Entries Tagged as 'RAISING CHILDREN'

Jerry Brown Education Proposals – A path to disaster

While I try to stay as neutral as possible on WestchesterParents there are times when I have to call people out when they offer a policy plan that flies in the face in reality.  Particularly in the case of education which I often write about and especially when it comes from a candidate for governor who is proposing what he will do  over the next four years. This is one of those times. 

Candidate for California governor, Jerry Brown came out today with a campaign press release aimed at education that is frankly dishonest and contains proposals that are written as if he were closeted away in a monastery for the last twenty years. You can find his plan here:

www.jerrybrown.org/sites/default/files/Education%20Plan.pdf

In his plan he makes a number of claims that I’ll list below. Each one of them I follow up with data that disproves the claim.

Claim 1 – “Despite the fact that many students (at Oakland Military, a school Jerry Brown claims to have started in Oakland as Mayor) come from low income families (80% of the students qualify for free or reduced lunches), this year 25% of our graduates were accepted to the University of California system. In prior years, graduates have been admitted to such prestigious schools as West Point and Yale.”

It wasn’t until the 2004/05 that year the Oakland Military Charter began reporting enrollment data to the California Department of Education (CDE) and only two full years of enrollment data is available to report.

Brown claims that 25% of grads were accepted into the UC system but the raw numbers paint an entirely different picture that is easily hidden behind ‘percentages.’

The first full graduating class that matriculated through grades 9-12 at Oakland Military was the class of 2008 just two years ago. This class reported to the CDE a 43.68 percent drop in enrollment from 87 freshman that began 2004 to 49 seniors that reported back in 2007.

The Class of 2009 saw a larger drop with 81 freshman enrolled in 2005 and saw only 42 students report in their senior year which represented a 48.15% loss of enrollment.

While data from two graduating classes alone are hardly enough to hang your accolades on, a 48% drop in enrollment of which 25% (10 students) went on to a UC or UCS school is terrible.  And did they really go on to a UC/CSU school or did the outgoing students simply state that they were going there prior to graduating? 

Claim 2 – “I also started the Oakland School for the Arts, which is devoted to intensive pre-professional training in the arts within a college-preparatory curriculum. The school, going into its 9th year, is audition based and also serves 600 students from 6th through 12th grade.”

Oakland Arts began reporting enrollment to the CDE back in 2002 and its first class to matriculate from 9th to 12th was the class of 2006. This class began with 102 freshman and ended up with only 61 seniors, a 40 percent loss. The most recent class of 2009 began with 88 freshman students and saw only 45 students reporting for the senior year for a 49 percent loss. Just as disconcerting is the drop in freshman students reporting in 2006, 2007 and 2008 where the number of incoming students fell to 58, 26 and 77 students.  Oakland Arts current enrollment is just 408 students and its highest level was in 2005 with 421 which is a third less than the 600 students that candidate Brown claims.

Claim 3 – “Both schools charge no tuition and are among the top-performing schools in Oakland.”

This claim is simply filler. Charters by state law cannot charge tuition. They are public schools receiving public funding to operate. As for top-performing, see claims 1 & 2 and judge for yourself how well they perform.

Claim 4 – “From my experience in starting and running these schools, I have gained first-hand experience in how difficult it is to enable all students to be ready for college and careers. Student outcomes are a complex interaction of student characteristics, teacher competence, instructional materials, and parental support. Any reforms and state educational policies must take into account this complexity and refrain from oversimplifying the problems and solutions.”

Brown has neither first hand experience nor any solution to enable “all students to be ready for college and careers.” His managing the schools above aptly point that out. 

With a 48% loss in class enrollment, Brown hasn’t had any more success in managing the  ”complex interaction of student characteristics, teacher competence, instructional materials, and parental support” that he claims to have. 

Jerry Brown then went on to state what he will do but his proposals are nothing new. They follow the same path that California has followed since the 1990′s and will simply make things worse.

Brown begins by saying he will “Establish(ed) Minimum Requirements for High School Graduates.” However the State of California already has minimum requirements in place. In fact in 1999 California had raised the bar and instituted a more rigorous college preparation curriculum “for all students.”

This however has had the unintended consequence of exponentially raising the drop out rate and placing diplomas out of reach for many students throughout the state.

Brown proposes raising the graduation requirement even further than it is today!

Considering that it is the math portion of the state curriculum and CAHSE that has proven to be so difficult to pass, his proposal to add another year of math will most assuredly raise the dropout rate to well over 40 percent.

Certainly these students (Ferris Buellers Day Off) would not be very impressed with Jerry Brown’s proposals.

Brown goes on to say that he will “Significantly increased investment in K-12 and Higher Education” but education today has already consumed 40 percent of the California budget.

Most of Browns other proposals are related to funding as if to explain that California’s problems with its education system have to do with underfunding. Funding is not the problem. Throwing more money at schools is not the answer. The problem is how to make education relevant to California’s students. The answer is to offer a variety of paths towards a diploma.

Note to our readers: To date I have not yet seen candidate Meg Whitman’s education plan if she has submitted one. When she does submit one I’ll comment on it as well.

Bradford’s misplaced priorities (Part 2)

A spirited defense of Assemblyman Steve Bradford’s (D) Limousine Legislation by Jenny M. appeared in our comments section in Part 1 but it was her initial comment on the state of education (the main point of the article) that was worth a column in itself. Part 2….

(Jenny M.) Unfortunately you cannot legislate students to stay in school. If there was a viable piece of legislation that would make all students graduate high school there is a good chance that would have flown through the legislature by now.

Jenny M is wrong on both counts. It was the legislature and the state board of education that forced students out of school by changing the curriculum. California students once had multiple paths towards a diploma but in 1997-98 that was eliminated reducing it to one single path. The argument then was that elementary and secondary schools should be preparing all students for college and so the curriculum was changed. Vocational paths to a diploma were eliminated and replaced it with two years of college preparatory math. In essence, they legislated a quarter of a million students out of a diploma.

From the California Dropout Research Project:

… students need a wide variety of skills to be successful in college and in the workplace. These skills include both traditional academic skills, but also applied, vocational skills, as well as so-called “soft skills,” such as punctuality, perseverance, and the social skills needed to work in groups. In fact, one recent study found that improvements in a range of non-academic skills were more valuable than improvements in math achievement for increasing chances for enrolling in and completing postsecondary programs, and for increasing earnings eight years after high school.

If California wants to truly prepare its students for life beyond high school, it should examine a full range of academic and non-academic skills and incorporate them in the state’s high school graduation requirements and accountability system so that schools and students are encouraged and recognized for acquiring them.

Finally, the state should consider more options for students to meet the graduation requirements. An increasing number of states have pursued the idea of multiple pathways for students to meet high school graduation requirements, such as through career and technical education (CTE) courses.

There could be a viable piece of legislation that would dramatically turn the dropout rate around and that would be a bill to eliminate the college preparatory math requirement (Algebra 1) and again offer vocational paths to a diploma. Students planning to go on to state universities would still need college preparatory math but those who choose a vocational career or a longer path to a college degree could still earn a diploma.

With multiple paths in front of them more students would be finishing high school, more students would be passing CAHSE and more high school grads would be going on to postsecondary programs such community colleges and state universities. More students would be applying for jobs with a diploma in hand. With multiple paths we could reduce spending on expensive intervention programs that are clearly failing and redirect that money to more meaningful academic offerings.

Today’s legislators are lock-step into group think and Bradford has so far fits neatly into that box. They are unable to seek solutions that put the California’s student’s interests first. Education unfortunately has steered perpendicularly to its stated purpose and goals and instead it has become a jobs program for state employees.

By the end of Steve Bradford’s first year in office, another 80,000 students in California will have dropped out. Students pushed out because the only other path available to them was dropping out.

LAUSD to deny parents inter-district permits to better schools

Ramone CortinesWell the rubber has finally hit road.

Despite all their posturing, Money does matter more than your child’s educational opportunities in the Los Angeles Unified School District and there is no more stunning example of that than the school board vote last month that quietly authorized the policy change behind our backs.  They want their $9,500 back even when it means your child will be forced to enroll in one of the districts substandard schools.

Because the district is facing a $640 million shortfall, the LAUSD is gearing up to deny up to 80% of the transfer permits it currently extends to thousands of Los Angeles students who have sought better academic opportunities outside of the district.

Parents don’t make these herculean efforts to obtain transfer permits out of the LAUSD without a good reason. In Westchester/Playa del Rey for example the local high school here has failed meet the states AYP (Average yearly progress) for 10 years running.

In 1999 the school was already well below the 50th percentile earning a dismal “4″ in the states ranking system where 10 is best. Since then, Westchester High Schools ranking has dropped to a “1″ where it rests at the bottom 10% of the states schools.

For many parents, the districts announcement will likely result in their children being pulled from excellent public schools ranked in the top 30% in the state and dragged into schools ranked in the lower 40%.

While this may monetarily benefit the district it could have serious consequences for other districts and the state.  Students enrolled in smaller surrounding districts cost the state roughly $8000 per student per year. If these students are denied permits by the LAUSD and forced to enroll in LAUSD schools, the cost to the state will go up by fifteen hundred dollars per student to $9500.

The boards vote also flies in the face of the goals set by the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) which was enacted by congress to offer parents public school choice when their neighborhood school fails to meet academic expectations and annual yearly progress.

NCLB provides that if a school fails to meet academic milestones (AYP) the district must offer students another choice of school within the district. However, what happens if well over 50% of the districts high schools are on the states watch list because they are failing to meet AYP?  And worse, what happens if the district itself is on the watch list as is the LAUSD? (Sounds like an opportunity for a NCLB federal lawsuit to me.)

NCLB also states that when a school does not meet academic milestones and is designated a “PI” or Program Improvement school, the district cannot offer students another PI school as an alternative. With over 50% of LAUSD of its high schools falling into the “Program Improvement” category, there are few if any LAUSD schools where students could go. Consequently parents seek out inter-district transfers.  Suitably close hight schools near Westchester for example (Venice, Hamilton, University, Gardena) are all on the PI watch list.

The district believes that by denying families permits, it can steer $51 million that now goes to other local districts back to the LAUSD budget assuming all these students end up in LAUSD schools and not private schools or charters.  However the State of California would stand to lose even more education dollars when these students are moved from less costly and more more academically proficient school districts that receive about $8000 into a very expensive low performing LAUSD school district that receives $9,500 per student. 

Families wishing to enroll their children in other districts should continue to file for inter-district permits with the district. If they later receive a letter denying the permit they can file this appeal [form] to the Los Angeles County Department of Education.

I would also suggest that you call, write or fax your LAUSD board member and let them know how you feel about this policy. The board contact list can be found at http://laschoolboard.org/. Steve Zimmer is the school board member for most of the west side.

Trutanich for City Attorney

Los Angeles Magazine which ran a cover in 2006 describing Mayor Villaraigosa as one of the city’s elite ‘influentials’ of Los Angeles politics is now describing the mayor as a ’Failure.’   This Westchester dad agrees!

(What’s missing in the Los Angeles Magazine cover however is a lineup of the city council members that should be behind him.  Los Angeles’s hard landing in the fiscal gutter was a team effort. ) 

Today the Los Angeles Times published a front page article about our failed mayor who is once again and maybe for the last time testing his influence (he lost Prop B) by endorsing his closest ally Jack Weiss over Carmen Trutanich.

All of this speaks loudly for why we should vote for Carmen Trutanich. Between the two candidates only Trutanich participated in the Westchester/Playa Candidate forum sponsored by the neighborhood council.  Weiss failed to show up. 

At our local forum Trutanich said he would not be advising the city to cave in to billboard companies or multi-million dollar ‘settlements’ such as fire department ‘dog food’ cases.  That latter case could have funded the entire neighborhood council system. We need a City attorney who will protect the interests of our cities voters and not the interests of lobbyist and high powered law firms.  

We need a City attorney who will challenge what is seen by most legal firms as easy money. Money that Delgadillo gave away time and again could have been used to preserve city services.

The Downside to Online Role Playing Games

Note: This was previously published June 3, 2007 and floated to the top.

Runescape and MapleStory could undo years of your child’s academic and social progress in 12 months if you let it.

Maple StoryI first heard of these games when our school sent home a flyer in our kids Monday morning envelope alerting them to some behavioral problems that found there way into the classroom that began with online game that was called Runescape.  It wasn’t so much the game per say that was responsible for the problem since kids were doing what adults often do in the often impersonal Internet medium by forgetting that there is a person on the other end of the keyboard who’s feelings might be hurt if the wrong things were said. 

Having had a chance to see a few of these games and since a number of parents have asked me what I knew about them and whether they were safe for children, I thought it might be a good idea to post something about them.

Two of the online games that I’ve seen recently that are very popular with 9 to 14 year old kids are Runescape and MapleStory.  (There are others games to be leery of. Some are targeted to teens and adults such as SecondLife) 

In this article I’m not referring to game consoles like the PS3, Xbox or Wii which have an online component to them because for the most part, I think that parents that buy these games already know what their getting into. 

Games like Runescape and MapleStory are different however because they are free and accessible to most any computer connected to the Internet. MapleStory is a game that must be downloaded and installed first, while Runescape can simply be played by creating an account on their web site. Both of these games are in the genre called “Massively multiplayer online role-playing games” or simply MMORPG’s and while they are safe, both are highly addictive. If your child plays them, you will likely find out soon that they will become your child’s first addiction and they will test your wills and abilities as a parent.

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Prop 8 parents have nothing to apologize for

While opponents of Proposition 8 and the media focused their ire on Blacks, Hispanics, Mormons and Catholics who were each an individual part of Prop 8’s success, what opponents missed was the fact that most of them were also parents. In fact, the largest segment in shear numbers were the propositions built-in supporters, parents.  The Edison/Mitofsky exit poll:

  • Married voters…
    • 62% of of exit polls respondents were married
    • 60% of them supported Prop 8 (est. 7,336,957 over 4,891,305)
  • Married Voters with children under 18…
    • 64% of them supported Prop 8 (est 4,695,652 over 2,641,305)
  • Of married voters with children (including adult children)
    • 68% of them supported Prop 8 (est 4,989,131 over 2,347,826)

Regardless of a parents racial makeup, a strong majority of mother’s, fathers and grandparents intuitively supported the amendment to California’s Constitution that simply says that a marriage is between a man and a woman. They voted that way because it is in their families best interest. Parent’s owe no one an apology.

Other interesting data…

  • Political party
    • Prop 8 captured 36% of Democrat voters
    • Prop 8 captured 82% of Republican voters
    • Prop 8 captured 46% of Independents and other parties
  • Philosophical leanings…
    • Prop 8 captured 22% of liberals
    • Prop 8 captured 47% of moderates
    • Prop 8 captured 85% of conservatives

Protecting marriage to protect children

Marriage as a human institution is constantly evolving. But in all societies, marriage shapes the rights and obligations of parenthood.  This is the reason why it is so improtant that we should  Vote Yes on Prop 8.

By David Blankenhorn

I’m a liberal Democrat. And I do not favor same-sex marriage. Do those positions sound contradictory? To me, they fit together.

Many seem to believe that marriage is simply a private love relationship between two people. They accept this view, in part, because Americans have increasingly emphasized and come to value the intimate, emotional side of marriage, and in part because almost all opinion leaders today, from journalists to judges, strongly embrace this position. That’s certainly the idea that underpinned the California Supreme Court’s legalization of same-sex marriage.

But I spent a year studying the history and anthropology of marriage, and I’ve come to a different conclusion.

Marriage as a human institution is constantly evolving, and many of its features vary across groups and cultures. But there is one constant. In all societies, marriage shapes the rights and obligations of parenthood. Among us humans, the scholars report, marriage is not primarily a license to have sex. Nor is it primarily a license to receive benefits or social recognition. It is primarily a license to have children.

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LMU – Hammered, drunk or just plain juvenile

http://video.knbc.com/player/?id=290031

I live next door to one of those party houses in the Westport area and about once a week we have these frankly -odd- parties that start and stop in fits where I have to almost weekly call LAPD. Sometimes I think these kids are following a script and moving from one house to another because the partying sometimes doesn’t start -until- 12:00AM, other times they start at 10:00PM and end at 12:00AM and later restart again at 2:00PM.

Yeah…. I’m a little out of touch with today’s college students but frankly with all the partying that is going on at this house very late in the evening and throughout  Westchester, I have to wonder if these students are really college material!!!! The amount of play time they engage in seems to far outweigh what I would think is the amount of study that is required of an under-graduate in an institution such as Loyola Marymount!

Fr. Robert B Lawton, S.J….. your flock is out of control! You can’t keep pretending they are angels.

Father Daughter Prom – May 17th

1c_656565_t11.jpgWestchester/Playa Dad’s! How about a special evening with the little princess in your life?

Bring your daughters, ages 4-12, to a father-daughter prom and create wonderful memories. Treat your daughter to an experience she will never forget by taking her to to Westchester’s 14th Annual Father-Daughter Prom.

Mike Dolan, the Associate Pastor at Del Rey Hills Church in Playa Del Rey told us that they are again sponsoring Westchester’s Father Daughter prom.  This is the 14th year the event has taken place at St. Bernard’s High School on May 17th beginning at 6:00PM.

Find out more by visiting the Father/Daughter Prom website at www.fdprom.com

Edited 5-12-08: corrected date

Westchester residents start bluff access campaign

Westchester residents have begun an information campaign and petition to reverse Playa Vista’s closure of the Westchester Bluffs. You can find more information about the bluffs at www.freethebluffs.org

For sixty years, the bluffs have offered residents a quiet, safe place to hike and allow their kids to explore and walk pets.  The closure of the bluffs follows a disturbing trend to close every bit of unimproved open space left in the area.  Several years ago the West Bluffs was finally closed to public access when homes were eventually built there.