May 28, 2009



In this month's CEG Education Reform Newsletter...

Public School News and Notes - Three Public School Choice Bills Signed Into Law  
Private School Choice Issues - Time to Start Thinking About Next Year!
For Homeschools - Helpful Tips for Starting a Homeschool
Commentary - No Excuses for Educational Mediocrity



Public School News and Notes 

Three Public School Choice Bills Signed Into Law

In victories for the education reform movement, Governor Sonny Perdue has signed three pieces of public school choice legislation into law.

House Bill 251, sponsored by Representative Alisha Morgan, allows parents of public school students to enroll their children in another public school within their assigned school system.  The law will increase the number of public school choices available to help parents find a school that best fits their child's unique educational needs. 

House Bill 149, dubbed the "Move on When Ready Act" and sponsored by Representative Jan Jones, allows high school students to take college courses for credit towards a high school diploma.  The law will provide college-bound students with more options in getting a head-start on higher education. 

House Bill 555, sponsored by Representative David Casas, allows local charter schools to utilize unused facilities owned by the local school board without charge.  The law will help to ensure that charter school students get to learn in better facilities. 

All three laws will take effect in time for the start of the 2009-10 school year.  Currently, the Georgia Department of Education is consulting with local school systems and other education stakeholders to help shape the rules and regulations that will guide these laws.


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Private School Choice Issues

Time to Start Thinking About Next Year!

It’s that time of year again.  As students gleefully walk out of classrooms across Georgia for the final time this school year, it’s time for parents to start thinking about next year.  For thousands of parents with special needs children in public school, this means meeting deadlines for the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship.

As of May 28th, there are 151 private school approved to accept students using the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship (SB 10).  Last year, 145 schools served 1,596 students through the program.

There are some important dates and deadlines to be aware for regarding SB 10, both for schools and parents: 

For Schools

June 30, 2009 at 5:00pm

All applications for private schools to participate in the program are due in office.  This is not a postmark deadline!

September 11, 2009

All SB 10 students must be enrolled and attending your school.

 

For Parents

Now!

Begin the process of determining your child’s eligibility for the Scholarship by using the scholarship calculator and filling out a parental intent form at www.specialedoptions.org.  Also, begin learning more about participating schools listed on the Department of Education’s SB 10 website at www.specialedoptions.com

August 2009

The final list of private schools participating the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship program will be available at www.specialedoptions.com

September 11, 2009

All students receiving the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship must be enrolled and attending the private school of their parent’s choice.

 

All the information you need about the Georgia Special Needs Scholarship can be found on the Department of Education’s SB 10 website at www.specialedoptions.com.   

Remember!  Georgia has another scholarship program that can help students, both with special needs and without – the Tuition Tax Credit Scholarship program.  Visit www.educatedgeorgia.org to learn about this program and what it means for schools and students.


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For Homeschools

Helpful Tips for Starting a Homeschool

If you are considering homeschooling for the next school year, but unsure of where to start, check out the following tips for helpful information:

  1. Contact the school your child is currently attending to let them know you are planning on taking them out of the school and start homeschooling. This will avoid the school reporting your child truant. 
  2. Fill out the “Declaration” form, including your name, address, the names of your children you intend to homeschool, their ages, and the dates you intend to school. No other information should be required or included. 
  3. Contact your school Superintendent to find out if there is a homeschool “office” you need to address your Declaration form to and send it via certified mail (return receipt requested) by September 1st, or within 30 days of the establishment of your homeschool program. Make sure you clarify that this is also the address to send your Monthly Attendance Forms to.
  4. On first day of each month, send in a completed Attendance Form to the correct address.

The Georgia Home Education Association (GHEA) is a great resource for every family, from those starting to homeschool for the first time to the veteran home educator. 

Find more start-up tips by visiting GHEA’s website.

For more homeschooling resources, visit CEG’s page for homeschoolers.


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Commentary

This month’s commentary comes from Kelly McCutchen, Executive Vice President of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation.  Each year, the Foundation compares poverty rates and student achievement data to find Georgia’s “No Excuses” schools.  These are schools where the majority of students come from economically disadvantaged backgrounds, and, despite this, student achievement is among the highest in Georgia.  Read on to learn more about Georgia’s “No Excuses” schools.


No Excuses for Educational Mediocrity

By Kelly McCutchen

Many Georgia schools face challenges even before classes start: high student poverty rates, poor facilities, lack of parental involvement or high numbers of students whose native language is not English. Such factors take time to overcome, and often are not. Does that doom children to academic failure? What if Georgia focused on replicating the practices of schools that are overcoming such challenges instead of making excuses?

Each year, the Georgia Public Policy Foundation ranks every public school in Georgia based on academic achievement – reading and math scores in grade three, five and eight and graduation rates and End of Course Test scores for high schools. Although not used in the rankings, poverty rates and site-based spending is also included. The results, compiled in the Georgia Report Card for Parents, present many reasons for optimism.

Those who think poverty is a barrier to success should visit Capital View Elementary in Atlanta or Webster County Middle School in Preston, just below Columbus. Every child tested in both schools was eligible for free- or reduced-price lunch. Capital View’s test scores ranked it in the top 15 percent of all elementary schools in the state; Webster ranked in the top 10 percent of all middle schools in the state.

Not only is there a poverty rate of 89 percent at Fair Street International Baccalaureate World School in Gainesville, but 50 percent of students are enrolled in the English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) program. Yet Fair Street placed in the top 10 percent of all elementary schools.

What about those highly publicized funding cuts?  The state average for spending per student at the school level is $7,039. Baconton Community Charter School in Mitchell County in South Georgia spends $5,114 per student, yet had a graduation rate of 94 percent and a ranking of 22nd in the state. Schley County Middle School in Ellaville spends $5,298 per student and is ranked 35th in the state. Walker Traditional School in Augusta spends $4,647 per student and is ranked 3rd in the state.

These examples should certainly not diminish the scale of challenges facing these children. There is no silver bullet, no substitute for hard work and extra time on task. However, visits and studies of high-achieving, high poverty schools across the state reveal several commonalities among the schools the Georgia Public Policy Foundation honors as “No Excuses” schools.

At every No Excuses school is a principal who is a dynamic leader. Critically important is the culture of high expectations these principals create. Of course, parental involvement is always desired but not always what it should be. To blame poor school performance on the lack of parental involvement is an excuse, an easy out, because it’s a tragic fact that there will always be a portion of parents who do not care or are simply not engaged in their child’s life.

No Excuses principals acknowledge that many of us worked hard in school in order to make our parents proud (or because we were afraid of the consequences of bringing home a bad grade) but that for many children those expectations must instead come from the school. And it doesn’t stop with academic expectations. It includes behavior. Students in No Excuses schools are respectful, orderly and often attired in a uniform or in compliance with a schoolwide dress code.

Finally, No Excuses principals hire high quality teachers who share the philosophy of high expectations.  After all, the most important factor in education is the teacher in the classroom.

The Foundation has honored No Excuses schools for more than a decade. They are, unfortunately, still the exception rather than the rule. In too many communities, mediocrity is expected and accepted. For Georgia to realize its potential, school boards must stand firm and refuse to accept excuses for poor academic performance.

Rules and regulations no longer stand in the way. Georgia arguably leads the nation in granting schools and school systems flexibility to adopt innovative, local solutions to their unique situations. But with flexibility must come accountability. If local school boards are unable or unwilling to address a long record of poor performance, then the state should force changes. The 44 No Excuses schools on the Foundation’s 2009 honor roll demonstrate that all children can be successful. They are clear evidence in every corner of our state, in cities, suburbs and rural areas that it can be done. The lesson is clear: No longer can Georgia excuse educational mediocrity.



Kelly McCutchen is executive vice president of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, an independent think tank that proposes practical, market-oriented approaches to public policy to improve the lives of Georgians. Nothing written here is to be construed as necessarily reflecting the views of the Georgia Public Policy Foundation or as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill before the U.S. Congress or the Georgia Legislature.