ECS
2011 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 2011 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
6
+ Accountability--Reporting Results
1
+ Accountability--Sanctions/Interventions
1
+ Accountability--School Improvement
2
+ Assessment
4
+ At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)
1
+ At-Risk (incl. Dropout Prevention)--Alternative Education
1
+ Attendance
2
+ Bilingual/ESL
1
+ Business Involvement
5
+ Career/Technical Education
4
+ Choice of Schools
3
+ Choice of Schools--Charter Schools
8
+ Choice of Schools--Charter Schools--Cyber Charters
1
+ Choice of Schools--Charter Schools--Finance
1
+ Choice of Schools--Choice/Open Enrollment
2
+ Choice of Schools--Tax Credits
2
+ Choice of Schools--Vouchers
2
+ Choice of Schools--Vouchers--Privately Funded
1
+ Class Size
1
+ Curriculum--Foreign Language/Sign Language
1
+ Curriculum--Mathematics
1
+ Curriculum--Science
1
+ Economic/Workforce Development
18
+ Finance
17
+ Finance--Adequacy/Core Cost
1
+ Finance--District
3
+ Finance--Facilities
3
+ Finance--Federal
3
+ Finance--Funding Formulas
3
+ Finance--Resource Efficiency
1
+ Finance--State Budgets/Expenditures
13
+ Finance--Taxes/Revenues
2
+ Governance
7
+ Governance--School Boards
2
+ Governance--State Boards/Chiefs/Agencies
2
+ Health
1
+ High School
7
+ High School--Advanced Placement
3
+ High School--College Readiness
6
+ High School--Dropout Rates/Graduation Rates
2
+ High School--Dual/Concurrent Enrollment
1
+ High School--Graduation Requirements
2
+ Leadership--District Superintendent
2
+ Leadership--District Superintendent--Compensation and Diversified Pay
1
+ Leadership--Principal/School Leadership
4
+ Online Learning--Virtual Schools/Courses
2
+ P-16 or P-20
5
- P-3
5
DelawareGovernor Jack Markell's State of the State Address

PROPOSALS

AP Courses, Assessment Systems, Federal Aid, Incentive Pay for Teachers, Teacher Evaluation
-- Make the state's Race to the Top competition plan a reality by: (1) Implementing a better assessment system, measuring student growth during the year and providing real-time feedback so teacher can adjust and improve student learning on-the-spot; (2) Measuring student growth in every subject area so we can link teacher evaluations with how much their students learning in their classroom, identify what works, and raise the quality of instruction across the state; (3) Give teachers more time to collaborate with their colleagues and work with data coaches in interpreting student data and developing strategies to address identified needs; (4) Meet parents' requests for more Advanced Placement courses; and (5) Provide incentive pay to attract highly effective teachers to high-needs schools.

Common Core Standards
-- Assess more accurately how proficient our students are at meeting the new common core standards.

Early Learning
-- Increase the focus on early learning within state government, improving assessment and the use of data, and better coordinating and integrating funding.

Foreign Languages, Online Courses
-- Offer high-quality online Chinese language courses developed with federal grant funding.

STEM
-- Fund a new STEM Teacher Residency Program to attract individuals with experience in the STEM areas to the teaching profession.
-- Bring to the classrooms a former senior scientist with Astra-Zeneca and a Master's-level physicist with prior experience at NASA.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Common Core Standards
-- Adopted new, clearer and higher "common core standards."

Federal Aid
-- Won the national Race to the Top competition.

Foreign Languages
-- Required completion of a world language in order to graduate.
-- Offered Chinese language courses to students at virtually no cost to the state.

School Improvement
-- Launched the Partnership Zone effort to provide more focus on our lowest-achieving schools. Selected schools are required to implement significant and difficult changes and all four Partnership Zones have done so.

School Safety
-- Asked the Safety and Homeland Security Secretary to oversee creation of model comprehensive school safety plans for the 26 public schools with a State Police Resource Officer.

STEM
-- Created a STEM Council to ensure that schools have the high quality programs and partnerships necessary so that students gain the critical skills and knowledge needed for high-quality jobs.

http://governor.delaware.gov/remarks/2011stateofthestate/2011stateofstate.shtml
KansasGovernor Sam Brownback's State of the State Address

PROPOSALS

P-3
-- Dedicate $6 million this year from the Children's Initiative Fund to the development of early childhood education centers in our most needy school districts.
-- Focus more funding on early childhood reading.

Economic Development
-- Establish a three-year, $105M University Economic Growth initiative to enhance job growth in key economic sectors such as Aviation, Cancer Research, Animal Health, and Engineering. Each university will be required to provide through private sector or reprogrammed funds 50% of the cost of the program initiative.

-- Create a Governor's Economic Council: Chaired by myself, this council will consist of some of our state's most successful men and women who are leaders in the private sector.  The Council will assure strategy integration, coordination and accountability across all of the state's economic development agencies and initiatives.

Finance
-- Proposed budget provides school districts with more overall state funding and will also stabilize state support for higher education for the first time since the Great Recession began.
-- Let the Legislature resolve school finance… not the courts, so we can send more money to the classroom, not the courtroom. Define suitability and end the confusion. This will provide a definition of what we need to undertake reform of our school finance formula and provide our school districts with stable, sustainable funding for the future. 

Reading/Literacy
-- No child should pass the 4th grade without being able to read.

Rural (Economic Development, Declining Enrollment)
-- Create Rural Opportunity Zones, or ROZes, to provide a state income tax waiver for any individual relocating from out-of-state into any participating county that has experienced double digit percentage population decline the last ten years.


ACCOMPLISHMENTS
N/A: Newly-Elected Governor

https://governor.ks.gov/media-room/speeches/2011/01/12/2011-State-of-the-State-Message
MassachusettsGovernor Deval Patrick's State of the State Address

PROPOSALS

Achievement Gap
-- Close the achievement gap.

At-Risk
-- Use the tools in the Achievement Gap Act (passed last year) to support the imagination and creativity of great teachers, principals, parent groups, and business partners, to reach poor children, children with special needs and children who speak English as a second language.

Early Learning - Postsecondary Investment
-- Find ways to invest in public schools, from early education to public universities.

Youth Violence
-- Engage the full spectrum of people who work with young people, including educators, to develop and implement a comprehensive strategy for preventing youth violence.


ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Achievement Gap
-- Signed the Achievement Gap Act (please see above).

Community Service
-- Gathered, through Project 351, 8th graders from every city and town in the state for a day of service.

Student Achievement
-- Acknowledge that the state leads the Nation in student achievement.

Race to the Top
-- Won the national Race to the Top competition.

http://www.mass.gov/?pageID=gov3terminal&L=3&L0=Home&L1=Media+Center&L2=Speeches&sid=Agov3&b=terminalcontent&f=Second+Inaugural+Address&csid=Agov3
MissouriGovernor Jay Nixon's State of the State Address

PROPOSALS

Pre-K-3
-- Fund programs to get youngsters off to a good start, like First Steps, Head Start, and Early Childhood Special Education.

Economic Development
-- Roll three worker training programs into one, and align it with our Compete Missouri incentives. Worker training assistance will be available to businesses as small as Ardent Outdoors, which employs 15 people in Macon, and as large as Boeing, which employs thousands.
-- Provide an additional $5 million for job training, giving employers more resources to maintain a highly skilled workforce, and sharpen their competitive edge.

Finance
-- Protect our investment in K-12 classrooms.
-- Partner with school districts to allow additional federal funds received to be used to keep stable funding for our K-12 classrooms - not only for fiscal year 2011, but also for fiscal year 2012.

College Access and Completion
-- Do more to help students make the leap from high school to college. Budget millions of dollars for Missouri's most successful college scholarship programs, including: Bright Flight, to help keep our top students at our excellent Missouri institutions; Access Missouri, which serves students with the greatest financial need; and A+, which has helped more than 50,000 students afford and attend college.
-- Give a $500 bonus to A+ and Access Missouri recipients who score well on Advanced Placement exams in math and science.
-- Extend our A+ program so that outstanding students all across the state are guaranteed access to A+ college scholarships. For too long, too many excellent Missouri high school students have been unable to get A+ scholarships - through no fault of their own - simply because their schools weren't designated as A+ schools.

Student Achievement
-- In the next ten years, Missouri student achievement must rank in the nation's top ten, if we expect to compete for the best jobs in the global economy

Technology
-- Bring broadband to every corner of the state. Connect tens of thousands of homes in rural Missouri to a network of vital community services like fire and police, schools and hospitals, libraries and government.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

College Access and Completion
-- Kept tuition and fees flat for two years running. Even if some schools impose modest tuition increases next year, we'll have protected Missouri families from the sharp tuition spikes seen in other states.
-- College enrollment jumped by 10,000 students last year, hitting record highs at more than half of Missouri's universities, and boosting applications at all of them.

Economic Development
-- Put Missouri's first State Parks Youth Corps in action. At a time when it's been especially tough for young people to find jobs, the State Parks Youth Corps put money in the pockets of more than 1,000 young workers - at no cost to the state. The National Association of State Park Directors gave our State Parks Youth Corps its top award for innovation in 2010.

Technology
-- MoBroadbandNow partnership was a stunning success.

Finance
-- Reformed and modernized the state pension system, which will keep it solvent now, and for years to come.
-- Required insurance companies to start providing meaningful coverage for the diagnosis and treatment of children with autism.

http://governor.mo.gov/newsroom/speeches/2011/2011_State_of_the_State.htm
MontanaGovernor Brian Schweitzer's State of the State Address

PROPOSALS

College Tuition
-- Urged lawmakers not to raise college tuition, as his proposed budget provides enough state funding for colleges to cap tuition for students.

Education Funding
-- Increase state funding for the University System and public schools; not the time for education budget cuts because funding is available.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

Accessibility, Finance, Technology
-- Created an education system that is more affordable, more accessible more digital and more relevant.

Full-Day Kindergarten
-- Invested in full-day kindergarten four years ago and it is just now starting to pay off.

http://governor.mt.gov/speeches/speeches.asp?ID=182
+ P-3 Grades 1-3
4
+ P-3 Kindergarten
1
+ P-3 Kindergarten--Full-Day Kindergarten
3
+ P-3 Preschool
2
+ Parent/Family
1
+ Postsecondary
8
+ Postsecondary Accountability
1
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Financial Aid
6
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Textbooks
1
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees
5
+ Postsecondary Affordability--Tuition/Fees--Prepd/College Savings Plans
1
+ Postsecondary Faculty--Compensation
1
+ Postsecondary Finance
13
+ Postsecondary Finance--Efficiency/Performance-Based Funding
1
+ Postsecondary Institutions
2
+ Postsecondary Institutions--Community/Technical Colleges
3
+ Postsecondary Participation--Access
6
+ Postsecondary Participation--Affirmative Action
1
+ Postsecondary Students
1
+ Postsecondary Success--Completion
7
+ Postsecondary Success--Developmental/Remediation
1
+ Postsecondary Success--Transfer/Articulation
1
+ Privatization
1
+ Promotion/Retention
3
+ Reading/Literacy
2
+ Remediation (K-12)
2
+ Rural
2
+ Scheduling/School Calendar
1
+ Scheduling/School Calendar--Extended Day Programs
1
+ School Safety
2
+ School/District Structure/Operations--District Consolidation/Deconsolidation
2
+ School/District Structure/Operations--Facilities
1
+ School/District Structure/Operations--Shared Services
2
+ Special Education
2
+ Special Populations--Military
1
+ Standards
2
+ Standards--Common Core State Standards
1
+ State Policymaking
5
+ STEM
6
+ Student Achievement
8
+ Teaching Quality
6
+ Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay
5
+ Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay--Pay-for-Performance
3
+ Teaching Quality--Compensation and Diversified Pay--Retirement/Benefits
5
+ Teaching Quality--Evaluation and Effectiveness
8
+ Teaching Quality--Paraprofessionals
1
+ Teaching Quality--Recruitment and Retention
1
+ Teaching Quality--Tenure or Continuing Contract
5
+ Technology
4
+ Technology--Computer Skills
5
+ Technology--Equitable Access
1
+ Technology--Teacher/Faculty Training
1
+ Textbooks and Open Source
1
+ Youth Engagement
1
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