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By Reeve Hamilton

For-profit institutions see opportunities in the declining state support for public institutions, disappointing graduation rates, and questions about productivity and efficiency.

Such schools, often referred to as career colleges, have their own well-publicized problems, including steeper price tags than some public schools, higher student loan default rates than other sectors and lingering suspicions about quality. It’s not uncommon to see an exposé questioning a for-profit college on the evening news.

But many stakeholders in Texas’ higher education ranks believe those schools will play an even greater role in the state’s future. And career college leaders are mobilizing to make the case that they offer an education that is both high quality and efficient. Read More

Originally Posted by on Sep 1, 2011 in Student Loan Legislation

The future of a state program for student loans in Texas will be decided by voters during the state’s upcoming constitutional amendment election.

Funding for the Hinson-Hazlewood College Student Loan Program is one of 10 proposed amendments to the Texas Constitution that will be up for a vote Nov. 8. The program has received more than $1.8 billion in proceeds from bonds sold by the State Legislature since 1969.

The state expects the program to exhaust its funds in 2013, which makes the issuance of new bonds a requirement if the program is to continue to help Texas residents pay for college. State-funded student loans in Texas and other states may become even more important as budget negotiations in Washington consider further cuts to federal financial aid programs.

“With this new debt commission, everything is on the table,” said State Sen. Royce West, author of the constitutional amendment to fund Hinson-Hazelwood (HH) student loans, on the possibility of further college financial aid cuts by the federal government. “They are looking to cut entitlement programs and are also looking at education funding. From that vantage point, higher education is going to be on the chopping block. One of things that is going to be on the block is research, but then they will look at financial aid.” Read More

Written by Bill Conrad, bconrad@acnpapers.com

The future of state-issued college loans is in the hands of Texas voters.

A proposed amendment to the Texas Constitution would allow the sale of bonds to fund the Hinson-Hazlewood College Student Loan Program is one of 10 items on the Nov. 8 ballot. Other items include a provision to extend tax exemptions to the surviving spouse of totally disabled veterans and an item dealing with the process of distributing money from the permanent school fund.

Since 1969, the State Legislature has sold more than $1.8 billion in bonds to finance the college loans. The state expects the current money for the program to expire in 2013, making the issuance of new bonds necessary. State-funded student loans may become even more important as Federal lawmakers consider cuts to financial aid.

“With this new debt commission, everything is on the table,” said State Sen. Royce West, the bill’s author. “They are looking to cut entitlement programs and are also looking at education funding. From that vantage point, higher education is going to be on the chopping block. One of things that is going to be on the block is research, but then they will look at financial aid.”

A summary of the proposed amendment provided by the House Research Organization said the need for the loans is paramount due to the competitive nature of the loan process. Read More

Written by Aricka Flowers, UOPX Writer Network

Are American schools too harsh when it comes to discipline? A new study by the Council of State Governments Justice Center has some people saying yes to that question. A review of the discipline records from the last 10 years of some 1 million Texas middle and high schoolers showed that about half included a suspension or expulsion. Yet only 3 percent of those punishments were required by state law; the others were based on the behest of school officials.

The reason why the study is problematic is due to the fact that the researchers also found that the suspensions and expulsions were doled out in a haphazard manner when schools, ability and race were considered. Even more impactful is the finding that 31 percent of the students who were disciplined even once ended up repeating a grade at least one time during their academic career. Only 40 percent of those punished 11 times or more ever graduated from high school.

“One of the most important takeaways from the report is learning that the school a student attends largely influences how, when, or if a student is removed from the classroom for disciplinary reasons,” said State Sen. Florence Shapiro (R), who is also chair of the Texas Senate Education Committee. “The data suggests that individual school campuses often have a pronounced influence over how often students are suspended or expelled.” Read More

By Diane Smith

Texas students would soon be able to scrutinize for-profit and career colleges using the state’s online accountability system for higher education institutions, under legislation awaiting Gov. Rick Perry‘s signature.

Entering information about for-profit and career colleges in the state databank will help students gain a sense of “buyer beware,” said Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, who authored the measure, SB1534.

Under rules that Shapiro said will better protect students, career schools also must post online the names of regulatory agencies that oversee their programs as well as how to file complaints.

Students “were getting stuck between a rock and hard place,” Shapiro said, explaining how she was moved to act after watching a news report about investigations into for-profit schools. “There was nobody paying attention.” Read More

By Morgan Smith

Expect the Texas House to revisit old battles over school finance — and open a new one, for the lower chamber at least, over pre-kindergarten accountability — when it takes up Senate Bill 1 (today) on the floor.

Among the swarm of amendments offered to the fiscal matters bill will be several aiming to modify key elements of the state’s plan to distribute $4 billion in cuts across public schools — significantly one that eliminates the across-the-board reductions districts face in the first year of the biennium and replaces it with the sliding scale of the second, and one that keeps the state guarantee to repay districts in the next biennium when it comes up short. The architect of the House’s approach thus far, Public Education Committee Chairman Rep. Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, told the Tribune Wednesday that he would oppose any changes to the compromise plan agreed to between the House and Senate.

Most of the attention will be on school finance, but an amendment from Rep. Mark Shelton, R-Fort Worth, that would require the Texas Education Agency to develop accountability standards for pre-K programs will likely generate some heat, pitting House members’ regard for efficiency against their disdain for bureaucracy. Read More

By Morgan Smith

Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, debates a bill on the Senate floor on May 25, 2011.

Updated, 10:53 a.m.: Rep. Eissler has said he will file mandate relief legislation, but that it won’t target the class-size ratio as HB 400 did.

The biggest victory for teachers’ associations was the defeat of legislation allowing school districts to furlough teachers, reduce salaries and increase class sizes. Now, with a special session under way, all of that is back on the table — and state Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano, has already filed a so-called “mandate relief” bill.  Read More

By MORGAN SMITH

Just past midnight, at the close of a 14-hour day last week on the floor of the Texas House, Representative Rob Eissler stood joking with reporters.

State Sen. Rob Eissler

Rob Eissler

“I’m going to move my desk up to the front mic,” Mr. Eissler said, “so I can watch every bill that goes by.”

After failing on three separate occasions to pass his signature education bill for the session and running out of time on a fourth, the Republican from The Woodlands was describing his plan to attach the legislation as an amendment to other bills that are still working their way through the House.

The widely liked, pun-spinning Mr. Eissler has led the House Public Education Committee since 2007, and this session he has a Republican supermajority to back him. Yet even with 66 co-sponsors, he stumbled with the bill bundling several measures to relieve school district mandates required by the state — including removing the 22-to-1 student-to-teacher ratio in kindergarten through fourth grade, minimum salary requirements for teachers and contractual obligations dealing with layoffs. Read More

MINUTES

SENATE SUBCOMMITTEE ON HIGHER EDUCATION FUNDING
Monday, April 11, 2011
8:00 AM
Capitol Extension, Room E1.012

*****

Pursuant to a notice posted in accordance with Senate Rule 11.10 and 11.18, a public hearing of
the Senate Subcommittee on Higher Education Funding was held on Monday, April 11, 2011, in
the Capitol Extension, Room E1.012, at Austin, Texas. Read More

By Morgan Smith of Texas Tribune

Enlarge photo illustration by: Todd Wiseman

When Rep. Rob Eissler, R-The Woodlands, brought House Bill 500 to the Texas House floor on April 6, he emphasized what it did not do.

It did not, he said, lower testing standards. Nor did it delay the planned 2011-12 rollout of the state’s more rigorous STAAR exams.

Eissler was setting out to correct what he called the “misrepresentations” and “false claims” surrounding the bill, which, despite its overwhelming support in the House — more than two-thirds of his colleagues signed on to it, and only five voted against it — has generated vocal opposition from some within education circles who view it as a dramatic retreat from hard-won reforms.

The bill also reveals a divergence between the Legislature’s two public education chiefs — Eissler, who heads the House Public Education Committee, and his counterpart in the upper chamber, Sen. Florence Shapiro, R-Plano — on how the state should hold students and educators accountable.

Shapiro staunchly supports moving forward with the testing standards in HB 3, the 2009 legislation that set up the transition to the new STAAR exams from the state’s current TAKS subject area tests .

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“It’s a shame that it’s happened at the very same time that we are having problems with the budget,” Shapiro said, “but that doesn’t change the idea that this is the direction we should be going.”

Worried about how operating with fewer teachers will affect classroom instruction and whether they will be able to afford updated textbooks, districts have pushed to delay the new exams.

HB 500 makes significant modifications to HB 3, with the goals of reducing costs and easing districts’ concerns that the new testing regimen could lead to large numbers of students failing to graduate. Instead of the end-of-course STAAR exams counting 15 percent of a student’s final grade, HB 500 permits school districts to set their own policies. It also would allow districts to suspend a new requirement that students receive a cumulative score on 12 exams in four subject areas to graduate; instead, students would have to pass a total of four exams, one in each subject.

Business groups — including the Texas Association of Business, the Texas Coalition for a Competitive Workforce and the Austin Chamber of Commerce — oppose the measure because they believe it represents a step back for student accountability.

Drew Scheberle, a senior vice president at the Austin Chamber, said HB 500 “represents the first time in 25 years that we would actually reduce the expectations for graduation.”

To some extent, the divide between Eissler and Shapiro is a rehashing of an old battle between the House and Senate on student testing.

“This is basically a fight we had two years ago in conference committee, when the Senate wanted the standards as they are on the books today, and the House wanted relaxed graduation standards,” said Andrew C. Erben, president of the Texas Institute for Education Reform, which opposes Eissler’s bill.

The House more than the Senate has traditionally aligned with school districts on student accountability, Mr. Scheberle said. “The House has not always been the strongest on this issue,” he said. “It has usually been the Senate.”

Now, lawmakers in the House are looking for ways to soften the blow of their stark budget, which allocates about $4 billion less to public education than the Senate. “The House is dealing in a very different arena than the Senate is dealing,” Shapiro said. “If I was in their shoes and didn’t have money for textbooks, I didn’t have any money to keep our teachers or to keep our schools whole, I would be looking for ways to lessen the pressure, too.”

Eissler told his colleagues that his bill represented the “middle ground” between those who want a delay of the STAAR tests and those who want to hold firm. On Friday, he acknowledged he had “some missionary work” to do in the Senate.

“It’s not like there’s a difference in philosophy,” he said. “It’s a difference in application. Florence Shapiro and I agree that we need to have rigor, relevance, and responsibility or strong accountability, but how that translates to day-to-day operation in the school district is what made H.B. 500.”

See story @
http://www.texastribune.org/texas-education/public-education/house-bill-student-testing-reopens-familiar-debate/

american daily standard. 654789 8  78 71

Kris Heckmann and Justin Keener will announce today that they’re launching Granite Public Affairs, a lobbying and communications shop. Heckmann served nine years in Gov. Rick Perry’s office as deputy chief of staff, deputy legislative director, liaison to the Senate, and policy adviser. Keener most recently worked as vice president of policy and communications for the Texas Public Policy Foundation. He also is a former staffer to former Speaker Tom Craddick and Sen. Florence Shapiro. “We provide a team approach that directly engages legislators, along with the advocacy organizations, media, and activists that influence the process,” Keener said. Initial clients include AT&T, Baryonyx Corporation, BB Concepts, Dallas Fort Worth Metropolitan New Car Dealers Association, TexCom Gulf Disposal.