Apr 19
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More Web Resources on Proposed Regulations

AHEA has posted recordings of the State Board meeting last month in which the Board voted to post the proposal packet for public comment.  Be patient because the page with the recordings takes forever and ever to load. AHEA is dominated by statewide correspondence school affiliates and reflects their point of view which is inconsistent with the in-district programs’ best interests. Nevertheless, they provide a useful resource.

AHEA has stated on this same page that more than half of the in-district programs are "out of compliance and required more diligent oversight." This is a misunderstanding of the Board’s discussion regarding the ‘highly-qualified’ teacher issue of NCLB. EVERY public homeschool program, local and statewide, is out of compliance with this aspect of NCLB because the parent is the primary instructor not a ‘highly qualified’ teacher as defined by NCLB.

At Frontier we have openly discussed this issue with our Anchorage administration and also the State DEED. These regs do nothing to change any of that and are certainly no path to a solution to the intractable conflict between parents’ rights and NCLB. I suspect that the only resolution will come in the courts and thus regulation is not a place to fight that battle.

The issue of "highly qualified’ teachers is not mention in the DEED’s memo and is being used now to focus attention away from the real issue which is local control and the political nature of these proposed regs.

Regarding the recordings, note that public comment occurred after the vote and those who were commenting were cut off before they had completed their allotted five or three minute periods. I don’t think this was done on purpose but it certainly was an unfair process: no comment allowed before the vote and comment was cut off. Not exactly ‘open and transparent.’

Public comment on the regulations is permitted until May 8, 2008.


Author: lynn
Apr 19
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Aussies Turn to Homeschooling

In New South Wales registration for homeschooling has jumped 15% in the last 12 months. That does not include those who have chosen not to register with the state.

Reasons parents give for removing their kids from the public school system:

  • Curriculum
  • Bullying
  • Homeschooling has lost its ‘hippie’ stigma

State Education spokesman Andrew Stoner says the problem is publics schools are starved for funds.

All of this sounds so familiar.

H/T: Australian Politics Blog


Author: lynn
Apr 15
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Reasons to Not Regulate Correspondence Schools

Yesterday I wrote about the reasons usually heard for regulating correspondence schools. I made the case that statewide correspondence schools (SWC) require regulation because they have no statewide oversight. In-district schools have sufficient local oversight.

Here are the typical reasons given to not regulate the two different types of correspondence schools. As before, my opinions are in italics.

Stated Reasons SWC’s Should Not be Regulated

  • Parents should be allowed to spend the money however they want on their own kids’ education. In practice, this is a voucher. Alaska’s constitution clearly states this is not allowed.
  • SWC students should be treated equal to in-district students. The 2 types of schools are very different and thus cannot be equal. In many ways they may appear similar but they are very different. This is a big picture concept.
  • Homeschool kids do better on testing and so parents should have the freedom to spend however they like. This is clearly false based upon data presented in last September’s work session. Homeschool kids perform comparably to students in traditional classrooms.
  • SWC’s provide choice for parents. This is true. However, this is not the path to choice given by the legislature. The legislature determined that charter schools are the way to provide choice and wrote very strong statute to support it. Much greater freedom is obtained with a charter. SWC parents should enroll in one in their local district or start a new one if they do not like the restrictions placed on SWC’s.
  • Homeschooling is cheaper and therefore extravagance with public funds is justified since it is still cheaper than educating a student in a brick and mortar school. No matter the dollar amount, unacceptable use of public funds is still wrong.

Reasons In-District Programs Should Not be Regulated

  • No specific need or inappropriate practices for regulation stated. The Board’s Memorandum states only that there has been "much public comment." Is that all that is necessary to change regulations and increase the State’s  oversight and to ignore adequate local control.
  • Motivation for the proposed packet is unstated and unclear. We don’t know who wrote the proposed regs. Stakeholders had no input into regulation development process as was the case with the current regulations.
  • Local School boards already provide LOCAL oversight. This cannot be overstated. LOCAL SCHOOL BOARDS PROVIDING LOCAL OVERSIGHT ALIGNED WITH COMMUNITY STANDARDS AND NEEDS!
  • Proposed regs have apparently been written without regard for local policies. In many cases, standards are lowered by state reg. Part of the current regulation was taken directly from Frontier’s Charter. I think we can state the case that an unintended result will be to restrict in-district programs from being creative and innovative.
  • SPED services are already provided by local schools for in-district programs.
  • Many in-district programs are charter schools approved by the State Board and Local Board. The proposed regs produce de facto charter changes. There is a path to change a charter and it is collaborative not regulatory. This is my big beef. The State Board already blessed our charter now they want a do-over without negotiation or collaboration or grounds and without input from the ASD Board with whom they also have a contract. These regs will likely have the unintended consequence of causing charter schools to close. Again, charters are the path to school choice and curricular freedom granted by the legislature. This Board would ignore that to give favor to districts who want to enroll statewide without legal authority.

Author: lynn
Apr 14
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Why Regulate Correspondence Schools at State Level?

One of the frustrating aspects of the new proposed regulations is the notion underlying them that in-district schools are the same as statewide correspondence schools and should be treated and regulated the same. Admittedly, there are some similarities on the surface but there is a much bigger picture to look at than allotment amounts and learning plans and purchasing guidelines. So, let’s take a closer look.

The first huge difference is the whole concept of local control. Local control has been affirmed by the United States Supreme Court in Milliken v. Bradley (1974) and is an established part of our national and Alaska’s public education tradition. In application, local control saves the state the laborious task of overseeing, minutely, the operating details of each program by delegating that task to a local district and its community’s standards and needs. The State Board’s proposal completely ignores this established precedent and chooses to regulate individual programs within a district. The issue of local control cannot be overstated. Statewide correspondence schools have zero local control. I’ve written in greater detail on the issue of local control here.

I’ve made a couple lists to illustrate some of the ‘big picture’ differences between our schools. This subject is so complicated I had to find some way to lay out points that had some kind of structure. This proposal package is ‘target-rich.’ Its regulations are inappropriate in numerous ways and even illegal when applied to charter schools.

The proposed regs already apply to statewide schools. The only change for them is an increase in the amount permitted to be spent on fine arts and P.E.

So, here are some reasons I have heard that correspondence schools should be regulated. First, the statewide correspondence schools. I’ve added my own humble opinion in italics.

Reasons Statewide Correspondence Schools Should be Regulated:

  • No LEA (local education agency) oversight once enrollment crosses district boundaries. Only the State has statutory authority to oversee statewide schools.
  • Motivated by revenue stream and therefore incentive for self-oversight is minimized. These schools want maximum enrollment to generate maximum revenue for their local districts.
  • A significant portion, 25%, of the Base Allocation is not spent on the student nor the correspondence school itself. Goes to previous point. Money is not spent where the legislature directed it. This is because there is no local control. Parents cannot even vote for the school board and thus have no voice in how funds are spent.
  • Inappropriate uses of public funds documented. These were what brought the public’s attention to this issue and thus the regs that are in place now.
  • Lack of compliance with existing regulations. This is anecdotal. Many of us know families in SWC’s who use sectarian mat’ls as their primary curriculum. These are prohibited under the current and proposed regs.
  • Special education services are inadequate. It’s tough and expensive to provide these services from a district 800 miles away from its students.

Reasons In-District Programs Should be Regulated

  • ‘Much public comment regarding correspondence study programs.’ This is the stated reason in the Board’s memorandum.
  • Expectations by those in statewide schools of ‘fairness.’

That’s it. Those are the only two reasons I’ve heard that in-district programs should be regulated. The latter requires real chutzpah. A coarse analogy is one of a squatter living in my backyard demanding the equal access and privileges of family to make it ‘fair.’ The real-life example is the Galena City School District enrolling 860 students within the Anchorage School District (ASD) and wanting a ‘fair’ chance to enroll even more by being given the same privileges as Frontier Charter School and Family Partnership Charter School but without the local control from the ASD School Board nor the community standards applied to the two charters. Keep in mind that Galena is a town of 640 that is 344 air miles from Anchorage without road or rail access. Galena is just one of several statewide schools that enroll within the ASD.

There are no allegations of misuse of public funds nor of mismanagement of the in-district schools. So, why regulate them? The motivation appears to be political. Public comment closes May 8th.


Author: lynn
Apr 06
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Blogging May be Bad for Health

Is there death by blogging? This from the NY Times, writers are blogging until they drop. I don’t know about you folks but life has enough 24/7 demand without manic blogging.


Author: lynn
Apr 04
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A Week of Testing

The Alaska Standards Based Assessment were this week and concluded today. John said they were pretty easy.  Whew! It added some serious structure to our usually casual schedule. Testing started promptly at 9 a.m. at a local church. Tuesday was Reading, Wednesday Writing, Thursday Math and today 8th graders also had a Science assessment.

It’s a big event for our school and the staff did a great job organizing it. The assessments are no big deal for some students and very daunting for others. I’m always sympathetic to the 3rd graders who are the youngest ones and not sure what to expect. I’m glad it’s over for this year.


Author: lynn
Apr 04
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Proposed Regulations Now Open for Public Comment

At last week’s State Board meeting the proposed regulations for correspondence schools were approved for public comment. There were a few comments before the start of Friday’s business meeting none of them in favor of the regulations.

Action on the proposal is expected at the June meeting which has been moved to Anchorage. As of this afternoon the State DEED’s website had not been updated for commenting. I’ll keep you posted.


Author: lynn
Mar 31
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Opening Day! Spring is Near! Go Tribe!

We spent the weekend with teenagers at Snow Camp in Big Lake and a night at our own cabin in Willow. It was cold, it was snowing, and our 400′ Willow driveway is unclearable laden with six inches of ice sandwiched by snow. So, we trudged our bags and food from the truck to the house. The lake is still frozen very solidly with no hint of any thin ice. But, spring is near, very near. I know this because today is Opening Day! 

That’s right, the Cleveland Indians host the White Sox at newly renamed Progressive Field. It’s 55 degrees in Cleveland right now and it might rain, too. First pitch is 11:05 a.m. Alaska Time. I’m trying to decide whether to subscribe to just the audio or the video, too, from mlb.com. Not too much coverage of the Indians in Anchorage unless they’re playing the Mariners.

Go Tribe!

medium_openingday08


Author: lynn
Mar 28
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Museum of Online Museums

You can find it all at the Museum of Online Museums.


Author: lynn
Mar 27
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Initial Thoughts on the Proposed Regs

I’ve read through these proposed regulations, discussed them with colleagues and fellow homeschoolers and have a few beginning thoughts. We’ll be entering some of this in the comment session at tomorrow’s State DEED Board meeting in Juneau.

My perspective is as a co-founder of Frontier Charter School which enrolls Anchorage School District students. As such, we object to regulations being extended to in-district programs. These proposed regs dictate permissible curriculum and spending, how learning plans are developed, implemented and tracked. In other words, they detail the administrative, instructional and financial structure of a correspondence school.

Here’s a few points addressing this aspect:

  • In the Background portion of the memo the Board presents no evidence showing this additional state regulation of specific schools within an LEA (local educational agency) is necessary. Where is the empirical data?  It looks like a few complainers are all it takes to get the Board to extend regulations into territory it has not regulated before.
  • The Board is extending their spending and curriculum regulations to charter schools. We have a charter, a contract, with the Anchorage School District and the State that details how we will operate Frontier Charter School. We went through a very lengthy, tedious public process to have our charter approved and our doors opened. The charter details how we will run Frontier, its accountability and compliance with District policies and State statute. Now, the Board would like to change how our school operates and how we spend our money. This is in direct opposition to our charter and also to state charter school statute. They are requiring de facto changes to our charter without going through the correct legal process of doing so. Changing a charter is a lengthy, tedious, public and cooperative effort with the ASD and Frontier. Again, I add that there is no evidence that this sweeping action is necessary.
  • The Board would like to regulate how Frontier chooses curriculum and how much money is spent on what materials. The law and legislative intent is clear. Charter schools have curricular freedom. To dictate how Frontier or any other charter school spends its money on curriculum is at its essence dictating curriculum choices. We have already complied with all statutory requirements and restrictions regarding curriculum. Frontier will not accept additional regulation unsupported by statute without a fight.

It seems these proposed regulations are a politically motivated. The issues related to statewide correspondence schools will not go away until there is an open, transparent discussion of why they exist. Schools such as IDEA and Raven exist to generate revenue for their small, rural school districts. So, while in-district programs compete with one another based upon academic excellence, statewide schools compete for a revenue stream.


Author: lynn