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DESCRIPTION:10/13 Rally for Public Education Outside of Bush/Murdoch/Gates Foundation 
 Event in SF\n\nEducation privatizers and billionaires will be meeting in 
 San Francisco to push privatization and charter of schools 
 nationally.\n\n\n\nOctober 13th - 4-5 p.m. @ the Palace 
 Hotel\nhttp://www.uesf.org/pdf/10-13-11-flyer.pdf\n\n10/ 13 In SF-Union 
 Busters, Pols and Billionaires Arrive In SF To Push For 
 Privatization-Destruction  Of Public Eduation\n\nEducation Everywhere: 
 National Summit on Education Reform 2011\n\nThursday, October 13, 
 2011\n\nhttp://www.excelined.org/Pages/Programs/Excellence_in_Action/National_Summit/2011_Agenda.aspx\n\n7:30 
 am                Registration Opens\n\n7: 30 – 8:15 am   Breakfast 
 Buffet\n\n8:30 – 9:00 am    Welcome from Jeb Bush, Chairman\n\n9:15 
 -10:30 am   Strategy Sessions\n\nStrategy Session #1:  The Teaching 
 Profession 2.0\n\nDuring the last two years, states across the country have 
 ushered in the most sweeping reforms of the teaching profession in our 
 nation’s history.  More meaningful evaluations.  An end to tenure and 
 destructive last-in, first-out policies.  Salaries that reflect student 
 learning rather than seniority.  Learn how lawmakers and policymakers from 
 states around the nation are changing the paradigm of the teaching 
 profession.\n\nModerator: Kate Walsh, President, National Council on 
 Teacher Quality\n\nPanelists:\n\nTony Bennett, Indiana Superintendent of 
 Public Instruction and Chair, Chiefs for Change\nErik Fresen, Florida House 
 of Representatives\nBryan Hassel, Co-Director, Public Impact\nKimberly 
 Lightford, Illinois Senate\nTom Luna, Idaho Superintendent of 
 Education\nStrategy Session #2:  Don’t Let a Financial Crisis Go To 
 Waste\n\nThe United States spends $500 billion annually on K-12 education.  
 While spending for education consistently rose during the last three 
 decades, student achievement did not.  Declining revenue in states across 
 the country has already started to reverse the trend in funding, at a time 
 when the demand for a more educated workforce is increasing.  Learn the 
 best and worst components of education funding formulas, and just what 
 lawmakers and policymakers can do to get a better return-on-investment for 
 their education dollars.\n\nModerator: James Guthrie, Senior Fellow and 
 Director of Education Policy Studies, George W. Bush 
 Institute\n\nPanelists:\n\nDon Gaetz, Florida Senate\nHanna Skandera, New 
 Mexico Secretary-Designate of Public Education and member, Chiefs for 
 Change\nStrategy Session #3:  Rebooting State Education \nIn 1998, almost 
 half of Florida’s fourth graders were functionally illiterate.  Today, 
 nearly three-quarters of fourth graders are reading on orabove grade level, 
 according to the National Assessment for Educational Progress.  That’s 
 not all.  Hispanic fourth graders in the Sunshine State read as well or 
 better than the average of all students in 31 states and the District of 
 Columbia.  Learn how high expectations for students, accountability for 
 schools, choices for families and rewards for progress reversed a 
 generation of decline in Florida’s public schools.\n\nModerator: F. 
 Philip Handy, CEO, Strategic Industries and Foundation for Excellence in 
 Education board member\n\nPanelists:\n\nMatt Ladner, Senior Advisor on 
 Policy and Research, Foundation for Excellence in Education\nPatricia 
 Levesque, Executive Director, Foundation for Excellence in 
 Education\n\n10:45 am - Noon  Strategy Sessions\n\nStrategy Session #4:  
 How Can Locally-Controlled Education Fuel a Global Economy?\n\nThe 
 foundation of America’s education governance – locally-controlled 
 school boards – was established in the 18th century.  Today, nearly 
 100,000 individuals across America serve on nearly 15,000 local school 
 boards.  In a world that has changed dramatically since these institutions 
 were formed, what is the role of local school boards in delivering a high 
 quality education that prepares all students to succeed in the global 
 economy?  Hear different perspectives on the challenge\n\nModerator: 
 Chester E. Finn, Jr., President, Thomas B. Fordham 
 Institute\n\n\nPanelists:\n\nAnne Bryant, Executive Director, National 
 School Boards Association\nJoel Klein, Executive Vice President and CEO, 
 Education Division News Corporation and former New York City Schools 
 Chancellor\nGene Maeroff, Board of Education of Edison, New Jersey and 
 author, School Boards in America: A Flawed Exercise in 
 Democracy\n\n\nStrategy Session #5:  R U Ready, Grads?\n\nJust one-third of 
 the nation’s high school students earn a diploma and graduate from 12th 
 grade with the knowledge to succeed in college and careers.  Two-thirds 
 don’t gain the skills to compete in the global economy or don’t earn a 
 diploma at all.  Leaders from across the nation are confronting the 
 challenge.  Learn how states are expanding and accelerating high school 
 students' opportunities to earn college credit, and what is being done to 
 get students ready for post-secondary education and the workplace that 
 awaits them after high school.\n\nModerator: Pam Stewart, Chancellor, 
 Florida Public Schools\n\nPanelists:\n\nJohn Gubera, Indiana Department of 
 Education\nGayle Manchin, West Virginia Board of Education and former 
 first-lady of West Virginia\nLizzette Gonzales Reynolds, Deputy 
 Commissioner for Policy and Programs, Texas Education Agency\n\n\nStrategy 
 Session #6:  Fed Up With Failure?\n\nAmerica is experiencing a renaissance 
 in education.  Yet, nearly every state in the nation faces a chronic 
 problem with a pool of historically poor-performing schools.  How do you 
 turnaround a school or school district that has fundamentally 
 institutionalized failure?  Learn how bold leaders are altering the course 
 of history at these schools and changing the lives of students who attend 
 them.\n\nModerator: Lindsey Burke, Senior Policy Analyst, The Heritage 
 Foundation \n\nPanelists:\n\nBen Austin, Executive Director, Parent 
 Revolution\nPaul Pastorek, Former Louisiana State Superintendent of 
 Education and Chiefs for Change emeritus member \n\n\n12:15 – 1:30 pm  
 Lunch Keynote - Sal Khan, Founder and Executive Director of Khan 
 Academy\n\n1:45 – 3:00 pm    General Session \n\nNation’s Report Card 
 on Digital Learning \n\nJeb Bush and Bob Wise, co-chairs of Digital 
 Learning Now!, will release the first-ever Nation’s Report Card on 
 Digital Learning.  The Report Card will grade each state based on their 
 alignment with the 10 Elements of High Quality Digital Learning, which was 
 developed by the Digital Learning Council last fall. \n\n\n3:15 – 4:30 pm 
    Strategy Sessions\n\n\nStrategy Session #7:  Building Your Education 
 Playlist\n\nTechnology has transformed nearly every aspect of our 
 day-to-day life – work, communication, commerce and entertainment – 
 except education.  That is about to change.  The seeds of the coming 
 digital revolution are taking root in states across the nation.  Digital 
 learning – whether online or in a classroom – is yielding rising 
 student achievement and, at the same time, addressing a myriad of 
 modern-day challenges, including class-size mandates and teacher shortages. 
  Learn the essentials of digital learning from pioneers and practitioners 
 of this new delivery system for education.\n\nModerator: Deirdre Finn, 
 Deputy Executive Director of Foundation for Excellence in 
 Education\n\nPanelists:\n\nJohn Danner, Co-founder and CEO of Rocketship 
 Education\nRick Ogston, Founder and Executive Director, Carpe Diem 
 Collegiate High School\nDarren Reed, Vice President, Blended Schools, K12, 
 Inc.\nMickey Revenaugh, Connections Academy\nJulie Young, President and CEO 
 of Florida Virtual School\nStrategy Session #8:  The Third-Grade Graduation 
 Strategy\n\nLearning to read in the third grade may determine whether a 
 student will graduate from high school.  According to a recent study by the 
 Annie E. Casey Foundation, students who couldn’t read by the end of the 
 third grade were more likely to drop out of high school.  In fact, 88 
 percent of students who failed to earn a high school diploma were 
 struggling readers in the third grade.  Learn the policies that will put 
 students on the path to a lifetime of success. \n\nModerator: Reba 
 Dominski, Director of Education, Target Foundation\n\nPanelists:\n\nTony 
 Bennett, Indiana Superintendent of Public Instruction and Chair, Chiefs for 
 Change\nJay Greene, Department Head and 21st Century Chair in Education 
 Reform, University of Arkansas\nDonald Hernandez, Professor of Sociology at 
 Hunter College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York and 
 author of Annie E. Casey Foundation’s “Double Jeopardy”\nClark 
 Jolley, Oklahoma Senate\n7:00 – 9:00 pm Dinner Keynote - Melinda Gates, 
 Co-Chair, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation\n\nFriday, October 14, 
 2011\n\n7:30 – 8: 15 am             Breakfast Buffet\n\n8:15 – 9:15 am  
             Morning Keynote - Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and Chief Executive 
 Officer, News Corporation\n\n9:30 – 10:45 am            General Session - 
 To Be Announced\n\n11:00 am – 12:15 pm   Strategy Sessions\n\nStrategy 
 Session #9: Just When You Thought You Did It All . . . \n\n2011 will mark 
 the 20th anniversary of the country’s first charter school.  While 80 
 percent of states now authorize charter schools, the potential for 
 innovation continues to grow – along with the public demand for this 
 educational option.  Learn how lawmakers and policymakers are expanding 
 capacity of charter schools as well as charter options.\n\nModerator: Todd 
 Ziebarth, National Alliance for Public Charter 
 Schools\n\nPanelists:\n\nRich Crandall, Arizona Senate\nJed Wallace, 
 President and CEO, California Charter Schools Association\n\nStrategy 
 Session #10:  Got Choice?  Get Choice!\n\nStates around the nation are 
 proving that there are as many wants to achieve choice as there are 
 educational choices themselves.  Explore the many ways states are 
 empowering parents with the financial freedom to choose the school that’s 
 right for their child.  Learn what’s worked in recent years to overcome 
 the obstacles to vouchers and expand the options for 
 students.\n\nModerator: William Oberndorf, Managing Director, SPO Partners 
 & Co. \n\nPanelists:\n\nRobert Behning, Indiana House of 
 Representatives\nRick Murphy, Arizona Senate\nJoe Negron, Florida 
 Senate\nGary Simrill, South Carolina House of Representatives\n\n12:30 – 
 1:45 pm  Lunch and Closing Keynote - To Be Announced\n\n *Times listed are 
 PDT\n\nPhoto of Bill Gates at the AFT Convention last year. Gates and his 
 education privatization foundation which pushes charters was supported by 
 AFT President Randy Weingarten who invited the privatizer to the AFT 
 convention which brought booing and a walk-out by hundreds of delegates.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/10/09/18692864.php
SUMMARY:Rally for Public Education Outside of Bush/Murdoch/Gates Foundation Event in SF
LOCATION:the Palace Hotel\nSF
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/10/09/18692864.php
DTSTART:20111013T230000Z
DTEND:20111014T020000Z
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