Florida

Putting Education Reform To The Test

Lawmakers To Consider Added Security Measures At Florida Universities

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Students can't bring guns on university or college campuses, but the Florida Legislature may change that.

A mom desperate for better security at her daughter’s elementary school is paying a deputy to patrol the school in Flagler Beach for at least the next two months.

School safety and security is at the top of the priority list for Florida lawmakers during the legislative session that begins in March.

Lawmakers are already meeting to discuss ways to increase security and how to pay for it in the wake of the mass killings in Newtown, Connecticut.

Safety on college campuses is also a concern.

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Florida Graduation Rate Improving, Still Among The Nation’s Lowest

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New federal data shows Florida's graduation rate is improving, but the state's national ranking has changed little since 2001-2002.

Florida’s graduation rate is increasing but the state still ranks among the nation’s lowest, according to new federal data.

Just six states and the District of Columbia had a lower graduation rate than Florida’s 70.8 percent, according to the National Center for Education Statistics for the 2010-2011 school year. In the 2001-2002 school year, just five states and the District of Columbia had a lower graduation rate than Florida.

However, Florida’s graduation rate has risen to 70.8 percent in the 2010-2011 school year from 63.4 percent in the 2001-2002 school year — a 7.4 percentage point increase. During the same period, the national rate increased to 78.2 percent from 72.6 percent — a 5.6 percentage point increase.

These figures use an older method for calculating graduation rates. The federal government has required states to use a new, standardized method. Those figures allow for a better comparison among individual state graduation rates.

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Government Watchdog Recommends Tougher Bright Futures Requirements

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Florida Taxwatch recommends the Bright Futures program be more selective in granting scholarships to college students.

Bright Futures money is being targeted again, this time by a government watchdog group that says the state should raise requirements for the merit-based scholarship program.

The lottery revenues which fund the scholarships aren’t stretching as far as they used to.

Lawmakers made changes to the Bright Futures program in recent years, as more college students are qualifying for the scholarships.

Now, Florida Taxwatch has released its annual list of recommended cost savings for the Legislature. The 25 recommendations add up to a potential savings of over $1 billion for the state.

The only item listed under “Education Reform” is Bright Futures.

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Teachers Union Responds To Supreme Court’s Pension Ruling

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FEA President Andy Ford and attorney Ron Meyer call the pension law a tax on teachers and other state workers.

Teachers and other state workers will have to continue contributing 3 percent of their salary to their retirement.

The Florida Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the pension law passed by the Legislature in 2011 will stand.

Now, the state teachers union is blasting lawmakers for imposing what it calls a tax on working families.

The law has been in legal limbo since it went into effect a year and a half ago.

Speaking to reporters shortly after the ruling, Florida Education Association (FEA) President Andy Ford said his group has no further recourse.

“We believe that our arguments were correct and that the justices just didn’t understand what they were doing to a half a million Florida families,” Ford said.

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Board Of Governors Chairman: ‘Good’ Is Not Good Enough For Florida Universities

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BOG Chairman Dean Colson says the State University System is doing more with less, but the decline in state funding is not sustainable.

Florida Board of Governors Chairman Dean Colson had much to brag about in his State of the System address this morning.

He told the people who govern the State University System that Florida’s universities are affordable, a good value, and excelling in graduation rates.

But Colson said, “If you want our system truly to serve as an economic engine for the state, we must have the resources to recruit the best and the brightest.  Simply being ‘good’ is not good enough.”

He talked about cuts in funding as more students seek higher education.

As state funding for universities has dropped by more than a billion dollars over the last six years, “System enrollment grew by 9% — an increase of over 35,000 students.” Colson said. “In essence, our System has grown by the equivalent of a sizable university while losing enough state funding to support an entire university.”

Colson said the universities are more efficient than ever, but the decline in funding is not sustainable.

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What The Florida Supreme Court Pension Decision Could Mean For Merit Pay Lawsuit

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Thursday's Florida Supreme Court decision could be cited in another legal challenge pushed by teachers.

In 2011 lawmakers approved a law requiring public employees — including teachers — pay 3 percent of their salary into their retirement account.

Public employee unions challenged the law, arguing it unconstitutionally changes a contract with workers and violates workers’ right to collectively bargain pay and benefits.

A circuit court overturned the law, but Thursday the Florida Supreme Court upheld the law in a 4-3 decision.

The decision is likely to set a precedent when a lower court issues its decision on another teacher-related lawsuit (A decision which is expected to be appealed to the Supreme Court).

That suit challenges a 2011 law, the Student Success Act, requiring teachers to be evaluated, in part, based on student standardized test scores, requiring district to design merit pay programs to pay better performing teachers more money, and ending long-term contracts for new hires.

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Florida School Districts Hope More Pay Will Mean Less Turnover

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Florida school districts are trying new ideas to reduce turnover at low-performing schools.

Two stories today look at how school districts are trying to entice staff to take hard-to-fill jobs.

Lee County and Miami-Dade schools are considering the obvious solution: More money.

In Lee, the school district has tapped a federal grant to pay teachers earning good reviews more money to work in schools with high turnover rates, according to the Ft. Myers News-Press. Low-performing schools and those that require longer commutes typically have the highest turnover rates, school officials said.

The district has $17 million to use over two years to try to bolster the retention numbers at those schools.

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Board of Governors to Discuss Online Education And Hazing This Week

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BOG Chairman Dean Colson will give the State of the System address Thursday in Gainesville.

The Florida Board of Governors (BOG) is in Gainesville for a two-day meeting.

Five members of the 17-member panel are new.

Gov. Rick Scott announced the appointments last week. All can begin serving right away, although they need Senate confirmation.

BOG committees overseeing the state university system will talk about budget requests, expansion of online education, and the status of Florida A&M University’s anti-hazing program.

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Commissioner Tony Bennett: ‘Florida Sets The Compass’ In Education

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Education Commissioner Tony Bennett is making the rounds in Tallahassee this week as the Florida Legislature holds pre-session meetings.

Florida’s new education commissioner made his debut before the House Education Appropriations Subcommittee this morning.

Tony Bennett clearly knows how to schmooze the folks responsible for funding his office.

Bennett began by telling the 13-member committee he has been an admirer from afar.

“I was taught at a very young age that you can always tell a person’s priorities if you would look at two things: their checkbook and their calendar,” Bennett said. “The forty-eight hours I have spent here, I have been amazed at the amount of time and discussion around how we make sure Florida’s children are the best educated in the United States.”

Florida’s education budget for the current fiscal year is about $20.3 billion dollars. That’s nearly a third of the entire state budget.

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The Florida Senate’s 2013 Agenda So Far: In-State Tuition; Teacher Pay; Disabilities

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Veterans would have an easier time receiving in-state tuition at Florida colleges and universities if a bill introduced by Sen. Jack Latvala becomes law.

While the Florida House has plenty of education-related bills to consider, Senators have introduced even more.

The Senate has also introduced a bill, SB 180, granting the U.S. citizen children of undocumented immigrants in-state tuition rates. Those students would have to attend school in Florida for four years and apply to college within twelve months of graduating from a Florida high school.

Another Senate bill would open up in-state tuition to U.S. military veterans. Veterans say it is often difficult to cash in their education benefits because they can not secure in-state tuition rates using military documents.

The bill, SB 260, grants in-state tuition to veterans who reside in Florida while attending college, or who attend a physical college campus in Florida.

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