Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Yearly Archives: 2013

Florida Yet To Adopt New Science Standards Which Emphasize Climate Change

BBQ Junkie / Flickr

Florida has yet to join other states pledging to adopt new science standards which include teaching about human-caused climate change.

Florida is not helping lead efforts to develop new science standards, our colleagues at WLRN report, and it’s unclear if the state will adopt the standards.

The new standards would begin teaching students in elementary school about the effects of climate change.

The science standards are expected to be released next month. The Sunshine State is not one of the roughly 40 states which have said they will adopt the standards or may adopt the standards.

By contrast, Florida is leading the development of a new test to assess the new Common Core State Standards for math and English language arts. The new standards are scheduled to take effect for every Florida student beginning in the fall of 2014.

From the story:

Continue Reading

Why Hillsborough County Schools Add Extra Tests To The Schedule

DaveBleasedale / Flickr

State lawmakers might require school districts post a schedule of district-required tests online, something Hillsborough County schools and other districts already do.

The Hillsborough County school district website lists 38 different testing dates for high school students.

They range from Florida Comprehensive Assessment Tests and biology exams required to graduate high schools, to alternative tests for special needs students and personal fitness exams.

Not every student has to take every test — those personal fitness exams, for instance — and not every one is a state or federal requirement. Hillsborough County schools list them all on elementary, middle and high school calendars and note which ones are state requirements.

Florida lawmakers are debating a bill which would require all school districts to post a similar schedule online. State law already requires school districts to publish a schedule of state-required testing.

The bill’s sponsor says he wants the public to know that some school districts add dozens of additional tests on top of those required by the state or federal government. The proposal comes after a year filled with parents, students and school boards criticizing the emphasis state law puts on test results, particularly the FCAT.

Hillsborough County schools spokesman Stephen Hegarty said the district has posted its testing schedule since at least 2005. Miami-Dade schools and many other large- and medium-sized Florida districts also post a schedule.

Continue Reading

Florida Students Will Spend At Least Eight Hours A Year Taking New Standardized Test

Third grade students will spend at least eight hours a year taking Florida’s next standardized test, while high school juniors will spend nearly 10 hours a year to complete the new online exam.

A Florida 8th grader — taking the FCAT reading, math, science and writing tests — will spend 8 hours and 20 minutes on testing this year. Under the new exam scheduled for the 2014-2015 school year, 8th graders will have an additional 65 minutes of math and English language arts testing and will still have to take the 160-minute FCAT science exam.

PARCC

Third grade students will spend eight hours over the course of the school year completing Florida's next standardized test. High school juniors will spend nearly 10 hours on the new exam.

The test, known as the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers, or PARCC, will replace most of the current Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test. The test is designed to assess new education standards Florida, 44 other states and the District of Columbia have fully adopted, known as Common Core State Standards. Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia are partnering to develop PARCC.

Tuesday the coalition designing the test released new guidelines for states, including how much time students will spend taking the test and an interactive tool to help school districts determine how many computers and how much Internet bandwidth they will need.

Continue Reading

Gov. Scott Is Asking Nicely: Please Pay Teachers More

Joe Raedle / Getty Images News

Last year Gov. Rick Scott threatened a veto if lawmakers didn't match the education funding in his budget.

A year ago, Gov. Rick Scott drew a line in the sand for lawmakers listening to his State of the State speech.

Scott wanted $1 billion added to the K-12 education budget. Nothing less.

“And I ask you to please consider that recommendation very carefully,” Scott said, according to the prepared speech. “On this point, I just cannot budge. I ask you again today to send me a budget that significantly increases state funding for education.”

Lawmakers agreed.

Scott was back with another education-related request in his State of the State speech Tuesday, but this time his approach to winning support for across-the-board $2,500 raises for teachers was more carrot, less stick.

Scott argued teachers deserve a raise. And then he asked lawmakers to remember a a favorite teacher. Scott didn’t threaten a veto if lawmakers disagree.

“Like me, you all are probably here today thanks to a great teacher who believed in you,” Scott said. Then Scott asked for a show of support — at once literal and metaphorical.

“Will you please stand now in honor of that great teacher?”

Bill Would Require School Districts Post Testing Schedule

myfloridahouse.gov

Rep. Manny Diaz, Jr. wants school districts to post testing schedules for local assessments. They're already required to post schedules for statewide tests.

A House committee unanimously approved a bill requiring school districts to post standardized testing schedules online.

Districts are already required to post the schedule for state-mandated tests such as the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test.

Schools districts would have to identify additional testing they’ve required. Rep. Manny Diaz, Jr, R-Hialeah, said districts would have to post the schedule by October 1st of each school year.

“This allows for all of the stakeholders in the districts – parents, teachers community members – to know exactly what’s going going on and which tests are local tests, which tests are state mandated tests,” Diaz said.

Last year local school board members asked state lawmakers to put less emphasis on test results to assess student, teacher, school and district performance.

Diaz was asked why he wanted the rule to be in state statutes.

“There are some districts that already post their testing schedule, however it is not uniform across the state,” Diaz said. “I want to bring up that there are districts that have up to 151 additional tests.”

Continue Reading

Governor: ‘We Don’t Want A War On Teachers; We Want A War On Failure’

Jordan Michael/StateImpact Florida

Gov. Rick Scott addresses the Florida Legislature in his third State of the State speech.

Gov. Rick Scott delivered his State of the State speech this morning before the Florida Legislature.

After thanking lawmakers and family members, education was first on Scott’s agenda.

He said he has two priorities for growing the economy: remove the sales tax on manufacturing equipment, and invest in teachers by providing them “a well-deserved pay raise.”

“The single most important factor in student learning is the quality of teaching,” Scott said, repeating a line he used during his speech in 2011.

Scott mentioned some of his administration’s accomplishments, including the elimination of teacher tenure and the addition of performance pay that will take effect in 2014.

“We don’t want a war on teachers; we want a war on failure,” Scott said.

In the Democratic response, Sen. Chris Smith, D-Fort Lauderdale,said Scott started the war on teachers by proposing $1.3 billion in budget cuts after taking office.

Smith challenged Scott to “provide leadership to make sure the Legislature follows through” on the raises. Smith also urged Scott support raises for other state workers, such as prison guards.

Continue Reading

House Speaker Wants To Change ‘Culture Of Mediocrity’ In Higher Education

Myfloridahouse.gov/Meredith Geddings

House Speaker Will Weatherford is holding out for an online university in Florida.

House Speaker Will Weatherford banged the opening gavel in the Florida House this morning, introducing the 60-day session with a speech heavily focused on education.

He promised the continued “pursuit of a world-class, student-centered K-12 education system in Florida.”

But he said attention must be paid to higher education as well, because “education solves problems that government cannot.”

Weatherford encouraged lawmakers to break free from a “narrow vision that has encouraged a culture of mediocrity.”

Here are more of Weatherford’s remarks on higher education, including emphasizing a high-quality online university and granting the U.S.-born children of undocumented immigrants access to in-state tuition rates:

Continue Reading

Five Education Issues To Watch During The 2013 Florida Legislative Session

Gregory Moine / Flickr

The old Florida Capitol building in Tallahassee, with the new Capitol behind it. The 2013 Legislative session begins today.

The 2013 Legislative session officially opens today in Tallahassee. Lawmakers will meet for 60 days and with no election or redistricting, fewer high-profile issues and a small budget surplus, education could be a headline issue this year.

Here’s five things to watch as lawmakers return.

Budget: Teacher raises?

State analysts project Florida will have a small budget surplus this year. Gov. Rick Scott would like to give teachers an across-the-board $2,500 raise. Lawmakers like the idea of paying teachers more, but don’t like the idea of a standard raise after passing a law in 2011 requiring school district pay teachers based on student performance.

But lawmakers must also look down the road to new education requirements taking effect in the fall of 2014 and fall of 2015. In 2014 all Florida schools are scheduled to move to new education standards and an accompanying online test.

The following year lawmakers have required schools to deliver half of their lessons digitally, using iPads, Kindles or other devices. Supporters say digital curriculum and textbooks are more interactive and can be updated more easily. Students use high-tech devices everyday, and schools say students are comfortable using them for school as well.

Continue Reading

Bill Would Delay Next Generation Test Until Schools Have Technology Ready

russelljamith / Flickr

The chairman of the Senate education committee has filed a bill postponing the next generation of standardized tests until schools have the technology in place.

The chairman of the Senate education committee has introduced a bill postponing the next generation of standardized tests until Florida schools prove they have technology and broadband capable of handling the computerized tests.

Sen. John Legg’s bill, S.B. 1630, would require school and district information technology systems “be load tested and independently verified as appropriate, adequate, efficient, and sustainable” to handle the new test.

Whether Florida meets the Fall 2014 deadline for new, tougher education standards — known as Common Core State Standards — is shaping up to be a significant subplot during this year’s budget debate. With the new standards come a new standardized test, the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers.

But school districts say they’ll have to upgrade their technology for the computer-administered exam. The Florida Department of Education requested $441.8 million to upgrade school technology and Internet systems for the budget beginning July 1. Gov. Rick Scott requested $100 million, opting to request $480 million for an across-the-board $2,500 raise for teachers instead.

Continue Reading

Most Educators Say They Are Familiar With Next Generation Education Standards

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Education students at the University of Central Florida are learning how to use books and other materials to design lessons which meet Common Core standards. A survey of educators found most teachers were familiar with the new standards, and most had received at least two days of training on the new standards.

Seven out of ten educators in a national survey said they have had at least two days of training for new, tougher education standards adopted by Florida and 44 other states.

But more than half of those surveyed disagreed that their textbooks and curriculum were aligned with the new standards.

That’s according to a national survey from the EPE Research Center, part of the non-profit group which publishes Education Week.

The poll surveyed educators about how familiar they are with the Common Core State Standards. The standards are intended to be tougher, teaching fewer topics but expecting students to be able to demonstrate their knowledge and use evidence to defend their reasoning.

The standards will also allow for better comparison of student performance from state to state and internationally.

Florida schools have fully introduced the standards in kindergarten and first grade, with all grades scheduled to move to the new standards by the fall of 2014.

According to the poll, nearly one in four surveyed said they were not familiar with the Common Core math standards. Just 8 percent said they were not familiar with the Common Core English language arts standards. Similar percentages of teachers said they were not familiar with their current state standards.

Continue Reading

About StateImpact

StateImpact seeks to inform and engage local communities with broadcast and online news focused on how state government decisions affect your lives.
Learn More »

Economy
Education