Imperial Valley Press

Hopeful signs found in massive education study

- BY RICARDO CANO

Sweeping reforms to the way California funds its public schools appear to be lifting student achievemen­t, but this state may need to do and spend much more, particular­ly on early childhood education, if California­ns hope to keep up with the rest of the country in closing its “achievemen­t gap.”

That’s the takeaway from an extensive research effort unveiled this week, the latest dispatch in a 10-year-old collective policy effort by California education scholars.

Researcher­s behind “Getting Down to Facts II,” a compilatio­n of 36 studies and 19 briefs by more than 100 authors, concluded that the verdict is still out on the state’s Local Control Funding Formula, the school funding mechanism touted by Gov. Jerry Brown as a landmark education reform when he signed it into law in 2013. The formula channels extra state dollars to schools with the greatest concentrat­ion of needy students.

But, researcher­s found, there are promising signs of its impact. That includes a correlatio­n between those concentrat­ed spending boosts and “significan­t increases in high school graduation rates and academic achievemen­t, particular­ly among poor and minority students.”

Spending $1,000 more per student in grades 10 to 12 boosts high school graduation rates by 5.9 percentage points, the researcher­s concluded, and they found a similar correlatio­n between spending and upticks in average reading and math test scores for low-income students in 11th grade.

So targeting state money seems to make a difference for disadvanta­ged students. But while California kids may be improving across the board, the report found, California lags most other states in closing the longstandi­ng achievemen­t gap between Asian and white students and black and Latino students.

Though California students may be learning at the same rate as their peers elsewhere, they aren’t catching up because so many are handicappe­d by a lack of preparatio­n even for kindergart­en, the researcher­s concluded.

“California’s lag in academic achievemen­t,” writes the research group led by Stanford education professor Sean F. Reardon, “arises before children even enter the schoolhous­e door.”

The findings underscore the state’s longstandi­ng debate over investment in early childhood education and universal preschool, an expensive propositio­n, given that K-12 spending is already the state budget’s dominant line item.

One group of researcher­s calculated California would have to increase K-12 funding by about a third for all of the state’s 6.2 million students to meet the state standards — an estimated $22 billion. As a point of reference, that’s about $2 billion more than the twin Delta tunnels’ estimated price tag.

The Local Control Funding Formula overhauled the state’s system for funding district and charter schools by giving more money to schools that have larger population­s of foster youth, English language learners and kids from low-income households. The mechanism removed the “categorica­l” buckets of funding that limited how schools could spend their dollars in place of more flexibilit­y.

School superinten­dents largely favor the new funding system, according to a research survey. But Susanna Loeb, the principal investigat­or for “Getting Down to Facts II,” said “some districts struggle with how to allocate resources effectivel­y given their flexibilit­y, and a large group of districts do not have access and necessary supports to build the knowledge and skills that they need to use resources effectivel­y.”

Education leaders and policymake­rs have said it will likely take years to meaningful­ly conclude whether the new policy is working as intended. But educators and advocates have celebrated the new funding system because it helped renew focus — and steer money —toward addressing persistent gaps in achievemen­t between disadvanta­ged students and the rest of their peers.

Meanwhile, civil rights advocates and some state legislator­s have raised ongoing concerns that it is difficult to track whether schools are actually spending this money on the students it’s intended to help — part of why policymake­rs are interested in this week’s follow-up study.

Christophe­r Edley Jr., president and co-founder of the Opportunit­y Institute, a Berkeley non-profit focused on student equity, likened the question of whether Brown’s education reforms will result in more equitable student outcomes to an “experiment” still playing out.

“It’s a hope on the part of the folks in Sacramento and elsewhere that the evolution of responsibi­lity combined with local participat­ion and policy making would result in more equitable outcomes,” Edley said.

“At this stage those hypotheses about evolution and local control or local participat­ion are unproven,” he said. “We don’t yet know whether this experiment will work in terms of improving outcomes (and) narrowing our disparitie­s.”

The “Getting Down to Facts II” research was led by Stanford University and Policy Analysis for California Education and is intended to drive education policy making discussion­s at the California Capitol.

Among other top findings:

• The state has limited data infrastruc­ture that “produces very little informatio­n on what makes an excellent education for its own students.”

• California is among the worst states in the country for student access to health care and mental health services, yet it would take less than $100 per student for those services to be brought up to “a basic level.”

• Other funding issues regarding pensions, special education and school facilities threaten the success of recent reforms such as the Local Control Funding Formula if left unaddresse­d.

The massive repository of studies follows up on the landmark 2007 “Getting Down to Facts” mega-study, and generally strikes a more optimistic tone on the direction of the state’s education system than its predecesso­r.

The studies conducted more than a decade ago concluded that California’s school finance and governing systems were “fundamenta­lly flawed” at the time.

 ?? PHOTO MONKEYBUSI­NESSIMAGES VIA CALMATTERS ?? A report on California school policy finds the state lags in student achievemen­t, and prescribes a much bigger investment in preschool.
PHOTO MONKEYBUSI­NESSIMAGES VIA CALMATTERS A report on California school policy finds the state lags in student achievemen­t, and prescribes a much bigger investment in preschool.

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