The Sacramento Bee
Sunday, June 12, 2005
Charting a course for schools
California has the chance to change the path of education,
thanks to two little-noticed trends
By Daniel Weintraub – Bee Columnist
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Second in a series: For California, the coming decades will be a time of
enormous changes, many of them unprecedented in scope. Over the next few months,
Daniel Weintraub will explore the dynamics of these changes, the challenges
and opportunities that they pose for California and what the state must do
now to prepare for them.
SAN DIEGO - Sometimes it seems as if California's political class never stops
fighting over the public schools. But even as that battle turns into what
looks like a struggle to the death between Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and
the teachers unions, there is reason to hope that the coming decade eventually
will bring an end to the education wars.
Amid the unrelenting rancor that dominates the landscape today, two little-noticed
trends hold the potential to transform the way we think about the schools.
One is a pause in enrollment growth. After years of breathtaking increases,
the slowdown now forecast should give the state much-needed financial breathing
room, allowing for a dramatic but painless boost in the money taxpayers spend
for each of the more than 6 million students in our schools.
The other trend is the emergence of charter schools, the product of a simple
but promising reform that does more by doing less, freeing teachers, students
and parents from the clutches of state politicians who can't keep themselves
from micromanaging every aspect of education policy.
More about the money in a moment. First, look at what is happening in San
Diego, where determined parents are showing how people in some of the state's
toughest neighborhoods can take back their schools from the bureaucracy.
Michelle Evans, 35, says the schools let her down. Promoted through the grades
without having to achieve, she dropped out of high school barely able to read
and write. But she is a fiercely proud woman, and she was not about to let
the same thing happen to any of her three children, or to her community -
the long-depressed Chollas View section of this otherwise wealthy city.
"Public education as it stands now is not working for minority children,"
says Evans, who is African-American. "It's not."
So earlier this year, Evans helped marshal a massive grass-roots campaign
that culminated in a declaration of education independence in her neglected
neighborhood. More than 700 parents representing about 70 percent of children
in the Gompers Secondary School attendance area, signed petitions demanding
that the San Diego Unified School District relinquish control of the campus
and hand it over to a board of parents, teachers, academics and community
activists. After initially resisting, the district's trustees approved the
request.
This fall, the site will reopen as Gompers Middle Charter School under a partnership
with University of California, San Diego. It will have a longer school day,
many new teachers and high expectations. The school will combine intense instruction
in basic subjects with strong discipline and close attention to the problems
many children from this area deal with outside of school.
Three other San Diego neighborhood groups took control of their schools the
same day Gompers did. And what is happening here increasingly is happening
throughout California. Parents, it seems, are less willing to accept a public
school system that cannot or will not help their children succeed. This has
always been the case in affluent neighborhoods, where families could turn
to private schools if they were dissatisfied with what the government offered
them. But now parents in poorer communities are finding the tools that allow
them to do much the same thing within the public school system.
The trend is picking up steam at a moment of peril and opportunity for the
schools and for California.
The danger comes from a persistent achievement gap between white children
and minorities, and between the rich and the poor, just at a time when the
schools are becoming dominated by more students of color. If those groups
continue to perform as they have been, the schools will be turning out more
and more people incapable of competing in a global economy.
But the flip side of those same demographic trends is a decline in the state's
birth rate and thus a drop in projected enrollment growth. While the most
recent estimates by the Department of Finance and the Legislative Analyst's
Office make this clear, the implications for state fiscal policy have not
yet penetrated the Capitol's budget debates, in part because those discussions
are so dominated by short-term thinking.
The pause will come at a good time. Since 1995, California's public school
enrollments have climbed by more than 20 percent, adding more than 1 million
students. But over the next decade, if projections are accurate, the schools
will grow by a little more than 3 percent, adding about 200,000 pupils to
today's enrollment of about 6.3 million. To put that difference in perspective,
consider that during just two years in the 1990s - from 1993 through 1995
- the schools grew by as much as they are expected to grow over the next 10
years.
This enrollment plateau means California, over time, ought to be able to spend
more on the schools, measured on a per-pupil basis, without taking away from
other programs or raising taxes, because the economy should be growing much
faster than the number of students. Think of the state as a family whose income
grew every year for 10 years, while adding another child each year as well,
straining the finances. But if that family's pay keeps growing at the same
pace while they have no more children, there will be more money to go around
for everybody.
Thus, if California's economy grows by an average of 3 percent a year, school
funding per student could climb by 25 percent over the next decade even if
public education gets the same share of the state's economic output that it
does today. That's $1,800 more per student in today's dollars -a demographic
dividend.
The public schools' claim on that money is not automatic. Health care costs
keep rising. And even as K-12 enrollments flatten, the colleges will see a
bigger enrollment surge, requiring more resources. Those needs could erode
the state's ability to do more for the schools. But chances are, kindergarten
through 12th grade education will do fine, fiscally speaking, as long as the
economy continues to grow at the typical average rate.
The question is what to do with that new money if it comes. It probably doesn't
make sense to keep spending it the way we spend money on schools today, since
by broad agreement, public education today needs more than just money to improve.
According to a recent study by the RAND Corp., California's students placed
third from the bottom on the average score in the National Assessment of Educational
Progress test, ahead of only Louisiana and Mississippi. Even when the state's
difficult demographics are taken into account, California is near the bottom.
The state's black students and non-Hispanic whites, according to RAND, are
the lowest performing in the nation, and Hispanic students here outperform
Hispanic students in just four other states. A recent Harvard University report,
meanwhile, showed that only about 60 percent of black and Hispanic students
graduate from high school.
What should we do about it? In my conversations with parents, teachers, administrators,
academics and lawmakers about education policy, I hear almost as many prescriptions
for school reform as there are schoolchildren.
Some will say the answer is in a "back-to-basics" curriculum that
focuses on core knowledge of reading, writing and math. Others insist that
this traditional approach ignores the "whole child" and risks boring
students who need to see how what they are learning connects to the world
around them. Still others point out that since not every child is going to
college, we need more and better vocational training, or that music and arts
education ought to be expanded.
The debate also covers logistics. Some education experts believe that nothing
will change until the schools abandon a century-old model based on the agricultural
calendar, with summers off and long stretches of school in the winter months.
There is a case to be made for longer school days, Saturday school, smaller
classes, smaller schools, team teaching. Many teachers believe that more parental
involvement at home and more discipline in the schools are crucial. If you
can think of a way to change the way public schools work, there is probably
someone out there who says it would improve public education - and someone
else who thinks it would ruin the schools.
But these wars need not go on forever. A state of 36 million people and growing
does not need one set of education rules that we insist must work equally
well for everyone.
Instead, California could dramatically pare state control over the way schools
are run, ending the incentive policymakers in the Capitol now have to tell
local districts what to do. The state has already set detailed standards reflecting
what we, as a society, want our children to learn in each grade and by the
time they graduate from high school. Annual testing tells us whether they
have achieved those goals. Now local districts, the schools themselves and
parents should be given a chance to meet those standards without further meddling
from Sacramento. The resulting innovation would likely provide many models
for success.
At a minimum, districts should be able to opt out of most of the state Education
Code if the children in their schools are making progress toward meeting state
standards. If schools are doing what we want them to do, why should we care
how they are doing it, other than to try to replicate their performance elsewhere?
But since school districts themselves can be dysfunctional, it also makes
sense to return as much freedom as possible to parents so they can make choices
for their children.
One way to start is to have the dollars follow every child to his or her school
rather than giving each district a lump sum based on its total enrollment.
The way it works now, teacher contracts value seniority, and seniority rights
tend to drive experienced teachers away from tough schools in disadvantaged
communities. The result: Those schools employ more teachers who have less
experience and who are paid less. If the dollars went to the schools first,
and the schools were able to pay competitive salaries, they might use the
extra money to keep more veteran teachers in their ranks. Or they could spend
the money on something else, like a fully trained aide in every classroom.
But changing the financing scheme in that way, from the inside, would be laborious
and uncertain. It would require every school to have a manager trained in
finance and the freedom to hire its own teachers and pay them a salary that
was not part of a fixed schedule. Enacting such a change for every school
in the state would be impossible in the current political environment.
Fortunately, though, state law already allows something very similar on a
case-by-case basis. The charter school is the ultimate in local control within
public education. It is the method those San Diego parents used to break free
from state and school district management.
Charter schools are public schools exempt from most state and local education
regulations. They are typically formed by parents and teachers with support
from the community. They have a vision, laid down in the charter, for how
they are going to operate. Like all schools, they are held accountable for
results. But they are more or less free to achieve those results in any way
they like. They manage their own budgets, hire and fire teachers at will,
and contract for services they do not want to provide themselves.
Gary Hart, a former teacher, state legislator and education adviser to former
Gov. Gray Davis, carried the bill that opened the door to charter schools
in the early 1990s, after years of trying unsuccessfully to reform education
from the top down. After reading that teachers union giant Albert Shanker
was a fan of the idea, Hart, a Democrat, figured it would be the perfect way
to free teachers to practice their profession at the highest level.
"I was getting tired of being beaten up by these education groups always
saying, 'You guys in Sacramento are always passing these bills. If you would
just leave us alone so we could do our jobs and be educators, we could be
doing a much better job,' " Hart told me recently. "I thought charters
were a great way to call their bluff, to give them a great opportunity to
work in a different environment with very few constraints."
Hart had in mind teachers like Mary McGown.
A veteran of more than 25 years in education, McGown now teaches at the Rocklin
Academy, a charter school in the suburbs outside Sacramento. Although the
school has a tight vision and a curriculum built around the core knowledge
concept, she says she loves her job because of the freedom she has to innovate
in the classroom and the way she is treated.
"The biggest thing for me is really building and contributing to something
that is going to make a difference, to know that what I do makes a difference,"
McGown says. "I am valued as a professional and not just someone that's
delivering a package that's given to me. I help create that package."
The beauty of the charter school concept is that there can be as many packages
as there are schools. The concept was slow to take hold, partly because of
constraints in the early law, and only about 100 charter schools were created
in the first five years. But now there are 512 statewide. One in 20 public
schools in California is a charter, and one out of every 50 students attends
one. Each is unique.
Gateway Charter in San Francisco serves more than twice as many students with
learning disabilities as the average school but is still one of the city's
highest performing schools. Eagle Peak school in Walnut Creek uses the Montessori
model and downplays standardized testing. The Mare Island Technology Academy
in Vallejo focuses on teamwork while also testing students regularly to diagnose
their progress toward meeting standards.
View Park Preparatory, in a poor, heavily minority neighborhood of Los Angeles,
mimics college-prep private schools and turns out high-achieving graduates.
And so on.
It's safe to assume that this is only the beginning, since more and more support
is building for the concept. A charter school association provides tips and
back-up for newcomers and puts creators in touch with start-up financing.
The governor's office is proposing to turn control of dozens of failing schools
back to parents and communities. And proposals to let a state agency and public
universities authorize charters would speed creation of the schools in places
where the local district is reluctant to allow them.
The idea seems to fit into a broader societal trend. In so many other aspects
of our lives, from things as important as investing and health care or as
trivial as travel and music, individuals are taking advantage of the information
revolution to seize more control over products that used to be handed down
to them from on high. We have begun to see that in education, as parents who
learn about the performance of schools across town or across the state demand
to know why their neighborhood school cannot do as well.
And that data-rich environment is only getting richer. Eventually, the state
plans to assign every student a unique number that will allow his or her performance
to be tracked from one school district to another and over time, allowing
researchers to dig deeper into what works and what doesn't. Public and private
databases, meanwhile, are making it easier to compare the performance of one
school with another, even how students in one grade level at one school compare
in particular skills, say, adding fractions, with similar students at another
school in a different part of the state.
That sort of information sharing leads parents to demand that the schools
do more to improve their children's performance, and that demand is fueling
the charter school movement.
A debate still rages about whether charter school students perform better
than those in traditional public schools. In some sense that's an irrelevant
question, because the charter model governs how schools are run, not how they
teach. And the whole purpose of charters is to add variety and competition
to the public school system with the goal of getting traditional schools to
improve. If they do, charters will never leave them in the dust.
Nonetheless, charter schools as a group should eventually build a performance
edge and maintain it over time because they have one big advantage that traditional
schools generally do not: They can fail. If a charter school's students are
not performing well, the school can be shut down, either because it loses
its clientele or the district revokes the right to operate. Only the strong
will survive. That almost never happens to traditional schools, unless, like
Gompers in San Diego, they are being converted to a charter.
And that's what makes Gompers such an interesting test case. A recent study
of the Preuss School, the UC San Diego school that will serve as a model for
Gompers, found that students who applied for the school's admissions lottery
but didn't get in fared as well at their neighborhood schools as did those
who were accepted at Preuss. While the data are preliminary, they suggest
it is not so much the school as the family and the student that makes the
difference. Anyone motivated enough to seek out a charter is likely to do
well wherever he or she ends up.
But what if the charter school seeks out the student, and not the other way
around? At Gompers, hundreds of low-performing neighborhood kids whose families
never would have sent them to the fancy school on a university campus across
town are about to be exposed to the same program now established at UCSD.
They will escape it only if they opt out, and few are likely to do so. If
they do better than did their predecessors at the local school, it ought to
be solid evidence that the school has improved while the student body remained
more or less the same.
Michelle Evans thinks that is exactly what will happen.
"All of our kids are capable of learning," Evans told me. "Not
just those few. Not just a handful. ... I feel like next year is going to
be a culture shock for the kids. But it's going to be a great thing."
If it does turn out to be a great thing, the Gompers experiment could be a
model for returning the power in education to the people, asking more of them
in return for the right to run their own schools, and then holding them accountable
for the results. If that's the future of public education, California could
do a lot worse.