Advocate for Quality Public Education
Including funding equity, integration, high quality teachers and principals, increase in essential support personnel, smaller class size in poverty schools, and ensuring public tax dollars for public school education are used responsibly and transparently.
Meeting/Contact Information
Please contact Carolyn Bunker at publiceducation [at] lwvpt.org for more information.
Positions
- Oppose vouchers to private schools and advocate capping Charter Schools at 100.
- Advocate for high quality early childcare, health services, and Pre-K for all.
- Advocate for Civics Education in all levels of public schools.
- Participate in voter registration for high school students in collaboration with local high schools.
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Under construction: former website content
The education roundtable is a group of several local organizations interested in public education in North Carolina. The LWVPT is the founding organization.
See the news release and new white paper from LWV-LCF concerning curriculum in some schools receiving vouchers.
February 2019 LWL Preparation
Kris Nordstrom from the NC Justice Center has provided the following links to information about public education in NC.
- The Charter School Annual Report (February 2018) has info on
- charter school closures
- charter school operating requirements
- Number of charter schools (page not found)
- There are two virtual charter schools: NC Virtual Academy and North Carolina Connections Academy.
- Fiscal impact of charter schools (page not found)
- Detailed school performance measures for charter schools. (page not found)
- Fiscal impact of charter schools
- Charter impact on school segregation (page not found)
- See Public Schools First for differences in operating requirements versus traditional schools.
Penn Griffin High School Program (February 2018)
On Feb. 20 the LWVPT met at Penn Griffin middle/high school in High Point, NC. The High Point Enterprise wrote a story about the meeting and permitted us to include here.
Double click on the image of the article - NOTE: does not work.
Impact of Poverty on Education
- Background of the meeting
- Greensboro News and Record article about the meeting
- High Point Enterprise article - see below
PERT Member Organizations
- Representatives from the Guilford Education Alliance (GEA)
- Guilford County Association of Educators
- Parents Teachers' Association
- Guilford County School Board Members
- LWVPT members
Papers Issued by PERT
- A Round Table of Thoughts about Public Education - white paper 2012
- NC Private Schools Receiving Vouchers: A Study of the Curriculum - white paper 2018 - by the League of Women Voters of the Lower Cape Fear
- LWVNC news release for the above
Resources & Articles of Interest
- Dr. Contreras' answers to LWVPT 2017 questions
At the March 2017 Lunch with the League, there were more questions than time to answer them. Dr. Contreras kindly responded with written answers to the questions. - An analysis by PSFNC of the current status of state public school funding following the passage of the budget by the NC General Assembly (Page not found)
- Impact on Public Schools of the 2016-2017 State Budget
- Facts on Public versus Private Schools (last updated June 2016)
- Letter to the General Assembly, May 2015
- Update on Public Education from Pricey Harrison's May 2015 Newsletter
- Putting Public Education back together Again - slides from presentation by Yevonne Brannon, March 17, 2015
- See Public Schools First for more information on the state of North Carolina's public schools.
Download The Public Schools First Advocacy Guide
Duke Study of Charter Schools in North Carolina (Washington Post article, 2015)
Top public schools in NY need diversity (New York Times op-ed, 2014)
Can Public School as We Know it Survive? (HuffPost, December, 2012)
All in for Public Education from the National School Public Relations Association, which offers advocacy resources for those seeking strategies and tactics to build more support for public education.
The 2014-2015 NC Budget and State Teacher Salaries (if this stays on the page, it needs to be pdfed)
The Case for Teacher Assistants in the K-3 Classroom by Alan Brown, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English Education, Wake Forest University (no date)
If you have questions about why teachers need tenure, you must see this video by an experienced teacher. He makes the case! http://www.kdreeves.com/responding-to-whoopi/ (Page not found)
Teaching is Not a Business (New York Times Op-Ed, August 2014)
A Hidden, Drastic Change in NC School Funding! (News & Observer, 2014) Page not found