Studies consistently indicate that states with abstinence-only sex education programs have higher rates of teenage pregnancy than states with comprehensive.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Closing the Achievement Gap in Americas Public Schools U.S. Department of Education Office of Elementary and Secondary Education.
Advertisements

1 Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) U.S. Department of Education Adapted by TEA September 2003.
Role of the Federal Government in Public Education
Chapter 11 Graphic Organizer Jonathan Kniss. The 10 th Amendment makes education largely a state function. The Chain of Command: student, teacher, principal,
Before IDEA One in five children with disabilities was educated. One in five children with disabilities was educated. More than 1 million children with.
1 Title I Faculty Presentation Department of Federal and State Programs or PX
The Instructional Program
The Constitution and the Branches of Government Landmark Civil Rights Cases.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008 Chapter 12 School Desegregation This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Different Types of Schools School Funding. Public Schools  Established by states (10 th Amendment)  Paid for by tax dollars  Usually run by local board.
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT TITLE I PARENT MEETING PRESENTATION.
Defining Equal Protection in a Democratic Society.
“Teaching” by Sharleen L. Kato
Current Issues. Vocabulary No Child Left Behind (NCLB)Curriculum AccountabilitySilent Epidemic Standardized TestMagnet School Charter SchoolCapitalism.
Changes in the Educational Status of Minority Students in New Hanover County Public Schools since Brown vs. the Board of Education (May 17, 1954) By: George.
Florida’s Implementation of NCLB John L. Winn Deputy Commissioner Florida Department of Education.
The Governor and State Legislator Legislatures make the laws that govern and affect education within their states, and they appropriate the money to fund.
Chapter Thirteen MONEY, MONEY, MONEY Cha-Ching $$$$$
Diverse Students of Today Chapter 10 EDCI 201 Contexts of Education 1.
What is Title I ?  It is federal funding that is attached to NCLB/ESEA legislation  It is intended to help students who are falling behind.
Agenda (5:00-6:30 PM): Introduction to Staff Title I Presentation PTA Information Classroom visits (two 30 minute rotations)
Education Governance structure—traditionally a local affair Usually elected school board decides policy for school district State board of Ed is appointed.
School Funding and School Reform. School Funding- 3 main sources Local44% State50 % Federal 6%
Title I and Families. Purpose of Meeting According to the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, schools are required to host an Annual Meeting to explain.
Title I and Families. Purpose of Meeting According to the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, schools are required to host an Annual Meeting to explain.
Color-blind vs. Color-defined Educational Opportunity Laura McNeal, J.D., Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Georgia State University Laura McNeal, J.D., Ph.D.
No Child Left Behind Tecumseh Local Schools. No Child Left Behind OR... 4 No Educator Left Unconfused 4 No Lawyer Left Unemployed 4 No Child Left Untested.
Laws Governing ESL Programs in the US Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 Title VI prohibits discrimination on the grounds of race, color,
Title I and Families. Purpose of Meeting According to the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, schools are required to host an Annual Meeting to explain.
1 Title I Faculty Presentation Department of Federal and State Programs or PX
Civil Rights and Public Policy Chapter 5. What are civil rights?  Civil rights: protect certain groups against discrimination  Civil liberties: constitutional.
No Child Left Behind Education Week
No Child Left Behind. HISTORY President Lyndon B. Johnson signs Elementary and Secondary Education Act, 1965 Title I and ESEA coordinated through Improving.
No Child Left Behind No Child Left Behind  NCLB Overview  Assessment and Accountability Requirements  Educator Quality.
Making Sense of Adequate Yearly Progress. Adequate Yearly Progress Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) is a required activity of the No Child Left Behind (NCLB)
School Law and the Public Schools: A Practical Guide for Educational Leaders, 5e © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 School.
Title I Faculty Presentation Faculty Title I and AYP Combined Presentation.
THE UNFAIR TREATMENT OF MEMBERS OF MAJORITY GROUPS(WHITES) CAUSED FROM PREFERENTIAL POLICIES, AS IN COLLEGE ADMISSIONS OR EMPLOYMENT, PROPOSED TO HELP.
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
FUNDING FOR EDUCATION. FACTS Every child has a right to free public education (K-12) Education is EXPENSIVE What does money go to?
No Child Left Behind Impact on Gwinnett County Public Schools’ Students and Schools.
State and Local Government Chapter 8: School Districts.
AP US Government Mrs. Lacks ON THE ISSUES: EDUCATION.
US Government Mrs. Lacks ON THE ISSUES: EDUCATION.
Cora Howe Annual Title I Meeting and Open House Understanding Title 1 Support for Schools September 12, 2013.
FUNDING LEGISLATION FEDERAL, STATE, AND LOCAL. CONTRIBUTIONS TO EDUCATION- 07/08 vs. 08/09  8%- Federal funds  State funds07/08  43%- State funds07/08.
 Education was historically a private responsibility (church-related schools, individual instruction)  The first public school, first mandatory attendance.
Aim: Does the US need to reform the educational system? Do Now: Make a list of the best aspects of the education you receive and make a list of the worst.
Types of Statewide Assessments Currently Used in Grades 3-8.
EDUCATION POLICY.
Important N.C Facts and Review
Laws and court cases.
Welcome to our SCHOOL’S Parents Are Connected (PAC) Meeting
Race and Segregation in American Schools
School Funding and School Resources
UNIT SIX| EDUCATion.
Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
EDUCATION POLICY.
Chapter 14 Education.
Chapter 13 Governance and Financing of Elementary and Secondary Schools By Delis Corke EDU /30/13.
What Parents Need to Know
What Parents Need to Know
Chapter 19 Lesson 4 New Approaches to Civil Rights Notes
Civil Rights.
What Parents Need to Know
AP Government “Civil Rights Movement”
What Parents Need to Know
New Approaches to Civil Rights in 70s
What Parents Need to Know
Oliver Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka
Presentation transcript:

Studies consistently indicate that states with abstinence-only sex education programs have higher rates of teenage pregnancy than states with comprehensive programs (i.e., containing information about contraception, HIV prevention, etc.)

Education was historically a private responsibility (church-related schools, individual instruction) The first public school, first mandatory attendance requirements, and first public governance of schools in the US were all established in Massachusetts. South Carolinas first free public schools were established in Public education is seen as a commons problem: everyone in society benefits from a well-educated population, and everyone is harmed by a poorly- educated population. Therefore, we have a shared responsibility to provide for it.

Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka (1954): Segregated schools are unconstitutional Separate but equal is inherently unequal Mississippis dual school systems spent $61 per white child for every $1 spent per black child Alexander v. Holmes County Board of Education (1969) ordered immediate end to segregated schools De jure (by law) segregation vs. de facto (in fact) segregation: whats the difference and how are they dealt with differently? Desegregation vs. integration: how far do you have to go? Busing has been ordered as a means of integration in both de jure (Charlotte) and de facto (Boston) segregated systems.

Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education (1971): US Supreme Court rules busing is constitutional as a means of integration, upheld policy where each school in the district had to be within a certain percentage of the district as a whole The CMS busing policy was overturned by a court decision in 2001; a white child was denied admission to a magnet program because she would have changed the racial balance beyond the permissible boundary, and her family sued Charlotte-Mecklenburg schools have largely re- segregated; with white flight to the suburbs and to private schools, black children are now a majority of students in CMS.

Charter schools: Publicly funded but not subject to school system regulations, can design their own programs and administrative procedures Magnet schools: Grouped by academic interest (arts, sciences, foreign languages, etc.); can this achieve integration without busing? Vouchers: State-funded grants which can be used for tuition at private schools (provides competition to public school systems, criticism is that voucher programs drain money from public schools)

Elementary and Secondary Education Act (1965): First large-scale federal involvement in K-12 public education. Reauthorized in 2001 as No Child Left Behind Act. Title I: Directed primarily at disadvantaged children; 94% of US public schools receive funding under this program. SC received over $178 million in Title I funding in FY Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (originally enacted 1975): Funding for special education and additional services as needed.

1983 federal report called for strengthening the quality of American public education Higher educational standards More rigorous content Longer school day and school year Standardized testing to measure progress Increasing qualifications, salaries and opportunities for teachers Better identification of needs of special groups (gifted and talented, socioeconomically disadvantaged, disabled, etc.)

Traditionally, K-12 education was entirely a state and local matter with no involvement from the federal government Today, only about 7% of K-12 funding is federal, but a disproportionate share of the regulations that public school systems deal with come from the federal government. Different states use different mixes of state and local funding. Hawaii funds its entire school system (one statewide district) with state funds, while New Hampshire schools get 81% of their funds from local sources (state vs. local tax revenues).

Increased funding for black schools was suggested as a way of making separate but equal closer to actually equal, as a way of delaying/preventing desegregation Repeal of mandatory attendance laws during fight to keep schools segregated – children were not required to attend school from 1955 to 1967 Administrative consolidation in 1950s – some schools had only one or two teachers, and some schools made up their own school districts Education Accountability Act (1998): Set assessment standards for student learning and progress (PASS test fulfills testing requirements for NCLB)

Education Finance Act (1977): Guaranteed a larger share of state funding for poorer school districts while still relying on local property taxes as primary means of funding Education Improvement Act (1984): Increased the state sales tax by 1%, with funds dedicated to public education. South Carolina Education Lottery (2002): funding for both K-12 education and scholarships for technical schools, colleges and universities Act 388 (2006): Increased sales tax in return for eliminating property tax on owner-occupied home. Shifted more of the burden for school funding on state rather than local sources but has not addressed inequities.

SC has 83 school districts Almost all districts are governed by elected school boards 23 school boards have the power to set their own tax rates for school funding 25 districts have no such power (County Council, legislative delegation or town meeting sets tax rates) 35 have limited authority

45 states have had lawsuits filed challenging school funding formulas on equity grounds. In SC, 37 poorer and predominantly minority school districts sued the state challenging the proportion of funds they receive (Abbeville was first alphabetically) 1999: SC Supreme Court ruled that there is a right under the state Constitution to a minimally adequate public education. The funding formula has been in litigation ever since (Supreme Court re-heard the case in 2012). Disadvantaged kids cost more to educate, but they tend to live in poorer areas.

Average in FY 2007: 47% from local sources 43% from state sources 10% from federal sources

Federal law enacted 2001, GW Bush Administration initiative SC received $274M in funding Still in place but Congress has deadlocked on how to reauthorize it Requires state authorities to develop accountability standards and assessment mechanisms for learning and student progress Schools must demonstrate Adequate Yearly Progress among different subgroups of students (defined by race, poverty, ESL, disabilities, etc.) or receive escalating sanctions Up to 5% of each subgroup may be excluded from testing requirementes

Increasing sanctions on schools whose student subgroups dont demonstrate AYP 1. After two years, school must develop school improvement plan and students must be able to transfer to another school within the district – but what if no school in the district demonstrates AYP (which happened in Chester County a few years ago)? 2. After three years, school is required to offer supplemental educational services 3. After four years, corrective action which may include staffing changes, curriculum reform, extension of school day or year 4. After five years, restructuring by turning into charter school, replacing staff, hiring outside management or turning it over to the state South Carolina took over the Allendale County School District from 1998 to 2007