California public schools are in
crisis- and they are getting worse. This is a consequence of massive budget cuts imposed on the
schools by the legislature and the governor in the last four years. Total
per pupil expenditure is down over $1,000 per student. The result is
significant class size
increases. Students are in
often classes too large for learning. Supplementary services such as
tutoring, art, and drop out prevention classes have been eliminated. Over 14,000 teachers have
been dismissed due to the budget emergencies.
Over 48% of the children in
California public schools are Chicano/Latino or descendents of
Mexican/Latino parents. ( See link, Demographics). The Chicano drop
out rate has not significantly changed in 30 years. ( See Choosing
Democracy: a practical guide to multicultural education, and Chicana/o
Educational Pipeline https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/Home/chicana-o-educational-pipeline )
All children need a good education to participate in our democracy and prepare
for life in the rapidly changing economy.
We need to invest in urban schools, provide equal educational
opportunities in these schools, and recruit a well prepared teaching
force that begins to reflect the student populations in these schools. At the
same time the largest, most succesful teacher preparation program for
Chicano/Latino children has been closed down at Sacramento State- https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/chicano-mexican-american-digital-history-project/history-of-bilingual-education-dept-at-sac-state) We
must insist on equal opportunity to learn, without compromise. When
we do these things, we will begin to protect the freedom to learn for our
children and our grandchildren, and to build a more just and democratic
society.
California
schools are now 47th. in the nation in per pupil
expenditure and 49th in class size. Low achievement
scores on national tests in
reading and math reflect this severe underfunding. California teachers have
been subject to demoralizing budget cuts that often prevent good teaching.
Instead of working with teachers to restore budgets, or to
limit budget cuts, a group that claims to be school “reformers” argue that the
important issue is teacher accountability.
This group of “reformers” includes so called Democrats for Education Reform led by former State Senator Gloria Romero and by Michelle Rhee, former Chancellor of the Washington, D.C.
schools. See. https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/
The so called “reformers” disrespect teachers. They prefer schools with principals as
managers – and that does not work.
They seek to reduce
teachers to interchangeable cogs in a corporate machine with few rights and
little independence. They have reduced teachers’ job security
and professional self respect in
the classroom.
There
are some school districts that are failing for many of their children. Los Angeles Unified is one of these as
is Oakland. But, look at the
reality. District failure is
almost never the result of
teachers, it is a failure to adequately fund, administrate and lead. Why do some districts succeed while others fail while using
the same teacher evaluation systems?
These
“reformers” have not improved our schools, however they have been effective in gaining a voice
in the state legislature.
These groups, and
their leaders, like to meet and to write reports about what teachers should do
differently. They assert that they
know how to improve teaching and schools.
Where is the evidence ?
Show me where they have improved school achievement. They do not assist
teachers. We have had decades of such reports. They have not supported teacher growth nor professionalism,
only their own consultant fees.
And, so far they have
improved is the flavor of coffee at their fund raising events.
The
legislature could best improve the
schools by doing their job –that is to adequately fund the schools. As
California cuts over $5 billion from the schools conditions and learning in
these schools deteriorate. Instead of doing their job and providing the
resources some legislators respond to the “reformers” call
for a new system of teacher evaluation.
Note that the California
legislature has a 13% support rate from the voting public. Teachers are
one of the most valued professions we have in educating future
generations.
The Chicago strike represents the first open rebellion of teachers
nationwide over political efforts
ignore the funding crises in the schools and substitute efforts to evaluate, punish and reward teachers based on their students’ scores on
standardized tests of low-level basic skills in math and reading. This is only the beginning. If California legislative leaders follow the direction of the so
called “Democrats for Education Reform”, more strikes will follow.
There is little substantive evidence
that the use of test scores to evaluate teachers improves student
achievement. See the post below by
Richard Rothstein on Teacher Accountability .
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