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Putting Education Reform To The Test

Monthly Archives: October 2011

Gaming the Merit Pay System

Joe Raedle / Getty News Images

Teachers protest budget cuts and Senate bill 736 -- now law -- in Miami in March.

Teacher merit pay systems need less objectivity and more accountability if they are to work, argues an economist at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute.

Rating and paying teachers based on student test scores is unlikely to improve teachers, writes Arnold Kling. It is easier to “game” the system if it is based on a simple formula, Kling wrote.

A new Florida law requires school districts to evaluate teachers and pay educators based on their performance. Half a teacher’s evaluation hinges on student Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test scores.

“People closest to the teacher, including peers, principals, and parents, have more information about teacher quality than what can be obtained by remote administrators relying on test scores,” Kling writes.

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Steve Jobs’ Education Legacy

Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

Steve Jobs' inventions, particularly the iPad, will leave a lasting impact on education

The death of Apple founder Steve Jobs is an education story as well as a business story.

Among the Jobs tributes flooding the Internet Wednesday night was this from the parent of an autistic child. Although the son does not talk, the parent wrote, he uses Apple’s iPad to communicate.

“Thank you Steve Jobs for helping my son,” the parent wrote on CNN’s iReport site. “You have given us hope we thought we would never have.”

The parent summed up Jobs’ impact on the son very simply: “Steve Jobs saved my son.”

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Schools You Think Are Charters… But Aren’t

Jamboid / Flickr

The sign says academy, but is it a charter school?

There are a lot of Florida schools that look and function like charters, but really aren’t.

And when we embarked on this series, we couldn’t always tell the difference between one public school with a focus on science and another public school with a focus on science. But it turns out there can be quite a bit distinguishing the two.

To help ease confusion, we’ve created a pop quiz for you.

1. A public school with a theme or academic focus is a… (Choose all that apply):

A. Charter school
B. Private school
C. An Academy
D. Magnet school

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Biden Tells Pasco Stories to Sell Jobs Plan

Win McNamee / Getty News Images

Vice President Joe Biden argued Congress should approve a jobs bill that includes $35 billion to add or maintain education jobs.

Pitching the effects on Pasco County elementary students, Vice President Joe Biden made a case for President Barack Obama’s jobs bill Tuesday.

Biden pulled plenty of local anecdotes for his stop at Oakstead Elementary School in Land O’ Lakes: The $54 million shortfall the district faced this year; the 513 jobs cut; the eight Oakstead teachers no longer working at the school.

Obama’s jobs bill, Biden said, would mean $35 billion across the country to add or preserve 400,000 education jobs.

The bill would mean 26,000 education jobs in Florida. Pasco County would get $40 million in emergency funding the county could use towards an expected $26 million deficit next year.

“No one can tell whether or not these shortfalls put these beautiful kids a month behind in their overall education?” Biden asked. “Six months? A year? Or two years? But the truth is it does slow down…their capacity to learn.”

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Inside Florida Charter School Contracts

Yesterday we looked at some of the misconceptions about how Florida charter schools must operate.

Today we’ll take a look at a couple of charter contracts to see the different requests school districts make of charter applicants. Seminole County asked Galileo School for Gifted Learning to abide by the class size limits for district schools, for instance, instead of the slightly more forgiving standards usually applied to charter schools.

Below is a Hillsborough County charter school contract. We’ve added some notes to point out important sections.

To read the contract of a Duval County charter school run by a for-profit firm, click here.

For Galileo School for Gifted Learning’s charter click here.

And finally, a Duval County charter high school here.

Saving Energy Also Means Less Money for Florida Schools

Kathleen High School Boosters

A Polk County high school under construction last year.

Florida schools will have little construction money next year after state economists reduced their estimate by 70 percent Monday.

Schools will have about $113 million available, down from the $380 million initially expected for the budget year beginning July 1, 2012.

Utility taxes provide much of the school construction fund, but economists said fewer people are buying electricity because businesses have closed or larger homes remain vacant. The school bond fund is being hit by a longer-term trend too: More consumers are buying energy-efficient appliances.

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Five Misconceptions About Charter Schools

If Michele Gill learned anything from helping open a Seminole County charter school this fall it’s this: Charter schools cannot do anything they want.

Despite some public perceptions, Gill said opening Galileo School for Gifted Learning has meant navigating a complicated network of state and federal regulations. Then school leaders have to make sure the local school board is happy with the plan, she said.

Gill is an education professor at the University of Central Florida and opened the school with UCF colleagues.

Joe Raedle / Getty News Images

Gov. Rick Scott visits an Opa Locka charter school earlier this year. Lawmakers approved a law making it easier for highly rated charter schools to expand.

Charter schools do have some big advantages, said Gill, but not as many as most people believe.

“These are expensive and difficult things to do and they’re very hard for a charter school to take care of,” she said. “What I have found out personally is they are quite restrictive. They are way more restrictive than a private school would be.

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