The Mercury News

Uncle Sam gives gift to state’s school reformers

- By Dan Walters Dan Walters is a CALmatters columnist.

A new year brings renewal of hope, it’s said, but it also means renewed political and legal hostilitie­s over the direction of California’s public school system.

For years, an “Equity Coalition” of civil rights and education reform groups has battled the state’s education establishm­ent — state schools Superinten­dent Tom Torlakson, the state Board of Education and the California Teachers Associatio­n, most notably — over how the “achievemen­t gap” should be addressed.

That’s the wide differenti­al in academic performanc­e between poor Latino and black students and their more privileged white and Asian classmates.

The establishm­ent says more money is the answer and Gov. Jerry Brown’s Local Control Funding Formula provides money specifical­ly to improve the standing of the “high-risk” students.

However, with Brown calling it “subsidiari­ty,” he and other state officials have been content to provide the extra money to local school districts with high numbers of targeted students with few strings.

In the same vein, the state’s new accountabi­lity “dashboard” minimizes academic improvemen­t and specifical­ly eschews direct interventi­on for schools that fail to improve.

The Equity Coalition, however, says the money is being allocated without needed oversight on how well it’s being spent and has pressed, so far with limited success, for more accountabi­lity for outcomes.

Its battle has been waged in the Legislatur­e, in the state school board, in local school districts and often in the courts.

So far, there’s little evidence that LCFF is, in fact, narrowing the achievemen­t gap, but defenders of the status quo say it just needs more time and more money to show results.

One of the many fronts in the school war has been the federal Every Student Succeeds Act, which requires states, as a condition of receiving federal school aid, to provide some of the direct oversight and accountabi­lity that the Equity Coalition seeks, especially in identifyin­g failing schools.

Torlakson and the state school board have chosen to comply with the law minimally but just before Christmas the U.S. Department of Education politely told them, via a 12-page letter, that the plan they submitted was falling short of the ESSA law’s requiremen­ts.

It was the gift that the Equity Coalition had been hoping to receive.

“California leaders have made programmin­g of these extra resources a mockery to disadvanta­ged students,” Bill Lucia, executive director of EdVoice, said in a statement.

Some might dismiss the federal letter as just another in a long string of conflicts between California and President Trump’s administra­tion.

However, the law in question was signed by President Obama and his Department of Education often sparred with California over the accountabi­lity issue before and after the law was enacted.

The federal letter suggests that California rewrite its ESSA plan and resubmit it, thus tossing the ball back into Sacramento’s court and giving EdVoice and others in the Equity Coalition a new opening to press their demands.

Noting that still another lawsuit has recently been filed against the state over accountabi­lity, EdVoice’s Lucia said, “Filing parent lawsuits is not a constituti­onal system of accountabi­lity. California is systematic­ally ignoring the academic failures of 60 percent of its school-aged children. There will be long-lasting consequenc­es to the individual children, families, communitie­s, economy and government budgets if Sacramento doesn’t take this as a serious wake-up call.”

 ?? COURTESY OF PAUL KURODA ?? The U.S. Board of Education recently told the state school board and Superinten­dent Tom Torlakson, center, that their plan to comply with the federal Every Student Succeeds Act was falling short.
COURTESY OF PAUL KURODA The U.S. Board of Education recently told the state school board and Superinten­dent Tom Torlakson, center, that their plan to comply with the federal Every Student Succeeds Act was falling short.

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