May 1, 2009
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Speaking of Leading:
"We are going to have to cut the important to fund the essential."
- Governor Jennifer Granholm, in comments to participants of the Governor’s Education Summit 4.28.09


I can do what?

No seat-time waiver? There’s still a lot of flexibility within the law.

According to the Michigan Department of Education, here’s a sampling of what schools can do without getting waivers and/or approvals from MDE. 

  • Allow any high school student to take one or two online courses at any self-scheduled time and place.  (mentor teacher required)
  • Allow any high school student to take all of his/her courses online at school with up to two of them from home.
  • Allow any high school student to dual enroll for all but one high school course and the high school course may be an online course.
  • Allow any high school student to take one or two independent study courses per semester.
  • Allow any high school student to take up to half of his/her courses as work-based learning.
  • Build project based learning courses for any high school content.
  • Build online project based learning courses for any high school content.
  • Offer college courses on the high school campus.
  • Create and use performance assessments to award secondary credits.
  • Offer flexible scheduling to high school students.
  • Remember: documentation is required and a conversation with your pupil accounting auditors will be helpful.

Source: MDE, 4.1.09

 

MDE releases guidelines for Project Reimagine

On Thursday, April 30, 2009, superintendents and school board presidents received a memo from State Superintendent for Instruction Mike Flanagan outlining criteria for applicants to become one of the 20 demonstration districts slated for additional funding.

Project Reimagine Proposal Guidelines are targeted to any school district/organization that is ready to accept the challenge to significantly transform teaching and learning. The MDE is seeking up to 20 demonstration districts to “reimagine” education, and MDE is securing $1 million that will be available to support those efforts.

In addition, those districts selected will be included in MDE’s application for additional federal ARRA funds.

Proposals must be sent to the Michigan Department of Education by close of business on Friday, August 14, 2009. Questions can be directed to Tom White at tomwhite2251@gmail.com or Jean Shane at shanej@michigan.gov.

“Be bold,” Flanagan wrote in closing. “Tinkering won’t do.”

 

Five ideas for high-leverage investments of ARRA dollars

Coalition calls for five specific reforms that stand the best chance of raising student performance.

The Coalition for Student Achievement has released five specific recommendations for governors, chief state school officers, superintendents and other state and local education leaders on how to best invest the federal stimulus dollars to leverage significant increases in student performance. 

As recommended by the guide, by 2012, Americans should expect to see:

  1. At least 40 states adopting a common core of fewer, clearer, higher, standards.
  2. Use of robust, user-friendly and timely data to know what is working for students, what is not, and what additional help students need.
  3. Meaningful professional teacher evaluation systems that shine a spotlight on effectiveness and provide teachers with the support they need to improve.
  4. Turn-around of the lowest-performing 5 percent of schools, with the help of new, quality education options, including public charters.
  5. Targeted and intensive interventions for struggling students, including a longer school day and year, with instruction by the most effective teachers.

These recommendations were developed by a bipartisan group of more than 30 national education policy leaders and practitioners following an April convening sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation in response to requests from state and district education leaders on how to best invest the federal stimulus dollars.  The recommendations were generated from the practices and policies that will most likely dramatically raise student achievement in America, based on the group's decades of experience in education reform.

The resulting recommendations are intended to build upon federal guidance by providing detailed, specific, bold steps that state and local leaders can take to use the one-time American Recovery and Reinvestment Act investment to yield powerful, long-term student achievement results. 

Read the full report…

The Coalition for Student Achievement is comprised of 50 organizations that are committed to ensuring that federal education funds available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act are leveraged to both stimulate economic recovery and drive education reform that will dramatically improve U.S. student achievement.  For more information, visit www.coalitionforstudentachievement.org.

 

Duncan proposes no changes to recent High School Graduation Rate regulations

In October 2008, the U.S. Department of Education released new federal regulations and guidance on Title I that changed the No Child Left Behind Act’s requirements related to high school graduation rate data collection, calculation, and accountability.
Many in the education community were waiting to see if the Obama administration would make any changes to these regulations. In an April 1 letter to chief state school officers, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan announced no changes to the graduation rate regulations, saying that he supports them and believes that they “strike the right balance between accountability and flexibility, thereby encouraging schools to serve all student populations.”

“It is increasingly clear that a high school diploma is the minimum credential needed for success in the labor force,” Duncan wrote. “High schools and districts with low graduation rates must be held accountable for their failures and must take action to improve these rates. The new regulations related to graduation rates are an important first step.”

Duncan’s letter did indicate some small changes to the approval process for states’ graduation rate proposals and said that more information on those changes will be forthcoming in the near future. The letter also included some changes to the Title I regulations that do not pertain to graduation rates, including a repeal of the ban that had forbidden underperforming school districts to serve as tutoring providers and an easing of the fourteen-day notification requirement on public school choice.

Related Resources from the Alliance for Excellent Education:
Every Student Counts: The Role of Federal Policy in Improving Graduation Rate Accountability, an issue brief by the Alliance for Excellent Education, examining the graduation rate regulations.

Individual state briefs that outline a state’s current high school graduation policies and describe how recent regulations from the U.S. Department of Education could impact these policies.

Source: Straight A's: Public Education Policy and Progress, 4.6.09

 

Reform and Restore: Implementing the ARRA

ARRATuesday, May 26, 2009
Kellogg Center, MSU, Lansing
8:30-4:00

President Barack Obama calls it a “major milestone on our road to recovery.”

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan calls it an “historic opportunity to create jobs and advance education reform.”

State Superintendent Michael P. Flanagan says, “it will lay the groundwork for a generation of education reform.”

But there’s a catch.

The funding flowing to schools through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) “must advance reforms and improve learning,” according to Duncan. “We are putting real money on the line to challenge every state to push harder and do more for its children.”

How can your district meet the dual demands by the federal government to Reform your system as you Restore jobs and services to students?
What best practices are suggested through the regulations and guidance coming out of Washington D.C. and Lansing?
Who are the experts who can advise you?
Where can you find resources to guide you along the way?
When can you expect to see funds start to flow to your district?

Reform and Restore: Implementing the ARRA is a workshop designed to answer these questions and help jump-start your district’s planning. We recommend you send a district team so you can begin work on a plan and leave with a strategy that fits your needs and goals.

Invited speakers include:

  • Mary Kuessler, AASA 
  • Governor Jennifer M. Granholm
  • Mike Flanagan, State Superintendent for Public Instruction
  • Jann Jenka, Michigan’s education liaison to ….:

Program will feature:

  • ARRA Overview and federal perspective
  • Michigan’s approach to ARRA education spending
  • Timelines for application and disbursement of funds
  • Guidelines for spending within the spirit and letter of ARRA
  • Evidence based ideas/best practices for use of ARRA funding

Plus, MDE specialists will offer information related to each of the major streams of funding through ARRA:

  • Title I, Part A
  • Title I, Part A School Improvement
  • Title II, Part D Educational Technology
  • Title X, Part C Homeless Children and Youth
  • IDEA Special Education—Part B, Special Education and SE Preschool; Part C,
  • School Lunch Emergency Food Assistance Program
  • Equipment Assistance for School Food Authorities
  • State Fiscal Stabilization Fund
  • Race to the Top & Innovation competitive funds
Register a team today at www.gomiem.org.

MASB-SEG Property/Casualty Pool announces one more reason to join

""Now there’s one more reason to join the MASB-SEG Property/Casualty Pool. As a benefit of membership, school districts can participate in the Pool’s new free Property Valuation Program.

About the program
The Pool’s Board of Directors recently authorized a partnership with CBIZ Valuation Group. CBIZ will appraise the value of all members’ buildings and contents, and provide them with a comprehensive report of its findings. The Pool and CBIZ have also negotiated an agreement that allows members to upgrade their property valuation to meet the financial requirements of GASB-34 at a 15 percent discount from the standard CBIZ rates.

Program benefits
Why is it important to know your total property value?
The information included in the comprehensive report will:

  • Help ensure you’re properly covered in case of a catastrophic loss;
  • Help you with facility upgrade planning and verifying your insured values;
  • Allow the Pool to provide detailed information to its reinsurers, and enable us to reduce our reinsurance costs; and
  • Help the Pool maintain premium stability.

Other benefits of membership
What other benefits of membership does the Pool provide?

  • Access to free employee training through SafeSchools, the nation’s leading provider of comprehensive safety and compliance training courses;
  • Comprehensive risk coverage designed specifically for school districts; and
  • The potential to share in annual surplus returns. The Pool has returned more than $91 million since its inception.

For information on the non-profit, member-owned and -operated Pool or to request a quote, contact your SET SEG Account Executive today.

1-800-292-5421
SET SEG

 

 

High school NAEP scores stagnant, while younger children improve

Students at ages 9 and 13 have posted significant gains in both reading and mathematics since the early 1970s, while the average scores for 17-year-olds were not significantly different in either subject, according to the new long-term trend report on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).

The Nation’s Report Card: NAEP 2008 Trends in Academic Progress charts the educational progress of students at ages 9, 13, and 17 in reading and mathematics on the NAEP.

The report compares results from the most recent NAEP long-term trend assessments, which were given in the 2007–08 school year, to results from 2004 and to the first years the reading and mathematics assessments were given in 1971 and 1973, respectively.

The report provides national results only.

Gaps in reading scores between White and Black students have narrowed for all three age groups since 1971, though those gaps did not change significantly from 2004 to 2008. Reading score gaps between White and Hispanic students were smaller in 2008 than in 1975 at ages 9 and 17, though there were no significant changes from 2004 to 2008.

The Nation’s Report Card: NAEP 2008 Trends in Academic Progress and additional data collected from the 2008 long-term trend assessments are available online at http://nationsreportcard.gov.

 

Date change! - SAPAC Annual Golf Outing, July 23, 2009

 

Braille-A-Thon

June 23 from 11 to 3. 

The Comprehensive Design Team for Quality Education for Blind and Visually Impaired students are organizing a very cool event.  It's a Braille-A-Thon on the Lansing Capital lawn on June 23 from 11 to 3.  It is to celebrate Louis Braille's 200th birth day and to raise awareness about the importance of Braille literacy for our blind children.

Vendor information…
Participant information…

 

Michigan shines in FIRST Robotics Championship

A robotics team from Huron Valley Schools is sharing a big win in the FIRST Robotics Championships in Atlanta, Georgia. The winning team in the international competition was made up of a team from Huron Valley Schools which partnered with teams from suburban Chicago and California to win the robotics championship. 

The Huron Valley team was mentored by engineers from the General Motors Milford Proving Ground. 

The champion game came down to two teams, one comprised of all Michigan teams and another consisting of an alliance of teams from Michigan, Illinois and California.  Second place went to a team of students from Berkley and Utica Schools along with a team from North Oakland County sponsored by GM Powertrain in Pontiac. 

There were nearly 350 teams involved in the championships at the Georgia Dome. 

 Other honors included a team from Notre Dame Prep and mentored by Chrysler engineers winning the top award for imagery and the Huron Valley team receiving the General Motors Industrial Design award

Michigan organizers of the FIRST competition say the results show Michigan is the dominate force in engineering across the world.

Hear an interview with the president of FIRST in Michigan…

For more on the FIRST Robotics competition…

Learn more about Da Peeps—an elementary/middle school team from Swartz Creek, who snagged top honors in the FIRST Lego League World Festival…

Source: WWJ Radio, 4.20.09

 

MASA news:

President’s Installation Luncheon, June 12

This year's MASA President’s Installation Luncheon is scheduled for Friday, June 12, 2009, noon, at the Holiday Inn Conference Center in Big Rapids. The luncheon features the installation of the 2009-2010 Executive Board officers as follows: President Tom Langdon, Big Rapids Public Schools, President-Elect T.C. Wallace, Lansing School District, and Director 2009-2012 Pete Dion, Novi Schools.

Mark your calendar and plan to join us for this important event.

 

Mark Bielang (Paw Paw) to be inducted as AASA president

Mark T. Bielang, superintendent of schools in Paw Paw, MI, will be installed as 2009-10 AASA president on July 16 from 6-7 pm with reception immediately following.

The event will be held in conjunction with AASA’s summer governance meetings and the AASA Seattle Summit in Seattle, Wash. (Hotel information listed below.)

“Michigan AASA members are invited to attend all the installation events.

At that same ceremony, Edgar B. Hatrick, III, superintendent of Loudoun County, VA, Public Schools, will be installed as 2009-10 president-elect. Hatrick has been a member of AASA for 22 years and has served on the AASA Executive Committee and the AASA Governing Board.

Hatrick has served as superintendent in Loudoun County since 1991. Previously, he was assistant superintendent in Loudoun County. He served as president of the Virginia Association of School Superintendents and the Washington Area Superintendents’ Study Council. He has been a guest lecturer at University of Virginia, George Mason University, Shenandoah University and Marymount University. He received his doctorate and master’s degrees in education from Virginia Tech and his bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Richmond.

Finally, the following individuals will be sworn in to the AASA Executive Committee:

  • Jerry Colonna, superintendent in Beaverton, Ore.;
  • Joe Gertsema, superintendent in Yankton, S.D.;
  • Chris Wright, superintendent of the Hazelwood School District in St. Louis, Mo.; and
  • Frank Sippy, superintendent of Pomperaug Regional School District 15 in Middlebury and Southbury, Conn.

“AASA is fortunate to have new members on the AASA Executive Committee to work with Ed and Mark to advance our shared vision of high-quality public education for all students,” said AASA Executive Director Dan Domenech.


HOTEL INFORMATION

Hyatt At Olive 8
1635 8th Avenue
Seattle, WA  98101
 

Group Rate: $179 Single, Double Occupancy
Reservation Phone Number: (206) 695 1234
Be sure to mention "AASA or American Association of School Administrators" to receive the AASA discounted rate.

Hotel-Reservation Deadline: Sunday, June 16, 2009 - Please be sure to secure your housing accommodations quickly. Reservations are based on availability after June 16.

 

Council Highlights: 4.22.09

At its April 22, 2009 meeting in Lansing, the MASA Council had an opportunity to chat with Jann Jencka of the Michigan Economic Recovery Office. Jencka, a retired ISD superintendent, will serve as a liaison between educators and the Governor’s office as they implement the education provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA).

Jann shared the latest news regarding rollout of ARRA funding and answered questions by Council Members. We encourage you to:

Key messages from Jann Jencka

Restore and Reform—This seems to be the general theme emerging for the direction spending should take when using ARRA funds. While leaders are sensitive to the need to restore staff and programming that economic downturns have forced, there is also the need—mandated in the Act and required for continued funding—for districts to leverage these resources to reform practice and improve results for students. The MDE has called ARRA “a short-term investment for long-term gains in student achievement through innovation and accountability.”

ARRA funds will come with restrictions on use and significant reporting requirements—for both states and local districts. Michigan is one of 16 states selected for oversight by the Government Accountability Office, which is likely to make this reporting burden even greater. Districts should take into consideration the staff hours and other resources needed to track and report ARRA spending when budgeting.

What LEAs can do now
PLAN early—
prepare a comprehensive needs assessment and begin to form school and district plans
PLAN deep—
identify your greatest challenge; look for research-based solutions; imagine substantial reform; begin to build capacity.
PLAN for accountability and transparency—
budget for staff time and resources needed for reporting; be ready to encumber funds within short timelines; keep separate accounting ledgers of the ARRA funds; expect to be monitored.

Current Timeline:

Applications for the first phase of the State Fiscal Stabilization Fund for Education are now available to states. To receive its initial SFSF allocation, a State must:

  • Show commitment to Four Core Reform Assurances:
    • Achieving Equity in Teacher Distribution: Increase teacher effectiveness and address inequities in the distribution of highly qualified teachers;
    • Improving Collection and Use of Data: Establish and use a pre-K-through-college-and-career data system to track progress and foster continuous improvement;
    • Improving Standards: Make progress towards rigorous college- and career-ready standards and high-quality assessments that are valid and reliable for all students, including limited English proficient students and students with disabilities; and
    • Supporting Struggling Schools: Provide targeted, intensive support and effective interventions to turn around schools identified for corrective action and restructuring.
  • Include baseline data that demonstrates the State's current status in each of the four core reform areas; and
  • Describe how the State intends to use its stabilization allocation. 

Within two weeks of receipt of an approvable SFSF application, the Department will provide a State with 67 percent of its SFSF allocation. The remaining funds are scheduled to become available in July 2009, pending approval based on progress toward the goals above.

Applications for districts to draw down this money should be available:
     Mid-April for most programs (see PowerPoint)
      Mid-June for Ed Tech Competitive
      September for Title I-School Improvement

 

Ron Fuller's brush with death

Ron FullerRon Fuller, the superintendent for the Kalamazoo Regional Educational Service Agency, is sporting a neck brace these days, but considering the alternative, he's grateful.

Fuller was injured on the final day of a spring break trip to Costa Rica with his wife and several educator friends, including Ric Perry, an assistant superintendent at Portage Public Schools.

Along with others in the group, Fuller was taking a final dip in the ocean when he was smacked by a towering wave that slammed him head first into the ocean floor. When the wave receded Fuller found that he couldn't move his arms and legs.

Perry was nearby, realized that Fuller was in distress, and pulled him out of the water. Fuller hadn't broken his neck, but he severely bruised his spinal cord. 

Fuller was able to fly home the next day with the rest of group - the plane trip from hell, he says - and he's is back at work. But the neck hasn't fully healed and that will take time, doctors are telling him.

It was, Fuller ruefully says, one of his more memorable vacations. And Ric Perry, he adds, will never again pay for a drink in Fuller's presence.
Read more….

Source: Kalamazoo Gazette, 4.26.09

Welcome to the Winners' Circle
Wild for Books program

At  this year’s MASA Distinguished Administrators’ Luncheon, 10  new MASA members were inducted into the Winners’ Circle. These members were honored by the Membership Services Committee for initiating a unique, successful program or implementing an innovative idea that has had a significant, positive impact on their school districts that can be used by other districts across the state.

Winners' CircleWild for Books program
Nick Ceglarek, Fruitport Community Schools
with Julie VanBergen and Darcy Ceglarek

“Wild for Books” is not your typical mobile library. Through the passion and innovation of one elementary principal and one dedicated parent leader working to address “summer reading loss,” this reading machine was launched.  The goal was not only to get books into student hands in the summer time, but also to track visitors, readership, and achievement. “Wild for Books” mobile library has been awarded the regional Western Dunes Reading Council’s “Celebrate Literacy Award” for 2008.  The impact to the great community of Fruitport has been tremendous.

Using spring and fall fluency data, the “Wild for Books” program proved statistically significant in reducing “summer reading loss”  Through parent and teacher volunteers, and community donations of over $10,000, the bus continues to have a tremendous positive impact with the greater community of Fruitport. Visitors to the bus have approximately doubled in a one year period reaching over 1/3 of the district elementary population. Unlike other mobile libraries, the “Wild for Books” program, tracks readership, visitors, and achievement data to evaluate program effectiveness. The “Wild for Books” reading bus rolls on in its quest to improve student achievement.

MASA accepts nominations for the Winners’ Circle year round. You can find more details on previous winners online.

 

MAISA news:

A cross-office core team redefines Michigan high schools

Since November 2007, the Michigan Association of Intermediate School Administrators has participated with the Office of School Improvement in a cross-office collaborative effort to assist high-priority schools, particularly high schools, in Michigan.

This effort involves representatives from:

  • Michigan Association of Intermediate School Administrators
  • Michigan Department of Education (MDE)
  • Michigan State University, Northern Michigan University
  • Lansing Community College
  • Michigan Association of Secondary School Principals
  • Ingham Intermediate School District
  • Oakland Schools
  • Association of Michigan School Counselors
  • Michigan Virtual University.

MDE collaborates with the Great Lakes East Comprehensive Center to lead and facilitate this work. Great Lakes East is funded by the U.S. Department of Education to provide high-quality technical assistance to MDE in meeting the goals of the Federal No Child Left Behind Act and is currently in its fourth year of operation.

The High School Core Team is an important element of MDE’s comprehensive effort to strategically redefine the vision of future Michigan high schools. It is an active advocate for all students, supporting initiatives to increase their achievement and meet the Michigan Merit Curriculum high school graduation requirements.

Currently, the team meets monthly to engage in facilitated conversations and collaborate on specific issues, such as English language learner achievement. Collectively, the members explore topics and identify opportunities for cross-office and partner collaboration. They create a plan for collaborating and addressing the challenges.

Each office representative takes the responsibility to share the information with their units and follow through the action steps. To learn more about this comprehensive effort, please contact Jon Tomlanovich, MAISA Associate Executive Director jont@gomasa.org; or MaryAlice Galloway, Interim Director of the Office of School Improvement, at gallowaym@michigan.gov.

 

MDE news:

MDE announces Title I distinguished schools

The Oakland International Academy High School located in Detroit was named the Michigan Title I Distinguished School for the 2008-2009 school year by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan.

The high school was recognized for its exceptional student achievement growth over the past three years in both English language arts and mathematics. From 2005-06 to 2007-08 student achievement grew 85 percent in mathematics and 69 percent in English language arts.

Four additional schools: Detroit’s Carstens Elementary School; Saginaw Preparatory Academy; Homer Middle School; and Granville Elementary School were each recognized as one of the top five Title I Distinguished Schools in the state. Schools were selected by the Michigan Department of Education on the basis of student achievement gains in both mathematic and English language arts.

“These schools and their students have shown that strong leadership, hard work, and commitment to excellence result in greater student achievement,” Flanagan said. “I applaud their dedication, effort and progress.”

The Michigan Department of Education will present certificates of accomplishment to the five schools during the Michigan School Improvement Conference today in Novi.
Oakland International Academy was one of 57 national Title I school winners (representing 36 states) recognized at the National Association of State Title I Directors annual conference in February.


2008-2009 Title I Distinguished Schools

Growth ELA 05-07

Growth Math 05-07

Oakland International Academy High School, Detroit

69%

85%

Carstens Elementary School, Detroit

59%

80%

Saginaw Preparatory Academy, Saginaw

68%

71%

Homer Middle School, Homer

57%

69%

Grandville West Elementary School, Grandville

55%

65%

Time to review Social Studies Endorsement Standards
Recently the Michigan State Board of Education reviewed the proposed revisions for the Social Studies Endorsement Standards for teacher preparation in the State of Michigan. This document includes revisions to the following endorsement areas: Social Studies (RX), History (CC), Geography (CB), Economics (CA), and Political Science (CD).

The Michigan Department of Education is now asking for content experts and members of the education community to provide feedback and comments regarding the revised standards.  The proposed revisions for the Social Studies Endorsement Standards document, a PowerPoint and video presentation explaining the process of development and content within the standards document, and links to the field review surveys can be found at: www.michigan.gov/mde/0,1607,7-140-6530_5683_6368-212000--,00.html

If you have specific questions, contact Thomas Bell, Higher Education Consultant with the Michigan Department of Education in the Office of Professional Preparation Services, via email at bellt1@mi.gov or phone at 517.241.0172.

 

MDE releases vision for ARRA

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 provides opportunities to improve instruction and increase student achievement for children across Michigan for generations to come. The charge is to fund innovative and proven strategies that drive educational reform. State data demonstrates that support is needed in math, reading, writing, parental involvement, high school graduation rates, and high quality job-embedded professional development for teachers. The responsibility for success depends on the commitment of students, parents, teachers, principals, superintendents, education boards, and state officials. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provides a short-term investment for long-term gains in student achievement through innovation and accountability.

MASA ARRA Resource Center

MDE Recovery Information—Podcasts, memos, and information related to ARRA spending in Michigan

 

Personal Curriculum update

In December 2008, Public Act 316 (Senate Bill 834) was signed into law, detailing several changes to the original Michigan Merit Curriculum requirements. This bill, combined with additional clarification of certain sections of the original legislation, Revised School Code (380.1278b), regarding the personal curriculum, has necessitated some revisions to the original Michigan Department of Education personal curriculum guidelines.

These revisions include:

  • School personnel may initiate a request for a personal curriculum for a specific student. The parent must still agree to the personal curriculum in order for it to take effect. A school may not implement a personal curriculum for a student without his or her parent’s consent.
  • Algebra II may be taken over two years for two credits without a personal curriculum.
  • Districts must offer the personal curriculum option to students. The law states that parents have the option to request a personal curriculum for their child, and districts must have the capacity to respond. A district is not, however, obligated to approve all requests for a personal curriculum.
  • A principal has the authority to determine the “counselor designee qualified to act in a counseling role” under section 1233 or 1233a of the school code.
  • The intent of the legislation is that the personal curriculum is a “pathway” to a diploma. The personal curriculum is a tool to individualize the Michigan Merit Curriculum in order to make it accessible and achievable for all students without undermin­ing the rigor of the Michigan Merit Curriculum or the integrity of the diploma.
Questions should be directed to Mary Head at headm1@michigan.gov.

 

 

State Board of Education 'Board Briefs'

The State Board of Education has developed a new publication entitled Board Briefs that provides an overview of the most recent State Board of Education action. The most recent brief summarizes the April  board meeting. Click here to read the brief and link to documents presented to the Board.

You can find the link at any time by going to www.michigan.gov/mde. Point to “State Board of Education” in the left toolbar, then click on “Board Briefs.”

 

MDE votes to support legislation to mandate administrator certification

At its April 14, 2009, meeting, the Michigan State Board of Education supported legislation to mandate state certification for school administrators, as was previously in state law.

Other highlights from the April meeting:

  • The State Board voted unanimously to support the concept of Project Re-Imagine, an initiative developed by State Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan to urge districts to dedicate themselves to significant and substantive reforms.  The MDE will select up to 20 Demonstration Districts across Michigan to implement and test dramatic district-wide reforms that will significantly improve learning for all students. Applications for school districts to become Project Re-Imagine Demonstration Districts will be available at the end of April.
  • The State Board unanimously recommended the state Legislature to require 180 days and 1,098 hours of pupil instruction for schools using a seat-based model of education, while allowing for the continuation of waivers of such days and hours by the state Superintendent of Public Instruction to explore and promote innovative educational models.
  • The Board also unanimously recommended the state Legislature maintain the requirements related to the current Michigan Educational Assessment Program (MEAP) tests, as opposed to moving toward an off-the-shelf test that is proposed by House Bill 4771 and Senate Bill 56.
  • Governor Jennifer M. Granholm was nominated by the State Board for the 2009 Policy Leader of the Year Award, given by the National Association of State Boards of Education (NASBE). Board Treasurer Marianne Yared McGuire nominated Granholm for “all of her work on early childhood education.” Others nominated by the State Board for NASBE awards were former State Board of Education member Eileen Lappin Weiser for the Distinguished Service Award; and the Skillman Foundation for the Friend of Education Award. These national awards will be announced by NASBE in June.

The State Board also cancelled its July 14 meeting.

 

New admin rules posted for Special Education

On April 3, 2009 new Administrative Rules for Special Education were filed with the Office of the Great Seal. These rules took immediate effect. 

You can view a complete copy of the Michigan Administrative Rules with the side-by-side federal regulations, along with new State Complaint Procedure on the Michigan EduSource.

 

Michigan Tools for Healthy Schools

The Michigan Departments of Education and Community Health have developed several needs assessment and action planning tools to guide local-level decision making involving healthy schools initiatives. Research demonstrates the significant impact of student health on strong academic achievement.

The “Michigan Tools for Healthy Schools” fact sheet contains information on the Michigan Profile for Healthy Youth, the Student Health Survey, and the Healthy School Action Tools. The free, online fact sheet is located at www.michigan.gov/cshsp under “What’s New.”

Each of the tools is designed to provide buildings and districts with data to drive decision making to improve the school environment, improve student health behaviors, and positively impact student achievement. Title IV Safe and Drug Free Schools funding can be used to support a Coordinated School Health Team in completing the needs assessment and action plan in the Healthy School Action Tools.

For further information about the Michigan Tools for Healthy Schools, please contact Kyle Guerrant by phone at 517.241.4284 or by email at guerrantk@michigan.gov.

 

Teacher Appreciation Week, May 4-8

In its resolution supporting National Teacher Appreciation Week, the State Board of Education noted that:  “Throughout Michigan and across the country, teachers open children’s minds to the magic of ideas, knowledge, and dreams.  Teachers fill many roles such as listeners, explorers, role models, motivators and mentors.  They continue to influence us long after our school days are only memories.”

The State Board of Education has continually supported teachers with several quality initiatives, including the Michigan Teacher of the Year Program, Michigan Network of Excellent Educators, and the Milken National Educator Award.

“Teachers keep American democracy alive by laying the foundation for good citizenship, and their hard work and efforts are directly responsible for creating the leaders of tomorrow,” according to State Board of Education President Kathleen N. Straus.

Teacher Appreciation Week is a fitting time to raise awareness of the importance of teaching, a profession that affects the lives of nearly two million Michigan children each day.  

Innovative and dedicated teachers will drive the success of Michigan’s future by leading its children to achieve at greater levels and become our state’s most reliable and valuable resource, said state Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan.  “Research shows that the most important factor to student’s success is teachers.  We need to recognize their dedication to our children and their futures.  There is no more important job.”

The Michigan Department of Education encourages schools and communities to appropriately recognize that teachers are vital to the very fabric of our society.

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Public Agenda report addresses need to keep costs under control

With state budgets under pressure from the economic downturn and widespread public anxiety about whether college is accessible to all qualified students, a new report released today points to the need for policymakers, public higher education leadership, and faculty to join together to look for ways to keep public higher education costs under control.

The new report, entitled "Campus Commons? What Faculty, Financial Officers and Others Think about Controlling College Costs," outlines differing perspectives on the cost containment challenges facing higher education.

Broad concern, but different starting points
Concern about rising costs and their impact on students and communities is widespread among higher education leadership, faculty, and the public at large, according to the "Campus Commons?" report, as it is among leaders in government and business. But the report identifies some potentially troublesome communications gaps between the views of financial officers charged with making ends meet and faculty whose focus is on academic issues and the classroom. The two groups approach the problem of controlling college costs from very different angles.

College costs escalating and out of reach for many
The "Campus Commons?" report comes against a backdrop of calls from a broad array of elected officials and business leaders to dramatically increase the number of Americans students earning postsecondary degrees and credentials in the coming decade. At the same time, tuition at public higher education institutions has been rising faster than the rate of inflation and faster than the income levels of middle-class and lower-income families, according to a recent 50-state review of college affordability conducted by the National Center on Public Policy and Higher Education.

The "Campus Commons?" report calls for broader public discussion about the future of higher education, and urges policymakers and institutions to bring faculty in the conversations sooner rather than later.
"Campus Commons?" includes:

The full "Campus Commons?" report is available at http://www.publicagenda.org/pages/campus-commons.

More information about Making Opportunity Affordable is available at http://www.makingopportunityaffordable.org.

"Difficult Dialogues, Rewarding Solutions," which addresses productivity in higher education, is Public Agenda's report from the 4th Annual Policy Summit of the Midwestern Higher Education Compact and is available at http://www.mhec.org/pdfs/0209difficultdialoguesrpt.pdf.

The Lumina Foundation for Education’s Making Opportunity Affordable initiative is a multi-year initiative focused on increasing productivity within U.S. higher education, particularly at two- and four-year public colleges and universities. The research was conducted by Public Agenda, the nonpartisan opinion research and citizen engagement organization.

 

One in 50 children homeless

A new report from the National Center on Family Homelessness finds that one in every 50 American children is now homeless, approximately 1.5 million.

"America's Youngest Outcasts: State Report Card on Child Homelessness" offers a comprehensive, state-by-state analysis of child homelessness, ranking the 50 states in terms of severity.

"Children without homes are on the frontline of the nation's economic crisis," says Ellen L. Bassuk, president of the National Center on Family Homelessness and associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

According to the report, children experiencing homelessness have twice the rate of moderate-to-severe health conditions compared to middle-class children, and twice the incidence of emotional problems. Homeless children struggle in school, with an average of 16 percent lower proficiency in math and reading, and an estimated graduation rate below 25 percent overall.

It's possible to end child homelessness within a decade, the report says, using dedicated funds from local, state, and federal governments, combined with reallocated dollars.

Read more: http://www.homelesschildrenamerica.org/

 

High education jobs gaining while low skills jobs losing

Millions of low-skills jobs have been eliminated in the national recession but there has been growth in the number of jobs that require advanced education, a report issued Tuesday by Michigan Future Incorporated found.

While the number of jobs created is less than a tenth of those lost, 162,000 compared to 3.75 million lost, the report's authors, Michigan Future President Lou Glazer and University of Michigan economist Donald Grimes, said the results are clear: the future of economic growth in the United States will be concentrated in jobs that are knowledge-based.

Since 1990, the report said jobs in lower-skilled employment like manufacturing have increased by 16 percent, while jobs requiring higher skills and more advanced education have increased by 32 percent.

The report is not necessarily good news for the state, since it has fallen behind others in terms of funding for higher education and promoting higher skills employment.

 

 

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School struggles outlined in budget review

Senate Appropriations School Aid Subcommittee members reviewed the status of the proposed 2009-10 budget Tuesday, but in the process heard some hard reminders of the condition of the state's schools.

The majority of school districts are seeing declining enrollments, the subcommittee heard.

And the number of school districts that are technically bankrupt is growing, with dozens with extremely thin financial reserves, they were also told.

The news was grim, committee members were told, and subcommittee chair, Sen. Ron Jelinek (R-Three Oaks), agreed.

Robbie Jameson, of the state's Budget Office, said 70 percent of the state's school districts have experienced declining enrollment and would be eligible for state grants to help districts with declining enrollments.

Meanwhile, Rick Floria, top financial officer for the Department of Education, said that 27 districts across the state face deficits.   That number has been growing continuously over the last several years and the state now needs some help to oversee those districts.

When asked how many districts may be close to that condition, Mr. Floria said he did not have an exact count, but that between 60 and 90 districts have 5 percent or less in financial reserves.

Source: Gongwer News Service, 4.21.09

 

Governor's Summit on Education news

On Tuesday, April 28, 2009, the Governor’s Education Summit in Lansing focused on efforts to get more students prepared for and into college. Here are some highlights.

Goveror announces 10 Promise Zone Designations
Gov. Jennifer Granholm has named the 10 "Promise Zone" communities that will offer their children at least a free associate's degree as long as they can find a group of private entrepreneurs to get the program off the ground.

As part of Promise Zones, once the zone gets the OK from the Department of Treasury it can raise money by capturing one half of the growth in the state education tax (SET) to keep the promise of a free higher education to students.

The zones were approved for the public school districts in Baldwin, Battle Creek, Benton Harbor, Detroit, Hazel Park, Jackson, Lansing, Muskegon, Pontiac and Saginaw. All of the districts are in communities that meet or exceed the state's average poverty level for families with children under 18. Four applicants were not accepted.

"The promise of a college education for all has the power to transform communities across our state, replacing poverty and despair with opportunity and hope," Lt. Gov. John CHERRY, Jr., told the crowd gathered for the Summit. "In addition to higher educational attainment levels, Promise Zones can spur investment, economic development and home ownership."

Source: MIRS News Service 4.28.09

Governor launches college access network , warns of continuing tough times
The state still has its goal of doubling the number of college graduates. But that will have to come despite less funding for education, Governor Jennifer Granholm told the Governor's Education Summit in Lansing April 28, 2009.

But she warned that the state funding to support that education at all levels will at least not be what educators would like. "I hope you're not discouraged by the challenges the budget will present," she said. "We are going to have to cut the important to fund the essential."

Ms. Granholm announced the launch of the Michigan College Access Network (MCAN) to accelerate the state's efforts to diversify the economy by doubling the number of Michigan's college graduates.  The initiative will promote postsecondary education by supporting local college access programs, which help citizens learn about higher education options, get into college, and earn their degrees. 

The bad news: the network is not expected to be up and running until the fall of 2010. 

Meanwhile, the state released a report Tuesday showing, based on surveys and interviews, that Michigan has substantial racial gaps in both high school and college graduation and that the state is below the national average for college graduation for all racial groups.

Among the recommendations in the report:

  • Having college readiness programs reach students before high school.  
  • Regionalizing statewide efforts to create college access programs, particularly in areas not currently served by some kind of community scholarship fund.
  • Identifying and cataloging existing college access providers
  • Building capacity of existing programs
  • Interveneing early to help put students on a path to success

Source: Gongwer Michgan Report 4.28.09

Haycock presents alarming data about Michigan’s schools
Michigan schools are, in general, struggling relative to the rest of the nation and the world. And if they want to change that, they have to stop blaming race and poverty and take the steps needed to improve, said Kati Haycock, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Education Trust, at the 2009 Governor's Education Summit in Lansing on Tuesday.

Ms. Haycock said Michigan must expect more from students and teachers and make the changes in schools and curricula that allow them to meet those expectations.
While she said poverty and race have been correlated to poor performance, schools and teachers also traditionally expect less of those groups that historically performed below average.

"There is no way you can blame our performance on poor kids, kids of color or the schools that serve them," Ms. Haycock said. "What schools do matters hugely. ...What colleges do turns out to matter as well."

"We appreciate the honesty but we've got work to do," said Governor Jennifer Granholm of Ms. Haycock's presentation, which had been provided earlier at a cabinet meeting.   "We had just come off patting ourselves on the back for the MEAP scores."

The schools that are performing well for low-income and minority students are looking beyond the traditional performance correlations and concentrating on the things they can do to improve achievement, Ms. Haycock said. And she said there are colleges and universities making similar efforts to improve their graduation rates above schools serving similar populations.

"The schools that really work succeed by focusing like a laser on the things they can do, things they can change, not by wasting a lot of energy on the things they can't," she said. "They don't leave anything about teaching or learning to chance."
Superintendent of Public Instruction Mike Flanagan argued in many cases schools and districts still do not understand where they stand in relation to other schools or the rest of the world.

"You have to have clarity about what your record is because if you don't know where you stand you can't improve," Mr. Flanagan said.
A sampling of data shared by Ms. Haycock:

  • The United States is now 17th in the percentage of students it sends through traditional high school programs, down from first.
  • The United States is second among 29 nations for the gap between higher income and lower income students.
Some 75 percent of upper income students have a bachelor's degree by age 24 compared to 9 percent of lower income students.

 

NGA, CCSSO Launch Common Standards Drive

After years of debating the idea of national content standards, representatives from 41 states convened in Chicago today in what organizers hope will be a first, concrete step toward common guidelines in mathematics and English-language arts.

The National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers—the Washington-based groups that are co-sponsoring the meeting—want to build a prototype of high school graduation standards by summer, and grade-by-grade academic standards in math and language arts by the end of the year.
The undertaking would start with rigorous math and language arts standards that are aligned with college- and career-ready expectations and made available for states to adopt voluntarily.

Following the meeting states ready to support common standards were to be asked to put their commitment in writing within weeks. It remains to be seen how significant a milestone the meeting will prove. The long path to national standards is often dated to 1983, with the release of A Nation at Risk, a report that warned the American education system was slipping into mediocrity and losing ground against international competitors. Over the past quarter century, the push has advanced in fits and starts.

Within the past few months, though, momentum on the issue has seemed to escalate. At the federal level, common standards have been declared a priority by the Obama administration and U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. In fact, Mr. Duncan has said he wants to use part of the $5 billion in “Race to the Top” incentive funds included in the economic-stimulus package to help fuel the drive for common standards.

Gene Wilhoit, the executive director of the CCSSO, said the chiefs’ and governors’ staffs will work with groups already active in crafting rigorous, college-ready standards, such as Achieve, the New York City-based College Board, and act, the Iowa City-based organization that administers the college-entrance test. The chiefs’ and governors’ groups also will convene a group of “respected individuals” outside the two groups to comment on the standards as the process continues, Mr. Wilhoit said.

States that agree to go forward will then have to figure out how to get those new, common standards adopted—a process that can vary from state to state. Some may need to work with their legislatures, others through their state boards of education.
Finally, states will have to get those standards down to the district level and then onto teachers’ desks and into lesson plans.

Source: Education Week, 4.17.09

 

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Assisting Students Struggling with Mathematics

The What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) has announced its newest practice guide, Assisting Students Struggling with Mathematics: Response to Intervention (RtI) for Elementary and Middle Schools.

Taking early action may be key to helping students struggling with mathematics. The eight recommendations in this guide are designed to help teachers, principals, and administrators use Response to Intervention for the early detection, prevention, and support of students struggling with mathematics.

The guide also describes how to carry out each recommendation, including how to address potential roadblocks in implementing them.

Download the guide…

 

 

ASCD offers FREE Whole Child book

Deadline: May 6

ASCD has just released a free book about best practices and strategies revolving around the Whole Child Initiative.

Engaging the Whole Child: Reflections on Best Practices in Learning, Teaching, and Leadership(Free for a Limited Time)

You can download ASCD's new whole child e-book for free until Wednesday, May 6. This special publication will help you build capacity to engage students in the classroom and community. It includes over 300 pages of articles on topics such as empowering students, deepening students' thinking, and connecting with students' communities and cultures. A study guide is also included.

 

Dollar General gives back to schools

Schools can apply for the  Dollar General Back to School Grants program, which is designed to assist school libraries or media centers within Dollar General’s 35-state service area.

Grants of up to $5,000 may be applied to defray the cost of enhancing or expanding school libraries or media centers through new programming, or the purchase of new equipment, materials, and/or software.

Interested K-12 schools within 20 miles of a Dollar General store must take an online eligibility quiz in order to access the online application. All applications are due May 22, 2009. For additional information, visit www.dollargeneral.com/servingothers/Pages/backtoschoolgrants.aspx.

 

Test Your Web Lingo IQ !

As educators, we are bombarded by “techno” language that has crept into the media, into our lives and into our schools.   You may have seen the innovative and engaging commercial by Sprint,  “Welcome to the Now Network”, stating that “right this minute, 233,000 people are Twittering and 26% of you don’t even know what this is….”  

Could you define  “twitter and tweet” to a school board member or fellow administrator?  Test yourself on your savvy about Web 2.0. 

  1. Social Networking:  building online and web-based communities of people who share similar interests or activities and who interact through instant messaging, e-mail or text messaging. Facebook. MySpace and Ning are examples of social networking sites.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_networking
  2. Twitter:  a free online service used to communicate and stay connected through the exchange of quick, short, frequent responses, usually through handheld devices or cell phones; a single message is called a “Tweet.”  http://twitter.com/
  3. Blogging: Blog is an abbreviated version of "weblog," a term used to describe web sites that maintain an ongoing chronicle of information, often in the form of periodic essays or commentaries. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blog
  4. Viral:  “Going viral” refers to the immediate and widespread popularity of a video, music clip or piece of media through internet sharing.   An example is the Susan Boyle video of her performance on Britain’s Got Talent; in seven days, the video was estimated to have received over 57 million viewings. http://www.viralvideochart.com/dailymotion/susan_boyle_on_britain_got_talent?id=x8ymn0
  5. YouTube:  the most popular media-sharing site on the web—if you’ve seen or heard of a video or news clip, check here—you’ll find it.  Although often blocked, many districts are beginning to unblock it to take advantage of its abundance of educational material.   http://www.youtube.com/
  6. Cookies and Breadcrumbs: Breadcrumbs are a practical web site navigation technique. Bread crumbs provide a “roadmap” for getting back to where your search first originated.  Cookies, however, are not so benign.  These are used to track your travels on the web and provide information on your spending habits, hobbies, and interests.  This can be useful for you but can also create both privacy and security issues.
  7. Plug-ins: Plug-ins help your internet browser (i.e. Explorer, Firefox or Mozilla) perform functions like viewing special graphic formats or playing multimedia files. As more and more enhancements to websites are made, it is very common to find new plug-ins necessary for your computer.  Many plug-ins are free to download from the web; however, many free versions of the plug-ins are limited in scope.
  8. Phishing: Phishing is the criminal process of attempting to acquire personal information such as usernames, passwords and credit card details by pretending to be a trustworthy entity in an electronic communication. A very common email is one purporting to be from the Internal Revenue Service; never send sensitive personal information in an unsolicited email. More on phishing at http://www.onguardonline.gov/topics/phishing.aspx
  9. RSS:  stands for Really Simple Syndication (of course, it’s not “really simple” to anyone but the tech department staff….). It’s a format for delivering regularly changing web content directly to your personal website. It allows you to easily stay informed by retrieving the latest content from the sites you are interested in. You save time by not needing to visit each site individually. Watch this CommonCraft/YouTube video for more information; it’s short, informative and you’ll enjoy the format. 
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0klgLsSxGsU
  10. PICNIC:  a humorous term for ascribing most computer errors to the user (where it usually belongs….); Problem in Chair, Not in Computer!

How did you fare?

9-10                 Very impressive!  Give yourself five gold stars!
6-8                   Not bad. You’re doing very well in introducing yourself to the new web.
3-5                   Needs improvement. Have lunch with the tech department members.
1-2                   What web? Please contact your local REMC director for assistance. 

 

Nominate an outsanding Michigan history teacher for Odyseey Award, $500 cash prize

The Michigan History Foundation is now accepting nominations for the 2009 Odyssey Award, given annually to up to three exceptional teachers of Michigan history.  Award recipients will receive a $500 cash prize and an engraved plaque at special recognition ceremonies. Nomination forms are available online at www.michigan.gov/odysseyawards or by calling the foundation office at 517.373.2565.

“We've all had one - the teacher who made history in our life.  The outstanding teachers who make a difference in students' lives every day are key to successful education,” Michigan History Foundation Director Pat Clark said. “It’s important to recognize these educators who go the extra mile to inspire our students and help prepare them for the future.”

All Michigan history educators are eligible for the award. Nominees will be judged on their depth of knowledge about Michigan history, their leadership in teaching others about Michigan history and their creative teaching methods.  The deadline for nominations is Aug. 3.

"We ask award recipients to share their winning ideas and expertise with other educators across the state," said Clark.  "In this way, the Odyssey program also promotes creative teaching methods that get students excited about learning and foster their interest in Michigan history."

Special recognition ceremonies will be held in each winning teacher’s school district.  The recipients also will be recognized at the Michigan History Foundation’s annual fundraising event, The Jingle Ball, on Saturday, Nov. 21 at the Michigan Historical Museum in Lansing.  The Jingle Ball supports the Michigan Historical Museum's award-winning education programs that help more than 70,000 Michigan students each year explore their state's history.
The Michigan History Foundation is a private, not-for-profit organization that supports the work of the Michigan Historical Center. The center includes the Michigan Historical Museum, 11 regional museums and historic sites, the Archives of Michigan, Records Management Services, archaeological and historic preservation programs, and publications, including Michigan Historymagazine. Learn more about the foundation at www.michigan.gov/mhfoundation.

The Michigan Historical Center is part of the Department of History, Arts and Libraries (HAL), whose mission is to enrich quality of life and strengthen the economy by providing access to information, preserving and promoting Michigan heritage, and fostering cultural creativity. The department also includes the Library of Michigan, the Mackinac Island State Park Commission, the Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs, and the Michigan Film Office. For more information about HAL, visit www.michigan.gov/hal.

 

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