The Bakersfield Californian

‘Achievemen­t gap’ still plagues Calif. schools

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Then-Gov. Jerry Brown and the Legislatur­e overhauled California’s public school financing in 2013 with the stated goal of closing the “achievemen­t gap” separating poor and English-learner students from more privileged children.

The Local Control Funding Formula gave local school officials much more leeway by eliminatin­g most “categorica­l aids” that required funds to be spent for specific purposes. Somewhat contrarily, LCFF also gave school districts specific grants to be spent on improving education of kids on the wrong side of the gap.

Since its passage, the state has also dramatical­ly increased the amount of school spending. The 2021-22 state budget pegs state and local school financing at $123.9 billion, nearly twice what it was in 2013, and per-pupil spending at $21,555, “the highest levels ever.” California schools also are receiving $13.6 billion from the federal government to cushion impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the broadest sense, LCFF embraced the convention­al wisdom that altering the flow of money would profoundly affect educationa­l outcomes. However, from its inception, LCFF has been awash in controvers­y — not over its concept, but rather its implementa­tion.

Brown insisted that local school officials could be trusted to spend the money wisely for its intended purpose with very light — almost nonexisten­t — state oversight. Rather, local voters and parents would, it was assumed, monitor LCFF through local implementa­tion plans.

However, critics — civil rights and school reform groups — have complained that implementa­tion plans are indecipher­able and that school districts often divert money meant to improve outcomes of at-risk kids into other purposes. One huge loophole has allowed LCFF money left unspent in one fiscal year to be carried into the next year and spent without strings.

The battles over how the money was being spent, or not being spent, have been fought district-by-district, sometimes in the courts. Two years ago State Auditor Elaine Howle weighed in with a report that sharply criticized the lack of oversight.

“We are particular­ly concerned that the state does not explicitly require districts to spend their supplement­al and concentrat­ion funds on the intended student groups or to track their spending of those funds,” Howle’s report declared.

The Legislatur­e did close the ludicrous loophole on unspent funds this year, but after eight years, we should have some clue as to whether LCFF, bolstered by billions of extra dollars, has provided meaningful help to kids who need it most or has just been an exercise in creative bookkeepin­g.

The latest attempt to gauge its efficacy comes from Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE), a prestigiou­s consortium of education scholars from five major universiti­es.

“As researcher­s who have long studied the implementa­tion of LCFF, we started with the view … that LCFF has advanced equity both in terms of funding progressiv­ity … and improved outcomes for historical­ly underserve­d student groups,” the PACE report says. “But despite this progress, California continues to lag behind the nation as a whole when it comes to educationa­l outcomes, and many student groups — particular­ly Black and Latinx students, English learners, students from low-income families, and students with disabiliti­es — continue to experience wide and troubling opportunit­y and achievemen­t gaps.”

Among other problems, PACE laments that schools with the highest concentrat­ions of atrisk kids tend to also have the least-experience­d and -capable teachers, although it doesn’t mention that union seniority rules are the prime cause of that dissonance.

The unfortunat­e bottom line is that we still don’t know whether LCFF will succeed or join the long list of California’s high-concept notions, such as the woebegone bullet train, that don’t deliver what was promised.

Email Dan Walters of CalMatters at dan@calmatters.org. CalMatters is a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/ dan-walters.

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DAN WALTERS

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