Las Vegas Review-Journal

The bell rings

District starts new year with new leader

- Jerry Fink Las Vegas Ron Moers Henderson

The Clark County School District began its 2018-19 calendar this week under the leadership of an affable new superinten­dent imbued with optimism. But it will take more than high hopes to lift the struggling district out of a deep quagmire of mediocrity and failure.

Jesus Jara came to Las Vegas in June after serving as deputy superinten­dent of the schools in Orange County, Florida. While cautioning that it will take time to turn around a district the size of Clark County — the nation’s fifth-largest — he promises to set high standards and to demand accountabi­lity from district employees and educators.

Good. The district’s success depends on bold reform and innovation. It demands that district leadership jettison low expectatio­ns and insist on results. It requires parents — and even the kids themselves — to take a more active role in the educationa­l process. The current trajectory — a large portion of the student population lacking proficienc­y in basic skills, such as reading and math; too many graduating seniors wholly unprepared for college — is unacceptab­le.

Unfortunat­ely, there is a large constituen­cy that remains wedded to the failing status quo. In recent years, the Legislatur­e has enacted a number of reforms intended to boost student performanc­e. But virtually all of them have been met with hesitation or outright opposition by various factions of the entrenched education establishm­ent, who have but one tired mantra: More money! More money!

In fact, no amount of taxpayer contributi­ons can sate the education unions, despite the thin correlatio­n between more spending and student achievemen­t. Keep in mind that we’re just three years removed from passage of the biggest tax hike in state history — $1.2 billion — which was directed to the state’s public schools.

Mr. Jara will no doubt seek increased revenues in Carson City next year. That goes with the job. But at the same time, he must be an active proponent of the district reorganiza­tion, which was part of Gov. Brian Sandoval’s 2015 reform package and is intended to give principals more autonomy over individual campuses. Mr. Jara should also embrace a more comprehens­ive teacher evaluation system, which union interests have blocked for years, and rein in social promotion, which has harmed too many students and perpetuate­d a fraud on parents by pushing kids forward before they are capable. His approach to Read By 3, set to be implemente­d next year, will be instructiv­e.

The most recent test results revealed that just 29 percent of Clark County fourth-graders were proficient in math. By eighth grade, the number was 25 percent. In reading, 29 percent of students were considered proficient in both fourth and eighth grade. ACT scores are equally depressing, with Nevada ranking last in the nation among states that make the test mandatory for high school juniors.

These numbers are dreadful, but this is the reality of what Mr. Jara inherits. His challenges remain considerab­le, and the community should hope he is up to the task. Simply tinkering around the edges or pleading poverty won’t be enough to successful­ly reverse course.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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Fax 702-383-4676 inside, Ms. Feldman stows the frozen goods in the freezer and puts the dairy products in the refrigerat­or. She receives a call on her cellphone. Afterward she sits at an electronic device and sends a letter to the editor denouncing the very substances that made all this possible — fossil fuels — as “dirty and evil.”

Everything she did or was done for her was made possible by those “dirty and evil” fossil fuels. No fossil fuels, no electricit­y. Just how disingenuo­us can one get? being collected, it could only mean the money is being sidetracke­d by those collecting the taxes. How about it, Mr. Segerblom and all you politician­s who promised this financial windfall? Where is the money?

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