Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Denver Teacher Sick-Out … An Action Not Exactly “For the Children”

Posted on May 27th, 2008 in Education, General, Labor | 1 Comment »

Some Denver schools are suffering today because unionized teachers organized a sickout, reports the Rocky Mountain News (H/T Complete Colorado):

Not a single classroom teacher showed up for work today at Academia Ana Maria Sandoval in northwest Denver, forcing the principal to scramble to cover classrooms.

All 16 classroom teachers plus a music teacher and the librarian called in sick, said Principal Debra Lucero Kraft.

“I didn’t have any warning,” Kraft said. “I don’t know what the goal is so I can’t really speak to whether or not that accomplished their goal … but certainly I’m not sure if leaving your students without a teacher is a way to address contract negotiations.”

Substitute teachers were found for all but five classes so Kraft pulled in other staff members — the administrative assistant, the psychologist, the literacy coach — to cover those. She also combined some smaller classes.

Four years ago I covered a similar “sick-out” in the Boulder Valley Schools. My reaction today is similar: Grown-ups who make political and educational decisions have to stop making knee-jerk assumptions that the actions of teachers unions are being done “for the children.”

But I also have another question: How much were students in Sandoval really adversely affected by missing these teachers on sick-out today? Something to ponder.

Conflicted Interests Behind Lawsuit Against Online Charter School?

Posted on May 23rd, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, General | No Comments »

Face The State has an interesting story today about possible conflict of interest behind a school district’s attempted lawsuit to get rid of an innovative online public charter school:

An education official involved in a lawsuit against an online charter school and the state school board is acting with conflicted interests, say some of those impacted by the legal action.

Critics charge that Michael Poore, the assistant superintendent for Colorado Springs School District 11 and chairman of Colorado’s Online Learning Advisory Board, faces a conflict when it comes to his district’s legal action against Hope Online Learning Academy and the Colorado State Board of Education.

Specifically, they object to the fact that he has been permitted to craft regulations that govern online programs with learning centers in multiple districts, and then use these regulations to sue Hope and the state board.

“How can [Poore] lead the lawsuit when he’s the one writing the rules?” said Lisa Villanueva, director of a Hope learning center in central Colorado Springs.

Check out the whole story. See what the education establishment won’t try to get rid of a competitor that some students and families have chosen as a better option.

Colorado Supreme Court: Unions Get a Pass from Electioneering Laws

Posted on May 20th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, General, Labor | No Comments »

Are Coloradans awakened yet to the union takeover of Colorado? On this site, I’ve covered Big Labor’s controlling influence on the legislature (last year’s House Bill 1072) and on Gov. Bill Ritter (union “partnership” executive order, anyone?). One that hasn’t received as much play is the unions’ controlling influence on the Colorado Supreme Court.

What, you say?

There’s hardly any other way to explain the Court’s 5-2 ruling yesterday that the teachers union is exempt from certain campaign finance restrictions in the state constitution.
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Intellectual Ammunition for Colorado’s State and Local Candidates

Posted on May 16th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General, Health Care, Second Amendment, property rights | No Comments »

Calling all Colorado candidates for state and county office! Want to catch up on your policy homework? The Independence Institute (where I work) is sponsoring an important event on June 11:

Want your state legislative candidates to be intellectually well-armed for battle on the campaign trail? Then make sure he or she attends our candidates’ briefing on Wednesday, June 11 from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Independence Institute offices. We gather the state’s leading free market experts on everything from TABOR, to transportation, to education, to property rights, to energy policy and more. Candidates will leave well-prepared to debate issues and field questions from friends and foes alike. This event is free of change and open to all state legislative and county commissioner candidates. Seating is limited.

DATE: Wednesday, June 11, 2008
TIME: 8:30 a.m to 4 p.m.
LOCATION: Independence Institute, 13952 Denver West Parkway (Building 53), Suite 400, Golden Colorado 80401 COST: Free of charge for state legislative and county commissioner candidates; other candidates included as seating allows.

TOPICS: (to include but not limited to) TABOR, health care, education, property rights, energy and environment, transportation, second amendment and grass roots organizing.

The Independence Institute will provide lunch and materials.

For questions contact Amy Oliver at amy@i2i.org. For reservations contact Eileen Mahony at EMMahony@gmail.com.

RSVP for this Event

Please spread the word.

Ed is Watching

Posted on May 14th, 2008 in Education, General, My Life, blogging | No Comments »

Why the cryptic title: Ed is Watching? It’s the name of a new blog I’ve started contributing to as part of the Independence Institute’s Education Policy Center. If you go there now, you’ll already find posts up on charter schools, on Flunked: The Movie’s Colorado debut, and on a new major school choice law in Georgia.

From Jon Caldara’s blog:

Ed’s job is to keep an eye on, “… legislators, state officials, school boards, administrators, principals, teachers, and other people and groups that have an influence on public education in this great state.” So to get your daily education fix, check in with Ed and see what he has to say.

Please stop by the site, bookmark it for regular visits, and tell all your friends!

Come See Flunked: The Movie’s Colorado Debut Next Wednesday

Posted on May 13th, 2008 in Education, General, My Life | No Comments »

Flunked: The Movie - an Evergreen Freedom Foundation (EFF) production - comes to Colorado next Wednesday, May 21. The Independence Institute (where I work) is sponsoring the showing of this spectacular 47-minute film about the success stories that should inspire transformational change in our nation’s education system. The film, narrated by Joe Mantegna, is more engaging and entertaining than your average documentary. Here’s a preview:

Also, you can listen to this iVoices podcast recorded today with EFF’s Steve Maggi to learn more about the film. And go here to find out how to sign up for the May 21 event.

At least this isn’t our teachers union…

Posted on May 12th, 2008 in Education, General, Labor | No Comments »

The teachers union in Washington State turned down millions of dollars in grant money that would have gone to boosting teacher salaries. What, you say? A pair of editorials today explain the story.

First, the Daily News Online:

That $13.2 million grant Washington state won last year to enhance the teaching of Advanced Placement courses in math and science is history. It’s lost because of the financial incentives it would have provided for teachers who improve test scores. The Washington Education Association didn’t much like the idea of tying teacher pay to student performance on exams. Neither did the teachers union like the involvement of an outside party, the grant provider, in teacher-pay decisions.

The zinger, though, comes from The Columbian:

Logic leads one to believe the WEA would support more pay for teachers, but because the NMSI grant money would come from an outside source, free from union manipulation, the union effectively killed the program.

Meanwhile, six other states will benefit from the grants awarded in September. WEA union bosses would point out that those are “right-to-work” states with weaker union rules. We would counter: That’s precisely the point, and those six states are also “right-to-better-education” states.

In our state, though, the union wins while students and teachers lose. For sheer accuracy, someone, please, take the “E” out of the WEA.

So why would we want to give Colorado’ teachers union more power?

Colorado Dems Fail to Lead or Take Responsibility, Irony Lost on Dead Guvs

Posted on May 12th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General | No Comments »

The Dead Governors couldn’t even bring themselves to defend their majority Democrat Party for accomplishing so little. So they tried to make fun of the minority Republicans for not getting much done themselves either:

How do you write a critical op-ed about how Democrats talked and Republicans acted without bothering to mention anything that you actually accomplished yourself?

For example: “On health care, we tried to clear away regulatory hurdles…” Good job on trying!

Do Colorado’s Left-leaning online apologists get the irony here? “You Republicans are going to criticize our Democrats for not fixing the state’s problems? Well, I know we were in charge, and there were only 60 of us compared to 40 of you, but you didn’t get anything done either! So take that!”

(Hmm… 60 vs. 40. There must be some connection here to the Democrats’ opposition to education standards for math - I’m not sure where the sex education mandate fits in, though.)

The Dead Governors exemplify the Left’s inability to take responsibility, even when they’re in power. They must be taking cues (here and here and here and here) from their leader: Gov. Bill Ritter.

Westminster School District Negligence Makes Case for Online Transparency

Posted on May 9th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General, My Life | No Comments »

I about fell out of my chair when I read this local CBS4 TV news story (video also available):

An out-of-state architectural firm has billed an Adams County School District nearly $60,000, for hotels, meals and travel expenses in the last year but the district hasn’t bothered to ask for, or review, a single receipt.

“It’s negligence,” said Kevin O’Brien, a former IRS agent, CPA and business ethics professor at the University of Denver’s Daniels College of Business. “The public has a right to expect there will be some minimum checking on those receipts because its really the public’s money.”

Adams County School District 50 hired Healy, Bender and Associates of Naperville, Ill., last year. The school district enlisted the company to help design a new high school and elementary school and renovate Westminster High School and Ranum Middle School. [emphasis added]

This development is only going to fuel citizens’ distrust of school district management, especially in light of the the Denver Post report that plenty of turmoil already exists over how to spend the $98.6 million bond money approved by local voters in 2006.

Watch the CBS4 news video, if you get a few minutes. Reporter Brian Maass closes with a remark that should inspire gift ideas for School District 50 administrators.
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Find a Charter School Near You

Posted on May 9th, 2008 in Education, General | No Comments »

The Center for Education Reform, a national charter school advocacy group, has unveiled a new Web tool for families across the country to locate a public charter school near them: YourCharterSchool.com.

I test drove the site a bit, and it seems user-friendly. In addition to the map feature, there are several helpful links along the side to guide the uninitiated and to arm any user with important facts. For Colorado families, I’d say YourCharterSchool.com is a very nice complement to the more comprehensive, state-focused School Choice for Kids website.

But I’m also interested to hear what Colorado’s resident charter school expert Denise has to say.

Bill Ritter’s Property Tax Hike on Trial: Closing Arguments for Tomorrow

Posted on May 8th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General | No Comments »

A busy day, not much time to blog. For those of you following Bill Ritter’s property tax hike on trial, Jon Caldara reports that closing arguments are set for tomorrow morning at 10:00.

Cary Kennedy Said What?

Posted on May 7th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General | No Comments »

With Gov. Bill Ritter’s property tax hike still on trial, the Rocky Mountain News reports that state treasurer Cary Kennedy - who thought up the mill levy “freeze” idea - made a remarkable concession on the witness stand:

State treasurer Cary Kennedy conceded today on the witness stand that a bill passed last year by the legislature alters the way taxes are calculated with the net result that many property owners pay more.

But Kennedy continued to insist the 2007 law, SB 199, does not violate Colorado’s Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights.

O-k….
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Bill Ritter’s Tax Hike on Trial: Day 1

Posted on May 6th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General | No Comments »

Yesterday was the first day of the court hearing on the lawsuit by the Independence Institute (where I work) and Colorado taxpayers against Gov. Bill Ritter’s unconstitutional property tax increase.

Today’s Denver Post explains a key issue behind the plaintiffs’ argument:

They noted that in 1993, the General Assembly amended the School Finance Act to ensure that the property taxes raised for the local share of total program funding for public-school education in each school not violate the revenue cap of the Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights.

But with passage of the 2007 amendment, Ritter used it to freeze mill-levies, the opponents charged. The freeze holds mill levies — the rate at which taxes are charged — in place when they normally would fall, allowing local school districts to collect more tax money. The state, in return, can use the money it saves for other purposes.

“These are property taxes,” said lawyer Richard Westfall in his opening statement Monday in the weeklong trial. “Evidence will show the purpose of the amendment was to shift the tax burden from state to local citizens.”

Over in his account of the first day’s proceedings, Jon Caldara has a great analogy for this transfer:

…[L]et’s say your employer starts paying your personal home mortgage for you so you don’t have to, did he just give you a pay raise? The state lawyers in court today would argue no, because your boss didn’t give you a larger paycheck. The rest of us would recognize it as a raise because one of your big expenses is now being paid by someone else, giving you more cash to spend on other things. The mill levy freeze is helping pay the state’s bill to local school districts - money the state now doesn’t need to pay them.

And our state constitution is very clear. If the state gets more money to spend, it has to the voters for permission first. Our constitution simply says Ask First!

The Post also picks up the solitary argument from the other side’s team of lawyers:

But lawyers for Ritter and the Colorado Department of Education told Habas that TABOR’s revenue and spending limitations are not absolute and that the mill-levy freeze is proper. The TABOR limitations can be changed, weakened or done away with entirely, if voters approve, argued lawyers John Mill and Mark Grueskin. And that is exactly what happened, they told Habas.

The fundamental flaw in the taxpayer-funded government attorneys’ argument is that the de-Brucing elections voters faced in many school districts were not advertised as authorizing tax increases. Caldara highlights an example in the testimony from an elected school board official in El Paso County’s Cheyenne Mountain School District:

He is on a small school board and helped campaign for his school district’s successful de-brucing. He held himself out to his small community and promised that if they voted to pass the de-brucing it would allow the district to keep an extra $120,000 or so in extra revenue. He promised his community it WOULDN’T RAISE TAXES. Bill Ritter’s mill levy freeze has made him into a liar.

Bill Ritter’s mill levy “freeze” made this school board member into a liar, and many other Colorado voters into fools. Stay tuned here and at Jon Caldara’s blog for updates on Day 2 of Bill Ritter’s tax hike on trial.

Bill Ritter and the Colorado Democrats’ Unauthorized Tax Hike Goes to Court

Posted on May 5th, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, Fiscal Policy, General, property rights | No Comments »

At long last, court hearings begin today in the case of Gov. Bill Ritter raising Coloradans’ property taxes without a constitutional vote of the people.

From the Denver Post:

The freeze is estimated to bring in $117 million this year and $3.8 billion over a decade, up from an initial estimate of $1.7 billion when it was passed.

Richard Westfall, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said the two sides will call about 10 witnesses, likely including school finance experts, the state treasurer and school board members. Dreyer said Ritter is not expected to testify.

“A lot of the discussion is going to be about addressing pretty esoteric points in the school finance act,” Westfall said.

The trial is scheduled to last a week. It will be heard by Judge Christina Habas, who was appointed by Gov. Bill Owens in 2003.

If the judge rules against the freeze, the state could have to somehow refund the freeze money it has already collected.

“We think the evidence is very clear,” Westfall said. “The voters didn’t approve it.”

Reminding readers that “it’s not the cash, it’s the constitution,” Jon Caldara’s blog offers updates on this week’s legal proceedings to see who will win Round 1: the Governor or the taxpayers. Regardless, the case will end up being appealed to the Colorado Supreme Court.

Don’t Think that Getting Rid of the Test Will Make the Problem Go Away

Posted on May 2nd, 2008 in Colorado Politics, Education, General | No Comments »

Nancy Mitchell in the Rocky Mountain News reports today about the Colorado Student Assessment Program:

Colorado’s $22 million testing program appears headed for replacement after more than a dozen years and scant evidence of improvement in recent results.

In other words: Not enough kids are learning fundamental reading skills at the critical junction of 3rd grade. Therefore, some people say it’s time to modernize and improve the CSAP, and others want to scrap testing and accountability altogether.

The first group has the right idea, provided updating the state’s assessment system is done correctly. The second group makes an absurd flight from logic. Imagine if the news story were about a state-funded auto emissions testing program in which the same percentage of cars were failing after 12 years. Who would use the flat results to argue that the solution is to scrap the testing program?

Maybe some change in the testing procedure would be helpful, but if the goal were to reduce emissions then other policies or incentives would be promoted. Not getting rid of the test. How then would we know the results?

The problem here is that some people want to get rid of the CSAP because having kids learn to read is not exactly their primary goal for schooling. Others don’t like the fact that it highlights the failures of some schools in the public education system. While updating the CSAP may yield some measure of success, don’t think that getting rid of the test will make Colorado’s education problems go away.

Meanwhile, Michael at Best Destiny has his typically keen insights about the announcement of preliminary CSAP results.