Saturday, September 26, 2009

Ed Sec on 'No Child Left Behind': 'WE ARE LYING TO CHILDREN AND PARENTS' - Duncan Calls for Reform of Bush-Era Education System; Critic Notes Lack of Action So Far

ABC News

Duncan: "[NCLB] unfairly labeled many schools as failures even when they were making progress," he said. "It places too much emphasis on raw test scores rather than student growth. And it is overly prescriptive in some ways while it is too blunt an instrument of reform in others. "

By MARY BRUCE | ABC NEWS Online

Sept. 24, 2009 —

The Obama administration is gearing up for an overhaul of the Bush administration's controversial "No Child Left Behind" education reform law.

"Few laws have generated more debate. Few subjects divide educators so intensely," Education Secretary Arne Duncan said today. "Many teachers complain bitterly about NCLB's emphasis on testing. Principals hate being labeled as failures. Superintendents say it wasn't adequately funded. And many parents just view it as a toxic brand that isn't helping children learn."

The administration is planning to develop its proposal for reauthorizing the legislation in the coming months, after receiving recommendations and input from various stakeholders.

Duncan's comments today were made at the first of six "stakeholder forums" to be held on the topic with representatives from more than 160 groups, including the National Education Association, the National Governors' Association and the Business Roundtable.

In addition, Duncan has been travelling the country this summer on a "Listening and Learning" tour to gather information about education reform and how NCLB can be improved.

The current law -- approved by Congress with overwhelming support in 2001 and signed by President George W. Bush in 2002 -- requires students to be measured through standardized tests. Currently, states set their own standards for academic success and may risk federal funding if they fail to show adequate yearly progress in achieving their goals.

Critics claim the current system encouraged states to lower standards so that they could report significant progress.

Duncan agreed that the legislation fails to raise the bar for academic achievement.

"It unfairly labeled many schools as failures even when they were making progress," he said. "It places too much emphasis on raw test scores rather than student growth. And it is overly prescriptive in some ways while it is too blunt an instrument of reform in others.

"But the biggest problem with NCLB," he added, "is that it doesn't encourage high learning standards. In fact, it inadvertently encourages states to lower them. The net effect is that we are lying to children and parents by telling kids they are succeeding when they are not."

However, while the secretary made clear that standardized testing is not ideal, for now, it is the best thing available.

"Until states develop better assessments -- which we will support and fund through 'Race to the Top' -- we must rely on standardized tests to monitor progress," he said. "But this is an important area for reform and an important conversation to have."

Duncan was adamant that reform cannot wait and cited Martin Luther King, Jr., in noting that education is the "civil rights issue of our generation."

"In this new century and in this global economy, it is not only unacceptable to delay and defer needed reforms -- it's self-destructive," he said. "We can't allow so much as one more day to go by without advancing our education agenda."

Despite the urgent calls for reform, many are concerned the administration has failed to offer specifics.

"The immediate take away was where's the detail," said Andrew Smarick, a distinguished visiting fellow at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. "[Duncan's] been on his 'Listening and Learning' tour since the beginning of this administration & yet we didn't get any very clear details about what he wants the reauthorization to look like."

"In effect, [Duncan] was saying we need to act immediately, but then let's do more listening and waiting," Smarick said.

Furthermore in this tough political climate, passing a reform bill may be easier said than done.

"The biggest challenge in getting this reauthorized is the politics of it -- what type of legislative plan could get support in both the House and Senate," Smarick said. "The amazing thing is that people have been making predictions since 2006 that NCLB reauthorization was going to happen, so you have to be skeptical of anyone who says that reauthorization is going to happen soon."

Overall, the secretary agreed that new standards must be clearly outlined, but that states should continue to play a large role.

"We should be tight on the goals -- with clear standards set by states that truly prepare young people for college and careers -- but we should be loose on the means for meeting those goals," he said.

Earlier this year, 48 states and the District of Columbia agreed to adopt uniform standards in math and language arts.

Several stakeholders raised concerns about accountability going forward.

"It's always very important to embrace higher standards, but let's not be too loose on the accountability side," said Arthur Rothkopf, senior vice president of the Chamber of Commerce. "We need to have real compliance."

Others are concerned that NCLB testing has narrowed the focus of academic success, something they feel must be reversed.

"The assessment system & we must think about sciences, the arts, creativity," said Santa Clara County, Calif., Superintendent Charles Weiss. "What gets assessed is what gets taught."

Smarick, however, noted that broadening the range of what gets taught and evaluated "means that you need to create even more tests, and a lot of people would be opposed to that. Most educators want fewer tests -- not more."

The news that didn't fit from Sept 27th

$1.5 BILLION UP FOR GRABS: …but it's not about the money! a 4LAKids Spreadsheet 24 NEW SCHOOLS SUBJECT TO PSC R..

A DOZEN LAUSD SCHOOLS COULD BE TAKEN OVER BY INDEPENDENT OPERATORS UNDER NEW PLAN …it’s actually three dozen, b..

…The other shoe drops: IN ADDITION TO THE TWELVE ‘FOCUS SCHOOLS’ THERE ARE TWENTY-FOUR NEW SCHOOLS ‘UP FOR GRAB

LIST PUBLISHED OF ‘TAKEOVER’ OR ‘FOCUS’ SCHOOLS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE – as chosen by the superintendent: FRO..

9/25 SUPERINTENDENT’S UPDATE ON PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE: from the LAUSD Website Public School Choice 9-25-09 Update

GARFIELD HIGH AMONG 12 SCHOOLS AVAILABLE TO OUTSIDE BIDDERS: by Howard Blume | LA Times LA NOW! blog Septemb..

NYC SCHOOLS ARE OVERCROWDED: City classrooms overflowing with students: Leonie Haimson, President of CLASS SIZE..

Re: A CLOCKWORK BUBBLE: City Council President Garcetti writes from his Blackberry, correcting 4LAKids’ mis / o..

MOST PARENTS WON’T HAVE KIDS GET H1N1 FLU SHOTS, STUDY FINDS: A national survey suggests parents are confused a..

COALITION FILES LEGAL BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF STATE TUITION LAW: by Carla Rivera | LA Times LA NOW Blog September 2..

LAUSD UNION AGREES TO FURLOUGHS: About 1,100 bus drivers will take six unpaid days off this fiscal year to help..

CALIFORNIA DROPOUT RESEARCH PROJECT, CAHSEE POLICY ANALYSIS REPORTS RELEASED: September 24, 2009 NEW: CDRP Poli..

LIMITING SPEECH – LAUSD BOARD CUTS BACK ON PUBLIC INPUT: LA Daily News Editorial Sept 24 -- To say "Shame on the..

UC & CSU WILL GRANT DEGREES TO THOSE SENT TO INTERNMENT CAMPS: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | from the NY Times Septembe..

DROPOUTS COSTING CALIFORNIA $1.1 BILLION ANNUALLY IN JUVENILE CRIME COSTS: Study finds that cutting the dropout ..

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS SAY UTLA BETRAYED THEM: En español: Maestros Sustitutos dicen que Sindicato de Profesores lo..

Interview with Steve Zimmer: RETURNING TO PUBLIC SCHOOL IS A MITZVAH: By Bill Boyarsky | Opinion in the Jewish J..

LA Times seeks your questions about work and child care: from the LA Times September 23, 2009 -- School has star..

STIMULUS QUIRK LEAVES COMMUNITY COLLEGES WITH $90 MILLION LESS: By Matt Krupnick | Contra Costa Times Updated: 0..

HEALTHY FAMILIES: Governor reverses threat, signs bill to preserve kids' insurance: Matthew Yi | San Francisco C..

CRISIS: LAUSD CUTS DOWN ON COMMITTEES. Move reduces staff time, materials; critics disagree.: By Connie Llanos, ..

VETERAN SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS PROTEST LOSS OF WORK: by Howard Blume | LA Times LA Now blog September 22, 2009 |  8..

No budget/No clue: THE CALIFORNIA FIX: Tax commission report falls flat, but it's a start: Pro..

No budget/No clue: THE CALIFORNIA FIX :: Taming the California Beast: So many problems, so man..

GARFIELD HIGH IS ELIGIBLE FOR TAKEOVER: Control of the East L.A. school, setting for 'Stand and Deliver,' could shift because of its low academic standing [+ more]

By Howard Blume | LA Times

September 26, 2009 -- Garfield High, which became nationally known as the real-life setting for the film "Stand and Deliver," will be among the initial 12 local campuses, including six high schools, eligible for takeover because of persistent academic failure, officials announced Friday.

The nation's second-largest school system will invite bidders from inside and outside the district to run these schools next year through a proposal process that is still being developed.

The Los Angeles Board of Education authorized this school-control plan in August; it applies to low-achieving existing schools and to 51 new campuses set to open over the next four years in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Garfield, which for decades has served a largely immigrant Latino population in East Los Angeles, reached a high-water mark in the 1980s, when math teacher Jaime Escalante built his famed calculus program.

Under his leadership, dozens of students passed the Advanced Placement calculus test every year, a rare feat even at the nation's elite schools.

Last year, only 5% of Garfield students tested as "proficient" in any math class.

"All these schools need the attention that this will focus on them," said board member Yolie Flores Aguilar, author of the policy.

Other schools include:

* Maywood Academy in the southeast Los Angeles County city of Maywood. The school opened four years ago. Maywood city officials are interested in obtaining substantial control over the school, said City Councilman Felipe Aguirre.

* Jefferson High in Central-Alameda. District officials successfully opposed a previous charter conversion attempt by Steve Barr and his Green Dot Public Schools. Barr later engineered a takeover of Locke High.

* Lincoln High in Lincoln Heights. Teachers helped staff a volunteer summer school after budget cuts slashed district offerings. One potential course that failed to attract sufficient enrollment was an activism seminar with the proposed class project of recalling Flores Aguilar because she voted for budget cuts that resulted in layoffs.

* Burbank Middle School in Highland Park, where parents have long worried about gang influence on campus. The school also has two new magnet schools that, some argue, already are the basis of a promising reform.

* San Fernando Middle School, the only Valley campus.

The other schools are Gardena High, San Pedro High, Carver Middle School in South Park, Griffith Joyner Elementary in Watts, Hillcrest Elementary in Baldwin Hills/Crenshaw, and Hyde Park Elementary in Hyde Park.

L.A. schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said that being on the list "should not be viewed as a negative" and that "this process is about providing our schools with the appropriate supports."

More than 250 schools are eligible under the board resolution, which applies to schools that consistently failed to meet federal benchmarks for at least three years.

Cortines refined the formula as recently as midweek, finally deciding that the "focus" schools, as he called them, would meet additional criteria: fewer than 21% of students proficient in math or English and no school-wide improvement on the state's Academic Performance Index, which is largely based on standardized test scores.

In addition, high schools would have a dropout rate greater than 10%.

Garfield qualified easily.

The school also owns the lowest rank, 1 of 10, when compared with schools statewide. But that does not make Garfield's selection incontestable.

When compared with schools that serve similar students, Garfield rates a 6 of 10, which puts it in the upper half of state schools.

And although Garfield dropped three points on this year's Academic Performance Index, it had improved by 44 and 25 points the previous two years, among L.A. Unified's better gains.

Garfield's uncertain future has engendered fear and anger among the faculty, said social studies teacher Brian Fritch.

"We have a lot of teachers confused about what the next step will be," he said. "People don't feel included in the process and feel rushed."

Fritch is hustling to organize an internal reform proposal.

Junior Karen Flores, 16, said she and her classmates are worried about the loss of cherished Garfield traditions and a disrupted senior year, with the potential to affect classes and college applications.

"It feels like people are giving up on us," she said.

Garfield became a reform battleground as a target of the Parent Revolution, which emerged out of Green Dot.

Its organizers have asserted that they have signatures from dissatisfied community parents equal in number to more than half the Garfield student body and that the district must either improve Garfield or face competition from start-up charter schools that would surround it.

Green Dot has agreed to step aside and let another charter group, the Alliance for College-Ready Public Schools, manage new charters near Garfield.

Alliance chief executive Judy Burton said she's interested in submitting a proposal both for Garfield and for a new high school, under construction, that will relieve Garfield's overcrowding.

more:

Valley middle school on list for takeover

Los Angeles Daily News - Connie Llanos -

The district selected 36 schools - 24 new campuses and 12 underperforming sites - to ensure that every "focus" school, as LAUSD Superintendent Ramon ...

Gardena and San Pedro schools are high on takeover list

Daily Breeze - Connie Llanos, Melissa Pamer -

... schools in the South Bay - could be taken over by independent operators next year under a Los Angeles Unified reform plan, district officials said ...

Friday, September 25, 2009

$1.5 BILLION UP FOR GRABS

…but it's not about the money!

a 4LAKids Spreadsheet

24 NEW SCHOOLS SUBJECT TO PSC RFP

School Students Co$t
Gratts PC 400 $66,877,385
Valley Region ES #6 950 $59,861,759
Valley Region ES #7 800 $62,224,883
Valley Region ES #8 725 $48,567,191
Valley Region ES #9 800 $57,818,486
Valley Region ES #10 650 $36,548,280
Central Region ES #13 875 $75,512,417
Central Region ES #15 575 $70,931,735
Central Region ES #16 675 $66,748,089
Central Region ES #17 725 $64,486,404
Central Region ES #18 575 $54,465,009
South Region ES #1 1,050 $85,379,327
South Region ES #2 1,050 $97,156,182
South Region ES #3 775 $81,238,658
South Region ES #4 775 $86,419,831
South Region MS # 2A 1,404 $127,675,163
South Region MS # 2B inc inc
South Region MS # 2C inc inc
South Region MS #6 1,404 $136,636,484
Esteban E. Torres HS #1 2,322 $206,707,370
Esteban E. Torres HS #2 inc inc
Esteban E. Torres HS #3 inc inc
Esteban E. Torres HS #4 inc inc
Esteban E. Torres HS #5 inc inc
TOTAL 16530 $1,485,254,653

A DOZEN LAUSD SCHOOLS COULD BE TAKEN OVER BY INDEPENDENT OPERATORS UNDER NEW PLAN …it’s actually three dozen, but who’s counting?

By Connie Llanos, Staff Writer | LA Daily News

09/25/2009 02:16:10 PM PDT -- A dozen low performing Los Angeles Unified schools could be taken over next year by independent operators under the district's new reform plan, officials said Friday.

Releasing the list of chronically under-performing schools, including San Fernando Middle School, paves the way for charter school organizations, the teachers' union and other non-profit groups to submit proposals to operate the schools.

Under the original guidelines of the "School Choice Plan" approved by the LAUSD board in August, 302 new and underperforming schools were eligible to be taken over. The plan called for all schools who had failed to meet federal test goals for more than three years to be included on the list.

But the district only selected 36 schools - 24 new campuses and 12 under-performing sites - to ensure that every "focus" school, as LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines has coined them, received the proper amount of attention.

Ultimately the 12 schools selected had to meet additional criteria that included having less than 21 percent proficiency in math or reading and no growth in their state test scores, and more than a 10 percent drop-out rate for high schools.

The other 11 underperforming schools are: Griffith Joyner, Hillcrest Drive, and Hyde Park elementary schools, Burbank and Carver middle schools and Gardena, Garfield, Lincoln, Jefferson, Maywood Academy and San Pedro High Schools.

All of the district's 51 new schools that will be completed by 2012 as part of the district's $20 billion bond construction program will be eligible for take over under the plan, but only 24 will be opening next year.

In the San Fernando Valley that will include elementary schools in Panorama City, Van Nuys, Sylmar, North Hollywood and Canoga Park.

Cortines also released a list of 56 "support and service" schools that he will be watching closely this year. Cortines said he will be setting benchmarks for these schools.

Schools that fail to meet these goals will be part of next year's list of schools that will be up for bid.

Cortines will be submitting final application procedures to the LAUSD board for approval Oct. 27 and expects to have all school operators selected for these 36 schools by February.

…The other shoe drops: IN ADDITION TO THE TWELVE ‘FOCUS SCHOOLS’ THERE ARE TWENTY-FOUR NEW SCHOOLS ‘UP FOR GRABS’

FROM AN LAUSD POWERPOINT, comments by smf

…the legal basis and authority  for transferring operation of the 24 new  schools, which are not failing and indeed have no academic track record at all, to

  • management and operation not contemplated in state law (while applicants may be Charter Management Organizations these are not charter schools) 
  • and outside the purview,  control and oversight of the elected trustees of the District

is open to question and litigation.  The first legal question is “!s this what the voters and taxpayers had in mind?”

The only legal justification for this is the Public School Choice Resolution itself – which contemplates its own limits and tenuous legality in Resolved #13:

Resolved further, That the Superintendent will work with the Office of General Counsel to ensure compliance with state and federal laws and regulations, comprehensive labor agreements,the Modified Consent Decree and other court orders, and that innovation, reorganization and restructuring of schools must be accomplished in accordance with these mandates;

 image

9/25 SUPERINTENDENT’S UPDATE ON PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE

from the LAUSD Website

Public School Choice 9-25-09 Update

LIST PUBLISHED OF ‘TAKEOVER’ OR ‘FOCUS’ SCHOOLS FOR PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE – as chosen by the superintendent

FROM THE LAUSD WEBSITE

The choice of the twelve was ultimately his – as evidenced by the telling first person singular pronoun in the accompanying memo: “Therefore, I have revised one element of the selection criteria for focus schools to….”

The List:

    • BURBANK MIDDLE SCHOOL
    • CARVER MIDDLE SCHOOL
    • GARDENA HIGH SCHOOL
    • GARFIELD HIGH SCHOOL
    • GRIFFITH-JOYNER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
    • HILLCREST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
    • HYDE PARK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
    • JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL
    • LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL
    • MAYWOOD ACADEMY HIGH SCHOOL
    • SAN FERNANDO MIDDLE SCHOOL
    • SAN PEDRO HIGH SCHOOL

image

GARFIELD HIGH AMONG 12 SCHOOLS AVAILABALE TO OUTSIDE BIDDERS

 

by Howard Blume | LA Times LA NOW! blog

September 25, 2009 |  8:41 am

Garfield High, which became nationally known as the real-life setting for the film “Stand and Deliver,” will be among the first group of local schools eligible for takeover because of persistent academic failure, a high-level district source has told The Times.

Garfield’s selection means that the nation’s second-largest school system will invite bidders — from inside and outside the district — to run the East Los Angeles campus of 4,600 students.  This “request-for-proposal” process could apply to more than 250 schools under a Board of Education resolution passed in August, but the initial set of schools will number 12, sources said.

Other schools likely to be on the list are Jefferson High in Central-Alameda, Lincoln High in Lincoln Heights, Burbank Middle in Highland Park and Maywood Academy High in the southeast L.A. County city of Maywood.

Sources supplied the information on a confidential basis because they did not have permission to provide it. In a Thursday interview, L.A. schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said he would release the list today, but only after notifying senior district officials of the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Garfield High, which for decades has served a largely immigrant population east of downtown, reached its recent high-water mark in the 1980s, when math teacher Jaime Escalante built a famed calculus program that became the subject of a book and subsequent movie. Under his leadership, dozens of students passed the Advanced Placement calculus test every year, a rare feat even at the nation’s elite high schools. 

Last year, only 5% of Garfield students tested as proficient in any math class. The school qualified for possible takeover as one of more than 250 that had consistently failed to meet federal benchmarks and thus was designated as falling into “Program Improvement” status. The board resolution applied to any school with that designation for three or more years.

Cortines later refined the criteria. “Focus” schools, as he called them, would have to meet additional criteria: Less than 21% of students proficient in math or English and schoolwide improvement of less than 10 points on the state’s Academic Performance Index, which is largely based on standardized test scores. In addition, high schools would have a dropout rate greater than 10%.

Garfield qualified easily. Moreover, the school has the lowest rank, 1 of 10, when compared with schools statewide.  But that does not make Garfield’s selection noncontroversial or unncontestable.

When compared with schools that serve similar students, Garfield rates a 6 of 10, which puts it in the upper half of state schools by that yardstick. An independently operated charter school, for example, would be eligible for renewal if it achieved a 4 of 10 in this category. Charter schools are exempt from some rules governing traditional schools, including adherence to the district’s union contracts.

And although Garfield dropped three points on this year’s Academic Performance Index, it had improved by 44 and 25 points the previous two years. That gives the school a three-year average gain of 22 points annually, far surpassing the level of improvement that Cortines sought for just one year.

“It’s hard to have constant progress each year,” said social studies teacher Brian Fritch. “We’re doing our best. People here really care about their jobs and they’re trying to do well.”

These efforts have included a recent intervention program that includes Saturday school and after-school tutoring and faculty collaboration that entails reviewing data to refine teaching strategies, Fritch said.

The expectation that Garfield would be put up for bidding has affected the campus climate, Fritch said.
“The mood is not good,” he said. “There is a lot of fear, uncertainty and anger. We have a lot of teachers confused about what the next step will be. People don’t feel included in the process and feel rushed. Even students talk about it.”

Garfield has been a particular reform battleground in recent weeks. The school has been targeted by The Parents Revolution, a group initiated within the charter-school organization Green Dot Public Schools. Its organizers assert they have signatures from community parents equal in number to more than half the Garfield student body. They say that the district must either improve Garfield or face competition from startup charter schools that would surround the Garfield campus.

The district’s action, in opening Garfield to bidding, means a charter school can now vie to manage Garfield. The school board's school-control resolution, authored by Yolie Flore Aguilar, also applies to 51 new schools set to open over the next four years.

Another organization involved at Garfield has been the local nonprofit InnerCity Struggle. It has pushed the “pilot school” model, under which Garfield would be divided into separate, independent small schools that, unlike charters, would retain a close affiliation with the school district. InnerCity Struggle has especially close ties with school board President Monica Garcia.

On campus, Fritch is trying to organize an internal reform proposal. He was among a delegation of about 20 Garfield teachers Thursday who toured pilot schools already operating within L.A. Unified

NYC SCHOOLS ARE OVERCROWDED: City classrooms overflowing with students

Leonie Haimson, President of CLASS SIZE MATTERS, forwards the following – apropos of how well mayors run school districts:

BY Rachel Monahan and Meredith Kolodner | NY DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Friday, September 18th 2009, 4:00 AM  -- Classrooms throughout the city are overpacked with students as schools struggle with limited funds.

Thousands of classes citywide are packed to the gills in all grades as schools struggle to stretch every scarce dollar, the Daily News has learned.

More than 7,200 classes are over the limit set in the teachers union contract, the union says.

"In my science research class, there are some kids sitting behind the blackboard," said Renzo Meza, a freshman at Forest Hills High School, which has 384 classes with more than the 34-student limit for high schools.

"They have to come in front and kneel down to take notes."

High schools in Queens have the most crowded conditions, with 26 having more than 34 kids per class, the report said.

More than 175 kindergartens have more than the mandated 25 kids, with the most problems on Staten Island and in the northeast section of the Bronx.

Parents of some fourth-graders at Public School 184 in Whitestone, Queens, were notified Thursday that even though they lived in the school's zone, they would have to enroll at PS 214 in Flushing.

Late Thursday, the Education Department promised to reverse the decision and add an extra class.

"I'm very happy they did this. I just wish we wouldn't have to protest and put parents through this kind of agony," said Leonie Haimson, director of Class Size Matters. "There are many parents in the same situation who don't know how to reach out for help and are being turned away."

Schools had to cut an average of 5% from their budgets this year.

Many cut the number of teachers and consolidated classes. There are about 1,100 unfilled teacher vacancies.

The closure of kindergartens in city-funded day care centers pushed at least 3,000 more kindergartners into the public schools this school year.

Teachers union officials said their reports showed the problem is worse this year than last.

"Every child deserves to be in a classroom that is small enough so they can get individual attention," said United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew.

"It's what parents want, it's what teachers want and it's what children need."

A DOE spokesman said it's impossible to get an accurate picture of class sizes after a week of school.

"As they do every year, the number of classes exceeding the contractual limit will decline dramatically in the coming weeks as enrollment stabilizes and principals add new classrooms to accommodate all of their students," William Havemann said.

Citywide, more than 5,300 high school classes were over the limit, and more than 1,800 middle and elementary school classes had more than the limit of 32 students per class.

Daniel Kounin, 16, an 11th-grader at Fort Hamilton High School in Brooklyn, where more than 200 classes are overcrowded, said he only got into an Advanced Placement class only after the teacher kicked out another student.

"Teachers can't pay attention to all the students," Daniel said. "If someone in the class has a problem in one area, she can't stop to help him. She has to stay on the curriculum."

Re: A CLOCKWORK BUBBLE

City Council President Garcetti writes from his Blackberry, correcting 4LAKids’ mis / over / or under-understanding of the City of LA Budget:

“One fact that is off: we (The City of LA) are not another 300 million in deficit. The 100 million was merely the portion for the majority of civilians but our many deliberations for our budget closed the deficit, then receipts were down about 75 million.

“Now we are in balance with an extra 20 million for our reserve.”

●●smf’s 2¢:  Thank you Eric. I am as guilty of this as anyone else who works with government and the taxpayer’s money …but the use of the adverb “merely” to modify “$100 million” gives me pause.

MOST PARENTS WON’T HAVE KIDS GET H1N1 FLU SHOTS, STUDY FINDS: A national survey suggests parents are confused about the risks of the virus and its vaccine + UMHS PRESS RELEASE

Complete report

By Melissa Healy | LA Times

September 25, 2009 -- Germ-spreading schoolchildren are expected to be the focus of a massive U.S. vaccination campaign against the novel H1N1 flu.

But if their parents are hearing the rallying cry to have their kids vaccinated, they're not buying it, says a new national survey.

In a poll of 1,678 U.S. parents conducted by the University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, 40% said they would get their children immunized against the H1N1 virus -- even as 54% indicated they would get their kids vaccinated against regular seasonal flu.

Among those who said they do not intend to have their kids vaccinated against H1N1, almost half -- 46% -- indicated they're not worried about their children becoming ill with the pandemic virus. Twenty percent said they do not believe the H1N1 flu is a serious disease.

REPORT HIGHLIGHTS

  • Only 40% of parents plan to have their children get the H1N1 flu vaccine—much fewer than those who plan to have children get the seasonal flu vaccine.
  • Hispanic parents are more likely than white or black parents to plan to have their children get the H1N1 flu vaccine.
  • Nearly one-half of parents who don’t plan to vaccinate their children are not worried about their kids getting the H1N1 flu.
  • Only about one-third of parents believe that H1N1 flu will be worse for children than seasonal flu.

There were differences along racial and ethnic lines in parents' responses, which were collected Aug. 13 to Aug. 31. More than half of Latino parents said they would bring their kids to get vaccinated against H1N1. Among white parents, 38% said they would do so. African American parents were the least inclined to vaccinate: 30% said they planned to do so.

About half of the parents who said they'd pass on the H1N1 flu shot for their kids expressed concern about possible side effects of the vaccine.

The chatter about seasonal flu and novel H1N1 flu, and the differences in their relative virulence, has certainly confused parents, the survey suggests. Half of respondents said they believe that, for children, seasonal and H1N1 flu pose roughly equivalent risks.

"That perception may not match the actual risks," Dr. Matthew Davis, the poll director, said in a statement. Davis is a University of Michigan professor of pediatrics and internal medicine.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that though serious complications of seasonal flu appear to spare most kids and strike the elderly and very young most heavily, the novel H1N1 flu appears to hit children and young adults hardest.

Not surprisingly, parents who believe that the H1N1 flu will be worse for children were most likely to say they will have their own children vaccinated.

In a news release accompanying the poll results, Davis said that public health officials wishing to maximize vaccination rates among schoolchildren need to communicate clearly to their parents that kids are at relatively greater risk of becoming seriously ill with the novel flu strain if they get it.

University of Michigan Health Service Press Release: H1N1 flu: Are parents underestimating risk to kids

September 24, 2009
Media contact: Jessica Soulliere
E-mail:
jesssoul@med.umich.edu
Phone: 734-764-2220

C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health finds less than half of parents plan to have their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu, despite higher disease risk; Hispanic parents more likely to vaccinate

ANN ARBOR, Mich.—With schools back in session, H1N1 flu has become more active across the United States—especially among children. A new vaccine against H1N1 flu—strongly recommended for kids—has been tested and is expected to be available in October. But will parents get their children vaccinated?

The latest C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital National Poll on Children’s Health finds only 40 percent of parents indicate they will get their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu—while 54 percent of parents indicate they will get their children vaccinated against seasonal flu. Among parents who do not plan to get their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu, 46 percent indicate they are not worried about their children getting H1N1 flu, while 20 percent believe H1N1 flu is not serious.

“This information about parents’ plans to vaccinate their kids against H1N1 flu suggests that parents are much less concerned about H1N1 flu than seasonal flu for their kids. That perception may not match the actual risks,” says Matthew Davis, M.D., director of the poll and associate professor of pediatrics and internal medicine in the Child Health Evaluation and Research Unit at the University of Michigan Medical School.

The poll also shows vaccination plans for H1N1 flu differs by racial/ethnic groups. More than half of Hispanic parents plan to have their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu, compared to only 38 percent of white parents and 30 percent of black parents.

Vaccination plans of Hispanic parents may reflect a higher perceived risk in the Hispanic community, given the well publicized outbreak of H1N1 flu in Mexico in early 2009, Davis says.

In describing their perceived risk of H1N1 flu for children, one-third of parents indicate they believe H1N1 flu will be worse than seasonal flu. Nearly half of parents believe H1N1 and seasonal flu will be about the same for children, according to the poll.

These perceptions contrast information from the CDC suggesting that—unlike what is typically seen with seasonal flu—rates of illness and hospitalizations related to H1N1 flu are higher for children than for other age groups.  

“It can be difficult to follow all the new information about a fast moving target like H1N1 flu,” says Davis, who is also associate professor of public policy at the U-M Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy. “Health care professionals and public health officials need to help parents and the community at-large understand that children are one of the groups at greatest risk for getting H1N1, and for getting very sick from the disease as well.”

Among parents who do not plan to get their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu, or who are unsure, about half are worried about possible side effects of the vaccine. Among parents who do plan to get their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu, about 4 in 5 believe that H1N1 is a serious disease and worry about their children getting H1N1 illness. Parents who think H1N1 flu will be worse for children than seasonal flu were much more likely to plan to have their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu.

“This connection between perceived risk and plans to vaccinate against H1N1 flu makes a lot of sense,” says Davis. “What it emphasizes is that to reach parents who are currently unsure about H1N1 vaccination and convince them to go ahead and vaccinate their kids, the health care community needs to focus on communicating key information about the risk of H1N1 flu for children.”

The poll surveyed 1,678 parents from Aug. 13 - 31, 2009 across the U.S. about their plans and perceptions related to getting their children vaccinated against H1N1 flu and seasonal flu.

Meet the expert:
Matthew Davis, M.D.

Learn more:
C.S. Mott Children's Hospital National Poll on Children's Health
Poll questions

Read the report

Download images

Resources for parents from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention:

Methodology: This report presents findings from a nationally representative household surveyconducted exclusively by Knowledge Networks, Inc, for C.S. Mott ChildrensHospital via a method used in many published studies. The survey wasadministered in August 2009 to a randomly selected, stratified group of parentsaged 18 and older (n=1,678) from the Knowledge Networks standing panel thatclosely resembles the U.S. population.The sample was subsequently weightedto reflect population figures from the Census Bureau. The survey completion ratewas 62 percentamong panel members contacted to participate. The margin oferror is plus or minus 2 to 5 percentage points for the main analysis.For results based on subgroups, the margin of error is higher.
To learn more about Knowledge Networks, visit www.knowledgenetworks.com.
Purpose/Funding: The C.S. Mott Childrens Hospital National Poll on Childrens Health funded by the Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases and part of the CHEAR Unit at the U-M Health System is designed to measure major health care issues and trends for U.S. childrenand their families.For this particular topic, additional funding was provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.


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Thursday, September 24, 2009

KEY TO IMPROVING SCHOOLS LIES WITHIN THE CLASSROOMS

OP-ED By Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte in the LA Daily News

Marguerite Poindexter LaMotte is a member of the Los Angeles Board of Education :: 4LAKids missed this Op-Ed when it first ran …but a friend brought it to my easily distracted attention, thank you!.

9/11/2009 -- AS we begin a new school year this week, I want to encourage my colleagues on the Board of Education and everyone else in our community interested in the fate of public education to pause and reflect on the true mission of the school district - providing educational opportunities for children.

This is a mission achieved through instruction. Not construction, not real estate transactions, not purchasing, not transportation, not accounts payable, not bond offerings, not food services, but instruction.

Considering all of the salesmen, lobbyists, politicians, contractors, lawyers, and special interest representatives that show up at my door, it is hard to remember the true mission much less focus on it. But we must. The children of our community are depending on us to serve them and do a good job.

The noninstructional activities the school district finds itself involved in are important, but meant to support instruction and the mission of the school district. Billions of dollars are spent each year to support the good work that needs to go on in the classroom.

Only half of the employees of the district are teachers, but both the money spent and all of the employees are meant to support the mission of providing an education to the children of our community.

Without argument, the school district could do better in the area of instruction. What to do differently is the perennial question, but I believe the district needs to look no further for the answer than down the hall. A successful model for achieving a goal declared by many to be impossible can be found in the school district's very successful construction program.

Nearly 20 years ago, my predecessors on the Board of Education, with laserlike focus, decided to prove to the public that children and families would be better off, and learn more, if they had the choice to attend a neighborhood school on the traditional school calendar.

To accomplish this goal, school district officials knew they would have to convince the public of the need to develop a school facilities program and hire accomplished professionals. Funding was important, but the key to success has been the extraordinary detail of the planning and implementation of the construction program.

That same comprehensive approach must be applied to the instructional program. The steps to build or modernize a school are contained in a multipage flow chart with hundreds of boxes anticipating every step and contingency in construction. Boxes are used for the steps taken to identify the area of our community that needs a school to ensuring that every fire extinguisher is in place and operational before the first student arrives. A hallmark of the school facilities construction program is the step-by-step, no-excuses discipline applied to the task. This may explain why so many of those involved are former military officers.

The school district and the school board need to apply the same laser-beam focus to student instruction with the same intensity and attention to details to accomplish our true mission. We need to plan out the educational path of every child from before they begin school in our pre-K classes to his or her selection of a post high school graduation opportunity.

We must plan for every contingency and add a box to our instruction flow chart when something unexpected comes up so it is never unexpected again. We must prove we can apply lessons learned, replicate success and eliminate the ineffective.

Concentrating on instruction and academic achievement takes at least as much discipline as building a school. School district officials need to look past the distractions thrown at us like cartoon brickbats by those who hide behind the skirts of reform but appear to want to destroy public education.

The public schools, from pre-K through college, are the great equalizer in our country. They are what allow the most recent immigrant, the child from a group home, the paraplegic, and the legacy child at Phillips Andover Academy to all have a chance to attend Harvard University or a public college.

Public schools accept all comers, and work and work and work with children who want an education but have no one to advocate for them.

We learn over and over that not every child can depend on a parent to keep them safe or ensure they apply to the best possible school. If we were to create an instructional path to success for every child, every child could be nurtured and protected within our education system so those without could fare as well as those holding a silver spoon.

For those who want to minimize the achievements of the school district, they need to reflect upon what the school district can do when it has the support of the community. The successful construction program is matched by many other great achievements, such as the outstanding LAUSD magnet program.

We need to do better for more. And we can if we dedicate as many resources and as much energy to the academic achievement of children as we have to building schools.

COALITION FILES LEGAL BRIEF IN SUPPORT OF STATE TUITION LAW

by Carla Rivera | LA Times LA NOW Blog

September 24, 2009 |  5:26 pm

A coalition of 80 civil rights, student and community organizations representing Asian and Pacific Islander Americans today filed a legal brief with the California Supreme Court supporting a state law that allows undocumented students to pay in-state fees at public colleges and universities.

Thousands of immigrant youths, many from low-income families, would find it impossible to afford college if the law is invalidated, said Yungsuhn Park, an attorney with the Asian Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California, which co-wrote the brief.

The state’s highest court is considering the case, Martinez vs. Regents of the University of California, which challenges the 2001 state law, AB 540, allowing documented and undocumented students to pay in-state rather than out-of-state tuition if they attend at least three years of high school in California, graduate from a state high school and promise to apply for permanent residency.

The difference in costs is considerable: In the current school year, for example, typical fees for an out-of-state undergraduate to attend a University of California campus total nearly $30,000, compared with about $8,000 for a resident.

"There are students currently enrolled in the UC or Cal State system that benefit and there are potentially thousands more who expect to be accepted to school and attend with the benefit of paying state tuition," said Park, who spoke after a news conference to announce the filing.

About 50% of documented and undocumented students receiving a tuition break under AB 540 are Asian and Pacific Islanders, many of them Korean, Park said.

"One of the unique aspects of this community is that a lot of these students were brought here as young children and didn’t have a choice in whether they would enter the country and remain here," Park said. "But they’ve been educated by California public schools."

In 2005, a group of out-of-state students filed a lawsuit challenging the legality of AB 540, alleging that it conflicts with a federal immigration law that prohibits granting in-state tuition to illegal immigrants unless all U.S. citizens who wish to attend the state’s schools are granted the same benefit.

California’s law directly contradicts federal law, which seeks to deter people from coming to the U.S. and staying here illegally, said Michael Brady, who represents 42 plaintiffs from 19 states.

In addition, Brady said, the program costs California about $250 million a year "at a time when we can ill afford this subsidy."

But the legal brief filed by the Asian groups argues that AB 540 helps California’s economy by increasing the educated workforce and promotes the social and civic values of education, diversity and democracy.

Even if undocumented students are ineligible to work now, many are petitioning to change their status and may become legal permanent residents during college, the groups say.

"If the benefits from AB 540 were taken away, I wouldn’t be able to go to school," said David, 20, an undocumented student attending UCLA, who spoke after the news conference. He asked that his last name not be used because of his status.

LAUSD UNION AGREES TO FURLOUGHS: About 1,100 bus drivers will take six unpaid days off this fiscal year to help offset the budget shortfall. It is the first time in recent history that a district union has accepted such a concession.

By Jason Song | LA Times

September 23, 2009 -- In what Los Angeles school district officials hope is the first of several concessions by labor unions, bus drivers have agreed to take six unpaid days off this fiscal year, officials said Tuesday.

The deal is the first time in recent history that a school district union has agreed to furloughs. Last year, the district approved -- but never required -- four unpaid days off for most employees in an attempt to offset a budget shortfall.

The Los Angeles Unified School District is facing a nearly $200-million budget shortfall this fiscal year.

"We hope . . . we will be able to make similar announcements" in the near future, said David Holmquist, the district's chief operating officer.

Leaders of the Service Employees International Union Local 99, which represents about 1,100 bus drivers, said their membership agreed to furloughs because all members' hours and retirement benefits otherwise would have been reduced.

"We understand it is a necessary sacrifice to protect good jobs in this hard economy and secure services to students," Edward Reed, Local 99's president, said in a statement.

The drivers transport about 55,000 students daily, according to the district. Because of the shortfall, the district cut $28 million from its transportation budget and eliminated more than 150 routes. Drivers will try to take their furlough days during school vacations to prevent a disruption in service to students, union leaders said.

It remains unclear if other labor groups also will accept furlough days. United Teachers Los Angeles officials have opposed them in the past, but said they discussed other cost-saving measures with L.A. Unified officials.

"This summer, UTLA put forth a proposal which would have kept class size down and reemployed all laid-off teachers, but the district would not agree to it," said A.J. Duffy, president of the teachers union.

District officials said they could not guarantee that the bus drivers' concessions would spare them from future cuts, but added that they want to avoid layoffs. "Our goal is to protect jobs," board member Yolie Flores Aguilar said.

CALIFORNIA DROPOUT RESEARCH PROJECT, CAHSEE POLICY ANALYSIS REPORTS RELEASED

September 24, 2009

NEW: CDRP Policy Brief and Report 16

High School Dropouts and the Economic Losses from Juvenile Crime in California


Solving California's Dropout Crisis (PDF)

Also:

Publications: Effects of the California High School Exit Exam on Student Persistence, Achievement, and Graduation, Policy Analysis for California Education (posted 9/24/09)

FREE SPEECH AMONG LAUSD CUTS – Board of Ed cuts back on public input

LA Daily News Editorial

Sept 24 -- To say "Shame on the school board," is very tempting.

The Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education has decided to eliminate all special committee meetings and limit the number of speakers from the public allowed to talk during the remaining meetings.

The board voted 5-2 for this new approach to conducting the public's business. Board members said it was a cost-cutting measure.

"We are in a crisis," said board president Monica Garcia, who proposed this plan. "And with this budget, we are not only challenged to do less ... we must do things differently."

This plan is too different.

Garcia said her idea was partially drawn to address a 30 percent reduction in money for the district's office of the board secretariat. The board secretariat coordinates all the district's meetings and produces all meeting-related material.

The special committees, by the way, meet to handle such things as the curriculum, school safety and charter schools.

The man in charge of the Board Secretariat Office, Jefferson Crain, told the board that with a 30 percent cut in money, his office can handle only 24 hours of meetings a month.

And that prompted Garcia's novel plan.

In addition, the board decided to shorten the remaining meetings by limiting to seven the number of speakers allowed to address the board on topics the trustees will vote on, and 15 speakers maximum at each meeting with public discussion of general education issues. No. 16 is out of luck, even if its a parent with a legitimate gripe who traveled by bus to attend the meeting.

The board does intend to offset the eliminated special committee meetings with an increase of full board meetings. In the past the board met twice a month, and now it plans to meet every week.

It's a bad idea in a good cause.

Everyone can agree that cutting costs is necessary, and everyone can agree that making those cuts work is difficult; but it seems the board is using money woes as an excuse to cut short the weary complaints from an increasingly dissatisfied public.

Yes, the number of meetings a board trustee must attend is onerous. And listening to some of our citizens borders on verbal abuse. And some of the speakers do abuse the right of free speech. Enduring it meeting after meeting does suck the joy out of public service.

However, the trustees were all consenting adults when they elbowed their way to the front and volunteered for this job and the annual salary.

Eliminating committee meetings will save money. Shortening the length of the meetings will save money.

But we don't think we can afford the cost that comes from cutting the public's right to speak.

UC & CSU WILL GRANT DEGREES TO THOSE SENT TO INTERNMENT CAMPS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | from the NY Times

September 24, 2009 -- California State University is set to begin granting honorary degrees to former Japanese-American students who were sent to internment camps during World War II. The system’s Board of Trustees approved the measure to honor former students whose studies were interrupted more than 60 years ago.

The move follows the University of California’s decision in July to confer honorary degrees to its former students who were interned. The state university system estimates that nearly 250 Japanese Americans were studying at state university campuses in 1942 when they were forced to live in internment camps throughout the West. Campus officials are asking for the public’s help in identifying those who would qualify for an honorary degree.

DROPOUTS COSTING CALIFORNIA $1.1 BILLION ANNUALLY IN JUVENILE CRIME COSTS: Study finds that cutting the dropout rate in half would save $550 million and prevent 30,000 juvenile crimes a year. Law enforcement urges more dropout-prevention programs.

 

4LAKids will post a link to the report when it becomes available.  REPORT: High School Dropouts and the Economic Losses from Juvenile Crime in California

By Seema Mehta | LA Times

September 24, 2009 -- High school dropouts, who are more likely to commit crimes than their peers with diplomas, cost the state $1.1 billion annually in law enforcement and victim costs while still minors, according to a study being released today.

The California Dropout Research Project at UC Santa Barbara found that cutting the dropout rate in half would prevent 30,000 juvenile crimes and save $550 million every year.

"This study demonstrates the immediate impact dropouts have on both public safety and the economy," said project Director Russell W. Rumberger. "If California could reduce the dropout rate, it could subsequently reduce the juvenile crime rate and its staggering impact on the state budget."

Drop-out statistics are notoriously difficult to pinpoint, but according to the state Department of Education, nearly 19% of students don't graduate from high school. In Los Angeles County, the figure is more than one in five, and at some L.A. schools, fewer than half of students graduate within four years.

The California Dropout Research Project previously studied the economic effect of not finishing high school and found that for each group of 20-year-olds who fail to complete high school (roughly 120,000 per year), the economic loss is $46.4 billion.

Lawmakers asked the group to study the immediate costs of dropping out, so they focused on juvenile crime.

Law enforcement applauded the research and urged more intervention programs to target students at risk of dropping out.

"The connection between dropping out of school and juvenile crime is very clear," said Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer. "The simple fact is if kids aren't in school, they're much more likely to be on the streets causing trouble, engaging in criminal activities such as burglary, thefts, graffiti and arsons."

Dyer and others urged the governor to sign legislation, SB 651, which would require the state Department of Education to produce an annual report that accurately depicts the number of students not finishing school. The report would also identify early signs that a student might be on the path to dropping out, such as truancy. Such indicators would allow schools to target at-risk students.

"Dropout prevention is crime prevention," said Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca, chairman of the board of the nonprofit Fight Crime: Invest in Kids, a bipartisan effort by law enforcement officials and crime victims. "Schools need better tools for identifying potential dropouts so they can target interventions at the kids who need them most."

Rumberger said the savings from reduced crime could be used to fund drop-out prevention efforts.

"Interventions pay for themselves," he said, noting that the state will see $2 in savings for every $1 invested.


REPORT: High School Drop Outs Robbing California Blind

LOS ANGELES (KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO) 

Posted: Thursday, 24 September 2009 7:17AM-- A new report says high-school dropouts are costing the state over a billion dollars a year-- because they commit so many crimes. The report from UC-Santa Barbara says that if California were to cut the dropout rate in half, it would save 550-million dollars and prevent over 30,000 crimes a year.

LAUSD Superintendent Ray Cortines thinks the study may have a point, but also unfairly characterizes those who drop out because they have to get a job to help support their family.

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS SAY UTLA BETRAYED THEM

En español: Maestros Sustitutos dicen que Sindicato de Profesores los Traicionó

 

by Andres Chavez, San Fernando Valley Sun Staff Reporter

 

ImageWednesday, 23 September 2009  -- About 75 extremely angry substitute teachers demonstrated in front of their union, United Teachers Los Angeles, headquarters Tuesday evening. They claim that UTLA President A.J. Duffy betrayed them in a back room deal with LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines, by, in effect, firing 6,000 substitute teachers in favor of teachers with less seniority.

Dave Peters, Substitute committee Chairman, shows UTLA president A.J. Duffy's failing report card.>>

Dave Peters, Chairman-Substitute committee, denounced Duffy's decision as illegal because it didn't have the approval of union representatives. "He was supposed to involve myself, as a representative of the substitutes," Peters said, "He did this in secret, in a back room deal with Superintendent Cortines. He hid it away from view. He had this in mind, I guess, for months.He didn't announce it until a couple of weeks ago. There's been no jobs in the summer and now there's no jobs when school started."

Duffy denies that there was any back room deal but acknowledges that the jobs of less-experienced teachers have been saved. He claims that it was to soften the blow of teacher layoffs in some of the worst schools in the district, "The schools with the greatest need," Duffy said.

Mike Christ has been a career substitute teacher in LAUSD for 11 years. He's subbed at San Fernando High School, Sylmar High School, Verdugo Hills High School, Pacoima Middle School, among others in all subjects, grade 6-12. Known as Mr.Mike to his students, he said the younger teachers don't have the classroom management skills that the more senior substitute teachers have.

"I get a lot of respect from the students. When I'm in the classroom, I make sure they learn something. One year, out of 12, of a student's education is spent with a substitute teacher. Let's remember that substitute teachers are college educated. They must pass certain requirement testing to teach for Los Angeles Unified School District. So we are professionals," he said.

Mr. Mike contends that career substitute teachers can provide continuity to students. "I received a requested assignment at San Fernando High school and there were students there from the feeder middle schools where I had substituted. The first greeting I got was 'Hello,Mr.Mike, how are you?'So they felt a comfort level with me being their teacher," he said.

Image

The plan being implemented by LAUSD, with UTLA's concurrence, does away with the seniority system for substitutes by giving the younger teachers who've been laid off preference in substitute hiring. Unless a teacher is specifically requested by a school, the younger teacher will get the first opportunity at the job. The situation is further complicated by the district's requirement that a substitute must work a 100 days during the school year to qualify for health insurance.

"If I don't get enough work because of the laid off teachers that have been put in the substitute pool above the career substitute teachers, I stand to lose my health benefits, let alone the financial implications of not having a job. I only get paid when I work," Mr. Mike said.

Peters said many substitute teachers have had to get other jobs or go on unemployment. "It's a very tenuous existence. A lot of us are basically without any sustenance. (For me personally) It's very hand-to mouth. In other words, I have no savings, nothing in reserve. I don't even know if I can pay the rent," Peter said, "There's a story of one attempted suicide. It's just a total economic disaster."

These concerns fueled the anger at the demonstration on Tuesday. Some carried reports cards for Duffy which gave him straight Fs in Truthfulness, Honesty, Reliability and Trustworthiness. "It's one thing to protest the District when they do something but this is our own union that threw 6,000 of us teachers under the bus. He threw us to the wolves," Peters said.

Some of the demonstrators were allowed to attend a regularly scheduled UTLA meeting where their concerns where added as the last item on the agenda. The press was barred from the meeting.

However, Howard Meibach, who has spent 12 years as a substitute teacher, did attend the meeting. He said the substitutes "vented" and there was a lot of angry back and forth as they grilled Duffy as to why he gave their jobs away. Duffy claimed he was working the District to try and save their health benefits.

"But when the substitutes asked him, 'Exactly how are you doing it, how are you going to accomplish it?' he didn't have any kind of plan. He was very vague about it, he just said he was working with the district. But he doesn't have a plan," Meibach said.

Meiback says that many of the regular teachers are supporting the substitutes, something Duffy did anticipate. Mei back feels that the union is being divided by Duffy's actions at a time when UTLA really needs to be united. "He didn't think of the long term effects, only the short term goals.," he said.

The substitutes are planning another demonstration and press conference on September 22 at 5:30 PM. in front of UTLA headquarters.