The following summary includes education-related proposals from the 2009 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.
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 | Accountability |
| 9 | |
 | Accountability--Rewards |
| 1 | |
 | Accountability--Sanctions/Interventions |
| 1 | |
 | Accountability--School Improvement |
| 1 | |
 | Assessment |
| 4 | |
 | Assessment--College Entrance Exams |
| 1 | |
 | At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention) |
| 8 | |
 | At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)--Alternative Education |
| 1 | |
 | Bilingual/ESL |
| 2 | |
 | Business Involvement |
| 19 | |
 | Career/Technical Education |
| 10 | |
 | Choice of Schools |
| 2 | |
 | Choice of Schools--Charter Schools |
| 5 | |
 | Civic Education--Character Education |
| 1 | |
 | Class Size |
| 2 | |
 | Curriculum |
| 5 | |
 | Curriculum--Arts Education |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Foreign Language/Sign Language |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Language Arts |
| 1 | |
 | Curriculum--Language Arts--Writing/Spelling |
| 2 | |
 | Curriculum--Mathematics |
| 13 | |
 | Curriculum--Science |
| 11 | |
 | Demographics--Enrollments |
| 1 | |
 | Economic/Workforce Development |
| 45 | |
 | Education Research |
| 1 | |
 | Equity |
| 1 | |
 | Federal |
| 15 | |
 | Finance |
| 48 | |
 | Finance--Adequacy/Core Cost |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--Bonds |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--District |
| 3 | |
 | Finance--Facilities |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--Federal |
| 14 | |
 | Finance--Funding Formulas |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--Local Foundations/Funds |
| 1 | |
 | Finance--Lotteries |
| 5 | |
 | Finance--Performance Funding |
| 2 | |
 | Finance--Resource Efficiency |
| 12 | |
 | Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures |
| 45 | |
 | Finance--Taxes/Revenues |
| 20 | |
 | Governance |
| 10 | |
 | Governance--School Boards |
| 4 | |
 | Governance--State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies |
| 28 | |
 | Health |
| 10 | |
 | Health--Mental Health |
| 1 | |
 | Health--Nutrition |
| 4 | |
 | High School |
| 13 | |
 | High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates |
| 9 | |
 | High School--Dual/Concurrent Enrollment |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Early Colleges/Middle Colleges |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Exit Exams |
| 1 | |
 | High School--Graduation Requirements |
| 2 | |
 | International Benchmarking |
| 1 | |
 | Leadership |
| 8 | |
 | Mentoring/Tutoring |
| 2 | |
 | Middle School |
| 1 | |
 | Minority/Diversity Issues |
| 2 | |
 | Online Learning--Virtual Schools/Courses |
| 4 | |
 | P-16 or P-20 |
| 3 | |
 | P-3 |
| 15 | |
 | P-3 Early Intervention (0-3) |
| 1 | |
 | P-3 Family Involvement |
| 1 | |
 | P-3 Finance |
| 5 | |
 | P-3 Grades 1-3 |
| 5 | |
 | P-3 Kindergarten |
| 6 | |
 | P-3 Preschool |
| 4 | |
 | P-3 Public/Private Partnerships |
| 1 | |
 | Parent/Family |
| 7 | |
 | Postsecondary |
| 40 | |
 | Postsecondary Accountability |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Affordability--Financial Aid |
| 17 | |
 | Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees |
| 22 | |
 | Postsecondary Faculty |
| 5 | |
 | Postsecondary Finance |
| 25 | |
 | Postsecondary Governance and Structures |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Institutions--Community/Technical Colleges |
| 16 | |
 | Postsecondary Institutions--For-Profit/Proprietary |
| 2 | |
 | Postsecondary Participation--Access |
| 4 | |
 | Postsecondary Participation--Enrollments (Statistics) |
| 1 | |
 | Postsecondary Students--Adults |
| 10 | |
 | Postsecondary Students--Graduate/Professional |
| 2 | |
 | Postsecondary Success--Completion |
| 4 | |
 | Promotion/Retention |
| 1 | |
 | Public Involvement |
| 5 | |
 | Reading/Literacy |
| 2 | |
 | Rural |
| 4 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar |
| 3 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar--Extended Day Programs |
| 3 | |
 | Scheduling/School Calendar--Summer School |
| 2 | |
 | School Safety |
| 4 | |
 | School/District Structure/Operations |
| 10 | |
 | School/District Structure/Operations--School Size |
| 1 | |
 | Service-Learning |
| 1 | |
 | Social/Emotional Learning and Non-Cognitive Skills |
| 2 | |
 | Special Education |
| 3 | |
 | Special Populations--Foster Care |
| 3 | |
 | Standards |
| 4 | |
 | State Policymaking |
| 2 | |
 | STEM |
| 1 | |
 | Student Achievement |
| 13 | |
| Colorado | Governor Bill Ritter, Jr.'s State of the State Address
Business Involvement, Community Colleges, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Continue aligning the needs of businesses with workforce development and training programs through the Jobs Cabinet and community colleges.
Dual/Concurrent Enrollment, High School
-- Propose a comprehensive, statewide concurrent-enrollment plan to give high school students an opportunity to earn college credits while finishing high school--a student-centered concept intended to give kids a reason to stay in school and accelerate their progress toward degrees and workforce-readiness.
Facilities, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, Rural
-- Work on a plan for wind and solar projects on schools in rural Colorado--to help reduce schools' energy costs.
P-16, Student Achievement--State
-- Continue to offer reform proposals through The P-20 Council.
-- Continue to implement Senate Bill 212, the Colorado Achievement Plan for Kids.
http://www.colorado.gov/cs/Satellite?blobcol=urldata&blobheader=application%2Fpdf&blobkey=id&blobtable=MungoBlobs&blobwhere=1229571409958&ssbinary=true
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| Georgia | Governor Sonny Perdue's State of the State Address
Accountability, Accountability--Rewards, Accountability--Sanctions/Interventions, School Districts, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Student Achievement
-- Encourage more school systems to enter into an IE2 contract with the State Board of Education. Under this contract, the state holds the system accountable for increased student achievement above and beyond state and federal requirements, in exchange for local control/flexibility; the system will face serious consequences if they fail to meet the goals.
Assessment, Finance--Performance Funding, Governance, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, Leadership, Student Achievement
-- Propose legislation to establish a high school principal incentive pay program for principals who increase student achievement – raising graduation rates and improving SAT and End of Course Test scores.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--Bonds, Postsecondary
-- Introduce a bond package, totaling over $1.2 billion in new investment, to create an estimated 20,000 new jobs and build infrastructure. This package will feature many projects in which both design and construction are funded in the same year, in an effort to ensure their timely completion. The projects will be state-wide and include new construction at our universities, technical schools, local school systems and libraries.
Finance, Finance--District, School Districts
-- Relax expenditure controls on local school systems to allow them more flexibility.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Recommend using a one-time strategy to help balance this year's budget--use the maximum amount available for appropriation from the reserves, appropriating $50 million this year and $408 million next year, as well as $187 million for the midyear education adjustment.
Finance--Performance Funding, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Propose merit pay legislation to award teachers who show evidence that their classroom instruction leads to increased student achievement.
Governance, Leadership, School Boards
-- Propose legislation to clearly define what citizens expect from school board members and give the state the ability to replace board members with responsible, local citizens when accreditation is threatened.
Mathematics, Science, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Differentiate pay for math and science teachers--introduce a market dynamic into the salary schedule to address these areas.
http://gov.georgia.gov/00/press/detail/0,2668,78006749_129886711_130508560,00.html | |  |
| Indiana | Governor Mitch Daniels's State of the State Address
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Aim for protecting education funding at this year's levels, considering the economic environment.
-- Spend the education dollar more efficiently.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Kindergarten
-- Postpone plan for complete state funding of Full-Day Kindergarten--revive plan when favorable economic conditions return.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Postpone plane for guaranteed college tuition--revive plan when favorable economic conditions return.
Finance, Finance--Resource Efficiency
-- Rectify the fact that 39 cents of every education dollar is spent outside the classroom.
-- Move tax dollars out of the back office and into the classroom.
-- Invite every legislator to help shape an effective new approach that sends many more education dollars into the classrooms.
Class Size, Finance, School Size, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Aim for smaller schools, smaller classrooms, more and better paid teachers, better academic opportunities for students, through lower overhead.
Safety/Student Discipline, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Working Conditions
-- Urge the Assembly to approve the bill previously introduced to reestablish complete, unquestioned discipline in the schools.
http://www.in.gov/portal/news_events/34390.htm | |  |
| Michigan | Governor Jennifer Granholm's State of the State Address
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Continue to support the Worker Left Behind initiative which trains workers for skilled jobs available in Michigan. This program provides free college tuition, up to $5,000 per year for two years. Currently 52,000 citizens are being trained through the initiative.
At-Risk, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Create Promise Zones in 10 Michigan communities struggling with high rates of poverty--use the promise of free college education to spur greatness in our kids and economic development in those communities.
Business Involvement, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Technology
-- Reform state government. I have asked Lt. Governor Cherry to lead a comprehensive effort to dramatically change the shape and size of state government—reducing the number of our departments from 18 to 8, reforming our civil service system, creating public/private partnerships and infusing technology everywhere.
-- Urge the State Officers Compensation Commission to reduce the salaries of all state elected officials in Michigan by 10 percent.
Community Colleges, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Ask state universities and community colleges to freeze tuition for the next academic year.
Completion/Postsec. Graduation, Postsecondary
-- Double the number of college graduates in the state.
Comprehensive School Reform, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, School Districts, Student Achievement
-- Help school districts replace high schools that don't work, with small, rigorous ones that do, through the 21st Century Schools Fund. Plans are already under way to create more than 25 of these rigorous new high schools that keep kids in school and put them on the path to success in college and careers.
Economic/Workforce Development
-- Fight for good paying jobs and educate and train Michigan citizens to fill those jobs.
-- Continue to make renewable energy a key focus of our economic development strategy.
-- Diversify our economy without deserting our major industry, the American automobile industry.
-- Announce that: Wonderstruck Animation Studios will invest $86 million to build a new studio in Detroit; Stardock Systems, a digital gaming manufacturer, will build its production facilities in Plymouth; and Motown Motion Pictures will invest $54 million to build their new film studios at a former GM plant in Pontiac. Motown Motion Pictures alone will create 3,600 jobs.
-- Announce that Great Lakes Turbine will locate in Monroe, creating hundreds more jobs building wind turbines.
-- Create jobs by reducing the state's reliance on fossil fuels for generating electricity by 45 percent, by 2020. We will do this through increased renewable energy, gains in energy efficiency and other new technologies. Instead of spending nearly $2 billion a year importing coal or natural gas from other states we'll be spending our energy dollars on Michigan wind turbines, Michigan solar panels and Michigan energy-efficiency devices, all designed, manufactured and installed by Michigan workers.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance--Facilities
-- Create the Michigan Energy Corps to put thousands of unemployed citizens back to work this year, weatherizing homes, schools and other public buildings, installing renewable energy technology, and turning our abundant natural resources into renewable fuels.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Postsecondary, School Districts
-- Require cities, townships, counties, school districts, colleges and universities to adopt their own Buy Michigan First policies.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Realize that the state's budget situation is difficult, but it pales in comparison to the situation many states are in.
Mathematics, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Professional Development
-- Give teachers, through the Algebra for All initiative, the professional development they need to teach algebra in a proven way that ensures all kids master it. The program will begin this summer.
http://www.michigan.gov/documents/gov/SOS2009_265915_7.pdf | |  |
| Minnesota | Governor Tim Pawlenty's State of the State Address
Charter Schools, Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance--Performance Funding, School Districts, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Expand the Q Comp program (gives school districts more funding if they pay staff for improvements in student learning, rather than just paying for seniority) to every school district and charter school. For school districts not currently in Q Comp, this proposal will permanently increase per pupil funding by an amount comparable to a 5 percent increase in the general education funding formula.
Charter Schools, Governance, Leadership, School Districts
-- Improve the management of our schools.
-- Require school districts and charter schools to come together to purchase in bulk to lower costs, eliminate waste and put more money in the classroom.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Propose a Minnesota Jobs Recovery Act.
-- Cut the state's business tax rate in half (from 9.8 percent to 4.8 percent) over the next 6 years.
-- Provide a 50 million dollar package of tax credits that to create over 100 million dollars in new investments and jump start small business job creation.
-- Propose a 25 percent refundable tax credit for small business owners that re-invest in their business quickly.
-- Provide a capital gains exemption for qualifying investments in small Minnesota businesses.
-- Eliminate the sales tax rebate on equipment and provide a 100 percent exemption from the sales tax – applies when the business buys the equipment.
-- Enact a green jobs initiative.
-- Create green JOBZ tax free zones for renewable energy jobs created anywhere in the state.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance--Performance Funding, School Districts, Student Achievement
-- Increase school district funding by up to an additional 2 percent per student for students meeting standards or at least showing reasonable growth towards achievement.
Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Ask each member of the legislature: Please don't add to the people's burden by increasing their bill from government; please don't take more of the people's money; and please don't raise taxes.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Continue to reform and improve our K-12 education system--one of our highest priorities.
-- Plan to propose a budget in a couple of weeks that will rely on significant reductions in state spending, as well as using other resources currently available.
-- Reduce funding for cities and counties.
-- Reduce or eliminate as many state mandates as possible. Allow townships, cities or counties to opt-out of some state mandates by vote of their governing body.
-- Freeze all state government wages for the next two years in order to minimize government employee layoffs.
-- Enact legislation to require a wage freeze for any Minnesota government entity that accepts state money.
-- Require local units of government to use the leverage of the state's buying power to purchase commodities such as road salt, paper and IT services at a reduced price, unless they can find a better price themselves.
Governance, Leadership, School Districts, Unions/Collective Bargaining
-- Change the way school districts and teacher unions negotiate and settle labor contracts. Begin using a fair arbitration process.
High School, High School--Grad Requirements, Technology, Technology--Instruction
-- Propose that state high school graduation standards require every student to participate in an online experience by the time they graduate.
Postsecondary, Distance Learning/Virtual University
-- Ask state colleges and universities to aggressively deliver more of their courses online. I'm grateful that MnSCU's board and leadership accepted my recent challenge to deliver 25 percent of their credits online by 2015.
Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Impose a firm cap on tuition increases.
Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Compensation, Teaching Quality--Preparation, Teaching Quality--Recruitment/Retention
-- Recruit the best and the brightest to become teachers.
-- Establish minimum entrance requirements for teacher preparation programs.
-- Continue to improve and modernize the way we pay teachers.
http://www.governor.state.mn.us/stellent/groups/public/documents/web_content/prod009309.pdf | |  |
| New Mexico | Governor Bill Richardson's State of the State Address
At-Risk, Early Learning, Early Learning--Finance, Early Learning--Readiness, Finance, Pre-Kindergarten
-- Continue to invest in Pre-Kindergarten-- to close the achievement gap and help students enter school ready to learn.
Economic/Workforce Development
-- Form a "Green Jobs Cabinet" to build an aggressive clean energy strategy, so our state educates, trains, and prepares a clean energy workforce. I will issue an executive order directing key state agencies—from education to workforce development, and from economic development to energy—to form this cabinet. Education is the key to a green workforce.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Propose a four-part economic security plan: (1) Create new jobs, (2) Build a better workforce; (3) Renew our role as an innovation state; and (4) Provide a safety net to catch those who fall.
-- Propose a balanced budget to accomplish the economic plan--that targets cuts, maintains needed services, makes strategic investments to create more jobs and does not raise taxes.
-- Continue stalled or stopped state projects that create jobs or protect public safety.
-- Reinvest funds from stalled or stopped state projects that do not create jobs or protect public safety into this year's budget.
-- Increase the Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit to help wind, and biomass projects boost their operations.
-- Extend a tax credit to small businesses.
Elementary Education, Health, Health--Nutrition
-- Expand the healthy breakfast program to 270 elementary schools (more than 100 thousand elementary students).
-- Provide children healthy food choices.
-- Ensure children get physical education.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas
-- Change the school funding formula--upon direct approval of the voters.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Draw down the rainy day fund from ten to eight percent---to preserve our high bond rating and help balance the budget.
Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Continue the state's zero-percent tuition credit policy and hold down rising tuition costs.
-- Change the College Affordability Fund and the 3% scholarships fund to direct 100 percent of grants to students with financial need.
Health, Safety/Student Discipline
-- Propose legislation that makes recruiting people into a criminal street gang a crime and makes recruiting a minor into a criminal street gang a felony.
Mathematics, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Preparation
-- Improve student achievement in mathematics by increasing the math requirement for new elementary and middle school teachers.
Postsecondary
-- Find a fiscally responsible way to assure that Santa Fe continues to host a four-year college, like the College of Santa Fe, to inspire and educate our next generation of actors and artists, painters and public servants.
Scheduling/School Calendar
-- Propose legislation to tighten the school calendar to make sure our students receive a full 180 days of instruction.
-- Continue before- and after-school programs.
State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Create a Task Force on Fair and Equal Pay (created by executive order) to look for ethnic, racial and gender gaps as well as job segregation in every state agency, and offer solutions for closing those gaps.
-- Establish an ethics commission to provide independent oversight of all branches of state government.
http://www.governor.state.nm.us/press/2009/jan/012009_01.pdf | |  |
| North Carolina | Governor Bev Perdue's State of the State Address
Access, Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Begin the College Promise program to remove financial barriers for access to higher education.
Access, Distance Learning/Virtual University, High School, Teaching Quality, Technology, Technology--Access/Equity
-- Use technology to modernize the classroom and enable teaching to catch up with the way our kids live.
-- Continue to support North Carolina's Virtual Public High School--levels the education playing field for students and assures educational equity.
Accountability, Business Involvement, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates, Parent/Family, Persistence/Retention, Public Involvement, School, Students, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Teacher Attitudes
-- Hold schools accountable.
-- Will not give any child permission to drop out of school.
-- Will not give any teacher permission to give up on a student.
-- Will not give any parent a free pass from their responsibility to be fully involved in their child's education.
-- Will not give any segment of our community, particularly our business community, a free pass on education. These leaders need to put the same effort into helping North Carolina be the home of the nation's best educated workforce.
Accountability, Governance, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Reorganized (earlier this year) the public school system with Bill Harrison becoming both the CEO of the State Board of Education and of the Department of Public Instruction.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Create jobs and provide ways for those who are out of work to learn new skills.
-- Put people back to work building bridges, paving roads, and expanding and renovating our infrastructure.
-- Transform our traditional industries into 21st century jobs.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Create jobs and provide ways for those who are out of work to learn new skills.
-- Put people back to work building bridges, paving roads, and expanding and renovating our infrastructure.
-- Transform our traditional industries into 21st century jobs.
Assessment, Standards--State
-- Eliminating duplicative or unnecessary state tests.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Become a Mecca for biotech, pharmaceuticals, and life sciences by bringing together government, higher education and private business.
Career/Technical Education, Community Colleges, Early Learning, P-16, Postsecondary, Pre-Kindergarten,
-- Create a pathway, starting in pre-kindergarten that offers courses of study that fit students' needs -- all the way through vocational, community college, or college. Seamless learning, pre-K through 20, that's the goal.
Federal, Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Ensure the recovery dollars are spent with maximum efficiency, transparency, and accountability.
-- Created the Office of Economic Recovery & Investment to track every dollar. Taxpayers can go to www.NCRecovery.gov to see how the money is spent.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Pay our state's bills.
-- Confront the $3 billion plus shortfall and make hard, painful decisions to balance the budget.
-- Propose to reduce and cut state government programs and services that are effective but which we cannot afford.
Finance, Finance--Funding Formulas, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Will not sacrifice education--it is the priority.
-- Increase per-pupil spending.
Health, Persistence/Retention
-- Keep all our kids healthy and in school.
http://www.governor.state.nc.us/stateofstate.aspx | |  |
| North Dakota | Governor John Hoeven's State of the State Address
Curriculum
-- Enhance curriculum, using funds from the $130 million listed below.
Finance
-- Provide $130 million to fund the recommendations of the Commission on Education Improvement. Those recommendations include resources to build student performance, enhance curriculum, provide strong professional development and mentoring, and improve compensation for our teachers.
-- Reach the goal set 25 years ago for the state to fund 70 percent of the cost of public education--which is now within the state's grasp.
Financial Aid, Finance (Postsecondary), Tuition/Fees
-- Provide $170 million in both ongoing and one-time funding to help campuses maintain and improve the quality of education they provide--this sum includes funding for ACT-ND, Aid for College Tuition in North Dakota.
-- Do more with non-needs based assistance to attract and prepare young people for new jobs and careers.
-- Offer up to $2,000 a year for five years - $10,000 in total - to help students in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math with their technical training or education (funding from STEM Grants, a merit-based program).
Student Achievement
-- Build student performance, using funds from the $130 million listed above.
Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Improve teacher compensation, using funding from the $130 million listed above.
Teaching Quality--Induction and Mentoring
-- Provide strong professional development and mentoring, using funding from the $130 million listed above.
Teaching Quality--Professional Development
-- Provide strong professional development and mentoring, using funding from the $130 million listed above.
http://governor.nd.gov/media/speeches/090106.html | |  |
| Ohio | Governor Ted Strickland's State of the State Address
Accountability, Public Involvement, School Districts, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Establish a new level of school district accountability and transparency.
-- Establish performance audits for school districts overseen by the Department of Education--to make sure they are maintaining academic and operating standards.
-- Require districts to report their spending plans before each school year and then account for every dollar at the conclusion of the school year.
-- Provide parents, public officials, and taxpayers an annual fiscal and operational report card for every school district. When we send districts funding to help students who need additional attention and instruction, we will now be able to track our dollars to see that they directly reach those students.
-- Establish a process for districts who fail to comply with the new standards. Upon a certain level of non-compliance, the State Board of Education will revoke the school district's charter.
Accountability, Charter Schools
-- Establish a new level of accountability in charter schools. Charter schools should meet the same standards demanded of traditional public schools.
Arts in Education, Language Arts--Writing/Spelling, Mathematics, Science, Student Achievement, Technology
-- Create new academic achievement competitions and awards.
-- Create the Ohio Academic Olympics, where students will compete in science, math, writing, debate, the arts and technology.
Assessment, Assessment--College Entrance Exams, Assessment--National Tests, High School, High School--Exit Exams, High School--Grad Requirements, Service Learning/Community Service,
-- Replace the Ohio Graduation Test with the ACT and three additional measures. All students will: (1) take the ACT college entrance examination; (2) take statewide 'end of course' exams; (3) complete a service learning project; and (4) submit a senior project.
Assessment, Elementary Education, Middle School
-- Rewrite assessments in grades 3 through 8 to test for mastery of the information and skills in the curriculum.
At-Risk, High School, High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates
-- Provide enhanced intervention services in schools with high dropout rates, by building on our 'Closing the Achievement Gap' initiative.
Character Education, Citizenship Education, Comprehensive School Reform, Curriculum, Education Research, Service Learning/Community Service, Social & Emotional Development, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality
-- Introduce my plan to rebuild our education system--using an evidence-based education approach that applies research findings to Ohio's specific circumstances. [note: this plan encompasses many of the initiatives throughout this summary]
-- Add new subjects including global awareness and life skills to the curriculum.
-- Use teaching methods that foster creativity and innovation, critical thinking and problem solving, communication and collaboration, media literacy, leadership and productivity, cultural awareness, adaptability and accountability.
-- Direct the Ohio Department of Education to set standards for Ohio schools requiring innovative teaching formats.
-- Make interdisciplinary methods, project-based learning, real world lessons, and service learning the norm.
-- Build the learning experience around the individual student.
-- Provide dedicated resources for instructional materials and enrichment activities.
Community Colleges, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Maintain commitment to affordable access to our colleges and universities.
-- Maintain tuition freeze for the next two years.
Early Learning, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Unite all of our early childhood development programs and resources into the Department of Education. This comprehensive early childhood system will focus on the whole child and provide quality early learning and care while improving our efficiency and effectiveness.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Renew the Technology Investment Tax Credit to attract investors for new Ohio start-up technology companies.
-- Broaden the Job Retention Tax Credit and Job Creation Tax Credit.
-- Create a Film Tax Credit to spur the growth of the film industry.
-- Create a New Markets Tax Credit based on the existing federal program, to help cities and towns spur investment in downtown multi-use projects.
-- Introduce a second jobs stimulus package in the coming months. The package will include an expansion of Ohio's Third Frontier program, regulatory reform and streamlining measures, and additional investments.
Education Research, International Comparisons, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Create a Center for Creativity and Innovation within the Department of Education--to monitor research and results from across the country and across the world.
Extended Day Programs, Health, Mentoring/Tutoring, Service Learning/Community
-- Expand the learning day for all students with activities such as community service, tutoring, and wellness programs.
Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Reduce spending by 3.2 billion dollars from 2009 planning levels.
-- Reduce a significant number of programs and services; will call for many program reductions of 10 to 20 percent.
-- Ask state employees to endure a financial sacrifice.
-- Balance the budget. Without the infusion of federal resources, we would have had to impose far more substantial cuts to balance our budget.
-- Will not raise taxes.
-- Leverage existing resources and one-time cash transfers.
-- Increase various state agency fees, fines, and penalties.
Finance, Finance--District, Finance--Local Foundations/Funds, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Eliminate aspects of our current funding system that are indefensible.
-- Eliminate the practice where the state asks school districts to pay their bills with phantom dollars.
-- Lower the local taxpayer contribution to local schools from 23 to 20 mills. The state will assume responsibility for providing the difference between what those 20 mills raise and the cost of the full range of educational resources our students need according to our evidence-based approach.
-- Provide districts the option of asking voters to pass a conversion levy.
Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Teaching Quality--Hard-to-Staff Schools
-- Provide scholarships for future teachers who agree to teach in hard to staff schools or in hard to staff subjects.
Governance, Leadership, Standards
-- Strengthen our licensing standards for school principals.
-- Give principals the ability and responsibility to properly manage their schools.
-- Create standards for the mastery of both education and management principles for school superintendents, school treasurers and other business officials.
Health
-- Place nurses in our schools.
Kindergarten
-- Require universal all-day kindergarten.
Outreach Programs, Parent/Family, Public Involvement
-- Create community engagement teams in our schools.
-- Place professionals in the schools who will help educators, families and community service providers come together to help our children succeed.
P-16
-- Continue to support a comprehensive P through 16 system.
Postsecondary, Teaching Quality--Preparation--Professional Development Schools
-- Redesign university teacher education programs to meet the needs and standards of our primary and secondary schools. Empower the Chancellor of Higher Education to reward university education programs that best prepare their students for success as teachers in Ohio.
Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Continue tuition freeze tuition in 2010, and keep any tuition increase to no more than 3.5 percent in 2011 (main university campuses).
Scheduling/School Calendar
-- Add 20 instructional days to the school calendar, over a ten-year period in order to bring the state's learning year up to the international average of 200 days.
State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Call on all state agencies to make government services simpler, faster, better and less costly.
Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Certification, Teaching Quality--Induction and Mentoring, Teaching Quality--Preparation, Teaching Quality--Preparation--Professional Development Schools, Teaching Quality--Professional Development, Teaching Quality--Working Conditions
-- Improve educator quality.
-- Introduce a four-year residency program to advance teacher preparation and development. Under the program, new teachers will be guided by an accomplished senior teacher and successful candidates will earn their professional teaching license.
-- Introduce a career ladder that begins with residency and may build up to lead teacher. This allows teachers the opportunity to advance their careers based on objective evidence of student progress.
-- Provide collaborative planning time.
-- Make mentoring, coaching and peer review standard.
-- Have the Chancellor of Higher Education and the Superintendent of Public Instruction collaborate to provide professional development programs and innovative techniques for the classroom.
-- Give administrators the power to dismiss teachers for good cause, the same standard applied to other public employees.
-- Create a Teach Ohio program to open a path to licensure for professionals who have the subject knowledge but lack coursework in education methods. Successful participants will be eligible to begin the four-year residency program.
http://www.governor.ohio.gov/GovernorsOffice/StateoftheState/StateoftheState2009/tabid/984/Default.aspx | |  |
| Pennsylvania | Governor Ed Rendell's State of the State Address
Accountability, Governance, Leadership, School Districts, Student Achievement
-- Adopt laws holding superintendents and principals accountable for boosting student achievement.
-- Adopt laws requiring fundamental change when schools or districts fail to improve year after year.
-- Direct school boards to focus their time to guide district improvement.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Community Colleges, Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Hold state institutions of higher learning to the same levels of funding that they currently receive.
-- Increase funds for community colleges--which serve as the training ground for Pennsylvanians seeking new skills to help them re-enter the job market.
Business Involvement, Economic/Workforce Development
-- Put citizens back to work through continued infrastructure investments.
-- Provide $27 million to ensure job-creating opportunities from projects such as the CSX and Norfolk Southern rail freight expansion.
-- Expand the Business in our Sites program by $60 million.
-- Create a $100 million working capital loan guarantee program and increase the funds available to water and other infrastructure improvements needed for business growth by $40 million.
-- Add $10 million to the Infrastructure and Facilities Improvement Program to help businesses grow.
-- Urge legislature to pass amendments to the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards, which will stimulate job growth.
Community Colleges, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Tuition/Fees
-- Provide $35 million in funds to restore the PHEAA education grant cutbacks.
-- Provide a $15 million increase in funding for enrollment at community colleges across the state. This will make it possible for 10,000 more students to receive grants to study in state community colleges next fall.
-- Introduce the Pennsylvania Tuition Relief Act, which will provide critically needed college tuition assistance to Pennsylvania families earning less than $100,000 a year. Under this Act, all students who qualify and seek to attend public or community colleges will pay what they can afford (at least $1,000 per year) in accordance with established financial aid practices.
-- Enact legislation to legalize video poker and tax its proceeds--to pay for the tuition relief described above.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Believe that investing in higher education is the single most important thing we can do to grow the economy in the long run.
Faculty, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Urge the legislature to pass legislation to consolidate health care benefits for all school employees in the state.
-- Freeze wages for state positions where possible and stop salary increases for this year and next.
Finance, Finance--Facilities, Finance--Resource Efficiency, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
-- Enact a Pennsylvania Green Building Code.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Unions/Collective Bargaining
-- Face a current projected budget deficit of $2.3 billion. However, Pennsylvania is in a far better position than most.
-- Hold counties at level funding.
-- Allow counties to impose a sales tax increase of up to one percent on top of the state sales tax and share 50% of those proceeds with cities.
-- Will not increase taxes on personal income, sales or businesses.
-- Propose a tax on smokeless tobacco.
-- Propose a tax on the minerals under state soil when extracted.
-- Need to tap some of our Rainy Day reserves to help close our deficit this year and next.
-- Cut current-year legislative spending by 4.25% (executive branch has already made these cuts).
-- Welcome any revenue enhancement proposals by any member of the legislature.
-- Decrease General Fund expenditures by 2%.
-- Cut $395 million in spending by completely eliminating 20 percent of the 500 line items under the control of the Executive Branch. In some cases we are cutting terrific programs that we can perhaps restore when the economy recovers, such as the Governor's Schools of Excellence, a week-long series of academic enrichment forums offered by the Department of Education to students from all over the state.
-- Cut the Scotland School permanently. This school was founded so that the orphans of the Civil War could receive a free public school education, however none of the current students in the school are orphans of veterans, and only seven have parents who are currently deployed.
-- Continue negotiating with leaders of our state unions to reach agreement on ways to meet our fiscal challenges with the lowest possible number of layoffs.
-- Accelerate local community mergers where it makes sense to do so (as recommended by the State Planning Board).
-- Provide $300 million to help contain local property tax increases and pay for public school activities that have proven effective in the last six years. If the American Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Act includes temporary support for schools, we should put this $300 million into a lockbox so that when the federal funds expire in two years we can ensure that our school districts continue on the path toward full adequacy funding.
Finance, Finance (Postsecondary), Postsecondary
-- Double state capital investment in projects at the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
-- Continue our annual commitment of $100 million in funding for important campus projects at the University of Pittsburgh, Penn State University, Lincoln University, and Temple University.
Governance, School Districts
-- Establish funds for the creation of a legislative commission to study how best to right-size our local school districts. The commission should reporting back, within one year, a set of recommendations for the legislature's approval that sets forth an optimal number of local districts and a plan with specific timelines for adjusting our boundaries to meet the optimal size. Full-scale school consolidation provides an effective way to relieve the local property tax burden all across the state. I challenge the commission to develop a plan that includes no more than 100 local districts statewide.
http://www.governor.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_2_24980_2985_368304_43/http%3B/pubcontent.state.pa.us/publishedcontent/publish/cop_general_government_operations/pagov/media/latest_news/09_2010_final_budget_address.pdf | |  |
| Rhode Island | Governor Donald L. Carcieri's State of the State Address
At-Risk, Student Achievement, Urban
-- Continue to support efforts to close the gap not only between our urban and suburban schools, but also with our partner states Vermont and New Hampshire.
Economic/Workforce Development
-- Continue to move aggressively to make Rhode Island home to the first offshore wind project in the nation. This will help us reach our goal of 20% of our state's energy being derived from renewable resources and will add 800 green collar jobs.
-- Received a renewed commitment from the US Navy to expand in Newport, adding 600 jobs and new investment in that community.
Economic/Workforce Development, Federal, Federal--Aid, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Use the anticipated federal stimulus money to bridge the deficit, support tax relief and structural reforms, grow jobs and grow our economy.
-- Signed (2/10/09) an Executive Order creating the Office of Economic Recovery and Reinvestment to establish a transparent process to administer these federal funds.
-- Reform our tax structure to make more business friendly, which will create jobs.
-- Phase out the corporate income tax.
-- Eliminate (eventually) the estate tax.
Economic/Workforce Development, Mathematics, Postsecondary, Science, Technology
-- Cut the ribbon last week at a new state-of-the-art facility at Rhode Island College where students and teachers will focus on math, science, engineering and technology.
-- Cut the ribbon two weeks ago at URI's new Center for Biotechnology and Life Sciences.
-- Open (this spring) the new Inner Space Center at the Graduate School of Oceanography – making us a leader in global ocean exploration.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Project a $350 million dollar deficit for the remainder of this year. Will close the deficit and balance the budget by June, 30.
Finance, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, School Boards, School Districts
-- Consolidate and regionalize services in our cities and towns, including public education. Our property taxes are so high and continue to rise because while the state has reduced employment by 25 percent, the cities and towns have increased employment by 38 percent. Consolidation will reduce the burden on our economy and our taxpayers.
-- Asked the General Assembly to create a new, high-level Government reform Commission to study the feasibility of consolidation. This commission would have special powers and the authority to make detailed recommendations to the legislature for a mandatory vote during the next legislative session. If necessary, the issue would then be brought to the general public as a referendum during the next election.
Finance, Finance--Taxes/Revenues, School Boards, Unions/Collective Bargaining
-- Give mayors and town councils the ways and means to control local spending and balance their budgets without raising property taxes.
-- Need the unions to realize that our cities and towns cannot afford business as usual—they cannot afford the wages, the pensions, the health care, and the work rules that were bargained for. I encourage every public employee union to sit down with the mayors, town managers, the city and town councils, and the school committees to become a part of the solution.
State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Reform public employee pension and benefit plans so that they are fair and equitable, affordable and sustainable. One of our highest personnel costs are for pensions for state and municipal employees and public school teachers.
http://www.governor.ri.gov/documents/statemessage09.pdf | |  |
| Texas | Governor Rick Perry's State of the State Address
Access, Finance (Postsecondary), Financial Aid, Postsecondary, Tuition/Fees
-- Make college accessible and affordable for more qualified, motivated students.
-- Increase funding for the Texas Grant Program, an initiative for traditionally underserved Texans.
-- Freeze a student's college tuition rates for four years at the level they pay as an entering freshman.
-- Extend in-state tuition rates to all veterans, regardless of their home of record.
Accountability, At-Risk, Student Achievement, High School, High School--Career Pathways, Minority/Diversity Issues, Public Involvement, Postsecondary
-- Hold schools accountable for student performance.
-- Make sure the accountability system continues to move students (especially low-income and minority students) along the path to graduating "college and career ready" while keeping parents and taxpayers informed on their district's performance.
Adult Learning/Continuing Education, Community Colleges, Economic/Workforce Development, Postsecondary
-- Increase significantly our investment in community colleges. Community colleges are anchors to their local communities and are ideally positioned to educate a growing population of workers that have either been displaced by the current economic turmoil, or have job skills that have been outpaced by rapidly-evolving technology.
-- Expand the Workforce Commission's Skills Development Fund and its training partnerships.
Bilingual/ESL, High School, Language Arts, Mathematics, Reading/Literacy, Science
-- Reach our goal of ensuring every student graduates from Texas high schools with a strong foundation in math, science and English.
Community Colleges, Postsecondary, Private Colleges/Universities
-- Improve education at every level.
-- Include community colleges and proprietary schools in any discussion of higher education.
Completion/Postsec. Graduation, Postsecondary
-- Reward four-year universities that increase the number of students they graduate.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Win jobs for Texans. A buyer's market for economic development is emerging and Texas is in better shape during this economic crisis than most other states.
-- Replenish the Emerging Technology Fund, the Film Incentives and the Enterprise Fund, to keep drawing ideas, investment and jobs to Texas.
-- Invest in adult stem cell research, which will create jobs.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance, Finance--Taxes/Revenues
-- Improve the reformed business tax implemented a few years ago.
-- Raise the small business exemption to $1 million.
-- Hold the line on taxes and regulatory encroachments, as more people move into the state.
-- Upgrade the state's overburdened infrastructure.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
-- Reduce the number of diversions in our budget--only spend tax dollars on the express purpose for which they were collected.
Health
-- Address obesity in schoolchildren. I propose we test an incentive-based fitness program like those gaining popularity in the workplace.
Mathematics, Science
-- Improve math and science education.
Postsecondary
-- Call for additional transparency in institutions of higher education.
Safety/Student Discipline
-- Provide just under $32 million to address the gang threat head-on. These funds would be used to pay more officers, provide better coordination of multi-force efforts and fund prosecutions for gang-related offenses. Transnational gangs have been moving into our towns, schools and neighborhoods.
School Districts, Technology, Technology--Instruction, Textbooks
-- Help schools benefit from evolving educational technologies, by updating our laws and regulations. For example, allow school districts to purchase electronic versions of the text books that have been approved by the State Board of Education.
Teaching Quality, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Put an excellent teacher in every classroom.
-- Continue the teacher incentive pay program.
http://governor.state.tx.us/news/speech/11852/ | |  |
| West Virginia | Governor Joe Manchin III's State of the State Address
Assessment, Extended Day Programs, Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, Language Arts--Writing/Spelling, Mathematics, Parent/Family, Promotion/Retention, Standards, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Student Achievement, Summer School
-- Refocus on basic principles of learning. For dozens of years we have evaluated our children's educational competency at critical grade levels through statewide testing. The data is helpful, but we should use that information to keep our children from being prematurely promoted to the next grade level.
-- Propose, in cooperation with the Department of Education, legislation providing that if our children do not meet the educational standards we set at the third grade and eighth grade levels, they cannot move on until they meet those required educational standards, either through after-school programs, attending summer school or being retained for another year.
This bill also engages the most critical factor in the learning process – the parents. We have directed additional resources to ensure the success of this program and help our children learn the math and language skills they need to succeed at the next grade level.
Curriculum, School Boards, School Districts, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Student Achievement, Teaching Quality
-- Join the State Department of Education in introducing The School Innovation Zones Bill to give teachers, principals and school communities greater control over critical education factors that affect student achievement. This bill will allow school staff to implement improvement strategies that currently are restrained by State Board of Education policies or antiquated state law.
-- Give our teachers and school systems the resources, curriculum and freedom to try innovative approaches to 21st century learning.
Early Learning, Postsecondary
-- Do a better job of educating our children, starting from the ground up--from pre-school through college.
Economic/Workforce Development
-- Commit to investing in the energy sources of the future.
-- Introduce the Alternative and Renewable Energy Portfolio Act which includes incentives to locate new alternative energy facilities in West Virginia--to encourage the development of renewable energy resources and create jobs.
-- Realize that the jobs of the future will go not to the places with the richest land or the most abundant resources, but the places with the richest minds. We must teach our children the job skills they need to compete.
Economic/Workforce Development, Finance (Postsecondary), Graduate/Professional Education, Postsecondary, Teaching Quality--Recruitment/Retention, Tuition/Fees
-- Recognize the workforce resource we have in our veterans. They have earned the right to further their education once they return to civilian life.
-- Continue to support the Troops to Teachers program.
-- Make sure our nation's veterans know they are welcome at West Virginia's colleges and universities.
-- Propose legislation that will require each of our public colleges and universities to participate in the New GI Bill's "Yellow Ribbon Program" that will allow veterans from out of state to attend our public colleges and universities at the in-state rates. Schools would be free to participate for graduate and professional students, as well, if they choose.
Finance, Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures, State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies, Teaching Quality--Compensation
-- Do not plan to cut essential government services, unnecessarily increase our state budget, or expand the size of state government.
-- Cannot include any base-building salary increases in this year's budget.
-- Ask the legislature for the ability to share any additional money that we may have with our teachers, service personnel and state employees.
Health, Health--Nutrition
-- Continue to recognize the growing problem of childhood obesity.
-- Recognize that schools must provide healthier food choices in their vending machines.
Scheduling/School Calendar
-- Introduce a bill to require county school systems to begin the instructional term five days earlier and give schools the flexibility to extend the calendar if necessary to meet the 180-day requirement.
http://www.stateline.org/live/details/speech?contentId=376640 | |  |
 | Students |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality |
| 18 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Certification and Licensure |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay |
| 25 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Induction Programs and Mentoring |
| 2 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Preparation |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Professional Development |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention |
| 5 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention--At-Risk Schools |
| 3 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Teacher Attitudes |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Tenure or Continuing Contract |
| 1 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Unions/Collective Bargaining |
| 4 | |
 | Teaching Quality--Working Conditions |
| 3 | |
 | Technology |
| 13 | |
 | Technology--Computer Skills |
| 2 | |
 | Technology--Devices/Software/Hardware |
| 3 | |
 | Technology--Equitable Access |
| 1 | |
 | Textbooks and Open Source |
| 1 | |
 | Urban |
| 2 | |
 | Whole-School Reform Models |
| 1 | |
|
| 799 |  |
|