focused on quality education," Jackson told about 60 residents who gathered at the Gunning Recreation Center. Read More…

  • Chardon High School student, employee called heroes for efforts during shooting in February (Plain Dealer)
  • In the frantic moments after shots rang out Feb. 27 at Chardon High School, cafeteria worker Cherie Reed held open a kitchen door, offering students a haven from chaos and evil. Travis Carver, a 16-year-old junior, heard the noises and thought they were someone popping paper bags. Then he noticed T.J. Lane. Read More…

  • Olentangy bomb ‘threat’ no joke, teen told (Dispatch)
  • Hours before he boarded a plane that took him and his family to Kuwait yesterday, a teenage boy admitted to a Delaware County Juvenile Court judge that he had joked about blowing up his school the day before. Mohamed Mahmoud, 15, pleaded guilty today to inducing panic at Olentangy High School, which was evacuated and searched by authorities in response to what officials thought was a bomb threat. Read More…

  • Parents asked to weigh in on Beavercreek redistricting plan (Dayton Daily News)
  • Beavercreek City Schools officials want to hear from local parents about plans that affect where their children will attend school in 2013-14.< District officials held a public forum Wednesday at Beavercreek High School to present three sets of initial redistricting maps, and put those maps online Thursday. Read More…

Education News for 02-29-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio Gov. John Kasich encourages thousands at Chardon vigil to comfort, support grieving families (Plain Dealer)
  • CHARDON - A crowd of thousands, swathed in Chardon red, holding candles and hugging, gathered in and around St. Mary Catholic Church on Tuesday night, near where five high school students had been shot a day earlier. Three have died, including Demetrius Hewlin, 16, and Russell King Jr., 17, whose deaths were announced Tuesday. Daniel Parmertor, 16, died Monday. He will be buried after a funeral Mass at the church Saturday. One woman held a wood-framed picture of him. Read More…

  • Chardon High School shooting, Vigil draws thousands (WKYC 3 NBC)
  • CHARDON - Community prayer vigils are being held in the aftermath of the Chardon High School shootings. On Monday night, more than half a dozen vigils were held at churches in Chardon and surrounding communities. Those somber observances included a candle light gathering on the Chardon Square. Students and community members came together to remember the five victims. On Tuesday night, thousands of people attended a memorial and vigil at St. Mary's in Chardon. Gov. John Kasich was among those attending. Read More…

  • Ohio school shooting, Drills, cell phone use paid off (Plain Dealer)
  • Nobody expected Monday's school shooting in Chardon. You wouldn't expect one in communities like Bay Village, Avon Lake or Orange either. But all of them plan for it. Over the past two decades and increasingly since the 1999 killings at Columbine High School in Colorado, school districts and law enforcement authorities have worked together on strategies to respond to violence in schools. Read More…

  • Recent U.S. Secret Service study looks at trends in school attacks (News-Herald)
  • When there is an incident that involves the loss of life at a school, people tend to ask why did it happen. A recent study by the U.S. Secret Service looked into 37 incidents involving 41 school attacks that occurred between 1974 and 2000. The review was conducted to identify and to highlight information that in some cases may have been known or knowable prior to school-based attacks and to aid in the prevention of future attacks. Read More…

  • Chardon High School shooting witness describes scene inside of cafeteria (WEWS 5 ABC)
  • CHARDON - Jason Suhadolnik still can't believe there was a shooting inside of his school. He is a first-year student at Chardon High School and was inside of the cafeteria when gunfire erupted. Suhadolnik was sitting at a lunchroom table with a few friends about 10 feet from the shooter when he opened fire. Suhadolnik said he doesn't know the alleged gunman, TJ Lane. He said at first the gunfire sounded more like a toy gun. Read More…

  • Latest school tragedy mimics others in its senselessness (Vindicator)
  • It happened again. And again the expressions of condolences are mixed with expressions of disbelief that one high school student could open fire on others, taking their lives. This time, it’s relatively close to home, in Chardon in Geauga County, a community not unlike many other Northeastern Ohio suburban communities. Many Vindicator readers would have visited its town square for the annual maple syrup festival at the end of April. Which makes the harsh reality even more difficult to grasp. Read More…

  • House of Representatives has moment of silence for Chardon shooting victims (Plain Dealer)
  • The U.S. House of Representatives held a moment of silence on Tuesday to honor the victims of yesterday's shootings at Chardon High School. The gesture was a request from Bainbridge Township Republican Rep. Steve LaTourette, whose district includes Chardon. It occurred at around 3:45 P.M. in the midst of a series of votes. "I would indicate that, in these tragedies there are also items of heroism," LaTourette said on the House of Representatives floor. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Youngstown School-board president seeks help with determining cuts (Vindicator)
  • Youngstown - The city school-board president says everything must be considered in the decision of where to make cuts and he’s asking the community for help to make those determinations. “Something has to be done with our finances,” said Lock P. Beachum Sr., school board president, during a school board meeting Tuesday. “Where are we going to save the money?” The district learned this month that because of a loss of more than 500 students as determined by the state’s official October enrollment count, it would receive about $4 million less. Read More…

  • TPS aims to run Head Start (Blade)
  • The dispute over who should control Toledo's Head Start program escalated Tuesday night at the Toledo Board of Education meeting. Dozens of supporters of the Economic Opportunity Planning Association of Greater Toledo and members of the union that represents Toledo Head Start employees attended the meeting to show opposition to a possible competing application by TPS for the $13 million grant to run Head Start. Read More…

  • McDonald schools Panel disbands as district is released from fiscal emergency (Vindicator)
  • McDONALD - The state Finance and Planning Commission for McDonald schools disbanded Wednesday, after the district was informed by the state auditor’s office that it was released from fiscal emergency. The commission requested the release in November 2011, after the local school board made the same request in September. “Coming back after fiscal emergency is an uphill battle for any entity, and each community must make the difficult choices that work best for them,” state Auditor Dave Yost said. Read More…

  • Licking Heights switches ESCs (Dispatch)
  • The Licking Heights Board of Education voted 5-0 last night to sever its ties to the Licking County Educational Service Center, which provides services, such as special-education programs, curriculum support and teacher training, to several school districts. The move takes advantage of a new state law that gave districts until March 1 to decide whether to switch Educational Service Centers or wait another year. Read More…

  • Liberty BOE votes to reinstate open enrollment in district (Vindicator)
  • Liberty - The Liberty school board voted unanimously to reinstate open enrollment, leaving to a future meeting approving the exact number of students it would allow under the program. Superintendent Stan Watson told the board there are likely slots for 10 open- enrollment students per grade but would return to the board with a solid figure in the future. The district would not be responsible for transporting the out-of-district students. Read More…

  • Strongsville Student Arrested for Threats Made to School, Students (WJW 8 FOX)
  • A Strongsville High School student was arrested on Tuesday morning for allegedly making a threat to the school and its students. According to an official with the Strongsville Police Department, the juvenile was arrested for inducing panic. The official tells Fox 8 News that the student was using social media to alarm other students that there would soon to be an act of violence committed at the school. Read More…

  • Other schools report threats in wake of Chardon shootings (Beacon Journal)
  • Several Akron-Canton school districts reported threatening messages Tuesday and one district confronted a student after he posed on Facebook with a rifle and made comments that officials perceived as menacing in the wake of the Chardon killings. Green High School evacuated classrooms shortly after 11 a.m. Tuesday and excused students from afternoon classes after a student found a bomb threat scribbled on a restroom wall. Summit County sheriff’s spokesman Bill Holland said the message read: “There’s a bomb in the building.” Read More…

  • Portage County student charged with inducing panic following postings on Facebook (Plain Dealer)
  • MANTUA - A day after the shootings at Chardon High School, Portage County sheriff deputies arrested a 17-year-old Crestwood High School student who school administrators felt was a threat to other students. On Monday, the boy wrote on his Facebook page, "Who agrees with their friend that it is a good idea to shoot up a school?" He also had posted a picture of himself holding an assault rifle. School officials told the sheriff's office that on Feb. 22, the teen posted on Facebook, "I'm close to going on a stabbing spree. I can't take some of these people anymore." Read More…

Editorial

  • 3 young lives lost, countless others forever changed in Chardon High School shootings (Plain Dealer)
  • For just a few moments early Monday morning, gunshots rang out in the cafeteria of Chardon High School. Those shots were the last sounds Daniel Parmertor, 16; Russell King Jr., 17; and Demetrius Hewlin, 16, would ever hear. But for those who remain, the echoes are unlikely ever to fully fade. People who loved them are trying to cope with something they probably had never dreamed of: the life of a child, a grandchild, a brother, a nephew, a cousin, a friend, wasted suddenly, needlessly, senselessly. Read More…

  • Reasonable step (Dispatch)
  • Dunning parents for unpaid lunch money isn’t likely what Columbus City Schools administrators had in mind when they went into education. But with nearly $1 million owed, it’s a problem that shouldn’t be ignored any longer, and the district is taking a reasonable approach to collecting: focusing on the biggest debtors, while not denying lunch to any child. Read More…

  • Cleveland teachers should be on the same reform team (Plain Dealer)
  • We in the Cleveland Teachers Union agree with Mayor Frank Jackson that every child in our city should attend an excellent school and every neighborhood should offer our families a multitude of great schools from which to choose. No fair-minded person can dispute the notion that our union has always been willing to work with others to achieve those goals. Read More…

Education News for 02-14-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Monroe board delays vote on fiscal emergency (Middletown Journal)
  • MONROE — The Monroe Board of Education decided Monday night to table the resolution that requested the state auditor’s office to place the district in fiscal emergency. If it had passed, the resolution would not have required Monroe Local Schools — which has a projected $4.5 million deficit at the end of this fiscal year — to submit a fiscal watch recovery plan. The state auditor’s office placed the district in fiscal watch Feb. 2. Read More…

  • School district to introduce Learning Café (News-Sun)
  • SPRINGFIELD — Springfield City School District will host an open house Thursday to introduce new components of the district’s after-hours program The Learning Cafe, formerly called the Family Academy. “We’ve got the best learning menu in the city of Springfield, something for almost everybody,” said Superintendent David Estrop. “That’s the whole idea ... so that we truly can give ... more opportunities for more people of all ages.” Read More…

  • Are you an Ohio educator?
  • We invite you to join Ohio Teachers’ Homeroom, the new Facebook page from the Ohio Department of Education. It’s a great way to keep up with the latest news important to your career and to connect with colleagues around the state. We welcome you to share your ideas, lesson plans and comments with fellow Ohio educators. Find us here

National Stories of the Day

  • Embracing the Common Core: Helping Students Thrive (Fordham Institute)
  • Join us February 15 for an important conversation about Ohio’s adoption and implementation of the Common Core Academic Standards! Academic content standards define what students should know and be able to do, and provide guidance to teachers and schools on content and instruction. Ohio’s schools will soon move from the current standards in mathematics and English language arts to more rigorous standards developed and embraced by a consortium of 46 states and the District of Columbia. Ohio joined other states in adopting these new standards, and the aligned assessments that go with them, to help ensure that Buckeye students learn the knowledge and skills needed for success in college, careers, and life. Read More…

  • Virtual Education Seen as Understudied (Education Week)
  • A flurry of reports and high-profile news articles over the past year has cast doubt on the effectiveness of online education, and raised concerns about the rapid growth of virtual education across the country. This increased attention comes as such education moves further into the mainstream of K-12 education and opens itself up to greater scrutiny. At this point in the maturation of virtual education, the importance of high-quality, objective research is greater than ever. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Proposed Dublin school cuts include new starting times, higher fees (Dispatch)
  • Students in Dublin schools would start their days earlier next school year, and some would pay more for extracurricular activities, under changes proposed last night. The changes were part of $7.1 million in cuts that district officials said they need to make over the next two school years because of a November levy failure. Some of the reductions would require board approval; others would be implemented by administrators. The change in starting times would be linked to transportation changes. Read More…

  • Newark schools suspends pay-to-participate fees (Newark Advocate)
  • NEWARK - The Newark Board of Education took two actions that members think will help improve the district's graduation rate Monday night. The board voted 5-0 to both suspend pay-to-participate fees for 2012-13 and restore partial high school busing immediately. The fees were implemented and busing eliminated during a round of cuts in 2007. Since then, students have paid $200 per sport and $55 per fine arts activity -- down to $165 and $45 after the Million Dollar Dream Committee formed four years ago. The fees have raised about $200,000 per year. Read More…

  • Lakota considers cutting 69 teachers (Journal-News)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — Lakota Local School District administrators are proposing eliminating nearly 69 teaching positions for secondary grades in the latest round of budget cuts. The cuts are being proposed to help offset a projected $9 million budget deficit for the 2012-13 academic year. The plan would allow the district to cut the secondary payroll by about $4.3 million, according to district officials. Read More…

  • Westerville schools union OKs concessions (Dispatch)
  • A second Westerville schools union has agreed to give up wage increases and pay more for health care to help ease the district’s financial problems. The Westerville Board of Education approved the contract for the Ohio Association of Public School Employees Local 138 at its meeting last night. The vote was 4-1, with board member Carol French opposed. The union, which represents about 180 custodians, maintenance and food-service workers in the Westerville district, is the second of four unions to agree to concessions, which take effect only if all of the unions agree to them. Read More…

  • Granville schools might cut 18.5 positions (Newark Advocate)
  • GRANVILLE - A reduction in staff by an equivalent of 18.5 positions is being recommended to help the Granville School District save $1.5 million during the next two years. Superintendent Jeff Brown presented a proposal to the Board of Education Monday night that would keep the Ohio Department of Education off of the district's back in two years by keeping the district out of "fiscal caution." Read More…