Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Monthly Archives: December 2011

Florida Governor Promises Investment in Education Despite Funding Gap

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Gov. Rick Scott sees a brighter future for Floridians through higher education. In a letter to newspaper editorial boards around the state, Scott said education pays off through “higher earnings and lower unemployment rates.” Then he addressed the money issue.

For the school year beginning next fall, he wrote that Florida’s student population is expected to climb by at least 30,000. If funding levels stay the same, Scott says that’s an automatic increase in education spending of $191 million. But local revenues continue to slide, leaving districts with $200 million less than they currently have to spend. Then there’s the loss of $780 million in federal funding. It’s ugly, and the result, says Scott, is an expected budget hole of $1.2 billion dollars just for the state’s schools.

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Florida Charter Group Has Short Legislative Wish List

Florida House of Representatives

Republican Rep. Janet Adkins has introduced a bill intended to equalize funding for charter and district school students.

A new charter school advocacy group has just one item on their Legislative agenda come January — Equal funding for charter schools students.

The group, the Florida Charter School Alliance, said a 2010 Ball State University survey showed Florida charter schools receive $2,749 less, on average, per student than district schools.

That 25.1 percent gap put Florida among states with a “severe” difference in funding charter and district schools Most of that Most of the difference comes from the roughly $2,000 additional dollars district schools receive in local tax dollars.

So the group is getting behind HB 903, sponsored by Fernandina Beach Republican Rep. Janet Adkins. Adkins sits on a number of education committees, and is vice-chairman of the PreK-12 Appropriations subcommittee.

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Florida Hazing Death Under FDLE Investigation

tampabay.com

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is now investigating the death of a Florida A&M University (FAMU) student who had reportedly been hazed by his fellow band mates. 26-year-old Robert Champion died shortly after he collapsed on a bus in Orlando, where he and other members of FAMU’s famed Marching 100 were performing.

Governor Rick Scott decided the state should be involved in the death investigation. In a meeting with reporters last week, he said, “I think it’s very important that we do a thorough investigation, and I think it’s also important that we review our hazing policies…When things like this happen, you’ve got to make sure in your organization, our universities in this case, that people feel comfortable coming forward, you know, if they see something like this because I don’t want this to ever happen again.”

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Governor’s Proposed Parent Trigger Law Looms for Florida Educators

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We’ve heard about Governor Rick Scott’s proposed “parent trigger law,” which would give parents the power to shut down low performing schools and transform them into charter schools.  Now we’re hearing from some of the people who would be impacted by the change.

Maria Mendoza’s daughter attends an underperforming elementary school in Ft. Myers. She told the Fort Myers News-Press the school and the teachers could be better. Her daughter took it a step further, saying she likes the school, “but they could teach the subjects better.” 

Most districts offer some sort of school choice program, and many are mulling how to make those programs work for more kids. The parent trigger bill hasn’t been filed with the Florida Legislature yet, but the kind of reform it would bring has long been part of Gov. Scott’s agenda.

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Scholarships and Housing Follow ’60 Minutes’ Profile of Homeless Florida Students

60 Minutes

Austin and Arielle Metzger discuss living in a truck with '60 Minutes'' Scott Pelley.

Two Seminole County students living in a truck became the face of the Great Recession thanks to Sunday’s ’60 Minutes’ profile.

Stetson University put on its white hat and rode to their rescue Thursday.

The DeLand school offered Arielle, 15, and Austin Metzger, 13, full scholarships. School president Wendy Libby told the Orlando Sentinel the school community demanded to help after seeing Arielle in a Stetson t-shirt,

The scholarships are just part of what the Metzger family said has been an avalanche of support. Seminole County schools said they have also been overwhelmed with offers to support the district’s homeless students program.

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Florida Among the Leaders in Improving Education Data

A survey that tracks the way states use data to improve the quality of education finds progress across the board. The data could be anything from individual standardized test scores to the performance of whole school districts.

The Data Quality Campaign is in its seventh year. More than fifty organizations around the country are now part of the effort to get state leaders focused on improving the use of education data. The idea is to quickly and easily get mounds of information to as many people as possible. The hope is that easily accessible data will lead to more informed decision-making by teachers, students, parents, and even lawmakers. Ultimately, the campaign sees better student outcomes as a result.

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