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Tag Archive for 'Education'

Have You Seen Your School’s Report Card?

It is difficult to get a handle on just about anything that involves education, but there is a new source of information for the public that is interesting and, hopefully, useful. In this interview, Kelly McCutchen, Executive Vice President of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, explains the information available to the public regarding each school’s budget. Now, anyone can check a school’s report card and find out all sorts of things. Like….

Where does the school rank among other schools throughout the state?

What percentage of students are from families who live in poverty?

The amount of money spent by the school per student.

The amount of central office spending per student.

All sorts of things.

There are schools with high poverty rates whose performance exceeds expectations. Within the same school district, there are schools whose performance vary significantly from school to school. There are schools that spend a lot more per student that other schools, but with no significant difference in performance.

I am not sure there is any overall conclusion that can be drawn from the information available in the report card. However, it would appear that schools succeed or fail without regard to poverty, and without regard to per student spending. That leads me to believe that the difference that matters has to do with something other than money, such as the leadership of the school administration and the creativity of the teachers. If this is true, then every school should be able to succeed, all it needs is leadership and creative teachers. I am sure this is an oversimplification, but I am equally sure that leadership and creativity are a large part of it.

 
 Kelly McCutchen, Georgia Policy [32:26m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (402)

The Great Tax Plan Targets Education!

If you don’t know about Glenn Richardson’s plan to eliminate ad valorem taxes in Georgia, you must be dead–just like his Great Plan. Speaker Richardson supposedly toured the state telling everyone about his proposal to do away with property taxes, but he only told people bits and pieces and would entertain no public discussion. The city and county governments jumped on him. Casey Cagle and most everyone else in the Georgia Senate expressed grave concern about such a proposal and essentially said it would not pass the Senate. For whatever reason, his plan has now morphed into a plan to eliminate the school tax portion of the property tax.

My question: Why schools? Why education? If it won’t work for city and county governments, what makes it good for schools? In this interview Jeff Hubbard, President of the Georgia Association of Educators (GAE), explains what this proposal means for education.

There are a lot of problems with this misconceived plan to take away local control of the education budget, but regardless of the shear power grab by the legislature, I don’t understand why we would want the quality of our education to depend on how much money people spend on goods and services, particularly with an economy that may be going downhill. If teachers get paid out of sales tax revenues and the economy goes in the tank, revenues go down and school districts have to scramble from month to month to make ends meet.

If you talk to these guys in charge of our state budget, like the Governor, they just love to tell you that they put more and more money into education every year. That may be true, but as Jeff points out, the fact that we spend more does not mean we are improving the quality of the education our kids receive. Georgia is one of the fastest growing states in the nation and a lot of the increase in education funding is due to this increase in the population of the state. More money does not translate into more money for classroom instruction. There may be more money for more buildings to house more students, but the money to improve the quality of instruction doesn’t increase.

There are about 1.6 million school age kids in Georgia. About half of them qualify for free lunches, which means they are generally from lower income families. About 57% of the state budget goes for education. And yet, we have never fully funded education according to the formulas set up 23 years ago in the Quality Basic Education Act.

Speaker Richardson and anyone who supports his efforts to transfer the cost of funding public education from the property owners (many of them wealthy) to the working families of Georgia (through the sales tax) is not seeking to improve education in this state. They are seeking power. They are manipulating the people of this state by promising the elimination of a significant portion of their property taxes without explaining the dangerous consequences for our struggling, underfunded educational system.

One of these days!

 
 Jeff Hubbard, Georgia Association of Educators [27:14m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (580)

Want to Support Teachers? Try Donors Choose!

Jeff Wood is the Southeast Executive Director of DonorsChoose.org. According to Jeff, teachers spend an average of $500 to $600 a year out of their own pockets buying supplies and other necessities to use in the classrooms. The purpose of DonorsChoose.org is to connect teachers who need money to fund projects with people who are willing to donate funds. All contributions are tax deductible.

I also did not know that teachers can claim a tax deduction of up to $250 a year for personal funds they spend for teaching supplies.

Charles Best began DonorsChoose 7 years ago in the Bronx, blending technology and philanthropy. The challenge is to get the word out so that teachers know help is available. DonorsChoose got a boost in 2003 when Best appeared “Oprah.” A few months ago it was Craig Newmark appearing on “The Colbert Report.” Today, it’s Jeff Wood on “What Is Goin’ On?” I guess the world knows by now.

This isn’t a give-away program. This is how it works: The teacher prepares a proposal requesting funds in a specific amount. DonorsChoose screens the proposal, and if approved it is posted on the site where donors can contribute. The funds are controlled by DonorsChoose. They buy the supplies or whatever it is and send it to the teacher. As you can imagine, DonorsChoose invests a significant amount of time investigating the validity of the request and facilitating the procurement of goods and for that it charges a fee which is added to the total request and funded by the donors.

The average proposal is $400. The largest request that was funded was a $20,000.00 playground in New York. Since its creation, it has funded over $14 million in teacher proposals.

If you go to the website, you can search for proposals by location or category. You can help fund a proposal in the hometown you haven’t visited in 30 years. You can give a Gift Certificate.

Since it is tax-exempt, you can also donate directly to DonorsChoose if you can’t decided what project to fund.

 
 Standard Podcast [30:38m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (398)

Tough Choices or Tough Times: Something About Education You Need to Know!

This interview with Dr. Charles Knapp, former President of the University of Georgia, may scare you, but that may be what it takes. Over the last 2 years I have interviewed a lot of educators and politicians trying to find out what is going on with our school systems. Dr. Knapp knows because he was chairman of a blue-ribbon committee that may have actually done its job, The New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce.

Dr. Knapp chaired the committee which was composed of former cabinet officers, former Congressmen, former governors and former university presidents.

There was a previous report in 1990 by the first commission on the Skills of the American Workforce. That report, America’s Choice: high skills or low wages, focused on the ability of the American worker to compete with cheap, unskilled labor in other countries. The world has changed dramatically in 15 years. Now the world is flat. The problem in 2007 is competing with skilled workers in other countries like China and India.

Dr. Knapp told me some of those facts that make you think:

1. There are more honor graduates in China than there are students in America.

2. The real average weekly wages in America has been declining for the last 30 years.

3. The per capita costs of a K-12 education in America has increased 2.5 times in the last 30 years, but test scores have not improved.

4. The low income 3 year old has less than half the vocabulary of a 3 year old from a professional family.

5. We are the only industrialized country in the world where older workers are better educated than the younger workers.

Dr. Knapp was frank enough to say that we are not headed toward a train wreck, we are in the middle of it and unless we are willing to revamp the system to meet the needs of the 21st century, we are truly in dire straits.

The study was comprehensive and seems to have endeavored to speak the truth about education in America, like it or not. This may be a little strong, but basically, the Commission determined that our educational system simply fails to meet the needs of an industrialized country and recommends changes that are nothing less than revolutionary.

The problem: Our current system is not high performance, but rather one of low expectations, exactly the opposite of our competitors.

There are 3 primary reforms that need to be instituted sooner, rather than later. However, since nothing changes overnight, the proposals contemplate bringing the educational system to where it needs to be over the next 15 years.

1. Eliminate the last 2 years of high school and prepare kids to graduate at age 16. Even kids know the last year of high school is a waste and the study proved this to be the truth, unfortunately. This would save $50 billion annually nationwide. The kids take a test at age 16 and the test determines whether you get to go to college or to a technical school. No more wasting time and money for kids to go to college to play and find themselves.

2. The savings would be funneled into: 1/3 into pay raises for teachers, 1/3 to pre-K, early childhood learning programs, and 1/3 on the hard to educate kids.

3. Teachers would be paid on performance only. Colleges would not have a monopoly on training teachers.

Last but not least, Dr. Knapp says these recommendations are for the states to implement, not the federal government. The recent Georgia legislation establishing Career Academies and Charter Schools are a step in revamping the educational system in Georgia. We just need to go faster. He also gives high marks to Governor Perdue, Lt. Governor Casey Cagle and School Superintendent Kathy Cox for their efforts in this new direction.

The Committee’s work is published in book format under the title “Tough Choices or Tough Times.” The Committee’s website has an executive summary that you can read online. You can also review a short powerpoint presentation.

And what is the price we will pay as a nation if we don’t get real with education? Simple: a lower standard of living than we have ever had, one we don’t want!

 
 Charles Knapp, Former President UGA [28:53m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (625)

PRISM: Partnership for Reform in Science and Mathematics

Rosalind Barnes is the Public Awareness Director for the Partnership for Reform in Science and Mathematics, a 5 year initiative by the University System of Georgia in conjunction with a grant from the National Science Foundation. The purpose of PRISM is to connect high schools and colleges to insure students are achieving in math and science by changing the way teachers teach so that learing is interesting and students are motivated.

We have known for years that American students are falling behind China and India when it comes to Math and Science. It is so bad the government is apparently increasing funding for math and science!

Imagine that! More money for education! I guess my question is, what program did they cut?

Maybe there is hope. Maybe.

 
 Rosalind Barnes [27:45m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (450)

Interview with William Harper, Local Educator and Concerned Parent

William Harper, Local Educator and Concerned Parent, tells us a truly amazing and entirely disgusting story about pornography for Second and Third Graders. Where is it? In the school library. Believe it or not.

 
 Standard Podcast [31:58m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (538)

Interview with Jeff Hubbard, President, Georgia Association of Educators

Jeff Hubbard, President, Georgia Association of Educators, gives us his evaluation of the performance of the 2007 Georgia Legislature. Education is still under-funded, but what else is new?

 
 Standard Podcast [28:35m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (400)

Interview with Will Bursen, Buy Dry Land

Will Bursen, Buy Dry Land, warns about the danger of buying wet land by mistake. BuyDryLand.Org is part of a educational campaign launched by Georgia Watch and the Georgia Water Coalition to make sure homeowners understand that land that was once dry can become wet when all the trees are removed.

 
 Standard Podcast [28:47m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (487)

Interview with Cindy Cupp, Author and Educator

Cindy Cupp, Author and Educator, brings us up to date on her battle with corruption in the Dept. of Education. Listen to her story of how the Reading First Program favored big publishers and excluded the small guy.

 
 Standard Podcast [31:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (410)

Interview with Jeff Hubbard, President, Georgia Association of Educators

Jeff Hubbard, President, Georgia Association of Educators, discusses education in Georgia, as well as SB 10, the Special Needs Scholarship Act and Charter Schools.

 
 Standard Podcast [29:39m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (521)