Los Angeles Times

LAUSD adds four days in 2022-23

The extended school calendar is being criticized by some teachers and parents.

- By Melissa Gomez

In a move to bolster academic recovery efforts, the Los Angeles Board of Education on Tuesday evening added four days to the next school year — a decision leaders said addresses the needs of students who are struggling to learn over complaints by some parents and teachers about late changes to the calendar.

In a unanimous vote, the board approved a $122-million plan for four extra days and three profession­al developmen­t days for teachers, on top of the state-required 180 instructio­n days. The four days will be scheduled at critical points in the school year: at the 10-week semester mark and before final grades are due. Regular classes will be canceled, and schools will be able to customize how best to use the days to help students.

At an elementary school, for instance, a day could bring specialize­d smallgroup instructio­n and individual­ized support for students, parent-teacher meetings or intensive support for

literacy and math skills — even family seminars to support learning with at-home activities. At middle and high schools, counselors and teachers could meet with students to go over work that needs to be made up, or students could work on missing assignment­s, get tutoring or participat­e in mini-lessons.

“The students who lost the most ground during the pandemic — poor students living in foster care, homeless students, those who have English-language limitation­s and those who have one or more disabiliti­es — stand to gain the most,” said Supt. Alberto Carvalho, who expressed support for the extended school year, which will run from Aug. 15, 2022, through June 15, 2023.

When the revised calendar was made public last week, complaints emerged from some parents that it was introduced late in the school year and could affect vacations and other scheduling. Parents and teachers alike were confused about what the district called “optional student accelerati­on days” and were frustrated that they did not have input on a critical issue that would affect teachers’ workloads.

Cecily Myart-Cruz, president of United Teachers Los Angeles, said in a statement that the calendar extends into the summer and is “an overreach of Supt. Carvalho and LAUSD officials to ask more of students, families, and educators, without seeking their input in any systematic or public way.”

“The educators of UTLA take issue with the complete lack of communicat­ion from Supt. Carvalho and the district, who did not attempt to engage with anyone in the school community affected by these changes — beyond us, that also includes our students, their families, and their communitie­s,” MyartCruz said.

School board member Nick Melvoin said he is disappoint­ed because “I have been asking for this calendar for months,” and the late release is challengin­g for some parents and staff. However, Melvoin stopped short of blaming Carvalho, who took over in mid-February, saying it was an investment in students and teachers.

“The school calendar is maybe the most controvers­ial thing this board acts on, because it’s a delicate balancing act,” Melvoin said, taking into account the timing of finals before winter break and AP exams. “What better investment can we make as a district than in our existing staff, with our students, and giving them more time in the classroom?”

School board President Kelly Gonez spoke of the wide diversity in the district — “from places like Pacoima to the Palisades.”

She expressed concern that board members heard from many parents about “impacts to vacations and camp schedules . ... But we certainly have not heard from the parents who, you know, are working two and three jobs, whose kids are most likely to be positively impacted” by the additional days.

“By giving students more time at school and teachers more time to collaborat­e and plan and individual­ly support their students on an optional basis, we can help our students continue to recover from the disruption­s and the trauma of the pandemic,” Gonez said.

Heather Mayer, who has two students in LAUSD, said she felt that by adding days, the district ignored parents’ rejection of such an option last year. Nearly a year ago, the district dropped plans to extend this academic year after the teachers union said teachers and families were exhausted and needed the time off. In a district survey, parents were closely divided on the issue.

“We want to use this time for kids to be able to increase their socializat­ion, spend more time with family, travel, go to camp,” Mayer said. As a working parent, she said, the additional school days add “a whole extra level of work” in arranging child care and juggling her job.

During public comment, one parent spoke in favor of the proposed calendar and agreed with the district that it would help students who have struggled to learn during the pandemic and have returned to the classroom.

“Our children have been impacted with lack of instructio­n due to the pandemic,” she said in Spanish through a translator. “Now that they’re back, they’re being affected because there has been a social, emotional loss, and it’s difficult for them to focus on their studies.”

Carvalho insisted that there is plenty of time for school communitie­s to design the extra days to fit the needs of their students — and took issue with critics who said the days were a waste of money.

“How is it wasteful?” he said. “In my mind, in my reality, it will never be a waste to pay teachers to be in front of the kids, inspiring them and remediatin­g, addressing and accelerati­ng their learning potential.”

‘The school calendar is maybe the most controvers­ial thing this board acts on, because it’s a delicate balancing act. What better investment can we make ... than in our existing staff, with our students?’

— Nick Melvoin, LAUSD school board member

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