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50CAN

Commentary and OpinionCustomizationEducation ChoiceEducation EquityEducation Savings AccountsFeaturedParent EmpowermentPodcastSchool ChoiceUnionism

podcastED: SUFS president Doug Tuthill interviews education choice advocate Derrell Bradford: Part 2

redefinED staff October 22, 2020
redefinED staff

In the second of a two-part interview, Tuthill and 50CAN’s executive vice president discuss the organization’s advocacy for federal funding to build new education infrastructure and its goal of giving individuals power and money to shift the future of public education toward greater diversity and choice.

https://www.redefinedonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Derrell-BradfordPT2_EDIT.mp3

Tuthill and Bradford also discuss the inflexibility of modern school districts and teacher unions, both of which have the potential to lead the charge in unbundling education services to offer families greater choice, but currently are resistant to do so.

“There is an opportunity here to talk about how we make sure we continue to have public schools that are sustainable, (rather than) continue to have a monopoly that isn’t.”

EPISODE DETAILS:

·       How pushing for new federal funding of diverse choice options can filter down to shift long-standing state funding battles

·       How school districts’ recalcitrance to offer compelling education options has led more families to explore other options

·       How decentralizing district and teacher union power could benefit teachers

·       The contradictory position of progressives who refuse to support education choice due to misplaced political loyalties

LINKS MENTIONED:

New York Times – Not Everyone Hates Remote Learning. For These Students, It’s a Blessing

Fund Everything – Emergency Education Investments in a National Crisis (Direct PDF link)

Measure Everything – Emergency Data Collection in a National Crisis (Direct PDF link)

You can listen to Part 1 of the interview here.

October 22, 2020 0 comment
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Commentary and OpinionCoronavirus / COVID-19CustomizationEducation and Public PolicyEducation ChoiceEducation EquityFeaturedParental ChoicePodcastSchool Choice

podcastED: SUFS president Doug Tuthill interviews education choice advocate Derrell Bradford: Part 1

redefinED staff October 15, 2020
redefinED staff

In the first of a two-part conversation, Tuthill talks with the charismatic executive vice president of 50CAN, a national advocacy organization that supports education choice policies on a state-by-state basis.

https://www.redefinedonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Bradford_PT1EDIT-1.mp3

Bradford’s straightforward analysis of complex education issues has earned him a sterling reputation in the education choice world, but his advocacy is personal. He recalls on the podcast a conversation between his mother and grandmother when he was growing up in southwest Baltimore about their decision to send him to a middle school out of his neighborhood zone to improve his educational outcome.

He also discusses two of his new policy papers – Fund Everything and Measure Everything – co-authored with 50CAN founder Marc Porter Magee. Inspired in part by the wide support for direct universal government assistance in the wake of COVID-19, the papers explain how to structure that support to solve a plethora of education problems that existed long before the pandemic.

“Parents and kids are trying to solve problems that are emergent … or created because a (school district) doesn’t want to play ball … What would you do if you were that parent that needed to solve that problem? The fundamental precondition has got to be a right to choose.”

EPISODE DETAILS:

·       Bradford’s education roots and his realization that education choice shaped his future

·       How 50CAN adapts its policy support based on each state’s landscape and political dynamics

·       What Bradford aims to accomplish with the Fund Everything and Measure Everything policy papers

·       How to pay and reward teachers in a Fund Everything education landscape

LINKS MENTIONED:

Fund Everything – Emergency Education Investments in a National Crisis (Direct PDF link)

Measure Everything – Emergency Data Collection in a National Crisis (Direct PDF link)

October 15, 2020 0 comment
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AnalysisCharter SchoolsCoronavirus / COVID-19CustomizationEducation and Public PolicyEducation ChoiceEducation EquityEducation SpendingFeaturedHomeschoolingMicroschoolsParental ChoicePrivate SchoolsSchool Choice

‘Emergency mindset’ needed to address education inequities

redefinED staff September 24, 2020
redefinED staff

As the first full year of schooling during the coronavirus pandemic launches, a national education advocacy network is sounding the alarm in a research brief that America’s K-12 education system is in crisis.

To ensure a more flexible, equitable and student-centered system of education both now and post-pandemic, the independent non-profit organization 50CAN is calling for a national response to that crisis, starting with a greater level of federal support for new learning modes to extend greater choice for families, including distance learning, homeschooling, and micro-schools and learning pods.

While schooling traditionally has been funded through a mix of local property taxes and state revenue with the federal government paying only about 10% of total costs, 50CAN observes, a greater level of federal support across these three modes of learning is needed. 

Among 50CAN’s overall policy recommendations:

 ·       All district, charter and private schools should receive emergency funding to support safely running in-person schooling this school year if they are able to do so and to provide a flexible, high-quality online schooling option for all students.

 ·       Families should be able to easily move into or out of these in-person and online options as their health circumstances and risk factors change throughout the year.

 ·       Families should have the option to enroll their student in an online district school program outside of their neighborhood boundaries or in an online charter school or private school program anywhere in the country with no restrictions to these online transfers, such as state enrollment caps.

 ·       Families should receive funding to enroll their child in an in-person school in a neighboring district or in a charter school or private school if their district school does not offer an in-person option.

 ·       Families up to 200% of the poverty line should receive a direct payment of $2,000 per child to pay for supplemental educational materials, tutoring, technology and other learning expenses, building upon payments — $1,200 per adult and $500 per child – in the CARES Act.

 The independent non-profit organization, launched in 2011, has a presence in eight states with affiliates in additional cities including Miami.

September 24, 2020 0 comment
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Charter SchoolsVirtual Education

Charter school advocates issue ‘call to action’ on virtual charters

Travis Pillow June 16, 2016
Travis Pillow
A new report calls for states to subject virtual charter schools to greater scrutiny.

A new report calls for states to subject virtual charter schools to greater scrutiny.

States need to overhaul the way they fund and regulate online charter schools and rein in “large-scale underperformance,” a new report argues.

The argument isn’t coming from the usual anti-charter school suspects. The report was released this morning by the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers, and the pro-charter advocacy group 50CAN (aka the 50-State Campaign for Achievement Now).

The three groups say they support full-time virtual schooling, and that the model can be beneficial for some students. But the report says recent research has found negative effects so significant and widespread that “[t]he breadth of underperformance by full-time virtual charter schools convinces us that states need to change the policy framework within which these schools can operate.”

“If traditional public schools were producing such results, we would rightly be outraged,” the report adds. “We should not feel any different just because these are charter schools.”

Online learning companies and some allied advocacy groups have disputed some of the most widely cited studies of virtual charters’ effectiveness, pointing out that virtual charters often serve disadvantaged students who change schools frequently, making their performance hard to gauge.

The report addresses this argument, noting that in a study by Stanford University’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes, the “mobility” rates of virtual charter students and their comparison groups in traditional public schools are similar. Other  observers have concluded the negative findings are simply too strong to explain away.

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June 16, 2016 2 comments
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Achievement GapBipartisanshipParent EmpowermentParental ChoicePodcastSchool Choice

The state of education advocacy: Jim Blew, podcastED

Travis Pillow May 11, 2016
Travis Pillow
Blew

Blew

All over the country, new private school choice programs are being created, more of the last remaining holdout states are beginning to allow charter schools, and a growing number of students are enrolling in educational options chosen by their parents.

But, on our latest podcast, Jim Blew, who served as the national president of StudentsFirst and will be focusing on California after a merger with the 50-state Campaign for Achievement Now (aka 50CAN), says it’s hardly time to declare victory.

“Creating high-quality alternatives to the traditional system is a very fragile effort that continues to be under attack every day,” he says. “… The reality of running a charter school is that you still feel, every day, that somebody is trying to snuff out your school, and anybody who’s been involved in the [private-school] scholarship programs will tell you the same thing.”

Look no further than current events in Florida.

Blew says that when 50CAN and StudentsFirst join forces, the broad pillars of their agendas – expanding quality school choices and creating accountability policies for teachers and schools – will remain largely the same. But they’ll also vary state-by-state.

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http://www.redefinedonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/Jim-Blew-w-Intro-1.mp3

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

May 11, 2016 2 comments
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