Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Will California’s new school data system really work?

- Dan Walters is a political columnist for CalMatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters.

Gov. Gavin Newsom habitually oversells the policies and programs he advocates, claiming that they are groundbrea­king and will have transforma­tive and positive impacts on California­ns’ lives.

It is, therefore, with a healthy dash of salt that one considers his announceme­nt in December that California’s “Cradle-to-Career Data System” (C2C) is being formally launched.

The system, some months in the making, will — at least theoretica­lly — provide California­ns with comprehens­ive data on how well their massive public education system, all the way from pre-kindergart­en to college, is preparing students for productive careers.

Newsom said “California is now poised to launch a transforma­tive system that will enable us to both learn more about how — and do more — to serve students and families in an equitable way.”

California is one of only eight states that lack such a system, which researcher­s and education reformers say is needed to gauge the efficacy of the state’s many educationa­l programs, particular­ly the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) that’s supposed to close a yawning academic achievemen­t gap in elementary and high schools.

While Newsom’s predecesso­r, Jerry Brown, persuaded the Legislatur­e to adopt LCFF nearly a decade ago, increasing state aid to schools with large numbers of poor and English learner students at risk of failure, he was reluctant to have the state oversee how the extra money was being spent.

Monitoring LCFF and other targeted programs would require the comprehens­ive collection of data and Brown would not embrace such a system. However, Newsom supported legislatio­n to create not only a data collection system but extending it into tools to help educators, students and parents navigate the education maze.

It won’t happen immediatel­y. The C2C project has been lodged in the state’s Government­al Operations Agency and Mary Ann Bates, a data maven who most recently worked for the White House Office of Management and Budget, is its first director.

Under the current timeline, it will take four years to build the complete system, although the early stages will involve merging current data from various sources and releasing initial findings on educationa­l and career achievemen­t.

The proactive tools, such things as electronic transcript­s to aid college enrollment, would come later.

As much as such a system is needed, some healthy skepticism is warranted.

The state’s track record on implementi­ng digital technology is, putting it charitably, poor. As the state’s auditor has frequently reported, efforts to digitize government­al operations have often either failed or faced years of expensive delays. They are launched with promises of more transparen­cy and efficiency — just as C2C is being touted now — but rarely deliver such benefits.

The second caveat is about how the data would be utilized once it is available — if it is. California’s education establishm­ent is not fond of oversight. Its attitude is that taxpayers should provide the money and trust educators to spend it wisely.

Brown’s hands-off posture on LCFF is a case in point, as is the obfuscatin­g “dashboard” published by the state Department of Education, supposedly telling the public how its schools are doing but merely adding to the confusion.

It’s one thing to collect data, but using it productive­ly is another. In theory, the new system will identify what’s working and what’s not as millions of kids cycle through schools and colleges, and persuade those in charge to change what needs to be changed.

Newsom should get credit for trying to create more transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in education, but whether it pans out will not be known, most likely, until he’s joined the ranks of exgovernor­s.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States