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Congress Conference Committee Resolving Differences on Education Bill
You can watch the conference committee in action yesterday and today. The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) looks to be headed for passage. The bill is now called: S. 1177 Every Child Achieves Act. Basically, the bill will strip the punitive aspects of Race to the Top such as teacher evaluations based on test scores and take overs of struggling schools. Annual testing, however, remains.
While Common Core may not be mandated, most states already have developed tests to measure the standards or are using the two national tests.
The brief discussion of testing acknowledged concern about over the impact of testing and will encourage states to enact limits. The committee members, however, stated that federal testing requirements were not the problem. The problem was the use of test scores for accountability. The authority for how test scores will be used is returned to the states. This does not mean that currently mandated accountability systems for grading teachers, schools, and districts are gone. They just are not federally mandated.
Remember that the Florida legislature stated that its tests were not the problem, the problem was over testing in the districts. Districts state that the amount of testing is due to the requirements to use scores for teacher evaluations. Florida’s 2016 legislative session could be interesting. Annual testing will not disappear. How scores are used could change.
I watched today. Some amendments were approved by both the House and Senate committee members that are of particular interest were approved:
Rep. Thompson: Study Title I funding formulas
Sen. Enzi: Study early childhood program overlap
Rep. Bonamici: Include arts and interdisciplinary course content in Title IV STEM programs
Sen. Bennett: Place caps on the amount of testing time required
There were a few other amendments related to teacher training for the appropriate use of student data and extending dual enrollment for ELL students.
Constitutional Amendment Filed For State Charter School Authorizer
Class Size Policies: Charters Avoid Mandate But Public Schools Can’t?
It is curious that Senator Legg believes that charter schools should escape class size mandates, but public schools are exploiting loop holes if they have the same flexibility.
There are times when, under the guise of flexibility, school choice is simply a way to avoid laws designed to protect the interests of children. Class size was mandated by voters in 2002 in the Florida constitution. Charters were able to use a school average class size but not district schools.
Laws implementing the amendment should be applied to all schools in the same way. They are not. Schools of Choice play by different rules. Districts want the same flexibility as charter schools. They found a way, but now Senator Legg wants to close that option for school districts.
Out of Control Enrollment? What Next?
Senator Benacquisto has filed SB 0886 to establish a teacher transfer process for parents and extend school choice options to CAPE certificates.
The phrase ‘controlled open enrollment’ is deleted. This phrase is defined by the Florida Department of Education as follows:
Each school board may offer controlled open enrollment within the public schools in addition to existing choice programs such as magnet schools, alternative schools, special programs, advanced placement and dual enrollment. Controlled open enrollment emphasizes the value of the opportunity for families to choose among existing public schools instead of being assigned to a public school by a school district based on attendance zones.
Does the elimination of ‘controlled open enrollment’ mean that enrollment would now be chaotic? Sometimes one wonders what people are thinking or if they are.
http://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2016/0886
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