By Duane Campbell
The Sac City Unified district has decided to reduce class
sizes in k-3 classes down to a maximum of 24 students for the fall of
2016, a good decision and a long overdue
decision according to an article by Loretta Kalb in the Tuesday Sacramento Bee .
Community groups such as the Communities Priorities
Coalition, parents groups, and the teachers union (SCTA) have been pressuring
the district to make this decision for over two years.
The district has received over $67 million in additional
funding since 2013 as a result of the economy recovering from the Great
Recession and Prop. 30 ballot
measure. The district receives some $237 million in revenues from
the change in state policy known as the Local Control Funding ( LCFF) that requires
that this revenue be spent on specific populations, low income, English Learners, foster children,
and Special Education. This year the funds have already been allocated to purposes
other than class size reduction by the administration and the School Board in spite of the community demands to spend the funds on class size reduction.
Watching the Board, it is often difficult to tell who or what body is making decisions on this significant new LCFF funding .
Class sizes in Sacramento grew significantly during the
Great Recession and teachers were dismissed while new teachers not hired.
The welcome decision
to reduce k-12 class size back toward the national average will require the hiring of some 100 new
teachers. SCUSD and other local
districts will have difficulty recruiting credentialed teachers as the number
of students studying to become teachers has fallen during the economic crisis.
SCUSD will have a particular problem with this because of
their relatively low starting salary for teachers and due to the need of urban
school districts to recruit and retain a more diverse teaching faculty. Some 21 % of the district students are
English Language Learners and some 72 % of the district students received free or reduced priced lunch ( and indication
of family income). The students in the
district are 37 % Latino, 17.4 % Asian, 17.7 % African American, and 18% White
(Anglo).
The district has long had difficulty recruiting faculty who
are representative of the languages and cultures of the students. Hiring new
teachers at this time may well make this
lack of representation worse.
CSU-Sacramento was a major source of minority teacher hires
prior to the economic crisis of 2008/2009 and the Great Recession. Sac State had
the largest
Bilingual/Multicultural Education department in the northern part of the
state which produced substantial numbers of Latinos and Asian teachers. However the BMED department that organized
and directed bilingual teacher preparation was eliminated by university
decision in 2010. Without a program
focused on recruiting and supporting future minority teachers, the teacher
pipeline of Latino and Asian future teachers dropped from being some 35 % of
Sac State credential graduates to less than 7 %. (https://sites.google.com/site/chicanodigital/home/the-creation-and-demise-of-bilingual-education-at-csu-sacramento-2)
Sac City Unified and other local urban districts will each be recruiting from a sharply reduced pool
of minority teachers, possibly creating another generation of Anglo domination of the local teaching
profession.
The most direct way to recruit new teachers skilled in the
teaching in diverse classrooms is to recruit new teachers from these
communities.
While European American teachers can certainly learn to
teach in language minority and diverse schools,
they can acquire cultural competence, the direct way to change the composition of a district
school staff is to recruit teachers from
the local communities. The significant and unfortunate failure of leadership in teacher preparation at Sac
State imposes yet another obstacle to
SCUSC achieving its diversity hiring goals and its student achievement goals.
A second major problem for the district is opening schools
to allow for the decreased class size and the placement of the new
teachers. This problem was created in significant
part by the unwise decision in 2012 to close 5 community schools and surplus
these properties. The board has already
decided to re open Washington Elementary, but more classrooms will be needed.
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