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Florida Department of Education

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Florida
Department of Education
Department overview
Formed1870
JurisdictionFlorida
HeadquartersTallahassee, Florida, U.S.
Employees2,500+ (2006-7)
Annual budget$23 billion
Department executive
Websitewww.fldoe.org
Turlington Building, the headquarters

The Florida Department of Education (FLDOE) is the state education agency of Florida. It governs public education and manages funding and testing for local educational agencies (school boards). It is headquartered in the Turlington Building (named for former education commissioner Ralph Turlington) in Tallahassee.[1]

The Florida commissioner of education manages the day-to-day operation of the department. The office of education commissioner was originally a Cabinet-level position filled by direct election and directly responsible for education in Florida. The 2002 Florida Constitution Revision Commission submitted a revision to the Florida Constitution, amending Article IV, Section IV to reduce the Cabinet from six elected officials to three. The voters approved the changes and it became effective January 7, 2003; after this time, the commissioner of education became an appointed position and the FLDOE became the overall responsibility of the governor. The revised constitution also created a new Florida Board of Education with seven members (one of whom is the commissioner of education), appointed by the governor to oversee the Department of Education. Division of Vocational Rehabilitation - 930 positions Division of Blind Services - 300 positions Annual operating budget for all entities in 2012-13 - approximately $18.6 billion Oversee 28 locally governed public state colleges and 47 school district technical centers

The department supports 2.6 million students, 3,800 public schools and 318,000 full-time staff and more than 180,000 teachers.

The department manages the Florida Information Resource Network (FIRN), which provides Internet access to public schools.[2]

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Transcription

History

The superintendent of public instruction was established to oversee Florida's public schools in the 1868 Florida Constitution. The elected officeholder became the commissioner of education under the 1968 Florida Constitution. A constitutional amendment in 1998 made effective January 2003 reorganized the office so its head was no longer elected and created a State Board of Education.[3]

In 2022, the Florida Department of Education rejected a record 41% of mathematics textbooks for non-compliance with the state's new B.E.S.T. Standards, which replace Common Core. The department claimed that the books rejected "incorporate prohibited topics or unsolicited strategies", including critical race theory (CRT), social–emotional learning (SEL), and Common Core. Commissioner of Education Richard Corcoran stated that the state is aiming to prevent "indoctrination or exposure to dangerous and divisive concepts in our classrooms". The state did not provide any specific examples of content that led to the books being rejected.[4][5] The state later approved 19 previously-rejected books, after claiming that publishers "made fixes" that removed "woke content."[6]

In May 2022, the state published records disclosing the results of the reviews, revealing that the majority of reviewers—largely educators—found no evidence of the textbooks containing CRT, but more often flagged for containing SEL. Most of the accusations of prohibited content came from Chris Allen—a vice chair of a chapter of the conservative group Moms for Liberty—who accused textbooks of promoting CRT because of its inclusion of data surrounding an implicit bias test and a statement that the United States had not "eradicated poverty or racism", complained of a word problem that involved the gender pay gap, objected to an author "[talking] about a climate crisis as if it’s a proven fact". and objected to questions involving elections and vaccines that did not include references to The Federalist Papers or natural immunity.[7][6]

In October, 2022, the Florida Department of Education announced the selection of a 13-member working group, including educators and curriculum developers, as well as the financial experts, Dr. David Phelps and Kim Kiyosaki, that would develop the state's new financial literacy curriculum.[8] This curriculum was later completed in 2023, and received support from notable celebrities, including Mark Cuban and Matt Higgins, to get students excited about and engaged with the new curriculum.[9] In completing this initiative, Florida joined roughly half of US states that currently have a financial literacy component to their public education curriculum.[10]

State exams

The State of Florida requires students to take the Florida Assessment of Student Thinking (FAST) each year in grades 3-10. Students' results from the FAST are compiled to generate a grade for each public school under former governor Jeb Bush's "A+ Plan." Under this plan, public schools receive a letter grade from A to F, depending on student performance and the degree to which the bottom 25% of the school has improved compared to its past performances. The higher a public school scores, the more funding it receives.[citation needed]

Teacher certification

The department paid bonuses to teachers certified by the federal government. Up until 2010, the bonus was as much as $3,800 annually. This is expected to diminish with diminished income to the state.[11]

Superintendents of Public Instruction

  1. C. Thurston Chase (1868–1870)
  2. Henry Quarles (1870–1871)
  3. Rev. Charles Beecher (1871–1873)
  4. Jonathan C. Gibbs (1873–1874)
  5. William Watkin Hicks (1875–1876)
  6. William Penn Haisley (1877–1881)
  7. Eleazer K. Foster (1881–1884)
  8. Albert Jonathan Russell (1884–1893)
  9. William N. Sheats (1893–1905) and (1913–1922)
  10. William M. Holloway (1905–1913)
  11. William S. Cawthon (1922–1937)
  12. Colin English (1937–1949)
  13. Thomas D. Bailey (1949–1965)
  14. T. D. Johnson (1965)
  15. Floyd Thomas Christian (Supt. of Public Instruction 1965–1969; Commissioner of Education in 1969–1974)

Commissioners of Education

  1. Ralph D. Turlington (1974–1986)
  2. Betty Castor (1986–1994)
  3. Douglas L. Jamerson (1994–1995)
  4. Frank T. Brogan (1995–1999)
  5. Tom Gallagher (1999–2001)
  6. Charlie Crist (2001–2003)
  7. Jim Horne (2003–2004)
  8. John L. Winn (2004–2007)
  9. Jeanine Blomberg (interim) (2007)
  10. Eric J. Smith (October 5, 2007 – June 10, 2011)
  11. Gerard Robinson (June 11, 2011 – 2012)
  12. Tony Bennett (January – August 2013)
  13. Pam Stewart (August 2013 – January 8, 2019)
  14. Richard Corcoran (January 8, 2019 – May 1, 2022)
  15. Jacob Oliva (interim) (May 1, 2022 – June 1, 2022)
  16. Manny Díaz Jr. (June 1, 2022 – present)

See also

References

  1. ^ "Contact Information." Florida Department of Education. Retrieved on August 31, 2009.
  2. ^ "Florida Information Resource Center". Florida Center for Instructional Technology. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  3. ^ https://www.floridamemory.com/learn/research-tools/guides/governors/commissioner-of-education.php[bare URL]
  4. ^ FDOE Press Office (April 15, 2022). "Florida Rejects Publishers' Attempts to Indoctrinate Students". Florida Department of Education.
  5. ^ Archie, Ayana (April 18, 2022). "Florida rejects 54 math books, claiming critical race theory appeared in some". NPR.
  6. ^ a b "Most Florida math textbook reviewers didn't see evidence of 'woke' concepts". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
  7. ^ "DeSantis accused textbooks of 'indoctrination.' Here's what he meant". Washington Post. 2022-05-09. Retrieved 2022-05-12.
  8. ^ "Dr. David Phelps Selected for Working Group to Guide FL's New Financial Literacy Education Curriculum". WNCT 9.
  9. ^ Hulce, Spencer. "Celebrities, Financial Experts, & Educators Team Up to Bring Financial Literacy to Florida Students". Grit Daily.
  10. ^ "More States Now Require Financial Literacy Classes in High Schools". New York Times.
  11. ^ Spitzer, Michelle (16 December 2010). "5 Brevard teachers get national certification". Melbourne, Florida: Florida Today. pp. 1A.

External links

This page was last edited on 28 February 2024, at 21:32
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