Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Florida Senate To Decide Whether To Pull Parent Trigger

The Florida Senate

Opponents of the parent trigger have urged constituents to call Sen. Ronda Storms.

The parent trigger debate could reach its conclusion today, with the Senate scheduled to vote of the bill.

The vote is expected to be very close, and supporters and opponents have stepped up their efforts this week.

A StateImpact Florida reader says she got a phone call yesterday urging her to call Sen. Ronda Storms and tell her to vote against the bill. The general tone of the call was that Darth Vader was attempting to takeover Florida schools through the proposed parent trigger legislation, she says.

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Lawsuit Challenges Schools’ Ability To Restrain Students

Joe Gratz / Flickr

An Ohio state agency is suing Columbus public schools over the use of “seclusion rooms often used to isolate special needs students, according to our colleagues at StateImpact Ohio.

Florida also allows schools to seclude and restrain students with disabilities. The state places a few limits on schools: Students can not be choked or their breathing restricted; and schools can not turn off the lights in a room where a student is secluded.

A bill proposed this year would have placed additional limits on schools, such as requiring anyone placing restraints on a student to be trained by the school district and requiring a medical evaluation after a student has been restrained.

That bill is in a Senate committee as the session winds down its final days.

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Budget Deal Ties Up USF’s Loose Ends

Amy Kellogg / Flickr

The legislative budget deal ties up a number of loose ends with the University of South Florida.

The fight over whether to create an independent 12th university from the University of South Florida Polytechnic provided the most dramatic moments of this year’s legislative budget debate.

Students bused up to the Capitol to protest. Newsrooms flooded the zone and made it the big story. And senators questioned their colleagues’ motives — and candidness.

Lawmakers wrapped up a budget deal this week, with the key concession to Senate budget chairman JD Alexander to create the new university. Here’s a wrap-up on everything USF-related in the budget:

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Pinellas School Board Recommends Closing Charter School With Scientology Ties

Pinellas County school

Pinellas County schools interim superintendent John Stewart recommended closing Life Force Arts and Technology Academy.

Bonnie Harvin says her 11-year-old daughter is doing well at Life Force Arts and Technology Academy in Clearwater.

“She’s a straight A student,” says Harvin. “Her FCAT scores are above grade level. So yes, I do think she has improves. A lot”

But Pinellas County school board members say the evidence to close Life Force is “overwhelming.” The charter school is in bankruptcy, it changed its curriculum without permission and it’s failing to serve students with disabilities.

“If corrections can not be made then I think we should close the school,” says school board member Carol Cook.

The school uses a controversial curriculum from the Church of Scientology, first reported by the Tampa Bay Times. But school board members said Scientology did not affect their decision.

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Parents Say They Were Shut Out On ‘Parent Trigger’ Debate

Florida House

Rep. Mike Bileca is one of a handful of sponsors of the 'parent trigger' legislation. Parent groups opposing the bill feel they have been shut out of debate.

Education activists say Florida lawmakers have repeatedly shut down public comment on a bill that would allow parents to choose how to restructure

Fund Education Now, 50th No More and other groups critical of Florida’s recent education policy say that at each of three State House hearings on the so-called ‘parent trigger’ bill, those opposing the idea had little or no time to make their arguments. The parents noted they drove several hours, hired babysitters and missed time with their children to travel to Tallahassee.

UPDATE: Parent Revolution, the California-based group that supports parent trigger legislation nationwide says Florida unions are creating “boogeymen.”

A Senate committee approved the bill Saturday and it now heads to the Senate floor. The House approved the bill last week. Here’s all you need to know about the ‘parent trigger.’

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Colbert: Florida Teacher Charged With Registering Voters “Destroying America”

Last night comedian — er — conservative talk show host Stephen Colbert took on the story of Dawn Quarles, a teacher at Pace High School in the Panhandle. Quarles faces a $1,000 fine for charges she violated Florida’s new law placing strict limits on who can register voters.

Colbert declared Quarles, and other teachers, were “People Who Are Destroying America.”

Colbert’s piece clearly makes the case Quarles was trying to promote voter fraud. It also suggests high school students might jump from a second story window if they are prematurely registered to vote.

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Senate Panel Wants School Grade Changes To Wait

The Florida Senate

Sen. David Simmons wants more time to study proposed school grade changes.

Senate lawmakers have pumped the brakes on a Department of Education plan to rewrite rules for grading schools, according to the Miami Herald.

School officials, parent groups and advocates for the disabled have criticized the plan, which would have resulted in 230 additional school earning ‘F’ grades. Education Commissioner Gerard Robinson and the Board of Education have already toned down the initial proposal.

Lawmakers want more time. A Senate committee proposed delaying the new grades by a year.

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USF Poly Puts Staff, Student Recruiting On Hold

Phil Coate / Associated Press

Polk County Sen. JD Alexander is pushing legislation that would turn USF Poly into the state's 12th university.

The University of South Florida Polytechnic is not recruiting faculty or students while lawmakers debate the school’s future, its interim regional chancellor told The Lakeland Ledger.

From the story:

It’s not an atmosphere under which a quality academic staff can be drawn in, said Touchton. “We just feel like we need to wait and see what happens.” Advertisements ­previously posted for various open positions have been discontinued.

And it does not make sense to actively recruit students, either, he said.

“We cannot be disingenuous,” he said. “That’s all there is to it.”

USF Poly recruiters expressed concerns last week about continuing to seek new students with all of the uncertainty now surrounding the university.

Socrates “Needs Improvement”

wallyg / Flickr

Death of Socrates by Jacques Louis David

What’s Socrates’ value-added score, and would he be able to keep his job?

Probably not, according to a humorous post at a ASCD, the nation’s largest curriculum organization.

Here’s the clever finish:

The results were posted in the Agora for all to see  the quality and performance of their teacher.   Socrates failed.    He simply spent too much time asking them to think.   A walk-through evaluation by his supervisor (undisclosed), determined that “ sometimes Socrates’s  students meander through endless dialogues examining challenging questions that do not have one right answer.”

Clarification: This post was updated to change the identification of ASCD, which is a curriculum organization.

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