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.

Bill Would Send Commissioner Choice To Voters

The Florida Senate

State Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart

Voters would once again choose Florida’s top education official if a bill proposed by a state senator becomes law.

Stuart Republican Sen. Joe Negron introduced the constitutional amendment to elect the Commissioner of Education Monday.

The commissioner has been appointed since voters amended the state constitution in 1998. Negron’s bill would also dissolve the state Board of Education.

“I think its time to restore public education to its proper place of stature along with agriculture, finance and our legal system which are the other Cabinet positions,” Negron told The Florida Current. “The current education system is confusing and ambiguous. I think it’s an unworkable structure and results in a diminution of focus on education in Florida.”

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What Are Texas’ Seven College Solutions?

Darren McCollester / Getty News Images

Are college reforms Gov. Rick Perry pushed in Texas coming to Florida?

The Texas model is doing to higher education what the Florida model did for K-12, at least according to supporters of the seven-point reform plan.

Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican, has been passing the plan around to higher education officials and has tentatively signaled his support in interviews. The reforms are a hallmark of Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry’s term as governor.

Critics argue the changes are the first step toward becoming diploma mills, encouraging grade inflation and discouraging research.

But just what do the “Seven Breakthrough Solutions” do?

In general, they would ask colleges to quantify their performance by calculating a cost-benefit analysis of instructors, offering bonuses for the best-performing professors and disclosing all of that data for students and the public.

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Hispanic College Enrollment Surges

Pew Hispanic Center

The number of Hispanic college students increased 24 percent in one year, according to a Pew Hispanic Center report released Thursday.

Hispanics age 18-24 now outnumber black students of the same age on college campuses. Nearly 350,000 more Hispanics were enrolled in college 2010 than in 2009, according to U.S. Census Bureau Data analyzed by Pew.

Pew attributed the gains more to rising educational attainment than population growth.

However, Hispanics earn bachelor degrees at a lesser rate than other ethnic and racial groups. Just 13 percent of Hispanic 25- to 29-year-olds had earned a bachelor’s degree, compared to 53 percent of Asians, 39 percent of whites and 19 percent of blacks in the same age group.

Hispanic graduation rates have reached an all-time high of 85.1 percent, Pew noted.

Education’s Florida Budget Competition

Florida House of Representatives

Rep. Jeff Brandes, a Pinellas County Republican

Education or health care?

That’s a choice Florida budget writers face, according to state Rep. Jeff Brandes, a Pinellas County Republican.

Brandes told WUSF’s Florida Matters that growth in Medicaid, the state-run health care program for the poor and disabled, was limiting the state’s ability to spend more on education. Medicaid has grown to 30.7 percent of the budget in the current spending plan from 22.2 percent of the budget in 2008.

That’s an increase of more than one-third in four years.

“How do we fund anything if 50 percent of the budget is Medicaid and education?” Brandes asked, noting the Legislature may have to take from public safety, transportation and other quality of life items.

Brandes’ numbers need some context if lawmakers’ decisions are being cast as health care versus education.

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Teacher Suspended Over Facebook Post Returns to Work

The Lake County teacher suspended over his Facebook comments critical of a New York law allowing gay marriage is back at work today, according to the Orlando Sentinel.

Jerry Buell chairs the social studies department at Mount Dora High School and was the school teacher of the year. Buell was suspended last week when he posted on social networking site Facebook that he “almost threw up” after hearing about a New York law allowing gay marriage.

District officials said at the time of Buell’s suspension that they were investigating whether he violated a district ethics policy to respect the “worth and dignity of every person.”

District officials would not say if Buell was reprimanded. That information will be available next week.

Do you agree with the decision? Should limits be placed on school district employees’ use of social media sites?

Can Technology Solve School Funding?

Florida House of Representatives

Florida State Rep. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican.

Technology could provide low-cost solutions for school districts struggling with tight budgets.

That’s what Pinellas County state Rep. Jeff Brandes, a Republican, said at a taping of WUSF’s Florida Matters this week. The show is looking at school issues as students head back to class.

Brandes believes schools can use technology to stretch their budgets. New revenue is unlikely because a tax increase is off the table, he said, and the economy is still slowly recovering from the Great Recession.

Brandes sits on the policy-setting House education committee, and said he favored both virtual charter schools and more widespread use of Apple iPads.

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Hillsborough Wins Principal Development Grant

The Wallace Foundation

Hillsborough County has won another national education grant, this time to improve principal training.

The Wallace Foundation announced Hillsborough was one of six districts to share a $75 million, six-year grant. Districts will receive $7.5 million to $12.5 million to develop programs in four areas: rigorous job requirements, high-quality training, selective hiring, and on-the-job evaluation and support.

The six districts are urban with a significant low-income population: Charlotte-Mecklenburg in North Carolina; Denver; Gwinnett County, Ga. in the Atlanta suburbs; New York City; and Prince George’s County, Md. in the Washington, D.C. suburbs.

Wallace will cover two-thirds of the funding, while the districts must cover the final third. Hillsborough won a $100 million Gates Foundation grant in 2009 to design teacher and administrator evaluations and a pay-for-performance system. Wallace officials said in a press release they chose the six districts because they already had programs to groom principals.

Virtual Schools Expand Students’ Network

Tim Chapman / Miami Herald

Felicia Brunson, (right), Liason between Florida Virtual School and Miami-Dade County Schools, talks to a group of instructors who will be running the labs along with Jeannine Schloss, a Virtual School instructional leader during an orientation on the virtual classes that will be required of students who enter ninth grade this year to graduate.

When does heading back to class not involve a school? When students tick off Florida’s new graduation requirement for an online course.

Miami Herald reporter Laura Isensee examined the advantages and criticisms of online schooling Sunday.

More than 150,000 Florida students will take virtual courses this year. Students told Isensee they liked the ability to work at their own pace, whenever and wherever they were ready to study.

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Teachers Believe Income Is Out of Their Hands

Joe Raedle / Getty News Images

Teachers rally in March to protest budget cuts, including requiring teachers to take a three percent pay cut to pay for pensions.

First grade teacher Elton Wright feels powerless.

He and his wife, also a teacher, are absorbing a 3 percent cut in pay required earlier this year by the Florida Legislature.

“People are angry,” said Wright, who teaches at Eagle’s Nest Elementary School in Orange County. “They feel as though this was forced on them. There were no options.”

Wright says he didn’t get into teaching for the money. He was willing to sacrifice take-home pay in exchange for benefits, such as a pension and good health insurance.

“We took less to get more,” Wright said.

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Feds Prioritize Deporting Undocumented Convicts Over Students

Jewel Samad / Getty News Images

President Barack Obama shakes hands after speaking about immigration in El Paso, Texas in May.

President Barack Obama’s administration announced it would prioritize deporting people convicted of crimes, while putting a lower priority on undocumented children who came to the U.S. when very young, military veterans and spouses of active duty military.

The announcement follows StateImpact Florida’s story Wednesday about students who have been granted a temporary reprieve from deportation by federal officials.The policy could allow more undocumented students to attend U.S. colleges.

Thursday’s White House announcement formalizes a policy already applied by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, giving local offices more say in which cases to pursue.

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