Sunday, January 29, 2012

The frumious Bandersnatch.


Onward! 4LAKids
4LAKids: Sunday 29•Jan•2012
In This Issue:
 •  ADULT EDUCATION ON L.A. UNIFIED'S CHOPPING BLOCK
 •  From the same wonderful folks who brought you 'Grading the Teachers': HOW TO GRADE A TEACHER
 •  COST-CUTTING CHANGES SET FOR LAUSD
 •  STAMP OUT ‘EARLY START’ NOW! - Avoid More Chaos at LA Unified!
 •  HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest (but not neccessariily the best) of the Stories from Other Sources
 •  EVENTS: Coming up next week...
 •  What can YOU do?


Featured Links:
 •  Follow 4 LAKids on Twitter - or get instant updates via text message by texting "Follow 4LAKids" to 40404
 •  PUBLIC SCHOOLS: an investment we can't afford to cut! - The Education Coalition Website
 •  4LAKids Anthology: All the Past Issues, solved, resolved and unsolved!
 •  4LAKidsNews: a compendium of recent items of interest - news stories, scurrilous rumors, links, academic papers, rants and amusing anecdotes, etc.
Someone thought up "Credit Default Swaps" and gave them that name. Someone else imagined+named "Value Added Analysis of Teacher Performance". Lewis Carroll said nonsensically to Beware the Jabberwock – and George Orwell told us not to believe the Newspeak.


CAROL CORBETT BURRIS, principal of South Side High School on Long Island, writes that she should be a cheerleader for the New York State value-added/test-score-driven evaluation system for educators. She’s the principal of a very successful high school where students get great test scores, she has a supportive superintendent. Her personal “score,” in all probability, will be high.

“However,” she warns: “The right question to ask is not whether this evaluation system is good or bad for adults, but rather whether it is good or bad for students.” | http://t.co/blb8NPE0

Lest we forget, test givers and test takers alike, there is no correct answer to the wrong question.


IN HIS STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS [http://1.usa.gov/zkyabp] President Obama said:

“Teachers matter.” (He delivered that line with a breathy confidentiality: ‘You and I, we know this is true’.)

“So instead of bashing them, or defending the status quo, let’s offer schools a deal. Give them the resources to keep good teachers on the job, and reward the best ones. In return, grant schools flexibility: To teach with creativity and passion; to stop teaching to the test; and to replace teachers who just aren’t helping kids learn.”

(Did he mean: I have come to praise teachers …and to bury them in competition for merit pay? Note that I imply that ‘teaching to the test’ is a bad thing – but evaluating teacher performance and ‘rewarding the best teachers’ and ‘replacing’ the unhelpful ones based on the test is good thing.)

And remember: The status quo IS NCLB and Race to the Top and Gates+Broad ®eform, Inc.

The President also said:

“We also know that when students aren’t allowed to walk away from their education, more of them walk the stage to get their diploma. So tonight, I call on every State to require that all students stay in high school until they graduate or turn 18.” [ see: Underwhelmed - Scratching the Surface of Obama’s Education Rhetoric]

(Didn’t the president teach constitutional law at the University of Chicago? Where is the constitutional provision about presidents requiring states to do things? This sounds like a national mandate-for (or a right-to) free universal public education. I’m for it – but is that what he meant?)

The Federal Government’s previous forays in public education have not exactly been all wonderfulness. See: Diane Ravitch Speaks Out: "NCLB HAS BEEN A DISASTER, AND THE WAIVERS ARE A POISON PILL"


IN LAUSD THIRTY ADULT SCHOOLS offer 350,000 students a chance to earn high school diplomas or learn English and career skills. In Sandy Banks LA Times column [ADULT EDUCATION ON L.A. UNIFIED'S CHOPPING BLOCK] you will read that Adult Ed - already cut in half - is being 'zeroed out' of the budget.

Banks presciently opines that "zero" might turn out to be an accounting gimmick or a political ploy… but for now, it has stoked the fears of adult students and their teachers.

Superintendent Deasy disagrees that adult education's value is somehow reflected in his budget line.

“The program may be ‘zeroed out’, but it isn't being singled out, he said.

"There are so many things that are going to be zeroed out of the budget, this is just the tip of the iceberg." Deasy ticked off a list of likely cuts: preschool programs, elementary art, summer school and thousands of administrators, teachers, nurses, custodians, gardeners and cafeteria workers.”

Deasy’s argument here isn’t just disingenuous; it’s almost evil.

He’s saying that what’s being done is bad: cutting preschool and art and summer school and Student Medical Services and custodians (not to mention school libraries and librarians and after school programs – or the Title One programs at 23 schools – those are so last semester!) …so eliminating Adult Ed is no worse.

The 24th floor leadership aren’t reducing high-states testing or Deasy’s signature value-added/test-score-driven evaluation system for teachers – programs that reduce the value of instruction. It’s full-speed-ahead with the “Early Start” calendar.

I was reminded by a reader last week that the late John Liechty grasped the punitive and non-teaching character of standards based education years ago. In institutionally underserving disadvantaged students of color and poverty Liechty said: “No one creates more subcultures in Los Angeles than LAUSD itself.”

A colleague of John’s wrote: “What was central to John was recognizing the dignity and worth of each child. What he meant was thinking that each child is the same - and delivering education with this wrong premise, was completely wrong. And as the momentum for the attack on schools and teachers began to rear its ugly head more prominently (it began, after all, in the mid-1980s), John vehemently warned. ‘Pay attention! You aren’t seeing what’s coming!’”

We were warned. And what was coming is upon us. Reform with an ®. [ see: “®eformers” or “Post Reformers” or “Post-Post-Reformers”]

Adult and Vocational Ed – and those other expended/expended programs – from early ed to after school programs and summer school to school libraries and the arts and nurses etc. – especially serve those kids who aren’t “just the same”. The ones who don’t have music lessons and AYSO and Little League and home libraries and English-spoken-at home; who don’t have Montessori preschools and medical insurance. The ones who need to get a job at sixteen – or who can’t get the class they need during the day because they don’t fit into the school’s master schedule. Because, gentle readers, many of the ‘adults’ in Adult Ed are regular students: sixteen-thru-nineteen year olds trying to make ends meet and credits add up – maybe getting past mistakes they’ve made (or not of their making) – not-yet-adults in the adult world.

Some are children raising children. Some adults in adult schools are losing their Adult Ed programs and their opportunity while their children are loosing their opportunity for quality Early Childhood Education.

Did I mention how the economy has already hammered disadvantaged, under-educated youth?

After all, no one will ever miss Transitional Kindergarten because no one will ever have it!

But an unforeseen+unintended consequence of the so-called “new-freedom” of “funding flexibility” allows Districts to ‘zero out’ specifically targeted programs like Adult Ed and Early Childhood Ed and all the rest and spend it on something else. After all, they did it in Oakland. And we in L.A. want to so to be like Oakland! [see Gertrude Stein on Oakland]


ELSEWHERE THE FALLOUT FROM THE LAUSD STEALTH REDISTRICTING+REORGANIZATION fell with a soft thud – interestingly enough with Dr. Jaime Aquino taking point. http://bit.ly/AldpB2 + http://lat.ms/wrrMLg (This should not to be confused with the City of L.A. Council Redistricting, which is proving ugly; The County of LA Supervisorial Redistricting, which has proven ugly; and the LAUSD School Board Redistricting, which hasn’t really started and has to be done by March 1.

GOINGS-ON AT LAUSD PROVED UNPOPULAR at a Valley Town Hall on Wednesday Night – "Wednesday night was a tough one for LAUSD Superintendent John Deasy..." - but the Superintendent used that forum to launch the campaign for a too-little+mistimed parcel tax. http://bit.ly/ABOwX9 + http://bit.ly/zO01uW

EdVoice SENT OUT AN E-MAIL attacking people in LAUSD whom they agree with and congratulating the brave (though anonymous) parents who are suing over LAUSD mollycoddling the usual rats nest of bad teachers in Doe v. Deasy. http://bit.ly/xUV7OO Mayor Tony weighed-in in support of the Does from somewhere out of town. http://bit.ly/xC4QpN EdVoice (an asrtroturf front for ®eform) – the bankroller of the lawsuit – stands behind (or hides behind) the brave anonymous parents. As the Plaintiff Does and Defendant Deasy – and EdVoice and Mayor Tony are all in agreement they should form a barbershop quartet and sing the Theme from Bad Teacher: The Movie (sadly un-nominated for any Academy Awards) in four part harmony down at the Courthouse.

Of course taxpayer (ie: the student’s) money is being used to “defend” the suit.

(There is another, real lawsuit on educational funding equity also being contested called Doe v. California. http://bit.ly/yrLkcp Different, non-anonymous Does, I assure you.)

So there you have it: the week ending Jan 28, 2012. Take it, I don’t want it anymore.

¡Onward/Adelante! - smf


ADULT EDUCATION ON L.A. UNIFIED'S CHOPPING BLOCK
WITH FINANCIAL WOES IN SACRAMENTO AND NEW FREEDOM ON SPENDING EARMARKED FUNDS, THE DISTRICT PROPOSES A BUDGET THAT HAS NO MONEY TO HELP ADULTS GET HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMAS, LEARN ENGLISH OR ACQUIRE CAREER SKILLS.

By Sandy Banks | LA Times columnist | http://lat.ms/zVrNMS

January 28, 2012 :: Adult education teacher Planaria Price is used to the ups and downs of budget planning in the giant Los Angeles Unified School District.

Price remembers boom times in the late 1980s, when classes at Evans Community Adult School near downtown ran 24 hours a day. Money was flowing and immigrants flocked to English lessons, hoping for legalization under federal amnesty programs.

And Price has stuck it out through tough downturns, when classes were cut, teachers were laid off and many vocational programs closed.

Still, nothing in her 39 years as a teacher at Evans prepared her for the news that the district's entire adult education division may be on the chopping block.

"The program's already been cut in half," she said. "Now we find out that we are being 'zeroed out' of the budget."

Indeed, according to a proposal presented to the school board last month, there is no money budgeted for the $120-million Division of Adult and Career Education in 2012-2013.

But the district budget is a moving target. The spending plan goes to the school board for public review in February. Then it faces a months-long evolution as state financing numbers shift.

Down the line, that "zero" might turn out to be an accounting gimmick or a political ploy. But for now, it has stoked the fears of adult students and their teachers and spotlighted how vulnerable they are.

"We've had dramatic cuts over the years," said Julie Wetzel, a teacher-advisor with a program that helps disabled adults learn life skills.

"This feels like we're being forced out because they don't think what we're doing is important."

::

Supt. John Deasy disagreed that adult education's value is reflected in his budget line. Thirty adult schools offer 350,000 students a chance to earn high school diplomas or learn English and career skills.

The program may be "zeroed out," but it isn't being singled out, he said. "There are so many things that are going to be zeroed out of the budget, this is just the tip of the iceberg."

Deasy ticked off a list of likely cuts: preschool programs, elementary art, summer school and thousands of administrators, teachers, nurses, custodians, gardeners and cafeteria workers.

"We're talking about $540 million worth of reductions," he said. "Every single one is important, and none of them should have to be made."

Adult education is an easy target because of forces coalescing in Sacramento: The institutional penny-pinching required by the state's ongoing budget problems and legislative changes that have given local school systems more spending autonomy.

Three years ago, state legislators untied dozens of education programs from their earmarked funding pools. That allowed districts to decide how to spend money that had had been designated for specific services, such as counseling, libraries or summer school.

The biggest pot of newly flexible money was in adult education.

"Some districts just wiped out adult ed and took the money," said Ed Morris, Los Angeles Unified's director of the Division of Adult and Career Education.

"Many never liked adult ed anyway," he said. "They look at the situation like this as 'Let's not waste a crisis.' "

Los Angeles didn't raid its program. Still, state funding cuts trimmed the budget by 20% and the district — wary of looming reductions — chose to lop off an additional 10%. "We had to economize," Morris said.
Now they have to prioritize. That means deciding what matters more: the aspirations of hardworking adults trying to learn their way to self-sufficiency or the needs of children trying to learn to read and calculate and write.

::

This sort of resource-balancing act is going on across the country, in schools reshaped by such disparate forces as immigration and technology.

Morris hears the clash of competing needs in private meetings and public forums: "They say we need teachers, not administrators. We need computers, but not books. We need K-through-12, but we don't need adult education."

Some districts, including Oakland, have already gutted their adult education programs. What officials will do in Los Angeles, Morris said, "is anybody's guess."

A teacher I interviewed in the lunch room at Evans put it more bluntly.

"People are worried because they know what happens when all that money goes to [district headquarters]. It goes to the fat cats and the consultants, and the schools continue to suffer." He didn't want me to use his name because he doesn't want a bull's-eye on his back when layoffs come along.

Morris doesn't expect all adult schools to shut down, because ESL, diploma and vocational programs draw, in part, on targeted federal funds.

But in a cash-strapped district forced to cut basics at children's schools, its hard to argue the importance of teaching a grown man to upholster a chair or helping an elderly immigrant learn enough English to pass her citizenship exam.

Adult education might seem like an unaffordable frill. But it's hard to square that perception with what I heard from grateful students last week in Price's ESL class.

I spoke with an ambitious young woman from Cameroon; a Catholic monk from Colombia; and a college graduate from Mexico — she's a mother of two daughters who spends six hours a day studying English so she can understand their homework. "If you are a parent," she said, "and can't communicate with your children, there will be a big mess in the family."

And I still recall a graduation I attended 10 years ago in Watts, where the stage was crowded with beaming parents who had been nudged back to class for high school diplomas by children rooting for their success.

This is not just about English lessons.

The debate, as it rolls along, may be waylaid by politics, hijacked by immigration rants or bogged down in battles over funding streams. "It's just another money game" to the bureaucrats, one teacher said. "Nobody knows how much time they put in, how hard they work, what our students are willing to do."

Adult school students don't have many defenders in high places. But their efforts to make up for what they missed sends a message that young students need.

Price expressed it best:

"The children of my students are wonderful students. That may have to do with them seeing that their parents care so much about education. What kind of bleak future are we leaving to them without the role models of adults who are striving to do better in their lives?"

sandy.banks@latimes.com


From the same wonderful folks who brought you 'Grading the Teachers': HOW TO GRADE A TEACHER
By smf for 4LAKids – and our friends at the LA Times Editorial Board

The LA Times has singlehandedly, arbitrarily and with malice of forethought done the most to muddy the waters around+about teacher evaluation – without seriously advancing their or anyone’s arguments.
This morning they published three – count ‘em – three essays on the subject under the headline above on the Op-Ed page, as a How-To …if not a Why-Should-We?```

Without further water muddying – and in the interest of brevity if not wit – here they are as reading assignments:

•HOW TO GRADE A TEACHER by James Encinas, Kyle Hunsberger and Michael Stryer
We're teachers who believe that teacher evaluation, including the use of reliable test data, can be good for students and for teachers. Yes,... http://lat.ms/x4Ft4f

•PUSHING PAST MEDIOCRITY IN THE CLASSROOM by Lisa Guernsey and Susan Ochshorn
Teacher wars are raging across the nation. One side blasts the "bad" teachers, waving around student test-score data and demanding... http://lat.ms/AqHrGQ

•AN L.A. TEACHER REVIEWS HER REVIEW by Coleen Bondy
For the first time this year, LAUSD has prepared reports for teachers that rate their effectiveness. When I received an email saying I could... http://lat.ms/x0Mlba

….I also direct your attention to Diane Ravitch on NCLB and GOOD THINKING INSIDE THE BOX, both cited below.


COST-CUTTING CHANGES SET FOR LAUSD
By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer, LA Daily News | http://t.co/yEF6muVP

01/24/2012 7:06 PM :: Superintendent John Deasy is taking the first steps in restructuring Los Angeles Unified, with a plan that would thin the district's administrative ranks and redirect resources to improving classroom instruction.

Under a draft of the proposed reorganization obtained by the Daily News [published Thursday Jan 19 in 4LAKidsNews | http://bit.ly/xLIBS4], LAUSD's eight local district offices would be squeezed down to four, with a new structure that diversifies administrative responsibilities. A fifth office would be responsible for overseeing the overhaul of dozens of low-performing schools.

The plan would cut 64 of the system's 311 administrative positions, shaving nearly $6.3 million from a deficit of nearly a half-billion dollars.

Deasy was out of town Tuesday and could not be reached for comment. However, Jaime Aquino, the deputy superintendent of instruction, said the plan is designed to help improve student achievement while saving the district money.

"This is an opportunity to reimagine what a new LAUSD should look like - with limited resources but that better addresses the needs of students," said Aquino, who crafted the plan.

Currently, Los Angeles Unified operates eight local districts, whose superintendents oversee instruction, operations and parent-community involvement.

The new plan puts Aquino in charge of the five area superintendents who, in turn, would oversee a network of instructional directors responsible for a small portfolio of schools. The local superintendents also would supervise "teaching and learning support" coordinators, who would provide professional development within their academic specialty.

Each local district would also have administrators to handle facilities and operations, and oversee parent and community issues.

"Right now, the eight local district superintendents handle everything," Aquino said. "The new structure would let a local superintendent target achievement, teaching and learning ... This puts the focus of the district more in the core of our work, which is improving instruction."

Judith Perez, president of Associated Administrators of Los Angeles, the union that represents the district's middle managers, said she was awaiting more information from LAUSD and had no comment on the plan.

Under the current system, the eight local districts include two that divide the San Fernando Valley into east and west regions.

The new plan would put most of the Valley within a single, sprawling district. The North Hollywood and Valley Glen neighborhoods would be swept into a district stretching from the Pacific Palisades to the Fairfax District and south to Westchester.

Hollywood, downtown and East Los Angeles would encompass a third district, and the fourth would stretch from South L.A. to San Pedro.

Deasy foreshadowed the consolidation earlier this month, in discussing the budget crisis facing the nation's second-largest school district.

Even if voters approve proposals for a parcel tax in LAUSD and a statewide sales tax hike to boost education funding, Deasy has said he'll have to make drastic cuts to LAUSD programs.

4 Your Review: The Shape of LA Schools to Come? - A DRAFT PLAN TO REORGANIZE LAUSD INTO FOUR+1 ‘LOCAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTERS’ - AND CREATES THE EDUCATION SILO, THE OPERATIONS SILO AND THE PARENT/COMMUNITY SILO - BEGINNING NEXT YEAR



DRAFT PLAN TO REORGANIZE LAUSD INTO FOUR+1 ‘LOCAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTERS’ - AND CREATES THE EDUCATION SILO, THE OPERATIONS SILO & THE PARENT SILO



STAMP OUT ‘EARLY START’ NOW! - Avoid More Chaos at LA Unified!
Diana L. Chapman MY TURN – LA CITY WATCH | http://bit.ly/zRgTXQ

01.23.2012 :: So let me get this straight: Los Angeles Unified School District allowed so many charters that now it has to woo students back to its own campuses, overhauled its entire lunch menu to make healthy food for kids who won’t eat it and now contemplates allowing parents to pick the schools their children attend.

Talk about change.

With more pink slips looming on the horizon – and plenty of LAUSD employees already gone -- one wonders how in these rough times of economic turmoil – it makes any sense to adopt “early start,” which means Los Angeles schools will start school this summer -- Aug. 14 district wide. That's three weeks earlier in blazing Los Angeles summer days – an action School Board Member Richard Vladovic is still shaking his head about.

No, the early start does not mean students will pick up more learning hours; they will just get out earlier –June 4 – in 2013.

No, this does not mean test scores will go up, which was one of kickers that triggered this “early start” calendar. The district’s own report reflects that test scores barely improved and that early start failed to bring up grades or increase attendance.

Even Los Angeles schools superintendent John Deasy recommended to the board that due to uncertainty with the state and federal budgets, it made more sense to indefinitely postpone the calendar change.

So all I can ask is why are we doing this, something that will wind up probably costing the district more than it expects and in which Vladovic, reminds the board each meeting that “this is not the time” to do this?

He was so concerned in fact, he filed a resolution to postpone the move – an action he lost in a 4-3 vote in October. Board president Monica Garcia voted no to the postponement along with Board Members Tamara Gatzalan, Nury Martinez and Steve Zimmer.

Voting with Vladovic were the two board members who co-sponsored his resolution: Bennett Kayasar and Marguerite LaMotte.

Vladovic, who serves the entire Harbor Area along with Carson, Gardena, Lomita and parts of south Los Angeles, bemoans the district wide action after 19 schools in the valley piloted the early start to see how it works.

According to Vladovic, it didn’t. It did improve the California Exit High School Exam, but did little else.

“It did not improve scoring,” complains Vladovic. “It did not improve AP testing or attendance. It didn’t raise the scores of schools. It will cause havoc for after school programs. Sometimes, change is good. In this case, the timing is wrong.”

Because pink slips lawfully have to inform teachers of layoffs by March 15 -- and the state budget may not pass until the end of August -- Vladovic has decided to raise the issue at every board meeting imploring other members to reconsider.

“We can’t rescind layoff notices until Sacramento passes their budget,” Vladovic wrote on his blog. “If Sacramento passes their budget after July, we will be hard pressed for a smooth opening. It now looks like the budget might not pass until late August.”

I too am concerned even though it won’t impact me personally since my son is graduating this year. But as a parent, I’ve been overwhelmed by the erratic changes the district has undertaken, including putting my son’s high school in the “public choice” category which meant outsiders such as non-profits could bid on running the schools.

This quickly turned problematic – as I expected – when the non-profits or charters went primarily after newly constructed schools and ignored larger, cumbersome LAUSD schools, such as San Pedro, Gardena and Carson high schools.

As fast as the “public school choice came,” it was quickly erased as rugged competition emerged and the district began losing thousands of students – meaning huge losses of money since it receives average daily attendance (ADA) -- or $28 a day per student from the state.

Longtime San Pedro High School teacher Richard Wagoner said he’s still trying to figure out what the entire purpose of the calendar change is. The schools already on early-start would have been allowed to continue to do so even if it wasn’t approved district wide.

It seems pointless, Wagoner argued.

“There is something very fishy about this initiative,” said Wagoner, a vocal proponent against the early-start calendar. “The valley was going to be allowed to keep their calendar. Yet principals from the valley took time away from their duties…to ensure that all schools are forced into early start in spite of the almost 100 percent opinion of those against it by the few that actually knew the vote was coming.

“I want to know what the early start board members stand to gain from this because it otherwise makes no sense.”

Truly, Wagoner is right. Some argue that it helps align high school aged students to the August college calendar system.

But is that enough reason to undergo anymore upheaval?

To use early start, LAUSD will have to use $20 million to punch it through, but it’s expected to recoup most – not all – of the money when the state pays the district ADA, said Jacob Haik, Vladovic’s chief of staff.

An LAUSD report says it will only cost $870,000 – but that probably means if it goes without a hitch. And if we know one thing about LAUSD, few things go without a hitch.

While I’ve talked to many teachers who aren’t troubled by it and a handful of parents also who said it wasn’t an issue for them, I still think there’s a key ingredient missing.

That is the why? Why, for heaven’s sake, would we do this?

Vladovic – please keep asking.



(Diana Chapman is a CityWatch contributor and has been a writer/journalist for nearly thirty years. She has written for magazines, newspapers and the best-seller series, Chicken Soup for the Soul. You can reach her at: hartchap@cox.net or her website: theunderdogforkids.blogspot.com) –cw


HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest (but not neccessariily the best) of the Stories from Other Sources
SAN FRANCISCO SCRAPS TRANSITIONAL KINDERGARTEN: District cites uncertainty over state budget
Kathryn Baron | TopEd | http://bit.ly/co89gG
January 27, 2012 :: San Francisco Unified School District, which begins registration today for the next academic year, is the first district in California to forgo plans for Transitional Kindergarten. The decision leaves several hundred families, who thought their children would be entering the new educational program, with few options. The district on its website blames the governor’s proposed budget, which would cut money for a program that San Francisco Unified can’t afford on….]

LOOKING FOR THE “COMMON” IN “COMMON SENSE”
Themes in the News for the week of Jan. 23-27, 2012 by UCLA IDEA
1-26-2012 In his third State of the Union address Tuesday night, President Obama grappled with America’s need to solve important challenges in the midst of incivility and lack of shared focus. Obama drew comparisons with America’s Armed Forces, whose successes in the field depend on placing the mission ahead of individual interests: “Imagine what we could accomplish if we followed their example.” Later in his speech, he added, “We need to end the notion that the two parties must be locked in a perpetual campaign of mutual destruction; that politics is about clinging to rigid ideologies instead of building consensus around common-sense ideas.”

Of course, one party’s “common-sense ideas” can be another party’s horrible ideas—which makes those ideas not at all common and nowhere near a consensus. The challenge is to identify what is truly common once one gets past the rhetorical generalities of our desires for a strong economy, fair taxation, innovative business climate, educational opportunities, and so forth.

Closer to home, California schools continue to be wracked by the pitched battles among stakeholders who have decidedly different notions of common sense. With this climate in mind, a new study from UCLA's Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access (IDEA) looks for promising consensus-building common ideas that may be obscured in the daily acrimony over strategies and proposals.

In Finding Common Ground in Education Values, IDEA researchers interviewed 50 influential Californians about their thoughts on the purposes of public education. The individuals included state legislators and legislative staff from both political parties, business and labor leaders, and representatives of civic organizations. Though they came from disparate political and ideological backgrounds, the white paper reveals strong points of agreement.

For example, respondents thought that “powerful learning” depended on personalized teacher-student interactions; respondents favored teaching that draws upon student interest and is project-based; they valued learning that can be used outside of classrooms. Experiences with technology, teamwork, problem-solving, analytic skills and civic participation were valued as inherently worthwhile rather than as means to other ends. Each of the values represents a productive starting point from which to develop not only “solutions,” but to gain the mutual trust and political climate needed to realize those solutions. Significantly, almost all of the survey respondents said that the current education system does not support these values.

The values reported in the white paper resonate with Gov. Jerry Brown’s recent comments about the need for California to develop new forms of accountability that do not rely exclusively on standardized tests (Washington Post). But, more than that, the white paper brings attention to what California schools should be doing and why this matters.

In closing his address, Obama said: “As long as we are joined in common purpose, as long as we maintain our common resolve, our journey moves forward, and our future is hopeful, and the state of our Union will always be strong.” Building such resolve and purpose in education policy requires common education values that are not so lofty as to defy disagreement and not so specific as to immediately draw oppositional boundaries. Common values have to reside in the body of our deliberations, not just in the introduction and conclusion of our speeches.

DIANE RAVITCH SPEAKS OUT: "NCLB HAS BEEN A DISASTER, AND THE WAIVERS ARE A POISON PILL": EdBrief Interview |http... http://bit.ly/AAGTML

Underwhelmed: SCRATCHING THE SURFACE OF OBAMA’S EDUCATION RHETORIC + two updates: Dana Goldstein | The Nation bl... http://bit.ly/yPrsjN

Labels: “®EFORMERS” or “POST REFORMERS” or “POST-POST-REFORMERS”: from notyet LAUSD | http://bit.ly/wMrMQn

USING TEST SCORES TO EVALUATE TEACHERS IS BASED ON THE WRONG VALUES: By Carol Corbett Burris | New York Times Sc... http://bit.ly/yJr7oc

Kindergarten? Transitional class? More preschool? SHIFTING STATE LAW AND BUDGET HAS PARENTS CONFUSED: By Sharon ... http://bit.ly/zIi1iv

More from Town Hall: LAUSD SUPERINTENDENT ASKS FOR TAX INCREASE TO HELP PAY FOR FULL SCHOOL YEAR + smf’s 2¢: Rep... http://bit.ly/y40z8o

Briefly: SCHOOL LUNCH: selected by 4LAKIDS from various newsreaders School lunch gets a makeover Los Angele... http://bit.ly/zuYb6x

PLAN WOULD CLOSE HALF OF L.A. UNIFIED’S REGIONAL HEADQUARTERS: by Howard Blume / LA Times/LA Now |. http://bit.ly/wGNsBx

TWO L.A. UNIFIED SCHOOLS WIN $100,000 GRANTS FROM TARGET: -- Rick Rojas | LA %Time3s/LA Now!| .. http://bit.ly/wWysda

CALIFORNIA’S WHITE ELEPHANT BUDGET GIVES SCHOOLS THE GIFT OF UNCERTAINTY: by Beth Chagonjian‚ Beyond Chron/Schoo... http://bit.ly/xfnYpC

Doe v. CA: LAWSUIT TO BAN PUBLIC SCHOOL FEES CLEARS KEY HURDLE: BY Howard Blume, LA Times/LA Now |. http://bit.ly/wZqXIT

BOYS PULL OUT KNIFE, GUN IN 7th GRADE GLASS AT MAYOR’S SCHOOL: Robert J. Lopez | LA Times/LA Now |.. http://bit.ly/yiXLRk

EDUCATION TOWN HALL: Community fumes over schools: By Susan Abram, Staff Writer, LA Daily News |.. http://bit.ly/xOGMn2

COST-CUTTING CHANGES SET FOR LAUSD: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer, LA Daily News |.. http://bit.ly/xoum2w

GENDER EQUITY: DOING THE MATH - As boys and girls become more equal in math skills, everyone benefits.: LA Times... http://bit.ly/xP7yGq

STAMP OUT ‘EARLY START’ NOW! - Avoid More Chaos at LA Unified!: Diana L. Chapman MY TURN – LA CITY WATCH |.. http://bit.ly/zmHMiH

GET YOUR LATTÉ, DONOR’S CHOOSE CARD (and soon) BEER + WINE AT STARBUCKS: Bake Sale Fundraising for the Socially Networked!... http://bit.ly/A40az0



EVENTS: Coming up next week...


*Dates and times subject to change. ________________________________________
• SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE:
http://www.laschools.org/bond/
Phone: 213-241-5183
____________________________________________________
• LAUSD FACILITIES COMMUNITY OUTREACH CALENDAR:
http://www.laschools.org/happenings/
Phone: 213-241.8700


• LAUSD BOARD OF EDUCATION & COMMITTEES MEETING CALENDAR



What can YOU do?
• E-mail, call or write your school board member:
Tamar.Galatzan@lausd.net • 213-241-6386
Monica.Garcia@lausd.net • 213-241-6180
Bennett.Kayser@lausd.net • 213-241-5555
Marguerite.LaMotte@lausd.net • 213-241-6382
Nury.Martinez@lausd.net • 213-241-6388
Richard.Vladovic@lausd.net • 213-241-6385
Steve.Zimmer@lausd.net • 213-241-6387
...or your city councilperson, mayor, the governor, member of congress, senator - or the president. Tell them what you really think! • Find your state legislator based on your home address. Just go to: http://bit.ly/dqFdq2 • There are 26 mayors and five county supervisors representing jurisdictions within LAUSD, the mayor of LA can be reached at mayor@lacity.org • 213.978.0600
• Call or e-mail Governor Brown: 213-897-0322 e-mail: http://www.govmail.ca.gov/
• Open the dialogue. Write a letter to the editor. Circulate these thoughts. Talk to the principal and teachers at your local school.
• Speak with your friends, neighbors and coworkers. Stay on top of education issues. Don't take my word for it!
• Get involved at your neighborhood school. Join your PTA. Serve on a School Site Council. Be there for a child.
• If you are eligible to become a citizen, BECOME ONE.
• If you a a citizen, REGISTER TO VOTE.
• If you are registered, VOTE LIKE THE FUTURE DEPENDS ON IT. THEY DO!.


Who are your elected federal & state representatives? How do you contact them?




Scott Folsom is a parent leader in LAUSD and is Parent/Volunteer of the Year for 2010-11 for Los Angeles County. • He is Past President of Los Angeles Tenth District PTSA and represented PTA on the LAUSD Construction Bond Citizen's Oversight Committee for ten years. He is a Health Commissioner, Legislation Team member and a member of the Board of Managers of the California State PTA. He serves on numerous school district advisory and policy committees and has served as a PTA officer and governance council member at three LAUSD schools. He is the recipient of the UTLA/AFT 2009 "WHO" Gold Award for his support of education and public schools - an honor he hopes to someday deserve. • In this forum his opinions are his own and your opinions and feedback are invited. Quoted and/or cited content copyright © the original author and/or publisher. All other material copyright © 4LAKids.
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