| Current
Articles, Interviews and Commentary from
The Sacramento Bee, March 14, 2004
California schools: Decades of decline:
'First to worst' for California schools
By
W. Norton Grubb – Special To The Bee
Governor Schwarzenegger's budget bore the good news that K-12 education
would not be drastically cut. (The California Budget Project estimates
that schools will lose "only" $175 per pupil, after inflation.)
But that's the bad news, too, because the status quo is woefully
inadequate.
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Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger |
Last month a
PBS documentary about California schools, "First
to Worst," described the decline from the '50s and '60s,
when the Golden State's schools were "the cutting edge of the
American Dream," to the present. Howard Jarvis, initiator of
Proposition 13, promises a supporter in 1978, "Youngster, we're
not going to hurt your schools."
But the portrayal of dilapidated buildings and inadequate textbooks,
overcrowded classrooms and unqualified teachers, the litany of what
other states have that California lacks - arts, electives, libraries,
buildings rather than portables, summer schools, counselors, nurses,
psychologists - are heartbreaking. "It's like you're in Calcutta",
declares a former state board chairman. A middle-school student
nails the right question: "How could a state so rich do so
poorly?"
Spending per pupil in California is now 44th in the country (considering
its high costs), down with Idaho and Tennessee. Even after class
size reduction, the average size in elementary schools ranks 48th;
the proportion of high school teachers with degrees in the subjects
they teach ranks 34th. Scores on the National Assessment of Educational
Progress, the "nation's report card," are abysmal: 47th
in eighth-grade math (alongside Arkansas and Alabama), tied for
last (with Hawaii) in reading, tied for last in science. In our
high-tech state, only 21 percent of these students are proficient
or better in math, 15 percent in science, 22 percent in reading
and 23 percent in writing. We've become a low-spending, low-resource
state, with low levels of learning.
Every Californian concerned about the future should ponder these
realities, and consider the ways to climb out of the cellar. Here's
my five-point program:
One: Funding must increase, at least toward the national average.
We may have to revise Prop 13, the "third rail" of California
politics, and to increase other taxes. Of course, we need to ensure
that additional funding is wisely spent. But funding is necessary
if not sufficient, and the educational consequences of low spending
are ubiquitous and harmful to learning. Despite complaints about
high taxes, California's tax effort ranked 40th among the states
in 1997, before the high-tech bubble; we could increase revenues
by 14 percent and still be only at the national average.
Two: Learning takes place in schools and classrooms, not district
offices or Sacramento. School communities - teachers, principals,
students and parents - are the basic units for reform, and to be
effective they must develop their own improvements. Rebuilding school
capacity in turn requires new conceptions of leadership, teachers
with broader skills, novel methods of funding, more supportive districts
and an end to Sacramento dictating local practices.
Three: State policy must be reshaped. The Serrano case, intended
to equalize spending among districts, created "equalized mediocrity"
rather than lifting poor districts to the level of wealthy ones.
The expansion of categorical grants has tied the hands of schools,
and made funding incomprehensible. The state has launched one expensive
"reform" after another - school restructuring, class size
reduction, Immediate Intervention for Under-performing Schools -
with few results because of mediocre design and poor implementation.
The current accountability system forces schools to think harder
about learning, but it measures performance poorly and narrows what
schools teach. We might need Educational Impact Statements, to compel
legislators and governors to consider effects of legislation more
carefully. We certainly need better implementation, with state administrators
knowledgeable about how schools work.
Four: We need to invest in school personnel, particularly teachers
and principals. We need stable, long-term policies targeting attrition
among teachers, the large numbers of non-credentialed teachers,
the lack of disciplinary preparation and inadequate staff development.
The preparation of principals, crucial to school-centered improvement,
has never been strong, and now the state allows principals to be
credentialed through a test that encourages quick-and-dirty programs.
Rather than proliferating check-lists of standards for teachers
and principals, we should invest in high-quality pre-service and
in-service programs.
Five: The decline has taken several decades, and so will the revival.
We need a stable plan, with steady progress toward long-run goals
- like a master plan. The 2002 Master Plan has many worthy recommendations,
but we need an expanded plan to reverse all dimensions of decline
and improve California's standing. Term limits foster short-term
thinking, so perhaps they should be eliminated. And governors turn
over regularly, each with new-fashioned ideas, so we should hold
governors accountable to a longer-range vision.
I've hardly gotten started: For example, I haven't said anything
about low-income or immigrant students, in a state where inequality
is growing. But even these points suggest an enormous agenda: substantially
more funding, the modification of Prop 13, a revised master plan,
better approaches to equalization, elimination of term limits, constraints
on gubernatorial whimsy, restoration of local control, the overhaul
of teacher and principal preparation, a revised accountability system,
Educational Impact Statements, civil service reform to enhance administrative
competence, elimination of Prop 227 and other constraints on teaching.
That's the point: The decline of California education comes not
from one cause - not just from Prop 13 - but from many independent
decisions, often well-intentioned but collectively disastrous. Working
our way out of the bottom will require undoing many of these.
The alternative is further decline. California would become a state
where no one trusts its workers, a first-rank economy that has to
import skilled employees, a republic with citizens unprepared for
civic responsibility and susceptible to circus democracy, a once-mythic
place that others shun for its high costs, poor schools and unequal
opportunity. We can resurrect the golden promises of California,
but that will require our collective efforts over several decades.
About the Writer
Professor W. Norton Grubb holds the David Gardner Chair in Higher
Education at the University of California, Berkeley, and is the
faculty director of the Principal Leadership Institute.
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