Sunday, December 18, 2022

Thank You PTA Volunteers!



Volunteerism is one of the most selfless acts that we can become involved in. 

Nonprofits worldwide need more volunteers to accomplish their missions and

make the most significant difference possible. PTA is no exception to the aforementioned.


Engage your volunteers by empowering them, and remember to demonstrate

that their contributions make a big difference. Treat your volunteers with respect

and thank them individually often. 

To quote the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr,  “Everybody can be great. Because anybody can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and your verb agree to serve. You don’t have to know the second theory of thermodynamics in physics to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.” 

And finally, Denzel Washington said, “At the end of the day, it’s not about what you have or even what you’ve accomplished… it’s about who you’ve lifted up, who you’ve made better. It’s about what you’ve given back.” ❤️

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Register for Convention EARLY (by February 1st) and SAVE!

 

Due to rising industry costs, we cannot accept any registration on-site, one-day registration, or offer the BOGO. However, a (10%) discount is available when registering, at the same time, for a group of 5. Please apply the code (10 percent) when checking out. Click “apply” after entering the code. 


Preliminary Convention Schedule


Register for Convention here or use the QR code

Make your hotel reservations here


Check out the new convention location here










Parent Academy Returning!

 


Friday, December 9, 2022

2023 Ohio PTA Convention


Register for the convention today!

We have Ohio 2023 Teacher of Year, Melissa Kmetz, NAMI Executive Director, Luke Russell, and our soon-to-be-named National PTA Rep! Lots of great workshops and networking, too!

REGISTER HERE


or use this




Ohio PTA Scholarship Applications Available!

 


Ohio PTA Scholarships

High school seniors can apply for one of 3 types of Ohio PTA scholarships- Academic, Special Education, and Post Secondary/Technical Certification. You can find the scholarships on the Ohio PTA website in paper form OR you can promote them to your seniors/ parents, via the electronic links below. The deadline is March 1st, 2023!

Academic Scholarship

• https://tinyurl.com/OPTA-Scholarship-Academic-2023

Post-Secondary Scholarship

• https://tinyurl.com/OPTA-Scholarship-PSCert-2023

Special Education

• https://tinyurl.com/OPTA-Scholarship-SpeEd-2023


Monday, November 28, 2022

Giving Tuesday 2022


 #GivingTuesday2022 bit.ly/3XEQioQ

Help support the Ohio PTA Memorial Scholarship Fund. Your donation will assist in providing scholarships to Ohio high school seniors from around the state. Thank you in advance for your contribution.



Saturday, November 19, 2022

Friendly Reminder and our Holiday Wish List – MemberHub

 



Friendly Reminder and our Holiday Wish List – MemberHub

We would greatly appreciate membership dues payments to us by Nov 30, 2022, so your unit stays eligible for grants, programs, free training, and awards! NOTE: uploading your members in the MemberHub is beneficial for communications from Ohio PTA.

Upload your members in a batch or individually. Then either the president or the treasurer must be logged in to " see " the pay button. Link your bank routing and account number and pay your dues! Here are some resources:

How to add members in MemberHub

https://support.memberhub.com/hc/en-us/articles/115001448274-Enter-PTA-Members-Cash-Check

How to pay state dues in MemberHub

https://support.memberhub.com/hc/en-us/articles/360006895253-How-to-Pay-Your-State-Dues-in-MemberHub

Have you completed the Voter Voice Survey? We would love to hear from you. Here is the link to the survey. OhioptA.org/voter-voice

IRS 990 Important Information

November 15, 2022, filing deadlines have come and gone but as a 501c3 your unit/ council is still required to annually file an IRS 990 and complete the Ohio Attorney Charitable Registration. Failure to file your IRS 990 for 3 years in a row will result in the loss of your EIN. Email or call your Region Advisor or the VP of Field Service, Barb Varley at barbvarley@gmail.com. We can help!

Units and councils are required to complete the Ohio PTA Standards of Affiliation checklist and NEW this year- to upload the signed checklist in the compliance section of Member Hub. We do not require you to upload each individual compliance document into Member Hub but many units do for storage and transparency. Please do not send the checklist or individual compliance documents to the office or your Region Advisor. The Standards of Affiliation checklist is here. 

Standards of Affiliation

Reminder to all unit and council leaders: Please be sure to upload your SOA (Standards of Affiliation) checklist into MemberHub, in the Compliance section. Once you have uploaded this document, please be sure to "Submit" the document in the section (under Compliance) that says Enter State Submissions. The listing in that section says Ohio PTA Standard of Affiliation Checklist (if you still have all of the listings there, it should be the 7th one down on the list). Please take care of this as soon as possible! This is due no later than November 30, 2022. If you have any questions, email (jeanne@ohiopta.org), and please let her know if the email is the best way to contact you or if you prefer to text. Jeanne can also do a video chat with you via Messenger. Just be sure to give her the necessary information. Thank you!


Be well. Be safe. Enjoy your Holiday Season!!





Friday, November 18, 2022

Seat Beat Resolution

 

With the most recent school bus crash in Magoffin County, Kentucky, communities are again raising questions about school bus safety. The Ohio PTA Board of Directors passed a board resolution encouraging, “Ohio School Districts to voluntarily pursue, within budgetary constraints, pilot programs of installing lap-shoulder seat belts when ordering new school buses to determine if the presence of lap-shoulder seat belts meets the safety and behavioral improvement needs of their school district for transportation of students.” The National PTA has been advocating for seat belts in school buses since 1998 and calls upon law makers to support, “legislation or regulation requiring any new bus purchased for the purpose of transporting school children to be equipped with seat belts, and encourage all school districts to implement strong seat belt use, education, and enforcement policies”.

Please click here to contact your leaders today to advocate for greater safety for our children! “Seatbelts Save Lives!” 

For more info, please visit the School Bus Seat Belt Safety Alliance website.





Wednesday, November 9, 2022

National PTA Fall 2022 Programs Grant Recipients


Fall 2022 PTA Connected: Create with Kindness Grant Recipients

Sponsored by TikTok

Akron Early College High PTA Akron Ohio
Olmsted Falls Senior PTA Olmsted Twp Ohio

Fall 2022 PTA Healthy Minds Grant Recipients Sponsored by The Allstate Foundation

Minerva France Elementary PTA Columbus Ohio

Fall 2022 PTA Connected: The Smart Talk Grant Recipients 
Sponsored by Norton

Austintown Intermediate PTA Austintown Ohio Barberton Middle School PTSA Barberton Ohio Big Creek Elementary PTA Middleburg Heights Ohio Gables Elementary PTA Columbus Ohio Hayes Intermediate PTA Grove City Ohio Jackson Middle PTA Grove City Ohio John Foster Dulles Elementary PTA Cincinnati Ohio

Congratulations to the Ohio PTAs included in the $655,000 in funding to 495 local PTAs and 2 DCR PTAs representing 43 state PTA congresses, of which 57% support Title I schools. The grants to carry out PTA programming for this round are as follows:

PTA Healthy Minds, sponsored by the New York Life Foundation and The Allstate Foundation: 100 local PTAs awarded $2500
PTA Connected: The Smart Talk, Sponsored by Norton: 150 local PTAs awarded $1000
Mary Lou Anderson Reflections Arts Enhancement, sponsored by the family of Mary Lou Anderson: 2 local PTAs awarded $1000
STEM + Families Propelling Our World, sponsored by Huntington Ingalls Industries: 35 PTAs awarded $1,000
STEM + Families Science Festival, sponsored by Bayer Fund: 30 local PTAs awarded $1000 and 2 District/Council/Region PTAs awarded $5000
PTA Connected: Be Internet Awesome, Sponsored by Google + YouTube: 50 local PTAs awarded $1000
Family Reading Experience Grant, Sponsored by Office Depot OfficeMax: 35 local PTAs awarded $1000
Tobacco Prevention Campaign, sponsored by The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids: 25 local PTAs awarded $1000
PTA Connected: Create with Kindness Grant, Sponsored by TikTok: 38 local PTAs awarded $1000
PTA Connected + Discord, Sponsored by Discord: 30 local PTAs awarded $1000




Friday, November 4, 2022

4 Key Takeaways and Friendly Reminders

 



IRS 990 filing and AG Charitable Registration DEADLINE is November 15th, 2022!!!

As a 501c3, your unit must file an IRS990 and register with the Ohio Attorney General's Charitable Registration -both are due by November 15th. The Ohio PTA pays for a free filing service, File990.org. Log in with your EIN and file. For more information - review the Financial and Legal Handbook ( attached) or email your Region Advisor OR contact Barb Varley, VP of Field Service at barbvarley@gmail.com


Ohio PTA Membership is DUE by November 30th, 2022

First, ( Initial - but don't make it the Last) membership dues are required to be sent via Member Hub to the Ohio PTA by November 30th. Please pay prior to November 30th so that we receive it by the end of the month.

So if your status is:


• We have paid members but not entered-- great!!-here is a resource to enter them into Member Hub hhttps://support.memberhub.com/hc/en-us/articles/115001448274-Enter-PTA-Members-Cash-Check-

• Haven't had a membership drive yet- see lots of resources from National PTA on membership https://www.pta.org/home/run-your-pta/membership-resources But also remember- your board should be members!

• Don't have access to Member Hub- call, text, or email your region advisor

• Don't see the pay button- only the president or treasurer( logged in ) can see the pay button!


Have you heard about the updated National Standards for Family-School Partnerships?

Well, Good News. There is a virtual town hall meeting coming soon!!

When: Thursday, November 17th, 2022

Time: 7PM EST

Where: Virtual Meeting will be streamed live on National PTA’s Facebook page and Twitter and YouTube accounts.

We want Ohio to be the most represented on the call. We can do this Ohio!

Register herehttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdd4jfDlnNRU0Pu3z11pHLbzE7UBbl2eL1IBie_qldiDKVbVw/viewform

Here is the National Standards for Family-School Partnerships Info Kit: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1_nUWa9ArLQ36UEB7Mhh8g7orhlRpNlPW


Daylight Savings Time this Weekend!

Remember to change your clocks this weekend. We get 1 extra hour in the day on Sunday, November 6th, 2022.


Thursday, November 3, 2022

Raising the Bar with the National Standards for Family-School Partnerships

 

 
Families are essential partners in providing a high-quality education for every student. National PTA’s National Standards for Family-School Partnerships set the bar for how schools and parents should work together to support student success. The updated Standards provide critical guidance and best practices for strong partnerships that will make a real impact for all students, families, and schools. National PTA, alongside other leading education organizations, will host a virtual townhall Nov. 17 at 7 p.m. EST in conjunction with National Parent Involvement Month. The townhall will be streamed live on National PTA’s Facebook page and Twitter and YouTube accounts. Register Now: https://forms.gle/Jv6FxDvRneHnWiwx8







Saturday, October 29, 2022

Upcoming Events

 


Upcoming Events

Save the Date: Annual Ohio PTA Convention, Friday, April 14th – Sunday, April 16th, 2023 at the Nationwide Hotel Conference Center, Lewis Center, Ohio.


Important Information

IRS 990 filing and the Ohio Charitable Registration, on the checklist, are required to be completed by November 15th, 2022."

First-time dues remission must be sent via MemberHub by November 30, 2022, to remain a unit in good standing.

We offer our units a free IRS990 filing service- File990.org


See your bylaws - Article IV: Section 3 and Section 5 for more information.

Article IV—Relationship with National PTA and Ohio PTA


-Section 3. This local PTSA to be in good standing with Ohio PTA:

a. Adheres to the purposes and basic policies of PTA,

b. Remits the initial payment of National and Ohio PTA dues to the Ohio PTA by November 30, 2022.


-Section 5. This local PTSA not in good standing by:

a. November 30:

1. Shall not be eligible for awards.

2. Shall have their unit removed from the mailing list of the Ohio PTA.

3. Shall not be eligible to participate in the Reflections program of the Ohio PTA.


Ohio PTA Nominating Committee is Looking for Leaders!

Advocating for our families and making every child’s potential a reality takes the passion and dedication of many volunteers. Leaders at the state level of PTA come from all corners of our state. The legacy of Ohio PTA continues to thrive because of the leaders developed from the local unit, council, and region PTAs as well as those who bring specific volunteer and/or professional expertise to our advocacy. PTA leaders have diverse talents and abilities, and each person adds something unique to the team. If you are interested in serving on the Ohio PTA Board of Directors - please see the attached letter of Interest. The deadline for all materials to be received by the Nominating Committee chair (beresgerri@gmail.com) is October 31st, 2022.


Congratulations and a welcome to the new chartered units:

Ferdinand Schumacher CLC PTA, Akron Council

AF Falcons PTSA, Austintown Council

Euclid Early Learning Village, Euclid Council


Helping Hands and put the T in PTA Awards

Ohio PTA has two awards for units ( in working with their councils OR if you don't have a council ) to participate in recognizing outstanding individuals. The Helping Hand Award is for a volunteer who has made a positive impact on the lives of children and always helping at the PTA. The T in PTA is a way to recognize a certified staff that always goes above and beyond for the PTA, and its programs, or has made a positive impact in the lives of children. Further guidelines are on the forms- see attached!


Resources

Joe Mancini is the Ohio Connectivity Champions Coordinator, an Ohio Department of Education grant-funded program that assists families to find affordable and reliable internet connectivity. Ohioans with the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), a $30 discount on internet costs for eligible families. Here is the Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/OHConnectChamps

For more information email Joe Mancini at joe.mancini@managementcouncil.org


Social Media – Stay Informed!!

Social Media Spotlight: We update our Ohio PTA Facebook page often, have you friended us on Facebook? https://www.facebook.com/OhioPTA/


Thanks for all you do!! We appreciate your Partnership!!


2022-2023 T in PTA .docx

2022-2023 Helping Hands.docx

2022 SOA Checklist.pdf

OPTA-Potential-Board-Member-Application-2022-Final.pdf




Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Vouchers



Source: Ohio Coalition for Equity & Adequacy of School Funding

A Reminder That a 2017 Stanford University Study Indicates That Vouchers Do Not Improve Student Achievement


It has been common knowledge for several years that vouchers do not improve student achievement, as evidenced by the 2017 Stanford University study. More recent studies in Ohio and elsewhere agree. However, a few voucher zealots and their political allies in the 134th Ohio General Assembly are bent on passing HB290, a universal voucher bill. Voucher zealots know the data but still try to convince potential voucher users that they are better off in a private voucher school. The voucher lobby however continues to change its rhetoric. Recently the lobby just puppets “fund the student—not the system.”

Support the E&A Coalition’s challenge to the constitutionality of the EdChoice voucher scheme.

Vouchers do not improve student achievement, Stanford researcher finds

Education professor Martin Carnoy analyzed 25 years of research and found that voucher programs do not significantly improve test scores. Carnoy says vouchers distract from proven policies and programs with proven impact on test scores and graduation rates.

BY CARRIE SPECTOR

Proponents of “school choice” say that voucher programs – which allow parents to use state education funds to enroll their children in private schools – promote learning by providing access to different types of schools and by fostering competition that motivates public schools to improve.

But there’s no evidence that voucher programs significantly increase test scores, according to a new report by Stanford Graduate School of Education (GSE) Professor Martin Carnoy.

At best, they have only a modest impact on high school graduation rates, Carnoy found – and the risks they pose outweigh any advances.

“The evidence is very weak that vouchers produce significant gains in learning,” Carnoy said. “They also carry hidden costs, and they’re distracting us from other solutions that could yield much higher returns.”

Assessing the impact

The report, published by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), was initiated shortly after Betsy DeVos was nominated to serve as U.S. Secretary of Education. DeVos, who was confirmed Feb. 7, has pushed for the expansion of school vouchers nationwide.

Carnoy analyzed research conducted over the past 25 years, including studies of programs in Milwaukee, New York City, Washington, D.C., Indiana and Louisiana. Most studies have evaluated the impact of vouchers through test scores (as a proxy for student achievement) and high school graduation and college enrollment rates (indicators of school performance).

In Milwaukee, where the nation’s second-largest (after Indiana’s more recent) voucher program has been operating for almost 20 years, only a quarter of students attend their neighborhood school. “If choice were the answer, Milwaukee would be one of the highest-scoring cities in the country,” Carnoy said.

But test score data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) tell a different story. Among black eighth-graders in 13 urban school districts, Milwaukee – where black students make up more than 70 percent of all voucher recipients – ranked last in reading and second-to-last in math.

In cases where test scores did improve, Carnoy said, the increase appeared to be driven by increased public accountability, not vouchers. A four-year study in Milwaukee found no greater gains in state test scores among voucher students attending private schools until the legislature announced that all private schools accepting voucher students would be required to take the test and that the results would be made public. Researchers concluded that publicizing the results for the first time pressed these schools to focus more teaching on elements that might appear on the test, which helped increase their scores.

While research has found some small gains in voucher schools’ graduation and college enrollment rates, Carnoy said there’s no evidence indicating whether this was due to private school competition – as free-market proponents contend – or to private high schools’ willingness to shed less-motivated students.

Hidden costs

The report also disputes the common claim that vouchers cost less per student than traditional public education. “The cost argument is flawed,” Carnoy said, because the savings that private schools enjoy couldn’t be sustained if voucher programs were implemented much more widely.

For one thing, a private school that accepts vouchers can ease out low-performing students, even if initially required to admit them by lottery. Also, administering a voucher plan is expensive: Carnoy cited research estimating that record-keeping, student transportation and other costs associated with vouchers could raise public educational costs by 25 percent or more.

One alarming long-term cost of a voucher system, Carnoy said, is the impact it could have on the teaching pipeline. Public education’s tenure and pension system offers security that compensates for relatively low pay and that helps to retain experienced teachers. Without these benefits, he said, fewer young teachers would be likely to enter and remain in the profession.

Private schools in a largely public system save money by hiring young teachers who seek training and experience and have the option to go on to competitive positions at public schools. A mainly private system would eliminate the salary and tenure benefits of the public system, he said, exacerbating the teacher shortage and diminishing teacher quality on average.

“Supporters make the argument that vouchers are still cheaper, even if they don’t produce gains, but they’re using a false measure of the real cost of these schools,” said Carnoy, who has authored more than 40 books and 150 articles on economics and education.

Proven strategies

The report also draws attention to policies and programs that have been shown to improve student learning.

“There are many policy changes that are likely to have much higher payoffs than privatization,” said Carnoy, including teacher training, early childhood education, after-school and summer programs, student health programs and heightened standards in math, reading and science curricula.

These strategies appear to generate far more meaningful results than those estimated for voucher students, he found. And given the potential downsides, he said, expanding voucher programs just for slightly higher graduation rates “seems rather unreasonable.”

Media Contacts
Martin Carnoy, Stanford Graduate School of Education: carnoy@stanford.edu
Brooke Donald, Stanford Graduate School of Education: (650) 721-1402, brooke.donald@stanford.edu



Friday, September 30, 2022

Attention All Advocates for Education

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

Mark your calendars for a full month of Honesty events kicking off tomorrow!




Join the Honesty Youth and Young Adult Coalition this Saturday
for a student-focused antiracism workshop.

Saturday, October 1, Noon
  REGISTER HERE  
 



Join Honesty and Equality Ohio for a testimony workshop addressing the proposed State Board resolution
targeting LGBTQ+ students.
Tuesday, October 4, 6pm

REGISTER
 



Join our Reporter Roundtable for a discussion about the State Board of Education. Learn about their role and duties, hot issues and priorities, and the five open seats on the November ballot.
Thursday, October 6, 7pm
REGISTER

 


Meet us for lunch at The City Club of Cleveland!
Ken Schneck will moderate a thoughtful discussion about identity and living your truth with students and LGBTQ+ advocates.

Friday, October 7, 12pm
REGISTER

 



SHOW UP & SPEAK OUT for LGBTQ+ students at the 
October State Board of Education meeting!
Say NO! to the proposed resolution rejecting Title IX protections.

Wednesday, October 12, 8am
LEARN MORE

 



Join Honesty for the second Beloved Community Teach-In!
Featuring Keynote Speaker Ashley Hope Peréz, author of Out of Darkness, and breakout sessions designed for
healing and empowerment.

Tuesday, October 18, 4pm
  REGISTER
 
More Events