Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Report: Florida Universities Improve Grad Rates While Keeping Costs Down

cooldesign/freedigitalphotos.net

Florida gets high marks in a national report for keeping university costs down while improving graduation rates.

A new report finds Florida’s public university system is a good model in affordability for the rest of the country.

Florida Rising: An Assessment of Public Universities in the Sunshine State analyzed cost, administrative and academic spending, curriculum, and graduation rates at Florida’s 11 universities.

(Florida Polytechnic University – the 12th in the system – doesn’t begin classes until August 2014.)

The American Council of Trustees and Alumni (ACTA) and The James Madison Institute are the groups behind the assessment.

“Overall, Florida public universities are on a prudent and successful course during these difficult economic times,” researchers wrote. “Significant challenges and difficult decisions over priorities remain. It is clear, however, that Florida has high potential to be a model for other states.”

While state funding for the system fell from $2.6 billion to $1.7 billion between 2007 and 2012, the report finds a six-year graduation rate of 66 percent – putting Florida in the top ten nationally.

Continue Reading

Science Education Group Seeking Florida Support For New Standards

Andrew Huff / Flickr

Advocates for new science standards are asking Florida supporters to speak up.

Advocates for new science standards are urging Florida residents to voice their support.

The concept for the science standards is separate, but similar to that of the math and English language arts standards which comprise the Common Core. Florida, 44 other states and the District of Columbia have fully adopted the Common Core standards.

The California-based National Center for Science Education is urging Florida members to voice their support for the standards, known as the Next Generation Science Standards, during a comment period this month. Supporters are worried the Florida Department of Education might back away from the science standards the public response is negative.

The standards include teaching students about evolution and human-caused climate change. State education leaders are reviewing the standards across the country and deciding whether they want to adopt them.

“We understand that the NGSS isn’t perfect and some folks have legitimate concerns about them,” three members of Florida Citizens for Science wrote in an email to members. “But overall, the NGSS are a significant improvement over our current state standards. Quite frankly, it’s unlikely that any future state-level effort could match the effort and resources that went into the NGSS.”

Florida has led the charge for Common Core. But the Next Generation Science Standards, have been a different matter.

Continue Reading

Why Foundations Must Help Florida Schools Make The Digital Switch

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Chris Pfahler, who manages the STEMsmart program for the Gulf Coast Community Foundation.

Sarasota County school could not have renovated 50 classrooms and stuffed them with high-tech learning tools without the help of the Gulf Coast Community Foundation.

The foundation saw a need to improve science, technology, math and engineering education, or STEM, in Sarasota and Charlotte counties, says Chris Pfahler, who manages the foundation’s STEMsmart program. So the Gulf Coast Community Foundation came up with a plan which will eventually renovate and equip 142 middle school classrooms.

The non-profit helped raise money for the $2.2 million project, which included securing pledges for equipment from Texas Instruments and Hewlett-Packard. They also guided the project through its conception, seeking out design tips from teachers and students.

School districts around the state may need to consider a similar transformation to their classrooms. That’s because lawmakers have required Florida school districts to deliver have of all instruction digitally by the fall of 2015.

It’s a big task and many school districts have made little progress.

“We had a guy from the state who talked about the technology issues,” Pfahler says of a recent meeting. “He said: ‘A third of the money is going to come from the state. A third of the money is going to come from the school district. And a third of the money is going to come from…wherever.’”

Continue Reading

Governor’s Office Answers Questions About Teacher Raises

Paul Gooddy/freedigitalphotos.net

Districts will negotiate with collective bargaining units to determine salary increases for teachers and other school employees.

A lot of teachers must be wondering exactly how the state plans to dole out $480 million in newly approved educator raises.

The governor’s office has created a list of frequently asked questions about the salary increases.

The answers make it clear that the districts must negotiate the pay hikes with the local teachers union – something House Speaker Will Weatherford pointed out before the Legislature approved the funding.

Gov. Rick Scott requested $2,500 across-the-board raises for teachers starting July 1st.

What he got was a compromise. The Florida Legislature found the money for raises, but it won’t be spent exactly as the governor intended.

Teachers will get a pay hike, but so will administrators and other school personnel. Charter and virtual school employees are included.

In some cases, districts may decide that teachers who earn “highly effective” ratings on their evaluations will get more than those rated as “effective.”

Districts must submit their plans for the money to the Florida Department of Education.

Here is a portion of the FAQ list released by the Governor’s Office:   Continue Reading

Sarasota County’s High-Tech Classrooms Have A Starring Role

John O'Connor / StateImpact Florida

Actress Mayim Bialik works on math problems with Sarasota County middle school students (from left) Amanda Folsom, Daphne Waggener and Gracie Brasacchio.

The algebra problem asked the Sarasota County middle school students to figure out how much Sheldon, Amy and Howard – characters on the television show “The Big Bang Theory” – spent on tickets and popcorn while seeing “The Lord of The Rings.”

The students talked through their work in small groups around the room. A tutor helped them set up the equations.

The tutor? Mayim Bialik, who plays Amy on “The Big Bang Theory.”

“We would usually set one equal to the other and then substitute it in,” Bialik said to Brookside Middle School math teacher Brenda Fuoco. “It’s the same concept, right?”

“Absolutely, I teach them three different methods,” Fuoco said. “That’s their least favorite method.”

“Why is that their least favorite?” Bialik asked. “That’s the most logical to me?”
Bialik, 37, is known her television roles, such as the title character on the 90s sitcom “Blossom.”

Bialik has also earned a Ph.D. as a neurobiologist, taught and now works with Texas Instruments to promote science, technology, math and engineering education. But the real star of her visit Tuesday to Sarasota Middle School were new high-tech science and math classrooms.

Continue Reading

Read Florida’s New Law Targeting Online Bullying

annavann / Flickr

A new Florida law targets bullying, particularly online.

Last week Gov. Rick Scott signed a bill targeting bullying, HB 609, into law.

The law makes three big changes: Students can be bullied publicly or privately; defines cyberbullying as harassment using electronic means, such as email or impersonating someone online; and allows schools to get involved if off-campus bullying affects the targeted student’s on-campus education.

The law does not require school districts to monitor off-campus activity. The law also requires schools to teach staff and students about how to identify bullying and what to do if they see it.

We’ve posted the new law and noted some of the key changes, after the jump.

Continue Reading

What We Learned In School: Teaching Is Hard. And Rewarding.

Neyda Borges

Neyda Borges teaches at Miami Lakes Educational Center.

Here at StateImpact Florida, we spend a lot of time investigating the policies that affect education in Florida.

This school year, we had loads to talk about: Common Core standards, changes to high school graduation requirementsthe end of FCAT and the search for its replacementsexpanded online education options, a one-time teacher pay raise.

But two weeks ago, we asked you: What did you really learn in school this year?

One of the responses came from Neyda Borges, a teacher at Miami Lakes Educational Center. She wrote this essay about what she learned in school this year:

Continue Reading

What Florida Data Say About The Effect Teachers Have On Math And Reading

emmajanehw / Flickr

Fabric based on the Dick and Jane reading instruction series.

The New York Times takes a look at why teachers have a tougher time improving reading performance than math performance.

In part, it’s because math lessons are more discrete. A quiz can tell you which math concepts a student is having problems with, as a teacher notes in the story.

But reading builds on many skills — vocabulary, grammar, contextual knowledge — and it is difficult to pinpoint just which one is the trouble spot. Reading deficiency may be more of a problem than math deficiency long term, educators say.

Data from Florida’s first round of statewide teacher evaluation data helps put a finer point on the difference.

Continue Reading

Orange County Schools Want To Set An Example During Switch To Common Core And Digital Instruction

ocps.net

Orange County Superintendent Barbara Jenkins and Chairman Bill Sublette focused their State of the Schools speech on changes in curriculum and technology.

Orange County schools superintendent Barbara Jenkins says the district should be a leader as they switch to new education standards and add more required digital instruction.

“Orange County Public Schools intends to be at the forefront of that change,” Jenkins said during her “State of the Schools” address last week with school board Chairman Bill Sublette.

The two spoke about “schools of the future” and what it will take to make Orange County, one of the nation’s largest school districts, the “top producer of successful students in the nation.”

So, it’s out with the old and in with the new.

“After 16 years of Sunshine State Standards and FCAT,” Jenkins said, “we are transitioning to Common Core State Standards.”

The Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test  is being phased out. In its place, students will take exams being developed by the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness of College and Careers, or PARCC, starting in 2015.

Continue Reading

Tea Party Leader Says Common Core Can Revitalize Movement

Bruce Ackerman / Ocala Star-Banner/Landov

Tea Party members, Lois Miller, right, and Charlie Batchelder, left, hold signs to protest Common Core across the street from Marion Technical Institute where school administrators were meeting on Southeast Fort King Street in Ocala, Fla. on Wednesday, April 3, 2013.

Tea party groups see opposition to Common Core standards as the issue to revitalize a political movement which failed to defeat Democratic President Barack Obama in last year’s election and lost a court challenge to Obama’s health care law.

Here’s the quote, from The Washington Post:

“This is the issue that could change things for the tea party movement,” said Lee Ann Burkholder, founder of the 9/12 Patriots in York, Pa., which drew 400 people — more than twice the usual turnout — to a recent meeting to discuss agitating against Common Core.

The standards have been fully adopted by Florida, 44 other states and the District of Columbia. Common Core lays out what students are expected to know in math and English language arts by the end of each grade.

The standards streamline the number of topics schools teach children in each subject. Common Core also requires teachers ask students what they know and to prove how they know it.

Though Florida led the charge against the health care law, state Republicans, Democrats and the teacher’s union support the standards. Former Gov. Jeb Bush is a leading national advocate.

Other states are leading the way in opposing Common Core. Our colleagues in Indiana have covered that story extensively.

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