ECS
2008 State of the State Addresses
Education-Related Proposals by Issue


Education Commission of the States • 700 Broadway, Suite 810 • Denver, CO 80203-3442 • 303.299.3600 • fax 303.296.8332 • www.ecs.org

The following summary includes education-related proposals from the 2008 state of the state addresses. To assure that this information reaches you in a timely manner, minimal attention has been paid to style (capitalization, punctuation) or format. To view the documents, click on the blue triangle next to the state.

+ Accountability
2
- Accountability--Sanctions/Interventions
2
MichiganGovernor Jennifer Granholm's State of the State Address

Focus on four things: 1) A job for every worker. 2) Affordable health care for every family. 3) Safe places to live and work for all of us. 4) Quality education for our citizens - kids and adults.

Accountability
-- Give our state superintendent broader authority to close schools that consistently fail to meet academic goals.

-- Reward colleges and universities when their students complete degrees. Also reward them when they create opportunity for low-income students, and when they find ways to turn research ideas into businesses. Invest more in higher education and expect more in return.


Early Learning
Significantly expand early childhood education.


Economic/Workforce Development
-- Create Centers of Excellence across the state to bring alternative energy companies and Michigan universities together to create new products and new jobs.

-- Double the number of college graduates to give Michigan the best-educated workforce in the nation. To reach that goal, make progress throughout our education system, from preschool to grad school to on-the-job training.

-- Invest more in training for adults already in the workforce. This past year, we took a giant step forward in workforce training when we launched the No Worker Left Behind initiative. Our goal is to give 100,000 workers displaced by changes in our economy access to college education and other training that prepares them for specific high demand jobs. We're offering free tuition for training in areas of need to the first 100,000 workers who sign up. Unfortunately, the huge demand for No Worker Left Behind will soon exhaust the federal funds used to pay for this program. That means Michigan residents who want new skills are on waiting lists when they could be on payrolls. The budget I propose next week will ensure that the thousands who need training are able to get it this year.


Finance
-- Increase our investment in our K-12 schools and significantly expand early childhood education.


Financial Aid
-- Expand the vision of the Kalamazoo Promise to communities across our state. (In Kalamazoo, anonymous donors promised full college tuition for every high school graduate.)


Tutoring/Mentoring
-- Recruiting 10,000 more mentors for kids.


High School
-- Establish a 21st Century Schools Fund to replace large impersonal high schools that fail, with smaller schools that use firm discipline and strong personal relationships to help students reach high expectations. Free from red tape and bureaucracy, these schools will deploy the new three Rs - rigor, relevance and relationships - to keep students in high school and then get them to college or technical training. Our 21st Century Schools Fund will give school districts the resources they need to create high schools that work. A pioneering group of schools in Michigan is showing us today there is a better way.

-- Create 100 more early college high schools to help ensure every student in Michigan leaves high school with the skills it takes to succeed in college and the work place.
In the past year, we created six early college high schools, which each partner with a major hospital in our state and a college or university.

-- Raise the dropout age to 18.


Kindergarten
-- Ask all of our school districts to begin offering full day kindergarten.

http://www.michigan.gov/gov/0,1607,7-168--184537--,00.html
West VirginiaGovernor Joe Manchin's State of the State Address

Accountability
-- Revoke the driver's licenses of students who are found to have committed serious offenses like assaulting a teacher or fellow student or bringing a dangerous weapon to school, and add a requirement that in order to obtain and keep a driver's license between the ages of 16 and 18, you must receive passing grades.

Drugs, Alcohol
-- Build upon the current success of Prevention Resource Officer Program, a cooperative effort between schools and law enforcement designed to put officers in schools to teach students about drug and safety issues and to recognize potential danger, prevent violence and respond to dangerous situations. Partner with local police and sheriff's departments to put Prevention Resource Officers in more schools in every county.

Economic/Workforce Development
-- Target higher education and work force development investments toward meeting the needs of the state's growing and emerging industries by creating "Bucks for Jobs." West Virginia must be a player in the 21st century world economy, and to do so we need to develop more intellectual and financial capital. "Bucks for Jobs" will achieve both these goals by leveraging smart, interconnected investments in economic development, higher education and work force training. A "Bucks for Brains" initiative, using one-time surplus monies, will create a $50 million endowment fund for our two research universities, WVU and Marshall, to stimulate world-class research and development and attract venture capital, which will eventually lead to jobs in emerging high-tech, high-wage industries. The state's investment will be matched, dollar for dollar, by private donations, resulting in sizable funds that will strengthen our most-promising research departments – ultimately leading to business spinoffs, new patents and job creation. Make sure that the money we're already spending on work force training is being accessed by the businesses that need it and that all businesses in our state know about "Training Bucks" and how to get them.

-- Make a major investment in the development of two state-of-the-art advanced technical centers. These centers will offer training that is specialized to meet the needs of existing businesses as well as those new businesses that we are now attracting to the state, and they will collaborate directly with industry to design and deliver high-quality instruction.

-- Invest in existing programs at community and technical colleges to fill the growing need for workers in allied health fields (from nurses to dental assistants, emergency medical technicians, pharmacy workers and surgery technicians). This investment will result in approximately 1,000 new allied health field graduates every year in West Virginia beginning in 2010.

-- Ask the Promise Scholarship board to develop a rule requiring recipients to work in West Virginia following graduation as a condition of not having to pay back the Promise Scholarship.

-- Add "payback" requirements for those new state employees who receive additional state-paid training, such as our State Police officers, pilots, engineers and others. Too often, we are spending state dollars to provide training for these new employees only to have them then leave us for other job opportunities outside of state government once their training is complete.

Health
-- Develop in our schools Kids First, a kindergarten health screening program. Through the use of administrative funds from the State Children's Health Insurance Program,
West Virginia will establish a health services initiative that is the first in the nation to ensure every uninsured child entering kindergarten has a wellness screening prior to starting school.

Teacher Compensation
-- Require all of our counties to use 100 percent of the extra School Aid Formula money for classroom teachers' salaries.

Safety/Student Discipline
-- Improve the environment that our classroom teachers currently work in and our children currently learn in. The 21st Century Jobs Cabinet has been asked to develop the "West Virginia Bill of Rights and Responsibilities for Learning." The Bill of Rights will set standards both for the rights and responsibilities of students while in school and the authority of teachers to protect those rights and enforce those responsibilities.

-- Go a step further with the state's requirement that districts have anti-bullying plans in place. Establish a commission to thoroughly review the anti-bullying practices of our schools and recommend the best ways to expand our efforts to identify and stop dangerous and bullying behavior before it becomes a threat, as well as how to best deal with disruptive students during the school day.

http://www.wvgov.org/SoS2008/ManchinSOS010908.pdf
+ Accountability--School Improvement
3
+ Assessment
2
+ At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)
1
+ At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)--Drugs/Alcohol
4
+ Attendance
1
+ Bilingual/ESL
1
+ Career/Technical Education
3
+ Career/Technical Education--Career Academies/Apprenticeship
1
+ Choice of Schools
1
+ Choice of Schools--Charter Schools
1
+ Counseling/Guidance
1
+ Curriculum
2
+ Curriculum--Arts Education
1
+ Curriculum--Mathematics
2
+ Curriculum--Science
3
+ Economic/Workforce Development
22
+ Finance
4
+ Finance--Adequacy/Core Cost
3
+ Finance--Facilities
10
+ Finance--Funding Formulas
5
+ Finance--Lotteries
1
+ Finance--Resource Efficiency
2
+ Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
17
+ Finance--Taxes/Revenues
8
+ Governance
2
+ Governance--Deregulation/Waivers/Home Rule
2
+ Governance--State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
1
+ Health
13
+ High School
11
+ High School--Advanced Placement
1
+ High School--College Readiness
1
+ High School--Dual/Concurrent Enrollment
1
+ High School--Early Colleges/Middle Colleges
1
+ International Benchmarking
1
+ Leadership
2
+ Mentoring/Tutoring
1
+ No Child Left Behind
1
+ No Child Left Behind--Choice/Transfer
1
+ No Child Left Behind--School Support
2
+ Online Learning--Virtual Schools/Courses
2
+ P-16 or P-20
3
+ P-3
16
+ P-3 Child Care
1
+ P-3 Ensuring Quality
1
+ P-3 Kindergarten
5
+ P-3 Kindergarten--Full-Day Kindergarten
1
+ P-3 Preschool
6
+ Parent/Family
3
+ Postsecondary
8
+ Postsecondary Accountability
1
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Financial Aid
16
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees
6
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees--Prepd/College Savings Plans
1
+ Postsecondary Finance
5
+ Postsecondary Governance and Structures
3
+ Postsecondary Institutions--Community/Technical Colleges
5
+ Postsecondary Participation--Access
3
+ Postsecondary Students--Adults
4
+ Postsecondary Success--Completion
2
+ Reading/Literacy
2
+ Remediation (K-12)
2
+ Scheduling/School Calendar
3
+ Scheduling/School Calendar--Extended Day Programs
2
+ School Safety
8
+ School/District Structure/Operations
2
+ School/District Structure/Operations--Transportation
1
+ Special Education
2
+ Standards
2
+ State Longitudinal Data Systems
1
+ STEM
8
+ Student Achievement
1
+ Student Achievement--Closing the Achievement Gap
1
+ Teaching Quality
5
+ Teaching Quality--Certification and Licensure
1
+ Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay
13
+ Teaching Quality--Induction Programs and Mentoring
2
+ Teaching Quality--Preparation
2
+ Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention
5
+ Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention--At-Risk Schools
1
+ Teaching Quality--Tenure or Continuing Contract
1
+ Technology
4
+ Technology--Computer Skills
1
+ Technology--Devices/Software/Hardware
1
+ Technology--Internet Safety
1
308