Sunday, October 25, 2009

WHY AMERICA IS FLUNKING SCIENCE: Don't just blame poor education for our nation's scientific illiteracy -- but our politics and pop culture

By Chris Mooney and Sheril Kirshenbaum | Salon.com

Tom Hanks, Pierfrancesco Favino, David Pasquesi, Ayelet Zurer in a scene from "Angels & Demons"

Monday, Jul 13, 2009 04:20 PDT pp In the recent Tom Hanks/Ron Howard film "Angels & Demons," science sets the stage for destruction and chaos. A canister of antimatter has been stolen from CERN — the European Organization for Nuclear Research — and hidden in the Vatican, set to explode right as a new pope is about to be selected.

Striving to make these details as realistic as possible on screen, Howard and his film crew visited CERN, used one of its physicists as a science consultant, and devoted meticulous care to designing the antimatter canister that Hanks' character, Robert Langdon, and his sexy scientist colleague, Vittoria Vetra (Ayelet Zurer), wind up searching for.

But there was nothing they could do about the gigantic impossibility at the center of the plot. While the high-energy proton collisions generated at CERN do occasionally produce minute quantities of antimatter — particles with the opposite electrical charge as protons and electrons, but the same mass, which can in turn be combined into atoms like antihydrogen — it's not remotely enough to power a bomb. As CERN quips on a Web site devoted to "Angels & Demons," antimatter "would be very dangerous if we could make a few grams of it, but this would take us billions of years."

As its Web site attests, CERN has been forced to develop some pretty sophisticated P.R. tools in recent years. Before "Angels & Demons" came out, the institution had to counter widespread but baseless public concerns that its Large Hadron Collider — the source of antimatter in the film — might create black holes that would grow to devour Earth and kill us all. CERN researchers received death threats; lawsuits were filed to stop the collider's operation. (Granted, the scientists scored a considerable hit when their hilarious YouTube video, the "Large Hadron Rap," went viral and garnered more than 5 million views.)

The experience of CERN is, more broadly, the experience of science in our culture today. It is simultaneously admired and yet viewed as dangerously powerful and slightly malevolent — an uneasiness that comes across repeatedly in Hollywood depictions. As science-fiction film director James Cameron ("Aliens," "Terminator," "Titanic") has observed, the movies tend to depict scientists "as idiosyncratic nerds or actively the villains." That's not only unfair to scientists: It's unhealthy for the place of science in our culture — no small matter at a time of climate crisis, bioweapon threats, pandemic diseases and untold future controversies that will surely erupt as science continues to dramatically change our world and our politics. To begin to counter this problem, though, we need to wake up to a new recognition: Fixing the problem of science education in our schools, although very important, is not the sole solution. We also have to do something about the cultural standing of science — heavily influenced by politics and mass media — and that's a very different matter.

There can be little serious doubt that entertainment depictions have consequences. Entertainment industry expert Marty Kaplan, director of the Norman Lear Center at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication, perhaps puts it best when he describes Hollywood films as the "unofficial curriculum of society."

What do we learn from this curriculum about science? Well, just ask America's kids. Researchers who have studied the stereotypical views of scientists held by American schoolchildren report that when they encounter real-life scientists who visit their classroom, the kids think someone's pulling their leg, because the scientists aren't anything like the big-screen version — mean, male, gray haired and mad. As one study author explained to the magazine Nature: "They might say the person was too 'normal' or too good-looking to be a scientist. The most heart-breaking thing is when they say, 'I didn't think he was real because he seemed to care about us.'"

To some extent these depictions may be changing today, as Hollywood appears to be finding a new interest in science. Yet with such images having been predominant for so long, is it any surprise that most Americans can't name a scientific role model? And that those who can tend to name people like Bill Gates, Al Gore and Albert Einstein, who are either not scientists or not alive?

To better understand why science fares as it does in our culture, perhaps it will help to grapple with the legacy of a man who contributed vastly to science's popular image today and who also embodied the seductive power of anti-scientific thinking: the late novelist, screenwriter and sometime anti-global-warming advocate Michael Crichton.

An M.D. who became a phenomenal entertainment industry success, Crichton was very much science's man in Hollywood. Even with his many science-centered hits, ranging from "Jurassic Park" to "ER," he still found time to lecture to scientific institutions and compose numerous nonfiction essays sharing his views on matters ranging from science in entertainment to climate change. He was, through and through, a paradox. His plots were meticulously researched and filled with science; yet at the same time — and most memorably in "Jurassic Park" — they depicted science going out of control, running amok, so that before long the bodies begin to pile up (or get digested).

And then toward the end of his career, Crichton produced a book that, for many in science, will live in infamy: 2004's "State of Fear," whose plot involves eco-terrorists trying to create natural disasters that will scare the public about global warming — which doesn't, in the view of the novel's heroic scientist-protagonist, even exist.

Let's take these two halves of Crichton in sequence, as both embody important lessons about science in our culture. First, science in the entertainment media. Crichton had little patience for scientists' complaints about ridiculous sci-fi plots and wild scientist stereotyping. In a 1999 lecture before the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, he countered such gripes with his own perspective on why scientists will probably never be very happy with the products of Hollywood. As Crichton advised, there are at least four important rules of movies that just don't mesh with the real process of research: "(i) Movie characters must be compelled to act. (ii) Movies need villains. (iii) Movie searches are dull. (iv) Movies must move." Crichton argued that real science, with its long, drawn-out intellectual processes and frequent dead ends, simply can't be reconciled with such exigencies. "The problems lie with the limitations of film as a visual storytelling medium," he concluded. "You aren't going to beat it."

Crichton's words are worth heeding. People who care about science and want it to come off better in the mass media can't ignore his four rules of movie storytelling. They can't ask for entertainment products in which the characters do actual research (or at least not much of it). They can't ask for entertainment products that will be boring — a contradiction in terms. Rather, the goal must be to work toward finding ways of conveying information about science through film and other entertainment media without rendering them dull or unpalatable to audiences.

Now on to perhaps the most controversial part of Crichton's career: His attack on the science of global warming in "State of Fear." Crichton's views on climate science have been pilloried by leading experts, and exhaustively refuted; there's no need to retill that ground. But what's instructive is the very fact that an M.D., a polymath, and indeed a man possessed of vast talents could nevertheless pen a wholly misleading and revisionist attack on climate change research. How could he have gone so horribly wrong in this instance?

The answer is that whatever happened, it had nothing to do with stupidity or ignorance, and it is surely nothing that a better high school education would have prevented. Crichton, don't forget, was an M.D. He backed up his bestselling narratives with considerable scientific research himself, becoming, in a sense, an expert on each subject he tackled. It wasn't that he didn't know anything about climate change, but rather that he fell for various highly sophisticated — but still ultimately wrong — misinterpretations and misinformation. In this he was likely impelled either by political convictions, the desire to be a contrarian, or perhaps some combination of both.

What's true of Crichton is true of the country. Polling data from the Pew organization reveals something fairly stunning about global warming and public opinion: If you're a Republican, you are vastly less likely than a Democrat to accept the scientific consensus that global warming is brought about by human activities. You probably have a bias in favor of business and industry and don't believe factory or automotive emissions exacerbate global warming. But that's not all. The higher your level of education, the more skeptical you probably are that humans are to blame. Why? One possible reason is that more education makes you better at finding information and arguments that are supportive of what you already wanted to believe — as Crichton clearly did.

But the same thing can also be true of Democrats and liberals. Consider vaccination. An army of aggrieved parents nationwide, likely spurred in part by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., swears today that vaccines are the reason their children developed autism, and they seem virtually impossible to convince otherwise. Scientific research has soundly refuted this contention, but every time a new study on the subject comes out, the parents and their supporters have a "scientific" answer that allows them to retain their beliefs. They get their information from the Internet, from other parents of like mind, from a few non-mainstream researchers and doctors who continue to challenge the scientific consensus, and perhaps most of all — as was much the case with Crichton and global warming — from a group of celebrities, most prominently Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carrey, who have made a cause of championing such misinformation and almost assuredly deeply believe in it.

Yet the parents who listen to McCarthy and Carrey — rather than the CDC and the FDA and the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine — tend to be well-to-do and highly educated. Calling them "ignorant" is hardly accurate. After all, they've probably done far more independent research on a scientific topic that interests and affects them than most other Americans have. Like Crichton, they may be misusing their intelligence, but it's not as though they don't have any to begin with. Perhaps Mark Twain put it best: "The trouble with the world is not that people know too little, but that they know so many things that ain't so."

But if politics and culture, as much as educational deficiencies, are the reasons we live in a society that is so science-challenged, perhaps we must think differently about how to address this disturbing problem. "We" in this case would be not only scientists but also anyone else who cares about making important decisions, particularly political ones, based on evidence and future-oriented thinking of a sort that science can best impart.

To this end, we need to realize that it isn't wise — and usually isn't even accurate — to denounce members of the public, or filmmakers and entertainers and celebrities, for scientific ignorance and for constantly getting it wrong. Instead, we must find ways of talking to these people, becoming aware of the constraints they're working with, and try to help them see that science is no necessary enemy to the realities of filmmaking or what it takes to entertain an audience.

It is heartening, then, that in a major initiative, the U.S. scientific community has recently tried to connect with Hollywood on its own terms. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the elite membership society of American science, has just launched a project called the Science and Entertainment Exchange to "facilitate a valuable connection between the two communities." A permanent National Academies office has been opened in Los Angeles to "make introductions, schedule briefings, and arrange for consultations to anyone developing science-based entertainment content." This is a new initiative, so one cannot yet judge its impact, but early signs are promising — and it is precisely the sort of step the scientific world should be taking if it wants to heal its rifts with the entertainment industry.

As for dealing with rampant misinformation — refuting it is certainly important, but in the end this does only so much good if people have a powerful political or social reason to cling to their beliefs and if they have easily available arguments to throw in the face of scientific consensus. Denunciations from across an intellectual battlefield go only so far — the harder work involves talking to people, understanding the sources of their misconceptions, and figuring out how to move them to better ground. It won't be easy, even then, to change minds. Humans cling to beliefs ferociously, because they are a core part of our identities. But that itself is precisely why we have to understand what makes people tick, and figure out where the real blocks to accepting science are.

Above all we should remember, as recent survey data released by the Pew organization underscores, that nobody really hates science. Rather, like Crichton, they might be fascinated by it while having their own reasons for problematic departures. But they're still reachable, curious, intelligent. If we want a society that sees how science can save the world — instead of destroying it — that's who we should be talking to most.

DISCUSSION, NOT FLAMING TORCHES, SHOULD DRIVE TEACHER PAY REFORM

By Doug Lasken | Op-Ed in the LA Daily News

10/25/2009 03:48:34 PM  -- WE live in a time when government is a form of theater; it manages us by appearing to manage us.

The current presidential administration, perhaps because it came in with so much support, has broken new ground in what I call fantasy government. It rails against health insurance companies, after giving them everything they want; it makes a show about debating our presence in Afghanistan, when all that is debated is the number of troops; it bemoans excessive bonuses on Wall Street, after making those bonuses possible.

And, now, it demands that public schools "reform" themselves, in terms so vague that any school can appear to comply while doing nothing.

The latest administration push is to promote merit pay for public school teachers rather than the guaranteed pay scales achieved by teachers unions. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is using the $4.35 billion "Race to the Top" funds as incentive for "progress towards" merit pay.

It is at this point that the reader will be wondering whether I'm a pro-union stooge defending the status quo or a "change agent" who sees how merit pay works in the private sector to enhance performance, and wants to extend that benefit to teaching.

Sorry to disappoint: I'm not really in either camp. I write here to suggest only that the Obama administration, and the states reacting to its efforts, are not promoting a policy on teacher merit pay, but merely broaching the subject, or, if you will, making noise. In pursuance of the Race to the Top funds, the California state Legislature and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger have eliminated a law that forbade use of student test scores in evaluating teachers. That's the easy part.

Merit pay for teachers is an idea worth considering, but it will be complicated, both in political venues and in the field, to carry out. If any level of government were really interested in implementing merit pay, here are the three key questions that would be discussed in the newspaper coverage of the policy development:

1. How to determine "merit" for teachers.

In California the only objective measure available is the California Standards Test, given each year in the spring to grades 2 through 11. There is no test in September to establish a baseline.

The "value added" approach is a rational first step in achieving a baseline. It is used in Texas, Chicago and some southern states. Value added uses the scores of the three previous years as the baseline. This approach may be the way to go in California, but it would not work as we are currently structured.

Kindergarten, first grade and high school seniors do not take the CST. How will teachers of these grades be evaluated? Even if primary were evaluated, what would the baseline be?

2. Even if all grade levels were tested, how do we factor student transiency into the baseline pay?

Transiency is a major statistical factor. In Los Angeles Unified School District, thousands of students transfer every year in and out of schools. There are migrant children who follow their parents' seasonal work, children going in and out of home schooling, children moving to California from states whose standardized testing is structured differently from ours. How do we derive their baseline?

3. How do we factor in the impact various types of students have on measures of teacher performance, and how can we keep a collegial environment among faculties?

Teachers already tend to compete for the brightest students, but evaluating teachers with student scores poses a counterintuitive problem: The highest scoring students have less room to go up. It's easier to show improvement from lower scoring students.

How do we factor those differences? How do we keep teachers from fighting over which students will be most likely to improve? Might we want to consider awarding merit pay to an entire school that has used peer assistance for struggling teachers and smart management to achieve academic growth? This might work better than trusting a bureaucrat in Sacramento to figure things out.

Bertrand Russell noted that society is motivated by strife, not discussion. It's more fun for the villagers to march with flaming torches demanding that the teachers be held accountable, than to have rational discussions of how to hold them accountable. My own problem with the flaming torches approach is that it gets government off the hook for actually figuring out policy. I say, let's settle down and get some real policy.

Doug Lasken is a retired LAUSD teacher and freelancer. Write to him at doug.lasken@gmail.com.

HAWAI’I SCHOOLS MOVE TO FOUR-DAY WEEK IN COST CUTTING MEASURE + PARENTS PROTEST HAWAI’I SCHOOL CLOSURES

• All 256 public schools in state to close for 'furlough Fridays'

• Up to 171,000 children to be affected

•  Schools to go to 163 day calendar …the same as Year ‘Round Concept 6 in LAUSD

• President Obama’s primary school impacted …but it’s safe to assume that the exclusive Punahou School, his alma mater, will be unaffected

from the ICOPE e-newsletter | Independent Commission On Public Education In New York City

25 October - Thousands of working parents in Hawaii are scrambling to make childcare arrangements ahead of the closure on Friday of all public schools, in a bid by the state's education authorities to cut costs.

All 256 of Hawaii's public schools will be closed in the first of 17 "furlough Fridays" that will see a drastic cut in school time for up to 171,000 children. The reduction of the school week from five to four days will last for at least the next two years.

The furloughs are the most draconian measure yet taken in the US, where the recession has forced many states to slash public services. At least 25 states have forced teachers to take unpaid days off, but most of the cuts have fallen on holidays or on preparation days rather than on actual school days.

Hawaii's cuts have been particularly punishing because unlike other parts of the US, the entire education budget is paid for by the state which is labouring under a $1bn deficit. Education accounts for about a quarter of the state's overall resources.

Most of its 13,000 public school teachers approved the furlough Friday plan because although they must swallow an 8% reduction in their pay packages, their time off for holidays and teacher planning days is left untouched. A proposal to bring in random drug testing for teachers has also been pushed back.

The first of the furloughs, however, are likely to be greeted by widespread protests from parents angered that a state that is already towards the bottom of America's league table for schools performance is further slashing facetime in the classroom. The Hawaiian school year is the shortest across the country. Yet the cuts will reduce the number of teaching days in the academic year to 163 compared with 180 in most US school districts. Hawaii is ranked 47th out of 50 in reading and mathematics among its 13-year-old public school students.

A further paradox is that the Hawaii cuts come at a time when President Obama - himself a product of the Hawaiian education system, though he attended a private school in his later years - is trying to increase the amount of time American children spend in school. "The challenges of a new century demand more time in the classroom," he said recently.

Parents at Noelani Elementary, the primary school Obama went to, will be staging one of many "walk-in" protests culminating with a rally at the state Capitol in downtown Honolulu.

A Noelani parent, Vernadette Gonzalez, told the Honolulu Advertiser: "Since education is being taken away, we thought it would be symbolic when the schools are being shut down by the state to say, 'We want to learn'. My daughter doen't understand why she has no school on Friday."

At least one legal action is likely to be lodged with the federal courts in an attempt to stop the furloughs on behalf of the children and parents affected.

---------------------------

Parents protest Hawaii school closures

By MARK NIESSE, Associated Press Writer

Fri Oct 23 - HONOLULU – Hundreds of angry parents protested Hawaii's statewide public school shutdown Friday, saying their children are losing out on education due to government budget cuts.

Hawaii closed 256 public schools Friday, the first of 17 teacher furlough days planned for this school year, giving the island state the shortest school year in the nation at 163 days. Most states have 180 school days.

While the parents waved signs and passed petitions at the state Capitol rally, their children wrote postcards to lawmakers and drew posters at arts and crafts tables.

The protesters, many of them bused in from schools across Oahu, formed a sea of yellow shirts with the message, "My Child Left Behind," a play on the federal No Child Left Behind initiative.

Hawaii musician Jack Johnson and entertainer Ben Vereen offered support with a few songs.

"There has to be a better solution than furloughing our kids," said Kathy Makuakane, who carried a sign saying: "You are furloughing our future."

Even her 8-year-old son, Jesse, agreed that he'd rather be in school at Kaelepulu Elementary.

"I don't really like it. I have a lot of fun in school most of the time," he said.

Organizers said the demonstration was meant to show elected leaders they shouldn't make children suffer for a lack of financial planning as the state faces a $1 billion projected shortfall over the next 20 months.

"I hope this raises awareness that people of Hawaii care about education, and we can do something about it," said Vernadette Gonzalez, who helped coordinate the protest. "It's a lack of imagination that keeps us back."

Many hope the state will make education a priority by raising taxes or dipping into emergency funds to restore Hawaii's school year. But those potential solutions, especially raising taxes, may prove unpopular among legislators looking to get re-elected.

Some teachers used their day off to show their support for parents who would rather put them back to work. The furloughs amount to an 8 percent pay cut for teachers.

"Education should be among the last things cut," said Jennifer Parson, an eighth-grade English teacher at Kalakaua Middle School. She carried a sign declaring, "I should be taking roll right now. No more furlough days."

"We're all having the same economic crisis, but other places have way more education days," said Sunny Yoon, whose 7-year-old son is a 2nd grader at Noelani Elementary, where President Barack Obama attended kindergarten. "Education is the most important thing. We pay a lot of taxes, and our children should get an education."

The loss of education will have unintended consequences, with more children being left alone and thus able to get into trouble, parent Jason McKinley said.

"They're unsupervised. They're left on the street," McKinley said. "What do you think is going to happen? It's like taking 10 steps backward."

Community organizations and daycare centers stepped up their efforts to help families unprepared for their kids' unexpected day off. They prepared for extra enrollment on teacher furlough days, but early reports showed that fewer parents than expected took advantage.

Central Pacific Bank dedicated several rooms for daycare services where employees could drop off their children for $15. The space at company headquarters was filled with computers, games, toys and movies.

"Employees wanted to help their fellow employees with a problem they had," said Karen Street, the bank's human resources director. "Parents are still sorting through all of it."

Saturday, October 24, 2009

PILOT STUDY OF CHARTER SCHOOLS’ COMPLIANCE WITH THE MODIFIED CONSENT DECREE AND THE LAUSD SPECIAL EDUCATION POLICIES AND PROCEDURES + CHARTER SCHOOLS BY DISABILITY DATA

by the Office of the Independent Monitor | Modified Consent Decree (formerly known as the Chanda Smith Consent Decree) covering Special Ed and Students with Disabilities in LAUSD

Pilot Charter School Data Req Charter Schools CASEMIS Dec 2008

THE NEWS THAT DIDN’T FIT FROM OCT 25th

PARENTS DESIGN L.A. PARENT INVOLVEMENT MODEL

Thursday, October 22, 2009 7:56 AM

By Ellen Noyes | The Children's Advocate -www.4Children.org| September-October 2009 Issue | Hot topics series en espaƱol Los Angeles parents have a new tool this fall to help them be more active and engaged in their children’s schools. The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) will be implementing a new model for involving parents in schools that specifically addresses the needs

●●smf: This story is interesting because the organizations described are invited but not regularly represented in LAUSD’s Parent Involvement Task Force ...but are writing articles instead.

DOMINIC SHAMBRA, LAUSD INSIDER 1939-2009

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 2:39 PM

by Howard Blume | L.A. Times October 19, 2009 | 7:44 pm - Dominic Shambra, a consummate school-district insider who sacrificed a distinguished career to push through what became the nation's most notorious high school construction project, died Monday at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena. He had been suffering from congestive heart failure and other ailments. After a well-regarded career as a

CALORIE LIMITS FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES ARE RECOMMENDED: An Institute of Medicine panel also urges lower sodium content under proposed guidelines for the National School Lunch Program, whose nutritional standards have not been updated since 1995.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 7:42 AM

By Mary MacVean | LA Times October 20, 2009 -- Children would get fewer French fries and more dark green vegetables in school cafeterias under recommendations being issued today by an Institute of Medicine panel. In addition, for the first time in the National School Lunch Program, the committee called for calorie limits on meals in an effort to curb obesity. The lunch recommendations

SCHOOL DAY FOR OBAMA

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 7:42 AM

By Helene Cooper | NY Times Online photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images President Obama asked several children what books they were reading. October 19, 2009 , 1:56 pm -- President Obama popped in on third and fourth-graders at a Silver Spring, Md. elementary school Monday, to tout the benefits of reading for youngsters, just as they were having lunch. The First Reader stopped by the

Teachers' & Public Employees' Retirement Funds: CALIFORNIA LAUNCHING FRAUD SUIT AGAINST MAJOR BANK

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 2:05 AM

Reporting by Jim Christie | editing by Carol Bishopric of Reuters SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 19 (Reuters) - California Attorney General Jerry Brown's office said on Monday it would unveil a lawsuit against a major bank for committing fraud against the state's Calpers and Calstrs retirement systems, two of the nation's largest pension funds. The lawsuit will seek to recover nearly $200 million in

GRIEF COUNSELORS AT HOLLYWOOD HIGH SCHOOL AFTER FOOTBALL PLAYERS DEATH

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 2:01 AM

LA Daily News Wire Services 10/19/2009 -- Grief counselors will be at Hollywood High School on Monday to comfort students distraught over the death of a ninth-grade football player who collapsed during a game and died, a school district official said. Spencer Juarez, 13, had just carried the ball and was jogging to the sideline when he collapsed with about two minutes left in the freshman-

STUDENT RECOVERY DAY: Top L.A. school official hits streets to find dropouts + Free Pass for Dropouts

Tuesday, October 20, 2009 1:48 AM

by Howard Blume | LA Times Online/ LA Now blog Photo by Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times October 19, 2009 | 3:36 pm When Michael Velasquez, 18, learned that the city's top education official was at the door, he decided he should put on his white T-shirt. L.A. schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines (standing next to Velasquez above) was taking part in a friendly sweep of students expected in

NATIONAL ASSESSMENT GOVERNING BOARD HOLDING HEARINGS ON NAEP TESTING FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES AND ENGLISH LANAGAGE LEARNERS TODAY: Forums scheduled Oct. 19 in Los Angeles, and Nov. 9 in Washington, D.C.

Monday, October 19, 2009 12:20 PM

NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Stephaan Harris - (202) 357-7504 Stephaan.Harris@ed.gov WASHINGTON—The National Assessment Governing Board will hold public hearings in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. to obtain comment on expert panel recommendations on uniform national rules for testing of students with disabilities (SD) and English language learners (ELL) on the National

●●smf: Although this federal hearing about Special Ed and ELL Programs was held at LAUSD Beaudry, parents were neither invited nor informed.

LAUSD SCHOOLS FACING BIG CHOICES IN REFORM: Charter option is not the only alternative

Monday, October 19, 2009 5:35 AM

By Connie Llanos, Staff Writer | LA Daily News Updated: 10/19/2009 -- The Los Angeles Unified District is just weeks away from launching its deepest reform effort to date - allowing nonprofits and other outsiders to run 36 new and underperforming schools. As the Nov. 15 deadline for the first phase of bidding approaches, targeted campuses are asking themselves a big question: Do we let others

Thursday, October 22, 2009

PARENTS AT SAN FERNANDO MIDDLE SCHOOL SPLIT ON SCHOOL CHOICE PLAN

Written by Alex Garcia, Dan Fernando Valley Sun Contributing Writer

en español: Padres de San Fernando Middle School Indecisos Sobre Plan de Opción de Escuela Pública

 

Image

Eduardo Solorzano, principal of SFMS, speaks with parents during a meeting over the School Choice Plan at the campus earlier this week.

Wednesday, 21 October 2009 -- The ongoing meetings about the future of San Fernando Middle School [SFMS] under the School Choice Plan, which could mean converting the school and dozens of other campuses into independently run pilot or charter schools, continued this week, with parents divided on the idea. About 50 parents showed at the school for the meeting held Tuesday night.

"I'd like for it [SFMS] to become a charter," said Veronica Rodriguez, whose son Daniel and daughter Denisse Cuellar attend the school.

She said she favors this because that would mean changing many of the teachers, whom she said are not doing a good job, and would bring improvements to the school.

But Catalina Martinez and Maria Elena Lemus are against the school going under charter control.

"I would like it to continue under the LAUSD [Los Angeles Unified School District], but with some improvements," said Martinez, who has a daughter at SFMS.

She said a previous experience with a charter school was not positive and left her with doubts about their efficiency.

"One of my daughters attended a charter and when she transferred to San Fernando High School they didn't count many of her credits," said Martinez.

Lemus said she had heard charter schools don't accept special education or English as a Second Language students and was concerned about this.

"I want it [SFMS] to continue under the district, because it will be only way for us to have equality," she said. "We just have to find a plan B to improve the school under the current plan."

In August, the LAUSD board approved 6-1 the School Choice Plan, which would allow non profit agencies to apply to run 250 new and underper forming LAUSD schools. Existing schools under the plan include those that have been in the program improvement status for more than three years, have had zero or negative growth in their Annual Performance Index [SFMS API went down three points in 2008- 2009 from 627 to 624] and where students have 21% or less proficiency in English and Math [SFMS is 20.5% proficient in Math and 24.1% proficient in English].

"If some kids would have gotten a few more points in math, we wouldn't be here," said SFMS principal Eduardo Solorzano during a meeting held Tuesday night at the school that was attended by some 50 parents.

But he said, development of a new plan gives the school community an opportunity to identify what is working and what is not.

However, he noted he would like to expand the current plan with implementation of "best practices" instead of opening the door to a charter or a pilot school.

However, outside groups, including Project GRAD, have already expressed an interest in running the school. A letter of intent must be received by the LAUSD by November 15th and a plan must be presented to the district by January.

Despite the future of the school being in play, many of the parents at the meeting did not seem to understand this. When parents split into different groups to express their wish list of improvements for the school, some of them mentioned they wanted more parent participation, better teachers and better traffic management around the campus.

Yolie Flores Aguilar, the school board member who proposed the School Choice Plan, said in a previous interview that the plan responds to the frustration she's felt with the way the LAUSD has run schools.

"My only interest is that all children have a good education," she noted, adding that competition is healthy and that agencies that take over schools will get a five-year commitment, but their progress will be reviewed annually and their contract can be rescinded at any time if things are not working.

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Veronica Hermosillo and Maria Lemus want SFMS to remain under the control of the LAUSD since they say charter schools exclude especial education and ESL students.

"When you create competition, it leverages change and creativity and the need to do things better," said Flores Aguilar.

She also said charter schools selected to run LAUSD campuses would not be allowed to exclude special education or English as a Second Language students and would have to take children from their neighborhood first.

Ben Austin, executive director of the Parent's Revolution, a campaign organized by several charter institutions and a newly formed group calling themselves the Los Angeles Parent's Union, is also in favor of the School Choice Plan.

"We want to transform public education in Los Angeles because the status quo is broken," said Austin in a previous interview.

He recognized that not all charter schools are good, but added public education needs to improve.

"The real value of charter schools is that they promote competition. If LAUSD is running schools that are failing, charters give parents leverage and power to force the district to compete and run good schools."

However, some parents likeAna de Jesus and Laura Baz, who are part of the Parent Community Advisory Committee for District 2, which SFMS is part of, are weary of charter and pilot schools.

"They want to bring a plan they've implemented somewhere else, but they're not paying attention to our specific needs," said de Jesus, who attended this week's meeting at SFMS. "We want the schools to continue with the LAUSD and that they give us the opportunity to modify some things."

"My kids all went to public schools and are now in college.

Public schools do work, you just have to find a way to make them work," she said.

Newly elected school board member Nury Martinez, who represents district two and who is a proponent of pilot schools, has required that parents and community members be involved in the school plan.  Community members and parents will meet again to discuss the plan this Friday at San Fernando Middle School starting at 8:30 a.m. The next meeting will take place on November 4th, when different agencies, including charter schools, will make presentations to the parents.

PARENTS DESIGN L.A. PARENT INVOLVEMENT MODEL

By Ellen Noyes | The Children's Advocate -www.4Children.org| September-October 2009 Issue | Hot topics series

en espaƱol



Los Angeles parents have a new tool this fall to help them be more active and engaged in their children’s schools.  The Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) will be implementing a new model for involving parents in schools that specifically addresses the needs of “parents of color with kids who struggle in urban schools,” says Mary Johnson, mother of two and executive director of Parent-U-Turn.

The new parent involvement model—developed by Parent-U-Turn,  an organization focused on improving parent involvement in schools—aims to “help urban parents advocate for their children, navigate the K-12 system, ask [schools] the right questions, and know about policy,” says Johnson. The LAUSD is implementing the new model this fall—and now schools across California can also adopt it.

Valuing parents’ voices

“Parents are the best experts. It’s time to make the voices of urban parents equal to the voices of others,” says Johnson. Parent-U-Turn’s parent involvement model (see below: Parents as advocates) will help parents better advocate for children in schools, with the aim of “decreasing the student achievement gap [and] drop-out rates, increasing graduation [rates] in urban schools of color,” she adds.

Parent leaders will learn more about their rights as parents, how to collect and understand data about how children are doing in schools, and how to make sure their children get the resources they need to succeed. Parent leaders will then hold ongoing trainings at their children’s schools to get more parents involved. “Parents listen to parents more,” notes Johnson.

Parent-U-Turn’s model differs from other parent involvement models because it includes “components such as empowering parents to become leaders [and] data collection and analysis,” adds Anna Carrasco, parent ombudsperson for local district 6 of the LAUSD. “[Parents need] to learn the key factors that make a difference in supporting their child’s education and communicating with the school. The more parents know, the more they can help support their child, even parents who don’t speak English.”

“Many parents are already leaders in many programs,” Johnson adds. “They just need spaces to engage with others and to show their expertise. In the past the only [tool] parents had was a report card.”

Ideas from the community

Parent-U-Turn’s parent involvement model is “based on experiences from parents [at low-performing] schools that have successfully navigated their children to universities,” says Johnson. In 2006, Parent-U-Turn held focus groups, conducted surveys, and interviewed parents about barriers to getting involved in their children’s schools. They listened to parents’ needs and concerns and “how they navigate the system,” recalls Johnson.

The results “overwhelmingly show parents have very little understanding on how to read or interpret data, the requirements [for students going to college], school structures and policy, and students’ rights,” says John-son. Parents also wanted a more welcoming school environment.

“Parents [need to] feel like they are part of the community and part of the decisions made at their child’s school—that they have a voice [and are] well informed of decisions and resources,” adds Carrasco.

Parent-U-Turn also talked with school advocates, such as the Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access (IDEA). “Parent-U-Turn has articulated a different form of parent involvement,” says John Rogers, Co-director of IDEA. “They have promoted research by parents in various ways [and used] parent-created data (from) conducting surveys, access to instructional materials, and analyzed data to hold schools accountable.”

Starting local and going statewide

Johnson presented the model to the Parent Collabora-tive, which brings together LAUSD parent representatives, and asked them to adopt it. Then she brought it before the LAUSD school board.

Parent-U-Turn and the San Diego County Title 1 Parents Association met individually with school board members and staff to ask for their support. When one of the superintendents feared teachers would not support the model, they met with him and PTA members, says Johnson. This fall, schools are implementing the model.

Parent-U-Turn also successfully campaigned for the California Department of Education (CDE) to adopt the parent involvement model as one of several that schools statewide can use. A new CDE website highlighting best practices will include Parent-U-Turn’s model, Johnson adds.

Parents as facilitators

At the end of August, Parent-U-Turn will collaborate with another parent involvement organization, Parent Boot Camp, to hold workshops on the new parent involvement model in Spanish and English. L.A. parent leaders will be trained as facilitators and hold ongoing trainings in area schools to help other parents get involved. Budget cuts threatened to “cut a lot of people who were going to be facilitators,” says Johnson, but Parent-U-Turn successfully campaigned to get funding reinstated.

“[I want to] help parents know they can make a difference and hold the school accountable for giving a quality education. [We] teach them to use the power of their voices to be engaged and active,” says Diane Haney, leader of Parent Boot Camp and the San Diego County Title 1 Parents Association.

Valerie MuƱoz plans to be a trainer at the August workshops because “I want to make a difference in children’s lives, [so] they have opportunities to be successful in life. Parent-U-Turn is making many changes in our community, by empowering parents as advocates for their children,” she adds. MuƱoz is co-founder of Parent-U-Turn and mother of six children.


Parents as advocates

Parent-U-Turn’s parent involvement model will train parents about their rights, understanding and collecting data, and how to advocate for their children. Parents will learn:

  • the rights of children as students and their own rights as parents—to visit the classroom, to take off work to attend school activities.
  • about course requirements and the curriculum used in the classroom.
  • ways to support their children—“It’s important that parents discuss with teachers how to engage their child and use the child’s strengths to build strength in the child’s weakest academic area,” says Valerie MuƱoz, co-founder of Parent-U-Turn.
  • how to read data from STAR testing and other school assessments—“Parents need to know [this] in order to improve their children’s education,” says Johnson. “Plus [these are] skills parents need to be an equal partner on decision-making councils.”
  • how to collect data through surveys, focus groups, and assessments.
  • how to write complaints and hold people accountable.
  • ways to successfully advocate for their children, particularly those in special education.

Parent-U-Turn is creating a parent facilitator guide in English and Spanish and developing an online Parent Involvement 101 course for parents, teachers, and principals.

For more information or to get involved, contact: Parent-U-Turn, 323-809-9160, www.californiaparents.net

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

DOMINIC SHAMBRA, LAUSD INSIDER 1939-2009

by Howard Blume | L.A. Times

October 19, 2009 |  7:44 pm - Dominic Shambra, a consummate school-district insider who sacrificed a distinguished career to push through what became the nation's most notorious high school construction project, died Monday at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena. He had been suffering from congestive heart failure and other ailments.

After a well-regarded career as a teacher and principal, he took on increasingly challenging roles in the Los Angeles Unified School District bureaucracy. In the early 1980s, he became the architect behind the unpopular closing of about two dozen schools because of declining enrollment in the west San Fernando Valley, the Westside and Westchester. He also was a strategist behind early attempts to pass school bond measures when schools in some parts of the district were bursting past their capacity.

"He was very smart, strategic in terms of what had to be done," said retired assistant Supt. Santiago Jackson. "He was also a lot of fun, a bigger-than-life kind of person."

In the late 1980s, Shambra led a school-district team that tried to outmaneuver developer Donald Trump when he and the district were battling to control the site of the Ambassador Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard. He and district staff fought Trump to a draw—nothing would happen on that land for years. But schools have just this fall opened on that site.

In his most controversial role, Shambra spearheaded the development of the Belmont Learning Complex, which became the nation's most expensive and notorious high school construction project.

In 2000, an anti-Belmont school board canceled the project, citing environmental hazards. But Shambra, by then retired, never gave up, working behind the scenes to argue why the school should be completed. In the end it was, thanks to the intervention of former Colorado Gov. Roy Romer, then LAUSD superintendent, who agreed with Shambra's assessment that the school was needed and could be completed and operated safely.

A full obituary will follow in Wednesday's print edition.

CALORIE LIMITS FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES ARE RECOMMENDED: An Institute of Medicine panel also urges lower sodium content under proposed guidelines for the National School Lunch Program, whose nutritional standards have not been updated since 1995.

 

By Mary MacVean | LA Times

 

October 20, 2009 -- Children would get fewer French fries and more dark green vegetables in school cafeterias under recommendations being issued today by an Institute of Medicine panel.

In addition, for the first time in the National School Lunch Program, the committee called for calorie limits on meals in an effort to curb obesity. The lunch recommendations allot 650 calories for students in kindergarten through fifth grade, 700 calories in sixth to eighth grade, and 850 calories in high school. Breakfasts should not be above 500, 550 and 600, respectively, for the same grade levels, the committee said.

Recommendations from the panel, made up of scientists and school food officials, must be approved by the Department of Agriculture.

The panel acknowledged that its recommendations would increase costs and called for a higher federal reimbursement to school districts, capital investments and money to train cafeteria workers to make the changes. Food costs for breakfasts could rise as much as 9%, and for lunches as much as 25%, if all the recommendations were enacted, the committee said.

The National School Lunch Program is available in 99% of public schools, and about 30 million schoolchildren took part in 2007 at a federal cost of $8.7 billion. The breakfast program is available in about 85% of schools and serves more than 10 million children each day. Nutrition standards for school meals have not been updated since 1995.

The committee said its recommendations reflected the 2005 federal dietary guidelines for Americans.

The intention is to teach children "to recognize foods that contribute to" a healthful diet and to help them develop lifelong habits, said Mary Jo Tuckwell, a member of the Institute of Medicine committee and a registered dietitian from Ashland, Wis.

Over the next decade, the sodium content of meals should gradually be reduced, the committee said. A typical high school lunch today contains about 1,600 milligrams of sodium; a maximum of 740 milligrams is recommended.

But the recommended upper limit of total fat would increase from 30% to 35% of calories, bringing it in line with the dietary guidelines. The goal is no trans fats and less than 10% of calories as saturated fats.

The committee recommended more legumes, vegetables and fruits -- such as cups of fruit in breakfasts for all grades and in lunches for high school students. It also said no more than half of the fruit should be in the form of juice.

The committee recommended weekly amounts for vegetables, including dark green and orange vegetables, grains, and meats, cheese and yogurt for each age group. And it said fruits and vegetables were not interchangeable.

It also recommended that whole milk be replaced with low-fat or skim milk, and that refined grains be replaced with whole grain foods.

The Los Angeles Unified School District has already adopted some changes like those recommended in the report through a 2005 school board action that, for example, reduced the amount of added sugar in cereals served to students.

Related stories from the L.A. Times

SCHOOL DAY FOR OBAMA

By Helene Cooper | NY Times Online

President Obama visits a Washington-area school.

photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images President Obama asked several children what books they were reading.

October 19, 2009 , 1:56 pm -- President Obama popped in on third and fourth-graders at a Silver Spring, Md. elementary school Monday, to tout the benefits of reading for youngsters, just as they were having lunch.

The First Reader stopped by the cafeteria at Viers Mill School, where Mr. Obama admitted to having read Harry Potter books (with his daughter, Malia), but not the Goosebumps series of children’s horror books that are apparently a favorite of many of the kids at the school.

President Obama visits a Washington-area school.

<<Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images Viers Mill schoolchildren squealed when the president called on them.

The school receives federal poverty aid and has closed the achievement gap between minority children and other students, administration officials said.

In his brief remarks to the students, Mr. Obama said “I have heard great things about your school and everybody here is reading all the time.”

He called for a show of hands on how many planned to go to college. Every hand went up.

STIMULUS SAVED 6,000 Ed JOBS IN L.A., REPORT SAYS: "It also means that we were able to avert massive class [size] expansion," Melody Barnes of President's domestic policy council says. We did?

More than 250,000 full- and part-time jobs escaped budget cuts nationwide. A more complete accounting will be posted online next week.

By Joe Markman | LA Times - Reporting from Washington

October 20, 2009 -- Some 250,000 education jobs have been saved or created by the economic stimulus package, according to a White House report released Monday.

The news previews what will be a more comprehensive accounting to be posted by the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board [comprised of twelve Inspectors General from various federal agencies and Chairman Devaney] on its website next week.

"There is a lot more work to be done, but we applaud those districts that have successfully used stimulus funding to stave off catastrophic layoffs and invest in critical reforms," Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a statement. Of the $97.4 billion in education funding included in the stimulus bill, $67.6 billion has been spent.

According to the report, more than 6,000 education jobs in Los Angeles were saved by stimulus funds. New York City was able to retain 4,000 positions, while 7% of the teaching corps in Scottsbluff, Neb. -- 18 people -- kept their jobs.

"It also means that we were able to avert massive class [size] expansion," Melody Barnes, director of President Obama's domestic policy council, said at a news conference.

The 250,000 number includes part-time and full-time positions.

In Las Vegas, where 1,100 teaching jobs have been saved by the stimulus, the local tourism economy has been hit particularly hard -- leading to budget cuts totaling $250 million in the Clarke County School District, spokesman David Roddy said.

"[The stimulus] was a tremendous benefit not only to the district but also to individuals who were facing loss of employment," Supt. Walt Rulffes wrote in a letter to the Nevada Legislature.

Related stories: Around the Web

●●smf muses:

  • The Times and the White House need to be a little more clear:
    • by "L.A." do they mean LAUSD  – the second largest individual school district in the nation?
    • ….or L.A. County – the Los Angeles County Office of Education is the largest regional educational agency in the nation – comprising 80 school districts …one of which (the problem child) is LAUSD.
  • And as for LAUSD, we seem to have saved jobs AND increased class sizes to among the largest in the nation – and I propose that '"the worst of both worlds" is NOT acceptable compromise!

from whitehouse.gov:

    The public is invited to submit written statements to the Advisory Committee by any of the following methods:
    • Send written statements to the PERAB’s electronic mailbox at PERAB@do.treas.gov; or
    • Send paper statements in triplicate to Emanuel Pleitez, Designated Federal Officer, President’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, Office of the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance, Room 1325A, Department of the Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20220

    From Recovery.Org

      One of the core missions of the Recovery Board is to prevent fraud, waste, and mismanagement of Recovery funds. Recovery.gov gives you the ability to find Recovery projects in your own neighborhood and if you suspect fraudulent actions related to the project you can report those concerns in several ways:             
      • Submit a Complaint Form electronically
      • Call the Recovery Board Fraud Hotline: 1-877-392-3375 (1-877-FWA-DESK)
      • Fax the Recovery Board: 1-877-329-3922 (1-877-FAX-FWA2)
      • Write the Recovery Board:
        Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board
        Attention: Hotline Operators
        P.O. Box 27545
        Washington, D.C. 20038-7958
        The Recovery Board is committed to helping ensure these funds are spent properly, but we cannot do it without your help. Additionally, the Recovery Act provides protections for certain individuals (whistleblowers) who make specific disclosures about uses of Recovery Act funds.

        Student Recovery Day: LA UNIFIED TAKES ANTI-TRUANCY EFFORTS DOOR-TO-DOOR -- Supt. Ramon Cortines and other top officials visit the homes of some of the 20,000 students who failed to show up this year. About a dozen teens began working out plans to return to school.

        By Howard Blume | LA Times

         

        October 20, 2009 -- Los Angeles' top education official went door to door Monday to urge teens to return to school, netting about a dozen students with the effort and drawing attention to a growing problem.

        Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Ramon C. Cortines was among 150 staffers and school board members who joined campus employees in the first-time, broad-based initiative, which targeted 10 truancy-plagued middle and high schools. This school year, about 20,000 of the district's 680,000 students have failed to show up as expected, officials said.

        Cortines and others who took part in Monday's friendly sweep emphasized that their main goal was to help students, but said another reason was this month's deadline for districts to provide final enrollment figures to the state.

        Those numbers, along with daily attendance figures, help determine annual funding allotments.

        A continued enrollment decline could mean displaced teachers or even layoffs in a district that already has endured cutbacks resulting in larger classes.

        On Monday morning, Cortines, accompanied by two counselors, knocked on the doors of about 10 households in a half-square-mile area north of John C. Fremont High in Florence. At a tan stucco house, the family he sought had moved, but the current resident was impressed when the superintendent introduced himself.

        "So, you the man, huh?"

        "I'm the man," Cortines replied, striding away as his companions hurried to catch up.

        At the next stop, a purple stucco house, a Fremont counselor spotted a pit bull behind the wrought-iron fence. Cortines tried in vain to telephone the family, then spied a teenager peeking out from the backyard.

        It was Jose, 19, who asked that his last name not be published.

        The young man said his mother was having financial trouble.

        "I'm trying to help her," he said. "She has a little store."

        The counselors and Cortines said they could work with the teen to arrange a plan for night school, adult school or a part-time schedule. The superintendent did not leave until Jose committed to an appointment to work out a school schedule.

        "I promise," said Jose, who is about a year short of the credits needed to graduate.

        He was Cortines' only catch, but officials later said that as a result of the sweep, at least 13 students returned to Fremont on Monday to work out plans for returning to school.

        In some cases, the families of those sought had moved. Other students, including Michael Velasquez, had graduated, but not from their original high school. Velasquez, who put on a fresh white T-shirt after the arrival of Cortines and his entourage, used the occasion to make an appointment with a Fremont counselor for help enrolling in a job-training program.

        Of 962 missing Fremont students, the school had resolved the cases of 599 before Monday, officials said.

        Parent activist Elisa Taub dismissed the effort as a public relations stunt but said she respects Cortines. Community organizer Manuel Criollo praised the symbolism, but said it runs contrary to day-to-day practices by the district that emphasize criminalizing truancy over providing needed social services.

        Cortines launched the truancy initiative at the suggestion of school board member Steve Zimmer, who had participated in a similar outreach effort as a teacher and counselor at John Marshall High in Los Feliz.

        Zimmer led one of the teams Monday and met with a 15-year-old girl whose story underscored the challenges. With a history of drug use and gang involvement, the girl had been out of school for almost three years and victimized by domestic violence and family disintegration.

        A judge recently told her she must choose between school and jail.

        After hours of meetings Monday involving district staff and her mother, the girl said she would give school another try.

        Teachers' & Public Employees' Retirement Funds: CALIFORNIA LAUNCHING FRAUD SUIT AGAINST MAJOR BANK

        Reporting by Jim Christie | editing by Carol Bishopric of Reuters

        SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 19 (Reuters) - California Attorney General Jerry Brown's office said on Monday it would unveil a lawsuit against a major bank for committing fraud against the state's Calpers and Calstrs retirement systems, two of the nation's largest pension funds.

        The lawsuit will seek to recover nearly $200 million in illegal overcharges and penalties, Brown's office said in a statement.

        A spokesman for Brown said details of the lawsuit would be disclosed on Tuesday morning.

        Representatives of Calpers, the California Public Employees' Retirement System, and Calstrs, the California State Teachers' Retirement System, were not immediately available for comment. ()

        also see:  CalPERS targets a former LA deputy mayor in probe of investment agent fees Los Angeles Times

        GRIEF COUNSELORS AT HOLLYWOOD HIGH SCHOOL AFTER FOOTBALL PLAYERS DEATH

        LA Daily News Wire Services

        10/19/2009 -- Grief counselors will be at Hollywood High School on Monday to comfort students distraught over the death of a ninth-grade football player who collapsed during a game and died, a school district official said.

        Spencer Juarez, 13, had just carried the ball and was jogging to the sideline when he collapsed with about two minutes left in the freshman- sophomore game against West Adams Prep Friday night. Paramedics took the player to Childrens Hospital Los Angeles.

        Juarez was pronounced dead about 3 p.m. Saturday. An autopsy to determine the cause of death is pending.

        Grief counselors will be at the school on Monday and will remain there "as long as staff and students need them," Los Angeles Unified School District communications officer Ellen Morgan told City News Service.

        Friends and a coach described Juarez as a dedicated athlete who ran marathons and did well in school.

        "It's the kind of kid that you want to teach, who makes you want to follow him throughout his life because you know he's going to do amazing things," coach and marathon trainer Bonnie Anderson told KCAL9.

        On Sept. 11, Garden Grove High School football player Kevin Telles, 17, collapsed and died during a game. Coroner's investigators have yet to disclose the cause of death, pending more post-mortem studies.

        Monday, October 19, 2009

        STUDENT RECOVERY DAY: Top L.A. school official hits streets to find dropouts + Free Pass for Dropouts

        by Howard Blume | LA Times Online/ LA Now blog

        Photo by Irfan  Khan / Los Angeles Times

        October 19, 2009 |  3:36 pm

        153218.ME.1019.Dropout

        When Michael Velasquez, 18, learned that the city's top education official was at the door, he decided he should put on his white T-shirt. L.A. schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines (standing next to Velasquez above) was taking part in a friendly sweep of students expected in school this fall but who had failed to show.

        By midafternoon today, the first-time "Student Recovery Day" in the Los Angeles Unified School District had pulled in about 13 students near Fremont High. Street teams had knocked on at least 100 doors, while other district staff members worked a phone bank.

        Nine other middle and high schools also participated. The initiative grew out of a suggestion two weeks ago from school board member Steve Zimmer to Cortines. It was thrown together hastily to boost enrollment before the school system has to turn in official numbers to the state. At stake are both funding and faculty jobs, which are based on enrollment.

        The trip to the home of Velasquez and his mother, Maria Contreras, turned out to be slightly off point. Velasquez has recently graduated though a new computer-based, credit-recovery program at Locke High, he and his mother said. But the trip was not a waste because Velasquez is interested in finding a job-training program and needs help getting started.

        Francisco Vasquez, a Fremont High counselor, used his clipboard as a surface to write information from son and mother to set up an appointment.

        "I'm glad you finished high school," Cortines told the young man. "I want to make sure you get enrolled in a program to help you further."

        At another stop, Cortines found Jose, 19, who quit going to school to help his mother at a store she runs. The two counselors with Cortines explained that Jose, who requested that his last name not be used, could attend school part-time or go to night school or adult school. Jose promised he would meet with counselors at Fremont to see what could be worked out.

        The trio had trouble finding other dropouts on their list because families had moved or the school's information was out of date.

        Cortines acknowledged that much of the day's efforts were symbolic, given the difficulty of finding students and returning them to school.

        "But I don't think you can underestimate the personal kind of contact," he said. "They'll tell another five to 10 people. It's the ripple effect. And it doesn't have to be the superintendent, just a human being that is sincere and interested in the students."

         

        Free Pass for Drop-Outs

        By LOREL KANE | KNBC-TV News Online

        Updated 8:15 AM PDT, Mon, Oct 19, 2009

        Getty Images

        Monday is the first-ever Student  Recovery Day in the Los Angeles Unified School District.  The LAUSD wants drop-outs to come back to school and is willing to go door-to-door to find them.

        Starting around 8:00 this morning teams of LAUSD administrators, including superintendent Ramon Cortines, will scour the streets and neighborhoods of Los Angeles in an attempt to recover as many students as possible who are no longer enrolled in LAUSD schools. The recovery teams will also be tracking down the students by phone.

        Superintendent Cortines says thousands of students who have left school are out there, kids from middle school through high school.   The district is targeting neighborhoods surrounding ten schools with the highest number of students on the drop-out lists.  They are: Fremont, Fairfax, Wilson, Los Angeles, Jefferson and Santee High Schools in Los Angeles; Polytechnic High School in Sun Valley, Monroe High School in North Hills, Banning High School in Wilmington and Huntington Park High School in Huntington Park.

        The district will provide special support services to any students who return to school to help them get back on track.  "We know if we can do this we can have a second chance of helping them reach their goal of high school graduation," Cortines said.

        Every students who drops out of school costs the district state money -- and when the state loses money it eventually has to lose teachers,  so if the district can recover students it benefits as well as the kids.

        The sweep will last six hours today and tomorrow.  Cortines says he hopes to make this an annual effort.

        First Published: Oct 19, 2009 7:06 AM PDT

        NATIONAL ASSESSMENT GOVERNING BOARD HOLDING HEARINGS ON NAEP TESTING FOR STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES AND ENGLISH LANAGAGE LEARNERS TODAY: Forums scheduled Oct. 19 in Los Angeles, and Nov. 9 in Washington, D.C.

        NEWS RELEASE
        FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
        Stephaan Harris - (202) 357-7504
        Stephaan.Harris@ed.gov

        WASHINGTON—The National Assessment Governing Board will hold public hearings in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. to obtain comment on expert panel recommendations on uniform national rules for testing of students with disabilities (SD) and English language learners (ELL) on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).

        The hearing in Los Angeles will be on Monday, October 19, at the Board meeting room (first floor) of the Los Angeles Unified School District headquarters, at 333 South Beaudry Ave., from 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (PDT). The hearing in Washington, D.C., will be on Monday, Nov. 9, at the Phoenix Park Hotel, 520 North Capitol St., NW, from 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (EST).

        The SD and ELL recommendations grew out of a concern that differences in accommodation and exclusion rates among the states and districts participating in NAEP, commonly known as the Nation's Report Card, may jeopardize the fairness and validity of state comparisons and other NAEP data and trends.

        The Governing Board has established an Ad Hoc Committee of Board members to conduct a comprehensive examination of NAEP testing and reporting of these two student groups. The Committee appointed two technical advisory panels to recommend uniform national rules for NAEP testing of SD and ELL students to better assure that NAEP samples are fully representative and produce comparable results. These panels reported to the Board at its quarterly meeting in August, and now the Board plans to consult widely before deciding whether or not to adopt the expert panel recommendations.

        To register to present oral testimony for up to 10 minutes, please call Tessa Regis, of the Governing Board staff, at 202-357-7500 or send an email to tessa.regis@ed.gov by 4:00 p.m. (EST) on Oct. 16 for Los Angeles and Nov. 6 for Washington, DC. The Board will make an effort to hear testimony from all persons, but speakers are encouraged to bring written statements to the hearings.

        Written testimony should be sent by mail, fax or e-mail for receipt in the Board office by Nov. 10. The address is 800 N. Capitol St. NW, Suite 825, Washington, DC 20002. The fax is (202) 357-6945. Further information on the policy options and Governing Board deliberations may be obtained from Lawrence Feinberg at 202-357-6942 or larry.feinberg@ed.gov.

        The full reports and recommendations of the technical advisory panels are available for ELL testing and SD testing. There are also PowerPoint summaries available for ELL testing and SD testing.

        The official hearing notices are also available for Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

        NAEP is a representative-sample assessment designed to produce valid, comparable data on the academic achievement of large groups of students. It is prohibited by law from providing results for individual children or schools.

        The Nation's Report Card is the only nationally representative, continuing evaluation of the condition of education in the United States and has served as a national yardstick of student achievement since 1969. Through the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), The Nation's Report Card informs the public about what America's students know and can do in various subject areas, and compares achievement data between states and various student demographic groups.

        The National Assessment Governing Board is an independent, bipartisan board whose members include governors, state legislators, local and state school officials, educators, business representatives, and members of the general public. Congress created the 26-member Governing Board in 1988.

        Who We Are | What We Do | Newsroom | The Nation's Report Card: NAEP | Publications | Policies

        Home | FAQs | Site Map | Contact Us

        Phone: 202–357–6938   Toll-free: 877–977–6938   E-mail: nagb@ed.gov

        LAUSD SCHOOLS FACING BIG CHOICES IN REFORM: Charter option is not the only alternative

        By Connie Llanos, Staff Writer | LA Daily News

        Updated: 10/19/2009 -- The Los Angeles Unified District is just weeks away from launching its deepest reform effort to date - allowing nonprofits and other outsiders to run 36 new and underperforming schools.

        As the Nov. 15 deadline for the first phase of bidding approaches, targeted campuses are asking themselves a big question: Do we let others bid for us or do we put up a plan of our own to retain control?

        Many educators anticipate publicly funded, but independently run, charter school operators to bid for a number of schools under the LAUSD's Schools Choice Plan. But teachers, administrators and community members at dozens of affected campuses see the plan as an opportunity to kick-start long-stalled innovation within the massive district.

        "There's been a lot of change in the district, a lot of growth and movement ... people no longer believe there is only one way to serve students and the community," said Rosamaria Figueroa Calderon, principal for Civitas Leadership Academy, an LAUSD pilot school - one of many non-charter options on the table. "A couple of years ago the only option was to go charter."

        Prompted by sagging test scores and dismal graduation rates - and more recently by the growing popularity of charters and declining enrollment at the district - local educators have attempted to bring alternative school models to LAUSD.

        From magnet schools, founded in the 1970s to improve education for minority students, to pilot schools, the district's newest and fastest-growing non-traditional school model, alternative schools have emerged as competitors to the rapidly expanding charter school movement.

        And the LAUSD, which once opposed charters, is now embracing the various alternatives to the traditional model.

        "This district has not celebrated change before ... has not celebrated thinking out of the box," said LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines.

        The School Choice Resolution gives a lot of control over school selection to teachers, parents and communities.

        "I believe there is an energy moving now among teachers, parents and administrators. ... They don't have to follow every policy, cross every `t' or dot every `i'," Cortines said.

        "I am only interested in people coming forward with plans that raise the bar."

        For Calderon, a veteran teacher and administrator at LAUSD for more than two decades, the opportunity to work at a non-traditional campus has been invigorating.

        At her small school of about 300 students in the Pico-Union district of Los Angeles, Calderon is not just a principal. She is also the only counselor on site, and she teaches Spanish.

        Civitas was one of two pilot schools to open in the district three years ago, as part of the schools that were built to relieve overcrowding at nearby Belmont High School.

        A model created in Boston, pilot schools run almost completely free of mandates from their local district. Perhaps more importantly, almost all of the school decisions - including who gets hired, and how many hours they work - are controlled by a board of directors made up of teachers, students and parents.

        Another option available to schools is the Expanded School Based Management Model, a concept spearheaded by local teachers and United Teachers Los Angeles.

        The ESBMM model puts teachers on a level playing field with administrators and allows many of the school's decisions to be made locally, including the hiring of staff.

        "It's like we are a small town where everyone really cares," said Colleen Schwab, a teacher and union representative at Woodland Hills Academy, the only district school to operate as an ESBMM campus.

        Schwab was part of the group of teachers who originally wanted to make the West Valley middle school a charter. Schwab said the ESBMM model granted teachers and parents at the school the kind of flexibility they wanted to change the school's curriculum and calendar, without having to leave the district.

        UTLA president A.J. Duffy hopes the ESBMM model is viewed as a viable option by schools that will be up for bid under the district's plan.

        "Teachers are at the epicenter of decision-making power here ... this is what UTLA has been fighting (for), for decades," Duffy said.

        Even as UTLA contemplates suing the district over its reform plan, the union leader admitted the school choice resolution also opens the doors for more teacher-driven reform to take place districtwide.

        Pilot schools and partnership schools are supported by the teachers union. The union has historically opposed traditional charter schools that usually do not hire union employees.

        "I don't believe I or this union should stand in the way of teachers' desires for reform," he said.

        While it seems that LAUSD is ushering in a new era of reform, efforts to improve schools have been initiated before by the district, but many have fallen short of their goals.

        For example, the iDesign Division of schools was created by former LAUSD Superintendent David Brewer to house the district's partnership schools - campuses that are run jointly by the district and a non-profit partner. The program's 19 campuses - which include the 10 schools in the Mayor's Partnership of Schools - were supposed to be laboratories for emerging teaching strategies and were touted by district officials as the solution to the district's chronic under-performance.

        Three years later, staff and resources for the iDesign division have been severely reduced and the division's last director - who left this summer to be a school administrator - hasn't been replaced. District officials also admit that the partnership schools have failed to create a cohesive vision for themselves.

        Some wonder if the district's latest invitation for reform could simply be another case of LAUSD taking on more change than it can follow through on.

        All final decisions on the school takeover plan are expected by February and all schools will be expected to open in fall 2010.

        "L.A. doesn't need another poorly implemented plan," said Pedro Noguera, an education professor at New York University who specializes in reform of large urban districts.

        "There's always too much change, too many reforms ... but if they are not clear on what the problem is, how can they make sure the remedy will actually work?"

        Sunday, October 18, 2009

        The news that didn’t fit from Oct 18

        SAN DIEGO BATTLE A PREVIEW ON U.S. DEBATE ON EDUCATION
        Sunday, October 18, 2009 8:09 AM
        San Diego Superintendent spreads the gospel of 'value-added' teacher evaluations -- In Tenn. and N.C. Terry Grier adopted and expanded a statistical method of tracking student progress.  Union resistance scuttled more modest efforts in San Diego, mirroring a brewing national debate.  By Jason Felch and Jason Song | LA Times  October 18, 2009 - When Terry Grier was hired to run the San Diego


        NOT A GOOD DAY FOR HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL: Hollywood High Player Dies, Fairfax Fight
        Sunday, October 18, 2009 7:46 AM
        Hollywood High School football player dies after collapsing during a game [Updated]  -by Eric Sondheimer, LA Times Online  October 17, 2009 |  5:44 pm  A football player from Hollywood High School's freshman-sophomore team who collapsed during a game Friday evening died this afternoon at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, according to Los Angeles Unified School District spokeswoman Ellen Morgan.


        UTLA: ABSENT FROM REFORM - L.A. Unified is changing, but a UTLA split could cause the union to miss out on opportunities to be part of the transformation. -
        Saturday, October 17, 2009 5:41 AM
        Editorial from the LA Times  October 17, 2009 -- It's easy to see why United Teachers Los Angeles doesn't like the new Public School Choice policy at L.A. Unified, which allows outside groups to apply to take over about 250 new or underperforming schools. Those groups are likely to include a large number of charter school operators that would hire their own teachers rather than sign a contract


        CORTINES STANDS BY CONTROVERSIAL DEAL TO USE LAID-OFF TEACHERS AS SUBSTITUTES
        Saturday, October 17, 2009 5:39 AM
        by Howard Blume | La Times Online/LA Now Blog  October 15, 2009 | 11:47 am updated 5:50 pm  The Los Angeles schools superintendent says he opposes revoking an agreement that has imperiled health benefits for more than 1,000 veteran substitute teachers while costing hundreds of them regular work.   In an interview, Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said he stands by a deal that was designed to help recently


        Independent Monitor: PROVISIONS OF PUBLIC SCHOOL CHOICE RESOLUTION VIOLATE CONSENT DECREE
        Friday, October 16, 2009 5:23 PM

        WALKING FOR SUCCESS: Promoting College Education and Scholarship
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 8:22 PM
        en espaƱol: Caminata por el Ɖxito  Written by Alex Garcia, San Fernando Valley Sun Contributing Writer     Wednesday, 14 October 2009 -- Ernesto Morales still remembers the knock on the door from Project GRAD visitors during the fall of his 9th grade year at San Fernando Middle School.  "They sat down with my guardians and thoroughly explained to them the importance of going to college and the


        SLUGGISH RESULTS SEEN IN NATIONAL MATH SCORES + CALIFORNIA SCORES AMONG THE LOWEST + SUPERINTENDENT O'CONNELL'S COMMENTS - NY Times: "Student achievement grew faster before No Child Left Behind, when states were dominant in education policy, than over the years since, when the federal law has become a powerful force in classrooms"
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 7:16 PM
        SLUGGISH RESULTS SEEN IN NATIONAL MATH SCORES     By SAM DILLON | New York Times  October 15, 2009 -- The latest results on the most important nationwide math test show that student achievement grew faster during the years before the Bush-era No Child Left Behind law, when states were dominant in education policy, than over the years since, when the federal law has become a powerful force in


        NEW YORK SLASHES EDUCATION+HEALTH BUDGET $2.5 BILLION: Gov. Paterson's word for proposed cuts : 'pain'
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 7:15 PM
        …but the recession is over.  By Kenneth Lovett | NY Daily News Albany Bureau Chief       Groll/AP -- Gov. Paterson will propose $2.5 billion budget cuts Thursday - mostly in health and education - to close a mushrooming deficit the controller says could balloon to a $4.1 billion.   Wednesday, October 14th 2009, 4:12 PM  -- ALBANY - Get ready for more pain in the wallet.   Gov. Paterson will


        DEAR RICHARD RIORDAN: An open letter to the former L.A. mayor on making parenting education part of public school reform.
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 7:14 PM
        By Esther A. Jantzen | Blowback/Op-Ed in the LA Times  October 15, 2009 -- Mayor Richard Riordan, your disappointment in the progress of educational reform in the Los Angeles Unified School District, after all you've done as mayor and secretary of education under Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, was palpable in your Oct. 12 Times Op-Ed article, "Course outline for the LAUSD." This lack of progress


        Blog review: THE BROAD REPORT
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 12:11 PM
        by smf  Sharon Higgins aka “The Perimeter Primate” writes a blog, The BROAD REPORT:  A Clearinghouse About Billionaire Eli Broad's Efforts To Dismantle Public Education.  Ms. Higgins, Occupation: Mother, former critical care R.N., former Parent Coordinator, wife of criminal defense attorney and Commander in U.S.N.R. (Retired), off-and-on ceramic artist, Neighborhood Watch Block Captain - lives in

        PRINCIPAL RESIGNS FROM GARDENA HIGH CITING A LACK OF UNITY ON CAMPUS
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 11:09 AM
        by Melissa Pamer Staff Writer | Daily Breeze  Tuesday, 10/13/2009  -- Just two weeks after Gardena High School found itself on a list of 12 troubled Los Angeles Unified campuses that could be taken over by outside operators, its principal has quit, citing a lack of unity on campus.   Kevin Kennedy, who has been at the school less than two years, announced Friday he was taking an administrative


        USING FEDERAL FUNDS TO MAKE UP FOR STATE CUTS (THIS YEAR): LAUSD makes up $140M budget cut with stimulus funds
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 8:41 AM
        By Connie Llanos Staff Writer | LA Newspaper Group/Daily News         ►from  another story:  The Department of Education's inspector general reports that some states are using stimulus dollars to replace money they've cut from their education budget — despite instructions to the contrary.     When the Department of Education began releasing stimulus funds last April, it told states the money was

        UCLA's LAB SCHOOL EXPANSION IS POSTPONED: Tough economic times delay the university's effort to replicate its Westwood educational program in lower-income areas.
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 6:46 AM
        Lab School Principal Jim Kennedy said he was discouraged by the lack of a commitment to continue the planning and fundraising needed for the project to proceed once the economy eases. "It doesn't appear to be a strong enough priority to survive the current economic difficulties," he said. (Christina House / For The Times / October 9, 2009)  By Carla Rivera | LA Times  October 12, 2009 -- In a


        GIRL, 16. SHOT WHILE WALKING NEAR HOLLYWOOD SCHOOL: Police say the student at Helen Bernstein High apparently was caught in the crossfire of two rival gangs and wounded in the hip. She was taken to a hospital in good condition.
        Wednesday, October 14, 2009 6:45 AM
        By Robert Lopez | LA Times  October 14, 2009 -- A 16-year-old girl was shot in the hip Tuesday afternoon within two blocks of Helen Bernstein High School in Hollywood, where classes had just ended for the day, authorities said.  The student was taken to a hospital, where she was listed in good condition, said Officer Bruce Borihanh of the Los Angeles Police Department.  Police suspect that the


        My Stanford researcher is better than your Stanford researcher - or- SCHOLARS SPAR OVER RESEARCH METHODS USED TO EVALUATE CHARTERS
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 6:21 PM
        By Debra Viadero | EdWeek          Published Online: October 8, 2009            Updated: October 13, 2009            Published in Print: October 14, 2009         The authors of a recent national study that found students in regular public schools outperforming their charter school peers are rebutting criticism that their research suffered from a “serious mathematical mistake” that negatively


        SCHWARZENEGGER OKs SCHOOL BILL LINKED TO STIMULUS FUNDS
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 5:18 PM
        By The Associated Press from EdWeek      October 12, 2009 - Sacramento, Calif. -- California is removing a legal ban on using the results of student achievement tests to evaluate teachers, under a bill signed into law by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger.  The bill lifts a barrier that prevented California from applying for $4.5 billion under the federal Race to the Top program. Schwarzenegger says more


        ONLY SOME ISSUES ARE FOR PARENTS, MAYOR BLOOMBERG SAYS. "It does not make sense for parents to be involved in larger issues like overcrowding, because those issues take years to resolve."
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 4:53 PM
        By Julie Shapiro  | Downtown Express - The Newspaper of Lower Manhattan    Mayor Bloomberg at the New Amsterdam Plein and Pavilion under construction near Lower Manhattan’s Staten Island ferry terminal last month.  Parents do not need a role in decisions like new school sites or school zoning, Mayor Michael Bloomberg told Downtown Express Friday.    Bloomberg said parents need only be involved in


        SOUND BYTE: The "Golden Age" of American Education
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 1:13 PM
        an interview with  Tom Loveless, Senior Fellow, Governance Studies of the Brookings Institution from The Kojo Nnamdi Show on WAMU 88.5 FM, Public Radio in DC     smf: Last Saturday, in a brief encounter with UTLA Prez A.J. Duffy, we mutually agreed that the “good old days of LAUSD” weren’t;  Duffy from his educator perspective  (he attended New York public schools, joining LAUSD in ‘74) I from my


        SMART CHILDREN LEFT BEHIND
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 12:09 PM
        by Tom Loveless, Senior Fellow, Governance Studies & Michael J. Petrilli, Vice President for National Programs and Policy, The Thomas B. Fordham Institute  | The New York Times (picked up from the Brookings Institution website)  August 28, 2009 — As American children head back to school, the parents of the most academically gifted students may feel a new optimism: according to a recent study, the


        GOVERNOR SIGNS SB 19 (SIMITIAN): Education Data Bill Ensures Access to Federal Funds
        Tuesday, October 13, 2009 6:48 AM
        California Chronicle | California Political Desk     October 13, 2009 - SACRAMENTO – Sunday Governor Schwarzenegger signed into law Senate Bill 19, by State Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto), which ensures California´s eligibility to compete for $4.5 billion in federal school funding. The bill puts to rest a controversy Simitian describes as "a tempest in a teapot" over California´s eligibility


        Dumb adult tricks: IT’S A FORK, IT’S A SPOON, IT’S A …WEAPON?
        Monday, October 12, 2009 1:15 PM
        By IAN URBINA | New York Times      Mustafah Abdulaziz for The New York Times -- Zachary Christie with his mother, Debbie, his father, Curtis, and the Cub Scout utensil that got him suspended from school.   October 12, 2009 -- NEWARK, Del. — Finding character witnesses when you are 6 years old is not easy. But there was Zachary Christie last week at a school disciplinary committee hearing