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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Seattle Schools Community Forum: The Stranger Explains the "Property Tax Swap"

Seattle Schools Community Forum: The Stranger Explains the "Property Tax Swap":


The Stranger Explains the "Property Tax Swap"

I have been desperate to get a thread on this issue because both McKenna and Inslee have been talking about it (along with Rep Carlyle and Rep Hunter) but pulling it altogether was going to be a task.  Enter Goldy with a good article (and a chart!).  It pretty much completes what I thought - Seattle and other "wealthier" districts would get less.

My understanding of the property tax swap is that it would phase out levy equalization and yet, wealthier districts would STILL be subsidizing poorer ones.  I am all for equity but when every single district in this state is cash-strapped, it seems unfair.

Read on and tell me your thoughts. 

The Property Tax Swap (or "State & Local Property Tax Shift" as it is more technically known) is also the only 

Wherever The DREAM May Lead Us [An Education For All] | The Jose Vilson

Wherever The DREAM May Lead Us [An Education For All] | The Jose Vilson:


Wherever The DREAM May Lead Us [An Education For All]


DREAM girl
Recently, the conversation around the use of the word “illegal immigrant” came to a precipice when the New York Times’ public editor said there was nothing wrong with using the phrase. Writers like Jose Antonio Vargas and institutions like Univision chimed in, and rightly so. “Illegal immigrant” suggests that the immigrant themselves is illegal. The very term suggests that these men, women, and children who migrate live an existence of illegality, whereas “undocumented worker,” the better alternative, suggests that the person crossing the border actually works here but has not (yet) filled out all the forms to become a full American citizen. The former puts the burden of proof on the individual, whereas the latter highlights a systemic issue.
We still have discussions about students in this situations in black and white terms. Either they all leave or they 

H.R.6556: Campus Safety for Children Act of 2012 - U.S. Congress - OpenCongress

H.R.6556: Campus Safety for Children Act of 2012 - U.S. Congress - OpenCongress:




H.R.6556 - Campus Safety for Children Act of 2012

To amend the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act, and for other purposes.view all titles (2)

Bill's Views

  • Today:1
  • Past Seven Days:9
  • All-Time:45
 
Introduced
 
House
Passes
 
Senate
Passes
 
President
Signs
 

 
09/20/12
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Sponsor

Representative
Debbie Wasserman Schultz
D-FL
No Co-Sponsors

Group promoting Idaho schools reform wants disclosure case moved to federal court | OregonLive.com

Group promoting Idaho schools reform wants disclosure case moved to federal court | OregonLive.com:


Group promoting Idaho schools reform wants disclosure case moved to federal court

five elements to help redefine public ed « Cooperative Catalyst

five elements to help redefine public ed « Cooperative Catalyst:


five elements to help redefine public ed

Image

Our latest post on dmlcentral.net, five elements we believe are key to redefining public ed in a community (the chapters of our little book). Click here to read the rest of the post.

Tension flare as officials defend their school support systems | GothamSchools

Tension flare as officials defend their school support systems | GothamSchools:


Tension flare as officials defend their school support systems

Councilman Jackson waives at Shael Polakow-Suransky (far right) during a hearing on the networks.
Facing criticism that the Department of Education does not hold the organizations responsible for supporting schools accountable for their success, Chief Academic Officer Shael Polakow-Suransky told members of the City Council today that the opposite is true.
In fact, he said during a heated hearing about the department’s network support structure, he has changed the leadership of 15 of the department’s 55 networks.
“Fifteen of those [former network leaders] are people that I did not have confidence in and we wanted someone to do better,” Polakow-Suranksy told the city council members during a lengthy hearing. ”There is very clear accountability.”
That revelation was one of many data points he and other top officials shared this afternoon at a City Council 

Sign our Petition: Stop disclosing confidential student information to corporations without parental consent! | Class Size Matters Sign our Petition: Stop disclosing confidential student information to corporations without parental consent! | A clearinghouse for information on class size & the proven benefits of smaller classes

Sign our Petition: Stop disclosing confidential student information to corporations without parental consent! | Class Size Matters Sign our Petition:  the proven benefits of smaller classes:



Sign our Petition: Stop disclosing confidential student information to corporations without parental consent!

The letter Norman sent Friday to the Attorney General and the Regents on behalf of Class Size Matters and other parent groups is posted here. A background memo on these issues is here. I don’t think it is an overstatement to say this whole project represents perhaps the most serious erosion of privacy in our nation’s history.

New York State, along with Colorado, Illinois and Massachusetts, intends to provide confidential student information to a private corporation called the Shared Learning Collaborative, funded by the Gates Foundation, which in turn will make this data available to for-profit companies to develop and market their commercial learning products. 
This confidential data will include student names, addresses, test scores, grades, attendance, economic and special education status, IEPs, and disciplinary records. All this is being done without parents’ knowledge or consent, and represents a shocking violation of our children’s right to privacy.
Four more states have said they will soon follow in phase II: Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky and Louisiana, and the Gates Foundation is soliciting even more states to join in.  ( For more on this, seehere and here.)
Please sign our petition below, asking the NY State Attorney General and the Board of Regents to prevent these unprecedented disclosures from occurring, until public hearings are held and parents are given the right to withhold their children’s confidential data.
Feel free to add your comments or edit the words in the petition; and be sure to click the box below if you want updates on this critical threat to our children’s privacy.

click here

Board of Regents reinstates illegal salaries for two top Vice Presidents - Wait, What?

Board of Regents reinstates illegal salaries for two top Vice Presidents - Wait, What?:


Board of Regents reinstates illegal salaries for two top Vice Presidents
by 



From Ken Previti, Pension Advocate. « Fred Klonsky

From Ken Previti, Pension Advocate. « Fred Klonsky:


From Ken Previti, Pension Advocate.

Today’s business section of the New York Times has an article that mentions all of our pensions being cut in this manner: “Time appears to be running out for a relatively painless fiscal reform, the task force said.”
I deeply resent having our reduced retirement incomes and other measures described by billionaires as “relatively painless fiscal reform.”
Our incomes – relatively painless fiscal reform.
The article has multiple presuppositions (huge fiscal problems at the state and local level are 





NYC study: 10 years of choice has not altered 'demography as destiny' | Philadelphia Public School Notebook

NYC study: 10 years of choice has not altered 'demography as destiny' | Philadelphia Public School Notebook:


NYC study: 10 years of choice has not altered 'demography as destiny'

by Dale Mezzacappa on Oct 25 2012 Posted in Latest news


With Philadelphia firmly committed to creating a "portfolio" of schools as a way to improve outcomes for all students, it seemed worthwhile to take note of a study just released by the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University.
It found that after 10 years of school choice and expanding high school options in New York City, "college readiness rates are still largely predicted by the demographics of a student's home neighborhood." It concludes, "choice has not been sufficient to increase systemic equity of opportunity."
This study focused on high schools, whereas Philadelphia's school choice initiative extends through the K-12 spectrum. There are other ways in which New York and Philadelphia are not directly comparable.
But there are nevertheless ways in which these findings might offer guidance to Philadelphia, where policymakers and civic leaders are determined to alter the "demography is destiny" scenario - to close the so-called achievement gap - 

Democurmudgeon: Milwaukee's Voucher Program Disaster; 90.1% not proficient in Reading and 88% not proficient in Math.

Democurmudgeon: Milwaukee's Voucher Program Disaster; 90.1% not proficient in Reading and 88% not proficient in Math.:


Milwaukee's Voucher Program Disaster; 90.1% not proficient in Reading and 88% not proficient in Math.

In Scott Walker's latest weekly address, he listed "Transforming Education" as one of his top priorities. What does that mean? What else could he do? Would he expand vouchers where no ones wants school "choice?" Sure.

But Walker will now have a more difficult job pushing his privatization plans after the horrific results of the countries longest running voucher program:
jsonline: Based on a new and tougher yardstick for academic competency in Wisconsin, about 

A call to action on the No on Initiative 1240 campaign and a video | Seattle Education

A call to action on the No on Initiative 1240 campaign and a video | Seattle Education:


A call to action on the No on Initiative 1240 campaign and a video

Charter School Fairy Tales
What do we want? DIRECT VOTER CONTACT! When do we want it? NOW!
Help People for Our Public Schools reach voters this week and tell them to vote NO on I-1240! To paraphrase Mr. Rogers, YOU are the only YOU there is. And we need YOU to help us now!!
1. Phone bank – THIS WEEK, Thursday Oct 25 from 5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. at our office in Seattle, 1914 N. 34th Street, Suite 209.  Call (206) 545-1240 to RSVP.
Also, mark your calendars with these upcoming phone bank dates: Monday Oct 29, Tuesday Oct 30th, Thursday Nov 1, and Monday Nov 5th. We will also offer an option to pick up a phone list and call from the comfort of your own home! Contact us for more details: (206) 545-1240.
2. Doorbelling – This weekend we will meet in Greenwood in front of Georgia’s Greek Restaurant, 323 NW 85th 

Mother Crusader: NJ Education Advocates To Duncan: State's Waiver Plan Is A Disaster

Mother Crusader: NJ Education Advocates To Duncan: State's Waiver Plan Is A Disaster:


NJ Education Advocates To Duncan: State's Waiver Plan Is A Disaster

Cross posted from WHYY's NewsWorks NJ

The debate over No Child Left Behind (NCLB) continues in New Jersey, this time over whether the state's new plan to meet federal education standards does enough to help the state's lowest performing schools. The Garden State has received a waiver from NCLB mandates, and a chance to come up with its own plan.
In a letter to U.S. Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, a number of advocates called on the federal government to suspend the NCLB waiver given to New Jersey. The signers of the letter sent a clear message to Secretary Duncan that New Jersey's plan of carrots and sticks is heavily weighted against minorities, stating "this 

Michelle Rhee's StudentsFirst Group Weighs In On Michigan's Proposal 2

Michelle Rhee's StudentsFirst Group Weighs In On Michigan's Proposal 2:


Michelle Rhee's StudentsFirst Group Weighs In On Michigan's Proposal 2

Michelle Rhee is jumping into another union battle -- this time in Michigan.

As Washington, D.C. schools chief, Rhee sparred with American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten over the school system's contract. Since then, Rhee, who is CEO and founder of nonprofit StudentsFirst, has said time and time again that she believes unions have a strong role in education and that collective bargaining is important.

Now, the political action committee of StudentsFirst is pumping $500,000 into a campaign against Michigan's Proposal 2, a ballot measure that would protect collective bargaining by enshrining it in the state's constitution. Mlive.com first reported the contribution Thursday morning. StudentsFirst is a national lobbying and advocacy shop based in Sacramento, Calif., that has received heavy support from bundlers for both Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. Under Proposal 2, any Michigan laws that limit workers' ability to join unions would be invalidated -

Diane in the Afternoon 10-25-12 Diane Ravitch's blog

Diane Ravitch's blog:





The Real Goal of Reformers: Re-Segregation?

Anthony Cody has a stunning article this week about what is happening in Louisiana.
The expansion of vouchers and charters will facilitate the re-segregation of the schools, he predicts.
Governor Jindal eliminated all funding for public libraries in his new budget.
TFA Commissioner has put a young and unqualified TFA alum in charge of teacher evaluation.
The freight train of reform (aka privatization) is running full blast in that unfortunate state.
Arne Duncan will be there any day now to congratulate Governor Jindal on the progress made


Audit Blasts Lack of Oversight of Charter Spending

The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of the Inspector General issued a stinging audit, showing a near absence of oversight of charter school spending in the three states studied: Florida, Arizona, and California. On the same day, the California charter schools association celebrated another big expansion of the charter sector in that state. There are now more than 1,000 charter schools with nearly half a million students in them, and the state department of education lacks the staff to monitor them. Some of the schools never open; some open and close within a year or two. Some pay outrageous executive salaries.
The main focus of the audit was the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Innovation, which awarded over $1