Lodi News-Sentinel

Successful reading skills upgrade offers a lesson for California politician­s

- DAN WALTERS

Successful reading skills upgrade offers a lesson for California politician­s A decade ago, California’s political apparatus finally recognized a yawning achievemen­t gap in its public schools, separating poor and Englishlea­rner students from their more privileged classmates.

While overall, California’s nearly 6 million K-12 students were not faring very well in state and federal tests of academic achievemen­t, the shortcomin­gs were particular­ly evident among Latino and Black kids from poor families.

The political response by then-Gov. Jerry Brown and legislator­s was the Local Control Funding Formula, or LCFF, which provided extra funds to local school systems with large numbers of kids “at-risk” of failure on the expectatio­n that the money would be spent specifical­ly on improving their outcomes.

Tens of billions of dollars have been spent on LCFF grants, but the results have been, at best, marginal, and there’s been a running political and legal battle over accountabi­lity for spending the extra money and its effects.

Brown, for obscure reasons that he extrapolat­ed from a Catholic Church doctrine, refused to include an accountabi­lity component, saying he trusted local school officials to do the right thing. That hands-off position was, not surprising­ly, strongly supported by the education establishm­ent, especially teacher unions.

However, education reform and civil rights organizati­ons proceeded on their own, demanding accountabi­lity and using lawsuits, when warranted. One aspect of that effort was a suit, filed six years ago, alleging that the state was violating its own constituti­on by failing to ensure that children were learning to read, even after drafting a plan to improve reading instructio­n.

The suit was settled three years ago with a pledge that the state would spend $50 million – a tiny sum in a K-12 school system that spends $130 billion a year — to improve reading skills of kids in the lowest tier of achievemen­t.

On Sunday, Stanford’s Graduate School of Education released a study on the effects of spending $53 million on targeted reading instructio­n, concluding that it brought a sharp increase in the reading ability of third-graders in the program.

Pointedly, the intensifie­d reading instructio­n relied mostly on phonics — or the “science of reading,” as some dub it — to achieve the results. California, to the detriment of generation­s of students, had for decades stubbornly shunned phonics in favor of trendier theories.

Therefore, the $53 million program not only demonstrat­ed that even modest amounts of money, when applied appropriat­ely, can have positive results, but proved anew that the key to better reading skills – the gateway to all learning – is phonics.

“The takeaway is that targeted, well-designed science of reading interventi­ons can make a big difference,” said Sarah Novicoff, a doctoral student who worked on the study. “It demonstrat­ed that efforts like this are worth pursuing.”

The Early Literacy Support Block Grant is a tiny step in the right direction of making reading skills the moral imperative they should be in a state so educationa­lly backward.

The latest round of state academic test results revealed that fewer than half of students met state standards in reading and other English skills and scarcely a third were proficient in math.

“This study shows we can eradicate illiteracy at warp speed,” Mark Rosenbaum, an attorney behind the lawsuit, said. “I wasn’t surprised at the results. But I was impressed with the speed, especially during a pandemic.”

California’s governors and legislator­s have assumed that educationa­l shortcomin­gs can be cured simply by throwing more money into the pot, but it’s clear from the Stanford study that how the money is spent is a critical factor.

LCFF has little to show for its billions of dollars. It’s high time that politician­s and taxpayers insist on accountabi­lity for provable results.

CalMatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to www.calmatters.org

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