Prove demographics don’t
have to be destiny
We can’t remake our public schools without you.
We can’t remake our public schools without you.
ConnCAN needs your support right now to make sure that every child in Connecticut, regardless of race, ethnicity, or class, has access to a great public school.
By George Levinson
By Robert Frahm
The state's allocation of federal stimulus money intended to save teaching jobs in cash-strapped school districts excluded charter schools, many of which serve students in Connecticut's poorest communities.
The experimental charter schools, along with the state's technical high schools and some public magnet schools, were left out under a formula used by the state to distribute the $110 million in stimulus funds approved by Congress in August.
By Rick Green
Maybe you saw what New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie did last week after he learned about the bungling behind his administration's failure to win $400 million in the federal Race to the Top competition that rewards states that adopt aggressive education reforms.
Christie fired his education commissioner.
Bravo. At least we know what matters to Gov. Christie, a Republican making waves across the country. That's more than I can say for Connecticut, land of timid leadership.
By Betsy Yagla
For the second time, Connecticut lost out on millions of dollars in competitive federal grants for education reform. Connecticut was not one of the 19 finalists announced in July. Last week, the U.S. Department of Education announced 10 winners, among them Connecticut’s neighbors Massachusetts ($250 million), New York ($750 million) and Rhode Island ($75 million).
By Donald Eng
Our Race to the Top was ConnCAN’s high impact 2010 legislative campaign advocating for four commonsense school reforms—Measuring Effectiveness, World-Class Standards, Superstar Principals and Money Follows the Child—to make Connecticut more competitive in Race to the Top, the federal government’s $4 billion education grant competition.
After Connecticut lost the first round of the Race to the Top, ConnCAN mobilized advocates throughout the state to push for policies that would boost the state’s chances of winning in the second round. As a result, the state legislature passed a Race to the Top law and the state board of education took action that codified three of our four reform goals:
Goal 1: Measuring effectiveness. For the first time, every district in the state will be required to evaluate teachers based on their students’ achievement growth.
Goal 2: World-class standards. The state board of education agreed to adopt the Common Core Standards to create internationally benchmarked goals to strive towards in Connecticut public schools.
Goal 3: Superstar principals. A new pathway to certification allows the state's most talented classroom teachers to become principals.
What we didn’t get:
Goal 4: Money Follows the Child. The Race to the Top law lifts the caps on the number of seats allowed in our high-performing public charter schools but it doesn’t lift the other cap that comes from a lack of money for those seats. Connecticut is still one of just three states that fund our charter schools on a line item in the state budget to be fought over year after year.
Want to know more? See the Race to the Top blog archive.
For more information on Race to the Top policies, see ConnCAN’s research publications below:
Read ConnCAN's new report on Connecticut's standing in the Race to the Top: The State of Connecticut Public Education 2009-2010. In addition to our traditional look at the state of Connecticut public schools, this year’s report takes a look at Connecticut’s policy environment: namely, where we stand in the Race to the Top. The report gives us the facts about how our districts are performing, how well our teachers are being trained, and how our educational standards measure up to other states.
Read ConnCAN's latest research on Connecticut's principal and teacher evaluation policy and how it measures up against the Race to the Top criteria. The Obama administration recognizes that many states’ evaluation systems are broken, and the $4 billion Race to the Top competition incentivizes states to make big changes in this area. As this issue brief shows, Connecticut needs to enact key reforms at the state level to make progress in this area, win sorely-needed federal money, and raise student achievement.
Read ConnCAN's research on Connecticut's charter school law and how it will factor into the state's Race to the Top application. The Obama administration has made the quality of a state’s charter school law a key criterion to win the $4 billion at stake in the federal Race to the Top grant competition. What does a good charter law look like, both across the country and in Connecticut? This issue brief explains what our charter policies look like now and what needs to change.