Monday, October 27, 2008

Where have you gone, Paul Volcker? A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

Alan Greenspan has been discredited in a flood of mea-culpas; a desperate nation looks about for a new Oracle of Wall Street to make sense of the economy.

 

 

In a "pop quiz" interview with Suze Orman, the omnipresent blonde and tanned self styled “one-woman financial-advice powerhouse” - the October-November '08 Edutopia gives us this exchange as we grasp at straws for meaning in the ongoing fiscal and credit crisis.

 

Edutopia: Did you go to public school, or private school?

Orman: A public, inner-city school.

E: What was your favorite subject?

O: Math, absolutely -- math.

E: If you could change one thing about education in America, what would it be?

O: Easy: the cost and quality.

●●smf’s 2¢: We stopped reading here.   Cost and Quality are two things. Math is first+foremost about counting things, we learned that from the Count on Sesame Street.

In the "Introduction to Business 101" first-day-of class mimeographed handout you learn that there are three variables in product deliverables:

  • Cost.
  • Quality.
  • Speed.

You may change only one.

…and Ms. Orman never says whether she would would increase or decrease the cost and quality of Education in America.

The Edutopia interview with Suze Orman.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

The news that doesn’t fit from October 26

L.A. Downtown News: NO ON MEASURE Q

Oct. 27, 2008  DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES - We think cynical greed lies at the heart of Measure Q, the school bond on the Nov. 4 ballot.

LOTTERY REVENUE FALLS AGAIN = Less money for schools

Sour economy hits California Lottery too: Tickets sales have dropped two years in a row. That means less money for schools and raises questions about Schwarzenegger's plan to borrow against increasing future lottery money to balance the state

EXPO LINE PROJECT HITS A CURVE IN THE TRACKS: Los Angeles Unified School District says crossings at Dorsey High and Foshay Learning Center would pose a danger to students.

Judge Kenneth Koss ruled that the Expo Line should build pedestrian bridges over the crossings, both of which are next to schools in South Los Angeles -- Dorsey High and Foshay Learning Center.

GRANADA HILLS CHARTER HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS STOLE OR VIEWED SAT EXAM + U P D A T E: The campus' executive director says five students were involved. The scores could be invalidated

The head of Granada Hills Charter High School acknowledged to parents Wednesday that students had stolen or viewed SAT exams before taking the college entrance test earlier this month.

COMMENTS BY BARBARA LEDTERMAN, VICE-PRESIDENT FOR EDUCATION of CALIFORNIA STATE PTA at the EDUCATION COALITION MEDIA BRIEFING - October 20, 2008

Barbara Ledterman, California State PTA Vice-President for Education, said parents across the state are seeing firsthand how children are suffering because of the state's budget cuts to public schools.

LA ARTS HIGH SCHOOL BRINGS PRESTIGE, HIGH COST

A steel tower wrapped in a spiraling ribbon is one of the most striking features of a new arts high school set to open next year.

Its $230 million price tag is another.

EXPECTING EXCELLENCE: EXCELLENCE FOR ALL

There's more to excellence than reading, writing, and arithmetic.

What does it mean for a school to be “excellent”? Is it excellent if no one fails but no one does terrifically well either? Is it excellent if the best, but only the best, do superbly? This question is important because the way we define excellence dictates the way we achieve it.

WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM L.A.: Tracing the Rise-and-Fall Pattern of Urban School Reform

When I told former Mayor Richard Riordan that I was studying school reform efforts such as his city’s Los Angeles Educational Alliance for Restructuring Now, he replied: “That’s easy—LEARN failed.”

Riordan, like most observers, saw education reform as a project, a coherent, relatively short-term set of fixes to the existing system. After half a dozen years, it was easy to conclude that the project had not lived up to expectations.

The view that one project after another has failed leads to a “spinning wheels” notion of reform in which nothing gains traction. Our historical study of the Los Angeles Unified School District and studies in other districts around the country lead my colleagues and me to a different conclusion. We believe that the whole institution of public education is in flux, abandoning old ideas born in the Progressive Era of the early 20th century and trying out new ones.

$400M HIGH SCHOOL OPENS TEN YEARS BEHIND SCHEDULE

The most expensive high school in Los Angeles history -- delayed for years because it was being constructed over potentially harmful gases -- opened Saturday near downtown.

A ribbon-cutting was held at the 2,808-student Roybal Learning Center at 1200 W. Colton Ave., which was to have been called Belmont High School until the $400 million construction project ran into problems.

When first proposed, the district hoped to complete the school for around $45 million.

Taxing campaigns

Outreach campaigns

from the LA Times

October 25, 2008 -- Critics complain that some public agencies in Los Angeles County are using tax money to promote self-serving measures on the Nov. 4 ballot:

Metropolitan Transportation Authority Measure R

$30-billion to $40-billion sales tax for roads and transit
$1.1 million for mailer, radio and newspaper ads

Los Angeles Unified School District Measure Q

$7 billion construction bond

$1 million for mailers, T-shirts, hats, polling, staff time

Long Beach Unified School District Measure K

$1.2-billion construction bond
$46,000 for mailers

Pasadena Unified School District Measure TT

$350-million construction bond
$600 for fliers distributed by hand

Torrance Unified School District Measure Y

$265-million renovations bond

Measure Z

$90-million special facilities bond
$28,733 for mailers

City of Lynwood Measure II

$6.1-million utility tax
$14,000 for mailers*

City of Pico Rivera Measure P

$6-million sales tax
$35,000 for mailers

City of El Monte Measure GG

$4.4-million sales tax
$23,000 for mailers

* Does not include two to three remaining mailers

Source: Times reporting

Friday, October 24, 2008

L.A. Downtown News: NO ON MEASURE Q

L.A. downtown news editorial

  ●●smf2¢ - Obviously (and obliviously)  the LAUSD team promoting Measure Q was unable to get to the LA Downtown News Editorial Board. 4LAKIds slightly-more-than-halfheartedly SUPPORTS Measure Q for many of the same reasons the LA Downtown News OPPOSES it, the main reasons being that the proponents seem unable to get out the message that there remains $60 billion in need to be addressed to bring our old schools up to twenty-first century educational standards – and exactly how they plan to do it. Lack of leadership doesn’t mean that the need isn’t there – or that the kids aren’t waiting. But it does bring into question whether this is the team to lead the next phase. Or the time for it.

Read the editorial below. Note that the editorialist singles out the board of ed and the mayor as culpable. Should the bond fail – and I hope it does not – watch them turn on the superintendent.

Last weekend at the dedication of the new Royball High School the mayor – the very person responsible for inflating the value of  what the Downtown News correctly styles “the largest local school bond in United States history” - continued his pathetic and statistically incorrect diatribe on LAUSD’s dropout rate. He never mentioned Measure Q – and no one called him on his inaccuracies.

Oct. 27, 2008  DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES - We think cynical greed lies at the heart of Measure Q, the school bond on the Nov. 4 ballot.

Measure Q is the fifth school bond since 1997. The first four left the public indebted for $13.5 billion. The result of the first three is new or upgraded schools in virtually every neighborhood in our vast city, a good outcome.

The fourth school bond raised eyebrows because it asserted the same pitch of the previous three, that it would be the ultimate solution to our local educational problems.

After cheerleading for the first three, we supported the fourth reluctantly, as we began to wonder why the previous bonds had not done the job. We growled that if LAUSD came forth with a fifth bond measure, they would have to demonstrate exactly why it was needed, how it would be spent and what was different from the first four. We also wanted to know in detail how they had spent the fortune they had asked for and received.

In light of how much the public had given LAUSD, it was somewhat of a surprise to see Measure Q put forward with a straight face. And of course that clarity about how they would spend the money never materialized. It was appalling to see they had the nerve.

Voters have been extraordinarily responsible in their support of schools. Perhaps to a fault. We think the LAUSD and those who put forth the bond (including Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa) have identified the good will and generosity of voters as an open spigot of dollars they can turn on by pressing certain emotional buttons about education and the safety of our children.

Pandering to these deep human instincts, Measure Q is labeled "The Safe and Healthy Neighborhood Schools Measure of 2008." The words might mean something important if they weren't fifth in a line of measures and if they laid out real programs that justified another astonishing $7 billion.

Measure Q, the largest local school bond in United States history, ought to be called "The Honey Pot That LAUSD, Its Board and L.A.'s Mayor Can Go to Any Time They Want and Ah Shucks Gee Whiz They Promise to Spend It Well."

Proponents are depending on voters not educating themselves, not realizing that school enrollment has dropped 8% in 10 years, that tremendous waste exists, that management has grown while teachers have been cut, that there are new schools, some with empty classrooms, in every neighborhood. As we say, it's a cynical and greedy attitude.

We strongly urge a no vote on Measure Q.

LOTTERY REVENUE FALLS AGAIN = Less money for schools

Sour economy hits California Lottery too: Tickets sales have dropped two years in a row. That means less money for schools and raises questions about Schwarzenegger's plan to borrow against increasing future lottery money to balance the state

By Patrick McGreevy From the Los Angeles Times


October 23, 2008 -- Reporting from Sacramento — Even the California Lottery is getting hit by the bad economy.

The agency is reporting a precipitous drop in ticket sales that will hurt schools and could undermine the governor's plan to use lottery funds to balance the state budget starting next year.

Lottery revenue dropped $260 million, or 8%, for the fiscal year ending June 30. It was the second year in a row that ticket sales had declined.

With a percentage of lottery revenue dedicated to education, the dive in sales means $106 million less for schools this year and $186 million less than was provided three years ago.

The Homeroom

The lottery, living large

Remember how the California Lottery was supposed to raise bushels of cash for schools? Apparently, lottery officials felt they were doing a good enough job to celebrate, big time. The Sacramento Bee has the story. -- Mitchell Landsberg

 

State Sen. Dean Florez (D-Shafter), chairman of a Senate committee that oversees the lottery, blamed the drop on "the sour economy" and a decline in disposable income of potential ticket buyers.

Similar drops in lottery sales have been seen in other states hit especially hard by the economic downturn, including Florida, Texas, New Hampshire and Maine.

"Lotteries all over the country are down," said Richard McGowan, a Boston College professor of economics who has written books on the gambling industry.

"The primary engine of growth for lotteries previously was instant tickets: the scratch tickets for $1, $5, $10 and even $20," he said. "But given the price of gasoline and the state of the economy, people have stopped buying these tickets. They no longer have the discretionary income to fuel the sales of these instant tickets."

The last recession in California began in April 2001. Lottery revenue was flat the next year and then declined 4% in 2003. After that, it rose -- until two years ago.

The new numbers raise questions about Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to borrow against increasing future lottery money to generate $5 billion starting next year to balance the state budget, said Florez and Sen. Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica).

"It makes it hard for the governor's plan to balance future budgets," Florez said, "but it certainly argues for updating the game to make it more attractive, meaning giving people the product that they want, rather than keep doing the same thing over and over again."

State Supt. of Schools Jack O'Connell said the drop in lottery money for education is "another warning signal to our schools" and an indication that the governor and Legislature need to increase education funding from other sources.

"It's a concern," he said.

The new numbers show that the governor's budget proposal "relies on unrealistic assumptions for lottery revenue in the future," O'Connell said.

Schwarzenegger, undeterred by the latest figures, still believes lottery revenue can be increased significantly if the games are modernized, said his spokesman, Aaron McLear.

"The sales are down under the old, outdated system that we are working to change," McLear said. "This doesn't change our ability to improve upon the lottery and securitize its future earnings. It underscores it."

Lottery officials agree that sales have been hurt by problems such as high unemployment and inflation, but they say changes to the lottery can turn sales around and make them more competitive in a state where more slot machines are being installed in casinos. In particular, restrictions on the amount that can be offered for prizes, currently 53% of the budget, are also hurting the game's performance, said Al Lundeen, a spokesman for the lottery.

The numbers "show that the lottery needs greater flexibility when it comes to the amount of money we dedicate to prizes," Lundeen said. "More prizes equal more players and greater revenue."

He said states such as North Carolina that have increased their prizes have seen a boost in lottery sales.

Schwarzenegger has proposed a ballot measure for as early as next spring that would provide more flexibility in the operation of the lottery.

As part of this year's budget, the Legislature approved a proposition that would change the purpose of the lottery by adding language saying it could be operated to help support education "and other public purposes."

The measure would also allow the Legislature to borrow against future lottery revenue. A separate bill approved this year by the Legislature reduces from 16% to 13% the amount allowable for administration of the lottery, and permits the Lottery Commission to increase prize payouts as "determined by the commission."

At the same time, the commission has taken steps to improve marketing of the games, highlighting the large number of people winning money every week and offering such prizes as free gas to winners.

In addition, the "Big Spin" television show will be revamped starting in January with the new title "Make Me a Millionaire."

Lottery players buying tickets Wednesday at the Midtown Market in downtown Sacramento confirmed that bigger rewards might get them to put more money on the line each week.

"If the jackpot was a lot higher, I would buy more tickets," said Nick Gonzalez. At the same time, he said, if times get any rougher, "one of the first things to go" will be his $1- to $2-a-week splurge on the lottery.

CalPERS SUFFERS 20% FALL IN PENSION FUND ASSETS, CalSTRS takes 9.4% HIT

Calpers, America's largest public pension fund, could be forced to ask the employers who fund it for more money after suffering a 20pc decline in assets in the six months to October.

By James Quinn, Wall Street Correspondent | The Telegraph (UK)


24 October -- Calpers – the California Public Employees' Retirement System – saw the value of its assets fall by about $50bn (£31bn) from the end of February to October 10 because of stock markets falls and other heavy investment losses.

The pension fund now looks set to tap Californian state employers for higher contributions, at a time when the state's budget is stretched to the limit as a result of its own investment problems.

CalPERS, which was one of the first public pension funds to begin investing in private equity and hedge funds, has seen its net worth fall from approximately $240bn in February to $190bn today.

A decision on whether employers will need to increase their contributions will not be taken until returns for the 2008 fiscal year are known.

"Cushioning the impact of investment setbacks is the fact that Calpers experienced double-digit gains in the four years leading up to the 2007/08 fiscal year," said Ron Seeling, the fund's chief actuary. "We had saved 14pc of the fund for cushioning the blow of a future market downturn, and our smoothing policy is working as it should."

If returns do not improve, Calpers said it may require employers to increase payments. The current average employer contribution rate is 13pc of payroll – but increases in contributions could exceed 4pc if losses continue.

Even if increases are needed, they will only come into effect in the fiscal year beginning July 2010, due to the benefit of substantial gains in previous years.

Whether Californian state and local authorities could meet those payments remains to be seen, however. The state has been one of the hardest hit by the foreclosure crisis, reducing tax-take and leading to additional spending on social welfare.

The situation in California had become so bad at one stage earlier this month that Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger said he may need a $7bn loan from the US government in order to meet short-term cash needs as a result of money locked up in the frozen credit markets.

That immediate need was resolved after institutional investors purchased revenue anticipation notes from the State treasury, but the overall financial picture remains gloomy.

Calpers is not alone in its problems, with the California State Teachers' Retirement System, America's second-largest fund with 795,000 members, seeing a 9.4pc drop in value to $147bn in the three months to the end of September.

The situation adds further woes to Americans already struggling with price inflation and reduced incomes as a result of the continued economic downturn across the nation.

EXPO LINE PROJECT HITS A CURVE IN THE TRACKS: Los Angeles Unified School District says crossings at Dorsey High and Foshay Learning Center would pose a danger to students.

By Steve Hymon | LA TIMES

October 23, 2008 -- When will trains ever roll into the Westside?

The Expo Line light rail from downtown Los Angeles to Culver City is scheduled to be done by 2010, but the $862-million project may have hit a big bump in the road Wednesday.

The problem: Two street crossings for the train that needed state approval were denied by a California Public Utilities Commission judge.

Judge Kenneth Koss ruled that the Expo Line should build pedestrian bridges over the crossings, both of which are next to schools in South Los Angeles -- Dorsey High and Foshay Learning Center.

It is potentially a huge setback for the Expo Line Construction Authority. If Koss' ruling stands, completing the needed environmental studies and building the two bridges -- with elevators -- could cost $18 million and delay the opening of the line one to three years, said Richard Thorpe, the chief executive of the authority.

He said the authority doesn't have the money: "If the proposed decision stands, we'll have to go back to the Metro board and request additional funds."

The authority had asked the PUC to let the Expo Line's tracks cross Farmdale Avenue at street level with crosswalks for pedestrians, many of whom would come from Dorsey. Nope, Koss ruled. It's safer to build a bridge over the tracks and also make Farmdale dead-end on either side of the line to prevent any conflicts between trains and people or vehicles.

At Foshay, the construction authority wanted to build the line atop an existing pedestrian tunnel under the tracks. Koss said that the tunnel would not comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act and "would not provide an adequate level of general public access or safety."

Build another bridge, he wrote.

The rub is that Koss doesn't have final say. That goes to PUC commissioners, who will probably hear the case in November and who can accept Koss' ruling, tear it up or revise it to their liking.

Community activists from both South and West L.A. had fought the construction authority. The Los Angeles Unified School District had also joined the battle, saying the crossings near both schools would pose a danger to students.

Damien Goodmon, chairman of United Community Assns., said his group was not entirely pleased with the decision to close Farmdale to traffic. "What they do at this intersection is going to impact this community for the next 100 years," said Goodmon, also the coordinator for the Citizens' Campaign to Fix the Expo Line. Goodmon said he believes that the better solution at Farmdale would be for the train to go over or under the street -- and he insists that transportation officials can find the millions of dollars to make that happen.

What ultimately happens with these crossings could affect how street crossings are treated if the second phase of the Expo Line ever reaches West Los Angeles -- the reason West L.A. activists are involved in this fight.

GRANADA HILLS CHARTER HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS STOLE OR VIEWED SAT EXAM + U P D A T E: The campus' executive director says five students were involved. The scores could be invalidated

By Mitchell Landsberg | LA Times Staff Writer

October 23, 2008 -- The head of Granada Hills Charter High School acknowledged to parents Wednesday that students had stolen or viewed SAT exams before taking the college entrance test earlier this month.

Brian Bauer, executive director of the school, blamed "a failure to properly secure SAT testing materials," and said he was deeply disappointed by the incident.

In an interview with The Times, Bauer said that students had gained access to the SAT one day before it was given. "Two in particular had reviewed it and a handful were involved in removing copies of the exam before the exam took place," Bauer said.

He later said a total of five students were involved.

The Educational Testing Service is investigating the incident, which means that the scores from the Oct. 4 administration of the college entrance exam could be invalidated.

Bauer said the exam had been stored on campus and was under the supervision of a school employee who had been hired by the Educational Testing Service as the "test supervisor." That person was responsible for ensuring the security of the test, Bauer said.

Bauer said he could not discuss in detail what action the school had taken, "except to say the gamut of discipline, including suspension and removal from the school, is being considered and in some cases has been taken" against the students, "and the same would apply to any particular employee or employees."

A number of students expressed dismay Wednesday about the school's handling of the issue. In e-mails to The Times, they said the tests were left in the open in a school office that was frequented by students, and that there was no adult supervision when the security breach occurred. They said that some of the students who were later punished had merely "peeked" at the tests, and walked out when they realized what they had seen.

Given that, they said the school's response, which reportedly included "opportunity transfers" of at least two students to other schools, was overly harsh.

Dylan Leas, a senior who said he was not among those taking the SAT, described two students who were forced to leave the school as "hardworking and honest," and among Granada Hills' top achievers.

"The student body is outraged at the fact that the school rushed their investigation just to dish out punishment fast and swift," he said.

 

U P D A T E: SAT eliminates scores of several Granada Hills Charter students

SAT scores of students who saw test earlier are tossed

October 24, 2008 -- The company that administers the SAT exam announced Thursday that it was throwing out the scores of several Granada Hills Charter High School students who managed to see copies of the test the day before they took it earlier this month.

But the Educational Testing Service said there was no need for a wider cancellation, suggesting that investigators were confident that any stolen tests had not been widely distributed.

The testing service had previously said that it was investigating a security breach in the exam and was unsure how far it extended.

"We have concluded . . . that a majority of scores will be reported and only those limited number of students directly involved will have their scores canceled," testing service spokesman Tom Ewing said. "They will not be given an opportunity to retest [immediately] and if they test in the future again, they will do so under very strict observation and most likely separate from the rest of other students."

The security breach has roiled the San Fernando Valley campus, with some students expressing anger over the way it was handled by Granada Hills administrators.

-- Mitchell Landsberg

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

PUBLIC-SCHOOL MOMS ASK: WHAT ABOUT EDUCATION?

From the LA Times Homeroom Blog

October 22, 2008 -- More than 10,000 people are gathering today at the Long Beach Convention Center for the Governor’s Conference on Women, which began more than two decades ago as a government initiative for women who are small-business owners and working professionals.

The host is California First Lady Maria Shriver, shown below greeting chef Rachael Ray on Tuesday.

clip_image002

Sandra Tsing Loh, public school activist and performer, writes of the conference:

We are a growing group of Burning Moms (California public school moms whose fingers are literally singed with all the baking we’re doing to keep our kids in art, music, PE programs and more). This year, we decided to celebrate the Conference on Women’s inspiring theme of self-empowerment by:

1) Not bumming out over the fact that California’s governor and first lady do not consider public education a women’s issue. (Topics covered in the conference included finance, enterpreneurship, leading an authentic life, looking one’s best and reducing stress.)

2) Not bumming out over the fact that tickets began at $125 for obstructed view (up to $3,000 per table), money that could do SO MUCH for our struggling California public schools.

3) Being cheerfully proactive by holding our own festive pro-public-school rally on Pine Street by offering (mostly) home-baked muffins to incoming conferees, with a welcome flier. We were forced to celebrate California public schools on Pine Street because the police kicked us off the conference hall outdoor landing where more of the conferees were. The police told us the Governor’s Conference on Women had leased the Long Beach Convention Center, hence the actual Governor’s Conference on Women was a non-free-speech/public-protest zone. Duly noted.

4) Our hope is for our public-school volunteer moms in the building to get a photo of Maria Shriver wearing a: "Hello! Ask me why I’m a BURNING MOM" button, and also to get Gloria Steinem to accept a muffin. Read on to see the flier we attached to the muffins. (Admittedly, many of the women declined the muffins as they seemed to be on diets -- but why? They all looked so fabulous!)

 image Burning Moms (and Dad) united on the street, in the Free Speech zone.

official simulated flyer

 

Welcome to the Governor’s Conference on Women!

We’re not officially part of the conference -- we’re public school moms.

Currently California, the 9th largest global economy, is 48th out of 50 states in public school funding.

So we hope next year public school will be considered a women’s issue.

Enjoy this muffin and back home, please donate generously to your local public school. Families like us are building our kids’ arts programs, music programs, and PE programs one muffin at a time.

Have a great conference!

Warmly,

The Burning Moms

COMMENTS BY BARBARA LEDTERMAN, VICE-PRESIDENT FOR EDUCATION of CALIFORNIA STATE PTA at the EDUCATION COALITION MEDIA BRIEFING - October 20, 2008

from PTA+Ed Coalition Press and public information releases

California State PTA

The Education Coalition

imageOctober 21 - Members of the state Education Coalaition and Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell held a press briefing on Oct. 20 to discuss the impact of current budget cuts on school programs, and to urge legislators and the governor not to make any further reductions in funding. Representatives of school boards, teachers and the California State PTA described how schools are already dealing with the severe cuts that were signed into law as part of the recently adopted state budget. With state revenues already falling below projections in that budget, there is talk of a special session being convened to consider more cuts.

Barbara Ledterman, California State PTA Vice-President for Education, said parents across the state are seeing firsthand how children are suffering because of the state's budget cuts to public schools.

 

Parents and PTA volunteers across the state are seeing firsthand how our children are suffering because of the state’s budget cuts to public schools. More and more, our parents are being asked to foot the bill for basic services and supplies.

  • PTAs were originally established as advocacy groups on behalf of children in local schools and neighborhoods. We speak up for the needs of all children and work for laws and policies that support children and families.
  • In a state financial crisis, PTAs should not be converted to small bank accounts asked to backfill cuts to their school’s funding. But that is exactly what has been happening.
  • From pencil sharpeners, copy paper, paper clips and LCD bulbs to computers, art programs, librarians and counselors – our public schools are being forced to lean on local parents and PTAs to help fund the basic necessities.
  • Parents have always been willing to help out at their schools and to pitch in as best they can – but public education is the top priority of our state constitution – and when parents are asked to help fund basic programs and services, it’s a clear sign we have cut too deeply.

I live in Orange County and I can share with you just a few of the stories and requests made of our local PTAs:

  • Elementary school PTAs have been asked to provide additional funding to keep health clerks in their schools each day.  School nurses have been gone for years.·
  • PTAs have been asked to provide additional funding for school supplies, for library and media support, for K-3 music education, and even counseling programs.
  • One elementary school PTA was asked to pay for a maintenance cart for the custodian and ink cartridges for printers.
  • One middle school PTA has been asked to fund $5,000 for copier maintenance.
  • Other middle schools have been asked to purchase additional computers and to help purchase science textbooks.
  • Yet another middle school has been asked to provide basic classroom supplies such as colored paper, pencils and highlighters.These are basic supplies and services and doesn’t even include all of the field trips, student support programs and enrichment programs that PTAs already work so hard to provide, things that will have to be cut back on in order to help with the basics….
  • In the coming week, we will be conducting a broad survey of all PTAs to determine in even greater detail the extent that the state’s budget cuts are forcing parents to pick up the bill for basic support.
  • PTA continues to be concerned with this situation. Funding to our schools has already been cut too deeply.

Today our children are competing for teacher time in overcrowded classrooms.

Today our children are missing out on comprehensive arts education and physical education programs.

Today they are lacking adequate health and counseling support services.

Today our children need us to invest in the future and produce an adequately funded education system so that they have the opportunity to reach their fullest potential.

LA ARTS HIGH SCHOOL BRINGS PRESTIGE, HIGH COST

By Jacob Adelman, Associated Press Writer from USAToday

 The inside of the library building at the Los Angeles High School for the Visual and Performing Arts is shown during construction near downtown Los Angeles, Friday, May 9, 2008. Supporters call the five-acre campus a beacon for a reformed education system. Critics, however, see the school as a wasteful extravagance. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)

The inside of the library building at the Los Angeles High School for the Visual and Performing Arts is shown during construction near downtown Los Angeles, Friday, May 9, 2008. Supporters call the five-acre campus a beacon for a reformed education system. Critics, however, see the school as a wasteful extravagance. (AP Photo/Reed Saxon)


June 10, 2008 -LOS ANGELES — A steel tower wrapped in a spiraling ribbon is one of the most striking features of a new arts high school set to open next year.

Its $230 million price tag is another.

The Los Angeles High School for the Visual and Performing Arts, with space for some 1,600 students, most from surrounding low-income neighborhoods, is the architectural crown jewel of the district's ambitious $20 billion building campaign.

Its spacious studios and 995-seat theater encased in austere concrete are enough to make anybody wish they were a young clarinetist in the district.

Supporters call the five-acre campus a beacon for a reformed educational system, a magnet for good teachers, and a means of raising dismal student performance in the nation's second-largest school district.

"Do these kids deserve this school? Absolutely," said Monica Garcia, board president of the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Critics, however, see the school as a wasteful extravagance for a district where more than a quarter of the 700,000 students remain in temporary classrooms and many existing buildings are in dire need of renovations and repairs.

"It's ludicrous to be spending that much money on one school," said parent Diana Chapman, who helps organize after-school programs at her son's middle school in the city's San Pedro area, about 25 miles from the new campus. "About every school I know needs help."

The price tag of another school, the much-maligned Belmont Learning Center, is approaching $400 million as it prepares to open in September as the renamed Vista Hermosa Learning Center.

Construction was stymied several times over the past 15 years by revelations that officials had approved building the school atop explosive pockets of methane gas and the discovery of an active earthquake fault beneath the site.

Two years ago, the school board was thinking far outside the traditional box-shape design of school buildings when it gave final approval to the seven-structure arts high school.

The sharp, clean lines of the architecture contrast with the mess the district is trying to build its way out of.

Public school funding in the state took a hit in 1978 with a voter-approved measure that limited property tax rate increases. Several districts are hard-pressed to attract and retain quality teachers and maintain academic performance standards.

In the Los Angeles district, less than 70 percent of students graduated in 2006, the last year for which data are available.

In addition, severe overcrowding at many of its 1,190 schools have forced about 200,000 students to attend classes in temporary structures and compelled many campuses to operate on schedules that shave weeks off the school year.

The problems led to an unsuccessful takeover attempt last year by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa that would have given him more control over the district's budget and curriculum.

The district began a school-building push in 2001 using $20.3 billion from four separate bond measures approved by voters. Seventy-two schools have been built so far, with another 60 planned by 2012, district facilities chief Guy Mehula said.

The rising cost of building materials and labor are to blame for the increased cost, Mehula said.

Officials initially budgeted about $70 million to build a conventional high school with a more basic design. Its makeover into an art school -- originally expected to cost around $120 million -- was promoted by billionaire philanthropist Eli Broad.

Former school board member David Tokofsky said he voted for the redesign because he thought Broad, a longtime financial supporter of school programs and area cultural institutions, would contribute more to construction costs.

"I'm all for an arts school as part of the cultural spinal cord of downtown, but right now it's a spinal tap on the construction fund because we expected to get outside monies," Tokofsky said.

Broad declined an interview request through his foundation's spokeswoman, Karen Denne.

She said the philanthropist promised no more money to the arts school than the $3.1 million he has already contributed for construction and the $1.9 million he has pledged toward the salary of a full-time fundraiser and other operating expenses.

She said Broad is open to giving more money once the school has a principal and curriculum is in place.

Lawrence O. Picus, who directs the University of Southern California's Center for Research in Education Finance, said well-appointed schools like the arts campus are attractive to good teachers who could help boost academic performance.

But he said districts in Seattle and Jacksonville, Fla., have shown significant improvement by recruiting and retaining better teachers and revising curriculums, not through construction drives.

The arts school sits on the highest point of downtown's Bunker Hill on the edge of a cultural district that includes other architectural gems like the Museum of Contemporary Art and Walt Disney Concert Hall.

The district plans to work with those venues to offer students internships and recruit performers and artists to teach.

Francisco Torrero, who has three daughters in public schools, praised the district for building the campus for working-class families who live in nearby neighborhoods.

"The arts in Los Angeles are viewed as only for the elite class," said Torrero, whose daughters include a violin-playing fifth-grader who may want to attend the arts school. "This is not for the elite class; this is for the whole community."

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

EXPECTING EXCELLENCE: EXCELLENCE FOR ALL

Educational Leadership

by Robert J. Sternberg

October 2008 | Volume 66 | Number 2

Pages 14-19

There's more to excellence than reading, writing, and arithmetic.

What does it mean for a school to be “excellent”? Is it excellent if no one fails but no one does terrifically well either? Is it excellent if the best, but only the best, do superbly? This question is important because the way we define excellence dictates the way we achieve it.

Common Models of Excellence

Let's look at four models of excellence that operate in our schools today. The following portraits are based on real schools that I have observed, although the names are pseudonyms.

Looking Only at the Bottom

Administrators at Shadyside School know which side their bread is buttered on. The district's rewards go to the schools that best meet the mandates of No Child Left Behind (NCLB). So Shadyside has put its resources into ensuring that it looks as good as possible under NCLB's definition of excellence.

The school places heavy emphasis on reading and math. Several other subjects get some attention, but less. The school has dropped physical education and minimized music and art. It has discontinued its gifted program, which, the administration believed, always consumed more resources than it was worth for students who need special services the least.

Heavy spending goes into ensuring that students in the bottom half of the class perform well enough to meet minimum-competency standards. Because many of these low-performing students come from one section of town, some Shadyside administrators have been quietly lobbying for a redistricting plan that would reassign that area to a different school, thus raising Shadyside's test scores.

So far, the result of all these efforts has been modest but noticeable success in enhancing compliance with the federal law.

No Child Left Behind was advocated as a national model for achieving excellence in our schools. But this model is problematic because it focuses attention on only the bottom of the distribution. Imagine a hypothetical school in which, indeed, no child is left behind, but all children are achieving barely passing grades—in letter terms, D-. Would anyone call such a school excellent?

Further, No Child Left Behind encourages schools to drop or minimize important programs that are essential to truly excellent education—such as music, arts, and physical education—because these programs do not boost passing rates on particular tests. Even social studies may get short shrift. Do we really want our schools to resemble the test-preparation cram courses given by private tutoring organizations?

The law discourages schools from providing special services for gifted students because they will pass the tests anyway. It has even motivated some schools to stoop to such dubious practices as encouraging weaker students to drop out. Is this any way to achieve excellence?

Looking Only at the Top

Sunnyvale School is in one of the most economically advantaged sections of a wealthy suburb. The school is considered “la crème de la crème” in the district. To be admitted to Sunnyvale's gifted program, students need to have IQs in the top 1 percent of the general population. The school boasts of the number of its graduates who end up going to Ivy League schools and has a Hall of Fame for its most illustrious graduates.

Sunnyvale puts relatively few resources into students at the academic low end. Because few of these students are actually at risk for failing to meet minimum-competency standards, the administration believes it can afford to focus on stronger students who are likely to succeed in gaining admission to the most prestigious colleges.

The administration's general view is that weaker students do not really belong in the school. In many different, often not-so-subtle ways, the school sends the message to these students that they are a drag on its reputation. For example, academically challenged students tend to get the weakest teachers and diluted courses. Although the school is careful to meet its legal obligations to students with special needs, any parents who demand more are told that they always have the option of a private school.

Sunnyvale's model is the opposite of Shadyside's. Sunnyvale lavishes its attention on the top end, and the result is a Matthew effect—the intellectually rich get richer, and the intellectually poor get poorer. Can we really consider a school excellent if it settles for mediocrity for a large portion of its students and gives only the academic superstars the opportunity to flourish?

Looking Only at the Middle

Brookdale School believes that one size fits all. It does not group students by ability or achievement, nor does it recognize or celebrate any kind of diversity within the heterogeneous groups. The teachers are not sure what to do for students with special needs; some teachers wish that such students would just go away. The school has no gifted program, and it provides the minimum service mandated by law, if that, to students with developmental disabilities.

The school reflects its community, which celebrates social and intellectual conformity. Many of the residents have similar belief structures, which they want to pass on to their children. Excellence, they believe, is a well-rounded child who does what he or she is told and does not stick out through exceptionally weak or strong academic performance. Being popular is good, but being intellectually excellent is suspect. People know that “tall poppies” tend to be cut down.

The administrators and parents of children at Brookdale believe they have created an excellent school and a superb environment for learning. Students and faculty are comfortable with one another, having similar ways of thinking, beliefs, and values.

Brookdale defines academic excellence as intellectual conformity. But Brookdale students are being educated for a world that does not exist—a world in which everyone thinks like they do. Some may be afraid to leave the community because they are unprepared to cope. Those who do leave may be bewildered by and perhaps resentful and intolerant of the astonishing diversity of people, values, ideologies, and worldviews they will encounter. This model of education poorly serves its students and their community because it isolates them from a rapidly changing world. We can hardly view Brookdale as providing an excellent education.

Looking Only at the Statistical Average

Every year, the Riverside Observer publishes the average test scores of the five elementary schools in the Riverside School District as well as those of other districts in the state. The newspaper does a detailed analysis comparing the local schools to one another and comparing the district as a whole to other districts. Parents are well aware that real estate prices coincide closely with the test scores, and the board of education has exerted pressure on district administrators to raise the statistical averages. The five schools in the district engage in a not-always-friendly competition to have the highest average scores. In one school, a principal was reprimanded for engaging in shady practices to enhance his school's ranking: Certain students' scores were “overlooked” when the averages were computed.

Currently, there is a national craze in the United States to raise statistical averages. Such averages are reported in the media and play a prominent role in U.S. News and World Report's ranking of colleges and graduate schools.

Riverside's model looks for excellence in high average scores. Individual students become cogs in a machine that operates like a huge calculator. Students are valued only to the extent that they raise the average scores. The model ignores students at both the upper and lower end—and it dehumanizes all students, including those in the middle.

An Alternative: The Three Rs and the Other Three Rs

A better model for defining and achieving excellence is to focus on excellence in education for all students and let the numbers emerge as a result of seeking excellence, rather than the main goal. Actually, this is what many schools once did before testing mania co-opted education.

The criteria for excellence are neither arcane nor complicated. I propose a simple model that focuses on the traditional three Rs plus what I call the other three Rs (Cogan, Sternberg, & Subotnik, 2006; Sternberg, 2006; Sternberg & Subotnik, 2006). You are probably familiar with the first three Rs: reading, 'riting, and 'rithmetic. So let me focus on the other three: reasoning, resilience, and responsibility. These latter three Rs complement and enhance the first three: It's not either/or, but rather, both/and.

Reasoning

Reasoning is a broad term that encompasses the comprehensive set of thinking skills that a person needs to be an engaged, active citizen of the world. These skills include

  • Creative thinking to generate new and powerful ideas.
  • Critical and analytical thinking to ensure that the ideas (your own and those of others) are good ones.
  • Practical thinking to implement the ideas and persuade others of their value.
  • Wise thinking to ensure that the ideas help build a common good.

Schools can teach reasoning in a number of ways, either through the disciplines (Sternberg & Grigorenko, 2007) or through a separate course (Sternberg, Kaufman, & Grigorenko, 2008). Either way, good reasoning complements knowledge by enabling students to use that knowledge well.

For example, presenting stories like the following can introduce students to scientific reasoning:

Professor Flowers believes that his special plant food, Proflower, helps plants grow to their full potential. He wishes to design an experiment to show that Proflower really does help plants grow. He takes five individual plant stems of each of three types of plants—orchids, tulips, and roses—and carefully places them in his special experimental room. He measures the height of each plant. Then, each day, he places in the soil for each plant exactly 15 drops of Proflower. All plants are watered the exact same amount and receive the same amount of sunshine. After 20 days, he compares the height of each plant to its height 20 days before. He finds that all of the plants have grown by at least 10 percent, and some by more than 20 percent. He then prepares a speech in which he argues that he has scientifically proven that Proflower really does help plants grow.

Is Professor Flowers' reasoning correct? Why or why not?

The answer is that Professor Flowers is not correct. The problem is that there is no control group that received equal amounts of water and light—and no Proflower at all. It is possible that all of the plants in the sample would have grown by the same amount (or more!) if they had not been given Proflower. Hence, Professor Flowers' reasoning is flawed.

Resilience

Resilience refers to persistence in achieving goals despite the obstacles life places in our way. Some children grow up with many obstacles strewn across their paths; others have relatively smooth roads to travel. Either way, everyone encounters roadblocks sooner or later; the question is how you surmount them. Resilience involves

  • Willingness to defy the crowd in your thinking and actions—to take the road less traveled.
  • Willingness to surmount obstacles in trying to achieve your goals.
  • Passion in your pursuits—going for your goals with drive, motivation, and personal involvement.
  • Self-efficacy—belief in your ability to achieve your goals.

Schools can build students' resilience by modeling it; by implementing programs designed to develop it (see Patrikakou, Weissberg, Redding, Walberg, & Anderson, 2005); and by creating challenging experiences for students that require resilience to see them through.

One way of developing resilience is to tell students about a challenging experience you have had in your own life, preferably when you were about the students' age, and how you got through the challenge. You can then encourage students to share their own challenges and how they have coped with them. The class can discuss what constitutes better and worse coping mechanisms, and how people can decide to employ better ones. (In my own case, when I talk to elementary school students I often tell them of how I used to do poorly on standardized intelligence tests as a child, and nevertheless, when I was 22, I was graduated with highest honors from Yale. Resilience pays off!)

Resilience is an important component of academic excellence. For example, Dweck (1999) found that students who have an incremental view of intelligence—who believe they can modify their intelligence—perform better when faced with challenging courses than do students who believe that intelligence is a stable, fixed entity.

Responsibility

Responsibility covers the ethical and moral dimension of development. Four components are particularly important:

  • Ethics—distinguishing right from wrong.
  • Wisdom—forging or following a path that represents a common good and balances your own interests with those of others.
  • Care—genuine understanding of and empathy for others' well-being that goes beyond an intellectual sense that you should care.
  • Right action—not only knowing the right thing to do, but doing it.

Schools can teach responsibility by modeling it, by providing case studies, and by challenging students with situations that require them to develop their own unique and personal sense of responsibility.

One way to learn about personal responsibility is by reading biographies of people who have shown wisdom and positive ethical values in their own lives. Examples might be Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela, both of whom made many personal sacrifices to help others. Mandela spent much of his life in prison before becoming the first president of South Africa in an election with broad participation from South Africans. King led civil rights marches at great personal risk to his life, which he eventually forfeited in the cause of justice for all.

Students can contemplate their own lives and how they have taken opportunities either to work for a common good or to be selfish and look out only for their self-interest. The great leaders of society, and of communities and families, are inevitably those who care about and for others and not just about and for themselves.

Changing Direction

Our society is moving in the wrong direction. If we continue to turn our schools into test-preparation centers, we are neglecting the important three Rs of reasoning, resilience, and responsibility. What's more, test prep is not even an adequate way of teaching the first three R's.

We need to educate students, not merely prepare them for tests. We need to immerse them in the full range of curriculum, including music, the arts, and physical education. We also need special programs that meet the needs of gifted students and those with developmental disabilities.

If we return to education rather than test preparation, we may find that students improve in both the first three Rs and the other three Rs. We must not just concentrate on the top, bottom, middle, or statistical average of the distribution. We must concentrate on all students and teach them how to be active, productive citizens in a rapidly changing world.

How to Teach for the Other 3 Rs
  1. Emphasize excellence for all—not just those at the top, bottom, or middle of the distribution—and recognize diverse forms of excellence.
  2. Provide students with opportunities to learn through multiple modalities.
  3. Value subject matter not only as important in its own right but also as a vehicle for teaching students to think critically.
  4. Value creative thinking applied to a knowledge base, recognizing that knowledge forms the backbone for creativity.
  5. Teach students to apply their learning to practical, real-world problems.
  6. Promote students' dialogical thinking—the ability to understand things from multiple viewpoints and to appreciate diversity.
  7. Promote students' dialectical thinking—the understanding that what is “true” now may not be true in the future and may not have been true in the past.
  8. Teach students to take personal responsibility for mistakes and learn from them.
  9. Teach students to care about people other than themselves and to think about the effects of their actions on others and on institutions, both in the present and in the future.
  10. Teach students to use their knowledge ethically, promoting universal values like sincerity, integrity, honesty, reciprocity, and compassion.
References

Cogan, J. C., Sternberg, R. J., & Subotnik, R. F. (2006). Integrating the other three Rs into the curriculum. In R. J. Sternberg & R. F. Subotnik (Eds.), Optimizing student success in schools with the other three R's: Reasoning, resilience, and responsibility (pp. 227–238). Greenwich, CT: Information Age.

Dweck, C. S. (1999). Self-theories: Their role in motivation, personality, and development. Philadelphia: Psychology Press.

Patrikakou, E. N., Weissberg, R. P., Redding, S., Walberg, H. J., & Anderson, A. R. (Eds.). (2005). School-family partnerships for children's success. New York: Teachers College Press.

Sternberg, R. J. (2006). Reasoning, resilience, and responsibility from the standpoint of the WICS theory of higher mental processes. In R. J. Sternberg, & R. F. Subotnik (Eds.), Optimizing student success in schools with the other three R's: Reasoning, resilience, and responsibility (pp. 17–37). Greenwich, CT: Information Age.

Sternberg, R. J., & Grigorenko, E. L. (2007). Teaching for successful intelligence (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Sternberg, R. J., Jarvin, L., & Grigorenko, E. L. (in press). Teaching for intelligence, creativity, and wisdom. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.

Sternberg, R. J., Kaufman, J. C., & Grigorenko, E. L. (2008). Applied intelligence. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Sternberg, R. J., & Subotnik, R. F. (Eds.). (2006). Optimizing student success in schools with the other three R's: Reasoning, resilience, and responsibility. Greenwich, CT: Information Age.


Robert J. Sternberg is Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts; robert.sternberg@tufts.edu.


TEENS FROM STRUGGLING L.A. PUBLIC CAMPUS GET A CHANCE TO SHINE AT PRESTIGIOUS PRIVATE SCHOOLS: With full scholarships and a strong support network, three students from low-income immigrant families enter the world of educational privilege and widened opportunities.

yoga

PHOTO: Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times

Heven Ambaye, 14, is guided by her teacher Sarah Bishop in yoga class at the Brentwood School. She and two classmates from a struggling Los Angeles Unified middle school are attending prestigious private schools on full scholarshipsMore photos >>>

 

By Carla Rivera | la tIMES STAFF WRITER |  cOLUMN oNE

October 22, 2008  -- What impressed Joel Argueta first about was his locker -- a wide, ample affair that holds his backpack and all of his books. There's also a student lounge with comfortable couches, where he does homework and meets with new friends. "Overall," he said, "it is spectacular."

Heven Ambaye admits to being a bit overwhelmed with homework at the Brentwood School. She is often up until 11 p.m. reading and studying for the next day's quizzes after taking two bus rides to get home. Still, she wants to join the soccer team, maybe lacrosse too, and already has joined a school book club.

Related Content

Francisco Sanchez was unsure of himself when he entered Crossroads School for Arts and Sciences last month, afraid he wouldn't be able to adjust. But the school's Santa Monica complex of old and new buildings -- it is bisected by an alley -- is like a little community, and already it feels like a second home.

Even for the best of students, the transition from middle school to high school can be trying. But Joel, Heven and Francisco are embarked on a bigger challenge. Children of low-income, immigrant families, they entered three of Los Angeles' most prestigious private campuses this fall on full scholarships. Many of their classmates went to top-rated public schools or private middle schools with vastly more resources than the one they attended, Johnnie L. Cochran Jr. Middle School a struggling Los Angeles Unified School District campus in Mid-City.

A team of Cochran teachers led by first-year instructor Sara Hernandez decided these three had a shot at making it at private schools, where they would receive a more rigorous college prep experience.

The teachers worked after-school hours, weekends and summer vacations mentoring them, helping navigate school choices, filling out applications and studying for the crucial Independent School Entrance Examination, which is required by most private schools.

The teachers connected the trio with the Independent School Alliance for Minority Affairs, a nonprofit placement and support group that offered summer math and English classes mimicking the pace and homework demands of their new schools.

There they met counselors like Christopher Price, 19, a former Alliance participant and a 2007 graduate of Windward School, who could address sensitive cultural challenges such as the classmates who receive cars for their birthdays and spend vacations in Europe.

Price, from Gardena, said that at Windward, on the Westside, he initially judged students who seemed to flaunt their wealth and possessions as shallow but found "you can have very much or very little -- money does not make the person."

"It wasn't so much the environment but how I handled it," said Price, an animation major at Cal State Fullerton. "I try to tell students they are in the top tier of people in the U.S. and the world to receive an education like this, and they need to take every advantage," said Price.

Several Cochran teachers and community members started their own nonprofit group to raise money for textbooks, school supplies, field trips, lunch money and other expenses that the students' families can't fully cover. They are also advising a new group of students.

Cochran Principal Scott Schmerelson said he supports the teachers' efforts, despite what some might see as skimming the best students from public schools. "The LAUSD has great magnet high schools these kids can go to if they wish, and if their parents wish to send them to private schools it's OK with me too," he said. "It's a wonderful opportunity to go off to a prestigious school and to a wonderful college."

At 6:20 a.m., Joel is standing at a corner near his Crenshaw area home taking a dry run on an MTA bus to Hancock Park, the closest pickup spot for Harvard-Westlake's shuttle, which will get him to the campus in Holmby Hills in time for his 8 a.m. class. By the end of classes at 3:15 and his reverse journey, he will have spent nearly 11 hours in school and getting to and from.

On a bus packed mostly with poor workers, Joel, 14, said he has dreams of becoming an engineer, possibly one day working at NASA. He loves math and science and in the fifth and sixth grades received perfect scores in math on the California standards test.

He has never been out of California, but Harvard-Westlake opens a world of possibilities. His mother, Delia, and father, Francisco, a construction worker, say they're ready to work extra hours to pay for his class trips and other activities. Joel is determined to succeed, even if it takes getting only an hour's sleep some nights to finish his homework.

"I'm well organized, and that's going to be really helpful doing homework on time and keeping on schedule," he said, listing what he sees as his strengths.

He recognizes the opportunity he's being given and is already thinking of what the future might hold. He said he wants to get a good job so he can buy a house for his parents and "help them like they've helped me."

His mother, who fled war-ravaged El Salvador in the 1980s, had always wanted something better for her children. She had never heard of Harvard-Westlake before Joel applied. But now she sees an endless horizon for her son. When Joel mentions potential colleges like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology or USC, Delia mentions Harvard.

"Even in El Salvador," she said, "they talk about Harvard University."

As a symbol of educational success, Harvard was also in the mind of Zenebu Gebeyhu, who set the college as a goal for her daughter Heven, who came to the U.S. from Ethiopia as a 9-year-old with virtually no English skills.

At the time, mother and daughter had been apart for nearly five years. Gebeyhu, a single mother, had left her homeland for Egypt to find work and then came to the U.S., where she was granted asylum. Working two jobs, she sent for Heven, who had been staying with relatives in Ethiopia.

Heven, 14, was placed in an English as a second language program when she entered Cochran in the sixth grade. Within the year, she was placed in honors English. She defines herself by the challenges she's overcome -- a hard life in an impoverished country, separation from her mother, adjustment to a new language and a country of vastly different cultural norms.

She wrote about her life journey when applying to Brentwood, grabbing the attention of every member of the admissions committee.

"Her transcript showed her going from ESL to honors, getting straight A's in every honors class, and it was like, 'Wait a minute, isn't she from Ethiopia recently? This can't be real,' " said Keith Sarkisian, Brentwood's director of middle and upper division admissions. "We really felt a kind of vivacity and energy to Heven. A lot had to with her background but also the growth she went through personally and in her writing in such a short time."

Heven said she is inspired by her mother's own determination.

"When I see how hard she works, I think it's nothing to do simple homework, and that keeps me going," she said. "I have big family back home, and they're all rooting for me. I want to do it for them and for myself. I know what the bottom is like, and I don't want to stay there."

Francisco, 15, moved with his single mother, Jovita Sanchez, to the U.S. in 1999, and since then they have moved 30 or 40 times, renting rooms and converted garages.

He was shy and didn't take much to teachers or classmates, perhaps because English is his third language after Spanish and Zapotec, an indigenous language of southern Mexico.

In middle school he started piano lessons, performing Mozart's "Turkish March" for his seventh-grade recital. He was placed in honors classes in the sixth grade and so impressed his teachers at Cochran with his writing that he was encouraged to enter a statewide contest, in which he wrote about the lessons he had learned from J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter novels.

Jovita Sanchez said her aim has always been to ensure that her son can fly as high as he is able.

"There are not so many opportunities to go to college in Mexico, not so much support," she said. "I dropped out when I was 15. I was not that smart and I couldn't learn. But I was a good worker, and that's why I've worked so hard to help him get the grades he needs to move on."

Along the way, Francisco's family has been there to help him dodge gangs, drugs and violence.

He has already made some quick adjustments at Crossroads: All ninth-graders spend a few days of orientation at a camp in Malibu, and Francisco didn't know how to swim. One of the teachers at Cochran volunteered to teach him. Francisco, they were not surprised to learn, was a quick study.

As the three students immerse themselves in new experiences, they're still in close contact with their middle school teachers.

"I feel very protective over them because we spent so much time together," said Hernandez, now a student at Loyola Law School. "I've dropped them off at friends houses, taken them to orientation, taken them shopping, picked them up at school. I hope to follow them for the rest of my life. What greater accomplishment can there be for a teacher."

Monday, October 20, 2008

WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM L.A.: Tracing the Rise-and-Fall Pattern of Urban School Reform

image

—Illustration by Patricia Raine

EdWeek Commentary by Charles Taylor Kerchner

Published Online: October 17, 2008

Published in Print: October 22, 2008

When I told former Mayor Richard Riordan that I was studying school reform efforts such as his city’s Los Angeles Educational Alliance for Restructuring Now, he replied: “That’s easy—LEARN failed.” Riordan, like most observers, saw education reform as a project, a coherent, relatively short-term set of fixes to the existing system. After half a dozen years, it was easy to conclude that the project had not lived up to expectations.

The view that one project after another has failed leads to a “spinning wheels” notion of reform in which nothing gains traction. Our historical study of the Los Angeles Unified School District and studies in other districts around the country lead my colleagues and me to a different conclusion. We believe that the whole institution of public education is in flux, abandoning old ideas born in the Progressive Era of the early 20th century and trying out new ones.

Projects produce great headlines, but their histories fall into a familiar rise-and-fall pattern. Paying too much attention to short-run change dulls the ability to see longer-range transformation. As former President Bill Clinton put it, “There’s a big difference between the trend lines and the headlines.”

The expected pattern of change from reform projects is diffusion, what has become known as “going to scale,” from pilot project to districtwide implementation. Projects, and the regimes that foster them, usually last from three to five years—seven years is a long horizon—and are associated with a specific reform program and the superintendency that implements it. Electoral support and foundation support often coincide to limit the patience for results and the time any reform program is given for its audition. In some situations we studied, the time from a project’s launch to announcement of its demise is often measured in months, and hardly ever in decades. Thus, “going to scale” usually means small-scale or short-term.

Institutional change follows a different time frame. It occurs infrequently and takes longer. Indeed, if we are right, the dismantling of the old Progressive Era institution began in some districts 40 years ago. The process of institutional change is simultaneously evolutionary and revolutionary. Instead of innovation within existing structures, institutional change is more likely to involve creative destruction, the breakdown of old authority and operating systems and the reconstruction and replacement of a system’s basic structures and operating procedures.


The old Progressives gave us an institution built around four ideas. The most visible was the banner of politics-free education, which in effect meant elite rather than populist politics. Elite politics fed local control of schooling, which is still an item of political faith, if not practice. In this context, school administrators professionalized, promising both effectiveness and efficiency in the application of the public trust. That they were seen as both legitimate and effective leaders led to a “logic of confidence,” in which would-be critics of the institution were held at bay.

It is these ideas that we have found challenged at every turn. The myth of politics-free education gave way to the reality of interest groups. Even though sponsors of reform projects talk of driving out destructive politics, which usually translates into diminishing the power of the teachers’ union, they find that they have re-created a world full of competing interests. Philadelphia’s attempt to escape urban politics by replacing the elected school board provided only a temporary respite, and that city’s diverse-provider model of education introduced for-profit and nonprofit school operators as new political interest groups. New York City, Chicago, and to a degree Los Angeles have recoupled public education and mayoral politics.

Even though local control is still used as a political symbol, it has effectively vanished in the face of increasingly activist federal and state governments. In Los Angeles, the share of operating revenue produced by local property taxes has declined by 80 percent. And in New York and Chicago, the strongest of the strong-mayor cities, the city’s elected leaders had to head to their respective state capitals to gain legislation necessary for their reform ideas.

Even though reformers applaud the emergence of strong singular leaders—represented most recently in the near-celebrity status accorded Chancellor Michelle Rhee in Washington—professional educators have been supplanted by outside policy entrepreneurs in many big cities. In turn, these leaders have reached outside the district bureaucracy to firms and organizations that sell their services and maintain separate identities or commercial brands, such as KIPP (the Knowledge Is Power Program) or Green Dot. Districts operated this way become networks rather than bureaucracies, explicitly in Philadelphia and New Orleans and de facto in Los Angeles.

Even though educators fervently wish for a return to a “logic of confidence” and its high-trust environment, there is none on the political horizon. It has been replaced by a logic of inspection and consequences. Even if the No Child Left Behind Act were to be replaced as federal policy, the notion of external accountability through tests and other means is so much a part of the new culture of consequences that it would be unlikely to be replaced. In large part, the critical public believes that public education cannot be relied upon to replace the century-old practice of bell-curve sorting with universal high standards.


Each of the new ideas is both troubled and ambitious. The mixture of revolutionary ideas that have moved to replace the Progressive Era ones is matched with a series of imperfect but increasingly sophisticated efforts at their realization.

For social scientists and policymakers, one of the problems with such long-wave evolution is that the changes are often invisible. The process is not unlike the experience of the apocryphal boiled frog that does not notice the temperature in the pot slowly rising. But, like the frog, public education is well and truly being cooked, and policy entrepreneurs—the very ones who advocate turning up the heat—can benefit from an institutional worldview.

The way forward involves a combination of short- and long-term thinking, both evolution and intelligent design, if you will. It is clear that the finance and taxing system needs reworking in ways that support effective use of money in addition to its equitable distribution. It is clear that educational federalism will have to be reworked in an era when local control of policy initiation has been greatly diminished, but when the consequences for implementation rest almost entirely at the school and district levels. And it is clear that the process of teaching and learning will require substantial redesign, for the irony of our research was how few changes we found in the basic technology of instruction despite major changes in governance and operations.

Given the need for system design, it is also clear that the change process is messy, and that what happens and at what speed varies substantially. But it is fair to conclude that we are not headed toward the disappearance of public education, but rather toward multiple hybrid forms as each large system moves away from the Progressive ideal along similar but not converging tracks.

Charles Taylor Kerchner is the co-author of Learning From L.A.: Institutional Change in American Public Education and the co-editor of The Transformation of Great American School Districts: How Big Cities Are Reshaping Public Education, both recently published by Harvard Education Press. He is a research professor at Claremont Graduate University in California.


MORE FROM DR. KERCHNER:

Learning from L.A.: Institutional Change in American Public Education is in the bookstores.

After four years of research, writing, and editing, I am delighted to see the book in print, partly because it represents the tangible reward for our labors, but partly because it delivers a strong message about public education. My co-authors and I believe that most research and commentary about public education reform has missed the important underlying changes in the whole institution of public education. That’s what we learned from L.A.

But LLA, as we called the research project, contains two additional layers. First, it’s a great story about real people who tried hard to reform the Los Angeles Unified School District in the 1990s. They spent more than $150-million, mostly in private money, much of it from Walter Annenberg’s gift. Half the schools in the District signed up, but at the end, the weight of opposition and inertia was greater than the resources and resolve of the reformers.

Second, there are some sharp policy lessons. Operating in the new institutional environment we describe means thinking about change differently, and acting with a blend of short and long-term strategy. Both explicit institutional design and experimentation are in order: intelligent design and evolution together, if you will. And at the end of the book, we make five explicit recommendations about policy changes that would move Los Angeles Unified beyond its current state of permanent crisis:

  1. Pass legislation that would allow groups of LAUSD schools to operate autonomously but still within the governance umbrella of the District. The objective is to recreate for District schools some of the flexibility achieved by charters. These “networks of autonomous schools” would come into being gradually. Along with charters, they would transform LAUSD from a single hierarchy to a network form or organization with many providers of education.
  2. Send money directly to the schools through a weighted student formula model of funding. Any form of decentralization, including the autonomous networks we advocate, is possible only if the principals and teachers at individual schools gain control over expenditures.
  3. Create positive incentives. The existing system is chock full of negative incentives and mandates at all levels. We would reverse that, creating positive incentives for students, parents, teachers and school administrators. Students, for example, should get positive rewards, such as guarantees of college admission, from the testing system, not just negative ones.
  4. Transform teaching and learning. We were struck how much energy in the education reform efforts was devoted to rearranging the relationships between adults and how little changed the way teachers taught and students learned. But during the same time frame, we witnessed a computer and Internet driven communications revolution that profoundly changes the way students access information and expertise. Among our more radical policy recommendations: break down the textbook monopoly by open sourcing the curriculum so that teachers develop their art and craft as they work and learn from one another.
  5. Increase variety and choice in the system. Choice is not simply about marketization; it’s about creating variety that allows public schools to experiment will different types and styles of instruction. Los Angeles already has more charter schools (about 120 at last count) and more magnets (about 150) than any school system in the country. It needs a better way of designing new types and styles of schools and for tracking their progress.

The first sentences in The Transformation of Great American School Districts lays out the conclusion of the research of my colleagues and I undertook over the last five years:

This book argues that urban education reform can best been understood as a process of institutional change rather than a series of failed projects. More specifically, we argue that to understand such changes one needs to pay attention to the basic ideas and assumptions that underpin these institutions. Indeed, we argue that virtually all the Progressive Era assumptions that provided the underpinning for urban education have now been violated, and that a set of new underlying ideas is being “auditioned,” and in some cases “rehearsed,” as we transition to a new and more hybrid set of institutions.

The institutional argument is developed in the pages of The Transformation… and in its companion book, Learning from L.A.: Institutional Change in American Public Education, both published by Harvard Education Press, and available from their web site.

· For a short summary of the book and why it matters.


· For a video interviewexplaining the difference between a project and institutional viewpoint.

· For background papers about Los Angeles and the Los Angeles Unified School district that contain data beyond the capacity of Learning from L.A.

In June, we introduced the ideas in Learning from L.A. to an audience of reformers who had led the LEARN and LAAMP reforms in the 1990s and reformers active today in the District, in charter schools, and in community based organizations. For videos of the conference including the opening speech by Virgil Roberts, my PowerPoint presentation, and videos of the panels of education reformers.

$400M HIGH SCHOOL OPENS TEN YEARS BEHIND SCHEDULE

cbs2.com  - Wire services contributed to this report

Oct 18, 2008 -- LOS ANGELES  -- The most expensive high school in Los Angeles history -- delayed for years because it was being constructed over potentially harmful gases -- opened Saturday near downtown.

A ribbon-cutting was held at the 2,808-student Roybal Learning Center at 1200 W. Colton Ave., which was to have been called Belmont High School until the $400 million construction project ran into problems.

When first proposed, the district hoped to complete the school for around $45 million.

Construction ground to a halt in 2000, when the school district learned that the site just west of downtown was honeycombed with old oil wells, and potentially harmful gases -- methane and hydrogen sulfide -- associated with petroleum were seeping to the surface.

However, local residents in the largely Latino neighborhood objected to shutting down the project, and it was eventually allowed to be completed -- at nearly 10 times its original projected cost.

Officials noted the new school will allow Belmont High a few blocks away to return to a two-semester calendar for the first time in 26 years, meaning students will not have to attend summer school.

"Had we abandoned our vision and listened to the naysayers, Belmont High School would still be operating on a year-round calendar," LAUSD Chief Facilities Executive Guy Mehula said. "Today is a crowning day for LAUSD's building program, and most importantly for the students and community our new school construction program serves."

"When the construction of this school was halted, the community was outraged, said Veronica Melvin, executive director of the Alliance for a Better Community. "Parents, students and community leaders rallied at the steps of the school board for years because we knew the school could be built safely, and the district needed to be held accountable for doing so."

Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, D-Los Angeles was among those to cut a ribbon officially opening the school, which is named after her father, the late Congressman Edward R. Roybal.

"My father believed that education was the single greatest gift we could pass on to our children, because an education, as he would say, `can never be taken away from you,'" Roybal-Allard said. "That is why he fought throughout his career to provide our community with quality educational opportunities like the Roybal Learning Center will offer."

The LAUSD Board of Education was supported by numerous community organizations and elected officials in naming the school in honor of the Roybal (1916-2005), who was a prominent Latino civil rights leader who graduated from Roosevelt High School, served on the Los Angeles City Council from 1949 to 1962, and was a congressman from 1963 to 1993.

"By creating small schools and a safe campus for students, the new Roybal Learning Center carries on the legacy of a great pioneer dedicated to reforming education in Los Angeles," said Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.

"Today we celebrate the legacy of our great civil rights leader Edward R. Roybal," LAUSD Board President Monica Garcia said. "We also honor the strength and courage of the hundreds of parents and students from the Pico-Union community who fought to bring this world-class school to their neighborhood. I am proud to be their partner as we strive to achieve 100 percent graduation for the students of LAUSD."

"Edward R. Roybal Learning Center is the kind of school facility all of our students deserve," said LAUSD Superintendent David L. Brewer III. "We are here celebrating today because people inside the district and out had the vision and tenacity to push forward in challenging times. That same vision and tenacity remains at work to bring continued progress for our students."

"After the vote was taken by the (LAUSD) board back in 2003 to approve my plan to move forward with this school, I recalled thinking that hope had won over fear," said Los Angeles City Councilman Jose Huizar.

The former school board president came up with an alternative plan for the site, which included the adjacent Vista Hermosa Park.

"That was a very proud moment for me, knowing that this community and these children were finally going to get the state-of-the-art campus they so richly deserved," Huizar said. "And seeing it up and running today reminds me that we did the right thing to create this learning and community oasis."

The campus facilities are comprised of small learning communities, each including general studies, science, and specialized classrooms, as well as local administration. A separate building on the campus has a library, cafeteria, auditorium and a parent/student center. The campus also features a large gymnasium with locker rooms, as well as outdoor athletic facilities.

"The Edward R. Roybal Learning Center provides relief to some pockets of the Temple-Beaudry community that reach 50,000 people per square mile," said Los Angeles City Councilman Ed Reyes, whose district includes the new school.

"Before the opening of the new school, students were on a multi-track calendar and packed in overcrowded classrooms," he said. "Now, students can enjoy a traditional two-semester calendar and a more personalized learning experience at a school that is like a mini college campus. The Roybal Center features small learning communities with lots of open windows, and stretches of green space for students to walk through on their way to class."

Roybal Learning Center will educate students in ninth through 12th grades and is home to four small learning communities and two independent pilot schools. The SLCs were established at Belmont High School and have moved their complete programs over to Roybal Learning Center.

The SLCs are the International School of Languages, the Activists for Educational Empowerment, the Business and Finance Academy and the Computer Science Academy. The two independent pilot schools are Civitas School of Leadership and the School for Visual Arts and Humanities.

Civitas School of Leadership opened with students in the ninth and 10th grade, and will add 11th and 12th grades in the next two years. The School for Visual Arts and Humanities begins with students ninth through 12th grades.

The schools are part of the Belmont Zone of Choice Initiative. First established in 2007, the Belmont Zone of Choice is a network of 500-student, autonomous college preparatory schools that downtown-area families can select based on students' interest.

The learning center is one of 74 new schools completed as part of LAUSD's $12.6 billion new school construction program to end involuntary busing and year-round calendars, and to provide every student a seat in a neighborhood school, according to the district.

To date, LAUSD has completed 74 new schools and 59 additions, providing more than 77,000 new classroom seats for students. School officials said the program is on track to deliver a total of 132 new schools by 2012.