Friday, October 07, 2011

LA Times: “PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE HAD IT RIGHT THE FIRST TIME” + smf’s 2¢

L.A. Unified should go back to the original version of the program, choosing from applicants to run new and underperforming schools strictly on merit.

LA Times Editorial | http://lat.ms/nzBBAd

Bennett Kayser

Los Angeles Board of Education member Bennett Kayser wrote a letter of recommendation in September for a team of teachers applying to run a school. (Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

 

October 7, 2011 - Under the Public School Choice program, applicants from within and outside the Los Angeles Unified School District — charter operators, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, teams of teachers — are allowed to submit proposals to run new and underperforming schools. Decisions are supposed to be made on the basis of which group has the most promising application, as well as whether it has a history of running successful schools.

We never expected the process to be entirely pure, not in a district so rife with open and hidden political agendas. But recent events have shown that the basic premise of the reform is endangered by actions that have little to do with its early promise of giving students the best possible education.

In late August, for example, the school board agreed to exclude charter operators from the first round of applications for new schools, allowing them to participate only if applications from inside groups — mostly teacher teams — were less than "sufficiently excellent." In return, the teachers union would have to allow modified labor agreements at any teacher-run schools. The decision alienated good charter applicants and reduced the competition that leads to stronger applications from everyone.

In 2010, the school board, a majority of which was politically aligned with Villaraigosa, voted to give his Partnership for Los Angeles Schools a third campus, though the district staff had recommended that only two schools go to it. And though the mayor's group has conscientiously worked to improve the schools under its purview, it had no record of success, supposedly an important factor in the applications. In August, a Times analysis of district test scores showed that traditional public schools had improved more than the partnership's schools.

Most recently, school board member Bennett Kayser, who is politically allied with United Teachers Los Angeles, wrote a letter of recommendation in September for a team of teachers applying to run a school. Last year, board member Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte wrote a similar letter on behalf of an applicant. Both recommendations were inappropriate. The board's job is to make a final decision after district staff has evaluated all applications, not to discourage some applicants and pressure district staff by showing favoritism from the start.

The district will be deciding the fates of 15 new campuses and 22 existing, low-performing ones in the next round of Public School Choice, with final votes in early 2012. It should dump the teachers-first agreement and stick to the original vision, before public confidence in this important reform is badly undermined.

●●smf’s 2¢: Either the School Reform Kool Aid has been spiked …or the Times’editorial board is smoking some medicinal weed. The politics played by the board in choosing the winners in PSC v 1.0 was as political as it gets. The recommendations of the superintendent were ignored. The advisory votes from the community were ignored. Boardmembers gave away schools from other boardmember’s districts to charter operators they were beholden too – in contravention to the wishes of the resident boardmember, the ‘best superintendent in the nation’ and the public vote. Boardmembers from the mayor’s faction stabbed other boardmembers from the mayor’s faction in the back – and then twisted the knife.

I was there. I saw it. It was a circus in Roman sense – missing only Christians and Lions.

Someone needs to go back to view the tapes of the “good old days” before they start bemoaning their passage.

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