Friday, January 31, 2014

Surprise, Surprise: Mississippi Tea Party Spreads Lies About Common Core Posted: 01/31/2014 3:22 pm EST | Updated: 01/31/2014 3:59 pm EST Rebecca Klein Rebecca KleinBecome a fan Rebecca.Klein@huffingtonpost.com

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/31/mississippi-tea-party-common-core_n_4703225.html?ncid=txtlnkushpmg00000037

SBOE Repeals Algebra II as Graduation Requirement

Algebra II is no longer among the courses that most students must take to graduate from Texas public schools after a nearly unanimous final vote from the State Board of Education on Friday. 

The 15-member board also approved two new high-level math courses students can take as an alternative: statistics and algebraic reasoning. Both will be designed — by local schools with the Texas Education Agency's guidance — to be as rigorous as algebra II. 

The final vote was 14-1, with only board member Martha Dominguez, D-El Paso, voting against repealing algebra II as a graduation requirement.

Dominguez said her vote reflected concerns that students who take algebra II are more successful in the Texas Success Initiative, a state-mandated program that measures students' success in college. 

In May, the Legislature unanimously passed House Bill 5, a sweeping overhaul of the state's high school curriculum, in part to allow more opportunities for career training for students who do not intend to attend college. The changes in the new law included dropping an existing requirement that all students take algebra II to graduate in favor of allowing their selection of diploma "endorsements" in a specialized areas like science and technology, business or humanities to determine which math courses they take.  

Widely debated as they passed through the Legislature, the new graduation requirements continued to be a hot topic as the State Board of Education set about deciding which courses students take to fulfill those endorsements. 

Leading up to the final vote, board members discussed whether the state Legislature had avoided the task of finalizing the details of new graduation requirements and passed on the responsibility to the board.

“HB 5 was not a perfect piece of legislation," said board member David Bradley, R-Beaumont. "Some would say and observed ... that rather than make some of the tough, controversial decisions, the Legislature ... just passed it down to us. [That was] probably a good political decision on their part."

Board member Thomas Ratliff, R-Mount Pleasant, said the Legislature's actions reflected an increased confidence in the board.

"That is why they allowed us to come in and do the hard work of filling in the details," Ratliff said. "I don't think they kicked the can or avoided a politically difficult discussion. They trusted us to do our jobs and represent our district."

In November, the board considered a proposal to include advanced math courses in all five new diploma plans, which came after opponents of the policy raised concerns about how the new graduation plans would affect the academic achievement of low-income and minority students. 

They backed away from that plan after the bill's authors, Senate Education Chairman Dan Patrick, R-Houston, and House Public Education Chairman Jimmie Don Aycock, R-Killeen, said including algebra II as a requirement would go against legislative intent, which was to reserve as much flexibility for local school districts as possible.

Several board members agreed that the new requirements allow local school districts and parents more control over course offerings. Other board members were worried the increased responsibility could be burdensome to school counselors.

Board member Mavis Best Knight, D-Dallas, asked whether the board could send the Legislature a letter encouraging them to appropriate additional funding to school districts for counselors "in light of the responsibility that will be put on them."

Board chairwoman Barbara Cargill, R-The Woodlands, said the board would discuss the idea.

The change comes after Texas adopted what were among the country’s first college- and career-ready graduation standards in 2006, leading a growing national march toward advanced high school math requirements.

Since 2004, when Arkansas was the only other state with an algebra II requirement, 21 other states have adopted advanced algebra courses into their standards, according to data from Achieve, a nonprofit organization formed by governors, business leaders and corporate foundations to push high college preparation standards.

The changes in graduation requirements will become effective ahead of the 2014-15 school year so school districts can have time to plan the course offerings and "schedule students in courses appropriately." 

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/01/31/algebra-ii-now-out-high-school-diploma-requirement/.

Share This With All the Schools, Please

http://momastery.com/blog/2014/01/30/share-schools/

Thursday, January 9, 2014

School zero-tolerance policies in question 1 hr 58 mins ago 2:30 KTRK – Houston

http://news.yahoo.com/video/school-zero-tolerance-policies-003206417.html?soc_src=copy

Dewhurst Rolls Out Education Interim Charges

Studying technology's impact on higher education and evaluating public school students' writing scores on state assessments are among the tasks Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst gave lawmakers in education-related interim charges Thursday.

Dewhurst announced the charges, which are expected to increase in the coming weeks, at a benefit for the United Negro College Fund in Dallas.

"Texas has made great strides on behalf of Texans pursuing education at all levels, and we must stay focused on meaningful outcomes," Dewhurst said in a statement describing the charges. "With our low taxes, limited government, careful spending and sensible regulations, Texas is still the best place in the country to pursue the American Dream, and a quality education only makes it more attainable."

On the higher education front, Dewhurst asked lawmakers to review the success of a state plan adopted in 2000 known as "Closing the Gaps by 2015" instructing them to work with the Higher Education Coordinating Board on a new set of long-term state goals for higher education. He also tasked senators with evaluating how massive open online courses, or "MOOCs," have affected the funding and quality of higher education in the state.

While he charged lawmakers with following the implementation of all education legislation, Dewhurst emphasized four bills in particular in the K-12 realm — House Bill 5, which changed accountability, testing and curriculum requirements; House Bill 1926, which updated the state's virtual school network; Senate Bill 376, which expanded the state's free breakfast program; and House Bill 617, which relates to transition services for special education students.

The lieutenant governor faces three challengers in the March Republican primary — and interim charges, which set the priorities of Senate committees before the 2015 session, recently became a subject of attack in that race. State Sen. Dan Patrick, a Houston Republican who is among Dewhurst's opponents, criticized the lieutenant governor for having not yet assigned charges to the education committee. Patrick said the delay in issuing the charges had kept the committee, which he chairs, from tackling important work on education-related issues. 

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/01/09/dewhurst-rolls-out-education-interim-charges/.

Davis Discusses Plan to Increase Supply of Teachers

ARLINGTON — Unveiling her first major policy initiative as a candidate for Texas governor, state Sen. Wendy Davis on Thursday vowed to increase the supply of teachers, pay them more and help wipe out the debts they rack up in college.

“I do believe that education must be the No. 1 priority that we address as a state,” the Fort Worth Democrat said. “Texas leadership hasn’t really provided the focus and the priority on education that it demands and that it deserves.”

Davis wouldn’t say how much the plan might cost or how she would come up with the money to pay for it, but she said she believed she could implement it without raising new taxes.

The centerpiece of the plan: Texas students in the top 20 percent of their high school class would get automatic admission to Texas colleges and universities, including the University of Texas at Austin, provided they promise to become teachers. Once they graduate with the requisite teacher certification, they would be guaranteed a job in a Texas public school.

Davis said the supply of teachers must increase to keep up with the state's exploding population.

Davis unveiled the proposal after a roundtable discussion with educators and school administrators on the campus of the University of Texas at Arlington. The plan is one of several education policy initiatives she expects to roll out in coming weeks.

Titled “Great Teachers. Great Texas,” the plan includes six planks. Among them is a proposal to expand the underfunded Teach for Texas Loan Repayment Assistance Program. According to the Higher Education Coordinating Board, the number of applicants has far exceeded the amount of available funding throughout the nine-year history of the program.

Davis vowed to make the program available to “all qualified students,” expand it to include more teachers and tie the loan forgiveness more directly to service in a Texas school district

Saying that Texas pays its teachers thousands of dollars below the national average, Davis also pledged to work to erase that gap.

“We must show them that they are worth the investment that we are willing to put into the hard work that they do,” Davis said.

Speaking with reporters after the roundtable discussion, Davis would not give an estimate on how much the program might cost, saying, “We’ll be working on developing that as we go forward.” She said some of the goals might not be accomplished “overnight” and would have to be implemented over time.

The campaign of Davis’ expected Republican opponent, Attorney General Greg Abbott, was quick to criticize the lack of detail about how to finance the new programs.

"Sen. Wendy Davis’ proposals are more fuzzy math – a plan that will increase spending and impose more mandates on Texas universities without explaining how to pay for it,” said Abbott spokesman Matt Hirsch. “Greg Abbott believes in genuine local control of education: empowering parents, teachers and principals to serve our students well.” 

Davis said she believed there was enough money in state coffers now to cover the new proposals. She also said she does not “intend as governor to propose any tax increase.”

“Right now under the leadership that we’ve had in Texas, the Legislature has been instructed to constrain, constrain, constrain and not to prioritize as a goal,” she said. “Strengthening the public education environment through additional resources, within existing state resources, I absolutely believe we can fund, and make a priority, public education in the state of Texas."

Asked how her vision of education would differ from Abbott's, Davis said that differences would be highlighted soon.

“This month we’ll highlight the difference between us,” Davis said. “This month, of course, I’ll be talking in great detail about my plan for prioritizing public education in Texas while General Abbott is in a courtroom defending the cuts that were made to public education. I think it’s a pretty clear distinction between what our focus and our priorities are.” 

Texas Tribune donors or members may be quoted or mentioned in our stories, or may be the subject of them. For a complete list of contributors, click here.

This article originally appeared in The Texas Tribune at http://www.texastribune.org/2014/01/09/davis-vows-increase-supply-teachers/.