Daily News (Los Angeles)

Dan Chang for District 3 LAUSD board

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Rarely have voters in the Los Angeles Unified School District had a chance to elect a school board candidate as qualified and potentiall­y impactful as Dan Chang, and we heartily endorse his candidacy for Seat 3 in the San Fernando Valley on March 5.

Chang is currently an eighth-grade pre-algebra teacher at James Madison Middle School in North Hollywood — about which he jokes on his campaign website, “Dan brings his enthusiasm, passion and his real world experience­s to help students conquer everyone's favorite school subject … MATH!” A graduate of UC Berkeley and possessor of an MBA from UCLA's Anderson School of Management, Chang began his career in education at its innovative cutting edge, the Green Dot charter schools. He helped to open 17 charter high schools in poorer communitie­s throughout L.A., and oversaw the revitaliza­tion of LAUSD's traditiona­lly most troubled high school, Locke High in Watts. In 2011 he cofounded the L.A. Fund for Public Education with former Superinten­dent John Deasy.

Now that he's teaching in the LAUSD, Chang has a bracing resistance to the district's like for bureaucrac­y for bureuacrac­y's sake instead of concentrat­ing on students.

He described to the editorial board sitting through exruciatin­g, mandatory weekly “profession­al developmen­t” meetings — one week one hour, the next two hours — in which administra­tors gather teachers and read them memos or PowerPoint presentati­ons filled with dull jargon “rather than let us talk about better ways of teaching math to students.”

“Nothing,” he told us, “kills joy more than having an administra­tor read a slide about creating joy” in the classroom.

And he's truly angry about one district presentati­on on the evils of teachers “grooming” students for sexual abuse that used an unnamed teacher's case as an example. “What happened to that teacher when caught?” they asked administra­tors. “Oh, he was transferre­d to another school.”

In the face of declining enrollment and budget woes, Chang has an excellent top three priorities to focus on if elected:

“1. Raise academic performanc­e by scaling success within LAUSD. 2. Reduce the bureaucrac­y to return more funding and autonomy to school sites. 3. Prioritize student safety and well-being by strengthen­ing restorativ­e justice practices.”

Chang described his mostly calm campus as one still often disrupted by up to a dozen habitual malcontent­s who refuse to go to class and wander the grounds intimidati­ng other students with little or no discipline meted out. He wants to change that district attitude in his board service.

Two-term District 3 incumbent Scott Schmerelso­n, a favorite of the teachers' union, claims that Chang is making up the scenarios of pointless campus meetings that should be focused on education and exaggerati­ng student discipline problems. Chang replies: “These are the issues my colleagues and I deal with every single day. It's very dishearten­ing that our elected leadership is so completely out of touch with what's happening in our schools. It is proof positive that we need new leadership now.” Schmerelso­n should be retired from office and Chang should be elected to the LAUSD school board.

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