John Kasich likes to be unpredictable.
One minute, he plays the moderate, sane Republican in contrast to irresponsible, impulsive Trump.
Then he acts in Ohio and shows that he doesn’t have a clue about education, the most important responsibility and budget item in every state.
Stephen Dyer of Innovation Ohio writes:
“While Gov. John Kasich’s line-item veto of the Ohio Legislature’s freeze on Medicaid has rightly eaten up much of the veto discussion, Kasich also vetoed 11 different education provisions in House Bill 49 — the state’s beinnial budget. For a complete rundown, look here. But I would like to focus on a couple things.
“CHARTER SCHOOLS
“In several of the vetoes regarding charter schools, Kasich said he struck the provision because it was unfair, or treated schools differently, or lowered standards. My issue with this reasoning is, well, that’s kind of been the story of Ohio’s charter school system. Ohio charters have been treated differently, held to lower standards and been unfairly funded at the expense of children in local public schools since 1998.
“So why the sudden call to conscience? I don’t know. But let me take a few of the vetoes in turn.
“1) He vetoed a provision that would have allowed charters to count student growth as 60 percent of its student achievement measure rather than the current 20 percent. He claimed this was because it would hold charters to a lower standard than local schools. But that’s only true if you believe that student growth is not as effective a measure as straight performance. And while there are real concerns with how student growth is calculated and used, putting more emphasis on that measure could encourage schools to spend more time with more students rather than just focusing on high fliers whose high scores would help a school’s rating more than growing the lower scoring students. That’s not a horrible public policy outcome. And we have always held charters to different standards than local schools — that’s been part of the point with charter law and criticism of it.
“2) He vetoed a provision that would have allowed sponsors that were stripped of their ability to sponsor schools this school year to sponsor them again this year if they scored 3 out of 4 or higher on academics. His reason? Because they would still score poorly on the other bureaucratic measures under which they are now evaluated. But this is exactly the problem the legislature was trying to address — you have some of the highest rated sponsors for academics (arguably the most important of the three charter school sponsor measures) unable to continue sponsoring schools because they don’t meet the bureaucratic measures. Instead, with his veto Kasich essentially is putting a greater emphasis on whether a sponsor fills out forms correctly than whether the schools they oversee serve kids well. I fail to see how that outcome upholds quality for kids.
“SCHOOL DISTRICT FUNDING
“Several of Kasich’s vetoes would directly harm the funding for kids in local school districts.
“1) He vetoed a provision that would have helped ease the removal of Tangible Personal Property (TPP) tax reimbursement payments to districts, forcing many districts to deal with much steeper cliffs. He claimed schools have had enough time to cope with this loss. Kasich has never really understood why removing this formerly $1 billion a year payment for kids in local schools was so detrimental. I think it stems from a fundamental misunderstanding (or deliberate misunderstanding) of the 2005 law that eliminated the TPP. In exchange for the elimination of the TPP (which went mostly to kids in school districts), the state agreed to make school districts whole with Commercial Activity Tax payments until a real replacement could be developed. It’s that last part of the agreement whose promise Kasich broke in 2011 when he decided to eliminate the reimbursement payments, cutting funding to kids in local school districts by $1.8 billion in that budget. The last year before Kasich, the TPP payment was $920 million. Now it’s all but gone. Which is why when lawmakers claim they’ve increased funding to schools, they NEVER include this lost revenue. Anyway, Kasich’s draconian adherence to this false narrative about TPP continues to be one of his greatest failings. And kids will suffer for it.
“2) Kasich vetoed a couple provisions that would have allowed school districts to apply for state matching funds for new buildings at lower local share matches if they phased them in over time. He claimed this would have created inequities among districts. Which is a nice sentiment, but the whole reason the legislature did this is because of the current system’s inequities. Some districts are caught in a nether zone where they are considered too “wealthy” for a big state match, but also too poor to fund the whole thing — hence the current inequity. However, if they could go for a smaller bond issue, kids in those districts might be able to access the same new buildings as many other districts in the state. Again, this punishes districts who are neither wealthy nor poor, but are less wealthy than the wealthiest.
“HOSING APPALACHIA. AGAIN.
“Throughout Kasich’s turn in the Governor’s office he has found new and creative ways to hurt rural Appalachian schools. When he developed what was supposed to be his signature “Achievement Everywhere” school funding plan (a plan that was dumped unceremoniously by his own party), the plan disproportionately hurt rural Appalachian districts. He used school funding formulations that would downplay the poverty in Appalachia. And now he vetoed a provision that would allow school districts to give state tests in paper rather than computer formats. Rural Appalachian districts simply don’t have enough computers to give tests over computers effectively or efficiently. We also know that kids who take paper tests tend to do better than those who take them on computers. So Kasich is forcing kids in mostly rural Appalachian districts to take more time taking tests and in a format that’s biased against them. All in the name of what? “Standards”?
“Part of his decision I think stems from Kasich’s sharing of the school reform bias toward assessments that show kids doing worse. I’ve discussed this before, but just because kids to worse on a test doesn’t mean that test is more accurately assessing their proficiency in a subject. Does anyone honestly believe that a test showing that only 1/3 of students are proficient readers is a more accurate read of how kids are doing than one that suggests 85 percent are?”

Kasich is no moderate, he’s a far right wing/libertarian tool pretending to be a moderate or a conservative voice of reason. Ha, ha, too funny. He was a vicious right winger on Fox News, judging from the clips that I saw.
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You’ve got that right, Joe! Those of us who live in Ohio have grown tired of his ability to speak one way to his constituents and quite another on the national stage. One has to begrudgingly admire how he can so easily slither out of one snakeskin into another. Much of the blame for this lays at the feet of the Ohio Democratic Party, a rudderless garbage skow. Also, the inability of the press to frame his profiteering foray as a (very highly) paid operative for Lehman Brothers, which helped accelerate the effects of the financial meltdown. Not only did he profit millions, he rode his duplicity in the state’s woes into the governorship. His whole public life is a well-contrived fiction.
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even those who noisily support the opening of public money to profiteering have little idea of what they are doing to their constiuents: always, then, the flip-flop language of wondering why they can’t have their cake and eat it too
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No surprise, here, & legislative ignorance of education is beyond appalling. Does any legislator consult w/real, experienced, in-the-trenches PUBLIC school educators when crafting education bills? Why, no, of course not. Some legislators may have actually been teachers, but it might have been a looong time ago.
ILL-Annoy legislators FINALLY passed a budget (we’d been 2 years w/o one), but have yet to complete/vote on the school funding bill, which is purported to “equalize” the funding formula (i.e., boost revenue to the poorer school districts). There is, in fact, little new revenue (which is the problem, albeit income tax was just raised in the new budget).
Biggest factoid: this bill has been pushed & backed–for at least 3 years–by the ILL-Annoy 50CAN groups–ILL-Annoy Stand for Children*–& what some believe to be the dark(er) (money, that is), more visible (their name is on everything–webinar, power points, etc.)–Advance ILL-Annoy.
To add insult to (great) injury, what would have been an excellent companion bill–that calling for a moratorium (in step w/the NAACP statement, but why should these people listen to the NAACP?) on charter schools in those poorer districts which, golly gee, would have kept the feeders away, giving the publics a chance to recoup and to grow–died in committee.
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Maybe state legislatures and the US Congress could find some time to put together something that actual supports or assists public schools, in addition to their full-time focus on promoting charters and vouchers.
They offer absolutely nothing to the 90% of children who attend public schools.
It is ALL cuts and punishment and grim pronouncements.
It’s really outrageous. Public schools are the schools 90% of their constituents attend, yet they get ZERO value-added from ed reform or ed reformers.
This has been going on for years in Ohio. They are utterly and completely captured by the ed reform “movement” and so far from the reality of existing schools it’s as if they live in another country.
I don’t think it’s unreasonable for a FEW state or federal employees to put some effort toward public schools.
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Some ambitious politician could really make a name for themselves by actually offering something of value to children and parents in public schools.
There’s a real opening here- a void. Someone should fill it. Be the single advocate for public schools in a state legislature or Congress. There’s a need.
Can anyone in this state name one thing John Kasich has done to benefit the 90% of Ohio students who attend existing public schools? An actual benefit. Name one thing.
I know Kasich’s kids don’t attend public schools but he must be aware that 90% of Ohio kids do. How did we end up with a state government that utterly ignores 90% of students and parents?
It’s ludicrous. To read what comes out of Columbus one would think 90% of the kids in this state attend charters and private schools. It has no connection to reality.
They’re all but irrelevant to kids and parents in public schools. The best thing they could do at this point is stop showing up for work. They offer NOTHING positive or of value to us.
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If you’re wondering what work DC is doing on behalf of public schools the answer is “nothing”.
They’re focused like a laser on promoting vouchers, meeting with private school interest groups:
Click to access Letters-to-Members-of-Congress-Outlining-Priorities-for-Federal-Scholarship-Tax-Credit.pdf
I know very few of our political leaders attended public schools or send their children or grandchildren to public schools, but one would think they could put a couple of work hours toward the unfashionable “public sector schools” that 95% of Americans attend.
Ridiculous level of capture. 95% of the time and energy at the federal level goes to 5% of schools- exclusively charter and private schools.
Has DeVos met privately with public school advocates or is she still meeting exclusively with charter and private school advocates? When do 90% of children get a hearing?
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Can public schools get someone who isn’t a charter or voucher lobbyists to review ESSA plans? Can I get an actual supporter of public schools to review the rules that every public school will be governed by?
Why are charter and voucher advocates running the public school system? Most US children don’t attend the schools they’re promoting. I want someone who actually supports public schools setting the rules for public schools.
Public schools will get screwed once again unless we get an advocate for our schools in government.
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Ed reform can now claim another state where public schools will be utterly ignored while every politician chases charter schools:
“The Kentucky General Assembly held a robust debate earlier this year that resulted in a divide on the topic of public charter schools.
Spirited debate can result in better public policy, especially when discussions focus on the shared goal of what is best for children. Lawmakers on both sides affirmed three decades of educational progress in the Bluegrass State, while acknowledging that achievement gaps among historically under-served students and their more advantaged peers persist.
When the gavel dropped on the last day of the session, Kentucky became the 44th state to embrace public charter schools.
Now, policymakers, educators, administrators, and charter authorizers must turn to the important work of ensuring that Kentucky’s charter schools are high quality — based on evidence of what we know works — and publicly accountable for results. Public charter schools, or any school, must be held to the highest standards to provide the excellent education that every Kentucky child deserves.”
Someone should notify public school parents in Kentucky that from this day forward their state government will be wholly consumed with opening charters, funding charters or regulating charters. 95% of the students and school will now be designated “the status quo” and either actively demeaned or ignored.
This is what ed reform offers children and parents in public schools: nothing.
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Chiara, you last sentence rings true: “This is what ed reform offers children and parents in public schools: nothing.”
Glad I don’t teach in Ohio any more. Ohio is now a pit.
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Ohio is where no newspaper article about education can be written without Fordham’s message added. Education “journalist”, Jeremy Kelley of the Dayton Daily News, wrote about the referenced Kasich vetoes. He told readers, that Fordham’s Aldis, said, “….the (contractor school) evaluation system…needs to be tweaked.” Ya think? Ohio’s contractor schools are a “multibillion dollar boondoggle”.
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