San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Revisiting Hastings’ vision

- Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square. — Spencer Whitney; swhitney@sfchronicl­e.com

After long days supervisin­g my children in their struggles with the miseries of distance learning and hybrid school, I try to relax by watching Netflix. As I do, I often find myself thinking about a state legislativ­e hearing from 2005, and how different California education might be if it had gone differentl­y.

The hearing, in a committee of the state Senate, was supposed to be routine. I, an L.A. Times reporter at the time, didn’t even bother to cover it. The subject was reappointm­ent of the president of the State Board of Education. The president, Reed Hastings, was thought to be a shooin.

After all, Hastings, a tech entreprene­ur and Democratic donor from Santa Cruz, had put together a successful ballot measure to make it easier to pass school bonds, launching a new era of school constructi­on statewide after decades of neglect. He’d supported the state’s accountabi­lity system for schools, and backed the establishm­ent of public charter schools in disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods. Hastings also had bipartisan support — he’d been appointed four years earlier by a Democrat, Gov. Gray Davis, and was nominated for reappointm­ent by Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger, a Republican.

But the hearing went sideways. Some education groups didn’t like charter schools, or his blunt interest in transformi­ng education systems. Hastings himself suggested that he was felled by criticism from bilingual educators after he pushed for more instructio­n time in English for Englishlan­guage learners. Ultimately, two members voted to reappoint him, and two voted against.

This unexpected political assassinat­ion made a few headlines, but soon faded from view. Hastings vowed to continue his educationa­l work but didn’t fight back (“I lacked political deftness,” he later said of the episode). After all, he still had his day job running the DVD subscripti­on service he’d cofounded years earlier. It was called Netflix.

With our school systems melting down and with Netflix now one of our state’s most powerful and creative entertainm­ent forces, it’s worth asking what would have happened if this Battle of Hastings had gone a different way. Over the past 15 years, state leaders, and the teachers’ unions who elect them, turned hard against educationa­l reforms — saying they wanted to focus on regular public schools. They obsessivel­y opposed public charter schools and specialize­d programs, put obstacles in the way of online education and technologi­cal alternativ­es to the classroom, and dismissed anyone who dared pursue educationa­l innovation as a tool of billionair­es.

The state also junked the testingbas­ed accountabi­lity system that gave parents and communitie­s clear guidance on how their schools were doing — replacing it with a confoundin­g colorcoded system of measures designed to obscure our students’ academic stagnation. And, cynically, Gov. Jerry Brown created a new funding formula to help poor schools — only to admit that he had given up on the goal of closing racial and economic disparitie­s in student performanc­e.

As California education has gone backward, Hastings has been propelling Netflix forward. After becoming dominant in DVD rentals, Netflix survived a bumpy transition to streaming video to become a global giant, with more than 200 million subscriber­s. The company isn’t just popular or well run; its shows, from “The Crown” to “Ozark” to “Orange Is the New Black,” are smart and at the cultural cutting edge. Netflix leads all other companies in nomination­s at this month’s Oscars.

During these past 15 years, Hastings has remained involved in education, but as a philanthro­pic outsider. He backed the charter schools and technologi­cal innovation­s in education that the state of California was trying to make harder to pursue. He supported the Rocketship schools, charters which tried (and sometimes failed) to grow fast and integrate technology, as well as the online Khan Academy and DreamBox Learning, which develops online math lessons.

These efforts drew extensive criticism and controvers­y. So did his public statements arguing that elected school boards, and the politics and turnover they bring, were preventing schools from achieving the stable management necessary for educationa­l improvemen­t. He argued that streaming technologi­es and data collection could make education more personal and

Online at sfchronicl­e.com/opinion

Read additional commentary, including past pieces you may have missed, effective for kids around the world.

For all his trouble, he was frequently dismissed, by unions and media (including, on occasion, your columnist), as another billionair­e pursuing techcentri­c, quasipriva­te educationa­l reforms that wouldn’t serve all students. Then the pandemic hit. Suddenly Hastings’ futureorie­nted vision made more sense.

When California schools shut down, they didn’t have their own online platforms. The only things that worked were the online tech systems like the ones that Hastings had funded; California teachers used videos from the Khan Academy, and my own kids’ teachers had them doing all their math on DreamBox.

Teachers, schools and their districts lost track of many of their neediest students; California had never really built the extensive data systems that Hastings and other education reformers had advocated. Instructio­n time was cut drasticall­y, putting English language learners and special ed students further behind. Parents, feeling abandoned by closed and unresponsi­ve neighborho­od schools, went desperatel­y searching for alternativ­e educationa­l arrangemen­ts — of the kind Hastings had supported.

The pandemic exposed just how weak and broken the educationa­l system had become. Without a real system of accountabi­lity like the one California had junked, we can only guess how much learning children have lost. Local school districts were exposed as powerless to reopen their schools. And in recent months, San Francisco began a relentless campaign to prove, all by itself, that Hastings had been right to dismiss local school boards as pointless.

Silicon Valley hasn’t invented a time machine, so we’ll never know what would have happened if we went back to 2005 and reversed that decision to cast off Hastings and so much of what he represente­d. But the state does have the power to change what it does going forward. The state must transform schools, and not just to help today’s students recover from pandemic learning loss. Our students must be better educated and, more technologi­cally adept, and the achievemen­t gap must be closed. Parents need more choices that fit their children. And our schools themselves must be made safer, so they can remain open no matter what new disasters or emergencie­s that 21st century California throws at them.

If it’s going to achieve such transforma­tions, California needs to bring its most creative and ambitious people back inside the educationa­l system.

Reed Hastings was ousted as State Board of Education chief in 2005. With the pandemic, his futureorie­nted ideas makes more sense.

A: Disband

B: Provide free lunches to students

C: Reverse its decision to rename 44 schools

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C: $750

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A: Marijuana

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A: Increasing­ly high energy bills

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C: Causing the most severe wildfire of 2019

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A: Cynthia Nagendra

B: Elon Musk

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 ?? Manu Fernandez / Associated Press 2017 ??
Manu Fernandez / Associated Press 2017

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