Ohio Archives · Policy Print https://policyprint.com/tag/ohio/ News Around the Globe Sun, 03 Dec 2023 23:45:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://policyprint.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-policy-print-favico-32x32.png Ohio Archives · Policy Print https://policyprint.com/tag/ohio/ 32 32 Ohio Department of Education Leading Quiet Policy Analysis Revolution https://policyprint.com/ohio-department-of-education-leading-quiet-policy-analysis-revolution/ Fri, 22 Dec 2023 23:33:06 +0000 https://policyprint.com/?p=4078 Last month, I attended the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management’s Fall Research Conference. This is the…

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Last month, I attended the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management’s Fall Research Conference. This is the ultimate wonk conference — more than 2,000 policy analysts and researchers convening in Atlanta, Georgia to talk about the most recent research on topics of public policy.

I go to this conference because I’m interested in what people are learning about public policy across the country. I’m often interested in learning things that I can bring back to Ohio — new analysis being conducted that is not happening here in the Buckeye State. Ohio isn’t usually on the cutting edge of policy analysis, so this is a good place for me to learn about things I can bring back home.

Imagine how surprised I was when I saw one of the most innovative research projects in the country presented by the Ohio Department of Education.

If you follow Statehouse news, you likely have heard about the efforts to reform education finance in Ohio. Alongside these legislative reforms, which will likely lead to billions of dollars in changes for school funding in Ohio, the state Department of Education (newly changed to the “Department of Education and Workforce”) has been conducting a series of studies on the cost of education in Ohio.

Two of these studies were released late last year. 

In November 2022, the Department of Education released a study by the American Institutes for Research on the cost of adequate special education in the state of Ohio. A month later, the Department released a study by West Ed and APA on the cost of education for English language learners in Ohio.

What I found fascinating about these studies was the approach they took. The studies were focused on a similar question: what will it cost to provide an adequate education for key student subgroups? They then answered these questions by turning to Ohioans.

Each of these studies included both interviews and surveys with professionals across the state to understand the components needed in education and the costs associated with these components. They both also undertook a “professional judgment panel” approach that utilized panels of local experts to understand the resources needed to provide education and the cost of those resources.

The Department of Education and Workforce is now contracting a new study, this time focusing on economic disadvantage, a component of school funding that could have a wider research than the last two studies.

While the Department has not officially endorsed the findings of these reports, they commissioned them in order to make sure that policymakers had access to the best information possible when formulating school funding policy.

Whether the General Assembly incorporates the results of these findings into future education budgeting is yet to be determined. We still live in a democracy, so it is not technocrats who make these decisions, it is elected officials who do. 

That being said, these sorts of studies represent a triumph for evidence-based policymaking and a marrying of the ideals of rational policy analysis and local input. Often Ohio is the last to undertake innovations in policy, but this is a situation where Ohio is leading the way. And as a state, we should be proud of that.

Source : Ohio Capital Journal

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Ohio County Board of Education Briefed on Medical Cannabis Policy https://policyprint.com/ohio-county-board-of-education-briefed-on-medical-cannabis-policy/ Sat, 21 Oct 2023 14:44:45 +0000 https://policyprint.com/?p=3661 WHEELING — West Virginia has established a policy pertaining to the use of medical cannabis in schools, and…

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WHEELING — West Virginia has established a policy pertaining to the use of medical cannabis in schools, and Ohio County Board of Education members were briefed on the new guidelines Monday night.

To date, there have been no requests for the use of medical cannabis by students in the school district, according to Ohio County Schools nurse Melissa Soltesz.

The new policy for medical cannabis is more restrictive than existing policy for other medications, Soltesz told board members.

Normally when a school nurse is asked to give medication to a student while at school, an order from a physician is required. The nurse also has to have a parental signature, and the medication must be kept in a drawer or cabinet that can be locked, she said.

“This is much stricter,” Soltesz continued. “This is not a situation where we simply (need) a doctor’s order or a parent’s order.”

The parent or guardian must first apply for and receive a medical cannabis card for their child from the State Department of Health and Human Resources. The youth also must apply separately for an identification card from the DHHR.

Then a physician certification has to be issued stating that medical cannabis is necessary for the student’s medical condition.

“This isn’t something we’re going to be keeping in our buildings,” Soltesz added. “It specifically says we cannot keep any of this on site. The caregiver would have to come to the school, and they would need to administer the medical cannabis. It cannot be delegated. It has to be the caregiver who has the card.”

That keeps the school district from having liability in the procedure, she explained.

If a student with a certified medical condition is found to no longer need medical cannabis, they need to notify their school’s principal within 10 days.

The medical cannabis administered cannot be in plant form, but must be in the semblance of a pill, drop or gummy form. It cannot be in a smokable form, according to Soltesz.

“At this point, we’ve not had a physician even try to give us any type of an order to administer medical cannabis in the school system,” she explained. “This (policy) actually makes it more difficult.

“If someone truly needs medical cannabis they will go through these steps. If they don’t, they won’t waste their time because it is a tedious process.”

The Ohio County Board of Education next meets at 6 p.m. on Oct. 23 at the board office, 2203 National Road, Wheeling.

Source : The Intelligencer

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