Wednesday, June 02, 2010

RttT 2.0: STATE TAKES SECOND SHOT AT SCHOOL FUNDS + CALIFORNIA APPLIES AGAIN FOR FEDERAL SCHOOL-REFORM GRANT

State takes second shot at school funds

Associated Press

06/01/2010 07:44:35 PM PDT -- SACRAMENTO — Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and California education leaders submitted an application Tuesday for the second round of a federal school-funding competition, hoping to capture as much as $700 million for the state's troubled public school system.

California was among dozens of states that lost out in the initial round of competition for $4.3 billion in federal stimulus money being made available through the "Race to the Top" initiative.

So far, Delaware and Tennessee have been the only states approved for money designed to reward states that make education reforms being promoted by the Obama administration.

Under California's latest application, teachers and principals would be evaluated in part based on student performance. The state also would try to place effective teachers in low-performing schools and make better use of student data to measure progress.

Schwarzenegger said the state plan meets every goal set forth in the federal program.

California's public schools rank near the bottom in most achievement categories and have faced budget problems that have forced the layoffs of thousands of teachers.

 

California applies again for federal school-reform grant

"Race to the Top" funds would help the state link teacher evaluations to student performance and better use data to improve teaching. Lack of union support could hurt the state's chances.

By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times

June 2, 2010 -- California joined 34 other states Tuesday in competing a second time for federal Race to the Top school-reform grants, but union opposition could doom the effort.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenneger signed the state's application at Lafayette Elementary School in Long Beach, joined by officials who included state Supt. of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell.

"The goal is really quite simple," O'Connell said, "to have an effective teacher in front of every classroom, to have a true school leader at every school site and to have the necessary infrastructure and support at the school."

The state could receive up to $700 million in one-time funding to link teacher evaluations to student performance, place the most effective educators in struggling schools and better use data to improve teaching. The plan also embraces the federal emphasis on replacing staff at "failing" schools and converting some to independently run charter schools, most of which are non-union.

At the news conference, the governor touted the participation of 40 unions. To reach that number, however, officials counted unionized charter schools; they counted one charter organization, Green Dot Public Schools, 17 times — once for each of its campuses.

Only 17 unions from 123 participating school districts signed on. The unions in opposition include those from Los Angeles Unified and Long Beach Unified, the largest participating school systems.

Limited union participation likely would diminish the state's chances at winning, given the scoring system, analysts have said.

The grant would provide a needed financial infusion as cash-strapped districts statewide are resorting to laying off teachers and shortening the school year to balance budgets.

Critics, including many from outside of unions, have opposed linking teacher evaluations to student test scores as well as other controversial initiatives they said would prove costly after the grant runs out.

Nationwide, union opposition has not been automatic. Several states, including Illinois, Pennsylvania, New York and Florida, deserve praise for collaborating "in a meaningful way with educators, parents and community leaders," said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

Earlier this year, California failed in the first round of the contest, from which only Delaware and Tennessee emerged as winners.

California almost abandoned a second try, but U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan personally urged Schwarzenegger not to give up, officials said.

In the current bid, California has opted to put together a more aggressive package spearheaded by a "working group" of seven school districts rather than settling for a watered-down application that might attract more widespread buy-in.

"We have decided to focus our efforts only on districts firmly committed to reform," Schwarzenegger said. "This is what makes this different."

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