There are last spring's 23 "Getting Down to Facts" studies, a mammoth 1,700 page analysis of education governance and finance commissioned by Hewlett and three other foundations. Add 47 more reports (shorter, thankfully) that were released earlier this month at a conference in
need popular will. To get it, he should immediately encourage grass-roots discussions that include parents.
The 47 policy briefs are a starting point. Produced by researchers and advocacy groups like Education Trust-West and the California Teachers Association, they propose various solutions to governance, school finance, teacher and administrator development and the achievement gap. Many call for more school spending. (Read them at www.californiaschoolfinance.org.) But it's the report of the Committee on Education Excellence that can shift the discussion into the next gear.
Schwarzenegger appointed a savvy and diverse committee whose members were charged with reaching a consensus on systemic reforms. Committee chairman Ted Mitchell, a state school board member and the former president of
The recommendations, along with the governor's own ideas and those that will emerge from state Superintendent Jack O'Connell's achievement gap summit next month, deserve to be hashed out openly and widely. There needs to be a statewide discussion, preceding any reforms, on just what it is Californians want schools to provide and students to learn.
A back-room deal with legislators and interest groups tied to the status quo won't yield worthwhile reforms. Schwarzenegger will need public leverage for that.
Time is wasting. Release the report.
Click to read more about the Excellence Committee: http://www.everychildprepared.org/
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