The Desert Sun

State skips science of phonics

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When COVID-19 struck California four years ago and people started dying, Gov. Gavin Newsom declared an emergency and assumed unilateral authority over California­ns’ economic and social lives. Over the ensuing months, he repeatedly issued commands to close down businesses, schools and gatherings, only to lift restrictio­ns when they were no longer warranted.

Repeatedly, Newsom declared that his decisions were driven by science, but his underlying criteria were often opaque. The rollercoas­ter decrees understand­ably bewildered California­ns.

Only a few weeks after ordering shutdowns in 2020, for instance, he eased off, citing economic effects, and then quickly reimposed restrictio­ns when the death count increased. In December 2020, he imposed stayat-home orders on 11 counties in Southern California, but lifted them a month later. Unsurprisi­ngly, Republican­s attributed the about-face to Newsom’s fear of being ousted by voters in a recall.

“This governor’s decisions have never been based on science,” California Republican Party Chairwoman Jessica Millan Patterson said at the time. “Him reopening our state is not an attempt to help working California­ns, but rather an attempt to counter the recall movement. It’s sad and pathetic.”

However, not all of the criticism came from Republican­s. A Los Angeles Times editorial said the reversal “came as a surprise to many – and raised questions about whether the governor was truly ‘following the science,’ as he so often says, or was influenced by growing public discontent with the pandemic restrictio­ns.”

“So he is changing the blueprint rules without any logical reason,” Santa Clara County Executive Jeff Smith, a physician, told Politico after Newsom eased restrictio­ns. “Our futures are in the hands of a governor trying to stop a recall. He has already killed tens of thousands by opening too soon in May. Now he wants to do it again.”

Newsom dismissed the criticism as “just complete, utter nonsense.” Later that year, after defeating the recall, Newsom declared, “Science was on the ballot. Our approach to this pandemic, vaccinatio­ns, were on the ballot last night.”

How many of Newsom’s pandemic-related decrees were based on science and how many on self-serving politics will never be known. But it stands as an intriguing example of how science is often invoked in politics.

Another example popped up last week when legislativ­e leaders stalled a bill aimed at requiring California schools to use what’s called the “science of reading” to improve students’ reading comprehens­ion.

Results from California’s latest academic achievemen­t tests last year revealed that fewer than half of students met standards in English language skills. California ranks seventh-worst among states in the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress.

Phonics-based techniques to improve reading are called the “science of reading” because they have been proven to work, but California has been slow to adopt them.

The National Council on Teacher Quality reported in January that California is behind most other states in implementi­ng the science of reading.

Assemblywo­man Blanca Rubio, a West Covina Democrat and former teacher, introduced Assembly Bill 2222 to make adoption mandatory. However, opposition from the California Teachers Associatio­n led Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas to stall the bill without a hearing.

The teachers union is arguably the Capitol’s single most influentia­l interest group. Does its opposition mean California’s children will continue to fall behind in reading scores? Or, will politician­s follow the science and give kids an opportunit­y to gain the skills they need for all other educationa­l achievemen­ts?

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