Monday, March 29, 2010

JONATHAN KOZOL SHARES FRANK INSIGHTS AT GATHERING OF EDUCATORS @ MASSACHUSETTS COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS: "No Child Left Behind needs to be abolished."

"Our children are learning that they are valued for their ability to do well on standardized tests -- not for themselves."
Kozol is disheartened by the president’s plans to revamp the NCLB, which he originally promised to dismantle.  "It looks as if his fiddling will result in more tests."

 By Jennifer Huberdeau | North Adams  (Mass.) Transcript

 

Jonathan Kozol speaks to a gathering of local educators... (Gillian Jones/North Adams Transcript)

Tuesday March 23, 2010  --NORTH ADAMS -- The national No Child Left Behind education reform act, that equates academic achievement with successful scores on standardized tests, should be abandoned according to renowned author and education critic Jonathan Kozol.

"No Child Left Behind is the worst education reform I have ever seen in my life. I think it’s very dangerous and encourages teachers to do nothing but teach to the test," he said Monday, speaking to an intimate gathering of local educators and education students at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. "It hasn’t improved scores. After 10 years, it’s still all about the ‘drill and kill.’ It’s taken all the joy out of being a child. Our children are learning that they are valued for their ability to do well on standardized tests -- not for themselves."

Kozol, a former educator and outspoken social activist, will join Lisa Cortes, the executive producer of the Oscar-winning movie "Precious: Based on the novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire" as part of the fourth installment of the college’s Public Policy Lecture series tonight at 7 in the MCLA Church Street Center.

The discussion is aimed at providing insightful commentary on not only the "frank" socio-economic issues -- illiteracy, hopelessness, teen pregnancy and mental, physical and sexual abuse -- raised by the novel and film, but also the support systems that are needed  to address these timely problems. It will be moderated by former ABC News journalist Carole Simpson. The event, which is sponsored by the Ruth Proud Charitable Trust, is free and open to the public.

"I’m a real intellectual snob; I don’t read books that make it onto the [New York] Times best seller list because they disappear so fast, but ‘Push’ is one of those books that holds up," Kozol told the gathering. He compared the rudimentary writing of the book’s main character, a 16-year-old pregnant illiterate girl who finds solace in an alternative school program where she learns to read and write, to those of elementary school students in his 2008 book, "Letters to a Young Teacher."

"Precious doesn’t get a teacher like ‘Francesca’ [the name he uses for the elementary school teacher in his book who fights back against NCLB] who wants to listen to her until she is 16. Francesca told her third-grade students ‘this MCAS test doesn’t matter a damn to me.’ We need more mischievous subversives like her in the educational system."

Although Kozol champions Francesca and her unwillingness to "teach to the test," he notes that at the same time she imparted the skills needed to pass it effectively through lesson plans that didn’t rely on phonics books or rubrics.

"She taught them out of books like ‘Goodnight Moon’ and ‘The Very Hungry Caterpillar’ and from their own writing," he said. "When the administration came to monitor her, she was quick and able to say what standard the lesson conformed to. If you’re going to rebel, you have to do it well."

He says it was Francesca who ultimately convinced the late U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy to withdraw his support of No Child Left Behind, an act he originally sponsored. The late senator promised that "NCLB would not be renewed under his watch," Kozol said.

"No Child Left Behind needs to be abolished," Kozol said. "Poor children and minorities are the ones who pay the highest toll of all. The children of the highest affluence are going to do well anyway -- they have the support systems in place. It’s a Neolithic, unoriginal system that is devised to drill those [poor and minority] children with skills that will make them become part of the American workforce."

He noted that the country’s most exclusive private schools, populated by affluent whites, are not subject to No Child Left Behind.

"Why is that?" he asked. "We need to end this type of accountability. Of course we need to know that our teachers are doing a good job, but there are much better ways to measure it than by keeping our teachers in a state of anxiety and our principals in fear that their school’s annual AYP [annual yearly progress] score won’t be high enough."

An adviser to President Barack Obama during his campaign, Kozol said he is disheartened by the president’s plans to revamp the act, which he originally promised to dismantle.

"It looks as if his fiddling will result in more tests," he said.

"I’m still waiting for my invitation to have dinner at the White House, where I’ll tell him about the funding inequalities between the rich and poor school districts in this county. The inequalities are grotesque. I think the president is very sincere in wanting to do what is best for the children, and I still have faith he will do what is right."

He said poor school districts, located in urban areas with large minority populations and in rural areas with high populations of poor white, often have large class sizes and shabby buildings, which result in high teacher turnover rates and budgets geared toward the purchase of standardized test materials.

"In this state, Holyoke is one of the neediest school districts, with one of the neediest school populations," Kozol said. "The affluent whites have moved on. This city is basically a ghetto. But in this city, the amount spent on students is half as much as what is spent on students in the more affluent Concord, which is populated by the children of the rich, white middle class."

ATHLETIC TRAINING CLINIC SET FOR CITY SECTION COACHES

By  Eric Sondheimer | Varsity Times Insider | LA Times reporters blog about high school sports across the Southland

March 29, 2010 | 12:15 pm -- All Los Angeles Unified School District coaches are eligible to attend an athletic training clinic set for Saturday, April 10 from 1 to 4 p.m. at Arleta High, 14200 Van Nuys Boulevard, Arleta, CA.

Also, coaches from other Los Angeles schools are welcome to attend.

The cost is $10 for the clinic that also includes a free ticket to the Los Angeles Sparks' home opener on May 28. The clinic, sponsored by the Los Angeles Sparks, focuses on skills for high school coaches, including injury prevention, proper stretching techniques and nutrition.

Registration can be done here/or following

 

Training Clinics

from the LA Sparks website

The clinics will focus on basic skills for high school coaches including injury prevention and care, proper stretching techniques, nutrition and much more. The involvement of Select Physical Therapy to present these clinics illustrates their commitment to promoting well-being and ensuring that athletes compete safely and reach their highest potential.

  • The first clinic that was to be held on March 20th from 9am-12pm at the Santee Educational Complex in downtown Los Angeles was canceled.
  • All who registered for the March 20th clinic should plan to attend the clinic on April 10th from 1-4pm at Arleta HS in the San Fernando Valley.           [map/address/directions]

All LAUSD High School Coaches and those at LAUSD affiliated Charter High Schools are eligible to attend. The cost is $10, which includes materials and a ticket to the Sparks Home Opener on May 28th at 7:30pm. All proceeds from registration fees will go towards LAUSD Athletic programs.

In addition to basic athletic training instruction, participants will also receive an Injury Hotline Information Card that will give them access to reach Sparks Head Athletic Trainer Courtney Watson with questions or concerns that may arise during their athletic events.

CLICK HERE to register for a clinic!

CLICK HERE to download the Clinic registration form.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

BLACK LEADERS WANT BROADER CIVIL RIGHTS PROBE OF LAUSD

By Connie Llanos - Staff Writer | L.A. Daily News

03/28/2010 --  Upset that black students were not included in a recently announced probe of potential civil rights violations at Los Angeles Unified, local African-American leaders are demanding federal officials include them in the investigation.

The compliance review, launched two weeks ago by the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights, was the first of 38 planned nationwide. The probe will look at whether LAUSD has respected the civil rights of English-language learners and provided them equal access to educational opportunities.

Leaders of several civil rights groups including the NAACP, Urban League and Black Educational Task Force, however, say the school district has chronically neglected African-American students and any civil rights probe of the nation's second-largest school district should include them.

"I don't see how we can have any kind of investigation into the disparities in the treatment of students in the inner city without including African-American students," said Leon Jenkins, president of the Los Angeles branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

"While you can make a separation between English learner students, their issues are no less severe than what black students experience and their failure rate is compatible. ... More than anything else this should be an equal protection issue for all children in underachieving schools."

Federal officials said they are looking into how LAUSD educates English-language learners because they make up a relatively large part of the district and they have shown dismal academic results compared to their counterparts in other districts.

A third of LAUSD's students are English-language learners and the district educates 11 percent of the nation's population of students learning English. At the same time only 3 of every 100 of the district's English learners are considered proficient in English and math by the time they reach high school.

Federal investigators stressed though that discrimination of any kind would be promptly addressed.

"This is not about English learners to the exclusion of other students," said Russlynn Ali, assistant secretary for civil rights with the Education Department. "Where discrimination happens we will work to uncover and resolve those issues."

Concerns raised by African-American leaders come at a time when black children have increasingly become a minority within minorities. Currently just under 11 percent of LAUSD's students are black. In comparison, Latino students make up 74 percent of the student population.

Black leaders said, intentionally or not, leaving students out of this civil rights probe could in fact fuel tensions in "an already fragile relationship," said Larry Aubrey, a local columnist and advocate for the black community.

The achievement gap between black students and Latinos and their white or Asian peers has been an issue of concern.

In 2008, African-American students had an average score of 627 on the Academic Performance Index, a statewide benchmark test on which students are ultimately expected to score between 800 and 1,000. The API average score for black students was just one point higher than the average for LAUSD's English learners.

PARENTS FEAR STUDENTS MAY LOSE PLACEMENT OUTSIDE L.A. UNIFIED: Cortines wants to limit out-of-district permits to help curb budget shortfall. More than 12,200 students now use them.

  •      pardon me, your spin is showing/published in print as: Parents find it harder to ditch L.A. Unified

By Carla Rivera | L.A. Times

L.A. Unified permits

Dana Middle School Principal Aileen Harbeck, right, shows Ivy Koester, 9, and other L.A. Unified students and parents around the Hawthorne campus. Transfer pupils from Los Angeles make up 18% of the Wiseburn School District's student body. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times / March 25, 2010)

March 29, 2010 -- Parents touring Richard Henry Dana Middle School in Hawthorne were impressed last week with descriptions of its history, science and arts programs, intrigued by a class conducting DNA experiments and pleased with the cleanliness of the campus. But one issue dominated: Will my child get a permit from the Los Angeles Unified School District to attend Dana?

It is a question on the minds of thousands of parents in the wake of a decision by Los Angeles schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines to greatly limit permits that currently allow more than 12,200 students who live in the district to attend schools elsewhere.

Cortines, facing a $640-million budget shortfall, said he wants the transfer students back -- along with the $51 million they bring in state funding. L.A. Unified has been lax in allowing so many permits in the past, Cortines said.

He argued that the district has improved academics and school options so that families shouldn't feel the need to escape.

But students' flight from L.A. Unified factored into a controversial decision by the Beverly Hills school board, which voted in January to end special permits for hundreds of students who live outside of that city. According to L.A. Unified figures, 945 of those students were from the L.A. district.

Under the new plan, L.A. Unified would grant permits to students whose parents work within the boundaries of another school district and to students who would complete fifth, eighth or 12th grade next year. Those exceptions have done little to assuage parents' anger and panic.

Other school districts are also concerned about the effects of L.A. Unified's policy change. Ninety-nine districts in Southern California have at least one transfer student from L.A. Unified.

Torrance Unified, for example, has about 1,700 permit students and could stand to lose $9 million in revenue. Culver City Unified has 1,400 permit students and could lose up to $5.7 million, officials said.

Parents are receiving assistance and encouragement in their fight.

"Don't let them threaten you," Alicia Galindo, the Wiseburn School District's permit coordinator, told parents touring Dana Middle School. "It's not going to be easy, but it's worth the fight." The 2,400-student Wiseburn district has about 435 students from L.A. Unified, 18% of its enrollment, said Supt. Tom Johnstone.

In Culver City, hundreds packed a school auditorium at an informational meeting last week coordinated by the district. Matthew Petersen, who lives in the West Adams area of Los Angeles and attends Culver City Middle School, collected more than 600 signatures on a petition for the Los Angeles school board.

"I was worried because I really wanted to go to Culver City High School, where they have a great arts program I'm interested in," said Matthew, 14. "I feel like I'm getting a good education and I'm worried about losing friends. I hope they change their minds."

Culver City Schools Supt. Myrna Rivera Cote criticized the timing of the announcement, which came on March 17, two days after the deadline to notify teachers and other staff that they might be laid off.

"If this had come earlier in the year it would have allowed us to work together and plan, it wouldn't be such a slap in the face," she said. "All we can do now is react."

The Las Virgenes Unified School District -- with nearly 1,400 permit students -- said it would help families write appeals to the L.A. County Office of Education, the final arbiter in transfer matters. Supt. Donald Zim- ring said L.A. Unified's policy runs counter to state and national reform efforts to expand student choice.

"It's a case where perhaps it needed to be more carefully thought through," Zimring said. "We don't want to lose students either, but do we want our youngsters to be held hostage to a school district?"

Many parents contend that schools in their Los Angeles neighborhoods are inferior and complain that the announcement from L.A. Unified came too late for them to apply to magnet and charter schools.

Laurie Lathem, a Los Angeles resident whose son Luca, 7, is enrolled at Edison Language Academy, a Spanish-English immersion program in the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District, said some low-income families seeking better schools may be disproportionately affected by the permit revision.

"Families who speak very little English may find navigating the cumbersome appeal process very difficult," Lathem said. "A lot of people with resources can find a way to open a business in Santa Monica or find a way to move, but so many of these people will be left out."

Cortines said students in programs that are not available in L.A. Unified will be given special consideration. "Permits are not going to be automatically renewed or denied but looked at on their merits," he said.

L.A. Unified has long required parents who live within district boundaries to obtain permits to enroll elsewhere. Permit applications will be available beginning April 1, and the district has vowed to make a decision within five business days.

Cortines dismissed arguments that permits should be granted just because parents don't like neighborhood schools. I "find it offensive when people think it's their entitlement," he said. He also accused some parents of simply not wanting to go to school with "those kids," meaning low-income and minority students.

L.A. Unified Board member Yolie Flores, however, noted that 200 of the permit students would have attended Garfield High School, a struggling East Los Angeles campus of mostly Latinos.

Board members Steve Zimmer and Tamar Galatzan said they will ask their colleagues at the April 6 meeting to allow all permit students attending high school to graduate at their current schools.

Richard Vladovic, a board member, said that although he understands the financial needs of the district, the needs of students must come first.

"An enormous number of children are involved and will be impacted," he said.

The Texas Board of Ed Rewrites History –or- Molly Ivens warned us there’d be days like this: HISTORY A FLASH POINT AS STATES DEBATE STANDARDS

 

Members of the Texas board of education discussed how schools will teach the Battle of the Alamo of 1836 during a wide-ranging debate preceding the board's March 12 vote giving preliminary approval to revised social studies standards. —Library of Congress

By Erik W. Robelen | Ed Week | Vol. 29, Issue 27

March 25, 2010 -- As debate continues around the development and adoption of common standards in English and mathematics, several states are independently wrestling with rewrites of standards in a content area largely absent from that national discussion—social studies—and encountering their own shares of controversy.

Flash points in the social studies debates tend to occur in the teaching of history, from what should be taught to when and how much.

History, in fact, appears to be repeating itself. Many of the issues are throwbacks to the squabbles that enmeshed the voluntary national standards in that subject a decade and a half ago, when critics complained about an ideological bias and contended that the standards omitted key historical symbols and figures. (They were there, in the elementary school document, though not repeated in the standards for secondary students.)

“This is probably the hardest set of standards to get right, because you’re getting into social debates about whose history matters and those sorts of things,” said Terry Ryan, the vice president for Ohio programs and policy at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a Washington-based think tank.

In the current climate, the Texas effort has attracted the most attention, with its arguments over the separation of church and state, whether hip-hop merits study as a cultural movement, and a successful push to highlight the “conservative resurgence” in recent decades, including such players as Phyllis Schlafly and the Moral Majority. Led by a bloc of staunch conservatives, the state board of education this month gave tentative approval to the standards on a party-line vote of 10-5, with all Democrats opposed.

North Carolina’s state education agency, meanwhile, has promised to rethink the handling of American history outlined in a December draft of social studies standards, in the face of an avalanche of critical feedback. Many teachers and historians complained that the document gave short shrift to U.S. history, especially in high school, where coverage of the subject would have begun in 1877, after Reconstruction.

In Ohio, discussion over revising social studies standards appears more subdued so far, though a number of groups have expressed concerns with drafts put out for public comment recently. For instance, the Ohio Council for the Social Studies is criticizing the lack of a required course in modern world history and asserts that the draft fails to build in sufficiently and clearly so-called “21st-century skills” as mandated under a recent state law, while others have complained about changes to scale back U.S. history content in the 5th grade.

A related concern in Ohio goes beyond the standards and raises questions about their classroom relevance. As a result of budget cuts, the state recently suspended for two years its social studies tests in the 5th and 8th grades (along with writing tests in grades 4 and 7).

“Most people know that if it’s not tested, it’s not taught,” said William A. Harris, who teaches history and government at Cedarville High School in Cedarville, Ohio, and is the president of the Ohio Council for the Social Studies. “It’s the continued marginalization of social studies that we’re seeing, not only in our state, but nationwide.”

Too Many Names?

State efforts to rewrite social studies standards come as concerns persist that this and other areas of the curriculum, such as the arts, are getting squeezed out of the classroom, in large part because of the federal No Child Left Behind Act’s emphasis on reading and math.

In addition to North Carolina, Ohio, and Texas, at least two other states, Oregon and South Carolina, are currently revising social studies standards, though both are early in the process and have yet to release a draft for public comment.

In Texas, the standards are being revised for the first time since 1997, following recent updates in other subject areas, including math, English, and science.

The project has drawn national interest not only because of the political controversy, but also because the standards will guide the state’s selection of new textbooks in 2011. Given the size of the Texas market, the state’s work is seen as influencing the textbooks some other states and school districts use.

A committee assembled by the state, including teachers, academics, and others, worked last year to revise the standards, in collaboration with seven “expert reviewers” named by the state board of education. The state board began debating, and amending, the draft standards at a round of meetings in January, and continued with three more days of deliberations this month. In all, the board has debated more than 300 amendments and is scheduled to reconvene in May to adopt the final standards.

Social conservatives on the elected Texas board have said one priority is to balance a perceived liberal bias in the presentation of history to Texas students; critics contend that the conservatives are using the standards to promote a right-wing agenda.

The conservatives have pushed, and won passage of, a variety of amendments. One measure, narrowly adopted, calls on schools to describe the “conservative resurgence of the 1980s and 1990s, including Phyllis Schlafly, the Contract with America, the Heritage Foundation, the Moral Majority, and the National Rifle Association.” Another that won approval says students should consider the “unintended consequences” of the Great Society programs of the 1960s, affirmative action, and Title IX.

GOP members, meanwhile, shot down an amendment put forth by Democrats that would have required schools to “examine the reasons the Founding Fathers protected religious freedom in America by barring government from promoting or disfavoring any particular religion over all others.”

Board member Terri Leo, a Republican, hailed the standards as a “world-class document” after the plan won tentative approval March 12, while Democrat Mary Helen Berlanga said she had a “very long list of reasons for voting against it,” including concern that it fails to “depict history in an accurate fashion.”

At least one Republican, Bob Craig, who voted against his GOP colleagues on some amendments but ultimately supported the package, said he has misgivings.

“I’m still not convinced that we’ve got the best document right now, but hopefully by May, with additional input from the public, from teachers, maybe we can reach that goal,” he said.

Beyond concerns about the influence of political and cultural agendas on the Texas standards, another issue is the sheer volume of information, especially names of people that schools will be expected to teach. The list grew steadily, thanks to board amendments.

“If we could just condense the [number of] names,” Democrat Lawrence A. Allen Jr., urged his fellow board members at the March meeting. “It takes away from the value and the ability to really do some critical analysis and teaching and evaluation. ... You only have time to deliver the information.”

The composition of the Texas board will see some changes, based on this month’s Texas primaries, though new members won’t join before the final vote on the standards in May. Perhaps most notable was the defeat of Don McLeroy, a leader of the board’s social-conservative bloc, by moderate Republican Thomas Ratcliff. Eight of the board’s 15 seats will be on the November ballot.

‘Too Precious’

In North Carolina, education officials have encountered plenty of resistance to a first draft of new social studies standards, especially because of concerns about when U.S. history is taught and how much attention it would get. The state education department received thousands of e-mail comments criticizing the draft, plus a strongly worded letter from a powerful lawmaker.

“Any changes the state makes to teaching U.S. history must be an enhancement to what students learn in high school and not downshifting in any way,” said Democratic Sen. Marc Basnight, his chamber’s president pro tempore. “Do not carry on with the thoughts of the changes as presented. U.S. history is too precious and important and must be taught in its entirety during the high school years.”

Vanessa W. Jeter, a spokeswoman for the department, emphasized that North Carolina’s draft standards will go through several rounds of revisions, and that the agency anticipates significant changes to the high school component, with more time likely to be carved out for U.S. history.

“One course probably will not cut it,” she said.

In general, department officials have emphasized, in responding to criticism of the first draft, that the idea in scaling back the breadth of the 11th grade U.S. history course was to allow students more time to study history in depth and to spread around some of the coverage, with additional emphasis before high school.

“We have been criticized in the past for having a curriculum that is an inch deep and a mile wide,” Ms. Jeter said.

But Holly Brewer, an associate professor of colonial and revolutionary American history at North Carolina State University in Raleigh who has worked to galvanize opposition to the draft, said recent statements from department officials have been misleading.

Ms. Brewer, a state coordinator for the National Council for History Education, takes issue, for example, with the notion that the plan would ensure students ultimately get “more history.”

“We looked all through the standards quite carefully at all the grade levels,” she said, and did not find evidence to support the state education department’s claim.

Ms. Brewer added: “In the early grades, there were huge gaps in coverage.”

She also asserted that because of pressure from No Child Left Behind Act requirements, most elementary schools “spend 15 minutes a week” on social studies.

John Dornan, the executive director of the Public School Forum of North Carolina, a Raleigh-based think tank, said he sees the dispute as a “classic clash” between ensuring students learn about the “global world” while also attending to U.S. history.

“I hope we can find a middle ground on this,” he said.

Lynne Munson, the president and executive director of Common Core, a Washington-based group that advocates giving students a strong grounding across disciplines, said it would be a big mistake to scale back the breadth of American history coverage in high school.

“I do think once you’re in high school and your intellectual development and background knowledge [have expanded], ... you can restudy the American past in a way that will bring more meaning than you might have been able to glean at earlier grades,” she said.

Nevertheless, analysts say that at least some states split U.S. history between a survey course in the 8th grade and another in high school. The North Carolina draft did not include such a survey course in the 8th grade, but did contain a 7th grade course called the “State, Nation, and World” from the 1600s to the early 1970s.

‘Kind of an Art’

In Ohio, the draft social studies standards, first issued for public comment in November, with a second draft released this month, would replace ones approved in 2002.

Stan Heffner, an associate superintendent at the Ohio education department, said the state has long been getting suggestions from teachers and others on how to improve the standards.

“Most importantly among them, and it’s not limited to social studies, teachers said, ‘We’ve got more standards than we know how to manage,’ ” he said. “If we want to get some depth, we want to identify the real key, fundamental standards, and also try to organize them in a way” to promote more sound “learning progressions.”

Furthermore, the state is aiming to better integrate the standards with essential skills, he said.

Mr. Heffner said Ohio has heard from a lot of groups advocating increased focus on specific areas of history and other topics, such as the American Revolution or military history, but is trying to find the right balance between appropriate coverage and giving teachers leeway to spend more time on a particular subject.

“It’s kind of an art,” he said.

In Colorado, meanwhile, the state board of education in December adopted a new set of social studies standardsRequires Adobe 
Acrobat Reader. Several people involved in that undertaking say it produced relatively little, if any, significant controversy.

Fritz Fischer, a history professor at Northern Colorado University who co-chaired the committee that led the standards rewrite, contrasts the effort in several ways with the process in Texas.

The Texas standards, Mr. Fischer noted, “have devolved into this long, long list of names, keeping people in, keeping people out. That’s going to be an endless debate.”

The mantra in Colorado, he said, was to devise “fewer, clearer, higher” standards. Also, unlike both Texas and North Carolina, he said, “we can’t dictate curriculum at the state level.”

In the end, one of the most striking differences compared with the Texas experience, Mr. Fischer said, was how the Colorado state board—whose members, he said, span the ideological spectrum—responded to the standards committee’s work.

“The state board, with very few exceptions, let us do our work and accepted what we did,” said Mr. Fischer, who is also the chairman of the National Council for History Education. The standards ultimately won unanimous board approval.

“It’s about good history and teaching and learning,” Mr. Fischer said. “It’s not about partisanship.”

HEALTH CARE LAW ALSO MAKES OVER STUDENT LENDING – BUT INCREASED SPENDING ON EARLY CHILDHOOD ED IS ELIMINATED, COMMUNITY COLLEGE AID REDUCED

Early-education advocates are now rethinking their legislative strategy.

By Alyson Klein | Ed Week | Vol. 29, Issue 27, Page 21

March 31, 2010 -- The health-care-overhaul bill that received final approval from Congress last week also makes major changes to the federal student-lending program, helping to shore up access to Pell Grants.

But proposed substantial new spending on early-childhood education was jettisoned, after Democrats found that the estimated savings from the planned student-loan overhaul would be too meager to pay for several new education priorities.

The student-loan revamp effectively eliminates the Federal Family Education Loan Program, which provides subsidies to student lenders. Instead, all loans would originate through the Direct Loan program, in which students borrow from the U.S. Treasury. The bill uses the savings in part to help shore up the Pell Grant program, which helps low-income students pay for college.

Pell Grants face a big shortfall because more students than expected have taken advantage of the aid in recent years, in part to bolster their skills in the tight job market.

Lawmakers originally had hoped to use a portion of the savings from the change—estimated by the Congressional Budget Office last year at $87 billion over 10 years—to help cover the cost of new funding for early-childhood education, school facilities, and community colleges.But, in part because of the expanded need for Pell Grants and in part because more schools joined the Direct Loan program over the past year, the CBO’s savings estimate is now much lower; one recent estimate was about $67 billion.

Early-education advocates are now rethinking their legislative strategy.

“Early childhood is drastically underfunded, and in light of this recession new funding is more important than ever,” said Helen Blank, the director of leadership and public policy at the Washington-based National Women’s Law Center.

But Ms. Blank acknowledged that the funding was wrapped up in a very complex debate that involved health care and the student-loan overhaul, and that early-education advocates now will have to regroup and figure out what to do next.

Community College Help

The original version of the college-lending legislation, as passed by the House of Representative last fall, would also have included a $10 billion boost for community colleges through a new program called the American Graduation Initiative.

And the House version of the bill would have provided about $4 billion over two years to districts to help with school modernization, renovation, and repair.

The current loan bill does include $2 billion to help community colleges beef up their education and training programs. And it would provide $750 million for a new College Access Challenge Grant program, which would help states and colleges bolster financial literacy and improve college completion.

The broader health-care law, called the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,places an excise tax on “high cost” health-insurance plans—an issue of major interest to the national teachers’ unions.

The tax will apply to plans that cost more than $10,200 for an individual or $27,500 for a family. Those thresholds, which will be indexed to inflation, are higher than those in a previous version of the bill passed by the Senate late last year.

Under the original Senate bill, the excise tax would have gone into effect in 2015. But the new provision pushes that deadline back to 2018, to give employers, employees, and plans more time to adjust.

In addition, there will be a mechanism that makes adjustments to the thresholds based on the age and the gender of the group-insurance pool. That’s a particularly important change for the teachers’ unions, because their membership is predominantly female and also includes a large percentage of middle-aged workers—demographic factors that can make insurance more costly.

“We’re completely supportive of the bill, and we think those changes were good changes for the good of working people,” said Bill Raabe, the director of collective bargaining and member advocacy for the 3.2 million-member National Education Association.

The health-care package also includes more than $250 million over five years to reinstate an abstinence-based sex education program recently terminated by the federal government with support from the Obama administration.

At the same time, the legislation also provides $375 million over the same period for a comprehensive sex education program called Personal Responsibility Education.

Staff Writer Stephen Sawchuk and Assistant Editor Erik W. Robelen contributed to this story.

NAEP SCORES: “THE NATION’S REPORT CARD” - California @ “Rock Bottom” in reading; National results are “disappointing”

NAEP: State shares rock bottom in U.S. reading scores

Jill Tucker, San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer

Thursday, March 25, 2010 - California remained at the bottom of the barrel in national test scores for reading, sharing last place with Louisiana, Arizona, New Mexico and Washington, D.C., according to the Nation's Report Card released Wednesday.

The state's reading scores have remained flat since the last assessment in 2007.

Few states showed improvement over the last two years on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, standardized tests given to a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students nationwide. A couple of states fell back.

In California, 54 percent of fourth-grade students and 64 percent of eighth-grade students tested in early 2009 scored at or above the basic reading level, a measure indicating a partial mastery of grade-level content. Nationally, 66 percent of fourth-graders and 74 percent of eighth-graders scored at basic or above levels.

Given California's size and diverse student population along with the relatively low amount of money spent per child on education, the state's scores aren't as bad as they appear, said David Gordon, Sacramento County schools superintendent and member of the National Assessment Governing Board.

"It's not really helpful to compare California to most of these other states," he said. "The level of investment we're making in our school system is really shameful."

California spends about $8,000 per student. New Jersey and New York spend about twice as much and score among the top states.

"I think given its circumstances, I would say California is holding its own," Gordon said. "It's hard to expect a lot more."

On average, California students perform at a basic level, but score lower than their national peers across virtually every socioeconomic demographic.

In the good-news category, the state's African American students moved from below basic to a basic level of reading competence this year.

But on the flip side, English learners lagged well behind their peers.

"In California, English learners make up a quarter of our student population, yet as a group, this population scores far behind nearly every other subgroup," said state Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell in a statement.

The tests are given to a sampling of students nationwide every two years, alternating each year between math and reading results.

Overall, the scores showed private school students score better than public school students and girls outscore boys.

Nationally and in California, the achievement gap between white and Asian students and their black and Hispanic peers remained as stubborn as ever.

California has seen some progress in state standardized tests, but that wasn't reflected in the national scores announced Wednesday.

A student questionnaire connected to the test results found that students who had access to books at home or who read for fun scored higher than their peers.

"Reading is fundamental to learning," O'Connell said. "Parents play a crucial role in helping their children build a solid foundation for learning by encouraging them to read every day."

How California fared on 2009 reading scores

The National Assessment of Educational Progress 2009 in Reading scores, on a 500-point scale, represent the results of a standardized reading test given to a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students.

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NAEP: Reading Results Deemed Disappointing

By Catherine Gewertz | Ed Week | Vol. 29, Issue 27

March 25, 2010 -- Reading scores stayed flat for 4th graders and rose only slightly for 8th graders on the most recent National Assessment of Educational Progress, results that some find disappointing after many years of intensive attention to improving the reading skills of American students.

The report released today on NAEP, commonly known as “the nation’s report card,” shows that 8th graders scored 264, on average, on a 500-point scale on the 2009 exam. That is 1 point higher than the last time the reading test was given, in 2007. At the 4th grade level, 2009 reading scores averaged 221, the same as in 2007.

Eighth graders’ reading scores have hovered between 262 and 264 since 2002, and have risen 4 points overall since 1992, the year that marks the beginning of this series of reading exams. Fourth graders’ scores, also, have risen 4 points since 1992, and since 2002 have stayed within 2 points of the average 2009 scores.

“What NAEP shows us over the past two decades is that in reading there have been only slight gains and no sustained trend of improvement,” Steven Paine, West Virginia’s commissioner of education and a member of the National Assessment Governing Board, which sets policy for NAEP, said at a news conference to announce the results. He called the findings “disappointing” given the “considerable amount of effort” devoted to improving reading. Even the 1-point 8th grade gain, while statistically significant, “is not sufficient,” he said.

Building reading skills has been one of the main focus areas for states for more than a decade as they have set up accountability systems aimed at raising student achievement.

At the federal level, the Reading Excellence Act, signed by President Bill Clinton in 1998, brought attention to the need for better reading instruction. The National Reading Panel’s 2000 report, which called for better approaches to teaching reading, was a key source in crafting the $6 billion Reading First program launched by President George W. Bush as part of the No Child Left Behind Act, signed in 2002. Reading First required key changes, including professional development, and the use of formative assessments, more structured curricula, and a sequence of interventions for struggling students.

In spite of those efforts, however, Mr. Paine noted that the proportion of 8th graders scoring at or above “proficient” on NAEP has risen only 3 percentage points, to 32 percent, since 1992. NAEP sets student-achievement levels in three categories: “basic,” “proficient” or “advanced.” The latest results show that one-quarter of 8th graders and one-third of 4th graders don’t reach the basic level.

The lack of improvement in 4th grade reading between 2007 and 2009 is “especially disappointing,” Mr. Paine said, because it parallels the December report on NAEP mathematics at that grade level. The math results, however, showed far more growth over time in students’ progress than the new report shows in their reading progress, a difference Mr. Paine deems “striking.”

One reason for the difference, he said, could be that learning math is largely confined to math classrooms, and the subject is taught with cohesive, sequential curricula reflecting standards adopted by national math groups and echoed in textbooks. Reading comprehension, by contrast, is acquired across all courses, with “no similar cohesion or emphasis” on a clear reading curriculum, he said. Also, students’ reading-comprehension skills can be deeply influenced by what they do outside school.

Bottom Up

Some officials saw the NAEP results as a call to arms. U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan urged support for putting the administration’s key education reforms, such as higher, common standards and better assessments, into practice.

“We shouldn’t be satisfied with these results,” he said in a statement. “By this and many other measures, our students aren’t on a path to graduate high school ready to succeed in college and the workplace.”

Carol Jago, the president of the National Council of Teachers of English, based in Urbana, Ill., said the results should remind teachers that adopting better reading-instruction strategies must go hand in hand with ensuring that students read more books.

“In the last five or 10 years, many of us have embraced many strategies, all the things we’ve figured out that help struggling readers do what accomplished readers do invisibly,” she said. “But we have to remember that it’s all in the service of reading a great deal more than students are reading today. And we need to be careful that they’re not just reading snippets of information. English teachers need to make sure what we’re doing in class is demanding from our students sustained, rigorous reading, thinking, and speaking.”

Officials found some encouragement in the proportion of students reaching the basic level or higher in 4th grade reading over the past decade. That number has gone from 59 percent in 2000 to 67 percent in 2009. Mr Paine attributed that to a focus on early reading instruction, the only area of reading “where there has recently been an emphasis and some agreement.”

Another area of optimism cited by officials of the assessment governing board was the progress made in reading by students at the lower achievement levels. The scores of 8th graders performing in the 10th percentile, for instance, rose 2 points since 2007 and 6 points since 1992. In 4th grade, average scores of those in the 10th percentile have risen 5 points since 1992. The scores of students in the 90th percentile, however, have not shown as much growth.

The greater gains by the lowest-performing students could reflect the effects of state accountability systems since the late 1990s, even before the passage of the federal No Child Left Behind Act, said Tom Loveless, the author of a recent report examining NAEP score trends and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think tank.

“It’s consistent with a story that says accountability systems are doing what they’re designed to do, boosting the lowest achievers,” he said. But he noted, as well, that the highest-achieving students did not appear to benefit from those same systems.

While the NAEP scores were relatively flat over the past two years, the long-term progress is “encouraging” because it suggests that the last decade’s focus on reading is paying off in 4th grade and “washing up” into 8th grade as well, said Michael L. Kamil, a Stanford University professor of education. But the lack of greater progress also illustrates some widespread problems with reading instruction, he said.

Teachers spend too much time on literary texts in the early grades, neglecting to arm students with skills they need to tackle informational texts beginning in 4th grade, and in grades 4-8, they “don’t do anything systematic” in reading instruction, he said.

“We are just now finally realizing that kids actually graduate from 3rd grade,” Mr. Kamil said.

Boys on the Move

Even as the scores of most student groups—girls and boys and those of various races and ethnicities—have risen over time, gaps since 2007 showed no improvement, and gaps since 1992 narrowed in only two areas: between black and white students in 4th grade and between boys and girls in 8th grade.

In fact, despite widespread concern about boys’ reading skills, the latest NAEP scores show boys making greater improvements than girls since 1992, Mr. Loveless pointed out.

The 2009 NAEP was the first based on a new reading frameworkRequires Adobe 
Acrobat Reader, or testing blueprint. The framework places more emphasis on literary and informational texts, uses a new way of assessing students’ vocabulary knowledge, and includes poetry. A NAGB analysis concluded that results from tests based on the new framework can be accurately compared with results of tests based on the previous framework, which had been used since 1992.

Among states, Kentucky alone saw increases in reading scores at both grade levels since 2007. Rhode Island and the District of Columbia saw scores rise only at the 4th grade level, and seven states—Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Utah—saw increases only in 8th grade.

Terry K. Holliday, Kentucky’s commissioner of education, attributed the gains to Reading First and to multiple state reading initiatives focusing on elementary and middle school. Reading coaches were dispatched to many schools to work with teachers, he said, and professional development in reading instruction was provided not just to English/language arts teachers, but to those in other subjects as well.

JUDGE BLOCKS CLOSING OF 19 NEW YORK CITY SCHOOLS

By SHARON OTTERMAN | New York Times

March 26, 2010 -- A judge on Friday blocked the closing of 19 schools for poor performance, finding the city engaged in “significant violations” of the new state law governing mayoral control of city schools.

The ruling, a setback to one of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s signature education policies, means the city will have to start over in making its case to close the schools, this time, the judge wrote, with “meaningful community involvement.”

Unless the decision is overturned, it will most likely result in all the schools’ remaining open for at least another year. The law requires the closing process to begin at least six months before the start of the next school year.

The decision cleared the path for high school acceptance letters, which had been delayed because of the lawsuit, to go out to eighth graders around the city.

The decision, by Justice Joan B. Lobis of State Supreme Court in Manhattan, was a victory for the United Federation of Teachers and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which joined more than a dozen elected leaders and parents in suing to stop the closings.

They argued that the city had failed to comply with the mayoral control law passed last year, which required the Department of Education to give detailed “educational-impact statements” describing the effect of each closing on students and surrounding schools.

Justice Lobis agreed with the plaintiffs’ contention that the department had issued boilerplate statements, which she found lacked “the detailed analysis that an impact statement mandates.” She found other procedural violations, including insufficient public notification before hearings.

“Today, the court has told the chancellor and the Department of Education that they are not above the law,” said Michael Mulgrew, the president of the teachers’ union.

The response from the city was quick — disagreeing with the judge’s decision and the rationale behind it. It promised an appeal.

“My view is that you don’t send students to failing schools, schools that can’t provide them what they need,” the schools chancellor, Joel I. Klein, said. “The sad thing is that the union would bring a lawsuit to resign kids to failing schools in order to save jobs. And ultimately, that is what this is about.”

Mr. Klein argued that the city had included the public sufficiently in the process. “I think the process was robust,” he added. “We literally met with thousands of people who expressed their views. We heard them, and in the end, we disagreed.”

The schools that received at least a temporary reprieve included Jamaica High School and Beach Channel High School in Queens; Christopher Columbus High School in the Bronx; Paul Robeson High School in Brooklyn; and Norman Thomas High School in Manhattan, along with smaller schools, including the Global Enterprise High School in the Bronx and the high school grades of the Choir Academy of Harlem.

“We are thrilled,” said Christine Rowland, a teacher and the United Federation of Teachers’ representative at Columbus High School. “I think there’s a chance now. It was so hard for us to get anyone to listen in the very tight space of time we’ve had.”

The city has closed 91 schools since 2002, many of them large high schools, replacing them with clusters of smaller schools and charter schools in the old schools’ buildings. Mr. Bloomberg credits the closings with significantly improving graduation rates, which average over 70 percent at the small schools and 63 percent citywide.

When a school closes, current students are allowed to stay until graduation, but no new classes are admitted.

The moves have always generated controversy, particularly when schools proposed for closing had shown some progress. For example, 12 of the schools scheduled to close this year received a grade of “proficient” on their last city quality review, and hundreds of students and alumni citywide spoke out in favor of effective programs at the closing schools, like one devised for mothers and pregnant teenagers at Robeson that offers day care and teaches parenting skills.

The judge wrote that the impact statement for Robeson, for example, did not say where young mothers in Brooklyn could find similar programs. This year, for the first time, the mayoral control law required a significant public role in closing decisions, requiring hearings, detailed statements of how the closings would affect the communities and a vote by the Panel for Educational Policy before the decisions were final.

On Jan. 26, the panel, which is controlled by the mayor, affirmed all 19 closings after nine hours of angry public comment from hundreds of teachers, students and parents.

Justice Lobis, who voided the panel’s decision, said the new law “created a public process with meaningful community involvement regarding the chancellor’s proposals.” The entire mayoral control law, she wrote, “must be enforced, not merely the portion extending mayoral control of the schools.”

While the ruling was a defeat for the mayor and the chancellor, it did not dispute the city’s right to close the schools or assert that the schools, which often have low graduation rates, were worth saving.

The city had argued in court that any violations of the law were too minor to warrant overturning the closings. Mr. Klein said Friday that he stood by his decision and that the ruling would not change his commitment to close the schools, and others. Mr. Bloomberg has vowed to close the lowest 10 percent of schools by the end of his term.

The lawsuit had held up some 85,000 high school acceptance letters that were due out on Wednesday. The city’s interpretation of the ruling is that it clears the way for all those letters to go out next week, although the plaintiffs disagree.

Students were required to state their high school preferences in early December, around the time the department began to reveal which schools it wanted to close. About 8,500 applied to the schools proposed for closing and were notified later that they could not attend them. Those students will receive acceptance letters from other schools next week, along with a note saying that they could revert to their original choice if the school remains open.

Destiny Donaldson, 13, an eighth grader at Frank D. Whalen Middle School in the Bronx, applied to Columbus and said that when she got a letter saying the school was no longer accepting new ninth graders, “I cried.”

“I thought it was wrong. I always wanted to go there. My friend went there and she went on to college.”

Nate Schweber contributed reporting.

TEXTBOOK CASES: As Texas shows, school book content must not be left to interest groups. California, take note.

“The problem is that these decisions are left in the hands of politicians and appointed board members who often know little about education and less about history.”

LA Times Editorial

March 28, 2010 -- Oh, those disingenuous Texans. Pretending to bring ideological balance to history textbooks when what they're really doing is weighting the books so heavily with conservative mores, you'd expect the state's backpack-laden school children to list to the right.

If the revisions proposed by the conservative faction of the Texas Board of Education are adopted in May, the state's textbooks will raise the study of the inaugural speech of Confederate President Jefferson Davis to the same level as that of Abraham Lincoln. They will downplay the role of Thomas Jefferson, in part because he coined the phrase "separation of church and state," and will imply that the Founding Fathers were Christian even though historians have found evidence that not all of them held Christian beliefs. The internment of a relatively small number of people of German and Italian heritage during World War II would be emphasized to make it appear as though there wasn't a racial component to interning more than 100,000 Japanese Americans. This amounts to just plain disinformation.

Before Californians look down their noses, though, they should consider the rules governing this state's textbooks. The state regulates the portrayal of genders, minority groups, the elderly and the disabled by requiring proportional representation that also cannot show any group in a negative light. Thus, as education expert Diane Ravitch writes, the elderly must be portrayed as fit and lively even if reality tells us that some cope with illness and disability. Publishers have been discouraged from portraying people in poor countries as poor -- because that would stereotype those nations -- and told to soften language on AIDS in Africa so as not to reflect badly on that continent.

A veto threat by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger stopped a 2006 bill that would have required textbooks to show a diversity of sexual orientation and include "the contributions of people who are lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender to the total development of California and the United States," basing choices of important people not solely on their accomplishments but on their sexual orientation.

Each textbook adoption in the state becomes a battle in which religious, ethnic and other groups demand changes so that they are seen in a more positive light. In 2006, a group of Hindus wanted to change social studies books to say that women historically had "different" rights in India, not fewer, despite practices such as child marriage, bride harassment and unequal property rights, and to eliminate certain information about the caste system, even though scholars insisted that the information was correct as written. The state agreed to the changes -- until an opposing group took issue. That's not to mention the time the state rejected a children's reader because it included “The Little Engine That Could,” a classic story in which the train is portrayed as male -- gender stereotyping.

Nor are these the only emotional disputes over textbooks. In 2001, the government of Japan approved a textbook that defended that nation's actions during World War II and downplayed the 1937 massacre in Nanjing. The textbook drew heated protest from China. Last year, politicians in Japan and South Korea began exploring the possibility of writing a joint history textbook with China to be used in all three nations, but as one Japanese official put it, "The countries have been unable to agree on historical matters."

In the debate over what the nation's children should be taught, we all view ourselves as moral purists, the people who want schools to teach facts as well as the skills and ethical values that will enable the next generation to succeed. The problem is that we can't agree on what those skills and ethical values are, or, for that matter, on which facts are important and sometimes what those facts are.

In California, textbooks might offer repeated lessons on the great diversity of race and religion, but what about diversity of thought? There are elements of the Texas revisions that are obviously ridiculous, but there are others that clearly would bring more balance to education. We wouldn't object to teaching about modern-day conservative groups such as the Moral Majority, one of the proposed additions. Students should learn about the breadth of opinion in this country. It's also appropriate for teenagers to debate the value of international treaties, as the Texas board wants them to.

The problem is that these decisions are left in the hands of politicians and appointed board members who often know little about education and less about history. The result hasn't been simply a slanting of textbook material but a simultaneous flattening of it. Publishers are so intent on meeting the long list of minutia demanded by states such as California and Texas that they have neglected to produce engaging books. Strange to say, the word "history" has its roots in the Greek word meaning narrative or learning by inquiry. Modern education has removed both.

We agree that textbooks need to be inclusive, unlike earlier versions that depicted white, middle-class people almost exclusively, down to the illustrations of children in elementary math problems. But when attempts to push one viewpoint or another distort the curriculum and reduce its accuracy, all students are harmed.

California and Texas have a disproportionate impact on the nation's textbooks because they are the largest of the two dozen or so states that adopt textbooks statewide. And because of the two states' complicated micromanagement of what the books can say and illustrate, it is the biggest publishing houses that are best able to work with them -- and to sell the resulting books across the country. Schools are left with a lack of variety and little competition in the industry.

Textbook information should be compiled by scholars and written by talented storytellers, not by politicians, interest groups or publishers' corporate committees. The books should awaken children not just to the diversity of people but the diversity of opinions in our nation. We agree with Ravitch that part of the problem is statewide textbook adoption. If school districts were empowered to pick their own books, allowing a more competitive textbook market to thrive, there would be less opportunity for lobbyists of any stripe to have undue influence over the process. What we should ask of districts is that they produce results -- educated young adults -- not that they do it according to a rigid formula. Increased competition from smaller publishers would encourage the publication of richer learning materials -- the textbook revision that schools need most.

TOO MANY STUDENTS FORCED TO RETAKE ALGEBRA

 

 

By John Fensterwald in The Educated Guess

March 24th, 2010 -- California’s pursuit of algebra for all is becoming algebra forever for too many students.

A new study sponsored by the Noyce Foundation that looked into the dark art of math placement found that unexplainably large numbers of eighth grade Algebra students are being assigned to repeat Algebra in high school, to their detriment. At least half of these students end up doing worse in the course the second time around. A high proportion of the repeaters are non-Asian minority students, the data indicate.

The Noyce Foundation is due to release its Pathways Study later this month. The lead researchers presented the findings at the second of three forums on “Closing the Achievement Gap in Silicon Valley,” co-sponsored by the Silicon Valley Education Foundation and the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.

smf notes that the Educated Guess is a publication of, and Fensterwald is an employee of the Silicon Valley Education Foundation

The study was limited to nine school districts in the Bay Area, but there’s no reason to doubt the same pattern isn’t statewide. The implication is that subjective and restrictive math placement policies are inhibiting students from pursuing and qualifying for a four-year state university.

The filters also may be turning students off to technical and scientific careers by branding them as math failures early in high school. Steve Waterman, a retired Bay Area superintendent and lead researcher, went as far as to tell the Silicon Valley audience that the Valley wouldn’t have to import so many engineers if schools stopped disenfranchising students from higher math. It’s that serious a problem.

California is alone among states in promoting universal Algebra I for eighth graders. From 2003 to 2008, the number of eighth graders enrolled in Algebra increased 63 percent, to 247,000, and the number of students who passed the state Algebra I test increased 76 percent. The rate of proficiency actually rose from 39 percent to 42 percent.

 algebragrowth1

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Meanwhile, the debate rages whether many eighth graders are prepared for algebra. The California School Boards Assn. and the Assn. of California School Administrators have sued the State Board of Education over the universal Algebra policy. The issue remains in court.

Slightly more than half of students statewide and in the nine-district Noyce study took  Algebra I in eighth grade last year. Researchers found that 65 percent of the nearly 2,000 students studied were reassigned Algebra or Honors Algebra (some schools didn’t offer the latter) in ninth grade instead of Geometry. Even 35 percent of the students who got a B- or better grade were required to repeat the course. And most surprising – or shocking — 60 percent of students who scored proficient or advanced on the CST, the standardized algebra test, were forced to repeat in ninth grade.

Passing Algebra in eighth grade is a gateway to high school. As Waterman pointed out, getting through it puts a student on a path for Advanced Placement math as a senior and, as importantly, places the students in a network of serious students that can counter negative peer influences while encouraging one another to do well. The converse, unfortunately, appears true, too, when students  view themselves as math failures and repeat algebra, often using the same curriculum and same textbook. Half of the students who got at least a B- in eighth grade algebra did no better or worse the second time around.

Districts and schools differ in how they decide whether students get placed in Algebra I and subsequently in Geometry. Some go by grades, others by teachers’  and counselors’ recommendations and standardized test scores – or a combination of all of them.  Some high schools give their own placement exams. Decisions on ninth grade placement begin early in the spring of eighth grade, months before results on standardized tests are known, so that master schedules can be made. High school schedulers would have to be flexible to reassign students once the CST results are known in August.

Then there are unknowable factors – parental pressure, unconscious ethnic or racial bias,  and tensions between middle and high school teachers — that go into the black box of decision-making. There are correlations between race, ethnicity and parents’ education – but not, interestingly enough, gender — in which students are selected for Algebra in eighth grade, the study found. Asians, whites and children whose parents have college degrees were disproportionately chosen.

The study numbers were smaller – and perhaps less reliable – in examining those students with a B- or better in Algebra I a year later. More Asians were assigned Geometry than Hispanics or whites (too few African Americans were in the study sample to draw conclusions).

The researchers speculated that some middle school teachers were  too conservative in their recommendations, passing along only their best students for geometry; some have been castigated by high school teachers for recommending too many.

David Foster, director of the Silicon Valley Math Initiative for the Noyce Foundation, noted that English teachers don’t apply similar restrictive criteria to deny students from taking freshman English. High school math teachers, he said, have to change their belief systems.

“Math teachers seem to believe their role in life is to separate wheat from the chaff,” he told me, referring to the large numbers of Algebra repeaters.  “There is no other discipline where failing half kids every year is seen as anything but failure.”

(Fensterwald will pass on the url for the study as soon as it is released. In addition, EdSource, as a followup to its massive survey of middle schools, plans to look at much of the same data on algebra on larger scale. Its findings should be out this fall. And the Silicon Valley Education Foundation and Silicon Valley Community Foundation plan to take a harder look at the issue of math placements in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties in coming months. Meanwhile, I encourage middle and high school math teachers to share their thoughts.)

THIS JUST IN: Coverage of contract settlement - LA Times/Daily News/NBC/S.F. Chronicle/AP

 

LA Unified, teachers and administrators agree to shorten school year

by Jason Song – LATimes/LANow blog

March 27, 2010 |  1:24 pm

Los Angeles school district and union officials announced Saturday that they have agreed to cut a dozen instructional days over the next two years to balance the budget.

If approved by members of both the teachers and administrators unions, the move would save the district about $140 million, according to Los Angeles Unified School District officials. The district is facing a $640-million deficit.

District officials had been urging unions to make concessions to help with the budget crisis, and several      have already agreed to furloughs.

Administrators agreed to the furlough days on Monday night, and the teachers union reached a deal late Friday, representatives said at a news conference Saturday.

"It is extremely important in going forward that we have this kind of partnership," said Supt. Ramon C. Cortines.

Five days would be cut from this year's calendar and seven from next year's calendar, although educators would have two extra paid professional development days next year.

Under a new state law aimed at easing the budget crisis, school districts still will receive full funding for a year even if they eliminate some instructional days. 

The deal also would preserve current student to teacher ratios in elementary and middle schools and would save about 1,800 teacher jobs as well as 300 librarian, nurse and counselor positions.

Deal saves 2000 LAUSD jobs

Los Angeles Daily News - Connie Llanos – ‎3/28/2010

After months of negotiations, leaders of the Los Angeles Unified School District teachers union announced Saturday they had ...

The Budget Crisis Affects Teachers' Pockets and Students' Plates

NBC Los Angeles - John Adams - ‎3/27/10

Unions representing teachers, administrators and the nation's largest school district have agreed to shorten the school year by five days this ...

Los Angeles school year shortened in teachers deal

San Francisco Chronicle – 3/27/10

Unions representing Los Angeles teachers and administrators reached a deal Saturday with the LA Unified School District that would shorten the school year ...

Los Angeles school year shortened in teachers deal

The Associated Press – 3/27/10

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles teachers union says it has reached a deal with the school district that would shorten the school year by at least five days, ...

Saturday, March 27, 2010

UTLA + AALA ANNOUNCE TENTATIVE CONTRACT SETTLEMENT, SHORTENED SCHOOL YEARS FOR THIS & NEXT YEAR

On Friday night UTLA, representing teachers,  and LAUSD reached a tentative two-year contractual agreement for 2009-2011. AALA , representing administrators, reached agreement Monday - concluding more than three months of negotiations. The tentative agreement provides for the District to shorten the 2009-2010 school year by five days and the 2010-2011 school year by seven days (five instructional days and two pupil free days).   See Attachment A, following , for specifics on the calendar changes for this year.

UTLA reaches tentative agreement to stop LAUSD class-size increases & save jobs

UTLA ANNOUNCEMENT FROM THE UTLA WEBSITE

THE MEMBER VOTE
(April 7-9)

Tentative UTLA Agreement text

  • UTLA members will vote on the tentative agreement at school sites April 7-9.
  • The voting timeline is very tight to cause the least disruption to sites planning for next year.
  • There will be a citywide chapter chair meeting at 5 p.m. on Monday, April 5, at Roybal LC to distribute balloting materials.

 

27 March, 2009 - On March 26, UTLA reached a tentative agreement (see text) with LAUSD that would maintain class sizes and save more than 2,100 jobs for the 2010-11 school year without implementing a permanent pay cut. UTLA’s bargaining team successfully pushed back against LAUSD’s demand for a 12% salary reduction. The deal would have to be approved by UTLA members. Key points include:

  • Class size maintained at current levels
    UTLA’s negotiating team preserved current K-8 class sizes. K-3 would be restored to 24-1 and grades 4-8 restored to current normed staffing levels. The District had demanded 29-1 in K-3 and an increase of two in grades 4-8 (no increases had been planned for grades 9-12). 
  • 2,109-plus jobs saved
    The number of jobs saved is much higher than LAUSD’s initial proposal, which was to use much of the furlough savings for other budget areas. Under this agreement, 1,825 teaching jobs would be saved as well as 284 positions of health and human services professionals, counselors, librarians, and ROC-ROP instructors. Savings on furlough days taken by employees funded by Title I and other categorical funds would also be used to buy back additional health and human services positions, librarians, and secondary class-size reduction positions.
  • Five furlough days in 2009-10 and seven in 2010-11  For this year, schools would be shut down on May 28, plus four days at the end of each calendar’s instructional school year. The dates for the seven furlough days for 2010-11 would be negotiated. Employees would receive a full year of service credit for STRS purposes.
  • Two new paid professional development days added to 2010-11
    These days would help offset the furlough days.
  • Other items in the agreement
    - Positive changes to the Public School Choice process that align with UTLA’s policy of playing a central role in school reform, including improving the timeline in which to write proposals and develop parent and teacher support for school change.
    -  A fair transfer process for teachers whose schools are changing grade configurations.
    -  LAUSD would dismiss the lawsuit against UTLA for the planned May 15 strike.

UTLA members will vote on the agreement at school sites April 7-9. There will be a citywide chapter chair meeting at 5 p.m. on Monday, April 5, at Roybal LC to distribute balloting materials. The voting timeline is very tight to cause the least disruption to sites planning for next year. A detailed Q&A will be soon posted on utla.net.

 

AALA/LAUSD CONTRACT HIGHLIGHTS

from the Associaed Administrators of Los Angeles UPDATE| Week of March 22, 2010

March 25, 2010 - On Monday, March 22, 2010, AALA and the District reached a tentative two-year contractual agreement for 2009-2011, concluding more than three months of intense negotiations. The tentative agreement provides for the District to shorten the 2009-2010 school year by five days and the 2010-2011 school year by seven days (five instructional days and two pupil free days). The agreement will remain tentative until AALA members ratify it (details will be available soon). Note: UTLA must also agree to the shortened school years for the furlough days to take effect.

In exchange for AALA’s acceptance of the 12 furlough days, the District agreed to the following concessions:

• The District will not seek additional pay cuts from AALA members for 2010-2011.

• The District will restore 100+ school-based administrative positions that would have otherwise been cut.

• The District will meet annually with AALA to review possible revisions of administrative staffing norms.

• AALA will gain extended protections for members subject to demotion or dismissal.

• The District will provide two professional development days in 2010-2011 to K-12 school-based administrators assigned on B, D, or E basis. AALA members will be paid their regular rate. The days are for reviewing student test data and planning instruction.

• Beaudry and Local District AALA members reassigned from A to B basis will receive seven days of Z basis time in 2010-2011 at their regular rate. This will allow continuing services to be provided for the District’s remaining year-round schools.

• The District will create a new Professional Development Advisory Committee for administrators. Half of the committee members will represent AALA.

• The District will notify AALA in writing no fewer than 15 calendar days prior to the application deadline of any vacant or new administrative positions.

• AALA members will have parity in salary increases with any other certificated bargaining unit during the contractual period.

Please be aware that AALA remains in regular communication with the Superintendent about other key nonnegotiable issues that impact our membership. We will keep you informed on these matters as our discussions progress.

 

Attachment A to the UTLA MOU identifies the proposed furlough and shutdown days for this year

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L.A. UNIFIED GIVES UP EFFORT TO GET MORE STATE MONEY TO KEEP STUDENT BATHROOMS CLEAN

By Howard Blume | LA Times LA Now blog

March 26, 2010 |  5:01 pm -- The Los Angeles Unified School District has withdrawn a claim that sought millions of dollars in new state funding to keep student bathrooms clean, unlocked and in working order.

The district had sought $22 million -- and about $9 million annually -- in the wake of a 2003 state law requiring that restrooms “shall at all times be maintained and cleaned regularly, fully operational and stocked at all times with toilet paper, soap, and paper towels or functional hand dryers.”

The law also required that bathrooms be unlocked when students need them except when closed for specific repairs.

About a year later, L.A. Unified submitted a claim to the California Commission on State Mandates, which has the authority to decide that the state must foot the bill when a new law creates new costs for a public agency.

The nation’s second-largest school system said that in 2004 it had spent $13.7 million for repairs and upgrades and nearly $9 million for additional workers. The district’s new standard has been to “routinely clean bathrooms as often as every night and spot clean and restock them twice a day,” said district spokeswoman Shannon Haber.

But the commission's staff was unmoved, noting, among other things, that since 1948, state law has required “sufficient patent flush water closets.” The new law merely clarified “sufficient” and established a new complaint and response process, according to the staff analysis.

The law itself resulted from a broadcast news investigation of poorly maintained bathrooms at more than 50 schools. Bathroom issues have periodically plagued L.A. Unified. In 2000, interim Supt. Ramon C. Cortines pledged a “books and bathrooms” initiative. (The books portion referred to textbook shortages.)

The subsequent furor, in 2003, prompted calls for outside inspections and forced Cortines’ successor, Roy Romer, to pledge more resources. And that’s when the district also filed its claim.

“We were trying to take advantage of every opportunity to get projects funded,” said Mark Hovatter, director of maintenance and operations. “We saw this as a chance to get state money because we were doing something above and beyond what we were what doing before. We never had a 100% expectation of being successful. It was more like applying for a grant.”

By 2010, the expectation had dropped to near 0%, so officials gave up rather than wait for the seven-member commission to reject their claim. The commission was scheduled to act Friday; L.A. Unified withdrew the claim Thursday.

The district’s current challenges include preserving efforts to keep bathrooms clean during an ongoing budget crisis. Overall custodial services are cut 20% in the tentative budget of Supt. Cortines, who returned to the top job in late 2008.

Friday, March 26, 2010

A LESSON ABOUT SPEAKING UP: Immigrant parents must demand improvement at kids' schools. Case in point: L.A. Unified's troubled Markham Middle campus.

 

Hector Tobar | LA Times Columnist

 

5:23 PM PDT, March 25, 2010 | The parents I met on 104th Street in Watts are immigrants from Mexico, for the most part, but they're well established in Los Angeles.

They own pickup trucks and vans, and many proudly claim to be either legal residents or naturalized U.S. citizens. Even though Spanish is their first language, most have lived here a decade or so and are fairly fluent in English.

One aspect of U.S. culture, however, remains a great mystery to them: the school system.

"In Durango I learned my times tables by the time I was in third grade," Gerardo Jasso, a 43-year-old metal polisher told me, describing his childhood in northern Mexico. "I had to memorize them."

Now Jasso has a son in the eighth grade at Markham Middle School who struggles to remember the answer to six times eight.

You'd think that a wealthy U.S. city like Los Angeles could boast of better schools than the impoverished urban and rural corners of Latin America from which Jasso and many others departed in search of a better life. But at Markham*, one of the most troubled campuses in the Los Angeles Unified School District, that may not be the case.

"When I went to school, I always carried a backpack and books," said a 30-year-old cook named Fidel, who grew up in Guerrero, Mexico, and never got past grade school. "But here, my daughter doesn't carry anything. She says she doesn't have any homework. Ever."

I met Fidel and other parents as they sat in their parked trucks and vans, waiting for their children to emerge through the campus gates.

A minute or so later, as if to prove his point, Fidel's daughter walked up in a sky-blue Markham T-shirt but in possession of no educational materials other than her brain.

Has Fidel ever walked into his daughter's classrooms and demanded more of her teachers? No, he said. And the mildly perplexed look on his face told me it's never even occurred to him that he could.

Fidel needs to start complaining soon. Because we won't have great schools again in L.A. until working, immigrant parents start to demand them. I know they're busy, I know they work hard. But their kids make up a big chunk of the student body. And if more of them don't speak out, all of us L.A. parents will suffer.

These days being an L.A. parent with a school-age child is a job unto itself, as many a desperate mom and dad can attest. Those of us who are educated quickly learn to cajole, complain, smile and plead with teachers and school officials on behalf of our kids.

Like shoppers, we scour the city for the best deals. We scramble in search of magnets, charters or private schools.

Once we buy into a school, we feel it's our right to hold its teachers and principal accountable.

The Spanish-speaking parents I talked to at Markham don't quite know they can do those things. They grew up in countries where people are taught to respect the authority of schoolteachers -- "el maestro and la maestra" -- as much as Americans respect judges.

"I want my son to finish his studies," one Markham parent told me in Spanish when I asked him his educational goals. "And I want him to behave himself."

Many immigrant parents believe that their local public school is there to make good on the government's legal obligation to educate their children well enough to get by in the world.

They are naïve to think this way.

Markham and two other L.A. schools are the subject of a class-action lawsuit filed last month contending that state budget cuts and the resulting layoffs of LAUSD teachers had an adverse effect on underperforming schools.

Younger teachers who work at tough schools like Markham were among the first on the chopping block. At Markham, more than half the teachers were suddenly gone, replaced by a series of rotating substitutes. The school was thrown into chaos.

Catherine Lhamon, an attorney with the public interest law firm Public Counsel, said state and district officials should have foreseen that some schools would be "decimated" by the cuts.

After Public Counsel and two other firms filed the suit, two students from Markham spoke to The Times about the conditions there. An eighth-grade Markham teacher penned a Times op-ed. Even the principal, Tim Sullivan, spoke out in support of the suit. "I've been working in schools for 21 years and I have never before now felt the sense of hopelessness . . . that I feel around me now," he said.

But I couldn't get any of the adults with Spanish surnames who were listed as plaintiffs in the suit to talk to me.

Outside Markham this week, most of the parents I talked to hadn't even heard of the lawsuit. Some were reluctant to tell me their full names.

All had complaints about the school, though most were unaware that Markham's test scores are in the bottom tenth of schools statewide.

Rosa Mendez, 38, told me she talked to school officials about her ninth-grade daughter's poor reading and math skills. She said they told her to file a "request to the state." But she decided it wasn't worth the effort. "For what?" she asked me in Spanish. Para que? "You complain and they don't do anything."

Others described meetings with school officials about safety and fights at the school.

For parents like Fidel, the cook with a grade-school education, violence is the one thing that will lead them to get in the face of a school official.

But these parents don't seem to know that if they don't fight the system, their children will suffer a fate more enduring than a black eye. Principal Sullivan would like them to know he has an advisory council with a small number of dedicated parents -- and he could use a lot more members.

Another mom, born in El Salvador but a U.S. citizen, told her 11-year-old daughter to talk to me. The daughter described disorderly classrooms, a school "lockdown" and other scary incidents.

A few hours later, that same mom called me at The Times and begged that I not print her daughter's name.

"My husband got mad at me," she told me. "He said, 'Why did you let her speak to him?' Everything my daughter told you is true. But sometimes you get in trouble for telling the truth."

And sometimes, señora, speaking the truth loudly and openly is the only thing that can save you.

 

* Markham Middle School is a Partnership for Los Angeles Schools (PLAS) school  …one of Mayor Villaraigosa's schools.  The PLAS website claims it is not an LAUSD school ("The Partnership for Los Angeles Schools is the largest non-district school operator in Los Angeles" ) – a point of contention with the district itself –  and trumpets the mayor's involvement ("…and given its close relationship with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa…").

If the mayor is involved as mayor that involvement is unconstitutional in California. see Mendoza v. California [Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BS105481] - (popularly: LAUSD v. Villaraigosa )