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Putting Education Reform To The Test

Monthly Archives: May 2013

“Do I Have The Discipline?” And Other Questions You Should Ask Before Signing Up For An Online Degree

Governor Rick Scott signed a broad-ranging education bill this session that—among many changes—establishes an entirely online bachelor’s degree program through the University of Florida.

The University of Florida will offer bachelors degrees that can be completed entirely online.

Marin / freedigitalphotos.net

The University of Florida will offer bachelors degrees that can be completed entirely online.

UF already has experience offering online courses and degree programs that allow students to finish the last two years of a bachelor’s degree online. But this is the first time a Florida university—or any state school in the country—will offer an entirely digital degree.

Still, there are models for what this new online institution at UF might look like. Models like Western Governors University—a private, not-for-profit university with more than 40,000 students in 50 states.

WGU president Robert Mendenhall has been with the school since 1999. He spoke with StateImpact Florida about lessons learned and what UF administrators and students can expect of online degree programs.

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Tweet That: Bush’s Foundation Not Giving Up On Parent Trigger Bill

Foundation For Florida's Future

The Foundation for Florida's Future is out with a new video after the defeat of the parent trigger bill. A provision of the bill lives on after it was added to another piece of legislation.

The Foundation for Florida’s Future isn’t giving up on the parent trigger bill. They’re asking people to announce their support on Twitter and other social media with ready-made post to cut and paste.

The bill — officially titled Parent Empowerment in Education — would give parents more power in choosing how to change a chronically failing school.

But it died this week, just as it did last year, in a 20–20 tie vote in the Senate.

The foundation, an education policy organization founded by former Gov. Jeb Bush, sent an email today with the subject line: “We will not ignore parents.”

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Who Supports, Opposes The Common Core?

Elle Moxley / StateImpact Indiana

Common Core opponents rallied in January at the Indiana statehouse.

Earlier this week we told you why opponents of new education standards fully adopted by 45 states have found less traction in Florida than in Indiana, Alabama and other states.

The standards, known as Common Core State Standards, will allow Florida to compare students performance to other Common Core states and students around the globe.

Our colleagues in Indiana — as part of our “Core Questions” series — answered a reader question about who supports and opposes the Common Core and why.

There are three top reasons why people support the Common Core, StateImpact Indiana’s Elle Moxley writes:

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Teachers May Receive Raises Sooner Than June 2014

Mark Foley/myfloridahouse.gov

House Speaker Will Weatherford and Senate President Don Gaetz say teachers may get their raises sooner than expected, but the size of the raises will be based on performance.

Teachers might not have to wait another year for a raise after all.

Leaders in the Florida Legislature are working on a fix to the education budget that provides $480 million in raises for teachers and other school personnel.

But according to the budget, that money won’t be in paychecks until June 2014.

Lawmakers say a technical fix should get teachers their raises before next year.

“We need to give the school districts a little more flexibility to spend that money sooner, and we can do that in a conforming bill,” House Speaker Will Weatherford said.

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