Los Angeles Times

New school year, ready or not

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MOST CALIFORNIA SCHOOLS are a week or two away from the start of the school year, which will be conducted online for at least 80% of them. Yet many are still trying to hammer out agreements with their teachers unions about what the school day will look like. How many minutes of live instructio­n will students receive? How many minutes of recorded instructio­n? How much small-group work with a teacher, or one-to-one contact?

The results have been all over the map. San Diego Unified students will get about 30% more live, real-time instructio­n with a teacher than those in the nearby Sweetwater Union district, and nearly twice as much as in Los Angeles Unified. Oakland still hasn’t reached an agreement with teachers, or fully trained them, even though it’s supposed to begin school Monday. They can’t get lesson plans going if they don’t know how much teaching will be live and how much recorded.

Gov. Gavin Newsom should have stepped in with a heavy foot from the start. The Legislatur­e set a minimum number of instructio­nal hours — and required daily attendance and grades — but for the most part left it to school districts to decide exactly what instructio­nal time meant.

It could mean back-and-forth among students and teachers in a live virtual classroom, which is generally considered the most effective. It could mean recording video lessons for students to view on their own, which gives more scheduling flexibilit­y. Or students could be doing assignment­s outside the class setting, like homework. Some schools are adding time for smallgroup instructio­n or individual tutoring; others are not. Most will do some combinatio­n of the above but in differing amounts.

School boards and their superinten­dents needed clear direction, not the figure-it-out-yourselves philosophy that’s been coming from Sacramento and Washington. Having gotten no such guidance, schools are struggling to come up with their own scenarios and to negotiate those with sometimes reluctant unions. The result is a patchwork in which some students in the state will receive more and better education than others, and that’s unacceptab­le.

Without being too prescripti­ve, state leaders should have averted this situation with laws, regulation­s and firm admonishme­nts so that schools, teachers and parents could have avoided the last-minute wrangling. Let’s face it — for most students and parents, last spring was a learning disaster. But that stemmed from the unforeseen hammer of the pandemic. By now, all school districts should have their training done, their remote classrooms set up and their schedules out so families can be ready for the demands of the new school year.

State Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond has no authority to impose instructio­nal mandates on school districts, and Newsom’s emergency authority may be limited. But both could have demanded clearer requiremen­ts from the Legislatur­e that would have bypassed district-by-district union negotiatio­ns, and they could have used the bully pulpit to push relentless­ly for teachers to spend significan­t time interactin­g with students. Newsom even could have promised extra funding for schools that met his yardstick. Now, sadly, it seems too late.

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