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Charter School Authorization And Growth

If you ask a charter school supporter why charter schools tend to exhibit inconsistency in their measured test-based impact, there’s a good chance they’ll talk about authorizing. That is, they will tell you that the quality of authorization laws and practices — the guidelines by which charters are granted, renewed and revoked — drives much and perhaps even most of the variation in the performance of charters relative to comparable district schools, and that strengthening these laws is the key to improving performance.

Accordingly, a recently-announced campaign by the National Association of Charter School Authorizers aims to step up the rate at which charter authorizers close “low-performing schools” and are more selective in allowing new schools to open. In addition, a recent CREDO study found (among other things) that charter middle and high schools’ performance during their first few years is more predictive of future performance than many people may have thought, thus lending support to the idea of opening and closing schools as an improvement strategy.

Below are a few quick points about the authorization issue, which lead up to a question about the relationship between selectivity and charter sector growth.

The reasonable expectation is that authorization matters, but its impact is moderate. Although there has been some research on authorizer type and related factors, there is, as yet, scant evidence as to the influence of authorization laws/practices on charter performance. In part, this is because such effects are difficult to examine empirically. However, without some kind of evidence, the “authorization theory” may seem a bit tautological: There are bad charters because authorizers allow bad charters to open, and fail to close them.

That said, the criteria and processes by which charters are granted/renewed almost certainly have a meaningful effect on performance, and this is an important area for policy research. On the other hand, it’s a big stretch to believe that these policies can explain a large share of the variation in charter effects. There’s a reasonable middle ground for speculation here: Authorization has an important but moderate impact, and, thus, improving these laws and practices is definitely worthwhile, but seems unlikely to alter radically the comparative performance landscape in the short- and medium-term (more on this below).

Strong authorization policies are a good idea regardless of the evidence. Just to be clear, even if future studies find no connection between improved authorization practices and outcomes, test-based or otherwise, it’s impossible to think of any credible argument against them. If you’re looking to open a new school (or you’re deciding whether or not to renew an existing one), there should be strong, well-defined criteria for being allowed to do so. Anything less serves nobody, regardless of their views on charter schools.

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Education News for 04-05-2013

Local Education News

  • Ohio superintendent of public instruction presents banners to 3 schools (Coshocton Tribune)
  • Richard Ross, Ohio’s superintendent of public instruction, visited a couple classrooms during a stop in the county to present three schools with special Schools of Promise banners…Read more…

  • Avon Lake City School officials receive $1,500,000 tax revenue advance (Lorain Morning Journal)
  • Avon Lake City School officials are relieved after being granted a $1.5 million tax revenue advance from the Lorain County Auditor’s Office yesterday after a late tax payment by NRG Energy Inc.…Read more…

  • Board overturns decision to close Akron Digital Academy (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • A recent vote to close Akron Digital Academy, an online charter school sponsored by Akron Public Schools, was overturned Thursday…Read more…

  • Charter school under scrutiny (Cincinnati Enquirer)
  • So many financial and student records are missing from the now shuttered International College Preparatory Academy in Bond Hill that Ohio State Auditor Dave Yost says he questions how nearly $1 million in federal funds was spent…Read more…

  • Toledo Public Schools narrows interim superintendent search to 2 finalists (Toledo Blade)
  • The Toledo Board of Education pared further Thursday its candidate list for interim superintendent of Toledo Public Schools…Read more…

  • Canal Winchester plans April 15 vote on open enrollment (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Canal Winchester could become the third Franklin County school system to open its doors to students living outside the district.…Read more…

  • Taking advantage of a change in state law, Fostoria school administrators are seeking voter (Findlay Courier)
  • Taking advantage of a change in state law, Fostoria school administrators are seeking voter approval of an 8.15-mill continuing levy on May 7.…Read more…

  • Three school tax issues on Seneca County ballots in May (Findlay Courier)
  • Bettsville School District is seeking renewal of a 1 percent, five-year income tax for operating expenses in the May 7 primary.…Read more…

  • Clear Fork puts off drug test vote (Mansfield News Journal)
  • A vote to approve the first reading of the potential new Clear Fork Schools drug testing policy was postponed during a lengthy board meeting Thursday night.…Read more…

  • Takin’ It to the Schools part of Alcohol Awareness Month (New Philadelphia Times-Reporter)
  • As part of Alcohol Awareness Month, Takin’ It to the Schools, a school-based alcohol, tobacco and other drug prevention program…Read more…

  • $27M Niles high school set to open next week (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • The new $27 million Niles McKinley High School will officially open to students Tuesday morning.…Read more…

Education News for 01-16-2013

State Education News

  • Ohio adopts student restraint, seclusion policy (Canton Repository)
  • The Ohio Board of Education has approved a policy on how educators seclude and physically restrain students in schools…Read more...

  • Allison named Canton City Schools superintendent; gets 5-year contract (Canton Repository)
  • Nearly 64 years after his grandfather became the first black employee hired in the district, as a janitor, Adrian Allison becomes its first black superintendent…Read more...

  • Key district official in data-rigging case retires (Columbus Dispatch)
  • In a flurry of developments yesterday, a key figure in the investigation of Columbus City Schools’ data-rigging retired; the Board of Education gave a cool reception to Mayor Michael B. Coleman’s request to critique district business operations…Read more...

  • Schools’ use of seclusion now limited (Columbus Dispatch)
  • State Board of Education members say their seclusion and restraint policy isn’t perfect, but they’re proud to have done something to protect Ohio’s children…Read more...

  • Gov. Kasich says his comprehensive school plan will be delivered shortly (NPR)
  • Gov. Kasich has signed a bill into law that grades schools on an A through F grading scale. But as Ohio Public Radio’s Jo Ingles reports, that’s a part of a bigger education plan that the Governor intends to release soon…Read more...

  • OPATA offering free training for educators (Portsmouth Daily Times)
  • Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine says more training opportunities for Ohio’s educators have now been scheduled…Read more...

  • State says former treasurer must repay school (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • A state audit has revealed excess payments to the retirement fund of the school district’s former treasurer…Read more...

Local Education News

  • North Canton takes proactive security steps in schools (Canton Repository)
  • After the horrific school shooting in Newtown, Police Chief Stephan Wilder feared a copycat gunman could strike here…Read more...

  • Looking at the bottom line, Heath schools open doors (Columbus Dispatch)
  • Less than 24 hours after the board agreed to allow open enrollment at Heath City Schools, a parent sat in the district parking lot filling out applications…Read more...

  • After-school shooting sends boy to youth prison (Columbus Dispatch)
  • A 15-year-old boy who fired a gun outside an East Side elementary school, grazing the head of a 17-year-old girl, was committed to the Ohio Department of Youth Services yesterday…Read more...

  • City schools board enters agreement for energy savings (Mansfield News Journal)
  • Mansfield City Schools could save “tens of thousands of dollars” in energy expenses through a new program, Superintendent Dan Freund said…Read more...

  • County delays decision on school funding (Springfield News-Sun)
  • Clark County commissioners delayed a decision about contributing $100,000 to the Global Impact STEM Academy due in part to uncertainty about the project…Read more...

  • Schools to cash in (Warren Tribune Chronicle)
  • Area schools are cashing out. Local school districts soon will receive the first payment of casino-tax revenue, with some districts set to take in more than $110,000…Read more...

  • Columbus City Schools Hopes To Have New Superintendent In 6 Months (WBNS)
  • The Columbus School Board is meeting Tuesday night with the firm that has been hired to lay out the process for searching and hiring a new superintendent. The goal is to have someone hired in six months…Read more...

  • Ohio school workers to carry guns have police training (WEWS)
  • Two of the four employees who have agreed to carry guns at a rural Ohio school apparently have law enforcement backgrounds…Read more...

  • Superintendent, board respond to concerns about enrollment at Austintown (Youngstown Vindicator)
  • Open enrollment was the hot-button topic at the Austintown school board meeting…Read more...

Editorial

  • Aiming to excel (Akron Beacon Journal)
  • As a national monitor for effective and high quality education, Education Week’s annual Quality Counts surveys are a valuable resource in comparative data…Read more...

An Open Letter to Ohio Women

Playing fair and playing by the rules are two of the most important lessons we teach our children. Unfortunately, Ohio politicians don’t want to play fair and they want to make their own rules. The system is rigged to allow the majority party to draw Statehouse and Congressional district lines to protect their own seats and their political party. Drawing district lines that determine who gets elected is how the politicians hold on to their power. In effect, they have turned our government from “We the People” into “We the Politicians”.

Passage of State Issue 2 will establish a system that takes the power away from politicians and gives good, decent people who want to fix our problems a real chance to compete against career politicians and win. We all want an impartial process AND WE CAN MAKE IT HAPPEN! The choices we make on November 6 will have a profound effect on the lives of our children and grandchildren.

Politicians will come and go, but the passage of State Issue 2 will help ensure that neither party can unfairly dominate state politics. When elections are fair and balanced the people of Ohio win.

In this election, you will have an opportunity to take a stand and vote YES on Issue 2. The system that decides who our elected officials are should be open to the public, transparent and without partisan manipulation.

As women, one a Republican and one a Democrat, we invite you to unite with us around issues of fairness and accountability. There is much wrong with politics but how we choose our elected officials should not be one of those wrongs. We can fix this problem once and for all.

Collectively, we must stand up and be heard. We must do this for our communities, our children, our values and our future. We have the chance to make a big difference in this election. Not in one politician’s life–but in the lives of all Ohioans.

Please help us by talking with your friends and neighbors about this important issue and share this message on Facebook, Twitter and your other social networks. To volunteer or learn how you can become more engaged on this issue, please email women@votersfirstohio.com and a Voters First representative will get back with you right away.

Leave a legacy. Vote for fairness, vote for our future, and vote YES on ISSUE 2.

Sincerely,
Joan Lawrence
Former Member Ohio House of Representatives
League of Women Voters of Ohio, since 1957 State of Ohio

Frances Strickland
Former First Lady, State of Ohio

Education News for 03-15-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Gov. John Kasich rolls out mini-budget with tax, education initiatives taking center stage (Plain Dealer)
  • COLUMBUS - As Gov. John Kasich rolled out a mid-term budget blueprint highlighted by an income tax cut for Ohioans but a hike in oil and gas taxes, the sales job began to skeptical lawmakers. Kasich's pitch to majority-party Republicans: Make sure Ohioans benefit from the oil and gas dollars expected to flow from the shale boom, not those in faraway area codes. "What we're saying is every Ohioan ought to benefit from this wealth," he told reporters at an afternoon news conference to announce his initiatives. Read More…

  • The U.S. Department of Agriculture to let schools decide whether to feed pink slime to students (WEWS 5 ABC)
  • CLEVELAND - The U.S. Department of Agriculture said it will allow schools to choose whether to buy ground beef patties made with or without the pink slime making headlines. They said they will make the announcement Thursday that could affect the food in schools. According to them, the pink slime filler is a low cost ingredient made from fatty bits of meat left over from other cuts and is treated with ammonium hydroxide gas to kill bacteria. Most of us had never heard about this pink slime until weeks ago when some fast food restaurants decided to stop using it. Read More…

  • Superintendents say proposed school grading system gets F (Morning Journal)
  • ELYRIA — The proposed new Ohio school district grading scale isn’t getting enthusiastic support by some local superintendents. “I don’t understand what our state is trying to do to our public schools,” Elyria City Schools Superintendent Paul Rigda said. “What do they want from us?” The new proposed grading scale will grade districts on an A through F scale, as opposed to the excellent with distinction through academic emergency scale in place now. Elyria schools, which were rated as effective, would have received a D under the new grading scale. Read More…

Local Issues

  • City schools to change gifted programs (Dispatch)
  • Many parents are wary of a Columbus City Schools plan to change its gifted and talented program next school year, but others are encouraged that the new format will serve more than double the number of gifted students. Superintendent Gene Harris explained the changes to an overflow crowd of more than 100 parents and district staff members at a meeting last night at the Downtown High School. Read More…

  • Parent posts threat on Facebook (Newark Advocate)
  • BLACKLICK - Licking Heights West has lifted increased security measures it implemented after a parent reportedly threatened a teacher on Facebook. The threat was made Monday night, district officials said, and West responded immediately, implementing its lowest-level security provisions Tuesday. The security provisions continued at the start of the school day Wednesday, but they were lifted by 10 a.m. Read More…

  • After cuts, Lakota focus is severance (Journal-News)
  • LIBERTY TWP. — The Lakota Board of Education, which slashed its budget by $10.5 million and cut 141 jobs Monday, is now turning its attention to severance pay. Individual employees cut for the 2012-13 school year will be based on seniority and licensing, said Treasurer Jenni Logan. “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, to give those affected as much time as possible to seek employment elsewhere. Read More…

  • Cleveland Heights-University Heights school board decides not to pursue open enrollment for 2012-13 (Sun News)
  • UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS - The Cleveland Heights-University Heights school board recently reached a consensus not to pursue open enrollment as a district policy for the 2012-13 school year. At a work session Feb. 21, Superintendent Doug Heuer presented information to the board about inter-district open enrollment, which allows a student to attend school tuition-free in a district other than where his or her parents reside. He said each year, the district’s administration must inform the Ohio Department of Education what its position will be on open enrollment. Read More…

  • Ax to fall on 16 at East Holmes (Times Reporter)
  • BERLIN — Sixteen full-time teachers or staff members in the East Holmes Local School District are targeted to lose their jobs in the wake of last week’s narrow defeat of a 3.77-mill emergency operating levy. Affected employees formally were notified Wednesday by Superintendent Joe Edinger, with the board of education expected to take action on the recommendation Monday. The 11 teachers, with 75 years of experience, are paid a total of $445,421. The five classified staff, with 15 years of experience, make a combined $42,599. That’s a total of $488,020. Read More…

Editorial

  • Support Reform In Ohio Schools (News-Register)
  • If Ohio Board of Education members are reluctant to take a stand on reforming one of the worst school districts in the state, how likely are they to address less serious but still important problems elsewhere? Gov. John Kasich did something unusual a few days ago. He appealed personally to board members to support a plan by Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson to improve his city's schools. Board members agreed to discuss the plan next month. For years, Cleveland Municipal Schools have chewed through taxpayers' money at an alarming rate, delivering little in return. Read More…

  • Youngstown schools system can do without disruptions (Vindicator)
  • While we have long URGED com- munity participation in the academic and financial rebuilding of the Youngstown City School District, we are strongly opposed to the threat by a community group to peel away a sizeable number of students just because of a perceived slight. The ongoing effort by many sincere, committed individuals to stabilize the district’s finances and improve its academic performance is too important to be undermined by the Community High Commission led by Jimma McWilson. Read More…

Education News for 02-27-2012

Statewide Education News

  • Ohio school districts operate under 2009 rules as they await Kasich's new funding formula (Blade)
  • COLUMBUS — How much does it cost to properly educate Ohio schoolchildren? What percentage of taxpayer dollars should go into classrooms or reading help, counseling or the arts? Should struggling districts get more than comfortable ones? How much more? All huge questions. All without answers. Since 2009, Ohio has been effectively without a school funding formula, the equation that answers vexing policy questions and doles out dollars accordingly. Read More…

  • State teachers' union names new chief (Enquirer)
  • DOWNTOWN — Longtime Cincinnati teacher Sue Taylor will retire next month after most recently serving five years as president of the Ohio Federation of Teachers. Teacher Melissa Cropper of Georgetown, Ohio, in Brown County has been elected as the federation’s new president to succeed Taylor. The statewide labor union represents about 20,000 teachers in Ohio, including about 3,500 part of the Cincinnati Federation of Teachers. Read More…

  • Overcoming obstacles: School programs help economically disadvantaged students get ahead (Times Recorder)
  • Haylee Hardwick doesn't have a computer at home. But on any given weekday, the third-grader can be found in the John McIntire Elementary School computer lab, finishing her homework or playing study games on a computer. Hardwick is part of an after-school tutoring program called 21st Century. The program, funded through a Title I grant, targets students who are struggling in math and reading and are considered economically disadvantaged. Read More…

  • State oversight commission rejects Little Miami plan to reopen schools (Dayton Daily News)
  • The state Financial Planning and Supervision Commission on Thursday rejected Little Miami Local School District’s plan to reopen Butlerville Elementary and Maineville Elementary schools. Interim Superintendent Greg Power and Treasurer Terry Gonda presented the district’s reconfiguration plan for 2012-13 to the oversight commission, asking for approval to re-establish neighborhood elementary schools, return to every day, half-day kindergarten, and bring back art, music and physical education. Read More…

Local Issues

  • Collection agency to go after lunch debt (Dispatch)
  • A collection agency will try to recover about $900,000 in unpaid lunch money unless parents of nearly 6,000 Columbus City Schools students pay up quickly. Next month, the district will turn over any account in which the family owes more than $50 for lunches served since the 2009-10 school year. If parents don’t pay after a few months of prodding, the district can notify credit-rating agencies of the unpaid debt, under a contract the Board of Education approved on Tuesday. Read More…

  • Cincinnati Public Schools expands choices again (Enquirer)
  • Cincinnati Public Schools, the state’s third-largest district, will open two new autism units next year to better serve its special-needs population. The district is also being courted by two charter schools seeking partnerships with the district. It’s evaluating their applications to see whether they would be good fits. The developments are the latest examples of CPS’ push over the past two years to expand the number of school choices it offers its 33,000 students. The district is on a mission to attract, retain and better serve students. Read More…

  • Liberty board to discuss possible reinstatement of open enrollment (Vindicator)
  • Liberty - The board of education will discuss and possibly vote on reinstating open enrollment at its Tuesday meeting. The school district currently has 81 open- enrollment students who entered the school before it closed open enrollment in the 2010 school year. Joe Nohra, board of education president, said that it closed down open enrollment because all the student slots were filled. But now the district has a $700,000 budget shortfall for next year even after the board approved $1.2 million in cuts to staff. Read More…

  • Schools sharing more costs (News-Sun)
  • SPRINGFIELD — School districts facing tight budgets are finding savings through shared services — and some officials say there’s still more savings to be had. For example, a superintendent works for two districts, special education classrooms serve students across the county and consortiums help districts take advantage of reduced group prices. “We’re going to look for every opportunity we can find to see if we can be more efficient in our opportunity and yet provide better services,” Springfield City School District Superintendent David Estrop said. Read More…

  • Eugene Sanders, former Cleveland schools chief, has no new role with district, officials say (Plain Dealer)
  • CLEVELAND - Have you heard? Retired CEO Eugene Sanders is consulting for the Cleveland school district. It's been the hot rumor for months, but everyone from the district to the mayor's office to the Cleveland Teachers Union says it's not true. He's also not working for any of the major organizations involved with the district. Representatives of the Greater Cleveland Partnership, Cleveland Foundation and George Gund Foundation say they have not hired him and know of no one who has. Read More…

  • Oregon City Schools predict large deficit (WTOL 11 CBS)
  • OREGON – While revenue continues to shrink for local schools districts, Oregon City Schools District Treasurer predicts an $11 million deficit for 2016. The Treasurer recommends the district proceed with caution. The state of Ohio requires all districts to prepare five year financial forecasts, and Oregon City School's budget is in the black for the next few years. In 2015, the forecast shows the district will slip into the red by about $3 million, and $11 million in 2016. Read More…

Editorial

  • A funding conundrum: Schools' resistance to change, voter hardship and declining state money create a financing crisis the parade of levies will not cure (Plain Dealer)
  • The Plain Dealer editorial board endorses in 21 school money issues on the March 6 primary ballot. It will not surprise regular readers of this page that we are supporting all 21, despite serious reservations about some districts' commitment to reform and belt-tightening. That's especially true in the case of the Garfield Heights schools, with a hefty 9.4-mill levy request on the ballot. We were outraged that while kids suffer from reduced options and school hours, both teachers and administrators in the school system continue to take step-up pay increases tied to seniority. Read More…

  • Achievement test (Beacon Journal)
  • David James, the superintendent of Akron Public Schools, outlined briefly in his State of the Schools address on Wednesday the new realities confronting the school system: Curriculum standards are rising; testing is more rigorous; the careers of teachers and principals are on the line with new performance assessments; the demand for workers with post-secondary education has risen. Funding sources have tightened up. The district is struggling to erase a $22 million deficit by June 30. Read More…

  • Dramatic proposal (Dispatch)
  • Those searching for the way to break through the calcified dysfunction of failing big-city public schools will be studying closely the ambitious reform plan proposed by city and school leaders in Cleveland. If it goes forward, it will be a test of some fundamental reform ideas that have been suggested many times but not attempted on such a scale. Its primary goal is to triple, in six years, the number of Cleveland students attending schools rated “excellent” or “efficient” and to close and replace failing schools faster. Read More…

  • Cleveland kids' fate rests in legislators' shaky hands (Plain Dealer)
  • When it comes to Cleveland's future, Mayor Frank Jackson's plan to save the schools isn't a matter of pass or perish. But it's awfully close. As Democrats and Republicans in the Ohio General Assembly begin to marshal their feeble excuses not to give Jackson the legislation he needs to implement his plan -- and they're already busy doing just that -- they should keep this in mind: A "no" vote is essentially a vote in favor of Cleveland's demise. It's a vote in favor of keeping Cleveland's children mired in a life of poverty. Read More…