pasc news, february 2011

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PASC News Volume 35 Issue 6 February 2011 e 2011 state conference theme, “With A Little Help From My Friends,” captures the idea of individual help, school help, and community help, all made easier with people work- ing together. Conference sessions dur- ing the November 10–12 conference will be held on the campuses of the new Altoona Area Junior HS and across the street at Altoona Area Senior HS. Altoona Student Councils will have e Beatles featured as their decorating and musical theme, and will focus on the 75th anniversary of PASC which was founded in Altoona in 1932. ey plan to wow us all as we return to Altoona this November. e registration fee will be $110 per delegate. Registration and welcome activities will be held ursday afternoon in both buildings. A free dinner for advisors and an evening opening general session will be held at Altoona Area Senior HS. Student delegates will go to host homes for dinner and will return to the high school for the general session. e evening will conclude with a concert/dance with a Beatles band in the high school gym. On Friday, an advisor break- fast will be held at the Ramada Inn while students eat at host homes. e general session, workshop sessions, and lunch for students and advisors will be held on the combined campus of Altoona Area Junior and Senior High Schools. On Friday night, the banquet and separate middle level and high school dances will take place at the Blair County Convention Center. e conference will end on Saturday morning by 11:00 a.m. with delegates having a maximum travel time of four hours from this truly central Pennsylvania location. In 2011, PASC will return to the use of host homes for student delegates, but will also provide an option for schools that require that their students be housed in hotels. Please note however that the number of hotel rooms for the housing of both advisor and student del- egates will be limited and that hotels need to be booked early due to a home Penn State foot- ball game versus Nebraska in nearby State College the same weekend. is causes Altoona hotel rooms to be booked quickly. (Note reservation closing date for each hotel.) Rooms have been reserved at a conference rate at the following hotels: Ramada Inn: 814-946- 1631—$99.00; 150 rooms reserved. is is the site of the advisor breakfast and round table workshop Friday morning and get-together after banquet Friday night. Must book by October 10, 2011. Comfort Inn, Duncansville: 814-693-1800—$99.95; 35 rooms reserved. Must book continued on page 2 Altoona to Be Site of 75th PASC State Conference State President Mariam Ahmad, State Conference Co- Chairs Jordan Weber and Sarah Arpino, and State Confer- ence Advisor David Aboud.l from Altoona Area HS are looking forward to hosting the 75th PASC Conference. INSIDE THIS ISSUE News & Notes ..................... 2 • Staff Applications for Summer Workshop • Council of Excellence Principal-Advisor-Leader Conferences .................... 2 Dodgeball Tournaments for the Keep It! Campaign.... 3 Secrets of Successful Legisla- tive Contacts .................... 4 National Teen Dating Violence Awareness Re- sources............................... 4 Google Voice: A New Ap- proach to the Suggestion Box...................................... 5 Mark Your Calendar for Summer Workshops ....... 5 Junior Member to Be Se- lected for State Board of Education........................... 6 New Governor Brings New Era of Educational Policy .................................. 7 Things to Do This Spring ... 7

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Monthly newsletter of the Pennsylvania Association of Student Councils.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News Volume 35Issue 6

February 2011

The 2011 state conference theme, “With A Little Help From My Friends,” captures the idea of individual help, school help, and community help, all made easier with people work-ing together.

Conference sessions dur-ing the November 10–12 conference will be held on the campuses of the new Altoona Area Junior HS and across the street at Altoona Area Senior HS. Altoona Student Councils will have The Beatles featured as their decorating and musical theme, and will focus on the 75th anniversary of PASC which was founded in Altoona in 1932. They plan to wow us all as we return to Altoona this November.

The registration fee will be $110 per delegate. Registration and welcome activities will be held Thursday afternoon in both buildings. A free dinner for advisors and an evening opening general session will be held at Altoona Area Senior HS. Student delegates will go to host homes for dinner and

will return to the high school for the general session. The evening will conclude with a concert/dance with a Beatles band in the high school gym.

On Friday, an advisor break-fast will be held at the Ramada Inn while students eat at host homes. The general session, workshop sessions, and lunch for students and advisors will be held on the combined campus of Altoona Area Junior and Senior High Schools. On Friday night, the banquet and separate middle level and high school dances will take place at the Blair County Convention Center.

The conference will end on Saturday morning by 11:00 a.m. with delegates having a maximum travel time of four hours from this truly central Pennsylvania location.

In 2011, PASC will return to the use of host homes for student delegates, but will also provide an option for schools that require that their students

be housed in hotels. Please note however that the number of hotel rooms for the housing of both advisor and student del-egates will be limited and that hotels need to be booked early due to a home Penn State foot-ball game versus Nebraska in nearby State College the same weekend. This causes Altoona hotel rooms to be booked quickly. (Note reservation closing date for each hotel.) Rooms have been reserved at a conference rate at the following hotels:• Ramada Inn: 814-946-

1631—$99.00; 150 rooms reserved. This is the site of the advisor breakfast and round table workshop Friday morning and get-together after banquet Friday night. Must book by October 10, 2011.

• Comfort Inn, Duncansville: 814-693-1800—$99.95; 35 rooms reserved. Must book

continued on page 2

Altoona to Be Site of 75th PASC State Conference

State President Mariam Ahmad, State Conference Co-Chairs Jordan Weber and Sarah Arpino, and State Confer-ence Advisor David Aboud.l from Altoona Area HS are looking forward to hosting the 75th PASC Conference.

InsIde ThIs Issue

News & Notes ..................... 2

• Staff Applications for

Summer Workshop

• Council of Excellence

Principal-Advisor-Leader

Conferences ....................2

Dodgeball Tournaments for

the Keep It! Campaign .... 3

Secrets of Successful Legisla-

tive Contacts .................... 4

National Teen Dating

Violence Awareness Re-

sources ............................... 4

Google Voice: A New Ap-

proach to the Suggestion

Box ...................................... 5

Mark Your Calendar for

Summer Workshops ....... 5

Junior Member to Be Se-

lected for State Board of

Education ........................... 6

New Governor Brings

New Era of Educational

Policy .................................. 7

Things to Do This Spring ... 7

Page 2: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net2

News & NotesDates and sites have been set for this fall’s PASC-sponsored

one-day conferences for school teams consisting of four student leaders, student council or class government advisors, and a prin-cipal. Each PAL Conference will include a keynote speaker; small group “birds-of-a-feather” sessions for administrators, advisors, and student leaders; a luncheon; collaborative time for each school team; and a closing wrap-up to the day which will include ideas to be shared by the school teams.

Three sites have been selected for the 2011 conferences (which were last held in the fall of 2008). These sites are:• Tuesday, September 27—Chadwick at Wexford (near the inter-

section of the PA turnpike and I-79)• Wednesday, September 28—Penn Tech Campus in William-

sport• Thursday, September 29—Holiday Inn-Grantville (on I-78 near

the intersection with I-81, near Hershey)

Mark your calendars now and watch for complete details about the program and registration forms to be mailed to PASC member advisors in April.

Staff Applications Available Now for Summer WorkshopsPASC is seeking students who will graduate in 2011 or

have graduated in 2009 or 2010 to serve as group advisors for one of the five PASC Summer Leadership Workshops. Additionally, advisors and other teachers or individuals with experience in leadership development are encouraged to apply for teaching positions at the PASC Blue (7–9 grade) workshops or the PASC Gold (9–12 grade) workshops for the summer of 2011.

Applications are now available at www.pasc.net or by contacting the PASC Office at [email protected] or call-ing 215-280-9299. Deadline for submitting applications is February 25, 2011.

NASC to Hold Lead Conference in ConnecticutNASC will sponsor a LEAD Conference at a familiar site

to PASC member schools on April 1–3, 2011. Located on I-95 just across the border from New York, the Marriott Hotel in Stamford, CT will serve as the host site.

The schedule for the conference runs from registration on Friday at 3:00 until the closing general session on Sunday morning, which ends at 10:30. Keynote speakers Heather Schultz and Alton Jamison will inspire attendees, while op-portunities to learn and grow as student leaders and advisors abound. The schedule includes:

Friday

Registration

General Session with Keynote Speaker

Interactive Program

Saturday

Student Reach program

Student-Led Workshops

Large Group Workshops

Dinner On Your Own

Stu Shafer’s “Traveling Junk-Show

Sunday

Closing General Session with Keynote Speaker

For program details and to register, go to www.LEADCon-ferences.org, choose your site then click on the registration information link. Deadline to register online to receive the member school early-bird rate ($165) is March 2, 2011.

Principal-Advisor-Leaders Conferences To Be Held in September 2011

by October 20.• Comfort Suites, Altoona:

814-942-2600—$99.95; 25 rooms reserved. Must book by October 20.

• Holiday Inn Express: 814-944-9661—$99.95 includes free breakfast; 30 rooms reserved. Must book by October 20.

• Super 8: 814-942-5350—$85.00. Must book by October 10.

• Quality Inn: 814-944-4581—$62.99 includes continental breakfast; 25 rooms reserved. Must book by October 15.

• Hampton Inn: 814-941-3500 —$159; 30 rooms reserved. Must book by October 10.

When you call to reserve your room, mention that you are with the PASC Conference.

Conference information will also be available at www.

pasc.net and at the conference website www.pasc75.org as of February 1. Advisors will have the opportunity to pre-register their schools for the Confer-ence this spring. Details of the registration process will be announced in March.

The Pennsylvania Asso-ciation of Student Councils was founded in 1932 by five schools: Altoona HS, Ebens-burg HS, Kane HS, State College HS and York HS. In 1934 Altoona HS hosted the first PASC State Conference, so it is only fitting that PASC delegates will again come to Al-toona for the 75th PASC State Conference in November.

Circle Your Calendars Now and Join Us in Altoona November 10–12, 2011 for the 75th PASC State Conference!

Altoona to Host 75th PASC State Conference (cont’d from page 1)

Page 3: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net 3

In January, we invited PASC members to celebrate the prog-ress made in Ivory Park, South Africa through their support of the “Keep It!” Campaign. Since the project’s inception 18 months ago, an expanding network of social entrepre-neurs has allowed us to make significant advances toward our goal. A library has been built, books are on the shelves, and we are funding the salaries of several full-time teachers. We have raised half of our fundraising goal. As we look forward to continued progress in 2011, we would like to introduce an exciting yearlong initiative inspired by several of our PASC member schools and organized by our regional representatives.

This year, PASC and “Keep It!” are sponsoring a statewide contest to challenge member schools to act locally and reach globally. With this contest, schools are invited to host dodgeball tournaments in sup-port of the Keep It! Campaign. The tournament is based on a scalable, replicable project model first used by students at North Allegheny. With the assistance of NA students and staff, PASC and Keep It! supporters have developed a how-to manual that documents the secrets to planning a suc-cessful dodgeball tournament. This manual is now available to all PASC member schools.

In addition to presenting students with valuable lessons in leadership, the goal of the dodgeball project is to fund our continuing efforts in Ivory Park AND to support community

PASC Introduces a Scalable, Replicable Model ProjectDodgeball Tourneys support the “Keep It!” Campaign

needs in your own hometown. This concept is being modeled by one of our partner schools. At Oak Park Elementary, stu-dents have created a sunshine fund. Monies raised through-out the year are shared by the Oak Park and the Ivory Park communities. Support of the sunshine fund allows students and staff to care for their own neighbors while building con-nections with people thousands of miles away.

It is hoped that through Keep It! Dodgeball Tournaments, schools can provide support to their own communities and to Ivory Park. The details for the dodgeball tournament contest are as follows:• Our goal is to recruit sixty

schools to sponsor Keep It! Dodgeball Tournaments before October 15, 2011.

• Between January 15th and March 15th, PASC will promote the tournament idea and recruit schools to register online at www.keepitcam-paign.com/dodgeball.

To encourage schools to go the extra mile, PASC is of-fering the following prizes to the schools and districts that provide the most support.• For the PASC district that

registers the greatest percent-

age of their member schools by March 15th (number of schools registered divided by the number of schools in that district), Bob Tryanski has agreed to speak at their District Conference or Lead-ership Workshop for free (host school will cover travel expenses).

• For the school that raises the most money to support the “Keep It!” Campaign (dollars raised divided by the number of students in the school), Bob Tryanski has agreed to offer a free assembly and leadership workshop next fall (host school will cover travel expenses). The win-ning school will also receive a free registration to the PASC State Conference at Altoona High School.

For your convenience, a link has been established that provides easy access to the how-to manual, enrollment form, publicity templates, and everything you need to know about hosting a dodgeball tour-nament at your school: http://www.keepitcampaign.com/dodgeball

The link also includes a direct connection to the Keep It! Campaign’s Facebook page.

Don’t forget to join our commu-nity on Facebook and share your story with other PASC schools.

In addition to sharing your story on the Keep It! Facebook page, this year’s PASC regional representatives have also been challenged to make contact with their regional student council presidents via Face-book. This will be a great tool for sharing ideas about running the tournaments, challenging neighboring schools, and estab-lishing bragging rights on who has raised the most funds for Ivory Park. If you haven’t heard from your rep, find out who he or she is and send them a friend request.

“Look at the organizations that have had tremendous success mobilizing high school students to support their cause through special programs—organizations like Habitat for Humanity, Special Olym-pics, or the American Cancer Society—and ask yourself what these organizations have in common. I think the answer is that each of them has an involvement template that any organization can follow,” says Tryanski. “If other schools embrace this idea and imple-ment the strategies outlined by the team at North Allegheny, the Dodgeball Tournament could easily turn out to be our Relay for Life. The possibilities are exciting!”

By working together to build a network of social entrepre-neurs, there is no limit to the positive impact that we can create…in our own communi-ties and across the globe in Ivory Park.

Page 4: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net4

Through participation in the PASC Student Summit in Harrisburg, student leaders often begin to see the possibili-ties for making a difference on issues beyond their local school or community. Working with state and national legislators is one way to achieve lasting change.

What’s the best way to ap-proach these policymakers? There are many options available: e-mails, telephone calls, letters, and personal visits. If you are trying to influ-ence something about to happen, e -mails and phone calls are the best option. If you need to provide detailed information and have a longer period of time in which to work, a per-sonal visit or letter may be more appropriate.

Whether you write, call, or visit your legislator, some basic guidelines are applicable to all methods of contact.

n Identify yourself as a con-stituent by providing your ad-dress, location of your school, and congressional district. Identify yourself as a member of the Pennsylvania Associa-tion of Student Councils and give your area of expertise.

n Know your issue. Iden-tify clearly the legislation or program you support and the impact it will have on your school, organization, or local community. Know and use statistics and facts whenever possible. Restrict yourself to one, or at most, two topics.

n Make it local. You can be most effective in conveying a

Secrets of Successful Legislative Contactsmessage by relating issues to your own personal experience. Use local examples, statistics, and stories to show the value of programs in your community or the impact of changes on your school.

n Know the policymaker. Learn as much as possible about the legislator and where he or she stands on issues. How has he voted in the past?

What is her political philoso-phy? Legislators who support your position can help you develop your strategy; those who “don’t know” need lots of your attention; and those who are opposed can sometimes be persuaded to change their minds. Never assume you know what your legislator thinks—find out. Usually, legislators keep a copy of their biography and information about their philosophical positions on their Web sites.

n Be concise in your written or verbal communications. Legislators and their staff have limited time to devote to any one issue. A one- or two-page fact sheet can summarize your points and is more likely to be read and filed for future refer-

ence than a 10-page document. In face-to-face meetings, high-light key issues and leave be-hind a fact sheet as a reminder of essential points you want the legislator to have on hand.

n Put thoughts in your own words. If a legislator receives numerous e-mails or letters with nearly identical wording, he or she may discount them as part of an organized pressure campaign.

n Be specific about the action you want the legislator to take, such as vote in a certain manner; introduce legislation; co-sponsor a bill; or make a floor statement.

n Be constructive. Be pleasant, polite, and use a “soft-sell” approach even if a legislator does not agree to support you

in a specific instance. If there are problems with a particular program or bill,

admit it and identify alternative solutions. Do not threaten or make negative comments. You are looking for a continuing relationship and will probably need the legislator’s support on other issues in the future. In the meantime, feel confident that you have shared your in-formation in a positive manner.

n Follow up and continue the relationship. Follow legislation throughout the legislative pro-cess and be prepared to contact your legislator several times on one issue. You can contact the legislator prior to a commit-tee vote, before a floor vote, or when there is a lot of press activity on the issue. Keep the pressure on him or her through your continued contact on the issue.

If participation in the Student Summit stimulated interest in legislative action, keep it going with these tips for working with legislators.

February is National Teen Dating Violence Awareness and Prevention Month. If your Council is sponsoring any projects to help raise awareness of this important issue, here are some resources that might help:

W The Warning Signs of Digital Dating Abuse www.youtube.com/watch?v=agDzWqt9TZU

W Office on Violence Against Women www.ovw.usdoj.gov/teen_dating_violence.htm

W Teen Dating Violence in-formation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov/ViolencePre-vention/intimatepartnervio-lence/teen_dating_violence.html

W Love Is Respect www.loveisrespect.org/

W Love Is Not Abuse www.loveisnotabuse.com

W Am I in a Healthy Relationship? www.kidshealth.org/teen/question/emotions/healthy_relationship.html

W Guide to Healthy Relationships www.youngwomen shealth.org/healthy_relat.html

W Love Doesn’t Have to Hurt Teens www.apa.org/pi/families/resources/love-teens.pdf

National Teen Dating Violence Awareness Resources

Page 5: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net 5

By Kyle Kaufman

Google Voice A New Approach to the Suggestion Box

Kyle Kauffman ([email protected]) serves as student council advisor at South Western HS. Follow Kyle’s blog at http://kyle-physics-apple.blogspot.com for more tech articles.

Underclassmen: Mark Your Calendar for a2011 Summer Camp Experience with PASCThe 2011 Summer Leadership Workshop Brochure and Application will be emailed by February

15 to all students and advisors who subscribe to PASC NEWS. It will also be posted on the PASC website at the same time. A hardcopy of the workshop brochure and applications will be mailed to advisors by March 1.

Please note the following dates and locations and begin planning now for students to attend in July.

Costs & Deadlines: Early Bird Regular (May 13th) ( June 10th)

Blue (Grades 7–9)

Grove City College July 17–21 $335 $360

Lebanon Valley College July 24–28 $335 $360

Gold (Grades 9–12)

Grove City College July 10–15 $360 $385

Susquehanna University July 24–29 $360 $385

Advanced Gold (Grades 11–12)

University of Pittsburgh/Johnstown July 17–23 $445 $470

Many student councils utilize suggestion boxes to collect feedback and ideas from the student body. The effectiveness of physical suggestion boxes, often located in libraries or other common areas, can vary greatly. One way to poten-tially increase the amount and timeliness of feedback collected by a “sugges-tion box” is to replace the physical box with Google Voice.

Google Voice is a powerful tool that blends phone and texting capabilities with voice transcription and message archiving. Your student council could set up a Google Account and then set up Google Voice that will give your council its own telephone number. You

have a lot of choice with this number so that you could potentially create a number that spells out some word or phrase that is easy to market and remember.

Once the student body has the number, students can

leave suggestions by calling or texting the number. Google Voice will transcribe the phone calls so that you can scan them quickly and keep a text archive along with text messages. You can collect student’s cell phone numbers via Google Voice and even attempt to provide direct responses to their suggestions

while maintaining a level of anonymity.

You will want to check with your school’s administration to make sure they are agreeable with the idea of using Google Voice. Also, you will want to make sure that the Google Ac-

count that you use to set up Google Voice is a common account for student council rather than someone’s

personal Google account. For more information on Google Voice check out www.google.com/voice.

PASC NEWS is published monthly during

the school year. To submit

announcements, articles, or corrections for newsletters, please email the Executive Director or Assistant Ex-ecutive Director. Articles or information from PASC NEWS may be reproduced for use, with appropriate credit.

Executive DirectorJim FinnemeyerNorth Penn HS1340 Valley Forge RoadLansdale, PA 19446215-280-9299215-855-0632 (Fax)[email protected]@aol.com

Assistant Executive DirectorKathy Ann Coll174 Link AvenuePittsburgh, PA [email protected]

PASC PresidentMariam Ahmad Altoona Area HS 1400 7th Avenue Altoona, PA 16602

PASC President-ElectTo Be Announced

PASC News EditorLyn FiscusLeadership Logistics

PASC Email:[email protected]

PASC Website:www.pasc.net

Page 6: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net6

Since September 2008, a se-nior and a junior student have served on the Pennsylvania State Board of Education. The term of Senior SBE member Travis Gilbert, of Big Spring HS, will end with the SBE meeting of May 17–18, 2011. We are happy to announce that Shannon Sullivan, Junior SBE member of North Allegh-eny HS, will be appointed to serve as the next Senior SBE Member. Thus, PASC has been charged with the responsibility to select the next Junior SBE Member. This student will be named this spring and will begin his or her term as of July 1. However, Shannon and the new Junior Member will attend their first meeting together in mid-May.

What Is the State Board of Education?

The State Board of Educa-tion sets all policies regarding public school education in the Commonwealth. It consists of Councils of Basic and Higher Education. The Board of Edu-cation has 17 adult members selected by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate. The chair and minority leader of the House and Senate Education Committees serve as well. The board meets in Harrisburg on Wednesdays and Thursdays in July, September, November, January, March, and May. A detailed job description is available at www.pasc.net or by contacting PASC at [email protected].

What Are the Duties of Students on the Board of Education?

The new Junior SBE Member of the Board of Education will join Shannon Sullivan in representing the 1.8 million K–12 public school students in the Commonwealth. Although they can not be an expert on every issue or idea coming before the Board of Education and its committees, they will be

expected to do their “home-work” to become knowledge-able about topics of interest to Pennsylvania students includ-ing special needs students and vocational and technical school students. Working with PASC, the student members will use the PASC NEWS commu-nications system, the PASC website, and PASC survey tools to communicate with their constituents. The students will report periodically to the PASC Executive Board and attend the state conference and January Executive Board meeting for face-to face report-ing and feedback. Being the “student voice” on the Pennsyl-vania Board of Education is an incredible opportunity for the students involved as well as for all Pennsylvania students. Only 13 states in the nation have student representatives on their State Boards of Education.

Advisors: Please share this important information with your student leaders

right away!

Who May Apply?

PASC is seeking to name a present sophomore to the Junior SBE Member as of July 1. It is our hope that, based on a January 2012 evaluation, the Junior Member would become the next Senior SBE Member. The process will be imple-mented in the spring of 2011 to select the next Junior SBE Member whose term will begin

on July 1, 2011. Any sopho-more in a public high school in Pennsylvania may apply for the position in the 2011–2012 school year. Students do not have to attend a PASC member school to apply. Travel, meals, and lodging in Harrisburg or other meeting sites in the state will be paid for by the State Board of Education. Travel, meals, and lodging for the re-quired meetings of PASC will be paid by PASC.

Application Includes• Basic contact information• Student resume• Two essays• Three letters of recommenda-

tion• Signatures of approval and

support from the student, parent/guardian, school administration

Download the information

cover letter, application, requirements and expecta-tions, and overview of the State Board of Education at www.pasc.net or click on the link in this month’s email version of PASC News.

Selection Timeline

February 10: Public

Announcement of the po-

sitions by the Department

of Education to all school

superintendents, school

boards, the state prin-

cipals’ association. PASC

NEWS announcement

made to member advisors

and PASC student leaders.

March 11: Deadline for

application and recom-

mendations by mail or fax

March 15–19: Screen-

ing of applicants by PASC

Ad Hoc Committee

April 2: Interviews in

Harrisburg with finalists

May 17–18: Orientation

and first meeting with the

State Board of Education.

New Junior Member to

attend.

Application deadline

by mail or fax is Friday, March

11, 2011.

Junior Member to be Selected for Pennsylvania State Board of Education

Page 7: PASC News, February 2011

PASC News • February 2011 • www.pasc.net 7

By Travis Gilbert, SBE Senior Representative

Tom Corbett, the Attorney General of Pennsylvania was inaugurated as the 46th gover-nor of Pennsylvania on January 18, 2010, ushering in a new era of educational policy for the Commonwealth of Penn-sylvania. Governor Corbett appointed Ron Tomalis, former deputy Secretary of Education under former governor Tom Ridge as the next Secretary of Education. Governor Corbett’s educational policy agenda includes reforming school funding, enhancing educational opportunities, and ensuring effective teachers.

The new governor supports the creation of a reporting system that better tracks educa-tional funding and ensures that schools and students receive the funding support they deserve, as well as the unbundling of educational dollars, so funding follows students who move to another school because they attend a failing school. Reform-ing charter schools is at the top of his agenda as well. Charter schools are schools that receive public funding, but are not held liable to certain rules and regulations that public schools are bound to follow. Governor Corbett believes in creat-ing an independent charter school board that streamlines the application process and ensures quality, accountability, and transparency from charter schools already established.

Some of Governor Corbett’s

New Governor Brings New Era of Educational Policy

initiatives align with the State Board of Education’s goals for this year. Both the State Board and Governor Corbett want to expand the career and technical centers in Pennsylvania, which are schools that provide train-ing for skilled jobs, without granting college degrees. The State Board and Corbett also want to expand alternative pathways to teaching cer-tificates and are looking at the Pittsburgh Public Schools’ and Teach for America’s programs for guidance.

The State Board of Education plans to meet in mid-March to begin work on its three initia-tives for this year: teacher effectiveness, student wellness, and implementation of the Keystone Exams along with the Common Core standards. As always, students are encouraged to contact us, Travis Gilbert at [email protected] or Shannon Sullivan at [email protected], with any questions or concerns.

Travis Gilbert, SBE Senior Representative

Second semester is full of opportunities to plan fun activi-ties. Consider the following when your Council is looking for something worthwhile to do:

n Slice of Pi. Work with your math department to celebrate National Pi Day, March 14 (or 3.14) with some lunchtime math games. Serve a free piece of pie to any student who participates.

n Most Wanted. On March 14, 1950, the Ten Most Wanted List made its debut. Create your own Ten Most Wanted Lists for those who stand out in your school or to recognize stu-dents who don’t always get recognition, such as the Top Ten Enthusiastic Students, Top Ten Skaters, Top Ten Students with the Longest Hair, and so forth.

n Helium Balloon Sales. Everybody is a little bit Irish on St. Patrick’s Day! Celebrate by selling green helium balloons that can be delivered to students with a message from the sender.

n Showcase Student Art. Celebrate Youth Art Month in March by creating a gallery of student art. Have visitors to the gallery vote on their favorite piece, then purchase the one with the most votes to start a permanent gallery of student work or to hang in the main office. Host a reception for the artists and their parents.

n Kick Butts Day. Organize a project to raise awareness of the dangers of cigarette smoking for Kick Butts Day, March 23. For activity ideas and resources visit http://kickbuttsday.org

n National TV Turnoff Week. Screen time cuts into fam-ily time and is a leading cause of obesity in both adults and children. Help your students reconnect with their families by sponsoring activities for Turnoff Week, April 18-24, in which families turn off the TV and other electronics to focus on more interactive activities. Check http://www.screentimeinsti-tute.org/ for ideas and more information.

n Teacher Features. Celebrate Teacher Appreciation Week May 3–9 by creating a short video profiling teachers in each of the departments or grade levels in your school. Feature one video each day during the week either on the announcements or on special screens set up in the cafeteria or commons.

n Lost and Found Fashion Show. Hold a lunchtime fashion show with the items that have accumulated in the school’s lost and found.

n Join Hands Day. Plan a multi-generational project for Join Hands Day, May 7. Refurbish a playground, remove trash from a park, plant some flowers, or check out other ideas and download a free planning guide at http://joinhandsday.org.

n National Youth Traffic Safety Month. Put the brakes on impaired driving during May with a National Youth Traf-fic Safety Month project. Visit www.noys.org to download a NYTSM planning guide.

Things to Do This Spring