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THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Thursday, December 5th, 2019

Kirkus Review: A resource for parents who feel overwhelmed by the prospect of school choice.

Campanella is the president of the annual public-awareness effort National School Choice Week, and his debut book offers a clear road map for choosing the best schools for one’s children. Its initial chapters lay down fundamental concepts—that parents are the experts on their own children, that what works for one child may not work for another, and that geographic location is a key factor in choosing a school. He then introduces six education options: traditional public schools, public charter schools, online public schools, public magnet schools, private schools, and home schooling. He provides basic descriptions of each choice, complete with quick summaries of management styles, how teachers are certified, and other factors. He also offers tables regarding each choice’s geographic availability, although these lack some specificity. “My Takes” summarize the author’s thoughts on each education option, such as “Private Schools can be unique, diverse, and more affordable than you might think.” The author walks readers through his seven-step process (starting with “Think Back to Your Own Time in School” and “Identify Your Goals for Your Child”), providing questions for readers to ask themselves as they do their own research. Worksheets help to focus the discussion with a structured, methodical approach. The questions feel repetitious at times, but they effectively highlight important items. The final chapter asks readers to share their experiences with others, which sweetly concludes the main text. Readers may have questions that the seven-step plan doesn’t directly address, but Campanella’s lengthy “Frequently Asked Questions” section will likely help them. Overall, the author succeeds in his stated desire to remove politics from the school-choice discussion. However, more critical commentary would have been useful, as some descriptions feel overly idealistic. Throughout, Campanella includes supportive, inspiring quotations from parents and school administrators as well as examples of successful schools around the country; several regions are noticeably underrepresented, however.

A straightforward and often useful companion for those on a school-choice journey.

To read the rest of the review, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.

To learn more about Andrew Campanella, click here.

RED HOTEL News!

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Wide Range Of Reading Ideas To Get In Gear For The Holidays

“Red Hotel” by Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman (Beaufort Books)

“Red Hotel” is an incredibly timely globe-trotting thriller that is fiction on the edge of reality. A Tokyo hotel is bombed and dozens are killed and injured, so why is one man walking away from the massacre with a smile on his face? Former Army intelligence officer Dan Reilly, now international hotel executive, is on the case.

As Reilly utilizes all the contacts he can to get to the bottom of the disaster, he learns he isn’t just looking for one person but an entire organization that he never suspected. This discovery leads him to more calculated acts of terror around the globe and a much more internationally connected web of corruption than he was prepared for.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about RED Hotel, click here.

To learn more about Gary Grossman, click here, and to learn more about Ed Fuller, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Tuesday, December 3rd, 2019

Virginia Walden Ford’s New Memoir, “School Choice: A Legacy to Keep,” Shares the True Story of a Courageous Education Reform Pioneer

Virginia Walden Ford, who was recently portrayed by Uzo Aduba in the film, “Miss Virginia,” tells the behind-the-scenes true story of her childhood in the segregated south and her fight to bring school choice to our nation’s capital, in her new memoir, “School Choice: A Legacy to Keep.”

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (PRWEB) November 21, 2019

Every child in the U.S. deserves the opportunity to receive a quality education, but those opportunities are not equally distributed among young people in our country. That inequality is something that Virginia Walden Ford discovered as a child growing up in the segregated south, and then spent most of her adult life trying to change. In School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, a memoir published today by Beaufort Books, Walden Ford shares the improbable true story of how her childhood experiences prepared her for a life of school choice advocacy.

A decade after the “Little Rock Nine” desegregated Little Rock Central High School, Walden Ford was part of the second wave of black students to enroll in the school. As a teenager, she watched in horror as faceless bigots burned a cross at her home, protesting her father’s appointment to serve as the first black administrator of Little Rock’s school system.

Then, years later, Walden Ford drew on those experiences –– along with the lessons taught to her by her parents and grandparents –– when she rallied parents to protest Washington, D.C.’s broken education system and demand greater school choices for their own children.

In the process, she and other low-income parents steadily built community support for their efforts but faced sustained criticism from school choice opponents. Aligned with an unlikely set of allies in the U.S. Congress, they eventually won the fight to create the D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program in 2004. Since its inception, the program has provided scholarships so that more than 10,000 children could attend the private schools of their parents’ choice.

Earlier this year, Walden Ford’s story was told on the big screen in the feature film, Miss Virginia, in which Emmy-winning actress Uzo Aduba portrays Virginia. The film also stars Matthew Modine, Niles Fitch, and Vanessa Williams.

Walden Ford’s new memoir expands on the lessons instilled by her parents, who served as public school teachers and administrators. The book also explores how she learned the values of courage and tenacity by listening to stories of her ancestors, including her great-great grandfather, who was a slave.

“I was raised to believe that education is a right but one that we have to keep fighting for, even 60 years after desegregation,” Walden Ford said. “I will never stop fighting for children and to give them a better chance at life. This book is part of that legacy.”

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

To learn more about Virginia Walden Ford, click here.

RED HOTEL News!

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

RED Hotel featured on Eagle & Times “Wide Range Of Reading Ideas To Get In Gear For The Holidays”

“Red Hotel” is an incredibly timely globe-trotting thriller that is fiction on the edge of reality. A Tokyo hotel is bombed and dozens are killed and injured, so why is one man walking away from the massacre with a smile on his face? Former Army intelligence officer Dan Reilly, now international hotel executive, is on the case.

As Reilly utilizes all the contacts he can to get to the bottom of the disaster, he learns he isn’t just looking for one person but an entire organization that he never suspected. This discovery leads him to more calculated acts of terror around the globe and a much more internationally connected web of corruption than he was prepared for. Purchase at https://amzn.to/2nYUh3m.

Click here to read the rest of the article.

Click here to learn more about RED Hotel.

Click here to learn more about Ed Fuller and Gary Grossman.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Thursday, November 21st, 2019

Clarion Reviews evaluates The School Choice Roadmap: 7 Steps to Finding the Right School for Your Child

Clarion Rating: 4 out of 5

With a convincing platform that’s based on helping children thrive, The School Choice Roadmap is a fair-minded resource.

A reassuring guide for parents, Andrew Campanella’s The School Choice Roadmap is all about navigating the sometimes overwhelming decisions around K-12 enrollment.

Its outlook positive, the book emphasizes the idea that school choice is personal, not political. It sidesteps the public versus private school debate, suggesting that parents research the options that are available where they live. What matters, it asserts, is what’s best for each individual student; it argues that parents are the experts when it comes to knowing their kids.

Presented in two parts, the book first forwards an objective overview of six types of schools: traditional public, public charter, public magnet, online public, private, and home. It argues the potential benefits of each, discussing the facts in a friendly way that’s appreciative of how busy parents are. This section will be helpful for cutting through school mission statements and numerical ratings to evaluate the key features which are relevant to a family’s circumstances. Its information sticks to standard definitions. In its second portion, the book outlines seven steps toward choosing a school.

Click here to read the rest of the review.

Click here to learn more about The School Choice Roadmap.

Click here to learn more about Andrew Campanella.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Tuesday, November 19th, 2019

The School Choice Roadmap named “Best Parenting Book” for 2020 by the National Parenting Product Awards

The School Choice Roadmap by Andrew Campanella was among the six products chosen for the 2020 National Parenting Product Awards.

To learn more about the award, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.

To learn more about Andrew Campanella, click here.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Tuesday, November 19th, 2019

The School Choice Roadmap wins Mom’s Choice Gold Award

The Mom’s Choice Awards has awarded the Mom’s Choice Gold Award for Best Parenting Book to The School Choice Roadmap by Andrew Campanella!

To read more about the award, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.

To learn more about author Andrew Campanella, click here.

THE WOMAN IN THE PARK News!

Tuesday, November 19th, 2019

Authors Teresa Sorkin and Tullan Holmqvist join Chris Cuomo on SiriumXM

Teresa Sorkin and Tullan Holmqvist sat down with Chris Cuomo on Monday, November 18th to discuss their debut book, The Woman in the Park.

To listen to the interview, click here.

To learn more about the authors, click here for Teresa Sorkin and click here for Tullan Holmqvist.

To learn more about The Woman in the Park, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Thursday, November 14th, 2019

Virginia Walden Ford’s is the Great American Story

Virginia Walden Ford’s is the great American story, she’s on the right side of it, and it’s dramatically well-told in the new movie Miss Virginia. In the movie, Emmy winner Uzo Aduba plays Ford as she—sick and tired of being treated as if she’s incompetent to choose her own child’s school—rises in righteous rebellion and seizes control of her own affairs again by fighting for school choice in Washington, D.C., in a grand renewal of the American ideal of citizenship.

As also told in her forthcoming autobiography School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, “Miss Virginia” was an already-struggling single mother from a low-income neighborhood who decided to take on yet another struggle—to seek another option for the education of her teen boy. She was highly dissatisfied with the public school he was assigned to attend. She very much feared that he might be on his way to a life of drug dealing and all of that which too often follows. She couldn’t afford the tuition at other, nearby private schools, however.

Overcoming several obstacles, including her own fear of public speaking and the powerful educational establishment, Ford and the D.C. Parents for School Choice group she formed in the late 1990s sought to secure educational opportunity for her child, at another school, of her choosing. It was a story known to Bradley, which supported similar groups in Milwaukee and elsewhere; it helped fund D.C. Parents for School Choice, too.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To read more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

To read more about Virginia Walden Ford, click here.

AGENCY MANIA News!

Tuesday, November 12th, 2019

AGENCY MANIA NAMED BEST BUSINESS BOOK OF 2019: MARKETING

With each passing year, the universe of marketing and sales continues to expand. Fueled by technology, constant connectivity, and rapidly evolving consumer behavior, the scope of activities and competencies that fall under this category grows. This year’s three best business books on marketing come from three radically dif­ferent parts of the ecosystem — and each reimagines a core function while expanding the boundaries of the discipline. Whether they are suggesting new ways to consider the customer experience, providing a realistic look at the immense potential of artificial intelligence, or delving into the still-powerful role of agencies, this year’s books bring focus to an industry that increasingly defies easy definition.

At the beginning of one chapter in Agency Mania, author Bruno Gralpois urges the reader to “go ahead and grab a cup of coffee” before plunging into a 40-page treatise on client/agency contracts. And it shouldn’t be a shot of espresso. Agency Mania is not a book that most readers will finish in one gulp; its best use is as a comprehensive manual detailing virtually every aspect of the client/agency relationship, to be kept on the office bookshelf (or iPad) and pulled out (or tapped on) as needed. About to look for a new agency? Read chapter 5, “Assortative Mating and the Sweaty T-Shirt Theory: Conducting a Successful Agency Search.” Trying to figure out an equitable compensation model? Turn to chapter 7, “Just Six Numbers: Determining the Right Agency Compensation.” Quotes interspersed throughout from major advertisers and agencies — Procter & Gamble, Anomaly, Ford — enhance the book’s credibility. Charts and best practices listed at the end of each chapter help break the thick book into digestible chunks.

Many marketing books I’ve read over the years have been inspiring. Many of the treatises and cris de coeur of ad gurus are full of soaring rhetoric and stabs at deeper meaning. Agency Mania is not one of these books. It’s a distinctly unromantic look into the plumbing of marketing. That said, you’re unlikely to find a more essential book if, as is the case for many marketers, your relationship with your agency is the most important one in your work life. Gralpois, a consultant who has championed agency management as a discipline top advertisers need to invest in, leaves no aspect of the client/agency relationship undiscussed. He devotes dense chapters to scoping work and briefing agencies, building effective performance evaluations, and understanding the nuances of that strange place still sometimes referred to as Madison Avenue.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about Agency Mania, click here.

To learn more about author Bruno Gralpois, click here.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Wednesday, November 6th, 2019

ANDREW CAMPANELLA FEATURED ON PARENTING OUR FUTURE PODCAST

We all want our kids to get a good education and be successful in school.  BUT not every school fits your child’s unique needs and abilities. Is your child gifted?  Does your child have learning disabilities? Is the school your child in just not a good fit? Do you know you have a choice and the right to choose a school that fits your child?  Are you aware of the many options that are available? This may seem like an exciting concept but also daunting because where do you start? 

In this episode, Andrew Campanella, the President of National School Choice week in The United States talks about how and when parents can look for alternatives for their kids based on their needs.  

To listen to the podcast, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Wednesday, November 6th, 2019

VIRGINIA WALDEN FORD WRITES ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF SCHOOL CHOICE IN WASHINGTON EXAMINER OP-ED

If anyone needed a wake-up call about the urgent need to expand school choice, last week’s release of student achievement data from the National Assessment of Educational Progress is the loudest alarm clock we have heard in years. It should jolt every family, every school, and every elected official into action.

The numbers are sobering: only 41% of our nation’s fourth graders are proficient in math and only 35% are proficient in reading. As students get older, the outlook looks even bleaker: only 34% of eighth graders are proficient in reading and math.

What’s worse is that across almost every metric, with the exception of fourth grade math, student achievement is at lower levels today than it was two years ago.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

SCHOOL CHOICE: A LEGACY TO KEEP News!

Friday, November 1st, 2019

FEATURE: VIRGINIA WALDEN FORD INTERVIEWED BY THE LOS ANGELES SENTINEL

Virginia Walden Ford is not afraid of a fight especially not when the welfare of African American children is on the line. Then she is “fearless” and “relentless” and where superheroines are drawn for comic book mythology, here, we have a real-life warrior who battled over school vouchers in the nation’s capital.

Ford knew that her son deserved better and fought to get her son into a private school — with the government footing the bill.

Virginia Walden Ford is known as a dedicated and effective Black D.C. activist who shook it up in the late 1990s and 2000s pushing for vouchers despite the opposition by many Democratic leaders in the District.

It didn’t stop her, in fact, the obstacles motivated her more.

In the movie version of her life — “Miss Virginia” — Virginia Walden Ford is played by Uzo Aduba (“Orange is the New Black”). The release of the film seems to be fitting perfectly to reflect our current political climate. If you follow education news then you know that the Trump administration is pushing for an expansion of vouchers and as Democratic presidential candidates debate school choice.

To read the rest of the article, click here.

To learn more about School Choice: A Legacy to Keep, click here.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Thursday, October 31st, 2019

New Op-Ed from Andrew Campanella: New Data Shows Kids Are Struggling with Reading—How You Can Help

If your child is having a hard time learning to read or you’re worried she might fall behind, the Nation’s Report Card scores released yesterday aren’t great news. An alarming percentage of students in fourth and eighth grades are indeed struggling, according to the 2019 scores.

Nationwide, 35 percent of fourth graders and 34 percent of eighth graders are not proficient in reading, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Equally as disturbing: overall student proficiency in reading has actually declined over the last several years.

In New York City, the proficiency rates are even lower: 24 percent of fourth graders and 26 percent of eighth graders are proficient—both a full percentage point below what they were in 2017.

The response to this worrisome news is predictable. Policy wonks and elected officials are engaging in spirited discussions about how they can change education policy to improve children’s chances at succeeding. There will, almost certainly, be a lot of finger pointing too, identifying what caused these surprising declines and what could have been done to prevent them. These discussions—the ones about how to fix things moving forward, at least—are important.

But most parents, understandably, are not thinking about this from a detached perspective. They are thinking about their own children. Some moms and dads will see the NAEP data and ask themselves if their own children are truly proficient in reading, or if they are quietly falling behind. For some parents who know their children are having a difficult time, the national NAEP scores will only reinforce their concerns.

To continue reading Andrew’s article, click here.

To learn more about Andrew Campanella, click here.

To learn more about School Choice Roadmap, click here.

THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP News!

Friday, October 25th, 2019

FEATURE: ANDREW CAMPANELLA FEATURED ON EPISODE 76 OF REALITY CHECK PODCAST TO TALK ABOUT THE SCHOOL CHOICE ROADMAP

Andrew Campanella (@andrewrcamp)is the president of National School Choice Week, which has grown under his leadership from 150 events in 2011 to more than 40,000 in 2019. He is the author of the forthcoming book, ‘The School Choice Roadmap: 7 Steps to Finding the Right School for Your Child, a guidebook that helps parents identify education environments that meet their children’s needs. (Beaufort Books, January 2020). Andrew joins Jeanne on this Episode 76 of Reality Check to talk about his journey to the choice movement, how his interactions with hundreds of parents have shaped and sharpened his understanding of how choice plays out in parental decision-making surrounding their children’s education, and why he is optimistic about the future of education in America.

To listen to the podcast, click here.

To learn more about The School Choice Roadmap, click here.