Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Irony and Insanity come to Fruition in the Pa Senate

The Senate Education Committee voted to continue down the path of irony and insanity by passing Senate Bill 1.  It is now rapidly careening down the path of self destruction and calling the proposed school voucher bill an “opportunity scholarship”.
The bill, intended to help the state’s poorest children from the lowest-performing schools by providing options of attending other public, private or parochial schools, did not pass the committee without debate.  The troubling issues that many of us have discussed, including constitutionality, religious freedom and the cost to public schools were sticking points for two members of the committee.
The Senate Education Committee is composed of six Republicans and four Democrats. Co-sponsoring the proposed legislation is Democratic Sen. Anthony Williams and Senate Education Committee Chair Jeffrey Piccola (R-Dauphin).  All six Republicans supported the bill, as did two Democrats, Williams and Sen. Andy Dinniman.  Dinniman had some suggested amendments to the bill, including testing and accountability from the non-public schools.  This was a simple request in light of the fact that frequent rhetoric coming from our Legislative leaders on data driven decision making.  They weren’t even considered. Why would the proponents of Vouchers and or Charter Schools continue to hide from research driven analysis of their programs?  Because what little research we do have, like the Milwaukee and Cleveland reports, indicate at best marginal success and at worst, like the Cleveland study for the 2010 student progress, shows that Public Schools outperformed their Voucher student counterparts in every area between the grades 3 to 9! 
Democrats Jim Ferlo and Daylin Leach were the members of the committee opposing school voucher bill.
Leach debated the proposed legislation on the grounds that the bill is not constitutional.  A view that I happen to concur with as do many other legal scholars despite the Supreme Court’s decision in 2002 case Zelman vs. Simmons-Harris.
 Ferlo and Leach are concerned that the voucher system could erode public schools whereas the others feel that the legislation actually offers a lifeline to those children trapped in the low-performing schools. The opposing sides present two distinctly different ways of looking at the same situation.  Piccola suggests that Leach’s argument that the school voucher legislation is unconstitutional is an erroneous interpretation of the Pennsylvania Constitution. The chair of the Senate Education Committee also dismissed the argument that the bill is in conflict with the state constitution in regards to support of religious schools with public money.
With all the questions swirling around this legislation, why did the Senate Education Committee seemingly just push it along through the system?  Usually, I would be complaining about the slowness of government process, but it is amazing the way this school voucher bill is bulldozing its way through Harrisburg.
Aside from the many questions, concerns and debates swirling around this voucher bill, why don’t we hear much about the cost of this ‘opportunity scholarship’? Is it simply that if the proponents told the truth about this approach they would have to acknowledge that much like in the case of Milwaukee, Cleveland and Florida tax payers were required to kick in more money to make up for the reduction in school district subsidies, sub-contracting of services, substantially larger class sizes, elimination of related arts programs such as music and arts, after-school programs and furloughs!
Gov. Corbett swept into the Governor’s office under the umbrella of austerity and budget constraints.  Can someone please explain to me how the estimated $1billion dollars in taxpayer costs by the end of the third-year phase of the voucher program meet that mission?  This 1billion does not take into consideration the dollars the bill will siphon from the public schools. 
Our newly elected Governor will introduce a budget that takes another 1 billion in state aid from PA’s school districts.
 Let me put that into some context for you.
The State’s share of Public education amounts to 5.1 billion dollars; so we are now planning to take one-fifth of the largest share of school district revenues away!
 Recently the Governor put a 364 million dollar freeze on state spending; of that amount 337 million was school funding.
 Why choose school funding for the largest share of this freeze: simple, because it could be made up by federal stimulus dollars.
 School Superintendents were informed of this freeze last Thursday by e-mail.!
The state is using 387 million dollars of unspent Federal jobs monies to help balance this year’s budget.
 The legislature is also using 654 million in federal stimulus monies to bridge the gap this year. Does anyone other than me see the absolute Irony in this approach! These very same Politicos’s constantly lamenting the infringement of the Federal Government in State matters: Yet they have absolutely no problem claiming how they wonderfully balanced our budget without revealing the fact that they used the federal villainous Federal Governments dollars to do it! If that is not the height of hypocrisy then I do not know its real face!
 There is a 1 billion dollar hole that needs to be filled next year!
This budget also sets the state’s expenditure levels for Education back to the 2005-06 levels!
Again who will be affected by this?
 Local School Districts and Boards will be required to raise taxes to make up the difference because legislative mandates will not have been taken off their backs by those in Harrisburg who preach fiscal responsibility.
This is not a new tactic! A previous Governor followed the exact same path in making himself appear to be a fiscal conservative by passing program costs on to County Governments and Local School Boards. Indeed he may have been the one who sent us down the road toward our current Pension Crisis!
Local Districts may be asked to pay more and still have to cut programs so that our Legislative Leaders can again engage in the oldest charade and shell game of all – “shift the blame”.  They tout a new program as if it would not raise state taxes. No tax increase at the state level but for local governments that is another matter.  The money has to come from somewhere!!
 Just one last question; How do our elected officials justify risking 2 to 4 billion dollars of taxpayer monies on programs, that as my last article argues are unproven and at the very best marginally successful on the academic performance side and certainly more costly on the fiscal side?

Vouchers an Exercise in Irony

As I stated in my last article on Pa. Senate Bill 1 which was never published{ So I added it here Irony and Insanity}; Not sure why? But in that article I made several observations about voucher initiatives nationally;1.}the research is at best uncertain and at worst a multi-billion dollar boon-doggly! 2.} there is no proven track record of them working any better than their public school counterparts. 3.} when the advocates for vouchers and choice are faced with the statistical realities they resort to excuses that they use to call scapegoating by the public school community. 4.} Vouchers have no track record of being a financial benefit to the state. 5.} Cleveland results are Even more compelling in terms of public school students out performing voucher programs. 6.} Pa legislature is taking the same approach it took with bi-lingual education ; we try to adopt it after other States like California and Arizona do away with it after an unsuccessful experiment with it for years! We are now trying to do the same thing with vouchers. 7.} I am last person on earth to suggest we in the public school system need to make major improvements in many areas, but lets not destroy the system that has made America the greatest country on earth. Lets not destroy the middle classes opportunity to occur economically by destroying public education. 8.} Make no mistake about it this absolutely not about improving education but rather an all out effort to destroy public education. 9.} I have often said to truly shape significant change i our system of Education , we must take it down to its very foundation and then rebuild it not the stop gap add-on approach we have been utilizing for the last 30 years!. 10.} the last thing we need is anothe rUn proven billion dollar  bureaucracy to truly reform education!
Enjoy the readings the full report which I have attached is well worth your time to read. It gives extra-ordinary insight into the issues especially for those of you who consider yourselves to b e Psycometricians.

P.S. Note the fact that this is the first time in the over 20 year history of the program that voucher students had to take the test! the irony is the legislature who pushed this approach are saying that one standardized test does tell you how successful a school is? Remember when public school advocates use to say that and were told they were obstructionists to reform. Is not IRONY GRAND1 Is not Political hypocrisy's amazing!

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Irony and Insanity come to Fruition in the Pa Senate:

 The Senate Education Committee voted to continue down the path of irony and insanity by passing Senate Bill 1.  It is now rapidly careening down the path of self destruction and calling the proposed school voucher bill an “opportunity scholarship”.
The bill, intended to help the state’s poorest children from the lowest-performing schools by providing options of attending other public, private or parochial schools, did not pass the committee without debate.  The troubling issues that many of us have discussed, including constitutionality, religious freedom and the cost to public schools were sticking points for two members of the committee.
The Senate Education Committee is composed of six Republicans and four Democrats. Co-sponsoring the proposed legislation is Democratic Sen. Anthony Williams and Senate Education Committee Chair Jeffrey Piccola (R-Dauphin).  All six Republicans supported the bill, as did two Democrats, Williams and Sen. Andy Dinniman.  Dinniman had some suggested amendments to the bill, including testing and accountability from the non-public schools.  This was a simple request in light of the fact that frequent rhetoric coming from our Legislative leaders on data driven decision making.  They weren’t even considered. Why would the proponents of Vouchers and or Charter Schools continue to hide from research driven analysis of their programs?  Because what little research we do have, like the Milwaukee and Cleveland reports, indicate at best marginal success and at worst, like the Cleveland study for the 2010 student progress, shows that Public Schools outperformed their Voucher student counterparts in every area between the grades 3 to 9! 
Democrats Jim Ferlo and Daylin Leach were the members of the committee opposing school voucher bill.
Leach debated the proposed legislation on the grounds that the bill is not constitutional.  A view that I happen to concur with as do many other legal scholars despite the Supreme Court’s decision in 2002 case Zelman vs. Simmons-Harris.
 Ferlo and Leach are concerned that the voucher system could erode public schools whereas the others feel that the legislation actually offers a lifeline to those children trapped in the low-performing schools. The opposing sides present two distinctly different ways of looking at the same situation.  Piccola suggests that Leach’s argument that the school voucher legislation is unconstitutional is an erroneous interpretation of the Pennsylvania Constitution. The chair of the Senate Education Committee also dismissed the argument that the bill is in conflict with the state constitution in regards to support of religious schools with public money.
With all the questions swirling around this legislation, why did the Senate Education Committee seemingly just push it along through the system?  Usually, I would be complaining about the slowness of government process, but it is amazing the way this school voucher bill is bulldozing its way through Harrisburg.
Aside from the many questions, concerns and debates swirling around this voucher bill, why don’t we hear much about the cost of this ‘opportunity scholarship’? Is it simply that if the proponents told the truth about this approach they would have to acknowledge that much like in the case of Milwaukee, Cleveland and Florida tax payers were required to kick in more money to make up for the reduction in school district subsidies, sub-contracting of services, substantially larger class sizes, elimination of related arts programs such as music and arts, after-school programs and furloughs!
Gov. Corbett swept into the Governor’s office under the umbrella of austerity and budget constraints.  Can someone please explain to me how the estimated $1billion dollars in taxpayer costs by the end of the third-year phase of the voucher program meet that mission?  This 1billion does not take into consideration the dollars the bill will siphon from the public schools. 
Our newly elected Governor will introduce a budget that takes another 1 billion in state aid from PA’s school districts.
 Let me put that into some context for you.
The State’s share of Public education amounts to 5.1 billion dollars; so we are now planning to take one-fifth of the largest share of school district revenues away!
 Recently the Governor put a 364 million dollar freeze on state spending; of that amount 337 million was school funding.
 Why choose school funding for the largest share of this freeze: simple, because it could be made up by federal stimulus dollars.
 School Superintendents were informed of this freeze last Thursday by e-mail.!
The state is using 387 million dollars of unspent Federal jobs monies to help balance this year’s budget.
 The legislature is also using 654 million in federal stimulus monies to bridge the gap this year. Does anyone other than me see the absolute Irony in this approach! These very same Politicos’s constantly lamenting the infringement of the Federal Government in State matters: Yet they have absolutely no problem claiming how they wonderfully balanced our budget without revealing the fact that they used the federal villainous Federal Governments dollars to do it! If that is not the height of hypocrisy then I do not know its real face!
 There is a 1 billion dollar hole that needs to be filled next year!
This budget also sets the state’s expenditure levels for Education back to the 2005-06 levels!
Again who will be affected by this?
 Local School Districts and Boards will be required to raise taxes to make up the difference because legislative mandates will not have been taken off their backs by those in Harrisburg who preach fiscal responsibility.
This is not a new tactic! A previous Governor followed the exact same path in making himself appear to be a fiscal conservative by passing program costs on to County Governments and Local School Boards. Indeed he may have been the one who sent us down the road toward our current Pension Crisis!
Local Districts may be asked to pay more and still have to cut programs so that our Legislative Leaders can again engage in the oldest charade and shell game of all – “shift the blame”.  They tout a new program as if it would not raise state taxes. No tax increase at the state level but for local governments that is another matter.  The money has to come from somewhere!!
 Just one last question; How do our elected officials justify risking 2 to 4 billion dollars of taxpayer monies on programs, that as my last article states are unproven and at the very best marginally successful on the academic performance side and certainly more costly on the fiscal side?