Ohio Charter News Weekly – 4.4.25
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. A sad update
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. A sad update
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
NOTES: Today, the Ohio House Finance Committee heard testimony on House Bill 96
NOTES: Today, the Ohio House Finance Committee heard testimony on House Bill 96
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Direct admissions (DA) programs—where colleges proactively (and preemptively) admit high school students to their institutions without the need to apply—are
As a recent edition of the Journal of School Choice makes abundantly
NOTES: Today, the Ohio Senate Education Committee heard testimony on Senate Bill 127, which would make changes to the way in which low-performing public schools are identified and how the state intervenes when scho
Under the leadership of Governor DeWine, Ohio has invested significant time, effort, and funding into expanding and <
It’s no secret that improving early literacy has been Governor DeWine’s hallmark education passion.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Dollars and (common) sense
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
With property values soaring throughout Ohio—and property taxes climbing upward—state lawmakers have been giving more time and attention to local tax policy.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Last spring, Governor DeWine used his state of the state address
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
There was so much news over our break that we needed two editions to cover it all!
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
Welcome to a special Thursday edition of Ohio Charter News Weekly. We’re back after three weeks’ break, with this edition covering Ohio-specific news published between 3/3/25 and 3/20/25. We’ll be back again tomorrow with a national catch-up.
News stories featured in Gadfly Bites may require a paid subscription to read in full. Just sayin’.
School systems across the country (and world) have been implementing limitations or outright bans on student smartphone use during the school day in an effort to improve the educational experience for young people. Improvements have been predicted along many dimensions: attention span, academic achievement, mental wellbeing, disciplinary referrals, and even absenteeism.
Student math and reading achievement continue to lag in schools across Ohio. Governor DeWine is proposing numerous initiatives to address this issue via the state budget. Yet lawmakers can and should go further in the following ways.
Bom dia, y'all! Gadfly Bites is back from vacation and our first catch up edition covers important clips from March 3 through March 14.
Debate on the biennial state budget is in full swing, as Governor DeWine has unveiled his proposals and House lawmakers are now holding committee hearings. Through the amendment process, the chamber is expected to put forward its plan in April and send the legislation over to the Senate.
School funding guarantees have been a much-discussed element of Governor DeWine’s proposed
Last year, during his state of the state address, Governor DeWine called on the legislature to “make a very simple fix in statute to insert career planning into existing graduation plan requirements.” The
Note: On Tuesday, March 4, 2025, the Ohio House Education Committee heard public testimony on the education provisions in House Bill 96—the next biennial state budget.
Years after the resumption of “business as usual” schooling, chronic student absenteeism stubbornly remains higher than it was before the pandemic. The governor’s budget offers a new approach to tackle this persistent problem.
During his terms in office, Governor Mike DeWine has been a strong supporter of public charter schools.