Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

John O'Connor

Reporter

John O'Connor is the Miami-based education reporter for StateImpact Florida. John previously covered politics, the budget and taxes for The (Columbia, S.C) State. He is a graduate of Allegheny College and the University of Maryland.

A Q & A With Democratic Gubernatorial Candidate Nan Rich

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Nan Rich.

Nan Rich campaign

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Nan Rich.

Nan Rich is a former state Senator who was the first Democrat to announce she’s challenging Gov. Rick Scott in 2014.

Rich stopped by the WUSF studios Wednesday for a Florida Matters interview with Carson Cooper.

Here’s what she said about education. You can hear the full interview Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. on WUSF.

Q: When it comes to education, you were opposed to the so-called parent trigger bill, which would have given parents more of a say about what should be done with a failing public school. Critics called it a thinly-veiled attempt to turn things over to for-profit charter schools. If a public school is failing, why not give parents the option to do something about it?

A: We already do in this state. We already do.

We have five turnaround options in the state of Florida. And one of them includes allowing parents to go to their school board and ask for a school to become a charter school. The difference is that bill was talking about for-profit management companies coming in and taking over a failing school.

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PARCC Multi-State Test Still An Option For Many At Education Summit

Florida's relationship with PARCC is still up in the air.

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Florida's relationship with PARCC is still up in the air.

What’s the status of Florida’s relationship with the multi-state test being designed to test new Common Core State Standards? It’s complicated.

The Partnership for Assessment of College and Careers was originally thought to replace most of the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test beginning in 2015. Florida is one of 20 states working on the test, paid for by a federal grant. Florida manages the money for the project.

But a couple of problems have put Florida’s continued participation in PARCC in doubt.

The first is the growing acceptance that Florida school districts won’t have the computers and Internet bandwidth needed to administer the online test by the original 2015 deadline. The other issue is that PARCC tests are longer — taking twice as much time in some cases — as the FCAT tests they are replacing.

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At Scott’s Education Summit, A Common Core Counter-Revolt At Table 1

Florida School Boards Association director Wayne Blanton, Miami-Dade Superintendet Alberto Carvalho, and state Sen. Bill Montford debate why they are debating Common Core State Standards.

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Florida School Boards Association director Wayne Blanton, Miami-Dade Superintendet Alberto Carvalho, and state Sen. Bill Montford debate why they are debating Common Core State Standards.

Table 1 was not going to play along.

The organizers of Gov. Rick Scott’s education summit had broken the three-dozen attendees into groups and asked them to write “vision statements” about the Common Core State Standards. The groups would pick and choose their favorite statements

But Table 1 – where two superintendents, the president of the PTA, the head of the Florida School Boards Association, a union leader and state Sen. Bill Montford were seated – thought the exercise was busy work.

It had been three years since Florida adopted Common Core State Standards, which outline what students should know in math and English language arts at the end of each grade. Florida is one of 45 states that have fully adopted the new standards.

In the meantime, Indiana had put implementation of the standards on hold, and other states had second thoughts about the standards. In Florida, too, critics have complained that the standards reduced local control over education and would not improve schools.

But Table 1 was unmoved. Despite complaints from those on the political right and left, the standards were a done deal.

Why were they wasting their time, Table 1 asked?

“I’d rather spend time on other issues,” said Bay County school superintendent Bill Husfelt. “This has already been decided.”

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What’s The Goal For Gov. Scott’s Education Summit?

Interim Education Commissioner Pam Stewart.

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Interim Education Commissioner Pam Stewart.

Why are three dozen parents, teachers, principals, business leaders and others spending three days in Clearwater talking about education?

That’s what reporters asked interim Education Commissioner Pam Stewart about this week’s summit called by Gov. Rick Scott.

During a break Monday, Stewart took questions from reporters. What exactly did she hope to accomplish? Stewart said she’s here to listen, but it isn’t clear what else might come from the three-day meeting.

Here’s an excerpt of the Q & A:

Q: What kind of consensus are you trying to reach? And what are you planning on telling the governor about this event?

A: It certainly is a great opportunity to bring everyone together. I’m so appreciative to Gov. Scott that he has provided this opportunity, but his focus is on education and he believes that this is such an important opportunity to bring everyone together and to hear from everyone.

And what we plan to gain is to listen, to hear what everyone has to say, to hear what’s most important, how we want to focus on Florida’s students, moving the bar, moving ahead and keeping the focus on education and doing the right thing for our students.

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Three-Day Education Summit Underway In Clearwater

Miami-Dade superintendent Alberto Carvalho introduces himself at Gov. Rick Scott's education summit.

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Miami-Dade superintendent Alberto Carvalho introduces himself at Gov. Rick Scott's education summit.

Florida educators have kicked off a three-day education summit in Clearwater to discuss standards, testing, the state school grading formula and teacher evaluations.

Gov. Rick Scott invited more than three dozen people to the summit, including parents, teachers, principals, superintendents, representatives from unions and other professional groups, lawmakers, business leaders and others.

So far, participants have introduced themselves and laid out their policy beliefs by way of praising strengths of Florida’s accountability system. Department of Education staff is briefing attendees on the four summit topics.

Interim education commissioner Pam Stewart said the state has a “moral, ethical and legal obligation” to make sure tests actually measure Florida’s education standards. Stewart also said the formulas for school grades and teacher evaluations should be easy to understand.

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What To Watch At This Week’s Education Summit

Gov. Rick Scott has called a three-day education summit in Clearwater, starting today. Will Scott stake out new positions on Common Core, testing, school grades or teacher evaluations?

Staff / Reuters/Landov

Gov. Rick Scott has called a three-day education summit in Clearwater, starting today. Will Scott stake out new positions on Common Core, testing, school grades or teacher evaluations?

Gov. Rick Scott has called state education leaders together for a three-day summit in Clearwater starting today.

Scott has put four items on the agenda: State education standards known as Common Core; the test which will assess those standards and (mostly) replace the FCAT; how Florida should revise its A-through-F school grading formula; and teacher evaluations, which state law requires are based in part on student test scores.

The governor, State Board of Education and Republican legislative leaders have supported all four ideas for years. But cracks have started to form on some issues.

State Board of Education members have criticized the school grading formula’s complexity. Lawmakers had to adjust the teacher evaluation law to eliminate teachers being evaluated on students who were never in their classroom. And Common Core has riled education activists on the political right and left who worry about a once-size-fits-all education system, loss of local control, more testing and more.

And Scott is running for reelection. He’s struggled to boost his poll numbers since taking office in 2011. He’s taken more of an interest in education issues recently, calling for more school funding after initially calling for cuts and pushing for teacher raises.

Here’s what we’re watching at the summit this week:

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Feedback Loop: What Readers Think Of Common Core Standards

Readers tell us what they think of Common Core standards.

Merrycrafts / Flckr

Readers tell us what they think of Common Core standards.

All week we’ve been posting answers from teachers to three questions about the Common Core State Standards (Part 1 is here, part 2 is here, part 3 is here and a superintendent is here).

One criticism we’ve received from readers is that no teacher is going to bash the standards or training they received if they want to keep their job. Readers (not all from Florida) have also weighed in with their own thoughts on the standards.

Michael Paul Goldenberg is a math teacher who also writes about math education. He says Common Core rearranges topics — that means some teachers will teach topics which they never have before:

Here’s what you’ll never hear from a teacher who hopes to keep his/her job:

1) I received little (or NO) preparation for teaching the Common Core.

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Three Questions For Teachers About Common Core Standards, Part 3

Teresa Stillman teaches at Cannella Elementary in Hillsborough County.

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Teresa Stillman teaches at Cannella Elementary in Hillsborough County.

Here’s another round of Q & A with teachers about the switch to Common Core State Standards. part 1 is here and part 2 is here.

Name: Teresa Stillman
School: Cannella Elementary in Hillsborough County
Teaches: Fifth Grade
Experience: 17 years

Q: How well prepared do you feel for the switch to Common Core?

A: I think I feel really well-prepared. The math department has been really good about phasing in lots of training for us. In our faculty meetings at school we’ve been talking about them. And the kids have started them in Kindergarten and first grade too, so my kids will have a background by the time they get to me – which is nice.

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Hillsborough County’s Parent University Is Back In Session

Joanne Land, right, sorts vocabulary words into tiers to learn more about how Common Core standards work. Land was one of hundreds of parents who attended a recent Parent University session. Many parents said they wanted to learn more about Common Core standards and testing.

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Joanne Land, right, sorts vocabulary words into tiers to learn more about how Common Core standards work. Land was one of hundreds of parents who attended a recent Parent University session. Many parents said they wanted to learn more about Common Core standards and testing.

School is back in session, and so is Parent University.

Parent University is a partnership between the Alliance for Public Schools and the Hillsborough County school district. Parents can take classes to learn more about district school choice offerings, the transition to middle or high school and how to find financial aid for college. Some sessions are offered in Spanish.

We’ve focused on Parent University teaching parents about Common Core State Standards and new exams.

The first event is planned for Saturday at Plant City High School. That session is full, but additional Parent University sessions are planned for Sept. 28 at Jefferson High School and Oct. 26 at Gaither High School.

To learn more about Parent University, read our story from May or click the audio link above. To learn more about the Alliance for Public Schools, read this story.

This Week In Education Polling

New school year, new education polls -- often with conflicting results.

Martin Deutsch / Flickr

New school year, new education polls -- often with conflicting results.

The start of the school year in Florida and many parts of the country has meant a glut of new education polls asking about shared education standards, standardized testing, teacher evaluations and policies adopted by Florida and other states.

The most noteworthy poll is the annual Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup poll of education issues. This is the 45th year of the poll. The poll sampled 1,001 adults and had a margin of error of 3.8 percent.

The PDK/Gallup poll found broad belief that two major education reforms will have little effect on U.S. schools.

Just 22 percent of respondents said the increased use of standardized testing to measure school performance has helped. 36 percent of those who responded said the testing has hurt schools, while 41 percent said it made no difference.

Florida is one of 45 states which has fully adopted new education standards known as Common Core, but the PDK/Gallup poll shows only 38 percent of those responding had heard of Common Core. Even for those with children in public schools, less than half were familiar with Common Core.

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