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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query education. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query education. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

N. Ga. grants to boost high school, college attendance

click to enlarge

DAHLONEGA - The Georgia Appalachian Center for Higher Education (GACHE) at North Georgia College and State University is awarding 16 competitive grants totaling $98,000 to area high schools on Wednesday to support strategies to assist and encourage students to finish high school and pursue a college degree.

The high schools receiving the grants are Banks County, Chattooga, Commerce, Elbert County, Fannin County, Franklin County, Gilmer, Gordon Central, Gordon Lee, Jackson County, LaFayette, Lumpkin County, Murray County, Ridgeland, Sonoraville, and Woody Gap.
"We are excited that so many school principals, graduation coaches, counselors, and superintendents are willing to step up to the challenge of ensuring that their students graduate ready for college with real post-secondary choices," said Shirley Davis, director of the Georgia Appalachian Center for Higher Education. 

"We know the economic consequences of leaving high school without a diploma are harsh, and, in today s world, stopping short of postsecondary education is equally grim. We want every student to graduate from high school and have college as a viable option."

GACHE is housed on the campus of North Georgia College and State University in the School of Education and is funded by NGCSU and by the Appalachian Regional Commission.

As part of the Appalachian Higher Education Network and one of ten centers in the Appalachian states, GACHE provides resources to schools to increase student opportunities for pursuing postsecondary education. GACHE is modeled after widely acclaimed programs operating in the Appalachian regions of Ohio and West Virginia that have boosted college attendance rates by as much as 20 percent.

In a related story, an independent review of Georgia's math tests shows that the exams were valid even though thousands of students failed them.

The audit released by the Georgia Department of Education on Tuesday says questions on the math Criterion-Referenced Competency Tests strongly matched state curriculum. The results bolster claims by the Georgia Department of Education that math scores plummeted last spring because of harder tests and more rigorous classwork. Nearly 40 percent of eighth-graders - about 50,000 - failed the math CRCT this year. State officials say the audit was a routine review and was scheduled before the low test scores were released in May.

The audit was performed by edCount LLC.

(The Associated Press)

Click here for more GPB News coverage of education issues.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Georgia No. 3 in Nat'l Pre-K Rankings

A national education group is giving Georgia high marks for its pre-k program. But as with any report card, there is always room for improvement.

Since its inception 15 years ago, nearly one million children have graduated from Georgia's pre-kindgarten program. That's why one national group ranks Georgia near the top when evaluating pre-k programs around the country.

Steve Barnett directs the National Institute for Early Education at Rutgers University in New Jersey. It's most recent report puts Georgia in the number three position.

"The best thing that Georgia is doing with this program is making it available to as many children as possible. Without it, there would be a much larger number of children in Georgia who wouldn't get a pre-school education at all or would get a very poor quality one."
More good news, this time from the Southern Education Foundation. Steve Suitts is the group's director.

"There is an argument to be made that Georgia probably more accurately ranks second instead of third in the nation. While the state of Florida has a larger percentage of three year olds and four year olds in the program, the fact is Georgia's program is a higher quality."
All that good news however, is tempered by calls for improvement in Georgia's lottery funded pre-k program.

State education officials estimate there are eight thousand children on pre-k waiting lists. The problem is that there are not enough spots says Suits.

"We've had a participation rate in Georgia pre-k that's virtually been flat for the last five to seven years, despite the fact that there are thousands of people who are on waiting lists all over the state."
Finally, funding for pre-k has dropped -- more than one hundred dollars per child since 2007. The Southern Education Foundation says it has asked the legislature to tap into lottery reserves earmarked for education. To date, the lottery has contributed 3.6 billion dollars for early childhood education. However state education officials say there are presently no plans to increase pre-k per child spending.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Millions in Education Stimulus Still Available

An education advocacy group charges that state lawmakers failed to use all of the federal stimulus money available for education.

The Southern Education Foundation says that the state legislature did not allocate $178 million available federal dollars for education.

Money the group says is desperately needed as schools and universities struggle through the recession.

“The money should be used to reduce the school funding cutbacks in 2009 and 2010 budget,” says Steve Suitts, vice president of the SEF.

But the governor’s office says the $178 million is not lost.

Chris Schrimpf, a spokesman for Governor Sonny Perdue, says the money will be spent, but just not now.

“I hope that groups that are focused on education do their homework first,” says Schrimpf.

“The money that they say is being left on the table is going to be applied to 2011,” he says.

That, however, argues the SEF, might be against the law.

The group has written a letter to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, asking him for an investigation into whether the state is required to spend the $178 million stimulus dollars now.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Stimulus $$ For Education Headed To GA

Next Tuesday, the State Board of Education will meet to discuss awarding the first part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) funding to local school districts. The grants go to the education of Students with Disabilities (IDEA) and economically-disadvantaged students (Title I).

According to a press release from the Board of Education, under ARRA, Georgia school districts will get a total of about $351 million in additional Title I funds and $314 million in additional IDEA funds. The U.S. Department of Education is expected to make the remaining Title I and IDEA funds available in the fall.

In addition to the Title I and IDEA funds, ARRA is expected to provide Georgia schools with other funding. Estimated funding includes:

- More than $22 million in Education Technology State Grants
- More than $10 million in IDEA grants for pre-school students
- About $900 million in "fiscal stabilization" funds that the Governor can use for K-12 education

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Perdue's line item vetos for '09 budget

Governor Perdue line-item vetoed $142 million in cash this year, including cash projects and debt service on $22 million in vetoed bond projects. The Governor’s vetos break down as follows:

Department of Economic Development:

  • $125,000 to the Tourism program for the development of a five year business plan for the Georgia Tourism Foundation
  • $150,000 to the Tourism program for the restoration of Augusta's historic Powder Works chimney
  • $3,000,000 to the Tourism program for the National Infantry Museum
  • $250,000 to the Tourism program for the Georgia International and Maritime Trade Center Authority to perform an economic impact and environmental improvement study

Department of Education:

  • $900,000 to the Technology/Career Education program in order to provide funds for a Classroom Technology initiative

Department of Human Resources:

  • $31,007 for the Brain and Spinal Injury Trust Fund program to provide for increased operating expenses

Department of Juvenile Justice:

  • $600,000 for the Children and Youth Coordinating Council for “Connecting Henry, Inc” to provide for a multi-jurisdictional collaborative to address the high drop out rate in the community

Department of Public Safety:

  • $250,000 to the Field Offices and Services program for the purchase of equipment for the Columbia County State Patrol Post
  • $250,000 to the Public Safety Training Center to fund expenses for the North Central Georgia Law Enforcement Academy

The Board of Regents:

  • $360,000 to the Public Service/Special Funding Initiatives program for the Georgia Water Planning and Policy Center at Albany State University and Georgia Southern University
  • $200,000 to the Teaching program for the planning and implementation of a program at Kennesaw State University for disadvantaged youth

Department of Technical and Adult Education:

  • $25,000 to the Economic Development (QuickStart) program for Base Closure and Realignment (BRAC) job retraining program for Atlanta Technical College
  • $250,000 to the Technical Education program for the creation of a college and technical facility in Catoosa County at Bentley Place

Department of Transportation:

  • $5,200,000 to the Airport Aid program for the Paulding County Regional Airport ($4,000,000), Cherokee County Airport Authority ($700,000), and the Glynn County Airport Commission ($500,000)

The General Obligation Debt Sinking Fund:

  • $683,200 to finance educational facilities for county and independent school systems through the State Board of Education specifically for the design and construction of a charter school to be operated by the Cobb County School System through the issuance of $8,000,000 in 20-year bonds
  • $1,155,000 to finance educational facilities for county and independent school systems through the State Board of Education specifically for career and vocational equipment per House Bill 905 through the issuance of $5,000,000 in 5-year bonds
  • $657,580 to finance projects and facilities for the Department of Transportation, specifically for rail lines for Lyerly to Coosa, Nunez to Vidalia, Ardmore to Sylvania, St Augustine Road Rail Switching Yard Expansion and McNatt Boulevard Extension rail crossing through the issuance of $7,700,000 in 20-year bonds
  • $170,800 to finance projects and facilities for the Department of Transportation, specifically for the construction of a welcome center for Tallulah Falls on the Rabun County side through the issuance of $2,000,000 in 20-year bonds

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Conference addresses education problems

The state of education in Georgia is the subject of a conference today at the University of Georgia. Dozens of education leaders came from across the state for the day-long workshop at UGA's Buckhead campus in Atlanta. Leaders from the Department of Education, UGA education college faculty and leaders from local school districts across the state. Issues included state funding of prekindergarten, teacher preparation, pay for educators and challenges for the state's higher education system.

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

School funding hot topic

At a meeting of the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education today, school funding was the hot topic. The state is being sued by rural school systems who say they don’t get enough money to provide an adequate education. Meanwhile, Governor Perdue has appointed his own task force to look at other ways to fund schools.

At a meeting of the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education, the head of the Governor's Education Finance Task Force, Dean Alford, said the current funding mechanism is not working.

"Local schools are being asked to do more and more and more. At the same times they’re hands are tied to some degree relative to their compliance The state is spending a significant portion of its budget on education and is not getting the full results that it desires."

Alford says his group is still working on recommendations to the Governor. One idea is to distribute money based on performance rather than compliance with rules. Alford says a big jump in education funding is unlikely.

Alford also says the state needs to do more to promote the benefits of a high school diploma.

"I don't think we've done a good job at educating of community at large. Because there are many people in our state who feel that a high school graduation is not necessary to move forward in the workplace. So we have got to do a better job at selling the benefits of an educated Georgia."

Georgia has improved its high school graduation rate to above 70 percent, but that is still one of the highest rates in the country.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Lawmakers Have Packed Schedule With Two Days to Go

Wednesday marks Day 39 in this year’s legislative session. And both chambers have a packed schedule.

The big issue for House lawmakers is the transportation governance bill. The measure no longer includes the creation of a new state agency – a plan backed by Governor Sonny Perdue. Instead, legislators would have more power when it comes to managing Department of Transportation dollars.

And there’s also a measure to curb property taxes. The legislation would put a 3% cap on property assessment increases.

In the Senate, next year’s budget is the hot topic. And there's a plan to do away with both the sales tax and the so-called birthday tax on car purchases. Instead, every sale would be subject to a title fee of up to $1500. Some of that money would be set aside for trauma care.

Below is a list of the bills that are on tap for the second-to-last day of the 2009 session.

House:
SB 27 - Confederate Heritage/History Month; create; encourages observances/celebrations; provide statutory construction
SB 49 - Georgia Registered Professional Nurse Practice Act; nursing education program
requirements; revise certain provisions
SB 85 - Georgia Aviation Authority Act; create; provide for membership, governance,
operation, power, duties
SB 114 - Education; provide for transfer of students who are military dependents into a local school system
SB 128 - Motor Vehicles; option of owner; permanent license plates for boat, utility,
noncommercial cattle/livestock trailers; provide for fees
SB 133 - Health Share Volunteers in Medicine Act; provide certain compensation; health care provider; sovereign immunity protection
SB 144 - Insurance Agent License; applicant shall be appointed by an authorized insurer prior to issuance of the license; repeal requirement
SB 163 - Human Resources Commissioner; authorize to appoint a diabetes coordinator
SB 164 - State Highway System; signs and signals; height limitations; allow owners to obtain permits to remove vegetation from the viewing zones
SB 172 - Victim Compensation; provide for recovery for serious mental and emotional
trauma; change definitions; provisions
SB 178 - Education; advance funding, exceptional growth, low-wealth capital outlay grants; embed/extend a sunset date
SB 194 - State Purchasing; benefits based funding projects; revise provisions; change
membership of an oversight committee
SB 195 - Professions/Businesses; clarify applications submitted in prescribed form not necessarily written document; provisions
SB 200 - Transforming Transportation Investment Act; create State Transportation Agency; definitions; purposes; abolish State Road/Tollway Authority
SB 201 - Health; provide voluntary contributions through individual income tax returns for cancer research
SB 207 - Proceedings; admit general public to hearings in juvenile court with certain
exceptions
SB 246 - Courts; provide notice of the release of child from detention under certain
circumstances; definitions
SB 253 - Sparklers; provide a definition for the term "indoors"
SR 1 - Appropriations; provide for prioritized funding requirements regarding certain
supplementary appropriations Acts - CA
SR 153 - Education Improvement Districts; provide creation and comprehensive regulation - CA
SR 176 - James H. Chandler, Jr. Memorial Intersection; dedicate


Senate:
HB 2 updates and clarifies many existing provisions in Georgia law related to illegal immigration.
HB 16 prohibits the use of an electronic tracking device to determine the location or movement of another person without that person’s consent, with several exceptions.
HB 56 revises provisions relating to distribution of proceeds and renegotiation of distribution certifications.
HB 63 deletes the chapter governing the Redevelopment Powers Law and replaces with some existing and new language. It also adds new language regarding the Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) Restriction Act.
HB 64 specifies that a funeral director must file a death certificate within 72 hours.
HB 69 allows a physician to issue a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order without the concurrence of another physician so long as there is oral or written consent from an authorized health care agent operating under a durable power of attorney or pursuant to an advance directive.
HB 86 allows that absentee ballots must be counted by precinct, and separate returns must be made showing the results by each precinct.
HB 101 allows that a transit agency may authorize the placement, erection, and maintenance of commercial advertisements on or in transit vehicles or facilities owned or operated by that transit agency.
HB 119 makes and provides appropriations for the State Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 2009, and ending June 30, 2010.
HB 120 authorizes the annual sales tax holiday for school supplies and energy efficient appliances.
HB 141 is the annual housekeeping bill for the Department of Banking and Finance (the Department), which addresses the regulation of financial institutions and commercial paper in Georgia.
HB 147 relates to proceedings for forfeiture of bonds or recognizances, so as to relieve a surety from liability under certain circumstances.
HB 169 provides a notice of new or revised flood elevations to Georgia property owners affected.
HB 173 permits non-compete and non-solicitation clauses in employment and business contracts.
HB 184 directs the Department of Human Resources to prepare information for public dissemination on the department’s website describing the importance of obtaining a blood test for sickle cell disease.
HB 186 extends the income tax credit for teleworking through FY2012. It also increases the available credit to $2.5 million for Fiscal Years 2011 and 2012.
HB 189 revises the applicability of the Georgia Arbitration Code because the General Assembly finds that entities need to cooperate with each other to ensure parents with better options on child support obligations.
HB 217 sets forth the requirements for influenza vaccine protocol agreements between physicians and pharmacists or nurses.
HB 221 amends two statutes to require that writs of mandamus and writs of prohibition to compel the removal of a judge cannot be issued if a motion to recuse has not been filed first, nor where a motion to recuse has been denied after assignment to a different judge.
HB 243 provides conditions of employment of certificated personnel in elementary and secondary education for salary increase for persons receiving certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards.
HB 258: Driver's license; minor of disabled guardian; restricted learner's permit; provisions
HB 278 allows local school system to waive the expenditure control requirements under the Quality Basic Education Act
HB 304 revises the rights of county appraisers and tax assessors and authorized agents of the county to go onto property to conduct official business.
HB 310 provides that the statewide recycling program for state agencies.
HB 318 defines several terms relating to the place of return for tax purposes of motor vehicles and mobile homes.
HB 321 relates to "group accident and sickness insurance" defined and "true association" defined, so as to provide for changes in the definitions of the terms.
HB 344 Probation; Department of Corrections; collections of additional fees; authorize
HB 349 Sales and use tax exemption; new construction of civil rights museum; provide
HB 371 Public Retirement Systems Investment Authority Law; increase in allowable fund investment; provisions
HB 379 Income tax; certain real estate investment trusts; disallow expenses paid
HB 388 The Option of Adoption Act
HB 395 Sales and use tax; personal property; construction of certain symphony halls; extend exemption
HB 406 Service delivery strategies; certain drinking water projects; funding limitation; provide exemption
HB 438 Income tax; tax credits for qualified jobs and projects; comprehensive revision
HB 439 Income tax; credits; business enterprises
HB 453 Superior courts; sunset dates for property filing fees; change
HB 455 Elementary and secondary education; annual contracts for certified personnel; extend certain deadlines
HB 473 Community Affairs, Department of; grants for clean energy property
HB 477 Retirement and pensions; creditable service; application requirement
HB 480 Taxation of motor vehicles; comprehensive revision
HB 483 Ad valorem tax; modernization and revisions of certain provisions
HB 485 Income tax; alternative credits for base year port traffic
HB 487 Superior Court Clerks' Retirement Fund of Georgia; employee contribution
HB 488 Superior Court Clerks' Retirement Fund of Georgia; eligibility criteria for creditable service
HB 492 Time-share projects and programs; private residence clubs
HB 493 Georgia Youth Conservation Corps; creation and purposes of the corps;
HB 509 Professions and businesses; regulation; change provisions.
HB 514 Judicial system; assignment of senior judges;
HB 528 Specialized land transactions; developers provide audits to homeowners
HB 549 Driver Services, Department of; information for purposes of creating juror lists
HB 568 Public Service Commission; members shall represent entire state
HB 575 Kidnapping; change certain provisions
HB 608 Time-share projects; estate shall include certain interests
HB 639 Special license plates; protect wild dolphins in Georgia
HR 161 White, Mr. John Jerome; compensate
HR 336 CPL Jonathan Ryan Ayers Memorial Interchange; dedicate

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Schools' chief presents budget to legislators

A recent report by Education Week ranked Georgia's 8th graders last in the nation in math scores.

At a joint House Senate Budget Committee meeting today, the head of the state's public schools unveiled a plan to reverse that statistic.

Kathy Cox is Georgia's school superintendent.

"When you look at our advanced placement right now, and the courses and the kids and the scores that they're getting, we're out pacing the nation in terms of the number of kids involved in AP. Other things like math achievement, we're still lagging. And that's why the importance of the new curriculum and the training of the teachers."

Cox told committee members she wants nearly 2 million dollars out of next year's budget to hire and train 17 math mentors.

The program would be similar to the state's science mentor program.

Cox is also asking for money to hire more graduation coaches, upgrade technology in schools and buy more school buses.

It would add up to almost 70 million dollars for the state schools.

And, news that Gov. Sonny Perdue has recommend slashing nearly 142 million dollars out of the state's school budget has angered some state lawmakers.

Senator Vincent Fort of Atlanta sits on the Senate Education Committee.

He says its time Georgia had an administration which invests in its children's future.

"I'd prefer to scrape the gold off the dome before I cut a dollar out of the education budget because no matter what are problem are in Georgia, its not going to be made better by cutting the education budget."

According to figures released by the Governor's office, the state's K-12 education budget will lose nearly 142- million dollars in "temporary reductions " in next year's budget.

Since Perdue first took office in 2003, he has cut nearly 1 and a half billion dollars from the state's school budget.

Finally, legislators attending Wednesday's meeting expressed concerns about the proposed GREAT plan.

Senator George Hooks of Americus warns that cutting ad valorem taxes will further increase the disparity between rich and poor school districts.

"If you remove ad valorem taxes from a local system, you may not achieve what you want to achieve. It will be balanced and heavy toward those people who pay a tremendous amount of ad valorem taxes and our little systems will again continue to suffer."

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

State education series begins today

Today, a the Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce begin a series of meetings across Georgia.

The series is called "Economics of Education," and will address the role education plays in building a strong state economy, and encourage citizens to get involved in the state's public education system. The dates are as follows:

Aug. 14 - Atlanta - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Georgia Tech Research Institute Convention Center, 250 14th St., NW, Atlanta 30318

Aug. 15 - Rome - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Greater Rome Chamber of Commerce, 1 Riverside Parkway, Rome 30161

Aug. 16 - Athens - 8:30 - 10 a.m. Athens Area Chamber of Commerce, 246 W. Hancock Ave., Athens 30601

Aug. 22 - Macon - 8:30 - 10 a.m. Greater Macon Chamber of Commerce, 305 Colisieum Dr., Macon 31201

Aug. 22 - Dublin - 3:30 - 5 p.m. McGrath Keen Sr. Conference Center, Dublin-Laurens Co. Chamber of Commerce, 1200 Bellevue Ave., Dublin 31040

Aug. 23 - Savannah - 8:30 - 10 a.m. Coastal Georgia Center, 305 Fahm Street, Savannah 31401

Aug. 23 - Augusta - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Augusta Technical College, 3200 Augusta Tech Drive, Augusta 30906

Aug. 30 - Carrollton - 8:30 - 10 a.m. The Burson Center, 500 Old Bremen Road, Carrollton 30117

Aug. 30 - Gainesville - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Greater Hall Chamber of Commerce, 230 E.E. Butler Parkway, Gainesville 30501

Sept. 5 - Tifton - 8:30 - 10 a.m. Civic Room, Tift Co. Chamber of Commerce, 100 Central Ave. S., Tifton 31794

Sept. 5 - Bainbridge - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Bainbridge - Decatur Co. Chamber of Commerce, 100 Earl May Boat Basin Circle, Bainbridge 39817

Sept. 19 - Columbus - 3:30 - 5 p.m. Greater Columbus Chamber of Commerce, Columbus

Monday, June 23, 2008

Education forums inform future leaders

A series of workshops wraps up this week, aimed at arming future lawmakers with the latest on Georgia’s education issues.

The Education Policy Forums are targeted at legislative and school board candidates across the state. Topics covered in the non-partisan workshops include policymaking, standards, education finance and leadership.

Bill Maddox is spokesman for Georgia Partnership for Excellence in Education, one of the forum sponsors. He says candidates who have already attended workshops in stops including Dalton, Macon, and Valdosta found them eye-opening:

"So far in the seven we’ve delievered, the candidates who have been there have just...number-one they shake their head saying they can’t believe there’s so much information. And number-2 they felt much more informed".

The four remaining events this week are scheduled for Acworth, Athens, Savannah and Dublin.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Education cuts tough but managable, Cox says

State School Superintendant Kathy Cox says Education cuts in the state budget will have little impact in the classroom.

Speaking to a joint house and senate education committee Kathy Cox outlined her department’s priorities for a year with education cuts expected to top 400 million dollars. Cox says school boards will get some leeway in how they spend state money.

For example graduation coach funding could go to other school needs and classes can be slightly larger. This flexibility Cox says should see schools through the economic downturn with little interruption.

“I think it would mean slightly more students in a class,” Cox says. “ But for most students I don’t’ think they’ll see much difference.”

Cox says she support the Governor’s efforts dispite a tight budget to push for a merit pay system for teachers and bonuses for high performing principals. She’s also pushing higher salaries for math and science teachers, because she says Georgia Desperately needs them. Cox will outline more details about education budget next week during budget hearing.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Perdue Wants Education Grant

Governor Sonny Perdue hopes to tap a major federal grant to bolster education in Georgia.

The state should be in-line to get more than $2 billion for education from the federal stimulus package. But in speaking to agency heads Wednesday, Perdue said he feels good about Georgia’s chances to also get more money from the newly-proposed grant called 'Race To The Top' that is part of the stimulus.

The program would reward states with innovative ideas in education reform.

Perdue says during his trip to Washington DC earlier this week he told the U.S. Education Secretary about his idea to pay new math and science teachers more than other new teachers.

"When he got through describing it, I asked him if he had looked at our proposal this year over science and math teacher differentiation--differentiated pay--paying for performance and all of those kinds of things, because that’s exactly what his vision is."



Georgia, like other states, has a critical shortage of science and math teachers. At the same time the state has tougher curriculum requirements in those subjects.

Friday, March 9, 2007

UGA Students Battle Jim Crow Legacy

By Valarie Edwards

Michael Thurmond was just 10 years old, when Charlene Hunter and Hamilton Holmes became the first African American students to officially enroll at the University of Georgia.

At the height of this country's civil rights struggle, UGA administrators threatened to shut its doors rather than admit black students.

“I remember the sirens and the bombs. One distinct memory I have is that my mother would not allow us to go out in the evening and play. We had to stay home basically for weeks while this riot and the whole process was taking place.”

The year was 1961.

Decades later, while studying law at the University of South Carolina, Thurmond – now director of Georgia’s Department of Labor -- uncovered evidence that Hunter and Holmes may not have been the first African Americans to study at UGA.

In his book, “A Story Untold: Black Men and Women n Athens History,” Thurmond tells the story of Samuel Harris.

In the 1800s, decades before Brown versus Board of Education, when law and tradition forbade teaching African Americans, a trio of white professors secretly tutored Harris.

Thurmond says he found Harris’ story compelling.

“There were those in the white community who reached across the racial divide of strict segregation and saw something compelling and significant in this young man and rejected those same types of taboos and provided him with education and opportunity.”

Harris studied partly by sitting in the back of classes led by his tutors.

He was allowed to be there because his job was to run the stereopticon, a precursor to the modern movie projector.

His private tutoring lasted more than a year.

But when his professors petitioned school administrators for a degree on Harris’ behalf, they were turned away.

Now, a century later, four students are trying to get UGA officials to acknowledge Harris’ work.

For the past year, the team has met, sometimes five days a week, usually at seven in the morning before classes begin at UGA.

And, as senior Kellen Williams Singleton says, all the hours spent and the broken dates have been rough.

“There’s a lot of things that we’ve got to prove. 'Cause I have a friend and I actually talked to her about it, and she's white and she's like, wow, Kel, you not only trying to get a black man a degree, but you're trying to get a dead black man a degree.”

Jamarl Glenn is a junior at UGA and was one of the first to sign on join the project.

Glenn says it’s time for UGA to correct a century old wrong.

“When I first heard about, I realized this man he came to school here when blacks were not even admitted to Georgia public education. And for him to complete all the requirements and be up for his graduation from the board of trustees and be denied that diploma simply because he was black, to me it’s of course, an injustice.”

After being turned away from UGA, some of Athens’ leading white business owners paid for Harris to attend historically black Morris Brown College in Atlanta.

At a memorial following Harris’ death, a notation is made that Harris received his degree from Morris Brown in quote recognition of his work at the University of Georgia.

To get a degree for Samuel Harris, the team must first convince the faculty of the school’s philosophy department to accept their limited evidence of Harris’ work at UGA.

The four have spent countless hours sifting through old documents. What’s made the students’ job more difficult was a massive fire in the 1800s which destroyed most of UGA’s files.

However, old county records, show proof of Harris’ clandestine studies in Latin, English, chemistry and agriculture.

Steve Brown is the UGA archivist who is helping the students.

“This comes from the minutes of the Athens Board of Education. The key for us was this paragraph here …. S.F. Harris received his early education in the public schools of Athens and spent one year in the Atlanta University. He took one year under private teaching on the part of the members of the faculty of the University of Georgia.”

It would be much easier says junior Jamel Harvey to get an honorary degree for Harris.

But the team says Harvey wants Harris to have the real thing.

An honorary degree is simply not enough.

“It says a lot to get an honorary degree, but it doesn’t say anything about him being at UGA. Why settle for the easy route when we’ve already put in so much time, so much work and we’ve had so many people supporting us and the purpose is to show that he went to UGA. Why settle for the honorary, why not go for the posthumous?”

Samuel Harris is buried at Gospel Pilgrim Cemetery, not far from the campus of the University of Georgia.

Standing near his gravesite, senior Timothy Evans can just glimpse the buildings of UGA.

The school Evans says owes Samuel Harris his long overdue degree.

“This whole of idea of Samuel Harris and him being buried here and all of the other people here, represent a broken legacy. But, to a certain extent it's kind of disheartening to find that it took this long for him to be brought back up again.”

The four students … Timothy Evans, Jamarl Glenn, Kellen Williams Singleton And Jamel Harvey … all graduate from the University of Georgia within the next year.

Their goal is to get their own degrees, at the same time they pick up a degree for Samuel Harris.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

DoE testing educator rating system

Georgia’s Department of Education is piloting a statewide program to professionally rate teacher educational skills.

The field study will include some 190 elementary, middle and high schools, and is meant to improve teaching performance standards.

A Department of Education official says the training program was developed over the past two years, in part, by the Board of Regents.

The training will enable administrators to rate teachers’ professional skills according to established criteria, rather than according to a supervisor’ subjective impressions.

Sessions will bring school principals and administrators together with a cross-section of teachers with varying experience, and in various subjects, including music, art and physical education.

The field testing will continue until April 2009, after which it may be implemented statewide.

Click here for more GPB News coverage of education issues.

Friday, April 20, 2007

GA lottery touts $9 billion for education

The Georgia Lottery Corporation says it’s raised more than 9-billion dollars for education in Georgia. The Georgia Lottery made the announcement just after this week’s third quarter transfer of funds into the Lottery for Education Account. It was the largest transfer to the lottery for education account in history. All Georgia lottery profits go to pay for specific educational programs including Georgia's HOPE Scholarship Program and Georgia's pre-kindergarten program.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

House Speaker Glenn Richardson Says Grady Board Must Take Additional Steps to Earn State Dollars

Addressing an Atlanta Press Club luncheon today Georgia House Speaker Glenn Richardson he has sent the Grady Memorial Hospital board "signal after signal" that state financial support will only be forthcoming if the current board is replaced by a non-profit group. Richardson said the majority of board members should be appointed by Fulton and Dekalb counties because they provide the largest portion of the hospital's funding. If the board takes these steps, Richardson said the hospital may be entitled to $30 million from the governor's proposed $53-million-dollar trauma budget.

Speaker Richardson said the most important topic of the legislative session is education. He and Dunwoody Representative Fran Millar are introduing legislation aimed at increasing high school graduation rates by directing more students to technical and vocational education instead of college preparatory tracks. The plan may cost up to $1 billion, but Richardson said there will be $15 billion in lost wages to students who dropped out of high school in 2007.

Richardson also said he believes there is a direct correlation between low-wealth school systems and high dropout rates. He said that HR 900, also called the GREAT Plan, will equalize education by funding education with a statewide sales tax insead of ad valorem taxes.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Charter Schools get boost from new laws

Governor Sonny Perdue signed three pieces of legislation into law to expand support for choice options within public schools: HB 881, 831, and 1277.

Jan Jones and known as the charter commission legislation, requires charter school petitioners to continue to seek approval from their local board of education. It also lets parents request charter approval directly from a newly-formed state charter commission if the local board of education rejects the petition, or if the petitioner seeks conditions different from those approved by the local board of education. In addition, HB 881 changes the way charter schools are funded. Many previously-approved charter schools operate on fewer dollars than traditional public schools receive.

House Bills 831 and 1277 build further on the infrastructure support for public charter schools. HB 831 enables the State Board of Education to establish a grant program to provide matching funds to charter school organizations for capital improvements or construction of charter schools, while HB 1277 provides charter school personnel access to the State Health Benefit Plan.

Another piece of charter legislation, HB 1065, was signed into law by Governor Perdue earlier this month and authorizes local charter schools and state chartered special schools to use their SPLOST funds for capital outlay projects.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Lawsuit over state education funds moves forward

A long-standing legal battle pitting 50 mostly rural schools against the state over education funding is moving forward. A judge denied the state's final attempt to dismiss the case, and it's scheduled to go to trial October 21st.

The lawsuit claims small, poor counties are treated unfairly because they don't raise enough local taxes to compensate for the cuts in state education funds.

If the schools win that could mean the state pays more than a billion dollars in education funds.

The state is reviewing the judge's order.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

State School Superintendent Addresses Joint Appropriations Committee

Superintendent Kathy Cox told a joint General Assembly Appropriations Committee that the Department of Education is proud of increased graduation rates and the new state curriculum. Cox said that the state continues to be plagued by low overall achievement rates and disparity between wealthy and low-income districts. Questioned by House Appropriations Chair Ben Harbin about how the state's equalization grants will close this gap, Cox admitted that the Governor's recommended budget does not fully fund statewide equal education. "We're not funding it to the letter of the law," she said, adding that the Department of Education expects legislation this session to alter the equalization formula.

Georgia is currently being sued by the parents of students in low-income districts who claim the state violates the Constitutional guarantee of equal education for all students.

GPB News Team: