Monday, December 28, 2009

Oklahoma lenders leaving the college debt arena | NewsOK.com


Oklahoma lenders leaving the college debt arena | NewsOK.com



Oklahoma lenders leaving the college debt arena

BY SARA PLUMMER - Tulsa World Comments Comment on this article0

Published: December 28, 2009


Big changes may be coming soon to the student loan industry, and those involved are preparing for the adjustments.
The Obama administration’s plan is to eliminate the Federal Family Education Loan Program, which has provided education loans to students and parents through a public and private partnership with lenders since 1965, if Congress approves. Direct lending from the U.S. Department of Education will take its place.


A trend of lenders departing the student loan business has been happening over the past few years. The Oklahoma Student Loan Authority had 42 banks and credit unions in its lender network in 2007. Now that network number has dwindled to eight.

Why the drop?
The state authority, which was created as a public trust by the Legislature in 1972, processes loan applications and serves as a secondary market to provide funds to borrowers. The authority receives no state-appropriated funds.


One reason for the decrease in participating lenders is the enactment of the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007. It reduces the profitability for nonprofit lenders by 1 percent and as much as 2.5 percent for for-profit lenders, said Michael Davis, OSLA vice president.
When lenders began dropping student loan services, emergency legislation — the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act of 2008 — was enacted. It allowed banks to sell existing student loans to the U.S. Department of Education, freeing up funds so that lenders could continue originating student loans.
"There was a concern that students wouldn’t have access to money for college,” Davis said.
The reduction of lenders was the primary reason Tulsa Community College switched to direct lending in July 2008. TCC and Oklahoma State University are the only colleges in Oklahoma— so far — using direct

Read more: http://newsok.com/state-lenders-leaving-the-college-debt-arena/article/3427884#ixzz0b2BjLTL7

BlackYouthLeadershipProject.org -- LEGISLATIVE OPEN HOUSE FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN YOUTH

BlackYouthLeadershipProject.org -- Welcome:

"Welcome: The Black Youth Leadership Project (BYLP) encourages African American students to increase their interaction with California’s political and community leaders through educational public policy experiences."


Black Youth Leadership Project, Inc.
presents
LEGISLATIVE OPEN HOUSE
FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN YOUTH



FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26TH, 2010


8:30 AM TO 5:00 PM


STATE CAPITOL
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA


The Black Youth Leadership Project, Inc. is hosting a one-day Open House geared
toward African-American high school students interested in California politics,
public policy, civics, governmental service, and/or community service. Students
will participate with Capitol staff in mock committee hearings and a legislative
floor session, passing laws that are important to them. The purpose of the Open
House is to encourage African-American students in grades 9-12 to regularly
interact with their state's political and community leaders and to use this
opportunity to discuss the legislative process, timely policy concerns, and the role
of democracy and advocacy within our communities.
Contact Lorreen Pryor at (916)319-3822 or LORREEN.PRYOR@ASM.CA.GOV or
Christian Jacobs at (916) 256-4286 or CHRISTIAN.JACOBS@ASM.CA.GOV
for an application.

Get your  2010 Packet here!

Obama's Smart Sex Education Funding - The Gaggle Blog - Newsweek.com


Obama's Smart Sex Education Funding - The Gaggle Blog - Newsweek.com:

"Although health care has dominated the policy sphere as of late, I wanted to call attention to the sex-education funding in the 2010 Appropriations Bill for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies. The 146-page bill is, to be fair, not a Twilight-caliber page turner, but it does tackle sex education, a hugely contentious issue during the Bush administration, when $1.8 billion was appropriated for abstinence-only education.

Here’s the Obama approach to the issue:

$100,000,000 shall be for making contracts and competitive grants to public and private entities to fund medically accurate and age-appropriate programs that reduce teen pregnancy; and for the federal costs associated with administering and evaluating such contracts and grants, of which not less than $"

Sacramento Press / Celebrate New Year's Eve 2010 in the Central City


Sacramento Press / Celebrate New Year's Eve 2010 in the Central City




So, you survived Christmas. Now the big question isn’t whether or not you’ve finished your holiday shopping, it’s all about what to do this New Year’s Eve. This four-part series aims to take the mystery and anxiety out of what to do in Sacrmento to ring in the New Year. Each day, we’ll feature very different downtown ways to celebrate 2010. Whether your idea of a perfect New Year’s Eve involves funky beats, bottles of bubbly, a caravan of kids, or haute cuisine, the Central City is the place to be!

Part One: Family style
Got kids? Start your evening early with a visit to the California Museum’s Out of this World exhibit, an exhibition of famous television and movie costumes sure to delight movie buffs from ages 8 to 80. View iconic movie garb like Darth Vader’s cape, helmet and lightsaber or Indiana Jones’ whip from Raiders of the Lost Ark. The museum is open daily until 5 p.m. Admission is $8.50 for adults, with discounted admission for children. Visit californiamuseum.org for details.

Afterward, head down to Old Sacramento to catch the 6:30 or 8:00 p.m. showing of Theatre of Lights, a symphony of lights, sounds and visual effects that accompanies a narrative reading of the beloved poem, The Night Before Christmas, first introduced in Sacramento in 1857.

Take a break from the winter chill with a visit to Old Sacramento’s newest restaurant, Ten 22. Brought to you by the owners of landmark establishment, The Firehouse, Ten 22 offers unique, family friendly fare like Corn Flake Chicken Wings, Dungeness Crab Tater Tots or hand dipped Mini Corn Dogs. Call Ten 22 at 441-2211 to make reservations.

Cap off your evening with a post-dinner stroll around this historic district and enjoy free family entertainment at Waterfront Park courtesy of Radio Disney’s Rockin’ Road Crew. If you can, be sure to stick around long enough to catch the 9:00 p.m. New Year’s Eve Sky Spectacular, a free




Arnold's Christmas Present to California: More Cuts! | California Progress Report


Arnold's Christmas Present to California: More Cuts! | California Progress Report:

Arnold's Christmas Present to California: More Cuts!
Posted on 25 December 2009

By Robert CruickshankShane Goldmacher got the scoop over at the LA Times on Arnold Schwarzenegger's plans to close the budget gap in January 2010: more cuts! Lots of cuts! Huge, wacko, crazy cuts!
Facing a budget deficit of more than $20 billion, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger is expected to call for deep reductions in already suffering local mass transit programs, renew his push to expand oil drilling off the Santa Barbara coast and appeal to Washington for billions of dollars in federal help, according to state officials and lobbyists familiar with the plan.
If Washington does not provide roughly $8 billion in new aid for the state, the governor threatens to severely cut back -- if not eliminate -- CalWORKS, the state's main welfare program; the In-Home Health Care Services program for the disabled and elderly poor, and two tax breaks for large corporations recently approved by the Legislature, the officials said....

What the feds owe us, and what we owe ourselves | California Progress Report


What the feds owe us, and what we owe ourselves | California Progress Report

What the feds owe us, and what we owe ourselves


Posted on 28 December 2009
By Pete Schrag
California Progress Report Columnist

Arnold Schwarzenegger isn’t the first California governor to complain that the state gets shortchanged in federal funding. California contributes more than its share in federal taxes and gets less than its share in federal programs, contracts and aid. But in a severe state budget crisis, the inequities, easy to slough off in good times, become harder to ignore and the injustice more infuriating.

Last week the governor dispatched a letter to California’s congressional delegation focused on the inequities in federal Medicaid funding (in California it’s Medi-Cal) , pointing out that states like Texas, Florida and Michigan are reimbursed at much higher rates for their costs than California. The difference between what California gets and the average of the ten largest states, he said, runs to $2.2 billion

The governor’s letter, which primarily concerns provisions of the pending federal health care bills, comes at almost the same moment as the leaks from his office that in his effort to close a project $20 billion deficit, again without new taxes, he’s planning to ask Washington for as much as $8 billion in new federal aid. How, or whether, the two are related isn’t clear.

What’s clear is that in a recession in which as many as one of every six Americans is either unemployed, underemployed in a part-time job or has given up looking for work altogether, the goal of economic recovery adds an even more urgent reason for additional federal funding.

More than ever, this is a time for significant federal aid to states, not only to protect existing jobs but, if possible, creating additional employment in education, road construction, park maintenance and other public sector programs. As Barack Obama’s first year in office comes to an end, hindsight makes it increasingly clear that

This Week In Education: AM News: States Spend 600 Hours On RTTT Applications


This Week In Education: AM News: States Spend 600 Hours On RTTT Applications



AM News: States Spend 600 Hours On RTTT Applications

Two teachers ordered to return more than $148,000 in overpayments LA Times
Two former Los Angeles teachers face a court order to return salary overpayments of more than $148,000, part of an increasingly aggressive push to retrieve $9.4 million from employees who were inadvertently caught up in its malfunctioning payroll system.
To get federal funds, schools must apply stronger measures to struggling schools Washington Post
If a public school struggles year after year, is the solution to shut it down? Fire everyone and start over? Hand the reins to a contractor? Or help teachers and principals raise their game?6a00e54f8c25c988340120a77999a7970b-200wi
Homework Applying for Education Grants New York Times
The Department of Education, preparing to give hundreds of millions of dollars in grants, estimated how long it should take each state to prepare its proposal: 681 hours.

D.C. Schools Chief Looks for New Breed of Educators PBS NewsHour
As part of a series of reports on school reform in the nation's capital, John Merrow checks in with D.C. schools chief Michelle Rhee, who has had to make difficult -- and controversial -- decisions regarding school closures and staff cuts.
Educator in Turbulent Times, Is Dead at 99 New York Times
Mr. Fischer led Baltimore to become the first large American city to integrate its public schools and brought reform to Teachers College of Columbia University as its dean and president.

Elk Grove Citizen : News


Elk Grove Citizen : News:
A teacher and a student honored







Memorials held for deceased at two high schools


"Tributes were paid last week to beloved individuals that two Elk Grove high schools each lost this fall.

One was a quiet, honor student who went out of his way to make origami paper roses for a classmate and the other was a celebrated teacher who fought Lou Gehrig’s Disease until the end.

Friends, colleagues, relatives and students honored them in memorials held at their campuses. These are their memories of Kenneth Ta and Carolyn Way.�

Student memorialized at Franklin High garden"

Girl's wish: N.J. study of reading disorders | Philadelphia Inquirer | 12/27/2009

Girl's wish: N.J. study of reading disorders | Philadelphia Inquirer | 12/27/2009:



Girl's wish: N.J. study of reading disorders



"The stuff on Samantha Ravelli's holiday wish list was pretty much standard fare for a 12-year-old. A digital camera, a watch, a laptop.

Her number-one wish, however, was in a class of its own.

She wants Gov. Corzine to sign her bill.

'I want to help other children,' she said.

The Ocean City, N.J., seventh grader and her mother, Beth, have been working the last few years to pass a law that would create a task force to better ensure that reading-disabled children like Samantha get the help they need.

The Senate passed her bill Dec. 10; the Assembly approved it in February. Sen. Jeff Van Drew (D., Cape May), a sponsor, said the Assembly needed to approve some changes before the measure went to the governor's desk."

Why the declines at private schools? | Philadelphia Inquirer | 12/27/2009


Why the declines at private schools? | Philadelphia Inquirer | 12/27/2009:


Why the declines at private schools?



"Some cite the economy and transfers to public schools. Others say it's a shortage of pupils and a long-term trend.

By Dan Hardy
Inquirer Staff Writer

Faced with the recession and rising tuition, are more parents at area private schools and their diocesan counterparts transferring their children to public schools to ease the strain on their pocketbooks?

Maybe.

School officials say it is difficult to measure the effect of the economy on enrollment because other factors are involved, including a declining number of school-age children and a long-term drop in the number of children in nonpublic schools.

But for Jacqui Coughlin and John Dewees, the answer is yes."

Charters’ funding is the fly in ed reform ointment - The Boston Globe


Charters’ funding is the fly in ed reform ointment - The Boston Globe:

"IT’S IRONIC that, just a week or two before state lawmakers vote on an education reform bill that would lift the cap on charter schools, two applications for charters in Lynn and one in Berkshire County are facing intense community opposition, while two existing charter schools in Springfield and Lowell face shutdowns."

When a sixth-grader at the C.T. Plunkett Elementary School in Adams asked Governor Deval Patrick during a recent visit why public money goes to charter schools, he explained that they are public schools, adding: “There are good ones and not so good ones, just as there are district schools that are good while others are not. We have a funding formula that is not good enough and needs to be fixed so that we’re not taking money away from district schools but supporting education in all different types of schools.’’

Patrick views the reform bill as aimed at “chronically underperforming’’ school districts. He acknowledges that the state lacks the money to support several proposed solutions for the charter school funding quandary.

As colleges add green majors and minors, classes fill up - USATODAY.com


As colleges add green majors and minors, classes fill up - USATODAY.com:

"Colleges are rapidly adding new majors and minors in green studies, and students are filling them fast.

Nationwide, more than 100 majors, minors or certificates were created this year in energy and sustainability-focused programs at colleges big and small, says the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education. That's up from just three programs added in 2005.

Two factors are driving the surge: Students want the courses, and employers want the trained students, says Paul Rowland, the association's executive director.

'There's a great perception that there's a sweet spot with energy to do good and do well, and it appears to be the place of job growth,' says Rob Melnick, executive dean of the Global Institute of Sustainability at Arizona State University."

Learning from afar taking UNLV far - Monday, Dec. 28, 2009 | 2 a.m. - Las Vegas Sun


Learning from afar taking UNLV far - Monday, Dec. 28, 2009 | 2 a.m. - Las Vegas Sun:

"Kimberly Townsend Little walked the stage at UNLV’s winter commencement ceremonies this month and picked up her doctorate in nursing.

For her, it was a rare visit to the campus.

She lives in North Carolina and completed her course work entirely online.

For Little, leaving home in pursuit of her doctorate wasn’t an option. She is not only an assistant professor of nursing education at Cabarrus College of Health Sciences in Concord, N.C., but also a single mother of three daughters — ages 17, 10 and 5."

To get federal funds, schools must apply stronger measures to struggling schools - washingtonpost.com


To get federal funds, schools must apply stronger measures to struggling schools - washingtonpost.com:

"If a public school struggles year after year, is the solution to shut it down? Fire everyone and start over? Hand the reins to a contractor? Or help teachers and principals raise their game?

As the federal government offers school systems an unprecedented $3.5 billion to revive schools, a huge increase for a reform program launched with $125 million in 2007, policymakers increasingly are prescribing stronger medicine for the lowest performers.

In years past, educators generally opted for the least invasive remedies. Most shied from state takeovers, shutdowns, conversion to a charter school and the like"

Restoring an educational gem's luster -- latimes.com


Restoring an educational gem's luster -- latimes.com:

"Great beaches, a gentle climate and the best system of public higher education in the country, maybe the world. California is famous for all three, but what it deserves abundant praise for is the last of those. How long it will continue to earn that praise is another matter. The state's visionary Master Plan for Higher Education, the engine that for years drove California toward educational leadership, and, as a result, economic leadership, is about to turn 50. It is not aging well.

The plan itself isn't to blame so much as the lack of money to carry it out. Right now, the dismal economy is driving deep cuts in higher education. But California has been giving short shrift to its public colleges and universities for years now, inching away from the promise of equal and affordable access based on merit."

Young journalists face real challenges | cincinnati.com | Cincinnati.Com

Young journalists face real challenges | cincinnati.com | Cincinnati.Com:

"It's quite possible that Lakota East seniors Kevin Li and Dana Sand will never earn a paycheck for journalism in their lives."




But that's irrelevant when the monthly deadline approaches for the duo's award-winning news magazine, Spark. Just as generations of high school journalists before them, the co-editors stay at school past 11 p.m. for weeks, corralling a staff of dozens, proofreading pages and making sure that last graphic is just right.
Spark - one of the country's best high school journalism publications - faces many of the same struggles professional journalism has:
Advertising sales are down more than 30 percent since 2005.
Printing costs soared.
The staff struggles with how to adapt to an evolving media environment and keep the attention of an elusive audience.

Freshman academies ease high school transition | courier-journal.com | The Courier-Journal

Freshman academies ease high school transition | courier-journal.com | The Courier-Journal:


"In a Fairdale High School classroom, a group of juniors and seniors counted out fake money for a special freshman activity — an auction in which the underclassmen would be encouraged to bid on the philosophical priorities that are important to them."




The auction's objective was twofold: to help establish a bond with the younger students, while teaching them an important lesson that will help them make the often intimidating leap to high school.
“We want them to have some fun with it, but we also want them to realize the importance of prioritizing certain things in their lives,” said 17-year-old senior Stacy Colmore. “It's something I wish I had learned when I was a freshman.”
The mentoring is one of many components of Fairdale's Freshman Academy — a program that provides a structured environment to help new students — and their families — so they are less likely to stumble when making the move from eighth grade to high school.

R.I. educators seek expanded ties with China | Education | projo.com | The Providence Journal


R.I. educators seek expanded ties with China | Education | projo.com | The Providence Journal:

"SMITHFIELD — School Supt. Robert M. O’Brien is still trying to adjust to the time change.

He, along with a contingent of educators from Smithfield, Lincoln, the Southern Regional Collaborative and the Rhode Island Superintendents Association, traveled to Beijing for a week earlier this month to attend the Fourth Confucius Institute Conference. It was the conversations with his counterparts in other parts of the world that amazed him.

“We were talking about things the commissioner was talking about in Rhode Island,” he said, “teacher quality, how to assess programs, a lot of the things we’re talking about in the United States, they were talking about globally.”"

Pittsburgh has some common sense, decides not to tax tuition � The Report Card


Pittsburgh has some common sense, decides not to tax tuition The Report Card:

"We all the know the Pennsylvania budget is a disaster. I mean when the mayor of Philadelphia is proposing shutting down courts and weekly trash collection to save money, you know there’s a serious problem.

But sometimes, people look for answers in all the wrong places. In Philadelphia, they decided to start taxing the arts (read the DP editorial that outlines why this is such a bad decision here).

In Pittsburgh, however, they took it to a whole new level of “bad idea:” they considered taxing tuition. In early November, Mayor Luke Ravenstahl proposed a 1 percent tax on tuition to bolster the city’s pension plan. This would have made Pittsburgh the first city in the country to have such a tax."

Legal aid program adds education to cause | Recordnet.com


Legal aid program adds education to cause | Recordnet.com:

"STOCKTON - Have an education issue that requires legal help but no money to hire an attorney?

No problem.

California Rural Legal Assistance, a nonprofit organization that serves the poor, is reaching out to disadvantaged families who need assistance in education matters such as expulsions, graduation issues, suspensions and the translation of important documents to languages other than English."

San Mateo Daily Journal


San Mateo Daily Journal Tough times on the horizon for schools:

Tough times on the horizon for schools

"Less money is expected for education next fall, but many fail to realized the state-issued cuts will be compounded by the loss of millions in one-time federal funds which helped local districts keep a number of programs and jobs this year.
California is predicted to end the current year with a $6.3 billion deficit and faces a $20 billion budget problem in the next year, according to the Legislative Analyst’s Office. Cuts to education will most likely be part of the plan. That coupled with the loss of one-time stimulus money, much of which was used to retain positions and programs, means there are a number of tough budget decisions ahead for local school districts."

In California Colleges, Coaches Face Furloughs and Fund-Raising - NYTimes.com


In California Colleges, Coaches Face Furloughs and Fund-Raising - NYTimes.com

"FULLERTON, Calif. — The best work done this year by Jill Hicks, the Cal State Fullerton gymnastics coach, did not involve a balance beam, a pommel horse or uneven parallel bars. It entailed shoe shopping and a manicure. Hicks was out recruiting the Olympic all-around gold medalist Nastia Liukin to ask for her help in saving Fullerton’s program, which the university was threatening to eliminate to make its budget."

The two women, introduced by another college coach, hit it off well enough that Liukin donated her time and a leotard — the one she wore during the 2007 world championships — to a fund-raiser that helped generate close to $30,000 for Hicks’s program.


The $400-a-plate luncheon with Liukin followed by an exhibition with the Fullerton and U.C.L.A. gymnastics teams drew about 1,000 supporters, most of them little girls in pigtails and their parents.

Opinion: Silicon Valley companies' help needed to shore up math education - San Jose Mercury News


Opinion: Silicon Valley companies' help needed to shore up math education - San Jose Mercury News:

"Thirteen-year-old Kayla Savage was failing math. Like many of her classmates in middle school, she hated the subject. Stuck in a large seventh-grade class with a teacher who had little time to offer individual help, Kayla was lost among rational numbers and polynomials.

Her frustration led to a phobia of math, an all-too-common affliction that often starts in middle school and threatens to derail students' future math studies in high school and chances for college.

Kayla is like thousands of students across America who struggle with math. The struggle in California is borne out by this grim U.S. Education Department statistic: Students in California rank 40th in eighth-grade math, a critical year in math learning that sets the path for math success in high school and beyond.

In Santa Clara County, only about 39 percent of eighth-graders meet the California standard for Algebra I proficiency. One study showed that less than one-third of eighth-graders have the skills or interest to pursue a math or science career. Yet these careers are the drivers of our future."

Sacramento joins battle against suit attacking Chicago gun controls - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee


Sacramento joins battle against suit attacking Chicago gun controls - Sacramento News - Local and Breaking Sacramento News | Sacramento Bee:

"The city of Sacramento regulates handguns and ammunition, and the City Council is willing to go to court to continue that role.

It voted recently to join other cities arguing in support of the city of Chicago, whose gun control ordinance is under review by the U.S. Supreme Court.
On March 2, the court will hear oral arguments in the case of McDonald v. Chicago, a case sponsored by the Second Amendment Foundation and the Illinois State Rifle Association."