Posts Tagged ‘highly qualified teachers’

Don’t Buy New Texts, Save Money

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Textbook purchases are being put on hold!  It’s amazing to find out, not from my school district, but when someone says, “I saw in the paper….”

studying the latest math TG

studying the latest math TG

My dad passed on the article “Budget Cuts Put New Textbook Purchases on Hold,” by Seema Mehta, Los Angeles Times, August 8, 2009, just after I’d commented in this blog (post 8/12) about the impressive math textbook purchases in my school district for 2009-2010.  I didn’t see an article in the bay area newspapers.

The article puts in print what I’d been thinking.  Turns out the state legislators, closing that $24 billion budget breach last month, did it partly by waiving the textbook purchase regulations in the California Education Code.

This waiver came about in spite of the California State Department of Education’s longtime insistence on keeping up with “modern, state-of-the-art textbooks, not outdated, antiquated textbooks,” as stated by Jack O’Connell, state Superintendent of Public Instruction.

The article included lots of back and forth about pragmatics in the current California school budget crisis versus actual need for new texts as often as set in the Education Code.

In my view, I understand how high school history and government classes may want materials every 6-8 years to reflect the latest changes in the world.  I remember, though, when I was in high school not very long ago, we read many supplemental books, newspapers, and other paper articles to get another point of view.

Now, I teach elementary school in which the literature texts, math texts, and even social studies texts are current for much longer than the regulations say.

I agree with the commentators in the article about state money designated for textbooks only: in this crisis, use the money to keep teachers in schools, to keep the custodial staff in schools.  A clean, safe elementary school with highly-qualified teachers is the first requirement to make sure students succeed.

At the same time, if school finance was fixed, if California finance in general was fixed, we wouldn’t be in this mess, would we?

Devil in the Details

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Just a glance at the websites for the White House and the Department of Education tell you big changes are emerging.  The sites affirm that students learn when teachers are retained-not laid off; that the day is long, the work is hard, and mentoring helps; that planning time can’t be ignored if reform is the goal.

As you’ve heard in the news, the sites declare the intention to improve early childhood education, high school graduation rates, student loans to help college attendance.  Sounds like the new administration is addressing the problems being flogged by various education blocs over the last eight years since the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) Act was authorized.

The biggest change is the amount of funding for programs mandated by NCLB, a highlight of the federal stimulus package (February 2009) as well as the federal budget legislation (March 2009).

Interesting that governors on behalf of state school boards, if they want the funds, must agree to assure certain provisions: improve the quality of standardized tests and raise standards; enforce the requirement that the most highly qualified teachers are assigned equably among all students, rich and poor.

If Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, and Barack Obama have been listening, why are so many in the education field upset?

The devil is in the details.

Some like Diane Ravitch in a mid-April post on the blog Bridging Differences, part of Education Week’s online magazine, say the administration is not doing enough to change NCLB faults (and there are many).   Dorothy Meier in the same blog says that there is national denial about the problem among voters as well as state governments.  The mantra is teachers are incompetent, unions are only thinking about pay, parents don’t care, public school districts waste money and so on.

On the other hand, Randi Weingarten, president of American Federation of Teachers (AFT), in an article in the New York Times (April 15, 2009) is quoted as saying “They’re trying to do reform with teachers, not to them.”

In California, however, the United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA) demonstrated at a school board meeting mid-April 2009, after 6000 teachers had been sent preliminary layoff warnings (pink slips).  The board members wanted to split the stimulus money over two years.  Only lay off 3000 school personnel next year?  How does that make sense?

And, on the NBC Nightly News, May 5, 2009, a short news clip outlined the problem with dividing up education stimulus funds among states based on existing government demographic formulas so that, for instance, Utah, which needs substantial additional funds, gets far less than Wyoming, which has a huge education budget already and spends much more ‘per pupil.’

It seems “how” changes are going to be designed and implemented bedevils the mind.

What have you heard in your state?