Ohio Charter News Weekly – 3.8.24
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Mayoral visit
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Mayoral visit
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. “They want you to do better. They drive you to do better.”
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Reaching more students
When it comes to facilities, Ohio’s public charter schools have long gotten the short end of
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Charter enrollment speeding ahead
One of the big stories in the wake of the pandemic has been the nationwide slump in public school enrollments.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Time to stop
Public charter schools in Ohio have long struggled to secure adequate school facilities.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Brand new school on the way
As we approach September 2024, the education community is bracing for the expiration of Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) funds. There’s a growing narrative that this marks a significant funding cut for schools.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Timely research
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. On the grow in Toledo
What is the impact of teacher salary increases on recruitment and retention? A new report gives us an interesting on-the-ground look using data from Washington State.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Ensuring student safety
A few days before Christmas, the Columbus Dispatch published a story detailing how Columbus City Schools (CCS) plans to spend over half a million dollars to “evaluate conditions at its
We’re back after a holiday break. Covering stories from 12/22/23 – 1/5/24. Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full.
This is our last edition of 2023. Thanks for reading and subscribing. We’ll be back on Friday, January 5, 2024. Happy New Year!
Between 2007 and 2022, California saw its K–12 public school enrollment decrease by more than 390,000 students, or more than 6 percent statewide, according to data from the state’s Department of Education.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Lawsuit update
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Burgeoning school choice – Michigan
Relaxing licensure requirements for new teachers is one of many proposals being floated in order combat teacher shortages and diversify the pipel
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. An opening
Our 2022-23 Fordham Sponsorship Annual Report shares our work during the last school year, overseeing thirteen schools that served approximately 6,000 students in Dayton, Columbus, Cincinnati and Portsmouth, Ohio.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. The world of data
Real time classroom observations by trained evaluators hold promise to accurately assess the quality of teaching and learning going on inside those four walls; an as-yet-untapped area of “education R&D”.
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Welcome, Director Dackin!
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Fighting student absenteeism in Ohio
Stories featured in Ohio Charter News Weekly may require a paid subscription to read in full. Education governance in Ohio finally changes
Too many students in Ohio are off-track—way off-track—in terms of meeting grade-level math and reading standards. Last school year, 32 percent of students statewide scored “limited”—the lowest achievement mark—on state math exams, while 20 percent scored at that level in English language arts (ELA).
This is the second of two editions this week, focusing on Ohio charter news stories and catching us up from our long vacation break.