| In This Issue:  																|  |   																	|  | State of the State: RAND REPORT SHOWS CALIFORNIA SCHOOLS LAG BEHIND OTHER STATES ON ALMOST EVERY OBJECTIVE MEASUREMENT |  |  |   																	|  | State of the State: EDUCATION BUDGET ON HIT LIST |  |  |   																	|  | State of the State: EDUCATORS WARN OF PLAN'S DIRE IMPACT |  |  |   																	|  | Other Voices: Steve Lopez-EDUCATION? CHALK UP AN F FOR THE GOVERNOR / Op-Ed: SCHOOLS IN THE CROSS HAIRS / Louis V. Gerstner Jr: DO THE MATH |  |  |   																	|  | EVENTS/COMING UP |  |  |   																	|  | 4LAKids Book Club for December & January  ALL TOGETHER NOW: Creating Middle-Class Schools Through Public School Choice by Richard D. Kahlenberg |  |  |   																	|  | What can YOU do? |  |  |  
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 |  |  |  | Â "California's public school system lags behind most of the nation on almost every objective measurement of
 student achievement, funding, teacher qualifications and
 school facilities." Â RAND Report: ÂCalifornia's K-12
 Public Schools: How Are They Doing?Â, January 3, 2004
 
 Â The state owes several billion dollars to education that
 Schwarzenegger proposed to pay back over 15 years.
 But under the governor's plan to reform the state's budget
 process, any across-the-board cuts would be automatic,
 and schools wouldn't be repaid. - from an AP Report on
 the governor's State of the State address, January 5, 2005
 
 
 The students of this state got hit with the old one-two on
 the first few days of the New Year:
 
 1. Things are bad. And
 2. There apparently isn't  the political will in the governor's office to fix it.
 
 There's really not much new in the RAND report, so
 there's not much to argue with . . . it's just laid out plainly
 in a single document.  Making it easier  and harder   to
 read.
 
 The governor's State of the State is a bit harder to take.
 
 The good news is that the California economy is
 improving. The better news is that now the state has the
 revenue to begin to pay back the money borrowed from
 education over the past few years  money could begin to
 flow back to school districts next year! The bad news is
 that the governor does not intend to pay back the money.
 Not this year. Maybe never.
 
 Before I get tagged for Schwarzenegger bashing, let me
 back up a step. Let me make even more enemies by
 saying that some of the governor's proposals  like merit
 pay for teachers  have merit and are worthy of
 consideration. Good Teachers who teach well are
 preferable to poor teachers who merely survive!  And
 good grief, of course the prison system and the CYA is a
 mess! By all means, shake 'em up! Go ahead, change their
 name!
 
 [Name the American profession in which workers get almost no rewards for a job well done, that's having a tough time attracting and keeping the best people, faces an unprecedented demand for new hires; and in which the quality of the worker determines our very future. Read Louis V. Gerstner, Jr's argument for merit pay for teachers: DO THE MATH (below)]
 
 Last year the governor worked out a compromise with
 the education community in this state. It was not a happy
 compromise, they rarely are. As the Times says (below)
 the deal allowed the state to suspend Proposition 98 for a
 year and forgo $2 billion owed to schools. In exchange,
 Schwarzenegger promised to protect schools against
 further cuts and he pledged to restore the $2 billion in the
 coming year's budget.
 
 Children in this state were shortchanged in the
 compromise, their education was not funded to the extent
 guaranteed in the state constitution. The compromise was
 founded on certain promises made between the governor,
 the education community and the legislature. One of the
 promises was that the state would fully fund the
 educational guarantees as soon as possible and pay back
 the money borrowed. These are the promises that the
 governor has proposed to renege on.
 
 Â Here are this week's vocabulary words: Promised.
 Pledged. Guaranteed. The California Constitution: the
 system of fundamental laws and principles that prescribes
 the nature, functions, and limits of a government.
 
 This is similar to promises broken under "No Child Left
 Behind"; children are left behind for the very reason that
 the mandates of NCLB are underfunded. Money was
 promised, but only 40% of it comes. It costs school
 districts more to comply with the administrivia and
 paperwork of NCLB than the feds pay.
 
 Recently we have seen "revisions" to promises made to
 the voters and children of LAUSD. The Board of
 Education voted last month 6-1 to build less schools in
 the Valley and San Pedro than was promised the voters
 that same year! Valley and San Pedro voter-taxpayers
 were promised school in their neighborhoods that are not
 going to be built. In essence 335,230 voters voted for the
 schools, but six school boardmembers voted no!  District
 staff has consistently requested  and  the Board of Ed
 has consistently approved - paying for projects not listed
 in the bonds. This, called by some "bait-and-switch"  is
 done at the expense of projects listed., either
 circumventing or ignoring the objection of the Bond
 Oversight Committee.
 
 
 All of us, Democrats, Republicans, liberals, conservatives,
 radicals, fundamentalists, middle-of-the-roaders, fringies
 of every stripe; governors, school boardmembers,
 assembly-congress-business-and-just-plain-people;
 doctors, lawyers, paleteros, politicians and teachers and
 students and parents and children  we all need to
 remember what we learned in kindergarten from Horton
 the Elephant:  "I meant what I said and I said what I
 meant.  An elephant's faithful one-hundred percent."
 Âsmf
 
 State of the State: RAND REPORT SHOWS CALIFORNIA SCHOOLS LAG BEHIND OTHER STATES ON ALMOST EVERY OBJECTIVE MEASUREMENT
 Jan 3, 2005 - California's public school system lags behind
 most of the nation on almost every objective
 measurement of student achievement, funding, teacher
 qualifications and school facilities, according to a new
 RAND Corporation analysis that is the first
 comprehensive examination of measurable dimensions of
 the state's education system.
 
 The study issued today chronicles how the state's K-12
 school system has fallen from a national leader 30 years
 ago to its current ranking near the bottom in nearly every
 objective category. It was funded by the William and
 Flora Hewlett Foundation, which is working to build
 support for improving California schools.
 
 While the assessment of California schools is generally
 negative, researchers also note several positive trends,
 including significant improvement in student math
 achievement in recent years, and funding increases for
 school construction and repair.
 
 ÂA lot of people have expressed concern about the state
 of K-12 education in California, said Stephen Carroll, a
 RAND senior economist and lead author of the report.
 ÂWe found that those concerns are well placed. California
 schools are lagging behind most other states and these
 findings suggest policymakers need to make major
 changes in order to repair the problems. Despite some
 improvements, the state has a long way to go to reclaim
 its standing as a national leader in K-12 education.Â
 
 ÂThis report makes the scope of the California education
 crisis crystal clear, said Marshall S. Smith, director of
 the Hewlett Foundation's education program. ÂWe need
 so much more than short-term Band-Aids  we need
 long-term solutions that deal with the system's underlying
 problems. To secure California's future, we need serious
 school finance reform to ensure that all children have the
 educational resources to achieve high standards.Â
 
 California currently spends more than $50 billion each
 year to educate about 6 million elementary and secondary
 students  about 12.8 percent of the nation's school-age
 population.
 
 RAND researchers examined the status of K-12 education
 in California across several broad measures, including
 student academic achievement, teacher qualifications,
 school facilities and non-educational benchmarks such as
 teenage pregnancy rates. Among the findings:
 
 * California student achievement on national
 standardized tests is near the bottom of the 50 states,
 ranking above only Louisiana and Mississippi. California's
 low scores cannot be accounted for by a high percentage
 of minority students, who generally have lower scores
 because many come from low-income families and
 sometimes must learn English as a second language.
 Controlling for students' background, California's scores
 are the lowest of any state.
 * California students have made gains on national
 achievement tests in both math and reading. In particular,
 the improvement seen among 4th graders in California in
 the past seven years has been greater than their peers in
 other states.
 * California has the second highest ratio of students per
 teacher in the nation, even after a major effort began in
 1996 to reduce ratios for K-3 and 9th grade. California
 K-12 schools have an average of 20.9 students per
 teacher, compared with a national average of 16.1.
 * California school districts' teacher standards are
 generally lower than in other states. Just 46 percent of
 school districts in California require teachers to have full
 standard certification in the subjects they teach, compared
 with 82 percent nationally.
 * The real average annual teacher salary in California
 during the 2000-2001 school year was about the same as
 it was in 1969-70, when adjusted for inflation. The
 adjusted annual average salary of about $39,000 (in
 today's dollars) places California last among the five
 largest states and 32nd nationwide.
 * While California spent less per pupil on school
 facilities than other states during the 1990s, progress has
 been made in recent years with passage of both state and
 local bond measures. However, schools in central cities
 and in rural areas still have a high number of inadequate
 facilities.
 
 The decline of California's K-12 system has paralleled the
 shrinking of per pupil financial support for education
 during the past three decades, according to the RAND
 report.
 
 The decline began about 30 years ago when the state
 became the first to implement school finance reform that
 moved responsibility for school funding from local
 jurisdictions to the state. The change helped to make
 spending per pupil more equal across the state. While
 there is evidence the change narrowed the gap between
 rich and poor districts, it also contributed to lower
 spending levels overall.
 
 While California's annual per student spending was about
 $400 above the national average in 1969-70, it fell to
 more than $600 below the national average in 1999-2000,
 according to the report. The state ranked 27th in per pupil
 spending in 2001-2002.
 
 Support for K-12 education as a proportion of the per
 capita income of Californians has fallen as well. California
 spent about 4.5 percent of the personal income of state
 residents on public education in the early and middle
 1970s  about the same as the rest of the country. But
 from the late 1970s through the middle 1990s, California's
 support lagged about 1.2 percentage points behind the
 national average, according to the report.
 
 Researchers note that California is among the nation's
 most ethnically diverse states, with a young population
 that poses many educational challenges.
 
 California's large immigrant population means the state
 has an abundance of students learning to speak English
 and parents who do not speak English. The 2000 Census
 showed that 5.8 percent of California school-aged
 children had trouble speaking English, compared with a
 national average of 2.5 percent. This creates challenges
 for the state's schools by imposing the need for higher
 staffing, and by hampering communication between
 schools and parents.
 
 In addition to academic issues, Carroll and his colleagues
 also examined others measures of youth achievement,
 such as teenage pregnancy trends, that can be influenced
 by schools. The findings on these measures were mixed
 for California's students.
 
 The pregnancy rate for 15-17 year olds in California is
 higher than in any state other than the District of
 Columbia, although it is falling faster in California than
 anywhere else. In contrast, California youths have
 relatively low use of cigarettes and alcohol when
 compared with youths nationally.
 
 The analysis includes information about California's
 academic standing primarily among students in grades
 K-8 because too little information is available to make
 meaningful comparisons for students in high school,
 according to researchers.
 
 Other authors of the RAND report are Cathy Krop,
 Jeremy Arkes, Peter Morrison and Ann Flanagan, all of
 RAND.
 
 The report can be downloaded free below. A printed copy of the entire report (ISBN: 0-8330-3716-1) can be ordered from RAND's Distribution Services for $24 (order@rand.org or call toll-free 877-584-8642).
 
 
 
 
 State of the State: EDUCATION BUDGET ON HIT LIST
 Â Governor will propose cutting $2.2 billion. Angry
 educators blast him for reneging on last year's agreement
 to protect school funding.
 
 By Evan Halper
 Times Staff Writer
 
 LA Times/January 6, 2005 - SACRAMENTO Â Gov.
 Arnold Schwarzenegger will propose cutting state
 spending on K-12 education and community colleges by
 $2.2 billion when he presents his budget Monday,
 administration officials said.
 
 The news came to school officials as they also were
 learning of the governor's plan to weaken Proposition 98,
 a constitutional provision to guarantee that education gets
 a set share of state revenues.
 
 "We are left absolutely speechless by his proposal to
 suspend and amend Prop. 98 and resolve the state's fiscal
 troubles at the direct expense of 6 million public
 schoolchildren," said Scott P. Plotkin, executive director
 of the California School Boards Assn.
 
 The governor's proposal would implement
 across-the-board budget cuts when the state overspends.
 Schools, like all other programs, would endure large,
 unanticipated reductions if the state budget falls out of
 balance.
 
 State Supt. of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell called the
 spending proposals "devastating" and education groups
 immediately began mobilizing to fight the governor.
 
 Schwarzenegger had vowed to protect schools from such
 cuts in return for their acceptance of billions of dollars in
 reductions last year to help balance the current budget.
 But Finance Director Tom Campbell told the school
 groups Wednesday afternoon that the governor would not
 be able to honor that deal. The administration will instead
 propose using $2.2 billion owed education to help close
 the state's projected $8.1-billion shortfall.
 
 As the governor prepared to cut education, however, he
 said in his State of the State speech Wednesday that
 schools are already failing: About 30% of high school
 students do not graduate, he said.
 
 And in a move that probably will draw further fire from
 educators, he proposed that teachers be paid based on
 merit rather than seniority.
 
 "This is war," said Brett McFadden, legislative advocate
 for the Assn. of California School Administrators. "We
 are going to be out in the streets, in the schools, at the
 PTAs. We had a deal. We shook hands and put it in
 writing."
 
 That deal began to unravel, however, when the
 nonpartisan legislative analyst's office reported in
 November that education spending was projected to grow
 much faster than originally anticipated. Voter-approved
 formulas automatically set aside a specific share of all
 revenue that comes into the state for education, and more
 revenue than projected has been coming in.
 
 The analyst suggested that the state could take as much as
 $2.8 billion of that money away from schools through the
 middle of next year, and they still would have enough to
 cover enrollment growth and cost-of-living adjustments.
 
 The administration has decided to proceed with that
 proposal, but has adjusted the amount to $2.2 billion.
 
 In proposing the cut, the governor would be taking on
 one of the state's most politically potent groups, with a
 grass-roots network of tens of thousands of parents and
 the financial resources to mount an aggressive campaign
 in opposition.
 
 But Campbell said education spending would still go up
 7% despite the cut. The increase without the cut would
 have been double, he said, and the administration could
 not justify that in a year when so many other programs
 face drastic reductions.
 
 "It is just not responsible with an overall budget gap of
 this size for any one item  even an item as important as
 this one  to go up that much," Campbell said. "The
 governor has the duty to represent all people, and to be
 fair in the face of different circumstances."
 
 Democrats were circumspect about the proposal.
 
 "This is just the opening shot and we have a long way to
 go in this process," said Assembly Budget Committee
 Chairman John Laird (D-Santa Cruz).
 
 Education groups, meanwhile, called the governor's
 proposal to subject schools to unilateral budget cuts
 unacceptable.
 
 "When you do across-the-board cuts it means you have
 no priorities," said Kevin Gordon, executive director of
 the California Assn. of School Business Officials. "We
 need leaders that have priorities. That's Public Policy
 101."
 
 But Campbell argued that the proposal would protect
 schools from the kinds of cuts they are now enduring, as
 it would prohibit the state from borrowing from one
 program to pay for another.
 
 As for programs such as schools suffering because of
 overspending in unrelated areas, Campbell said, "That's
 how it works in a family. When you have a particular
 crisis, everyone spends less. It's how average Californians
 deal with it."
 
 *
 Times staff writers Cara Mia DiMassa and Nancy Vogel
 contributed to this report.
 
 
 
 
 State of the State: EDUCATORS WARN OF PLAN'S DIRE IMPACT
 By Duke Helfand and Joel Rubin
 Times Staff Writers
 
 LA Times/January 7, 2005 - Education leaders and school
 district superintendents responded furiously to Gov.
 Arnold Schwarzenegger's budget plans Thursday, saying
 that the proposals would gut funding guarantees that have
 protected schools for more than a decade.
 
 Schwarzenegger is expected to propose a state
 constitutional amendment to alter Proposition 98,
 approved by voters in 1988 to ensure that schools and
 community colleges receive at least 40% of state spending
 each year.
 
 Proposition 98 has served as a financial buoy for schools,
 establishing a statewide funding base that rises when the
 economy is strong.
 
 It has also allowed the state to hold back school funding
 when revenues slump, with the requirement of paying
 back the money. Those funds become part of the state's
 minimum obligation to schools in future years.
 
 Schwarzenegger's plans would eliminate protections and
 could strip billions of dollars from schools, education
 groups said.
 
 School district leaders warned of dire consequences,
 including school closures, layoffs, larger classes, fewer
 buses and requiring school employees to pay more of
 their healthcare costs.
 
 A report released this week by the Rand Corp.
 underscored educators' concerns: It showed that
 California's level of funding per pupil has fallen below the
 national average for nearly three decades.
 
 "It's a terribly serious undermining of public education,"
 Los Angeles schools Supt. Roy Romer said. "You will
 put public education in the state of California on a roller
 coaster that depends on what happens with the governor
 and Legislature each year."
 
 But administration officials said the governor's proposals
 would put an end to political leaders raiding education
 funds to help balance the budget. Schwarzenegger and the
 Legislature took such action last year, diverting $2 billion
 originally earmarked for education spending.
 
 Altering Proposition 98 is part of Schwarzenegger's
 broader plan to make across-the-board budget cuts in
 state spending if legislators can't resolve future deficits.
 
 H.D. Palmer, deputy finance director of the state
 Department of Finance, said education would suffer the
 same degree of cuts as other agencies instead of falling
 victim to deeper reductions.
 
 "I think when [educators] find out what's in the budget,
 they will be pleasantly surprised to learn that the
 governor's proposals Â
 will eliminate the ability of the
 Legislature or the governor to borrow from education,"
 Palmer said.
 
 He also said the budget Schwarzenegger will unveil
 Monday will include a $2.9- billion increase for schools in
 the coming year  a 7.1% rise in general fund education
 spending from this year and nearly twice the 4.2% rate of
 increase in overall state spending.
 
 But that is still not as much as school districts were
 expecting or what they were owed this year.
 
 Education groups complained that another
 Schwarzenegger proposal  one that would require
 school districts, rather than the state, to fund
 contributions to California's teacher retirement system Â
 would cut into the anticipated funding increases.
 
 If that occurs, districts might have to renegotiate teachers'
 contracts  an unwelcome prospect that could trigger
 ugly battles with unions, education leaders said.
 
 "We're going to have strikes up and down the state as
 school districts pick up on this time bomb," said Scott
 Plotkin, executive director of the California School
 Boards Assn.
 
 Plotkin and other education leaders in Sacramento
 assailed Schwarzenegger for reneging on a budget deal he
 made with education groups last year.
 
 The deal allowed the state to suspend Proposition 98 for
 a year and forgo $2 billion owed to schools. In exchange,
 Schwarzenegger promised to protect schools against
 further cuts and he pledged to restore the $2 billion in the
 coming year's budget.
 
 Educators said they do not expect to get that money, or
 an additional $2.2 billion owed to schools as a result of
 the improving economy.
 
 "I feel that teachers and children have been betrayed,"
 said Barbara Kerr, president of the California Teachers
 Assn., which negotiated the budget deal with
 Schwarzenegger. "I am very disappointed. We had an
 agreement. I worked very hard to have a bipartisan
 organization. Right now I don't feel very bipartisan."
 
 This is the Schwarzenegger administration's opening salvo
 in what is expected to be a protracted budget fight. The
 governor and the Legislature will haggle over the budget
 until May, when Schwarzenegger will release a revised
 spending plan.
 
 School district leaders were scrambling Thursday to glean
 details of Schwarzenegger's initial proposals  and
 weighing new budget-cutting options.
 
 In Santa Ana Unified, a heavily Latino district where
 more than two-thirds of the students are still learning
 English, Supt. Al Mijares said the governor's plans could
 force increased class sizes in primary grades.
 
 The Santa Ana district has struggled through three years
 of funding cuts in programs and administrative staff.
 
 To help close a $29-million budget shortfall this year,
 Santa Ana's teachers agreed to a 4% pay cut last March.
 
 "I understand that we are in a fiscal crisis. I think
 everyone in public education understands that," Mijares
 said. "But at some point you have to prioritize. We are,
 right now, on the edge. We cannot bear any more
 reductions in funding."
 
 The superintendent of the San Francisco Unified School
 District sounded a more understanding note  even as
 she prepared to go before her school board with a
 budget-cutting plan that may include closing as many as
 five schools.
 
 "The governor has to look at the whole state, and I do
 understand his dilemma," Supt. Arlene Ackerman said.
 "But at the same time, education is woefully underfunded.
 We have one of the strongest school accountability
 systems in the country, but we lack the resources to
 assure that students can succeed."
 
 Though school financing dominated Schwarzenegger's
 education agenda during his State of the State address
 this week, he also proposed a system that would tie
 teachers' pay to merit rather than seniority.
 
 Education Secretary Richard J. Riordan said local school
 districts would work out details with teachers unions and
 the state. He said such things as teacher evaluations and
 student test scores could be weighed in pay decisions.
 
 The merit pay idea drew immediate criticism from unions.
 The head of the Los Angeles teachers union issued a blunt
 assessment of the proposal, saying that it is unproved and
 would pit teachers against one another.
 
 United Teachers Los Angeles President John Perez
 suggested spending more money in classrooms and
 reducing class sizes.
 
 "Shouldn't we do what other states are doing that is
 causing them to outperform us?" he asked. "First you try
 the Â
 proven methods, then you try something new. We
 haven't tried what we know works in other states."
 
 *
 
 Times staff writers Cara Mia DiMassa and Evan Halper
 contributed to this report.
 
 Other Voices: Steve Lopez-EDUCATION? CHALK UP AN F FOR THE GOVERNOR / Op-Ed: SCHOOLS IN THE CROSS HAIRS / Louis V. Gerstner Jr: DO THE MATH
 Â Steve Lopez/Points West/LA Times: EDUCATION? CHALK UP AN F FOR THE GOVERNOR
 
 January 7, 2005 - I keep thinking it's going to be
 impossible for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to outdo
 himself, and he keeps reminding me never to
 underestimate him.
 
 For two years, he's been telling us public education in
 California is one of his top priorities. In his State of the
 State speech Wednesday, he said schools are a disaster,
 with 30% of high school students dropping out. This
 followed a grim Rand Corp. report that gave California
 schools lousy grades for funding and student
 achievement.
 
 So what's Big Boy going to do about it?
 
 Take an ax to education funding.
 
 Yeah, that oughta get Johnny reading.
 
 "Devastating," state Supt. of Public Instruction Jack
 O'Connell said of the $2.2-billion cut expected when
 Schwarzenegger's budget is released Monday.
 
 With no clear plan for balancing the budget, mountains of
 new debt, and so many close friends in the anti-tax
 business community, it was obvious that a day of
 reckoning was fast approaching for Schwarzenegger. But
 who would have thought he would drop a hammer on the
 state's children?
 
 It's too bad they aren't represented by the state Chamber
 of Commerce.
 
 Some educators were left speechless by news of the cuts,
 probably because it's hard to talk while removing a knife
 from your back. Schwarzenegger promised last year,
 while whacking education funding, that he'd keep schools
 off the chopping block next time around.
 
 And do you know how Schwarzenegger, who keeps
 saying he represents the will of the people, is going to
 make that $2.2-billion cut? He's going to trample on
 Proposition 98, the education funding protection
 approved by California voters.
 
 See what I mean? And he doesn't even blink when he
 feeds us this stuff.
 
 Not that Big Boy's State of the State didn't score a few
 points. The governor wants caps on irresponsible
 spending, he wants redistricting so we don't end up with
 so many left-wing nuts and right-wing kooks in the
 Legislature, and he's gunning for the dastardly prison
 guards union.
 
 But on education, you would have expected more from a
 guy who has used schoolchildren as political props, and
 who struts around talking about blowing up boxes. While
 he preens  is it me, or is his hairdresser toning down the
 reds? Â other states are leaving us in the dust.
 
 Education Week reports that 31 states are rethinking how
 they finance public education. In 16 states, angry parents
 and children's advocates got so fed up with the sorry state
 of public schools, they sued for adequate funding.
 
 In California, state spending per pupil has gone from
 among the highest in the nation, before Proposition 13, to
 the company of backwater cellar-dwellers. When Warren
 Buffet made the unforgivable mistake of telling the truth
 about the crippling effects of Proposition 13,
 Schwarzenegger vaporized him.
 
 Money alone can't fix the schools, but the wealthiest state
 in human history ought to be ashamed of its status as a
 national laggard. This has gone on for so many years that
 mediocrity has become acceptable, if not something to
 applaud.
 
 Do you think we couldn't fix this if we really wanted to?
 
 Parents of means, like Arnold and Maria and their pals,
 don't have to worry. They have the choice of shelling out
 for private school or moving to one of the handful of
 well-heeled communities where public schools actually
 work.
 
 Parents without means?
 
 Good luck and God bless.
 
 The only saving grace in Schwarzenegger's plundering of
 California schools is that it might get people ticked off
 enough to do what the governor doesn't have the courage
 to do.
 
 Chris Cabaldon, of EdVoice, is exploring support for a
 statewide parcel tax.
 
 Mike Kirst, a Stanford University professor, says he
 thinks it's high time to join other states and organize a
 lawsuit that would require reasonable funding.
 
 Phil Angelides, the state treasurer, says the top 1% of
 California's income earners will get $12 billion in federal
 tax cuts this year. He wonders why Schwarzenegger can't
 borrow an idea from Govs. Wilson and Reagan and
 temporarily squeeze the top tax bracket.
 
 "There needs to be some radical, systematic overhaul,"
 says Jeannie Oakes, a UCLA education professor.
 
 "Ninety-nine percent of California's kids are in districts
 spending less than the national average. California is No.
 8 or 9 in terms of personal income per capita, and we are
 down around 30 or 40 in the country in the percentage of
 income we devote to education."
 
 Oakes noted an obvious irony: The governor is willing to
 move heaven and earth for California's business leaders,
 arguing that we can't afford to have them leave the state.
 
 But if we don't fix the schools, who are they going to
 hire?
 
 
 Â LA Times Editorial: SCHOOLS IN THE CROSS HAIRS
 
 January 7, 2005 - Last year, Gov. Arnold
 Schwarzenegger was making pacts with his new friends,
 the teachers unions: Let me, for one year, suspend
 Proposition 98, which guarantees a set share of state
 revenues for education, and next year I'll make it up to
 you. Now the governor is reneging on the deal, shifting
 $2.2 billion away from schools in his proposed budget
 and asking to end mandatory funding levels.
 Schwarzenegger implied in his State of the State address
 that educators had poorly spent the billions they had
 already been given.
 
 Schwarzenegger also was brave enough to say what many
 parents whisper: Teachers' pay should be linked more to
 performance than seniority. And firing teachers who don't
 measure up shouldn't be such an impossible task. Some of
 the most ineffective teachers are burnout cases, doing
 minimal work but pulling in the top-scale salaries. They're
 a tiny minority, but a couple of them during a school
 career is enough to bring a child's academic progress to a
 crawl.
 
 Screams of imminent disaster are baseless. The governor
 is still proposing a 7% hike in the education budget,
 enough to keep schools on the same mediocre track. The
 billions for schools, however, are less generous than
 Schwarzenegger thinks. A Rand report released this week
 showed the state's classes were more crowded than in
 comparable states, its teachers less well paid and its
 per-pupil spending lower.
 
 Schwarzenegger would be in a better position to propose
 smart spending had he done his job a year ago and
 appointed his share of members to the Quality Education
 Commission. Instead, he proposes to kill it altogether.
 
 Authorized two years ago, the commission was supposed
 to start meeting last January. Its mission: Examine
 schools top to bottom to determine the real cost of a
 good public school education. That means taking a fresh
 look at what makes a good education. Which methods
 work, and which don't? Where are schools spending with
 little result, and what might be better ways of using that
 money?
 
 The 13-member commission would be unpaid, and private
 foundations have granted $500,000 for its work. But
 facing what a decent education costs could put
 Schwarzenegger in a quandary  he might be forced to
 admit that state budget restraints, not most teachers, are
 what's shortchanging students.
 
 
 Â LA Times Commentary: DO THE MATH: Money Plus
 Merit Equals Better Teachers  Professionalizing their
 pay would be the most effective education reform.
 
 By Louis V. Gerstner Jr.
 
 January 7, 2005 - Pop quiz. Name the one American
 profession in which workers get almost no rewards for a
 job well done; that's having the toughest time attracting
 and keeping the best and brightest people, just as it faces
 an unprecedented demand for new hires; and in which the
 quality of the worker determines, more than any other,
 whether or not our young people excel.
 
 The profession is teaching. And that's why Gov. Arnold
 Schwarzenegger's call to usher California's schools into
 the modern era with performance-based pay for teachers
 is the right reform at the right time.
 
 Few Californians need convincing that the state's schools
 are subpar. A Rand Corp. study, released this week, put it
 starkly: "California's public school system lags behind
 most of the nation on almost every objective
 measurement of student achievement, funding, teacher
 qualifications and school facilities." The report noted how
 far the state's position had fallen since it was a clear
 national leader a generation ago.
 
 What makes good schools good? If we could wave a
 magic wand and improve one thing, what would it be?
 Buy new desks and books, cut class size or put an
 exemplary teacher in as many classrooms as possible?
 
 First, consider what the Center for the Future of Teaching
 and Learning reported last month: "Nearly 60,000
 California teachers are over the age of 55. If those 60,000
 teachers leave the profession at the average Â
 retirement
 age of 60, California will need to replace one-fifth of the
 state's teacher workforce in the next three to five years."
 
 One reform rises above the rest in urgency and
 importance: investing in teachers. Invest in them now by
 building a teaching profession in California that is the
 envy of the world. Improve preparation programs, which
 currently don't give teachers the training they ought to,
 particularly in the subject area they teach. Streamline
 certification and licensing systems. Strengthen
 professional development. (According to the Rand study,
 just 46% of California school districts require teachers to
 be fully certified in the subjects they teach.) And attract
 the best with good base pay and modern incentives for
 excellence.
 
 While other professions have offered more and more
 rewards to people who do good work, teaching has
 lagged behind. All good teachers in the state are
 underpaid compared with other professions  one study
 shows teacher pay in California falling below the national
 average when adjusted for the state's cost of living. And
 for professionals talented in math, science or engineering
 who can earn far more in fields outside education, the
 shortfall is stark.
 
 And that will remain the case until we professionalize
 teacher compensation. The norm now is that a teacher
 equals a teacher equals a teacher, no matter how
 desperately society may need a certain skill set and no
 matter how well a teacher performs in the classroom. The
 precious few exceptions, like Denver public schools Â
 where teachers approved a plan that would phase in a
 system that takes into account student growth, market
 incentives, evaluations and teacher knowledge and skills
 Â aren't yet enough to change the paradigm; California
 is.
 
 Schwarzenegger deserves credit and support for leading
 the charge for change. And he's not alone; others, like the
 Broad Education Foundation in Los Angeles, have been
 working to develop innovative pay systems.
 
 There is no doubt that we will hear from naysayers: Merit
 pay can't be done fairly; it rewards teachers who have the
 easiest students to teach  the ones who come from
 wealthy homes or start out with a head start; it breeds
 unhealthy competition.
 
 But the fact is, a merit pay system can be built fairly to
 give the most to teachers who produce the biggest annual
 academic improvement, and to factor in a wide variety of
 measurements of excellence, including peer and principal
 review. Even an imperfect system would be far better
 than the current single-salary schedule. And while we
 reward the best, we need to empower principals to lead,
 making sure they have the proper authority to hire and
 fire teachers. And as far as competition goes, since when
 is a little healthy effort to be the best at improving reading
 or math scores such a bad thing?
 
 This is not a Republican issue. Building a system that pays
 teachers based more on results is one of the core
 recommendations of the bipartisan nonprofit organization
 I founded  a group that includes a former Democratic
 secretary of Education and two former Democratic
 governors.
 
 This is not a time for red-hot rhetoric. It's time to look
 honestly at the shortcomings of the current compensation
 system and work together to design one that works better
 for teachers, for students and for us all.
 
 Â Louis V. Gerstner Jr. is the former chairman of IBM and
 the founder of the Teaching Commission and
 Reinventing America's Schools, Inc.
 
 
 
 
 EVENTS/COMING UP
 Â ROMEO & JULIET FOR TEACHERS: Just what our kids need: Murder, gang warfare, sex, drugs and a teenage double suicide!  - smf
 
 Shakespeare Festival/LA, Autry National CenterÂs
 Museum of the American West  and Native Voices
 are pleased to announce a free teacher in-service training
 exploring William ShakespeareÂs  ROMEO & JULIET
 and the world premiere of James LujanÂs KINO &
 TERSEA: Teresa: A Native American Adaptation of
 Romeo and Juliet
 
 Teachers attending this two-day workshop will receive:
 Â Multicultural Salary Point
 Â A TeacherÂs Edition of Romeo and Juliet
 Â A full classroom set of Romeo and Juliet, donated by Penguin Books
 A Special Incentive: The first fifty teachers enrolling will
 also receive a free ticket to Sir Peter HallÂs production of
 AS YOU LIKE IT, playing at The Ahmanson Theater.
 
 Dates: Sat., January 29, 2005, and  Sat., February 5,
 2005,  from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM at Shakespeare
 Festival/LA, 1238 West First Street LA, CA 90026
 
 Â For More Information Call Marina Oliva at
 213-481-2273
 
 
 Â 24th LAUSD ACADEMIC DECATHLON COMPETITION VOLUNTEERS
 
 The twenty-fourth LAUSD Academic Decathlon
 competition will take place on Saturday, January 29 at
 Bravo Medical Magnet High and Saturday, February 5 at
 UCLA. Come out and support some of the most brilliant
 scholars in the Nation by volunteering to help with one or
 both days. Help is especially needed with the Speech and
 Interview events on January 29.
 
 Volunteers from previous years are encouraged to wear
 their Aca Deca t-shirts in support of the students who are
 competing this year.
 
 A volunteer application and more information can be
 obtained by going to: http://www.lausd.k12.ca.us/lausd/offices/Academic_ Decathlon.
 
 Â Monday, Jan 10, 2005  TRADITIONAL CALENDAR (2 Semester) SCHOOLS RETURN FROM WINTER BREAK
 
 Â Tuesday Jan 11, 2005
 South Region Elementary School #1
 Schematic Design Meeting
 
 Please join us for a community meeting regarding the design for South Region Elementary School #1.
 
 At this meeting we will:
 
 * Present schematic design
 * Collect community input on the design of the project
 
 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.
 
 75th Street Elementary School
 142 W. 75th Street
 Los Angeles, CA 90003
 
 Â Wednesday Jan 12, 2005
 South Region Elementary School #4
 Pre-Design Meeting
 
 Join us at this meeting where we will:
 
 * Introduce the Project Architect to the community
 * Provide overview of the school facilities, including: number of classrooms, library, lunch area, etc.
 * Review LAUSD design principles
 * Receive community input on school design
 
 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.
 
 Bryson Elementary School
 Auditorium
 4470 Missouri Ave.
 South Gate, CA 90280
 
 Â Thursday Jan 13, 2005
 South Region Span K-8 #2
 Revised Project Definition Meeting
 
 At this meeting, we will present and discuss the RECOMMENDED PREFERRED SITE RECONFIGURATION and REVISED PROJECT DEFINITION that will be presented to the LAUSD Board of Education for review and approval
 
 We will also:
 * Review the factors used to revise the project definition
 * Go over next steps in the school construction process
 
 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.
 
 Normandie Elementary School
 4505 S. Raymond Ave.
 Los Angeles, CA 90037
 
 *Dates and times subject to change.
 _______________________________________
 Â SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE:
 http://www.laschools.org/bond/
 Phone: 213.241.4700
 ____________________________________________________
 Â LAUSD FACILITIES COMMUNITY OUTREACH CALENDAR:
 http://www.laschools.org/happenings/
 Phone: 213.633.7616
 
 
 
 
 4LAKids Book Club for December & January  ALL TOGETHER NOW: Creating Middle-Class Schools Through Public School Choice by Richard D. Kahlenberg
 Â Paperback: 390 pages
 Â Publisher: Brookings Institution Press (Dec. 1,
 2003)
 ÂISBN: 0815748116
 
 All Together Now comes highly recommended by Dr. Percy Clark, Jr., Superintendent of the Pasadena Unified School District. PUSD is using an open enrollment strategy based upon ATN to socioeconomically integrate Pasadena Schools; a similar strategy is currently underway in Boston  a major urban school district.  smf
 
 Â ReviewerÂMidwest Book Review: In All Together
 Now: Creating Middle-Class Schools Through Public
 School Choice, Richard Kahlenberg (senior fellow at The Century Foundation), advocates giving every child in American the opportunity to attend a public school in which the majority of students come from middle class households. He persuasively argues that the only way to make good on the American assumption that public schools will provide equal educational opportunity is by teaching disadvantaged and advantaged children together within the same facilities, with the same faculties, the same curriculums, and the same educational resources.
 
 The only way to achieve this socioeconomic integration is to establish a critical mass of middle-class students within all schools. The recommendations offered in All Together
 Now outline a blueprint for creating middle class schools and draw upon the experiences of current experiments with economic integration in Wisconsin, North Carolina, Connecticut, and elsewhere. Based on these case examples are practical ways to bring about integrated schools for the future, and guidance for successfully overcoming political, logistical, and legal obstacles to an economic desegregation. All Together Now is informative, challenging, and occasionally inspiring
 reading which is particularly recommended to education reform activists, policy makers, school administrators, faculty members, and concerned parents.
 
 
 
 
 What can YOU do?
 Â E-mail, call or write your school board member. Or your city councilperson, mayor, assemblyperson, state senator, the governor, member of congress, senator - or  the president. Tell them what you really think.
 Â Open the dialogue. Write a letter to the editor. Circulate these thoughts. Talk to the principal and teachers at your local school.
 Â Speak with your friends, neighbors and coworkers. Stay on top of education issues. Don't take my word for it!
 Â Get involved at your neighborhood school. Join your PTA. Serve on a School Site Council. Be there for a child.
 Â Vote.
 
 
 
 
 
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