Sunday, February 19, 2012

Blink.


Onward! 4LAKids
4LAKids: Sunday 19•Feb•2012 President's Weekend
In This Issue:
 •  The Valentines Day Massacre v.2.0 narrowly avoided: SCHOOL FUNDING AND THE PRICE OF FLEXIBILITY
 •  “Unprofessional Conduct”: LAUSD’S FAILURE TO NOTIFY SACAMENTO OF MIRAMONTE TEACHER’S DISMISSAL COULD RESULT IN SUPT. DEASY’S LOSS OF CREDENTIAL
 •  LAWMAKERS ADVISED TO GIVE SCHOOLS OPTIONS TO MAKE CUTS IN THE FALL
 •  SENATORS: DON’T JAM US ON WEIGHTED FORMULA: Committee likes concept, wants more time
 •  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:
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 •  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.
Mark Naison, in his essay “The Real Culprits in America’s Decline Are Shifting Responsibility to Schools and Teachers” [http://bit.ly/zS9M3N] asks: “Are 28 percent of the homes in the United States under water because of union teachers? Can they also be blamed for the 44 percent Black unemployment rate in the city of Milwaukee?

“America’s public schools were never perfect. But they helped hold the country together through wrenching economic crises that left many communities deeply wounded and many Americans wondering if there was a real future left for them. And it was never easy. Some of what went on in our most economically depressed schools involved real courage and heroism. All of it required patience and hard work.

“And one of the things these schools did is show that you could effectively run institutions without huge salaries and bonuses for executives and without a huge gap between the employees and their managers. In most public schools, the principal’s salary was never more than a third higher than the highest paid teacher, rather than the 400 to 1 CEO to worker ratio that now exists in American industry.”
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4LAKids RECOMMENDS AN ARTICLE ON INGLEWOOD UNIFIED’S PENDING INSOLVENCY from the LA Times: “In Inglewood, A Sparkling New Campus and Looming Bankruptcy” [http://lat.ms/ytnFmG] but discount IUSD’s hanging their hopes on a shiny new school saving their day. Parents look beyond the new school shine+sizzle to the instructional program. Rightly or wrongly parents are buying what charter schools are selling – and unfortunately they are buying it with the public’s money – money IUSD had already counted on and spent it their budget.

Likewise I caution against dependence on the passage of AB 1172 – which would allow school districts to disapprove a charter application if it puts undue burden on school district budgets. The state’s primary interest is in educating children – not in preserving school districts. IF charter schools actually did a better job of educating students (and generally they don’t) they should be allowed to bloom at the expense of underperforming districts. Boards of education cannot be the decider any more than the California Charter Schools Association.

Perhaps the most telling clue to how bad things are is that the Inglewood teachers union is welcoming state receivership – even though that would temporarily invalidate huge parts of the union contract.

But buried in the article is the glimmer of hope for Inglewood and every one of California’s 1050 cash-strapped school districts: “California has cut funding to schools by 20% over the last three years and, in the case of Inglewood, deferred payment of more than $17 million this year alone. That shortfall caused most of Inglewood's looming deficit, (School board President Young) said.”

IN ADDITION TO the 20% in cuts, California owes Inglewood $17 million in Deferred Payments. That’s an IOU – a promissory note - a debt the state is obligated to pay at an unspecified point in the future. J. Wellington Wimpy: "I'll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today" That’s not a loan school districts wanted to make – it was forced upon them. In law this is called a contract of adhesion, where one party has no ability to negotiate because of their unequal bargaining position.

Under receivership the state loans a school district the money it needs to operate “in order to pay schools’ utility bills and meet payrolls” – and runs the school district until it gets paid back with interest. OF COURSE IF THE STATE PAID INGLEWOOD AND LAUSD AND EVERY SCHOOL DISTRICT THE MONEY IT OWES THE DISTRICTS WOULDN’T BE IN THIS MESS!

And I seriously doubt if there’s a judge with a robe and gavel and a bench to sit on who would uphold the State of California charging interest on a loan to a district the state forced by not paying back previous money it “borrowed”. You know those urban legends about the burglars who sue victims after falling through the skylights during burglaries? This is like that – only more so.

The above scheme should make Mr. Ponzi blush. And while I feel sorry for the unfortunate school districts and the teachers and staffs who have-been-and-will-be RIFed – it’s the children who are being defrauded.
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SATURDAY’S LA TIMES Business Section had a prophetic article with the headline “L.A. On Brink of Gas At $4 a Gallon”; by Saturday afternoon the cheapest Arco station in my neighborhood – with gas at $3.99 – had a line at the pumps. I’m inviting the Business Section to headline an article: “LAUSD Solves Budget Crisis as Test Scores Soar.”
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THERE IS A GREAT TENDENCY TO OVERSIMPLIFY SITUATIONS and cut to the chase – including in these pages where one tries to state the unvarnished truth in 800 words or less. Last week the LAUSD Board – while mired in a sulfurous swamp of scandal - seemed poised to pass a budget/eliminate programs/RIF staff and ask for a parcel tax in a straight up-or-down-vote – based on not enough information poorly shared or even thought out.

In the opposite of Malcolm Gladwell’s definition, they blinked – took a three week step back – and agreed to think more deeply.

In the end all of us need the real numbers, the real assumptions and the real cuts proposed; the consequences – intended or no – identified and debated - line item by line item, dollar-for-dollar, program-by-program, and school-by-school – down to the classroom. The way this board usually does things: “Without opposition… so ordered” cannot be allowed.

Eleven words identify true wisdom more than any other: “I do not have enough information to make an informed decision”. These words do not admit failure, they predetermine success.

We – We the People – cannot afford to eliminate elementary arts education or adult Ed or early childhood Ed or afterschool programs. Our children need librarians and counselors and buses to transport some kids to and from school.

The Board of Education can no more approve a budget based on a spreadsheet, a pie chart or PowerPoint than voters can select representatives based on campaign mailers and Pepsodent smiles. Oh sure we try …and look at where it gets us.

The current Republican front runner o’ th’ week repudiated public education last week. As free universal public education is America’s greatest contribution of democracy he doesn’t get any points here – accept possibly in recognition of the one on his little head.

Here is a parting thought: Public Education and Social Justice are not programs to cut and adjust or amend and reform to conform to the times – whether golden-and-flush or challenging-and-hard.. They are universal constants. Whether he was prophet or savior or messiah or a rabbi from Galilee, the words still stand: “And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

¡Onward/Adelante! - smf


The Valentines Day Massacre v.2.0 narrowly avoided: SCHOOL FUNDING AND THE PRICE OF FLEXIBILITY

Themes in the News for the week of Feb. 13-17, 2012 by UCLA IDEA | http://bit.ly/zB4UBu

2-17-2012 :: Responding to widespread protests, the Los Angeles Unified School District will not cut, or at least will postpone cuts, of over $550 million from the 2012-13 school year budget, as had been planned. Hundreds packed the LAUSD boardroom and more protested outside, prompting street closures. They came to plead for adult education, early education, after-school programs, arts in elementary school and other categorical programs—all of which were earmarked for elimination (Huffington Post, LA Weekly, Los Angeles Daily News, Los Angeles Times). The board postponed the vote until March, giving time for Superintendent John Deasy to negotiate concessions with labor unions, and for the public to pressure legislators for more funding.

According to EdSource, a reliable source of information on complex education issues, “categorical funds represent a sizable part of the budget for most school districts and can have a major effect on local expenditure decisions. However, in response to the recent state budget crisis, California lawmakers are allowing districts more flexibility in how they spend those funds.”

Indeed, districts are taking advantage of loosened guarantees—sometimes drastically reducing or eliminating programs—often, in order to pay schools’ utility bills and meet payrolls. It’s a wrenching task. “We can’t live with eliminations,” said Los Angeles board Member Steve Zimmer, but “there will be cuts” (San Jose Mercury News).

By stepping back from its decision on cuts, the board’s action is reminiscent of Gov. Jerry Brown’s attempt to eliminate school bus funds earlier this year. After much political pressure and campaigning from rural and poor districts, Brown reversed course and will keep the busses rolling through next year (Sacramento Bee, Thoughts on Public Education).

Some additional flexibility might allow local districts to decide how best to use their limited resources. However, categorical funds, historically, have been instituted for sound reasons: “to remedy inequities among students; to ensure that all students are served, especially the hardest to educate; and to support current priorities, particularly when there are extra funds” (EdSource).

Meanwhile, the Senate is considering Brown’s new school funding plan which would create a weighted formula, giving school districts a base amount per student and up to $3,000 more for those with the greatest need, such as English language learners and low-income students. This plan would also phase out the majority of categorical programs (EdSource Extra, Thoughts on Public Education). Such a new, more rational system of school funding, based on weighted formulas, stands a chance of allowing greater local flexibility while preserving important protections and guarantees now protected by categorical funding.

But we can’t forget that the reasons behind categorical funding remain. Without “strings-attached” money, many local districts could decide, as they have done in the past, not to provide crucial services. Can California lawmakers fashion a school finance system that provides both flexibility and essential guarantees? In principle, Brown’s “weighted formula” is a good start. However, flexibility without wisdom, fairness, guarantees, and money leads only to more dreadful choices of how to reorganize hardships among the most vulnerable, at-risk students.


“Unprofessional Conduct”: LAUSD’S FAILURE TO NOTIFY SACAMENTO OF MIRAMONTE TEACHER’S DISMISSAL COULD RESULT IN SUPT. DEASY’S LOSS OF CREDENTIAL
SUPT. DEASY TOLD BY STATE AGENCY LAUSD FAILURE TO INFORM ON MIRAMONTE TEACHER POSED POTENTIAL RISK TO STUDENT SAFETY
By Tami Abdollah | KPCC pass/fail http://bit.ly/wcNmjY

Feb. 16, 2012 :: The California Commission on Teacher Credentialing wrote Superintendent John Deasy a letter dated Wednesday informing him that the district was posing a "potential risk to student safety" by not filing timely reports required by state regulation when a teacher's employment status changes.

In the case of former Miramonte Elementary School teacher Mark Berndt, accused of spoon-feeding his semen to children, the district did not file paperwork with the commission until nearly a year after it moved to dismiss Berndt.

Nanette Rufo, the commission's director and general counsel, cites the California code of regulations in the letter, which warns Deasy that "failure to make a report required under this section constitutes unprofessional conduct. The Committee may investigate any superintendent who holds a credential who fails to file reports required by this section. (Emphasis added)."

Deasy, who holds a "clear administrative services credential," could not be reached for comment Thursday. District spokesman Thomas Waldman said he is in Sacramento all day testifying on the budget. Waldman could not confirm receipt of the letter.

According to the regulation, the superintendent must report the change in employment status no later than 30 days after the status changes when it is a result of alleged misconduct or an allegation of misconduct is pending.

From the letter, which is subject-lined "Re: Superintendent's Mandatory Reporting Requirement":

"In one recent case we have no record of a report related to the teacher after the final settlement was reached and were only notified that the teacher was charged with multiple counts of lewd acts upon children more than six months after final settlement was reached by your District with the credential holder. Although the Commission is aware that errors can occur, please be aware of the potential for harm to students by not meeting your mandatory requirement to report information to the Commission when credential holders separate while charges of misconduct are pending."


MIRAMONTE ABUSE SCANDAL: LAUSD FAILED TO NOTIFY CALIFORNIA CREDENTIALING COMMISSION OF ACCUSED TEACHER'S SUSPENSION
By Tami Abdollah | KPCC Pass/Fail |http://bit.ly/wcNmjY

Feb. 16, 2012 :: The Los Angeles Unified School District violated state law by waiting nearly a year to inform the agency that oversees teacher credentials that it had moved to dismiss former Miramonte Elementary School teacher Mark Berndt accused of spoon-feeding his semen to children.

The state's Commission on Teacher Credentialing suspended Berndt's credential on Jan. 31, the same day he was arrested and charged with 23 counts of lewd conduct on children. But according to the state code of regulations and the education code, the LAUSD should have informed the credentialing commission of Berndt's February 2011 suspension without pay by mid-March of 2011.

The district paid Berndt a $40,000 settlement in June to ensure, it says, that he would no longer work for LAUSD and resign. But with his credential intact, Berndt could have legally obtained employment as a teacher at another district up until January 31.

"We did not, during the course of the investigation inform the CTC about Berndt," said district spokesman Thomas Waldman. "We contacted the Sheriff's Department over the course of the year on 15 occasions to check on the status of the investigation and our ability to move forward. We were told they were conducting an investigation, that we were to refrain from taking any actions that could jeopardize the completion of the investigation, so that was interpreted on our end as not informing the commission regarding Mr. Berndt's status."

Steve Whitmore, a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, said that once L.A. Unified removed Berndt from the classroom "our interest in his status as a teacher stopped."

According to the state code of regulations and the education code, when certain actions have been taken against a teacher, such as a dismissal or suspension without pay for more than 10 days, the superintendent is required to inform the state's Commission on Teacher Credentialing of the change in employment status no more than 30 days after the action.

When the commission is notified it then has the ability to investigate and recommend a particular case go forward to its Committee of Credentials for review. During this process the committee can decide to take action against the teacher in various ways, including a private admonition, as well as suspending or revoking his credential, said Marilyn Errett, an administrator for the Office of Governmental Relations for the Commission on Teacher Credentialing. If a teacher is convicted of a crime, the credential is automatically revoked, Errett said.

"Even if a case is not necessarily a criminal case, or even if a court has not convicted someone of [something] criminal, we're still looking at unprofessional conduct," Errett said. "...It might not rise to the criminal conviction arena but it might be unprofessional."

The state code of regulations states that the "failure to make a report required under this section constitutes unprofessional conduct. The Committee may investigate any superintendent who holds a credential who fails to file reports required by this section."

Superintendent John Deasy, who holds a "clear administrative services credential," could not be reached for comment Wednesday.

In Berndt's case, the LAUSD moved to dismiss him on Feb. 15, 2011, and stopped paying him the next day. The commission should have been informed of this action by mid-March; however, the district sent no paperwork until Jan. 31, 2012, when it e-mailed the charging documents to the commission, said Errett.
Once the commission became aware of the charges against Berndt, it automatically suspended his credential as required by law, Errett said.

During the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's year-long investigation, Berndt, who appealed the dismissal Feb. 17, 2011, received a $40,000 settlement from the district, which included back pay for lost wages, reimbursement for health insurance payments, and $16,000 in legal fees, according to the documents. As part of the agreement, Berndt was reinstated, then allowed to resign on June 30 and thereby keep his lifetime health benefits.

District officials have said their goal was to avoid a lengthy appeals process that could take years and ensure Berndt was out of the classroom.

LAUSD board president Monica Garcia said the district has launched its own investigation into how the Berndt case was handled, and that it will be thoroughly reviewed by an independent commission led by retired California Supreme Court Chief Justice Carlos Moreno.

"I will be very interested in learning what the commission tells us...about our handling of all the information and [how it can] help us understand what needs to be changed," Garcia said.

Board member Steve Zimmer said that the district's failure to follow procedure was wrong, but that he didn't believe children were in imminent danger.

"Obviously if we didn't follow procedures, we should follow procedures and that's wrong, and that makes me upset," Zimmer said.

Clarification: An earlier version of this post stated that Berndt had been dismissed. While the school board approved his dismissal Feb. 15, 2011, Berndt's appeal and later settlement agreement with the district allowed him to be retroactively reinstated to his post. He resigned June 30.

SUPT. DEASY ACKNOWLEDGES LAUSD VIOLATED LAW BY FAILING TO NOTIFY STATE ABOUT ACCUSED MIRAMONTE TEACHER
By Tami Abdollah | KPCC | http://bit.ly/zSuKrH

Feb. 17, 2012 | Superintendent John Deasy acknowledged today that LAUSD violated state law when it failed to notify a state agency responsible for teacher credentialing of the suspension of Miramonte Elementary School teacher Mark Berndt, who is accused of spoon-feeding his semen to children. Deasy said the district has launched an internal investigation to determine why this happened.

The story was first reported Thursday by KPCC, which provided the district with a letter addressed to Deasy from the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing dated Wednesday that stated that the district's failure to provide a timely report on teachers posed a "potential risk to student safety."

The state's Commission on Teacher Credentialing suspended Berndt's credential on Jan. 31, the same day he was arrested and charged with 23 counts of lewd conduct on children. But according to the state code of regulations and the education code, the superintendent is required to inform the credentialing commission of Berndt's February 2011 suspension without pay by mid-March of 2011.

"LAUSD acknowledges that in the case of Mark Berndt, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing was not notified within the required timeline of Berndt’s change in employment status," Deasy said in a statement issued today. He said the failure to notify in this case "is contrary to standard district practice."
(●●smf: “Contrary to District practice” is one way of putting it.. The CTC says “failure to make a report required under this section constitutes unprofessional conduct” …and assigns responsibility for mandatory reporting directly to the superintendent. )

Deasy said the district has launched an internal investigation to determine the reasons for the untimely notification.

District spokesman Thomas Waldman said part of the investigation may entail combing through LAUSD records to determine "if there are any other cases for which either the district failed to inform in a timely manner or didn't file a report at all" to the commission. Waldman said he is not sure how far the district would go back.

According to the state code of regulations and the education code, when certain actions have been taken against a teacher, such as a dismissal or suspension without pay for more than 10 days, the superintendent is required to inform the commission of the change in employment status no more than 30 days after the action.

Here's Deasy's statement from today:
Yesterday, I was made aware through the media of the existence of a letter dated February 15, 2012 and addressed to me by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing stating that it had concerns about possible late reporting “of dismissal of credentialed employees while allegations of misconduct are pending.” LAUSD acknowledges that in the case of Mark Berndt, the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing was not notified within the required timeline of Berndt’s change in employment status. State law requires that school districts report changes in a teacher’s employment status as a result of allegations of misconduct within 30 days of the change in employment status. The failure to timely notify the CTC in this case, is contrary to standard district practice. I have immediately launched an internal investigation to determine the reasons for the untimely notice in this case. After LAUSD was informed by the Sheriff’s Department of Berndt’s arrest on January 30, 2012, LAUSD notified CTC on January 31, 2012.


FEB 15th LETTER FROM THE COMMISSION ON TEACHER CREDENTIALING/Division of Professional Practices



LAWMAKERS ADVISED TO GIVE SCHOOLS OPTIONS TO MAKE CUTS IN THE FALL
By Timm Herdt, Ventura County Star | http://bit.ly/zy3BU8

February 16, 2012 at 5:42 p.m —SACRAMENTO :: California lawmakers on Thursday began to tackle the perplexing problem of how to handle school funding in a year in which no one will know how much money will be available until after the next school year has begun.

At the same time, they opened consideration of a proposal by Gov. Jerry Brown to dramatically and permanently change how state funds are allocated to local districts.

In his budget proposal, Brown has proposed that $4.8 billion of the $52.5 billion he seeks in Proposition 98 funding be conditional on voters' approval of a tax measure in November.

Lawmakers likely will alter the mix of cuts to be triggered if the measure fails, but agree such triggers must be included in whatever budget they adopt this summer — and that many of the cuts inevitably will be in education, the state's biggest single expense.

Rachel Ehlers of the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office told members of the Senate Budget Committee that lawmakers should consider giving schools more flexibility as they fashion their budgets for the 2012-13 school year.

Under existing law, school districts must notify employees this spring if there is a possibility they could be laid off next year, and the layoffs must be issued by summer.

"Think about a post-election layoff window," Ehlers said, suggesting a one-time change in law to let districts reduce their workforce next fall if the tax measure fails. "To the degree that you can offer certainty that districts will have certain levers they can pull, you can help avoid layoffs this spring."

Thursday's budget hearing was the first of dozens that lawmakers will conduct between now and mid-June, their constitutional deadline to approve a budget for the fiscal year that begins July 1. Ehlers also suggested, as has the Brown administration, that schools be given the option of shortening the school year if the tax initiative fails. Generally, such action can only be taken if it is agreed upon by school employees through collective bargaining.

Ehlers praised Brown's proposal to eliminate nearly all state categorical funding to schools — earmarked money that must be spent on certain programs such as transportation or class-size reduction — and rolling all those funds into a formula that would allocate money based on districts' enrollment.

The formula would award more funding per pupil to districts with large numbers of low-income students and students with limited English proficiency.

Under a proposal revised by the administration this week, the formula would be phased in over six years. All districts would be held harmless for the first year.

Beyond that, acknowledged Nick Schweizer of the Department of Finance, there would be winners and losers under the formula.

"Some districts do better than others, based on the population of students they're serving," he said.

Districts that will experience a significant drop, he said, are those that now have "extremely high revenue limits, and they've got six years to adapt their cost structure."

Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said Brown's proposal has merit.

"I am favorably inclined to the idea of a weighted student formula," he said. "The phase-in would allow this to be done without a lot of winners and losers."

Steinberg said, however, he will insist that a shift to the formula occur in conjunction with a change in the school accountability system that would place less weight on standardized test scores and more weight on other factors.

"We ought to measure high schools not just on test scores, but on how well they are preparing students for college and careers," he said. "The two issues need to be matched."


SENATORS: DON’T JAM US ON WEIGHTED FORMULA: Committee likes concept, wants more time
By John Fensterwald - Educated Guess | http://bit.ly/zIh3s8

Feb 17, 2012 :: Senators on the Budget and Fiscal Review Committee generally praised the rationale and framework of Gov. Brown’s proposal to overhaul school funding in a four-hour hearing Thursday but questioned the details, timing, and the disparate financial impacts on school districts. One message came across clearly: They won’t be rushed into adopting Brown’s weighted student formula.

“These are worthwhile approaches, but I am troubled we are moving quickly without knowing the full impact,” said Sen. Alan Lowenthal, D-Long Beach. He and others called for turning the governor’s budget item into a full-blown policy bill – code for a two-year process. Brown wants the changes adopted now, so they can begin to be incorporated in next year’s budget.

Brown proposes a six-year transition, in which districts would receive a base amount per student, with substantial extra dollars for every English learning and low-income student. He would abolish nearly all categorical programs – funded programs for designated purposes, like class-size reduction and career technical education – and let districts spend all of the dollars however they see fit. (Go here to see how the formula would work.)

Districts with few disadvantaged students would receive little supplemental money, but the Brown administration is projecting that the base would rise over six years from $4,920 to about $7,000 as additional revenue from a revived economy flows into Proposition 98. Districts with large numbers of targeted kids could get $3,000 to $5,000 per student in addition to the base.

Extra funding for disadvantaged students is “the right, just, and morally responsible approach for the youth of California,” testified Los Angeles Unified Superintendent John Deasy, for it recognizes that program costs for English learners and low-income students are higher. And adding even more money to districts with concentrations of poverty is necessary, Deasy said, “to break the cycle of poverty.”’

PLAN NEEDS MORE WORK

But Deasy also had plenty of suggestions for changing the weighted student funding formula. His and others’ criticisms included the following areas:

WHAT DOES “HOLD HARMLESS” MEAN? Brown wants to start slowly, redistributing 5 percent of the weighted formula to poor districts next year. He’d guarantee that no district would get less money than they get now – but only for next year. Beyond that, when the formula really kicks in (15 percent in 2013-14, 40 percent in 2014-15), he’d count on new Prop 98 money to make the “loser” districts whole.

But, said Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto, “we are struggling to get revenue projections over the next six months, not to mention the next six years. Six years ago (budget estimates) were projecting growth of $1,000 per pupil. We are rather wide of that mark …” he said with understatement.

Brown is starting with a low base of $4,920, with no assurance that all districts would restore money lost since 2008 by the time the formula is fully phased in. But Nick Schweizer, budget manager for education with the Department of Finance, said that Prop 98 revenues should be enough to cover nearly all districts’ yearly COLAs. If revenues fell short, the administration would adjust the formula.

FORMULA ADJUSTMENTS: Elementary, unified, and high school districts currently receive different funding allocations per grade out of recognition that older students, who need to take labs, are more expensive to educate. Brown’s weighted formula doesn’t differentiate by grade, although Schweizer said the administration would consider a change.

Schweizer was less open to the idea of a regional cost adjustment, which Simitian and Committee Chairman Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, pushed. A 2008 version of a weighted student formula, co-authored by current President of the State Board of Education Michael Kirst, did include a regional cost of living factor. Since 85 percent of a district’s budget goes to personnel, regional costs of living are a huge factor for districts in high-cost areas, Simitian said. Heather Rose, an associate professor at the University of California-Davis, and co-author of a 2008 study on California funding formulas, reinforced that, telling the Budget Committee that overall wages in Santa Clara County were 54 percent higher than in the North Coast and 32 percent higher for teachers, reflecting a need to compete in the local marketplace.

Schweizer said that low-cost rural regions have complicating factors, too, like high busing expenses; determining which factors affect regions is complicated. That prompted Leno to remark, “Just because you don’t know, you should not ignore, throw up your hands and say you cannot deal with the complexity.”

Busing students to school is currently a $500 million categorical program. Brown would preserve it one more year, then throw it into the mix, along with other categoricals. Districts without large numbers of poor students would lose most of the funding. Both Deasy, an urban superintendent, and Sen. Noreen Evans, who represents rural Northern California, oppose that idea. Busing is “fundamental to students’ civil rights and access to school,” Deasy said.

ACCOUNTABILITY QUESTION: Brown would impose no requirements on how districts spent the extra dollars for disadvantaged students. He is proposing to hold districts accountable for results, and has charged the State Board of Education to come up with new measures, beyond state standardized test scores, within the next year. Schweizer said that districts that raise achievement and meet targets would get 2.5 percent funding rewards, starting in 2013-14.

But some senators and the Legislative Analyst’s Office were uncomfortable with adopting a formula without new accountability measures in place. “I’m not comfortable with the existing accountability system to know how we are doing. This makes me very nervous,” said Sen. Lois Wolk, a Democrat from Davis.

Rachel Ehlers, who analyzes education for the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst, testified that district progress is particularly difficult to measure with English learners, because higher performing English learners are reclassified, only to be replaced with new non-English-speaking immigrants. Tracking individuals with the use of CALPADS, the new statewide database, will help eventually. Meanwhile, “we have a ways to go on oversight before turning (total flexibility) over to districts.”

HYBRID MODEL: Concerned that simply giving districts more dollars for disadvantaged children won’t ensure that they’ll be spent on them, the LAO recommends that the Legislature consider block grants, which allow discretion over money for broad purposes with audits and public hearings to ensure the intent is followed. Assemblymember Julia Brownley, who chairs the Assembly Education Committee, takes this approach, using different weights, in AB 18, a weighted formula bill she’s been working on for a year. Besides a basic all-purpose amount, the bill would have a block grant for teacher training and development and an equity fund, directing dollars to English learners and low-income children. Brownley would consider setting aside money for adult and career technical education.

At the hearing, a dozen Oakland high school students called for accountability for money that should be spent on them. Their escort, Katie Valenzuela, with Public Advocates, said enforcement should be in place before a weighted formula is enacted. “Needs-based funding does not make sense unless it meets students’ needs,” she said.

GAMING THE SYSTEM: Giving premiums for English language learners creates incentives to overclassify children, who already comprise a quarter of the state’s students, and then not strive to move them along quickly to fluency. “Will you be an English language learner forever?” asked Sen. Jean Fuller, a Republican from Bakersfield and former school superintendent. “The weakness of the model is that there is no real defined exit and incentive for exit.”

In a comment in yesterday’s post, Rob Manwaring, who was a consultant for Gov. Schwarzenegger’s Committee on Education Excellence, noted that the Committee “proposed phasing out the funding for English learners after four years of funding with a full phase-out after six years as an EL student. This type of approach would counter any incentive to not redesignate EL students.” Since three-quarters of English language learners (the latest figure, according to Schweizer) are also low-income, they’d be covered by the formula anyway.


HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest (but not neccessariily the best) of the Stories from Other Sources
L.A.’s TRUANCY TROUBLE – A FRESH LOOK: Hefty tickets for students who are late or ditch school are counterproduc... http://bit.ly/xJ34Lx

Letter to the Editor: TEACH IT TOO: from LA Times | 19 Feb 2012 |lat.ms/yvf7rb Re "LAUSD puts off budget... http://bit.ly/yuVuIA

An Op-Ed Appeal from a Redistricting Commissioner: LAUSD REDISTRICTING COMMISSION NEEDS TO HEAR FROM YOU!: By Li... http://bit.ly/wYl0w7

SAVE ADULT ED: Funding for K-12 must come first but adult education classes provide benefits that can't be ignor... http://bit.ly/zpkdm8

GENEROUS BEQUEST OF NEARLY $392,000 LIFTS SPIRITS AT PACOIMA MIDDLE SCHOOL: By Melissa Pamer, Daily News, Los An... http://bit.ly/yDreiT

LAUSD SUPT. JOHN DEASY ADDRESSES MIRAMONTE SEX ABUSE ALLEGATIONS + LA TIMES CORRECTS INCORRECT REPORTING: Rick R... http://bit.ly/yvmkNE

Deasy: MIRAMONTE PROBE COMPLETE; ALL STAFF EXCEPT THE TWO ACCUSED CAN RETURN.: smf: So many investigations, so l... http://bit.ly/yAUMbD

WHAT’S NEW AT THE PTA, DAD? -Men Shift the Dynamics of a Changing Organization: By KYLE SPENCER/The New York Tim... http://bit.ly/wpMaoa

SANTORUM + PUBLIC EDUCATION: The backstory: smf: (in)apropos of the previous RICK SANTORUM SUGGESTS OPPOSITION T... http://bit.ly/x9bcXO

“Unprofessional Conduct”: LAUSD’S FAILURE TO NOTIFY SACAMENTO OF MIRAMONTE TEACHER’S DISMISSAL COULD RESULT IN S... http://bit.ly/zq3Jr6
16 Feb Scott Folsom Scott Folsom @4LAKids

LAUSD (was) SET TO CUT BEYOND THE BELL AFTER-SCHOOL PROGRAMS: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer LA Daily News | htt... http://bit.ly/AmYkF0

What Oversight?: D.A., L.A. COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT PROBE ALLEGED IMPROPRIETIES AT TRADE-TECH COLLEGE FOUNDAT... http://bit.ly/yTi5ka

LOS ANGELES SCHOOL DISTRICT CONTINUES TO LANGUISH UNDER UNENDING BUDGET CRISIS: Gabriel Lerner : Senior News Edi... http://bit.ly/wgyAHa

@4LAKidsTWEET: student at CA Senate Budget&Fiscal Review Commiittee: "I go to an arts high school that doesn't have any arts." | calchannel.com/channel/live/

RICK SANTORUM SUGGESTS OPPOSITION TO PUBLIC EDUCATION: Some scary thinking + a scary picture!: By Brian Montopol... http://bit.ly/zMrxTd

@4LAKidsTWEET: re: Budget&Fiscal Review Commiittee: Corona supe: "Not one student will be helped by weighted formula unless there's more money."

LAUSD OFFERS MAPS OF NEW BOARD MEMBER’S DISTRICTS: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer, Daily News | http://bit.ly... http://bit.ly/x0Gqsg

Full coverage: LAUSD’s VALENTINES DAY MASSACRE AVERTED …or postponed?: from google news LAUSD Budget Cuts: Matt... http://bit.ly/wzogLS

LAUSD reform -- MIRAMONTE SCANDAL IS OPPORTUNITY TO CHANGE THE SYSTEM FOR THE BETTER: Long Beach Press Telegram ... http://bit.ly/zDP2Xu

STUDENT’S BUSES SECURED ONLY FOR REST OF SEMESTER: By Tim Smirnov and Rosie Somoundjian, The Pearl Post / Daniel... http://bit.ly/zxh5q8

MERIT PAY: ‘It doesn’t work’ + NYC wastes $5.7 Million in Principal Bonuses – including to some at most selectiv... http://bit.ly/zTRX3s

New Mexico is the 11th state to receive flexibility from NCLB #edflex go.usa.gov/QsH
Retweeted by Scott Folsom@4LAKids

NCLB IN THE REAR VIEW MIRROR: WAIVING GOODBYE!: A Cheat Sheet –or- What the judges liked+What they didn’t: NCLB ... http://bit.ly/zVo990

Video: COUNCILMAN GARCETTI SPEAKS TO THE BOARD OF ED ON THE CRITICAL IMPORTANCE OF ADULT EDUCATION: Feb 14, 2012 http://bit.ly/y0OH32

LAUSD BOARD POSTPONES VOTE ON $557 MILLION CUT TO ADULT ED, PRESCHOOL, ART AS HUNDREDS PROTEST + addl. coverage:... http://bit.ly/yifQux

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Zimmer ammendment passes. Clock is tickintg until….

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Marguerite Lamotte: "The arts save lives."

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Debby Allen: cutting arts drops atomic bomb on public ed.

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Zimmer offers ammendment to stay the cuts & RIFs until March 15

FWD: @UTLAnow: The street in front of lausd hq has just been closed. Marchers have jammed the streets. twitpic.com/8jzwjk
View photo

FWD: @UTLAnow: Inside the board, multiple speakers making crystal clear arguments to save the vital programs at their schools.

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Rita Walters offers a stirring defense of adult ed

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Dr V and Zimmer will offer budget solution @ LAUSD board mtg

@4LAKidsTweet from Feb 14th LAUSD Bd Mtg: Rumor has it today's LAUSD budget crisis gets resolved deus ex machina through intervention by Gov Brown. Stay tuned.

Reports: FREMONT HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER AIDE ARRESTED FOR LEWD ACTS WITH A CHILD: Feb 14 | 6:49 a.m. | By KPCC & wi... tinyurl.com/6n7ga9l

Tom Torlakson to Superintendents and School Board Asso: PLEASE DON’T ELIMINATE ADULT ED: http://bit.ly/wc7qMv

SHERIFF BACA, A YEAR AFTER THE FACT: “Dear Miramonte School Student Parents and.or Guardians:” + How fear of dep... http://bit.ly/xoKOKB

MICELLE RHEE + MAYOR TONY ON “LISTENING TOUR” OF LOS ANGELES: …get an earful of ®eform at a location to be named... http://bit.ly/AaJker

The Valentines Day Massacre: SOUTH GATE ADULT COMMUNITY SCHOOL WORRIES ABOUT FUNDING | PREOCUPACIONES EMERGEN S... http://bit.ly/zATAOT

[More about] The Valentines Day Massacre: THE OPTIONS PROGRAM and EARLY CHILDHOOD ED: Associated Administrators ... http://bit.ly/whBUHw

In California: PRIVATE EFFORTS TO KEEP EXERCISE IN PUBLIC SCHOOL CURRICULUM: By KATHARINE MIESZKOWSKI | NY Times... http://bit.ly/wmvY7x
ABUSE CASES: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writ... http://bit.ly/yGZUIy


EVENTS: Coming up next week...
LAUSD REDISTRICTING COMMISSION COMMUNITY MEETINGS
BOARD DISTRICTS 2, 5 & 7
MONDAY FEB 20TH, 1PM
PRESIDENT’S DAY HOLIDAY
HOLLENBECK MIDDLE SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
2510 EAST 6TH ST.
map: http://g.co/maps/r62ar

BOARD DISTRICTS 1 & 4
TUESDAY FEB 21TH, 6PM
HAMILTON HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
2955 SOUTH ROBERTSON BLVD
90034

BOARD DISTRICTS 3 & 6
TUESDAY FEB 21TH, 6PM
SEPULVEDA MIDDLE SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
15330 PLUMMER ST.
91343


• • SPECIAL MEETING:
PRESENTATION AND ADOPTION OF FINAL MAP
THURSDAY FEB 23, 6PM
BEAUDRY BOARD ROOM
333 S. BEAUDRY
90017

Childcare and Refreshments will be provided



*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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