Ohio Charter News Weekly – 7.28.23
Jeff MurrayThe time to close charter funding gaps is now
How Ohio helps students into tech-based internships
Jessica PoinerSince he took office in 2019, Governor DeWine has consistently prioritized work-based learning and workforce development.
Ohio Charter News Weekly – 7.21.23
Jeff MurrayPraise for school choice expansion in Ohio
Even school choice opponents should support open enrollment
Jessica PoinerNow that the latest state budget is officially in the books, it’s safe to say that school choice stole the show.
Ohio lawmakers gut the third grade reading guarantee. What now?
Aaron ChurchillEnacted in 2012 under the leadership of Governor John Kasich, Ohio’s Third Grade Reading Guarantee included a retention requirement aimed at ending “social promotion,” the
Ohio lawmakers pass historic policies on charter schools, private school choice, governance, and literacy
Aaron ChurchillOn June 30, the Ohio House and Senate passed the state’s biennial budget bill for FYs 2024–25, and Governor DeWine signed the bill into law on July 3.
Hey parents: They don’t call it “college advantage” for nothing
Jeff Murray, Susan AckermanThe end of our parental education journey is drawing near: Less than a year from now, both of our children will be looking at college graduation.
Ohio Charter News Weekly – 6.30.23
Jeff MurrayBudget conference committee continues
Lorain schools don’t deserve special treatment in the budget bill
Jessica PoinerIt’s been a very busy budget season in Ohio.
One size does not fit all: Alternative education campuses in the charter sector
Jeff MurrayOne purpose of charter schools is to serve as laboratories of innovation for public education—a deliberate effort to do things differently than the long-entrenched traditional district model.
Don’t weaken accountability for Ohio’s charter sponsors and online schools
Aaron ChurchillAs this year’s budget process races to the finish line, state lawmakers are the midst of making decisions about what stays and what goes. The current, Senate-passed version of the budget bill has dozens of provisions that would move K–12 education in the right direction.
Lawmakers can still go further in Ohio’s historic effort to narrow charter funding gaps
Aaron ChurchillDespite serving tens of thousands of students each year—most of whom are low-income—Ohio has a regrettable track record of underfunding its public charter schools.
“Supplemental targeted assistance” is no way to fund schools
Aaron ChurchillIn its biennial budget plan for FYs 2024–25, the Senate—as did the House—proposed a hefty increase in K–12 education spending.
Lots of new schools. How much innovation?
Jeff MurraySince the 1980s, education reform efforts have sought to shake up the stodgy, traditional landscape of public schooling in the United States. One way to do that is to start schools from scratch that can introduce innovative new education models and push traditional systems to improve.
Senate’s budget plan moves the ball downfield on educational choice
Aaron ChurchillTo use football parlance, education reform often feels like three yards and a cloud of dust. Yet sometimes the gains are bigger—a long forward pass—and that’s what the Ohio Senate’s final budget bill, which passed the chamber yesterday, would amount to. These are the key proposals in their game plan.
Senate takes aim at some CTE funding boosts proposed by Governor DeWine
Jessica PoinerThe Ohio Senate recently introduced its version of the state budget for fiscal years 2024 and 2025.
CREDO got it wrong: Ohio’s charter sector is strong and getting better
Stéphane LavertuNOTE: The Thomas B. Fordham Institute occasionally publishes guest commentaries on its blogs. The views expressed by guest authors do not necessarily reflect those of Fordham.
Fordham Institute statement on Ohio Senate’s FY 2024-25 state budget plan
Ohio Education GadflyToday, the Ohio Senate unveiled its version of the biennial state budget (Substitute House Bill 33). Among the K-12 education highlights from the upper chamber’s bill include: Increasing accountability for the state education agency to rigorously implement education laws through much-needed governance reforms;
Impacts of charter authorizer and operator type on student achievement
Jeff MurrayOne of the more variable aspects of charter school operation around the country is the system by which schools are authorized and managed.
It’s time for Ohio to adopt the science of reading
Thomas J. Lasley, Jennifer BlatzNOTE: This piece was originally published by RealClear Education.
More evidence—this time from Ohio—that third grade retention works
Aaron ChurchillFollowing Florida’s lead, about twenty states, including Ohio, have enacted laws that require schools to retain third gra
Fordham Institute media statement on new study demonstrating academic benefits of third grade retention
Ohio Education GadflyToday, Ohio Excels and the Ohio Education Research Center (OERC) released a study on the academic impact of retaining students under Ohio’s Third Grade Reading Guarantee and providing them with extra support.
Ohio’s urban students lost a full grade level of learning. Here’s what their schools need to do right now.
Aaron ChurchillBy now, it’s no secret that the pandemic and schools’ pivot to remote learning was a disaster for most students.