Education issues that are the subject of sometimes contentious state and national discussions were the focus of the recent fall meeting of the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence.
The Committee is setting priorities for its work in the coming months, building on more than 25 years of advocacy that have contributed to Kentucky's improved national rankings in education. Members heard from the editor and publisher of Education Week, a leading national publication, and from representatives of Kentucky organizations who shared their perspectives on key issues in education today.
The Committee also celebrated the 15th anniversary of its award-winning Commonwealth Institute for Parent Leadership, an initiative that trains parents to become informed advocates for school improvement. To date, more than 1,600 Kentuckians have completed the program, which also has been made available in other states.
Publisher Virginia B. Edwards, who also is president of Editorial Projects in Education, told the group that the Prichard Committee has led efforts to heighten public will, political support and media attention as Kentucky has framed many of the issues that are now making headlines. Among the themes that in Edwards' view are taking shape across the country:
· The challenging transitions to tougher academic standards, such as those Kentucky adopted last year, and to the tests that will measure student performance on the standards. In Kentucky, the new tests are to be administered for the first time next spring.
· Early childhood education and the importance of parent involvement and community support for quality programs.
· Tight budgets that states are facing, worsened by the end of federal stimulus funding.
· The increasing significance of international measures and competition in determining and ensuring education quality.
· Political uncertainties about the re-authorization of federal education legislation and other matters.
Clustered under these areas are issues related to technology and on-line learning, teacher effectiveness, college access, leadership development, special education and other importance topics, she added.
National leaders and much of the public realize that the education system is outdated, Edwards said, adding that she believes four things could lead to significant changes in education: eliminating so-called "seat time," where students must remain in a class for a certain length of time regardless of their mastery of the subject; eliminating the adoption of textbooks to encourage more creativity in classroom teaching and learning; deploying teachers and other staff members differently to remove restrictions on how they do their work; and greater use of technology.
The Kentucky panelists shared their views as "voices from the field" in a session led by Stu Silberman, executive director of the Prichard Committee.
· Mary Ann Blankenship, executive director of the Kentucky Education Association, described the "excitement, anxiety and trepidation" that she sees in Kentucky classrooms today. The atmosphere is the result of Kentucky's adoption of the tougher standards and the additional work they will require when resources are limited and shrinking. KEA members appear to be "more stressed out and confused" than they have been for many years, she said.
· Bill Scott, executive director of the Kentucky School Boards Association, said his organization is focusing on helping local school boards set and maintain high expectations for student performance, accountability for results and ensuring the capacity is in place to meet the goals in both areas. He agreed that ensuring conditions for success was possibly the most challenging task in times of rising costs and diminishing resources, citing the tension between greater student needs and a declining capacity at the local level to raise revenue.
· Wayne Young, executive director of the Kentucky Association of School Administrators, agreed with elements of Edwards' assessment and said the state should change its thinking on curriculum with more emphasis on virtual and distance learning. "We need to look differently at what we teach."
· Jerry Green, president of the Kentucky Association of School Superintendents and Superintendent of Pikeville Independent Schools, applauded the new emphasis on preparing students for college and career and noted that parents want their children to be ready to succeed at that level. He also noted that "this has been the greatest single year of change since 1990, (the year the Kentucky Education Reform Act passed) without question."
The Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence is a statewide citizens' advocacy group, founded in 1983, working to improve education for all Kentuckians.
A web-based destination for aggregated news and commentary related to public school education in Kentucky and related topics.
Showing posts with label Virginia Edwards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia Edwards. Show all posts
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Prichard Committee focuses on education 'hot topics'
Here's Prichard's press release on their Fall meeting:
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Prichard Rethinks 21st Century Education Reform
There’s rising concern that our
test-based accountability system is broken…
test-based accountability system is broken…
Some experts argue that key elements of the US system,
especially annual testing and tying consequences for low scores
to schools and increasingly to teachers - and you know that’s
just a huge mess - are a far cry from the practices embraced
by these leading countries… I’m not sure it’s a particularly
healthy way to look at [teacher evaluation.] In many cases,
top performing countries do not test annually, and their approach
to accountability rests on gateway exams in high school with clear
consequences for students.
--Virginia Edwards

Now as President of Ed Week’s parent group, Editorial Projects in Education – where Sexton served as a board member - she says she has the perfect job, one that combined four “important-to-me things:” journalism that helps build political will through communication; a chance to improve education for kids; she gets to “run something;” and is part of the nonprofit sector.
From her unique perspective Edwards tells a familiar tale, that “Kentucky has been a national beacon of education reform” over the past quarter century, after languishing at the bottom of the heap for so many years. But, Edwards has been uniquely positioned to see education reform in other states mirror Kentucky’s efforts.
Edwards’s topic was “21st Century Education Reform: A National Perspective,” and she zeroed in on six “big picture” themes for the current year:
1. A difficult academic transition is taking shape: The common-core standards are different and hard, and the move to a new generation of assessments will be a challenge. The new standards and tests have implications across the board for everyone but it remains to be seen how well the supporters of the common core can sustain the momentum of the past year as the “real work” gets going.
2. Early Literacy: by which Edwards means early childhood education up to the third grade. Education Week will focus on cradle-to-career coverage, Edwards said. She underscored the importance of community support and parental involvement.
3. Tough budget times are getting tougher: The “funding cliff” was real; the end of most of the stimulus aid that “partly cushioned the blow of the Great Recession for states and districts.” In many states, the budget squeeze has reduced school funding and cost jobs while districts are challenged to offset significant losses with greater efficiencies.
4. Watershed political and policy changes are still being assimilated (or resisted) as the 2012 election looms. The K-12 system already had a full plate with the Bush-era No Child Left Behind Act; the competitive-grant and school improvement initiatives of the Obama years have introduced another driver of policy; and schools in many states are now being whipsawed by dramatic changes enacted by a resurgent GOP. Against this backdrop, educators face the unknown timing and provisions of a new ESEA and the uncertainties of an election year with control of the White House, Congress, (most other states’) governorships, and state legislatures in play.
5. A conjunction of new entrepreneurship and new forces for innovation is reshaping the “education industry” and - maybe – education itself. “New programs, products, and services are emerging through the efforts of private investors, a new generation of philanthropists, and retooled older companies (with a nudge, in some cases, from federal dollars). New technologies are enabling much of this ferment, which could be “disruptive” as well as “sustaining” innovation in the field. Many educators are eyeing these developments warily; others see opportunities to rethink a century-old K-12 system.
6. The international dimension in education is more significant than ever: The financial and economic crisis of the past three-plus years has only heightened the urgency of seeing American education in its global context. How well the United States performs academically compared with overseas competitors is a first-tier concern in policy circles.
Edwards then shared a partial list of issues Ed Week is following:
• Teaching and Learning
o Standards and Assessment (a favorite focus of business and policy circles)
o Teacher Effectiveness
o Teacher Preparation
o Expanded learning (out-of-school)
o College access
• Leadership, Districts, Research & Special Needs
o Leadership development
o Get-tough management
o Zero-tolerance (questioned)
o Nutrition standards
o ELLs and Common Core
o Special education and charter schools
o Special education expenses
o Neuroscience in the classroom
o Research and entrepreneurship
• Government and Politics
o Whither ESEA?
o RTT, SIG, i3 implementation
o The impact of state policy change and cuts
o The new players (PIE Network, Stand for Children, Students First, DFER, others… flex muscles in state policy)
o Campaign 2012 (See Politics K-12)
• Technology and E-Learning
o Online learning goes mainstream
o Bring your own device (portable digital technology)
o Games and education
o Research questions remain
• Education Week Priorities
o Develop and launch a business and innovation/ “education ventures” channel
o Expand the presence of Commentary online through our evolving “opinion channel”
o Build on our 2011-12 successes by disseminating even more of our work to new audiences through content partnerships or other means
o Build on our recent advances in social media by making more effective use of Facebook or Twitter to promote our work and engage readers
o Increase our skills and content knowledge by attending PD events and beat-area conferences
The Gist
America’s leaders and much of the public have come to realize that an education system born in the Industrial Age can no longer effectively serve students in a complex, rapidly changing Information Age…Students need a combination of content knowledge, cognitive strategies and learning behaviors…high-quality education will increasingly become a necessity for building a successful adult life…must think creatively and critically…adapt…leverage technologies…work collaboratively… communicate clearly…
Yet, in 19th century fashion, we continue to rely on tests, and textbooks that are poorly conceived and inconsistently taught… This can be traced to teachers’ inadequate subject-matter knowledge… PD does little to make up for teachers’ deficits… too many students are unprepared as innovators, creative thinkers, problem solvers or leaders…
Recent years have seen unprecedented developments in the policy environment…growing momentum toward a very different educational experience… Most states have aligned with common core and high expectations… federally funded consortia developing next generation assessments…
“If the past two years can be characterized as a time of massive movement on the policy front, we believe the coming years will be occupied by the hard work of implementing these ambitious policies, bringing the new vision to the classroom, and making it real through curriculum, instruction and assessment, both formative and summative.”
Edwards told the Prichard gathering that Quality Counts 2012 will take on an international theme, and that the trips she joined to Finland, Toronto, Singapore and Shanghai were “not junkets.” Her observations taught her that high quality education was an important goal in those places, and that educators were held in high regard for civic and economic reasons.
Quality Counts will feature
• Career: focusing on college readiness
• Testing: “A recent report by the National Research Council suggests there’s little evidence to date that the current approach – with its high stakes for teachers and schools, but little for students – will produce the kind of academic gains hoped for.” …and they are not the practices of our leading competition
• Testingbox: An infographic with PISA and TIMSS
• Teaching: Teachers are universally seen as crucial but “in the US continue to be viewed largely through a pink-collar lens…”
• Curriculum: how international schools approach curriculum
Ed week is launching a new “channel” of coverage looking at innovation in a rapidly-evolving high tech education industry. Well established players, like Pearson, are aggressively staking new claims in the market, and Ed Week hopes to be an independent national resource to chronicle and analyze the changes in “the business world of K-12 education.
The idea is being shaped by the notion of “disruptive innovation,” change that alters the fundamentals of how we look at teaching and learning.
~
Snippets
Ed Week online:
25 million page views last year
Edwards on the reauthorization of ESEA:
“I don’t think any of us think it’s going to happen quickly.”
“We’ve got to start telling our story better –
about why good schools are needed…”
“Education has suffered and continues to suffer from people
who are telling the story in a negative way.”
I’m a big fan of the democratization of information.
The internet is not going away.
Social media’s not going away…
so trusted media brands are more valued than ever.”
I think there is a common vision of where we are going
to the extent that the political ends have come around to meet
(on the possibility of other forms of education
that don’t have to be the cookie cutter of one teacher to 22 kids).
If four things could happen tomorrow,
here’s what I think could change the education system over night:
1. If we got rid of seat time
2. If we got rid of textbook adoption
(to help teachers become more creative
about the curriculum materials)
3. If we could figure out how to deploy
our human resources differently
(Who says you can’t sit with a 150 kids in a classroom,
particularly in AP?)
4. The technology piece.
(There are tons of teachers doing innovative things…
and people are not fretting over the possibilities as they were two years ago.)
“We’re on the verge of big change in education.”
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Prichard Committee to review 'hot topic' education issues
Commonwealth Institute for Parent Leadership
Celebrates 15 years of Parent Empowerment
The latest 'hot topic' issues in education will be the theme of the fall meeting of the Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence, set for Friday, November 18, 2011, at the Kentucky History Center in Frankfort.
Virginia B. Edwards, president and editor of Editorial Projects in Education, publisher of Education Week, will frame the issues in her keynote address: "21st Century Education Reform: A National Perspective."
Prichard Committee executive director Stu Silberman will facilitate a "Voices from the Field" panel to hear the Kentucky perspective from:
* Mary Ann Blankenship, executive director, Kentucky Education Association
* Jerry Green, president, Kentucky Association of School Superintendents and superintendent of Pikeville Independent Schools
* Bill Scott, executive director, Kentucky School Boards Association
* Wayne Young, executive director, Kentucky Association of School Administrators
Members also will be asked to set their priorities for the Committee's work to address key education issues as they undertake a new planning process.
The Committee will also celebrate the 15th anniversary of the Commonwealth Institute for Parent Leadership, a program that prepares parents to become productive partners in education.
SOURCE: Pichard Press release
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