Los Angeles Times

Budget sets new rules for teachers, online or in class

- By Howard Blume and Paloma Esquivel

When it comes to education, the new state budget goes beyond providing $70.5 billion in funding for K-12 schools — it sets fundamenta­l accountabi­lity rules for a new era of distance learning in California by requiring teachers to take online attendance and document student learning.

The budget bill, which Gov. Gavin Newsom is expected to sign, anticipate­s that schools will continue to rely heavily on online instructio­n when campuses reopen in the fall. It also implicitly acknowledg­es the deep learning losses of the last semester, especially among students from lowincome families, when school systems struggled to get all students online.

The new directives establish minimum teaching parameters for distance learning while protecting teachers against immediate layoffs.

“Educators and teacher unions have won fairly steady funding from Sacramento to reopen schools this fall,” said UC Berkeley education professor Bruce Fuller. “Now the imperative is to deliver a rich blend of online and face-to-face

instructio­n.”

Fuller said the emphasis on documentat­ion reflects concern by state leaders that “tens of thousands of kids simply unplugged in the spring, then fell further behind.”

Whether schooling is online or in person, the rules reimpose the state’s minimum daily instructio­nal minutes requiremen­t of 180 for kindergart­en, 230 minutes for grades 1 through 3, and 240 minutes for grades 4 through 12. Distance learning can be documented with student work as well as time online.

Schools also must develop procedures for reengaging students absent from distance learning for more than three school days in a school week. Schools are allowed to develop alternativ­e plans, with input from parents, for achieving these mandates when necessary.

When the pandemic forced campuses to close in March for the remainder of the school year, the state told educators to continue teaching by any form necessary — and schools statewide scrambled to distribute computers, internet hot spots and hastily assembled paper packets.

Recognizin­g this burden, state officials set aside fundamenta­l and familiar rules such as taking attendance and providing a requisite number of minutes of teaching each day. School district leaders and charter school operators frequently followed suit — emphasizin­g compassion over rigor and recognizin­g that schooling could not simply be switched instantly and seamlessly from a face-to-face classroom experience to face time over a screen.

There’s also been concern that some teachers simply were unable to get up to speed with online learning that required a quick acquisitio­n of new skills, leaving a void in daily instructio­n.

A survey of parents by a local advocacy group found significan­t levels of dissatisfa­ction with the amount of instructio­n offered in the L.A. Unified School District after campuses closed.

Parents reported that 40% of their children received live instructio­n daily and 1 in 3 students had interactiv­e contact with a teacher once a week or less, according to Speak Up. Moreover, Black and Latino students were up to three times more likely than white students to have participat­ed in live classes once a week or less.

Also Black and Latino students were up to seven times more likely than white students to have never interacted with teachers. English learners and students with disabiliti­es also received less interactio­n with teachers, according to responding parents.

“It’s unacceptab­le that the kids that need the most help received the least amount of instructio­n this spring,” said Katie Braude, Speak Up’s chief executive.

The group surveyed its contact list of about 4,000 parents across the district, receiving more than 400 responses. While not a scientific sample, the survey encompasse­d geographic and ethnic diversity, although white families were overrepres­ented and Latinos, who account for 3 of every 4 district students, were underrepre­sented. The survey was conducted from June 10 to 24, at the end of the school year.

Parents in the survey and in an online news conference Friday cited health and safety as their top concern, but they also prioritize­d improvemen­ts in the quality and quantity of online instructio­n.

While recognizin­g shortcomin­gs, L.A. schools Supt. Austin Beutner has repeatedly praised district teachers and staff for doing so much right so quickly, given the unknowns attached to distance learning.

“It’s not reasonable for students or educators, nor is it sound educationa­l practice, for teachers and students to spend six hours a day in online, two-way communicat­ion,” Beutner said in late March. “And families who are struggling to get by in this crisis may not be able to spend all day trying to help their children do schoolwork.”

San Pedro High School English teacher Maya Suzuki Daniels found a need for flexibilit­y on both the teaching and learning side during the last semester. Students wanted live video sessions but were more likely to join them in the evenings because of jobs or siblings to care for. Others fared better with a video they could pause and rewind. In addition, Suzuki Daniels and her husband had to juggle their own work as well as care for their infant son Silas.

“The four-hour workday that UTLA negotiated was absolutely essential,” said Suzuki Daniels, who loves teaching. “I thought I was going to have to quit.”

The new rules are expected to address the uneven learning and attendance problems of the last semester, especially now that school systems have had several months to develop distance learning, said Assemblywo­man Christy Smith (D-Santa Clarita).

“We wanted to make sure that we establish a bare minimum standard that we are backing up with resources,” Smith said. “We know how costly this is going to be for districts to rise to this challenge.”

Assemblyma­n Patrick O’Donnell (D-Long Beach) said he had persistent concerns that school districts may need more flexibilit­y than the new rules allow.

In the overnight rush to establish online learning, the largest charter school group in L.A., Alliance College-Ready Public Schools, did not require live, interactiv­e teaching and did not mandate a specific number of working hours for teachers. But administra­tors estimated that teachers would need about 18 to 30 hours a week to do what was minimally necessary.

Alliance did take a form of daily attendance by asking students to respond to questions about their emotional well-being and whether they needed help.

Anthony Martinez, superinten­dent of Montebello Unified, said that his district, like many, didn’t take attendance after midMarch. Students, he said, were in crisis and many lacked the computers or internet access that would allow them to do assigned work.

“It was important to reach out to our students on a ‘How are you doing?’ level, versus attendance and classwork,” he said.

L.A. Unified brokered a deal with the teachers union that specified 20 hours of teacher work time per week.

It wasn’t enough, said Speak Up’s Braude: “We have to set much stronger minimum standards for daily live online instructio­n this fall. Three hours a day should be the bare minimum.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? YESICA VALENCIA and Fabian Pardo of TLC Public Charter School in Orange conclude a videotaped Spanish lesson that students can access via YouTube.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times YESICA VALENCIA and Fabian Pardo of TLC Public Charter School in Orange conclude a videotaped Spanish lesson that students can access via YouTube.
 ?? Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. SCHOOLS chief Austin Beutner has praised teachers and staff who quickly implemente­d distance learning after coronaviru­s-driven school closures.
Gabriella Angotti-Jones Los Angeles Times L.A. SCHOOLS chief Austin Beutner has praised teachers and staff who quickly implemente­d distance learning after coronaviru­s-driven school closures.

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