offer

Education News for 02-09-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio sees uptick on AP exams (Dispatch)
  • More Ohio students took Advanced Placement exams last year, and the rate nudged up of students earning a score high enough to earn college credit at most schools. In last year's graduating class, 24.585 seniors from Ohio's public high schools took exams associated with AP courses. That's a 6.7 percent increase from the year before. The tests aren't a required part of taking the class, but many colleges offer credit to students who earn a 3 or better. Last school year, 62.8 percent of the test-takers got at least a 3. The year before, the number of 62.1 percent. Read More…

  • Kasich pushing plan as model in education overhaul (Middletown Journal)
  • COLUMBUS — Gov. John Kasich loves Cleveland’s ambitious plan to overhaul the city’s failing public schools by resetting collective bargaining agreements, championing high-performing charter schools, expanding preschool to all 4-year-olds, and increasing the hours students spend in classes. “I’m counting on Cleveland to deliver the goods,” Kasich said in his 83-minute State of the State speech delivered at a public school in Steubenville on Tuesday. “We can change urban education in Ohio and change the urban education in America. And that is worth fighting for and risking for.” Read More…

Local Issues

  • Bantam Ridge hosts state superintendent (Herald Star)
  • WINTERSVILLE - Bantam Ridge Elementary School hosted Stan W. Heffner, state superintendent of public instruction, on Tuesday morning. Heffner was accompanied by Sarah Dove, teacher liaison to the governor's office, during a meet and greet with local superintendents, where they were given the chance to field questions and concerns to Heffner, and a tour of the facility. "There is terrific teaching going on here, and you can feel the synergy between the teachers and children," said Heffner. Read More…

  • University of Akron aims to offer free tuition to qualified graduates of Akron schools (Plain Dealer)
  • AKRON - The University of Akron plans to offer full-tuition scholarships to eligible Akron public school students under an innovative deal that would allow the university to acquire an almost vacant city high school on campus. University of Akron President Luis Proenza and Akron Superintendent David James appeared today before the House Education Committee seeking support for legislation that would require a public school district planning to sell a building to first offer it to a state university with a campus within the district. Read More…

  • Area districts applauding new regulations for school meals (News-Herald)
  • As part of the nation’s growing battle against childhood obesity, the government announced new regulations for school meals for the first time in 15 years. The new meal requirements are a part of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act that became law in December 2010. Schools must offer at least 3/4 cup of vegetables and 1/2 cup of fruit for each meal, as opposed to at least 1/2 cup of combined fruits and vegetables. Vegetables also have to include certain types of food, including dark green and legumes. Read More…

  • School’s pilot program encourages learning (Journal-News)
  • FAIRFIELD — At Fairfield West Elementary School, kids hustle through their classrooms, moving from desk to desk, playing games and high-fiving each other. One might think they’re making too much noise and having too much fun to learn. Not so, according to the teachers and the principal. Not only are the children getting an education, but they are behaving better through a system called Kagan Learning, which the school has adopted as a pilot program in all of its classrooms. Read More…

  • Licking Heights Local Schools gets clean state audit for 2010-11 (Newark Advocate)
  • PATASKALA - Licking Heights Local Schools received a clean state audit for fiscal year 2011. Ohio Auditor of State Dave Yost's office released the report on Jan. 20. The audit, which covers the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2011, revealed Heights complied with the rules governing its major federal programs. The audit also revealed no material control weaknesses involving Heights' financial statements or deficiencies in Heights' internal financial controls. Heights, according to the findings, is a "low-risk" auditee. Read More…

Editorial

  • A Cleveland school plan worth fighting for (Plain Dealer)
  • Reforming the Cleveland public schools has been a work long in progress. But more is needed to repair the travesty of a district where most youngsters attend schools ranked at the bottom of the heap. That's why it's critical that local legislators move quickly to embrace Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson's daring road map for state and local reforms aimed at tripling the number of Cleveland children who attend the most effective schools -- from 11,000 to about 40,000, covering almost all of the district's students. Read More…

  • Urgency in Cleveland (Beacon Journal)
  • Mayor Frank Jackson’s plan to reinvent public education in Cleveland offers ample evidence that he is not afraid to kick a hornet’s nest. The plan submitted on Tuesday cited “a fierce sense of urgency” and “an informed sense of hope” as the basis to push a package of broad reforms certain to provoke heated discussion. If there’s a school district that can afford to tinker at the edges of change, it isn’t Cleveland. Alone among Ohio school districts, Cleveland is under mayoral control, its financial and academic problems extensive. Read More…

Gov Kasich "I'm done talk, talk, talking

How big of an empty promise was the Governor's offer to sit down with labor and discuss a meaningful compromise? ProgressOhio captures his flip-flop on tape.

From the Governor's press conference Wednesday 17th August, 2011

Governor Kasich, "We're inviting them to talk. We think that would be a good thing for all of us to sit down, see if we can reach some agreement."

Governor Kasich, "erm, when I was approached, err, by, by, er, by, the former Speaker Joanne Davidson, about should we sit down and talk, I said are you kiddin' me? Absolutely we should talk."

On February 26th, 2011 the Governor appeared on the Bill Cunningham radio show and told a very different story. Roll the tape.

Bill Cunningham, "Even at this late date in February are you willing to sit in a room with the representatives of the public employment unions, waway from the television and away from the radio and listen to the legitimate concerns of those that..."

Governor Kasich, interupting, "Listen, I've heard their concerns, I mean it's on TV and in the newspapers everyday. I know what their concerns is, they do not want ot give up the right to collectively bargain."

Bill Cunningham, "Meet with them Governor, You've got to get in a room with 'em Governor."

Governor Kasich, "Bill, Bill, let me explain to you. I'm not gonna let you put me in a position to say that I don't listen. I've listened. I've Heard. I've made a decision. It's not like I'm not talkin' to people. But y'know we spend a lot of time in Ohio talk, talk, talk ,talk, talkin'..."

Bill Cunningham, "And the Governor's done talkin', you;re walkin?"

Governor Kasich, "It's time to do some things."

Here's the video

As if to punctuate the insincerity of the offer ot find a compromise, here's Speaker Batchelder quoted in the WSJ regarding the offer to repeal then deal

Republican House Speaker William Batchelder rejected the unions' suggestion to craft a new law. "That dog won't hunt," said Mr. Batchelder

Urge your lawmakers to do the right thing. Call 888-218-5931 and tell your lawmakers NO DEAL until they repeal SB 5.

Update

The Governor, Speak and President sat alone waiting for a meeting they knew was not going to happen. They even went to far as to create silly cardboard name tags. When asked if they would repeal SB5 so negotiations could happen in an atmosphere of trust they said no to repeal first because it's an "ultimatum" and we would "lose leverage".

Three men, sitting alone. That's what is has come to for the proponents of SB5.

Educators Offer Solutions For NCLB Rewrite

It’s punitive. It over-emphasizes standardized testing. It narrows curriculum and takes a one-size-fits-all approach to education.

The problems with federal education policy under No Child Left Behind, the current incarnation of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, are numerous and frustrating for America’s educators and students.

With the Obama administration’s recent announcement that it will soon establish guidelines for states seeking relief from NCLB’s onerous requirements, there have been renewed discussions on what it will take to fix NCLB permanently and comprehensively.

America’s educators, who are intimately familiar with the practical problems NCLB presents at the classroom level, are eager to be heard in those conversations.

[readon2 url="http://www.educationvotes.nea.org/2011/08/15/educators-offer-solutions-for-nclb-rewrite/"]Read more...[/readon2]