Rep. Tim Kelly White Paper
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Transcript of Rep. Tim Kelly White Paper
Addressing Detroit Public Schools (“DPS”) Failure While Preserving Education Choice
Submitted by
Representative Tim Kelly, Chair House Appropriations Subcommittee on School Aid and
Member, House Education Committee
September 2015
Introduction Governor Rick Snyder has focused significant attention on the plight of children attending public
schools in the City of Detroit.
Early this summer, the Governor issued a proposal to both provide a state funded method of saving the
financially failed Detroit Public Schools (“DPS”) and to significantly recentralize control of all Detroit
public education under the Governor’s ultimate control. In making his announcement, the Governor
indicated he looked forward to discussing the proposals with his “partners in the Legislature.”
The Governor’s announcement indicated he understood that it is the state legislature that is charged
under the Constitution to “maintain and support a system of free public elementary and secondary
schools as defined by law.”
In the Michigan House of Representatives, it is the House Appropriations Subcommittee on School Aid
and the standing Committee on Education that have primary responsibility for designing and funding the
public education system of the state, including the City of Detroit.
With that understanding and in response to the Governor’s invitation, the following series of proposals
are submitted for consideration as the Legislature focuses on the situation of the Detroit public schools
and the 3.2% of the state’s children who attend DPS.
As more fully described, there are alternative strategies to the centralized structure the Governor
proposes. I believe that better outcomes may come through robust education choice directed by pupils
and their parents and guardians.
2
Background Discussion
Governor’s 2011 Education Policies
Early in his term as governor, Mr. Snyder endorsed innovation and choice in public education:
Michigan needs to drive toward a system of higher expectations for its
system of schools and educators. We need a performance-based education
system that will meet the 21st century education needs of all students.
Innovation and educational entrepreneurship must be cultivated through
improved models of instruction across the state. There must be greater
choice for students and parents and greater responsibility and
accountability at the individual school level for student growth.
***
In order to create dynamic, performance-based school districts in
Michigan we need to challenge the status quo. Charter schools play an
important role by offering an alternative education option to parents and
students, particularly in our struggling districts. We need to increase the
number of charter schools in Michigan to help attract the top charter
operators from across the nation and encourage more choice at the local
level.
***
Today, I am proposing a new ―Any Time, Any Place, Any Way, Any
Pace public school learning model. Michigan’s state foundation allowance
should not be exclusively tied to the school district a child attends. Instead,
funding needs to follow the student. This will help facilitate dual
enrollment, blended learning, on-line education and early college
attendance. Education opportunities should be available 24 hours a day,
365 days a year.
A model of proficiency-based funding rather than ― seat time
requirements will foster more free market ideas for public schools in
Michigan. This includes mandatory ― schools of choice for every public
school district. Providing open access to a quality education without
boundaries is essential. Resident students in every district should have first
choice to enroll, but no longer should school districts be allowed to opt out
from accepting out-of-district students. In the event more out-of-district
students wish to enroll than space allows, the school should conduct a
random lottery to determine acceptance. I will propose legislation to
accomplish this change.
By introducing an education system that offers unfettered flexibility and
adaptability for student learning models and styles, we will break down
the status quo on how, when, and where students learn.
3
We must minimize all state and local barriers that hinder innovation at the
local level, including seat time regulations, length of school year, length of
school day and week, and the traditional configurations of classrooms and
instruction. Blended learning models, where students receive instruction
from high quality online educators, along with face-to-face instruction
from high quality classroom teachers should be encouraged. School
districts that embed technology into blended classroom instruction or
embrace total online learning, project-based learning, and experiential
learning models will make the system more cost-efficient, competitive,
innovative, and effective in motivating student achievement.
The Governor’s Education Policy Shift
But for the City of Detroit, the Governor has since abandoned his announced education policy and
replaced it with a command and control education policy reminiscent of the old big city monopoly
districts of the last century.
After his 2011 Message, the Governor established the Education Achievement Authority (“EAA”) and
in announcing the new initiative said:
The academic progress in our state's largest district was unacceptable.
We know that a strong public school system will be an important part of
Detroit's comeback, as well as our state's resurgence. That effort is well
underway on multiple fronts.
We also know that what we were doing was not working -- for whatever
reason -- for too many students and for too many years.
During his entire tenure, the Detroit Public Schools (“DPS”) has been under the control of a series of
state-appointed emergency managers.
The Detroit-based Skillman Foundation created a self-appointed group of Detroit “stakeholders” to
address the continuing failure of the DPS. The Governor announced he would accept the Skillman
Coalition Report as the basis for developing his own proposals for Detroit schools. On April 30 he
introduced his own plan saying, in part, in a press release:
DETROIT, Mich. – Detroit children can’t succeed when their schools are
struggling academically and the district is struggling with crushing debt,
Gov. Rick Snyder said today as he outlined a plan to dramatically
restructure the city’s public schools to improve education and finances.
***
Snyder is proposing a holistic approach that includes recommendations
from a community coalition and addresses accountability and higher
standards for all schools.
4
Snyder said the Detroit Public Schools has reached a crisis point where
systemic change is needed. Enrollment has dropped by nearly 100,000
students in the last decade. The district has accumulated about $483
million in debt. Test scores of all Detroit high schoolers show that just 6
percent of high school students are proficient in math and 4 percent are
proficient in science. Two-thirds are not proficient in reading.
***
Under the plan…
A new district – the City of Detroit Education District – would operate the
schools under the management of a seven-member school board of Detroit
residents initially appointed by the mayor and governor….
A new Detroit Education Commission, a five-member board jointly
appointed by the mayor and governor, would serve as an umbrella
organization that hires an education manager who would oversee all
traditional and charter public schools in the city, review performance and
determine timelines for poorly performing schools to show improvement
or be closed. The person would manage universal services, such as
security, for all buildings.
Additionally, this Detroit education manager would oversee a universal
enrollment system that will give students an equal chance at attending the
school of their choice, be it a traditional or charter public school.
***
The Detroit Public Schools would use the existing local millage – about
$72 million per year – to pay off debt. The state would need to provide
funding for the new district to offset the loss of the locally generated
money with up to $72 million annually until the existing district’s debt is
repaid.
The plan isn’t a bailout, but rather an effort to address the Detroit Public
Schools’ debt while making systemic changes to ensure the problems of
the past will not be repeated while ensuring other districts across the state
are not hurt.
Snyder said some aspects of the plan would require changes in state law,
and he is looking forward to working with his partners in the Legislature
as well as leaders in Detroit on the efforts to help all families in the city
and the state as a whole. The legislation is planned to be introduced within
two weeks.
5
After more than five months, the bills are about to be introduced and some members of the Legislature
have seen draft bills and have been briefed on certain aspects of the Governor’s proposals.
This document is designed to outline a different approach to the Detroit schools issue that both addresses
the DPS challenge and preserves and enhances education choice. It is intended to take up the offer of the
Governor to “work with his partners in the Legislature” on this important issue.
The Skillman Coalition
In 2010, the Skillman Foundation released a Report introduced as follows:
Excellent Schools Detroit represents a broad and diverse cross section of
Detroit’s education, government, civic and community, parent, organized
labor, and philanthropic leaders who are committed to ensuring that all
Detroit children receive the great education they deserve.
This citywide education plan reflects months of discussions and
deliberations by coalition members, as well as a series of six community
meetings in November and December, youth focus groups, small group
discussions with multiple stakeholders, and other outreach efforts. We
appreciate the thoughtful recommendations from the many Detroiters who
are as passionate as we are about the need to prepare all students for
college, careers, and life in the 21st century.
In 2014, Skillman again created a group to address Detroit school issues, calling it the “Detroit Schools
Coalition,” which released a number of “Official Recommendations.” The proposals were designed “to
stabilize the public school infrastructure” in Detroit.
The Coalition decided not to draft legislation to implement their proposals and instead decided to work
with Governor Snyder on his similar proposals. The primary differences between the Governor’s
proposals and the Coalition proposals are the Coalition’s position that the DPS School Board should be
restored to power, the EAA abolished and the emergency manager should be dismissed.
But both the Governor and the Coalition have proposed state taxpayer bailout of the DPS and the
recentralization of control.
The House Should Enact Elements of the Governor’s Detroit Plan While later in the paper, I take issue with the Governor’s anti-education choice proposals, there are
elements that that deserve support, particularly those dealing with the DPS.
The Governor’s OldCO/NewCo Approach to DPS Makes Sense
The Governor’s proposal to address the impending insolvency of the DPS makes sense. The Governor
proposes an OldCo/NewCo model, similar to that used in the GM bankruptcy and other corporate
restructurings, to address both the DPS insolvency and the need to continue to provide public schools for
Detroit residents:
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OldCo, the existing DPS, with its emergency manager and the inoperative elected school board,
would be transformed into a legacy public agency whose task is merely to collect property taxes
and pay off DPS. It would have no authority to operate schools or spend money.
NewCo would be an entirely new school district named the Detroit Education District (“DED”)
that would take over and run DPS schools with existing DPS buildings, teachers (including
union contracts) and administrators. But it would be funded solely by state taxpayer funds
deducted from state aid funds that would otherwise go to educating pupils throughout the state.
I reject the assertion of the Skillman Coalition that “the state” is solely responsible for the DPS fiscal
mess. There is plenty of blame to go around for the DPS mess.
I also reject the Governor’s notion that “the plan isn’t a bailout.” Clearly, under the Governor’s plan
state taxpayer money (and future increases) is proposed to be taken away from districts statewide to
support, or bail out, the DPS. Given the source of the funds, it is hard to believe that the proposals will
ensure “other districts across the state are not hurt.”
The taxpaying public and non-Detroit school districts deserve the straight story. This will be an
important subject of House Appropriations Subcommittee on School Aid hearings.
However, insofar as the proposal is also an effort to address the Detroit Public Schools’ debt while
making systemic changes to ensure the problems of the past will not be repeated, it may make it the least
bad alternative.
The DPS is responsible for only about 3.2% of Michigan’s public school pupils. But public schools are a
state responsibility and the state’s constitutional obligation is to establish a statewide system of schools
and provide the level of funding it determines for public schools.
Also, it is clear that education is not a fundamental right with a right to unlimited funding. Recently, in
ACLU v State of Michigan, the Michigan Court of Appealsi restated what has long been the law --
Education Is Not a Fundamental Right.
The courts have long recognized that, for constitutional purposes,
“education, as important as it may be, has been held not to be a
fundamental interest.” … Further, as our Supreme Court observed in
Milliken v Green, 390 Mich 389, 406; 212 NW2d 711 (1973):
It must be apparent by now that we are of the opinion that the
state’s obligation to provide a system of public schools is not the
same as the claimed obligation to provide equality of educational
opportunity. Because of definitional difficulties and differences in
educational philosophy and student ability, motivation,
background, etc., no system of public schools can provide equality
of educational opportunity in all its diverse dimensions. All that
can properly be expected of the state is that it maintain and support
a system of public schools that furnishes adequate educational
services to all children.
7
In sum, the cited provisions of the Michigan Constitution require only that
the Legislature provide for and finance a system of free public schools.
The Michigan Constitution leaves the actual intricacies of the delivery of
specific educational services to the local school districts.
The Governor’s proposal to replace the DPS with a debt free, state funded DED does address and
potentially halt the continuing overspending. But merely changing the governance does not assure any
significant improvement in academic performance.
And his proposals to centralize all Detroit public schools under what he calls an “Education Manager”
(and common political parlance calls a “Czarii”) are exercises of state political power, not education
policy.
Implement Reform/Redesign District
Under former Governor Jennifer Granholm, the Legislature created the State Reform/Redesign District
and Officer as part of the federal Race to the Top process for federal money.
The Michigan Department of Education never implemented the provision by seeking to close any failing
schools.
Governor Snyder, by Executive Order 2015-9, moved the duties, functions and responsibilities of the
State School Reform/Redesign Officer from the Michigan Department of Education to a new State
Reform Office created in the Michigan Department of Technology, Management and Budget
(“DTMB”).
Under the Reform/Redesign District language, schools are placed under the supervision of the State
School Reform/Redesign Office as a result of being identified as the lowest achieving five percent of
schools in the state.
The lowest achieving 5% does not now include failing DPS schools because they are under control of an
emergency manager. It does apply to Detroit-based public school academies, urban high schools and
schools of excellence in the lowest 5 percent. The MDE now designates the lowest achieving five
percent of schools as “Priority Schools.”
According to the MDE website, the goals of the Reform/Redesign Office are:
Establish policies and procedures for rapid turnaround in Priority schools.
Coordinate reform efforts for Priority schools across the Department of Education to ensure
thorough integration of activities and monitoring of schools.
Strengthen teacher effectiveness in Priority schools.
Develop policies and strategies to support effective school leaders in Priority schools, including
principals and teacher leaders.
8
Identify, advocate and recommend policies that ensure the reallocation of academic and financial
resources to support the implementation of school plans.
Identify and develop tools and resources to ensure schools implement effective school redesign
plans.
Under the EO, the duties of the Officer are transferred from the State Superintendent to a person hired
by the Director of DTMB (who is appointed by the Governor).
The Governor, now that he has assumed full control of the Reform/Redesign Office, should aggressively
implement the law the Legislature passed in January of 2004.
Close “Bad” Charter Schools, But Create More “Good” Charters.
Much of the rhetoric against charter schools and education choice is ideological, not based solely on
performance. For example, the Skillman Foundation is quoted as saying:
Charter schools, plagued by a flawed state authorizing system that allows
mediocre academic performance and little financial transparency for
public dollars, offer little hope.
But it is true that Michigan’s charter school process has not always lived up to its promise and there is a
need to more aggressively change or close nonperforming charters.
From an education policy approach, the issue is not how many charters have been closed, but how many
underperforming schools of all types remain? There are too many and the legislature should revisit the
standards for minimum charter school operating authority.
The goal should be to improve on the educational choice policies that have led more than half of the
Detroit residents choosing to go to a Detroit public school to choose a charter school. And many have
selected charter schools outside the boundaries of Detroit.
The proposals in this Paper suggest that different and creative models of public education be considered
to increase the number of successful public schools in the City.
Accountability and Higher Standards for “All” Schools In Detroit
Michigan has been a “local control” state for most of its history with performance standards set by
locally elected school boards.
But the state has increased its intervention in local school performance in recent years with:
Imposition of national Common Core standards on all public schools.
Imposition of statewide testing and assessment on all pupils and schools.
Enacting School Code Section 388.1280c allowing the state to impose changes in local schools
and charter schools, including closure, for the lowest performing 5% of schools.
9
The Governor’s proposal, as well as the Skillman Coalition Report, would create a separate set of
Detroit-only citywide standards for all Detroit-based school buildings, including DPS/DED schools,
EAA schools and charter schools.
The legislature should not defer its authority and that of the State Board of Education to local political
forces in Detroit to establish separate Detroit-only education policies and standards. Education policy is
and should remain a state function.
Support Student Centered Learning
The Governor has been a strong proponent of new developments in student centered learning. These
new approaches to learning should be supported by the legislature and progressive school officials. The
legislature has already made significant investments in the technology infrastructure that is essential for
effective student centered learning. The following are key principles of a student centered learning
approach:
To utilize the power and scalability of technology, including, but not limited to, online course, to
customize education so that a pupil may learn consistent with the pupil’s learning style and
preferences and at the pupil’s pace.
Enable a pupil to acquire knowledge and technology skills necessary to be competitive
technologically anywhere in the world.
Utilize technology to remove the constraints of traditional classroom learning, allowing a pupil
to access learning virtually any time and in any place and giving the pupil the flexibility to take
advantage of the pupil’s peak learning time.
Provide personalized learning. Provide greater access to self-paced programs.
The benefits of student centered learning do not apply only to the City of Detroit; they can benefit
students, teachers and public schools statewide.
The Michigan Legislature has already provided significant funding for the Technology Readiness
Infrastructure Grant (“TRIG”) program in the MDE.
The Legislature should also address efforts to encourage teacher-training programs that support student
centered learning and to provide waivers from the prescriptive requirements that limit better learning
outcomes.
A-F Grading System
The A-F Grading System for schools has been considered for years. I am encouraged by the Governor
including this concept in his proposals.
Partial Waiver of State Education Regulations for Detroit Schools
The Governor’s draft bill suggests that the state superintendent shall:
Waive any otherwise applicable requirements placed on a [Detroit] school
under this [School Code] act, the state school aid act…or a rule
promulgated under this [School Code] or the state school aid act.
10
Under the draft reviewed, no process is provided for applying for or receiving the waivers. It is also
unclear whether the Education Manager can apply or revoke the waivers on a school-by-school basis,
using them to reward cooperative or punish uncooperative schools.
This section could be one of the most important elements of the bill because it applies to “any applicable
requirements.” Most education regulations have some supporter or advocate that will oppose any
waiver. In addition, many state education regulations are imposed, in part, by federal mandates. Finally,
parents and education officials outside Detroit can reasonably ask why Detroit gets the benefit of the
waiver and the rest of the state does not.
I urge the Governor to explain in more detail his concept of regulatory waiver.
The House Should Also Consider Elements Of Skillman Coalition Proposals
While I strongly reject and oppose the Skillman Coalition anti-charter and centralized control proposals,
the Coalition has worked on a long series of changes they propose for Detroit schools. Subject to seeing
the specifics of what the Coalition proposes, I am prepared to consider the following from their list of
Official Proposals:
1. Three-year budget projections to all school districts accounting for demographic trends,
and provide step-down funding to shrinking districts as they manage fixed cost
reductions.
2. Task force to address facilities-related barriers to “clean and safe schools.”
3. Undertake a DPS organizational audit (incorporating both operations and financial
practices) to reallocate resources and adopt best practices to drive improved instruction
and management.
4. Safeguard “independence” of charter from EMOs.
5. Discipline and safety: All school districts engage in efforts to develop, enhance,
strengthen, and adhere to discipline policies.
6. Every school intentionally foster high academic achievement, good citizenship, and
character.
7. A strategy be developed to recruit, develop, competitively compensate and retain high-
quality educators across all schools in Detroit.
8. A Leadership Academy is established to prepare educators to become school leaders,
with specific training on improving achievement at low-performing schools.
9. A task force is developed to consider citywide coordination and consolidation of special
education and bilingual services, so as to facilitate access to high-quality supports as
well as equitable funding.
10. Community-informed action plans are developed to accelerate achievement in low-
performing schools, incorporating strategic partnerships and assistance from proven
turnaround partners, with support from the Michigan Department of Education and
Wayne RESA.
11. Persistently low-performing school programs should close.
12. Stabilize and make DPS Career Technical Education facilities state of art and available
to all Detroit public high school students.
13. Career Technical Education should include quality career curricula, dual enrollment with
colleges and universities, and pre-apprentice courses aligned with registered apprentice
programs.
11
Preserving Education Choice Is a Public and a Legislative Priority The Legislature has its own views on education policy and is the branch of government given the
primary responsibility to design and fund the public education system. Thus, while I appreciate the
Governor’s leadership in addressing in the Detroit schools issue, the Legislature will also advance its
own education policy priorities.
For 20 years Michigan has delivered its mandatory enrollment, state-funded K-12 public school system
through an Educational Choice Model. In addition to charter schools, Michigan’s school districts operate
a wide range of alternative schools and engage in robust cross-district enrollment to provide educational
choices for pupils and parents.
Perhaps no area has made greater use of education choice than residents of the City of Detroit. Facing
the financial and academic collapse of many (but not all) DPS schools, Detroit residents have made their
wishes clear:
Many families leave Detroit for better and safer schools in the suburbs.
Other Detroiters remain in the City sacrifice to take their children to better schools in the
suburbs.
More than half of the remaining Detroit-resident pupils have selected charter schools over DPS
schools.
An unacceptable number of Detroit young people continue to drop out of public schools.
Also, a dwindling number of Detroiters are able to attend independent and parochial schools in
the City. The announced closure to outstanding Friends School in Detroit is a troubling example.
Unfortunately, in addressing the very real challenges of the DPS, Governor Snyder and the Skillman
Coalition have attempted to “save” the DPS system by severely restricting and centralizing control over
charter schools and parent choice in Detroit and adjacent districts.
I believe the state can address the DPS challenges without abandoning opportunities for educational
choice. Instead, I propose to address that real deficiencies in Michigan’s charter and choice systems and
create even more opportunities for alternative educational strategies for Detroiters.
Policy Framework Should Support Choice
In contrast to the centralization strategy being proposed by the executive branch, the following is
proposed as a policy framework for the legislature as it begins its deliberations:
Within available resources, the parent or legal guardian of each child is
entitled to choose among available public or nonpublic schools for some
or all of the education necessary to develop the child’s intellectual
capabilities and vocational skills in a safe and positive environment.
Where the parent/student choice model is not working, it should be fixed, not thrown out to revert to the
old monopoly structure of the last century.
12
Instead, the legislature should advance an effective education choice approach throughout the state,
including a serious look at these concepts:
Stimulate innovative teaching methods and improved teacher training.
Expanded use of selective enrollment to give pupils and appropriate education environment.
Permit more adjunct instructors and non-certificated teachers under the oversight of Master
Teachers.
Create new professional opportunities in a school designed and managed by teachers at the
school site level.
Provide greater choices among public schools.
Permits parents and pupils to choose globally competitive schools.
Expand public entities permitted to authorize and supervise schools.
Provide for new forms of public school governance.
Permit tuition requirements for hybrid schools.
Permit cultural institution-sponsored schools.
What follows are responses to certain elements of the Governor’s proposal followed by our high priority
proposals.
I reject the central Education Manager approach for Detroit. It is a significant step backwards, because it
re-establishes district “ownership” of students. I believe it is unfair and untenable and will be politically
unpalatable when it is revealed to be limitations on Detroit parents but not on others in the state.
Proponents of this approach should consider the optics of one set of rules (more restrictive) for Detroit
parents, but another set of rules for all other parents.
Reject Centralized “Uniform” Enrollment
I reject the proposal for total control of school enrollment by a single politically appointed Education
Manager. The Governor’s proposal treats all school “seats” alike and is more focused on filling seats in
underutilized DPS schools that giving parents and students the capacity for choice through which more
than half of the Detroit-resident students have selected charters.
I believe Detroiters also have rights under Section 10 of the Revised School Code:
It is the natural, fundamental right of parents and legal guardians to
determine and direct the care, teaching, and education of their children.
The public schools of this state serve the needs of the pupils by
cooperating with the pupil's parents and legal guardians to develop the
pupil's intellectual capabilities and vocational skills in a safe and positive
environment.
Not every school is the same. Each school has its emphasis and culture and may appeal to some and not
other parents and pupils. If the goal is to keep Detroit young people in school, assigning them through a
centralized bureaucracy and computer algorithms is not the way to do it.
However, I support a common enrollment timeline for all schools in Detroit. In addition, all Detroit
public and private schools should be encouraged to participate in a voluntary program to help educate
13
Detroiters as to the diversity and opportunities in City schools. Such a “clearing house” as opposed to a
mandatory enrollment system can better serve the public and the schools.
Reject Imposing Detroit Controls On Contiguous Districts and Schools
The Governor’s announced proposal is to solve the DPS problems, in part, by reaching out and imposing
controls on some suburban schools and districts simply because they are providing education
opportunities to too many Detroiters. We should simply reject this idea.
It is surprising that the administration would propose this approach on the 50 th Anniversary of Milliken
v. Bradleyiii, the United States Supreme Court case dealing with the planned desegregation busing of
public school students across district lines among 53 school districts in metropolitan Detroit.
Proposed Legislative Reforms The legislature should use the opportunity presented by the Detroit schools crisis to enact more positive
changes in Michigan laws to enhance educational opportunity and choice. I will submit proposals to
accomplish the following:
Education Opportunity Card
The Constitutionally-guaranteed commitment1 of Michigan taxpayers to each family of a school aged
child resident in the State is significant – approximately $7,200 per year for 12 years or over $86,000.
Public funding of education through K-14 would provide a benefit of more than $100,000 per pupil in
2015 dollars.
When the Clinton Administration was promoting the delivery of government benefits from a then-
named Electronic Benefits Transfer (“EBT”) card, Governor John Engler proposed, but was unable to
pursue, the idea of delivering the new school choice per pupil funding guarantees through an “Education
Opportunity Card” similar to the welfare based EBT card. With the changes in technology over 20 years,
and the need to refresh education choice, the Education Opportunity Card concept (now probably be a
smart phone “app”) should be revisited.
Tuition Pupils in Public Schools
Rather than force some Detroit parents to move out of the City for challenging education opportunities,
the law should allow the establishment of specialized, high standards and challenging environment for
those families that demand a better service from their public school by allowing a combination of public
1 Art. IX, § 11. State school aid fund; source; distribution; guarantee to local school district. There shall be established a state school aid fund which shall be used exclusively for aid to school districts, higher education, and school employees' retirement systems, as provided by law. *** the state shall guarantee that the total state and local per
pupil revenue for school operating purposes for each local school district shall not be less than the 1994-95 total state and
local per pupil revenue for school operating purposes for that local school district…..
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funds and tuition/tax credits for people willing to invest to improve their own public school. These
specialized schools would be public schools with enhanced funding and would remain under the
ultimate and immediate control of state education authorities. The policy should also allow school
districts and charter schools to enroll tuition paying out-of-state pupils.
Extended Learning Opportunities
Students should be able to choose (without the need for their home district’s approval) to participate in
any program approved by any school district in the state. Districts may partner with community
organizations, other government entities or private organizations to provide educational services that
students may use to meet their ILP goals and demonstrate mastery of core competencies.
Adjunct instructors, Including Veterans
Michigan should adopt the most advanced state law to encourage the effective use of business and
professional people and faculty members of state universities or community colleges with subject matter
teaching experience. Adjunct instructors should have a valid “adjunct instructor certificate” issued by
the superintendent of public instruction and be subject to appropriate oversight of Master Teachers.
Successful completion of college level equivalent courses must be granted credit and count toward
graduation and subject area requirements.
In addition, the School Code should be amended to assure that our returning veterans, particularly those
you have been engaged in providing military training, have a way to use that experience in joining the
ranks of professional teachers in public schools.
Mastery of Core Competencies
Students should be able to progress by demonstrating mastery of standard competencies outlined in the
Michigan Merit Curriculum and Common Core Standards. These competencies may be demonstrated
through end-of-course exams, but also may be demonstrated in a wide variety of other methods in
accordance with a student’s individual learning plan (“ILP”).
Selective Enrollment for Specialized Schools
Change from “random selection” requirement for certain charter schools. I believe all schools should be
able to using the same selective techniques permitted by the DPS. The success of the DPS’s selective
Renaissance High School, Cass Technical High School, Communication & Media Arts High, and
Detroit School of Arts is proof that, for some students, higher standards and challenging schools lead to
success.
The random selection criteria should continue to apply to most public schools and the selective criteria
limited to specialized enrollment categories
Cultural institution-affiliated school
Like the long standing Henry Ford Academyiv, there may be other opportunities for schools formally
affiliated with a §501(c)(3) cultural institution or government instrumentality. These schools should
15
require agreement of continuing support and guidance. Not more than 1/3 of school board members can
be affiliated with the cultural institution.
Michigan already has a comparable model – the urban high school academy. These special forms of
charter schools must have a stated goal of increasing high school graduation rates and receive financial
and educational support from a private applicant entity that has net assets of at least $50,000,000.00.
Globally competitive school
Michigan should permit and fund, with state and tuition/scholarship funds, highly selective schools for
innovative, specialized learning environment for highly motivated pupils who have a genuine interest in
the curriculum of the school. These schools should be locally developed and designed for performance
at an educational level equal to or exceeding the highest-performing schools anywhere. It should include
a competitive admission process based on articulated standards. Special designation must require
academic standards that meet high international testing and ranking standards. These schools may recruit
from anywhere in the world and charge tuition to non-Michigan residents.
Open Services
Districts should be allowed to operate learning and instructional support facilities outside of their
traditional geographic boundaries for the purpose of supporting students enrolled in
online/blended/distance/extended learning programs or schools.
Quality Study of Middle and Upper Middle Class Schools
There is a legitimate focus on the challenges of low performance of many minority and low-income
schools. But the ultimate economic success of Michigan also depends on the education outcomes of
middle and upper-middle class schools as Michigan competes in the global economy. I will authorize the
State Superintendent of Public Instruction to create an index ranking Michigan high schools as though
they were nations as a device for creating middle and upper-middle class family demand for an
education market and tools for managing their children's educations. According to many parents and by
many measures, Michigan's "good" public school systems aren't as good as many people think. Because
the state is home to some of the worst school systems in the country, the rest of the lot naturally looks
pretty good by comparison. There has been a lot of work done on this issue, including the "Global
Report Card" last year (http://www.globalreportcard.org/), which ranks every school district in the U.S.
based on international benchmarks. The MDE will analyze this data specifically for Michigan school
districts and see how we stack up.
Transparency In Allocation of Federal Education Funds.
The State of Michigan and its public schools receive and spend approximately $1 billion in federal funds
each year. Because this is considered “free money,” the Legislature and the public pay little attention to
how these funds drive and limit education policy choice for Michigan officials. Gov. Snyder has now
proposed to take a slice of federal education funds to start up his replacement for the DPS. The
Legislature should revisit the idea of using some of the federal funds for administration to create a
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transparent bipartisan, bicameral entity in the Legislative Council to develop a deeper understanding of
how federal education funds are used in the state.
No Discrimination Against Home Schools
Families who are homeschooling their children are part of the State’s education system and
homeschooled students are entitled to access the free public school system. Some of the most
innovative approaches to education are coming from these homeschoolers. But, ever since the ruling in
Snyder v. Charlotte Schools, homeschooled students have been unnecessarily linked to nonpublic
schools, with the same restrictions. Existing restrictions and interpretations from the MDE should be
removed to allow homeschooled students the option to take some essential courses from the public
schools.
I urge other members of the Education Committee to advance their proposals for improving student
learning and the performance of public schools throughout the State.
Respectfully Submitted,
Rep. Tim Kelly (R-94th District)
# # # i http://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2014/11/07/appeals-aclu-highland-park-schools/18641651/ ii See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._executive_branch_czars iii 418 U.S. 717 (1974) iv http://dbn.hfli.org