Archive for News & Updates

Alexander the Great Understood The Importance of Teachers

How Alexander The Great Felt About TeachersAlexander the Great Understood The Importance of Teachers

(Written by Jeff Dunn & EduDemic)

Alexander III of Macedon, aka Alexander the Great, was undefeated in battle and knew his way around a battlefield. Teachers know a thing about doing battle as well. A good teacher is always battling to improve the lives of others. That’s what makes it such a noble career.

Click here to read rest…

CHS Smith wins Governor’s Shine Award to 23 2013-2014

Nnacy SmithCHS Smith wins Governor’s Shine Award to 23 2013-2014

Today Florida Governor Scott annouced that teacher Nancy Smith of Citrus High School along with 22 other Florida teachers has won the Governor’s Shine Award.  Governot Scott said, “Smith has been teaching for 33 years and for the last three years she has been teaching 11th and 12th grade English at Citrus High School. She consistently encourages her students academically and personally and works with her students to help them achieve success.”

Congrats Ms. Smith and thank you for all you do for Citrus students!!

Free Fun for Teachers this Summer at SeaWorld AND LegoLand

SeaWorld Free for TeachersFree Fun for Teachers this Summer

Thanks to parent Michele Ferguson for sending these to me and asking me to share with teachers.

SeaWorld is offering a FREE ANNUAL PASS to Florida Teachers too!!! Check this out and share it with all of your teacher friends. This is so exciting and WONDERFUL to see! You can score FREE SeaWorld AND LegoLand Tickets!!

LEGOLAND Free for TeachersCLICK HERE for more info: http://florida.legoland.com/freeteacherpass

 

About Common Core

Common CoreAbout Common Core

It might not be totally rotten to the ‘Core’!

If you are involved in education these days, one of the terms that has become a regular part of your vocabulary is Common Core, which is shorthand for Common Core State Standards (CCSS).  While there are parts of Common Core that I have several concerns and reservations about, I would not consider myself entirely against Common Core; I would not consider myself a fan of Common Core either.  So it makes it interesting that lately I have been in the position of defending Common Core.  I have been defending Common Core from those who misunderstand what it is, where it came from, and who is behind its adoption.

Florida’s State Board of Education for the Department of Education adopted the CCSS in 2010.  Since then approximately 45 states have now adopted CCSS or parts of it.  The purpose behind Common Core is that students in any state  should be measured by  similar, rigorous standards  resulting in students going on to be  successful in post-secondary schooling or a career.

One of the first myths about Common Core is that it is a curriculum; it is not.  Common Core are standards, just as the current Florida Next Generation Sunshine State Standards (NGSSS) and before that the Sunshine State Standards where were  all standards. Each state and local school board has autonomy in adopting and/or developing their own curriculum, teaching practices, and supportive resources that are aligned to those standards.

Another myth is that Common Core is a mandate, not so different from “ObamaCore;” a federal program that is being forced by the federal government; again, is not the case.  The Nation Review, in an April 3, 2013, article entitled, The Truth about Common Core explained, “They (CCSS) simply delineate what children should know at each grade level and describe the skills that they must acquire to stay on course toward college or career readiness.”  The conservative Fordham Institute’s Michael J. Petrilli wrote in The RNC on the CCSSI, OMG! The Common Core standards are worth supporting because they’re educationally solid. They are rigorous, they are traditional—one might even say they are ‘conservative.’ They expect students to know their math facts, to read the nation’s founding documents, and to evaluate evidence and come to independent judgments.

It is for the reasons above that I support Common Core.  Common Core infuses the daily technology tools that are a critical and necessary part of being successful in college and the work place. It was the National Governors Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers who worked together to develop CCSS in 2007.

I greatly encourage you to look at the CCSS for yourself by visiting the FL DOE Common Core standards search page at: www.cpalms.org/Standards/FLStandardSearch.aspx There you will find all the adopted CCSS for K-12 such as this one for 6th grade ELA (Reading/Writing):

  • [LACC.6.W.1.3] “Write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences or events using effective technique, relevant descriptive details, and well-structured event sequences.
  • [LACC.6.W.2.6] “Use technology, including the Internet, to produce and publish writing as well as to interact and collaborate with others; demonstrate sufficient command of keyboarding skills to type a minimum of three pages in a single sitting.

The concerns that I have with Common Core start with Florida’s CCSS implementation timeline. It says that by 2013-2014 Kindergarten through 2nd grade will be fully implemented in CCSS and that by 2014-2015 Kindergarten through 12th grade will be fully implemented in CCSS.  In the above example of two 6th grade ELA standards you can see that the use of individual student technology will be necessary for teaching the Common Core standards. With a 2015 deadline– which I might add also includes standardized testing of the CCSS– our schools and more importantly, our teachers and students, will not have the time to transition to these standards and will not have all the necessary tools in place.

The CCSS in Florida will not be measured by the FCAT but rather by the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC).  The PARCC will be taken entirely on computers from 3rd grade through 12th. Education Weekly reports in Common-Core Tests to Take Up to 10 Hours published on March 12, 2013, that the PAARCC test requires  nearly 8 hours for 3rd grade students to take and more time for the other grade levels: “The amount of time students will have to complete both the performance-based and end-of-year components in math and English/language arts: Grade 3rd: 8 hours, Grades 4th-5th: 9 hours, 20 minutes, Grades 6th-8th: 9 hours, 25 minutes, Grades 9th-10th: 9 hours, 45 minutes, and Grades 11th-12th: 9 hours, 55 minutes”.  Keep in mind this is in addition to the multitude of standardized test students are also required to take such as Advanced Placement (AP), International Baccalaureate (IB), American College Testing (ACT), Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT), Florida’s Postsecondary Education Readiness Test (PERT), and Florida End-of-Courses (EOC).  Many of these tests are being updated to include CCSS assessments as well.

In order to accomplish this major shift in standards and assist teachers in developing their curriculum to meet CCSS standards, a tremendous amount of time, funding and resources are required. At the same time, teachers must also continue teaching to the current NGSSS as their students are still being assessed on these and teacher evaluations are still affected by students’ FCAT test scores.  Citrus through a multitude of professional developments and initiatives has been doing a phenomenal job preparing for Common Core; the iPad/one-to-one students devices that are being introduced into classrooms is just one example of how that is being accomplished. However, there is just not enough time let alone funding resources to properly implement CCSS.  The expectation is that by 2015 our students will be formally assessed on CCSS and their future academic success defined by the CCSS assessments; in turn, teachers’ evaluations and incomes will be determined by those students’ CCSS assessments.

My hope and efforts are to help the state legislators provide a statutory balance before 2015 by providing flexibility for school districts in order to not remove “common sense” when implementing Common Core.

Ocala.com Reporting: Marion County School District lays off 261 employees

Sad Day in EducationOcala.com Reporting

Marion County School District lays off 261 employees

The School District on Friday laid off 261 employees — including all 160 first-year teachers — to fill a $29 million funding gap for 2013-14.

The 101 other layoffs are:

• 16 middle and high school clerks

• 13 physical education technicians

• 72 district-funded elementary level teacher aides, known as paraprofessionals

“This is a dark day for us,” School District spokesman Kevin Christian said on Friday just before the employees were informed. The layoffs will take effect June 30.

Click here to read rest of story…

Recent School Board Meeting Clarifications

May 23rd, 2013 School Board MeetingRecent School Board Meeting Clarifications

There have been several misunderstandings as to what took place at the workshop and board meeting and as well as misunderstandings regarding who suggested what and what will happen next. If you missed any portion of the meeting or if you have not had a chance to see the meeting for yourself you can view the meeting by visiting http://new.livestream.com/citrusschools/events/2117691

At the workshop the board discussed the school staffing plans and how they relate to the overall general budget.  At the school board meeting the board formally approved the Staffing Plans for the 2013-2014 school year which included retaining the Media Specialist, continuing Renaissance with reduced staff ($250,000 savings), and reducing 11 high school teacher positions for a modified block schedule ($531,000 savings), along with some additional smaller savings.  During the workshop the district staff presented the school board with suggested savings that had been developed by the District Budget Committee last year.  It is important to note that the CCEA had two of its leaders­­– the CCEA President and CCEA’s lead bargaining negotiator– on the District Budget Committee.  Last year the District Budget Committee was assembled to look into budget reduction recommendations.  This committee was made up of a cross section of representatives from all the various Citrus County School Departments as well as a representative from each of the Citrus County Schools and leadership from the CCEA.  The committee used a survey to rank the impact of various programs or cuts at our schools.  All of the items mentioned during the May 23rd school board workshop came from this District Budget Committee.  (Click here to see the 2012-2013 presentation, suggestions and surveys.)  I want to also clarify that the suggestion of the 1% pay reduction for all employees (which included all administrators and board members) or the reduction of one workday for all employees (which included all administrators and board members) were suggestions made by the District Budget Committee and not the school board.  The board discussed several cost-cutting options that would directly affect students and schools.  After reviewing those suggestions the board agreed to send to the District Budget Committee suggested items that would require going through the bargaining process. The next bargaining meeting is on May 30thThis ONLY means that the board began a conversation with the Citrus County Educational Association (CCEA) regarding bargaining required items suggested by the District Budget Committee.

Nearly none of the Budget Committee’s suggested cuts were approved by the board for the 2012-2013 budget; in fact,  the school board had subsequently rejected most of  these suggestions two additional times, one as recently as the January 29th School Board Workshop meeting.  The board’s goal has been to maintain as many of our schools’ programs and curriculum as possible so over the last several budget years the board has used the Reserved Fund Balance (savings) to maintain these programs.  What the School Board recognized and what the board has stated is that we could no longer continue to use the reserved funds because we had limited reserved funds now remaining. Over the last several years we have used approximately $9 million in reserved funds to maintain programs and staff in our school district which has brought our Reserve Funds now down to the minimum required amount of 3.5% or $3.5 million.  After making the most recent cuts to the high school staff and the Renaissance Center we felt we had to address all of the non-bargaining suggested cuts from the District Budget Committee and now were left with having a conversation about the bargaining- required suggestions.  It is for that reason that at the May 23rd workshop the board sent the Budget Committee’s suggestions to the bargaining table.

Please understand that just because the board has sent the Budget Committee’s suggestions to the bargaining table does not mean the board agrees with all of those suggestions. However, one of suggested items that I feel is an example of an item to discuss is reducing the number of non-extra duty supplements.  (Supplements are additional pay for both extra and non-extra duties.)

Following the 2013 Legislative session Citrus County Schools learned that due to mandated instructional salary increases, increases in the Florida Retirement System rates, and casualty insurance costs increases, that, even with the added new educational funding by the 2013 Legislator, Citrus School District would still be facing approximately a $2 million shortfall.  After receiving news of the shortfall, the Executive Administrative Team met with principals as soon as possible to inform them of these new unforeseen budget challenges and to ask for their insight and assistance in making cuts.  The principals were asked to perform the terrible task of looking at what position they might be willing to surrender such as one less P.E. teacher, TOSAs, or media specialists.  They were asked about closing Renaissance, along with additional suggested cuts by the District Budget Committee.  At the May 14th and May 23rd School Board meeting the school board heard from many staff and teachers– many from the CCEA –asking the school board to not cut the Media positions or close the Renaissance building to make “Mini Renaissances”.  With more and more items being rejected this leaves the school board with fewer and fewer options to consider.

These are some of the toughest challenges we face as board members and it is why we have spent a great deal of time and research to get information from all levels in our schools before making decisions.

As a husband of a 22 year veteran teacher of the Citrus County School system I personally understand the challenges both economic and personal our staff face.  I deeply value each of our amazing staff and the work you have done to help make our students, schools and district a success.

If any of you have specific questions, please feel free to contact me.