Los Angeles Times

Settlement seeks to help get rid of ‘sham’ classes

- By Joy Resmovits joy.resmovits@latimes.com

Jason Magaña always wanted to go to college to become an engineer.

But as a senior at Jefferson High School in South Los Angeles last year, he was enrolled in graphics, a class that he already had passed and that would not help him graduate. What he needed to graduate was economics. He also had two “home periods” that allowed him to leave the building and placed no demands on him.

Magaña was frustrated and worried about his future. He was one of several hundred students who spent days waiting for their schedules to be assigned after technical glitches.

Though many of the issues have since been fixed, Jefferson made headlines at the time for scheduling problems tied to L.A. Unified’s flawed student data system.

But a lawsuit settlement announced Thursday confirms what attorneys have said for more than a year: Jefferson’s problems were more widespread, and many students across California have missed days, weeks or months of learning time because they were sitting in courses without academic content or were merely let out early.

Students in six schools in Oakland, Compton and Los Angeles that are predominan­tly low-income and minority were taking these types of classes. The schools are Castlemont High School and Fremont High School in the Oakland Unified School District; John C. Fremont High, Thomas B. Jefferson High School and Susan Miller Dorsey High School in L.A. Unified; and Compton High School in the Compton Unified School District.

“Generally, students started school at the same time, and the bell to end rang at approximat­ely the same time,” said Mark Rosenbaum, the lead counsel for the plaintiffs and director of Public Counsel Opportunit­y Under Law. “What was happening behind closed doors was very different depending on ZIP Code.”

On Thursday, the state Board of Education voted to approve a settlement in the case of Cruz vs. California filed in Alameda County Superior Court. According to the settlement, the state Department of Education will update the online reporting system to include codes for “course periods without educationa­l content” and notify districts of the change.

After schools send their course enrollment data to the state for the next two school years, the Education Department will have 45 days to give the plaintiffs a summary of the number of students in the six named high schools who have enrolled in or completed courses with no academic content.

The settlement also requires that the state provide technical help to the districts as they work to get rid of these courses, and it creates a process for the state to investigat­e a school where a student is assigned to a troublesom­e course this spring. The settlement, which needs final approval by a Superior Court judge, also states that the Education Department will pay $400,000 in legal fees to the plaintiffs.

State Supt. of Public Instructio­n Tom Torlakson said in a statement that the settlement “reaffirms my commitment and the California Department of Education’s commitment to help identify and coordinate local resources for districts with significan­t problems scheduling students.”

These schools have greater responsibi­lities than others in the state, but a bill signed by Gov. Jerry Brown last month seeks to ameliorate the problem in all California schools.

Under the law, high schools will be barred from assigning students to “any course period without educationa­l content” for more than a week each semester; they can’t reenroll students in classes they’ve already passed; and any noncomplia­nce will be subject to a complaint process.

The case, filed in May 2014, was litigated by Public Counsel, the ACLU of Southern California and others. The attorneys investigat­ed the schools in question and found that inschools that had low proficienc­y rates on state tests and served disadvanta­ged students, students had less learning time. Students were enrolled in classes referred to as “service courses,” but weren’t learning anything.

Rosenbaum called them “sham periods,” and the students reported spending those periods watering plants, sorting mail and making coffee.

Last October, the plaintiffs received a temporary restrainin­g order that required immediate interventi­on at Jefferson and reaffirmed that the state is responsibl­e for ensuring that students are actually being taught in class.

Magaña ultimately graduated, but the effects of the scheduling problems continue: He’s a student at Sacramento State and in his engineerin­g class, he said, “Most of the students in there already have the skills and knew what the class was going to be like. I don’t.”

Thursday’s settlement, he said, “will help my school.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi
Los Angeles Times ?? JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL in South L.A. made headlines last year after technical glitches forced several hundred students to spend days waiting to have their class schedules assigned.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL in South L.A. made headlines last year after technical glitches forced several hundred students to spend days waiting to have their class schedules assigned.

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