ExcelinEd – 蜜桃影视 America's Education News Source Mon, 01 May 2023 22:09:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png ExcelinEd – 蜜桃影视 32 32 Exclusive: Penny Schwinn, Influential Tennessee Education Chief, to Step Down /article/exclusive-penny-schwinn-influential-tennessee-education-chief-to-step-down/ Mon, 01 May 2023 18:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=708249 Updated

Tennessee education chief Penny Schwinn, one of the nation鈥檚 most high-profile state superintendents, who worked to expand tutoring and revamp literacy during the toughest days of the pandemic, will announce today that she is stepping down, effective June 1.  

In addition to launching the to curb learning loss, Schwinn shepherded through the legislature and positioned Tennessee as the first state with a federally registered . At the same time, she told 蜜桃影视 in an exclusive interview last week, she weathered distracting culture war battles over the way race and gender is taught in the state鈥檚 classrooms.

鈥淚 see it as extraneous politics and my job is to educate kids,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 knew that my charge, first and foremost, was to move our state forward.鈥


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A Republican, Schwinn faced criticism from Democrats and GOP leaders alike for issues ranging from the teaching of American history to her support for charter schools.

Last fall, she told Republican Gov. Bill Lee that she didn鈥檛 plan to stay through his second term. Lee will appoint Lizzette Gonzalez Reynolds, a school choice advocate with experience in state and federal policy, to be her successor. 

Currently vice president of policy with nonprofit ExcelinEd 鈥 which has been instrumental in the rapid expansion of education savings accounts in Republican-led states 鈥 Reynolds said she plans to pick up where Schwinn left off. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 an absolute joy to be tapped for this role and to continue this work,鈥 she said.

Before her work at ExcelinEd, Lizzette Gonzalez Reynolds served as chief deputy commissioner for the Texas Education Agency. She also worked for the U.S. Department of Education for former secretaries Rod Paige and Margaret Spellings. (Lizzette Gonzalez Reynolds)

A former Teach for America leader from California, Schwinn held high-level positions in the Delaware and Texas education agencies before Lee appointed her commissioner in 2019. She had a rocky start in Tennessee, initially facing criticism from lawmakers for being an outsider. Even though she鈥檚 a Republican, her policies were by more conservative members of her own party. But under her leadership, the state won praise from for requiring districts to use a , training teachers in those methods and providing free curriculum resources.

鈥淒r. Schwinn has successfully executed a culture and curriculum shift to the science of reading that no other Tennessee state commissioner could do,鈥 said Sonya Thomas, executive director of Nashville Propel, a parent advocacy organization. 鈥淯nder her leadership, we have become a national leader in literacy reform.鈥

Julia Rafal-Baer, founder of ILO Group, a consulting firm focused on leadership opportunities for women in education, added that Schwinn has had a 鈥渟eismic impact鈥 as commissioner, inspiring other women in the profession. On Friday, Schwinn addressed members of of women superintendents, where she spoke in part about the importance of navigating politics in the top job.

鈥淚 said to keep kids as your north star because that鈥檚 common ground,鈥 she said. 鈥淚gnore the distractions and get a thick skin because everything in education is personal, but you can鈥檛 take it personally.鈥

Tennessee has been in the spotlight not just for post-pandemic recovery efforts, but also for a legislative proposal to phase out federal funding, as well as controversies over and the state鈥檚 ban on receiving . 

In 2021, a state Moms for Liberty chapter their complaint about the Williamson County district鈥檚 use of an elementary reading curriculum, which includes the children鈥檚 book 鈥淩uby Bridges Goes to School: My True Story.鈥 The autobiography recounts Bridges鈥檚 experience as the first Black student to desegregate an all-white school in New Orleans. But some to the book鈥檚 use of words such as 鈥渋njustice鈥 and 鈥渦nequal鈥 and references to 鈥渁 large crowd of angry white people.鈥

The complaint focused on lessons during the 2020-21 school year. Schwinn largely sidestepped the issue, responding that the law requiring the state to investigate possible violations didn鈥檛 kick in until the following year.

From Democrats, she鈥檚 faced criticism for her ties to charter schools (she founded one in Sacramento) and questions about possible conflicts of interest involving her husband, Paul Schwinn, a leadership coach for TNTP. The nonprofit, which works in districts to improve teacher quality, with the state as part of its reading initiative, but Schwinn received approval from the state and promised to distance herself from the agreement.

鈥淲hichever side you’re on or whichever kind of philosophy you have, there’s always another push that is frankly very distracting,鈥 Schwinn said. 鈥淚t can come from the left or the right, and I think it has really decimated our leadership nationally.鈥 

Of the 38 states where superintendents are appointed and not elected, Tennessee will be the 17th to have since January 2022 鈥 a mark of the widespread leadership turnover in the profession since the pandemic.

Tennessee Commissioner Penny Schwinn testified before Congress in July 2020 on safely reopening schools. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

But John Bailey, a consultant and visiting fellow for the conservative American Enterprise Institute, noted that Schwinn had a longer run than some state chiefs. , appointed Virginia education chief by Gov. Glen Youngkin in January 2022, recently stepped down after just a year. She previously spent eight years leading Wyoming鈥檚 education department.

Schwinn鈥檚 鈥渟uperpower,鈥 Bailey said, has been her ability to 鈥渂ridge differences that are sometimes political and sometimes just normal policy tensions.鈥

鈥楩oundation of success鈥

Schwinn noted, for example, last year to the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, to highlight the state鈥檚 grow-your-own teacher preparation program.

鈥淚 have a great relationship with that administration as I serve very loyally my own,鈥 she said, calling Lee 鈥渦nwaveringly supportive鈥 during her tenure. 鈥淗e said, 鈥楶enny, go do your job, and your job is to make sure our kids are accelerating faster than ever before.鈥 鈥 

Schwinn and Lee worked together to gather public input on how the state funds schools. On top of a base amount for each student, the new system provides additional funding for students with greater needs as well as ongoing funding for tutoring, early literacy and career and technical education.

In a statement Monday, Lee said, “Penny has played a key role in our administration鈥檚 work to ensure educational opportunity for Tennessee students and secure the next generation of teachers, while navigating historic learning challenges.”

Last year, Schwinn showing Tennessee students had largely recovered from pandemic-related declines, which leaders attributed partly to recovery efforts like tutoring and summer school. But those wins quickly were overshadowed by sharp declines in math and reading performance on the 2022 National Assessment of Educational Progress, especially in the . The mismatch is not unusual. State tests more closely cover state standards than the national test. Students also took NAEP before tutoring efforts were widely implemented.

Meanwhile, the state鈥檚 effort to turn around performance in many Memphis schools has been a disappointment, Schwinn said.

Since the Achievement School District began a decade ago, the schools involved , academic gains. The state is now , reducing the number of charter school operators running schools. But Schwinn added, 鈥淚 regret that we didn’t move faster on that. The kids deserved us to move faster.鈥

She also regrets not spending more time on students鈥 mental health. She called on the issue 鈥 which lists suicide as the third leading cause of death among 14- to 18-year olds 鈥 鈥渇rightening鈥 and said the state still needs 鈥渁 really clear, tight and well-articulated plan鈥 to respond to students in crisis. 

Early in the pandemic, she took heat from GOP state lawmakers for a plan to use $1 million in federal COVID relief funds for districts to conduct 鈥渨ell-being checks,鈥 particularly for students who didn鈥檛 participate in remote learning while schools were closed.

House Education Administration Committee Chair Mark White, for example, he received calls from parents concerned about government intrusion. And Rep. Scott Cepicky suggested Schwinn was more concerned with her own agenda and didn鈥檛 consult with those 鈥渆lected by the people of Tennessee.鈥

“I think there’s still a huge lack of communication to the General Assembly and to [local] superintendents and school boards,” Cepicky said Monday. “I think that was one of the pitfalls of Commissioner Schwinn and her regime.”

Schwinn declined to say what she鈥檒l be doing next, but said she has 鈥渜uite a few good opportunities鈥 and expects to make a decision in about a month.

Reynolds, her successor, said her first priority will be ensuring eligible families can take advantage of the state鈥檚 targeted ESA program. It鈥檚 currently open to students in Shelby and Davidson counties, which include Memphis and Nashville, respectively. This year, , which encompasses Chattanooga.

鈥淓SAs are the most flexible form of school choice,鈥 Reynolds said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to take the work we鈥檝e done nationally [at ExcelinEd] and implement our ESA program in Tennessee.鈥

She鈥檒l also oversee the next phase of academic recovery efforts and lead the state through  the financial challenges expected as federal relief funds run out in 2024. 

鈥淭he good news is that she gets to build on this foundation of success,鈥 Bailey said. 鈥淪he has a lot of momentum.鈥

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Seizing on Parents鈥 Frustration, GOP Govs Push for 鈥楨ducation Savings Accounts鈥 /article/seizing-on-parents-frustration-gop-govs-push-for-education-savings-accounts/ Mon, 23 Jan 2023 10:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=702763 Capitalizing on parent鈥檚 frustration with public schools during the pandemic, Republican governors across the country are putting education savings accounts at the center of their legislative agendas.

Some hope to significantly broaden the concept of ESAs, which allow families to tap state education funding to pay for private school tuition, tutoring and other education-related expenses.

In a 鈥淐ondition of the State鈥 earlier this month, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said the state should spend the same amount on students, whether they attend public schools or not. 


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鈥淲e have to set aside this us-versus-them mentality,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you want to pretend that this is a war between two different school systems, then you’re not focused on our children.鈥

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds wants the state to spend the same amount on students whether or not they attend the public schools. (Iowa governor鈥檚 office Facebook)

Reynolds is one of more than half a dozen GOP governors who seek to join the that currently have ESAs. They say parents across the political spectrum want more control over their children鈥檚 education, and blame districts and teachers unions for extended school closures. But critics say the programs undermine funding for the traditional schools attended by the vast majority of students. 

鈥淭here is a push among some Republican governors to make this a priority,鈥 said Jessica Levin, director of Public Funds for Public Schools, a campaign of the left-leaning New Jersey-based Education Law Center. 鈥淏ut when they are proposed, there is a broad spectrum of groups that come out against them 鈥 pastors, rural legislators, parents.鈥

Governors proposing the programs draw inspiration from the recent 鈥渆mpowerment scholarship鈥 and Florida鈥檚 long history of taxpayer-funded . 

Tom Greene

Arizona鈥檚 program 鈥 which provides about $7,000 per student 鈥 is like the 鈥渉oly grail of school choice鈥 because it鈥檚 not restricted to certain groups of families, said Tom Greene, vice president of advocacy for ExcelinEd, an education reform think tank. But in a sign of the opposition such programs face, new Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, has pledged the expansion, saying the program lacks accountability and could cost the state $1.5 billion over a 10-year period.

Under Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida has multiple scholarship programs and raised eligibility to $111,000 for a family of four. And this year, Republicans have introduced a plan to the program to more families, potentially leaping over Arizona to become the state with the largest ESA enrollment. 

鈥淚 think both states have really helped create momentum and energy,鈥 Greene said. 鈥淧arents want an all-of-the-above approach when it comes to how their kids are educated. Legislators across the country are responding to that desire.鈥

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, a Democrat, wants to repeal a law that made the state鈥檚 education savings account program universally available. (Getty Images)

鈥極n the ground鈥

While Republican legislators are leading the charge for ESAs, a shows there is less of a partisan divide among voters 鈥 likely because many parents in lost patience with remote learning. Conducted by Yes. Every Kid, a school choice advocacy group, and YouGov, a research company, the poll found that 60% of parents favor ESAs, while 15% oppose them. Democrats were actually slightly more supportive than Republicans 鈥 58% to 55%.

That doesn鈥檛 surprise Craig Hulse, executive director of Yes. Every Kid.

鈥淧eople think about Republicans versus Democrats in Congress, and it鈥檚 just not what people on the ground are hearing,鈥 he said. 鈥淓verybody recognizes the status quo is inequitable.鈥

Acknowledging the pandemic created a 鈥減erfect storm鈥 for ESA supporters, Levin nonetheless pointed to data showing parents remain with their local schools. In the 2022 PDK Poll, Americans鈥 support for schools in their communities reached a . She also pointed to the failure of ESA efforts in and

鈥淎n even better poll is the vote,鈥 Levin said.

Legal hurdles have derailed other programs. In Kentucky last month, the the state鈥檚 鈥渆ducation opportunity accounts鈥 unconstitutional, ruling that state law clearly intended for public funds to be spent only on public schools. And last summer, the Nevada Supreme Court to get an ESA measure on the ballot, calling it an unfunded mandate.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has continued to expand private school choice options during his administration. (Getty Images)

鈥楻obust debate鈥 

Greene still expects a 鈥渞obust debate鈥 this year over ESAs in Republican-led states like , where Gov. Spencer Cox鈥檚 support depends on , and Oklahoma, where made school choice a focus of his re-election campaign. 

The impact of ESAs in rural areas was a key issue in Stitt鈥檚 race against former state Superintendent Joy Hofmeister. She argued private school choice would wipe out small town school districts. Some rural Republicans, , have opposed ESAs because there are fewer private schools for kids to go to.

At the same time, a focusing on a Florida program showed that families in rural areas use ESAs, but are more likely to spend funds on curriculum and tutoring than private school tuition. 

Most reports on ESAs focus on parent satisfaction. A from EdChoice, an advocacy group, showed that almost 60% of ESA users were somewhat or completely satisfied with the program when it was more targeted.

Even so, Levin said ESAs are tough to push through state legislatures. 

Jessica Levin

鈥淟ots of voucher bills are proposed every year and the majority of them fail,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 governor has to put in a ton of political capital if he or she wants one of these to pass.鈥

In Virginia, experts suggest Gov. Glenn Youngkin鈥檚 victory in 2021 was partially due to parents who felt and weary with school board drama. But the might face resistance .

A bill could make it out of the House, where Republicans have the majority. But Democrats control the Senate, where Kristen Amundson, a Democrat and former member of the state assembly, expects strong opposition from the state鈥檚 Legislative Black Caucus.

鈥淭here is zero way that they are going to approve that,鈥 she said.

Seeking accountability

Shifting some of the education budget to the private sector also raises questions of academic and fiscal accountability. 

In South Carolina last year, Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey, a Republican, blocked an ESA bill in the final hours of the session because lawmakers removed a requirement that participating students take the same state tests as those in traditional schools. 

The state school boards association agrees with him. 

鈥淚f there is going to be legislation, then we certainly are going to support accountability measures that are similar or the same as those in public schools,鈥 said Debbie Elmore, government relations director for the association. 

But Sen. Larry Grooms, also a Republican, thinks it鈥檚 鈥減unitive鈥 to require students using ESAs to take state tests because they were likely already behind when their parents withdrew them from district schools. He has reintroduced a similar version of the bill that failed. 

His bill would cap the program at 15,000 students, and Grooms tells his 鈥渢eacher friends鈥 that the difference between Arizona鈥檚 program and his plan is 鈥渓ike night and day鈥 because it would be targeted to low-income students.

In Arizona, participation is nearing 46,000 students. That鈥檚 why observers in Texas, where lawmakers have filed , are paying close attention. 

Colleen Dippel, CEO of Families Empowered, a Texas nonprofit that helps parents navigate school options, has no doubt that such a program would be popular because of 鈥減ent-up demand鈥 from parents for more educational options. 

鈥淚t seems insane to me to try to preserve this system that is not getting optimum results and is really outdated,鈥 she said about traditional schools. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like saying, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to keep those rotary phones on the wall and spend more money on those phones.鈥 鈥

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Tests Show Early Reading Skills Rebounding, But Racial Gaps Have Grown Wider /article/early-reading-skills-see-a-rebound-from-in-person-learning-but-racial-gaps-have-grown-wider-tests-show/ Wed, 28 Jul 2021 18:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=575342 The return of in-person learning last spring led to a boost in young children鈥檚 reading skills, but performance hasn鈥檛 returned to pre-pandemic levels and racial gaps have grown wider, according to .

Compared to winter results, the end-of-year data on the widely used Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills, or DIBELS, shows that fewer students were at risk of not learning to read 鈥 a decline to 38 percent from 47 percent in kindergarten and a drop to 32 percent from 43 percent at first grade. But the scores at third grade, a critical year for developing more advanced reading skills, haven鈥檛 bounced back in the same way.


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The results provide some hope that a full in-person return to school this fall could see young children quickly regain the early literacy skills they missed while learning from home. But students entering fourth grade might need more targeted support to get back on track not only in English language arts but across other content areas as well. In keeping with anecdotal evidence and other assessment results, the Amplify data confirms that the severe disruption in learning caused by the pandemic has disproportionately impacted Black and Hispanic students, but the setback for white students has been minor.

鈥淚t is really encouraging to see that when we get back to instruction, the kids in the early grades are really responsive,鈥 said Susan Lambert, Amplify鈥檚 chief academic officer for elementary humanities. But the pandemic, she added, has magnified existing gaps in reading for Black and Hispanic students. And many in the upper elementary grades will need extra intervention from tutors, reading specialists and others specifically trained in literacy.

The racial disparities were also noted this week in of pandemic-related learning loss from McKinsey and Company, which found that while students ended the year about five months behind in math and four months behind in reading, students in majority Black schools had six months of 鈥渦nfinished learning鈥 in math and those in high-poverty schools were seven months off track.

In the Amplify report, the DIBELS data represents about 400,000 students from 1,400 schools in 41 states from both the 2019-20 and 2020-21 school years. The sample also mostly reflects students in large, urban metro areas, which serve a higher proportion of Hispanic students than the nation as a whole.

Just prior to schools shutting down in early 2020, 32 percent of Black, 30 percent of Hispanic and 20 percent of white first-graders were severely off track. When the 2020-21 school year ended, 44 percent of Black and 38 percent of Hispanic first graders were significantly behind, but the proportion of white students in that range had increased by only 1 percentage point. At third grade, white students were even less likely to be well off track in reading at the end of the 2020-21 school year than they were before the pandemic.

As with third grade, the decline in reading skills in second grade was higher for Black and Hispanic students. (Amplify)

Kymyona Burk, the policy director for early education at ExcelinEd, a think tank focusing on state education initiatives, said the results match the trends in students returning to school in person. Black and Hispanic students were more likely to finish out the year in remote learning, while white students returned at higher rates.

When students are learning to read in the classroom, teachers are better able to 鈥渃heck for understanding,鈥 Burk said. But at home, a lot of students lacked a reliable internet connection, chronic absenteeism was high and even when students were attending remote classes, many turned off their cameras or didn鈥檛 want to speak on screen.

She added that for students who were already struggling readers, remote learning 鈥渨as an easy way to check out of the process,鈥 while more motivated readers probably weren鈥檛 deterred by the virtual format.

As districts decide how to plan recovery efforts this fall, Amplify suggested that it鈥檚 essential to collect data on students鈥 literacy skills and then to organize daily schedules and educators鈥 time to allow for extra reading instruction.

At last week鈥檚 Reagan Institute Summit on Education, Amplify CEO Larry Berger urged educators to take an informal inventory of students鈥 reading skills when school starts and focus on reestablishing relationships.

High-stakes assessments at the beginning of the year 鈥渃ould do more harm than good,鈥 he said, but added it鈥檚 important to gather 鈥渆nough data to understand where resources need to be deployed.鈥

This year, lawmakers in several states, including Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, North Carolina and Tennessee, have joined Alabama and Mississippi in passing legislation focusing on comprehensive literacy instruction, Burk said, adding that some are providing guidance on which materials to adopt and ensuring teachers are receiving training using those resources.

These laws, she said, improve equity for Black, Hispanic and low-income students since schools predominantly serving white and upper-income students were already offering high-quality reading instruction.

The Center on Reinventing Public Education鈥檚 review of district plans for using federal relief funds shows that several have prioritized literacy efforts. These include $25 million to hire and train 850 literacy tutors in grades K-5 in Chicago, a reading intervention coordinator in Maryland鈥檚 Montgomery County Public Schools, and elementary and secondary literacy specialists in Columbus, Ohio schools.

Both Lambert and Burk added that upper elementary teachers will need some support in how to teach foundational reading skills.

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