Posts Tagged ‘Education Reform’

The Teachers’ Unions’ Last Stand (The New York Times)

Monday, May 24th, 2010

The New York Times Magazine runs an excellent piece on ‘Race to the Top’ and the push for education reform. Here is an excerpt from the article:

The winners of the Race would be those states that submitted the best blueprints for fulfilling the reform agenda, which includes allowing school districts to take over failing schools, improving curriculum standards and encouraging school innovation (which means, in part, allowing charter schools to flourish). But what the reformers have come to believe matters most is good teachers.

You can read the complete article here.


Examiner.com: Eliot’s Push for Charter School Legislation

Monday, November 30th, 2009

The Examiner.com covered the Charter School debate in Maine and noted Eliot’s position as one of the most vocal supporters of Charter Schools to date:

Independent Eliot Cutler has been one of the most vocal supporters so far.  Matthew Gagnon of Pine Tree Politics has stated that this is likely a clear sign that Cutler is working to define himself as a balanced pragmatist.  “He will have a good base in the consciousness of the voter that can supplement his left leaning history and reputation with a much more balanced “the best of both worlds” image,” said Gagnon.  This move puts Cutler in direct conflict with the Maine Education Association’s position on charter schools, usually an ally of liberal candidates.

Cutler has reaffirmed his support for charter schools and his disappointment in the Baldacci administration for not supporting charter legislation.  Cutler wrote to Governor Baldacci after news broke Tuesday no charter legislation would be put forward next session.  In the letter, Cutler urged Baldacci to reconsider his decision to kill charter legislation.  Cutler is concerned, as others have been, that Maine will miss out on federal Race to the Top funding, which we desperately need, if charter legislation is not enacted.

“These Augusta decisions are just plain wrongheaded,” Cutler said. “We are losing out on millions of dollars, denying our children important educational opportunities, and cheating the future of our state.  Sadly, Maine children are paying the price because the same special interests and tired partisan politics keep getting in the way.”  Cutler went on to say that if the governor did not enact charter school legislation, he would as governor in 2011.

You can read the complete article here with Eliot’s comments highlighted in yellow.


Cutler Urges Gov. Baldacci to Reconsider Charter Schools (Augusta Insider)

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Eliot received coverage in blog Augusta Insider for his vigorous support for Charter Schools in Maine:

Independent Eliot Cutler has been one of the most vocal supporters so far. Matthew Gagnon of Pine Tree Politics has stated that this is likely a clear sign that Cutler is working to define himself as a balanced pragmatist. “He will have a good base in the consciousness of the voter that can supplement his left leaning history and reputation with a much more balanced “the best of both worlds” image,” said Gagnon. This move puts Cutler in direct conflict with the Maine Education Association’s position on charter schools, usually an ally of liberal candidates.

Cutler has reaffirmed his support for charter schools and his disappointment in the Baldacci administration for not supporting charter legislation. Cutler wrote to Governor Baldacci after news broke Tuesday no charter legislation would be put forward next session. In the letter, Cutler urged Baldacci to reconsider his decision to kill charter legislation. Cutler is concerned, as others have been, that Maine will miss out on federal Race to the Top funding, which we desperately need, if charter legislation is not enacted.

“These Augusta decisions are just plain wrongheaded,” Cutler said. “We are losing out on millions of dollars, denying our children important educational opportunities, and cheating the future of our state. Sadly, Maine children are paying the price because the same special interests and tired partisan politics keep getting in the way.”

You can read the complete article here with Eliot’s comments highlighted in yellow.


Steve Bowen Notes Eliot’s Support for Charter Schools (Maine Heritage Policy Center)

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Steve Bowen from the Maine Heritage Policy Center blog talks about Charter Schools and commends Eliot for his support of Charter Schools. Below is an excerpt:

One of the many, many gubernatorial hopefuls has jumped into the debate over charter schools. Eliot Cutler, who came to the notice of many Mainers with a well-received January speech on higher education and who is running for governor as an independent, posted the following on his campaign blog last Friday:

“Dwindling state revenues are forcing state officials to make massive cuts — millions of dollars — in the state’s share of funding for K-12 education in Maine’s public schools. At the same time, the federal Department of Education is getting ready to hand out hundreds of millions of dollars to states in the Race to the Top program.

But not to Maine. MPBN reports that Maine will be standing in the corner, likely ineligible to receive our share. Why? Because we are one of the few states left in America where charter schools are not allowed.”

In an October 20 interview with blogger Derek Viger, Cutler that he supported charter schools and “regretted” that the legislature had failed to pass the charter school bill. “When I am governor,” he said, “I will pass it.” He continued on, saying that the bill “had the support of educators and parents from around the state, but another good idea was lost because the same old tired politics kept us from innovating and moving forward.”

Sounds very much like what I was saying as Maine’s legislature killed the charter school bill last spring.

Cutler even makes mention in his Friday blog post of the new U.S. Chamber of Commerce report I mentioned in a blog post last week.

So, there is at least one gubernatorial candidate talking the talk on charter schools.

You can read the complete blog entry here.


Eliot Cutler Calls on Maine Legislature to Enact Charter School Legislation (Pine Tree Politics)

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

Matt Gagnon from blog Pine Tree Politics wrote an article about Independent candidate Eliot Cutler’s call on key legislators to enact charter schools in Maine. Below is an excerpt:

Cutler has sent emails to Senator Bill Diamond and Representative Emily Cain (the chairs of the legislature’s Appropriations Committee), pressing them to act quickly to bring the question of charter schools back up to the Maine Senate.

Cutler (correctly) asserts that Maine is missing out on federal funds that could provide some new money for Maine’s education system. Specifically at issue is the “Race to the Top” program, which is a Federal effort to bring more schools up to par with national educational standards.

Click here to read the full story.


BLOG: 100-20+0=?

Friday, November 13th, 2009

The arithmetic isn’t hard. Any third grader in Maine could figure out the answer to this problem. Yet, the answer seems to have eluded their state fathers and mothers!

Dwindling state revenues are forcing state officials to make massive cuts — millions of dollars — in the state’s share of funding for K-12 education in Maine’s public schools. At the same time, the federal Department of Education is getting ready to hand out hundreds of millions of dollars to states in the Race to the Top program.

But not to Maine. MPBN reports that Maine will be standing in the corner, likely ineligible to receive our share. Why? Because we are one of the few states left in America where charter schools are not allowed. Indeed, in a recent, bipartisan joint report that reviewed programs in all 50 states, conservative and progressive national think tanks ranked Maine’s K-12 education performance near the bottom, concluding that “Maine does a poor job managing its schools in a way that encourages thoughtful innovation.” (Read the entire report here. Click on the map of Maine to see the report on Maine.)

All states are suffering today. But while other states will find some federal funds landing in their coffers to ease the pain in local school districts, Maine won’t. Can’t our state leaders add and subtract?

Now would be a good time for the Maine Legislature to re-examine the policy prohibiting charter schools…and to fix it.


VIDEO: Eliot’s interview with Connie Brown on ‘In & Around Augusta&’

Friday, November 6th, 2009

Eliot talks about education,  job creation, the economy and important ballot measures during a recent interview on ‘In and Around Augusta.’

The interview is split up into four segments.

PART I

PART II

PART III

PART IV


BLOG: While the Governor was in Europe . . .

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

. . . I was in China.  I was in Beijing for a week, meeting with Chinese clients — businesses and investors — who are looking closely at opportunities in the United States.  It’s given me another chance to reflect on what lessons we can learn from the extraordinary progress the Chinese have made in rebuilding their national economy, creating jobs, increasing incomes and educating their young people.

More than just about anything else, the story of modern China has been written in the extension of education to vast numbers – hundreds of millions – of people who never before had even dreamed of it. The result is that China has lifted more people out of poverty in less time than any other nation in the history of the world. And for individual Chinese citizens it has meant better jobs, higher incomes and expanded opportunity.

I have written and spoken about these changes and what they mean for both the Chinese and the rest of the world, here and here and here.

Our challenge in the United States and in Maine is to keep pace. Our educational system remains in important respects a much better one than the more rigid and rote Chinese approach, but these advantages will be fleeting if we don’t maintain and improve our public schools and universities.

If you want to know what I think we need to do in Maine, please take a look at my presentation – Keeping Pace: An Agenda for Maine in a Changing World.