Parents United for Public Schools
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March 6, 2009

Update for March 2-6, 2009 — From Mary Cecconi, Executive Director

In This Issue
Important Dates
At the Capitol
Bills to Watch
A Look Ahead
At the Website
Bills Being Heard



Parent Leadership Summit
Monday, March 16, 2009

Learn - Network - Act

The top three reasons why you should spend a morning with us at the Leadership Summit:

  1. Have you been wondering:

    "What will happen to our schools in the next few years?" or

    "What is being considered?" or

    "What decisions are being made right now?" or

    "How do decisions like that get made?"

    Let's talk about it! This Summit provides us the opportunity to raise these questions with others who are just as interested as you AND people who are at the Capitol each day.

  2. The information provided at this Summit has never before been in one place, at one time, so easily accessible to parents.

  3. This is a leadership summit organized by parents, for parents and we are tired of listening to gloom and doom each day -- we want to step out and DO something about it. What better way than to talk about our kid's futures? REGISTER TODAY so we can expect you!

Important Dates

Wednesday, March 11, 2009, 6-8 pm, Minneapolis
Minnesota Pipeline Alert: Educating all of our children equally
Mobilizing Our Communities to Support Legislation for Early Childhood Funding and Desegregated Schools

A complete listing of Events is always available at our website.

In this issue

 

What is Happening at the Capitol?
The February budget forecast was released on Tuesday, March 3. Our state deficit grew by $1.6 billion. Using the Federal Stimulus package helps our spending deficit stay around $4.6 billion, but it's pretty obvious that we can't continue the way we have been these last years in Minnesota.

The House this week took up charter school legislation, the governor's education budget, seat belts on "motor coach" style buses, raising the compulsory age for school attendance to 18, and bills for early childhood literacy, while the Senate has been struggling with the very difficult issues of testing.

Minnesota began charter school legislation in the nation in 1991. The recent audit of charter schools in Minnesota by the Office of the Legislative Auditor (OLA) prompted many of the provisions in this large and far reaching bill HF 935. Its journey on to passage continues next week in House K-12 Education Finance.

Heard in House K-12 Education Finance this week was the Governor's budget with payment shifts of $1.13 billion and an addition of $156 million. The $156 million is to be used for the programs he proposes to increase teacher recruitment and teacher/principal effectiveness, improve teacher preparedness with changes to Minnesota colleges of teacher education, provide funding that averages $50 per pupil using a student "pay for progress" method, increase funding to the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) for test development, cut other funds for them, require binding arbitration for teachers, change the status of the Perpich Arts High Schools to a charter, implement "Summers of Success" for 8th graders not successful with math, and require online learning experiences for all students. Many of these proposals will be debated throughout the session. Many of the proposals represent major policy shifts.

The Senate is taking up the very thorny issue of testing and assessments. The discussions are around summative and formative testing and the requirement that a student successfully complete one test to graduate. Formative tests (like NWEA) give teachers, students and parents diagnostic information in a timely manner to intervene and help a student progress. Summative tests (like MCA's) have a different reason for being; one of their main purposes is for the state to comply with NCLB requirements.

With the push for "college and career readiness" coming head to head with "testing fatigue," it is a constant source of conversation how testing can be useful, yet the number of tests reduced. This is a struggle. Current law requires that every high school junior pass the GRAD in order to graduate, yet the number who will pass it appears very low. The 2003 change in academic standards and a very high bar, especially in math, for the GRAD seem to affect the passage rate. A very interesting question and response came when Vice Chair Sen. Wiger asked testifier Kent Pekel, from Ramp Up to Readiness, if "a student's graduation should be linked to one test," Mr. Pekel's immediate response was "Linked, but not solely dependent on."

The current discussion is around using End of Course (EOC) exams rather than one GRAD given in a student's junior year when there is little time to remediate. It seems reasonable that a student who takes an EOC exam will have just completed the material and if (s)he does not pass will have the time to re-learn and re-take the exam. However, in Senate testimony from Dr. Rick Spicuzza, a highly regarded assessment expert, he cautioned the committee that moving to an EOC exam makes it impossible to continue using the state growth model just implemented by the MDE in December. A note: The Governor's proposed student "pay for progress" model for funding schools is based on use of that growth model.

You can get more familiar with the graduation requirements at our website, and thanks to our friends at Schools for Equity in Education, a pdf of the MDE Power Point presentation "Statewide Assessment" is available at their website.

In this issue

 

Bills to Watch
HF 322 (Nornes-R-Fergus Falls)  SF 314 (Skogen-DFL-Hewitt)
These companion bills increase the number of voter signatures required to revoke an operating referendum for education funding. This issue was brought to this level from the situation in Frazee-Vergas: after five years of trying to pass an operating levy they succeeded in the fall of 2007; almost immediately after that success, using current law, a group of dissenters collected the required number of signatures on a petition to place the referendum BACK on the ballot to be revoked or reduced.

This legislation calls for an increase in the number of signatures needed on a petition to take this action. As difficult a task as passing a levy is for parents, imagine getting one passed and then having to start all over again. We are watching this bill with great interest.

 

A Look Ahead
The charter school legislation, HF 935, continues on its path to passage in House K-12 Education Finance on Tuesday, March 10; the bill to raise the bar on the number of voter signatures required to recall a levy referendum, SF 314, will be heard in the Senate on Thursday, March 12.

In this issue

 

At the Website

Check out all the News and Hot Topics at our website!

In this issue

 

Bills Being Heard
If any of these bills interests you, you can find out more about them.

House K-12 Education Policy and Oversight, Chair Rep. Carlos Mariani

  • HF 935(Slocum-DFL-Richfield) Charter school provisions modified.
  • HF 920 (Tillberry-DFL-Fridley) Education; obsolete and unneeded mandates removed.
  • HF 1037 (Swails-DFL-Woodbury) Home school mandates reduced.

House K-12 Education Finance Division, Chair Rep. Mindy Greiling

  • HF1172 (Garofalo-R- Farmington) Early childhood and family, prekindergarten through grade 12, and adult education provided.
  • HF 331 (Nornes-R-Fergus Falls) Seat belt requirements amended for motor coaches used in school-related transportation.
  • HF 875 (Hortman-DFL-Brooklyn Park) State requirement modified for pupil transportation for elementary pupils, and a levy authorized to pay for certain transportation costs.
  • HF 896 (Hortman-DFL-Brooklyn Park) Locally controlled process defined for establishing hazardous traffic condition pupil transportation zones, and levy authorized for certain hazardous pupil transportation services.
  • HF 1256 (Mullery-DFL-Minneapolis) Local hazardous pupil transportation zone establishment process defined, levy for hazardous pupil transportation services authorized.
  • HF 116 (Ward-DFL-Brainerd) Type III school bus driver qualifications modified - pending referral

House Early Childhood Finance and Policy Division, Chair Rep. Nora Slawik

  • HF 1046 (Mariani-DFL-St. Paul) Minnesota reading corps program established, and money appropriated
  • HF 223 (Slawik-DFL-Maplewood) Words Work grant provided for early childhood literacy, and money appropriated
  • Presentation by St. Paul Project Early K
  • HF 378 (Slawik-DFL-Maplewood) Early childhood education funding provided, and money appropriated
  • HF 106 (Swails-DFL-Woodbury) P-20 education partnership established
  • Presentation on the Effects of Early Maltreatment and Trauma on Children and Families by Dr. Bruce Perry, M.D., Ph.D.
  • Presentation on February Forecast
  • Testimony from providers in quality rating system

Senate E-12 Education Budget and Policy Division, Chair Sen. Leroy Stumpf

  • Testing and Assessment

In this issue

Childhood has no rewind: Our children cannot go back to grade school and
get another education when times are better and we all have more to give.
When the playground is empty and the children are gone,
either we will have sacrificed for them, or we won’t."
                                                                           
—from a Parents United poster

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We welcome your feedback on this update and our work. Please take a few minutes to let us know what's helpful to you.

Questions? Email Mary Cecconi

Parents United for Public Schools
1667 Snelling Avenue N., St. Paul, MN 55108
651-999-7391
www.parentsunited.org