From the daily archives:

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Mike May and Matt Strawn (l-r)

Mike May R-Spirit Lake and GOP Chair Matt Strawn (l-r)

Iowa Republicans say it’s time for incoming teachers to take a test to see if they’re prepared to be classroom leaders and for high school seniors to take an exit exam to see if they’re ready for graduation.

Representative Mike May, a Republican from Spirit Lake who is a retired teacher, says those who flunk the test won’t necessarily to denied a diploma as they might be able to prove their proficiency in certain subject in another way.

“(We’re) not suggesting this is just a do-all-or-die test. This is certainly not intended that way,” May says. “…We want to implement this because it gives us a good look at our districts.” The Republicans in the legislature are also pressing for an enhanced “report card” that would let Iowans know how well students in their local school district are performing, and how much is being spent on local schools.

Senator Kim Reynolds, a Republican from Osceola, calls it the “Parent and Taxpayer Right to Know Act.” “We need to do what we can to keep parents and taxpayers fully informed on the process and we need to make sure that we are providing for them adequate tools that they can evaluate the performance of the school system and be able to really hold their educators and local officials accountable,” Reynolds says.

The Republicans are also reversing course as a party and suggesting it’s time for statewide content standards for what is taught in each grade level — in both public and private schools. Representative Jodi Tymeson, a Republican from Winterset, says Republicans have been hearing from “lots of Iowans” who’re upset with the status quo.

“We are the only state in the nation without state standards and for years we’ve thought we were the best in the nation and the test scores show something different,” Tymeson says. “So we are looking at: Is it time for us to have state standards to get where we need to be in education?”

The three legislators held a news conference Tuesday afternoon at Republican Party of Iowa headquarters in Des Moines. Matt Strawn is the chairman of the Iowa G.O.P. “We rightfully should be proud of our school system, our public school system, however we cannot let our pride blind us to the reality that measures of accountability, expectations and standards that were acceptable decades ago just aren’t getting the job done today,” Strawn said. Without reform, Strawn said the state’s public education system will continue it’s “slide toward mediocrity.”

Iowa Democratic Party chairman Michael Kiernan finds the G.O.P. call for statewide education standards ironic.

“When they say they’ve come forward with a new plan and a new initiative, one of the pieces of their proposal is the same one that they shot down,” Kiernan says. Republicans maintain their proposal would be different and give schools greater flexibility in meeting the statewide standards. The Iowa Democratic Party’s chairman also dismisses the idea of testing new teachers and high school seniors awaiting graduation.

“This seems to be a reach to the past and some of their failed policies before,” Kiernan says. “Frankly, it smacks of No Child Left Behind.” President Bush signed the “No Child Left Behind Act” in 2001. Under the federal education standards outlined in that law, 293 Iowa schools are now on classified as “in need of assistance.

AUDIO: G.O.P. news conference. 20:00 MP3

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Iowa prepares to meet former Hawkeye against Arizona

by Todd Kimm 09/15/09 4:16 PM

The Iowa Hawkeyes will close out the pre-conference portion of their schedule this weekend at home against Arizona. Iowa is off to a 2-0 start after a win at Iowa State while the Wildcats are also 2-0 under former Hawkeye safety Mike Stoops. Ferentz says it’s always good to have former Hawkeyes home, but it’s [...]

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St. Ambrose moves into top 10

by Todd Kimm 09/15/09 4:14 PM

The St. Ambrose football team has moved into the nation’s top ten and gets set to host St. Francis of Indiana in an early season showdown. The Fighting Bees are 2-0 and ranked ninth in the latest N-A-I-A poll and big plays on defense have been a major factor. The St. Ambrose defense has generated [...]

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Governor says no big changes in store for IPERS

by O. Kay Henderson 09/15/09 4:04 PM

Governor Chet Culver says there are no big changes in store for IPERS, the Iowa Public Employees Retirement System, to ensure future beneficiaries get their benefits. IPERS provides retirement benefits for government workers, including teachers, fire fighters and cops. There are over 300-thousand active and retired “members” in the IPERS system today.
“There’s no need for [...]

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Sprinkler puts out fire at Rockwell Collins, employees evacuated

by Pat Curtis 09/15/09 4:03 PM

Nearly 700 employees at Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids were evacuated from a number of buildings this morning because of a fire. Cedar Rapids Fire Department spokesperson Greg Buelow says a sprinkler system doused the fire, which started just above a drop-down tile ceiling over two interconnected buildings.
“The sprinkler system worked like it was supposed [...]

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John Deere Credit dedicates new addition in Johnston

by O. Kay Henderson 09/15/09 1:15 PM

John Deere’s C.E.O. was on hand for today’s dedication of a three-story, 145,000 square foot addition to the John Deere Credit headquarters in suburban Des Moines. John Deere Credit was formed in 1985, but Sam Allen, the new president and C.E.O. of John Deere, says its roots go back to the Great Depression when the [...]

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Congressman pushes for statue of Borlaug at U.S. Capitol

by O. Kay Henderson 09/15/09 11:36 AM

An Iowa congressman is pushing the idea of honoring the late Norman Borlaug with a statue in the U.S.Capitol. Borlaug, a native of Cresco, Iowa, won the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in plant genetics.
In 1864, congress passed a law which allows each state to have statues of two “notable citizens” on display [...]

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