ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ron Matus
Ron Matus is director of Research & Special Projects at Step Up for Students and a former editor of redefinED. He joined Step Up in February 2012 after 20 years in journalism, including eight years as an education reporter with the Tampa Bay Times (formerly the St. Petersburg Times).
My background story
I’ve been watching Florida’s education landscape for 20 years. If the changes were distilled into a Florida Man meme, the meme might say, “Holy smokes! Florida Man got something right!” I left a career in journalism after my own evolution on school choice made me realize how fundamental it is to a fair, high-functioning education system. Florida’s system, once a national joke, is showing the rest of America what’s possible. How amazing it is to be here at this moment in history. When it comes to learning options, there are 1,000 flowers in bloom – and thousands of people, from all walks of life and all points on the political spectrum, worked together to make it happen. How gratifying to be part of such a diverse, dynamic movement – and to help tell its story.
What I did before joining Step Up For Students
I was a newspaper reporter my entire adult life; my first story was published when I was 18. I worked in Tallahassee, Fla., Thomasville, Ga., Albany, Ga., and Panama City, Fla., before becoming the environmental reporter at the Gainesville (Fla.) Sun in 1997. I joined the Tampa Bay Times, the state’s biggest and most influential newspaper, in 2002, and I was the TBT’s state education reporter from 2004 to 2012. It feels like bragging to mention it, but I won more than 20 reporting awards, including three from the Education Writers Association, and I was nominated for two Pulitzers.
What do I do on my day off?
I study Florida. I’m slogging my way, one course at a time, through a master’s degree Program in Florida Studies at the University of South Florida. I got halfway through a similar program in the 1990s before I was derailed by delusions of being a rock star. My academic focus is on Rosenwald schools, segregation-era schools that flourished throughout the South for a half century before integration and still hold ironic lessons for public education today.
How to reach out?
Reach me at [email protected].
12/18/24 | Ron Matus
This educator skipped the traditional teacher route and headed straight into entrepreneurship
DAVENPORT, Fla. – Valeria Oquendo didn’t set out to be an entrepreneur. “Ms. V,” as her students call her, had wanted to be a teacher since she was a teenager....
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11/14/24 | Ron Matus
A microschool in farm country
McALPIN, Fla. – Maybe it stands to reason that in a remote community surrounded by hay fields and pine plantation, students at a new, K-5 microschool would bring baby horses...
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10/29/24 | Ron Matus
With help from education choice, this teacher forged a kind and curious and joyful path
SARASOTA, Fla. – After 18 years as an educator in public and private schools, Justine Wilson decided to make a change. She was excellent at her job. In fact,...
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09/26/24 | Ron Matus
À Taste of À La Carte Learning: SALTWATER STUDIES
Editor’s note: This story is one of five spotlights included in our latest special report, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning.” So how’s this for a science classroom? These...
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09/18/24 | Ron Matus
Former public school teacher who needed to ‘break free’ creates her own learning center
PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. – Cristina Bedgood, a 15-year former public school teacher, took two years to craft plans for her own private learning center. She knew she needed 40...
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09/10/24 | Ron Matus
‘Alexa, how do you start a school?’
VERO BEACH, Fla. – For eight years, Danielle McLean couldn’t believe her luck. Through all of pre-school and elementary school, her twin boys Jackson and Lincoln, both on the autism...
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09/09/24 | Ron Matus
Jewish schools in Florida are growing so fast, they’re running out of room; here’s one example
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. – Thirteen years ago, Katy Horowitz and her family moved from London to Miami, where she promptly secured a job at a charter school. But when the...
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08/26/24 | Ron Matus
Special report: Florida’s Jewish schools are booming, fueled by families using school choice scholarships
The number of Jewish schools in Florida nearly doubled over the past 15 years, boosted by parents using state school choice scholarships and the migration of families from New...
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07/25/24 | Ron Matus
A Taste of À La Carte Learning: EYE OF A SCIENTIST
Editor’s note: This story is one of five spotlights included in our latest special report, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning.” Florida has long had a critical shortage of...
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07/01/24 | Ron Matus
Here’s how one parent is doing a la carte learning; imagine what millions could do
Editor’s note: This post provides a parent’s perspective to supplement our recent white paper, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning,” which spotlights the rise of unconventional learning options...
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06/25/24 | Ron Matus
Special report: A taste of a la carte learning
One of the best education stories in America is the shift from school choice to education choice. The best place to see it is an hour north of Miami....
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06/17/24 | Ron Matus
‘Excellence personified’: The school where 3-year-olds learn to read
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Benjamin Crump, one of the most prominent lawyers in America, aka “Black America’s attorney general,” obviously could send his daughter to any school he wanted. So, it...
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06/01/24 | Ron Matus
A Taste of À La Carte Learning: THE LIVING SCHOOL
Editor’s note: This story is one of five spotlights included in our latest special report, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning.” Joelle Smith’s school-on-wheels is literally a dream come...
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06/01/24 | Ron Matus
A Taste of À La Carte Learning: PROJECT FLOURISH
Editor’s note: This story is one of five spotlights included in our latest special report, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning.” These middle school students at the Colossal Academy...
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06/01/24 | Ron Matus
A Taste of À La Carte Learning: SURF SKATE SCIENCE
Editor’s note: This story is one of five spotlights included in our latest special report, “A Taste of À La Carte Learning.” In 1977, a 15-year-old skateboarder in South Florida...
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05/28/24 | Ron Matus
This former public school teacher created her own school. Now she’s ‘100 percent free.’
JUPITER, Fla. — When you start your own school, you make the rules. You can even bring your dog. The Andersen Academy serves 16 middle school students, nearly all...
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01/25/24 | Ron Matus
Blazing Stars, blazing trails
DADE CITY, Fla. – LaTania Scott and Kameeka Shirley were former public school teachers who wanted something different when they opened their own school in January 2023. Something … authentically...
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