Independence Institute 2011 School Board Candidates Briefing

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Pam Benigno, Education Policy Center Director Ben DeGrow, Senior Education Policy Analyst

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Independence Institute 2011 School Board Candidates Briefing. Pam Benigno, Education Policy Center Director Ben DeGrow, Senior Education Policy Analyst. Education Policy Center. http://Education.i2i.org http://www.SchoolChoiceforKids.org http://www.EdIsWatching.org - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Independence Institute 2011 School Board Candidates Briefing

Page 1: Independence Institute  2011 School Board Candidates Briefing

Pam Benigno, Education Policy Center DirectorBen DeGrow, Senior Education Policy Analyst

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Education Policy Center http://Education.i2i.org http://www.SchoolChoiceforKids.org http://www.EdIsWatching.org http://www.IndependentTeachers.org

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Digital Learning Douglas County Blueprint for Choice Innovation Schools Act SB 191 / Changing Educator Pay School District Financial Transparency Collective Bargaining Reform

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Local school boards have control over instruction

No state control over textbooks No state-mandated collective bargaining No state-mandated teacher union

membership Intra- and Inter-district open enrollment Strong charter school law Strong education reform community

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Open Enrollment Intra-district

and Inter-district

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Neighborhood schools Magnet / Option / Focus schools Charter schools Programs within schools Contract schools Home school programs Online schools

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22 full-time, multi-district programs

23 single-district programs

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Model 1: Face–to-Face Driver Model 2: Rotation Model 3: Flex Model 4: Online Lab Model 5: Self blended Model 6: Online Driver

The Rise of K-12 Blended Learning Innosight Institute January 2011

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Student Eligibility Student Access Personalized Learning Advancement Content Instruction Providers Assessment and Accountability Funding Delivery

Digital Learning Now!Foundation for Excellence in Education December 1, 2010

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President and VP spearheaded effort Open to community: June 2010 Task force gave recommendations at board

retreat: November 2010 Supportive superintendent Unanimous board support: March 2011

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Charter schools Home education partnerships Contract schools “Choice Scholarships” Neighborhood school empowerment Online learning Open enrollment policy reform

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Changed “tone” of open enrollment policy to be more supportive of choice

Added a second-round application period Added a new student choice option Added an appeals process Treat family members as a unit in selection

process Increased the number of days for first round

period

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School or group of schools may implement innovations

Innovations may include but not limited to: ◦ Educational services◦ Budgeting◦ Personnel administration ◦ Personnel decision making

District may request waivers from allowable statutes and regulations

Requires collective bargaining agreements to allow for waivers of terms with 60% support

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Denver: 18 Innovation Schools Colo. Springs 11: 1 Innovation School Kit Carson : 2 Innovation Schools

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Innovation school district in process Developed four zones of innovation led by

high school principals (three feeder areas and “innovation zone” of virtual, charters, etc.)◦ Innovation plans to be submitted this fall

Projected savings of $11.8M over 5 years◦ Reduced administration◦ Contracted transportation services

“Backpack funding”: money follows student to school / program of choice

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SB 191: Educator Effectiveness

Define teacher and principal “effectiveness”◦ 50% of evaluations tied

to student growth Weaken legal promise

of tenure◦ Gaining & keeping

tenure based on effectiveness

Principal consent in direct placement; seniority less factor

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Going Forward… State Implementation

◦ State Board rulemaking (November)◦ Legislature reviews and approves rules (February)◦ Pilot period: districts selected (2012-13)

Local opportunities◦ Replace seniority with performance [“Bargaining Reform”]◦ Performance evaluations = performance pay

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Teacher Compensation Reform The single-salary schedule

is unsustainable and unproductive◦ Teacher skills don’t

typically improve beyond first 3 to 5 years of experience

◦ ZERO correlation between masters degrees and effective learning results

◦ Nearly 2% of Colo. K-12 operating budgets spent on “masters bumps”

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Colo. Compensation Reforms Merit pay (“First” generation)

◦ Forced ranking systems, bonus pay-outs◦ Charter variations: Cherry Creek Academy;

Liberty Common; Platte River Academy Strategic compensation: an evolution

◦ Eagle County & The Classical Academy◦ Merit pay discarded: subjective, opaque

Denver ProComp (Results-based pay)◦ Some positive results, esp. from newer teachers◦ Salary schedule kept, some rewards misaligned

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Pay Innovation to Watch Harrison 2 Effectiveness and Results

◦ Performance Pay, NOT Incentive Pay◦ Comprehensive: principal training; evaluation

tools; data systems; smart professional development

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Douglas Co. Pay for Performance Next generation?: Work in progress

◦ Market-based salaries◦ Objective standards, no quotas◦ Triangulation of data (tests, evaluation, targets)◦ High earnings for highest performers◦ Salary-building, not bonuses◦ Opt-in with “test drive” / “audit” option

To-do list◦ Defining details◦ Common assessments◦ Data structure

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The Goal: Performance-Based System Don’t limit performance pay & evaluations to

teachers◦ Principals and building administrators◦ Support staff◦ Central office

Focus on results, invest in success!

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Model Financial Transparency

Expenditures easy to find, detailed and searchable

Expenditures clearly linked to revenue sources

Exemplary Districts◦ Jefferson County◦ Douglas County◦ Adams 12◦ Cherry Creek

Subscription service Archived data

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Financial Transparency: It’s the Law! House Bill 10-1036: Post finances online

◦ Current budget◦ Most recent financial audit◦ Quarterly or monthly financial reports◦ Salary schedules / policies◦ Expenditures: check registers & purchase cards◦ Investment reports (starting 7/1/2012)

Other requirements◦ Post within 60 days◦ Two prior years’ budgets◦ Link to CDE site

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To Comply or Not To Comply? Real Accreditation Consequences

◦ Drop to “priority improvement” / “turnaround” Enforcement Depends on Self-Reporting

◦ Primarily citizen-driven accountability I.I. Review of District & BOCES sites

(7/2011)◦ 2010 requirements: 24 fully compliant; 36 mostly

compliant – out of 193◦ 2011 requirements: 8 fully compliant; 36 mostly

compliant – out of 193

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Loopholes and Other Issues 60-day issue

◦ What does July 1, 2011 really mean?

Challenges for smaller districts / charters?◦ CDE template solves

most of the problem Wire transfers & spirit

of spending transparency◦ Aurora sending funds to

union (private info?)

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Collective Bargaining Reform Colorado Context

◦ One of nine states with discretionary bargaining◦ 41 of 178 districts = exclusive union representation◦ Other districts practice “meet and confer” or have

no formal negotiation structure at all What Reform May Offer

◦ Management flexibility◦ Fiscal savings◦ Employee fairness◦ Academic gains, esp. for low-income students

(limited research)

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Open Negotiations to Public

Good government: keep contracts in view

Remind employees whose interests they bargain against

Keep citizens engaged in reform process: observe, not participate

Of 41 districts, only Poudre and Colorado Springs 11 ensure open negotiations

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Payroll Deduction Power

1) Automatic deductions = conflicted interests, politics, negotiations

2) 30 districts: Opt in any time, brief opt out windows (many have to ask union)

3) 6 districts: Non-union members opt out each year or pay full “dues equivalency”

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Real Victims…

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Union Release Time Privileges Release day allotments

◦ Professional development, grievance, negotiations, membership drives, lobbying, political activities?

◦ Jeffco (275 days a year): district pays teacher and sub; days used to lobby against SB 191

◦ Define and document acceptable uses; require reimbursement for substitutes / end practice

Union presidents and other officers◦ Poudre: $67,763 taxpayer subsidy (10-11)◦ Adams 12:$187,000 subsidy for 3 officers (09-10)◦ 5 districts require union to pay in full

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Other Bargaining Opportunities1) Remove Seniority from Teacher Placement

“Last In, First Out” (LIFO): costly, ineffective Neediest students get least effective instructors Tiebreakers (Jeffco): Coin flip, drawing lots

2) Equal Access Many districts give unions exclusive privileges:

Emails, bulletin boards, equipment, facilities Teachers’ “Right to Know”

3) Bargaining Alternatives Park County ended agreement Gilcrest (Weld Re-1) ended meet & confer

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