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Home » More Explicit Guidance For Distance Learning Sparks Debate In Legislature

More Explicit Guidance For Distance Learning Sparks Debate In Legislature

by CLAYCORD.com
17 comments

By John Fensterwald – EdSource

In March, Gov. Gavin Newsom suspended state laws setting the length of the school year and minimum daily instructional minutes when he signed an executive order to fully fund schools for the rest of the year.

That order will expire July 1, and what will take its place has become embroiled in a debate over the shortcomings of distance learning under local control. The clock is ticking; the Legislature wants to establish instructional minimums, along with tighter rules for distance learning, by the June 15 deadline to pass next year’s state budget. Talks between legislative leaders and the Newsom administration are ongoing this week.
Potentially facing further school closures, budget cuts and higher

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costs because of the pandemic, an organization representing schools boards, school administrators and teachers unions has called for maximum flexibility over the school calendar and at least another year of assured state funding.

“Unprecedented times require innovative responses,” the California School Boards Association wrote in a report, issued Tuesday, on reopening schools. “The proposed scenarios for resuming school will require regulatory relief.”

They’re expected to get some of what they want, starting with funding. Current state law permits districts to be funded at the rate of the greater of the past two years. As a result, districts in 2020-21 can claim full funding again based on last year’s funding level. The same would then apply to 2021-22.

But in return for calendar flexibility, two dozen civil rights organizations and student advocacy groups, collectively called the Equity Coalition, and parent groups in Los Angeles and the Bay Area are demanding that the Legislature set tighter standards and more oversight over distance learning. They’ve been critical of poor implementation of remote instruction and big gaps in technology and internet access in many school districts, particularly those serving low-income, black and Latino students.

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“The threshold is too low for distance learning,” Aurea Montes-Rodriguez, executive vice president of the nonprofit Community Coalition in South Los Angeles, said Tuesday. She spoke at a news conference on the release of a new report by the Advancement Project, recommending ways to achieve racial equity in the state budget.

One parent’s frustration

Too many parents have shared the frustration of Kusema Thomas, the father of a fifth-grader at 232nd Place Elementary School in Carson, part of Los Angeles Unified. His son didn’t receive a laptop until the fourth week of
instruction. He received live instruction for an hour a day and found it hard to ask questions on Zoom with students forgetting to mute their mics.

“He can’t stand it,” Thomas said. “He says, ‘This is not fun; it’s not real school.'” He said his son is a conscientious student who keeps up with assignments daily, but weeks into distance learning he got an email that
his son was behind. That’s because he didn’t get instructions on how to upload work assignments, and the principal didn’t communicate with parents, Thomas said.

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Legislative and state leaders appear to be looking for middle ground between prescriptive mandates and Newsom’s March 13 directive that districts should provide “high-quality” educational opportunities “to the extent feasible.”

When Newsom issued his guidance, rates of coronavirus infections were rising; his focus was more on keeping teachers and students safe than on long-term instruction. Three months later, legislators like Assemblyman Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, who chairs the Assembly Budget Committee and is involved in the distance learning discussions, have become critical of some districts’ inconsistent and belated efforts to conduct distance learning
effectively.

Newsom has as well. Last week, he defended his plan to direct $4 billion to low-income districts to address students falling further behind academically by citing new research on learning loss. The consulting company McKinsey & Company found that low-income students were far more likely to receive poor distance learning instruction and would return to school at the end of this year having lost a year of instruction.

During a recent webcast by the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research, State Board of Education President Linda Darling-Hammond agreed with the need to suspend instructional minute regulations. The coronavirus has disrupted traditional school patterns and funding based on in-school attendance, and districts need flexibility to create new models, she said.

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But she also said that disparities among districts’ distance rlearning have created a “huge inequality.” Districts’ efforts to reach out to students have varied; as a result, “some kids are going completely uneducated
right now,” she said.

Darling-Hammond acknowledged a need to create “parameters” for distance learning around questions like, “What does quality distance learning consist of? What kinds of interactions should be anticipated among adults and kids?” She has participated in the talks on forthcoming guidance that will address these and other questions.

Minimum days and minutes of instruction

California requires 180 days of instruction per year (175 days for charter schools). The minimum number of instructional hours per year varies by grade: 600 for kindergarten, 840 for grades 1 to 3; 900 for grades 4 to 8
and 1060 for high school.

During the last recession, some teachers’ unions agreed to forego scheduled pay raises, but others negotiated pay cuts through furloughs, which had the effect of reducing the school year. Districts want that option available again.

Some of the “blended” models for instruction call for elementary students splitting time between school and at home doing distance learning, with Fridays reserved for teacher collaboration and training.

Districts and teachers unions are warning that cycles of closing and re-opening schools in response to surges of coronavirus infections would also create havoc with the calendar.

Measuring time through distance learning is harder than an in-person school schedule, since some teachers and schools upload lesson plans and videos for students to view, and they expect students to work independently off-line. However, since March, some districts have required only a handful of hours of instruction per week, whether live or recorded, and a minimum of interaction with students.

“If you are attempting to deliver the same quality of instruction that you had before the pandemic, it would be wildly irresponsible to offer one hour per day and pretend that would be sufficient,” said Brian Greenberg, CEO of the Silicon Schools Fund, which invests in charter schools and innovative projects in traditional districts.

What parents and advocacy groups want

In a June 3 legislative alert to its members, the Equity Coalition called on the Legislature not to waive instructional minutes and days unless there are “minimum safeguards for all students that exceed what some students have experienced over the last 10 weeks.” Even then, the instructional year should be shortened only in the event of closures due to coronavirus outbreaks.

The coalition says districts should be required to develop “instructional continuity plans” in which districts would commit to:

  • Evaluate all students to determine how much learning loss and trauma they experienced during school closures.
  • Track students’ attendance and level of engagement daily.
  • Provide live or “synchronous” distance learning opportunities between teachers and all students.
  • Ensure “a full curriculum of substantially similar quality” regardless of whether in-school or by distance learning, with accommodations for English learners, special education students and students academically behind.
  • Help families to support their children in distance learning in the languages that parents speak.

The coalition wants the Legislature to empower the California Department of Education and county offices of education to intervene in those districts where there is “egregious underperformance” in high-quality distance learning.

Working with parent leaders in district and charter schools in Los Angeles and the Bay Area, the nonprofit Innovate Public Schools issued a similar 10-point list. It includes requiring all teachers to communicate individually with every student in their class at least once a week by phone or video to discuss academics and social-emotional wellness and to communicate with parents at least once a week.

School districts and the California Teachers Association have opposed state-imposed mandates on instructional methods, which they say should be left to districts to decide or to negotiate with unions under local control.

But in its 30-page school reopening document, published in late May, the Association of California School Administrators included a 10-point “Essential Commitments to Equitable Education” that are broadly compatible with the Equity Coalition’s more specific demands.

“Commitments” require action. “Guidance” implies advice. Education groups are waiting to see how legislators and Newsom frame their document on distance learning, expected within days.

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Lots of words and very little information on what parents want. 90% is about what teachers, unions and school boards want. And the organization that claims to represent what parents wants, Innovate Public Schools, appears to consist of community organizers who are only interested in what poor Latino parents want.

If there ever was a time to home school now is it. I’m glad my daughter graduated last year.

Oh yes, the Equity Coalition group..the same group that pushed for the “unfair” SATs to be stopped at the UC’s….
The state of California has been in a steady decline where education is concerned for many years. And with the introduction of Common Core, the dumbing down of students is in place. Now with the political pandemic looming over us, there is basically no education at all as the educated morons in power fight over what will take place, how the money will be spent.
It really is quite amusing how this all falls into the socialist agenda. Keep giving into the special interest groups to ruin the American culture, keep the people uneducated and confused, keep taking away our freedoms.

My son didn’t learn anything during the 3 months of distance “learning.” His teachers barely required any work from him, and they didn’t grade it, he just got credit.

fly on the wall told me that teachers could not require the work and kids knew it… Teachers just had to provide something…

How are we to “lead the world” if we keep dumbing-down the school programs? Over the years, I’ve talked with guys who graduated from secondary schools and universities in the UK, France and Germany, and their programs are far more rigorous than ours. I was looking at the curriculum for my degree at SFSU today and it’s been dumbed-down to where it’s almost unrecognizable since I graduated 35 years ago. If being more inclusive means we cannot compete in the world, we may as well issue 10 million H-1Bs a year.

I tutored low income kids the last few weeks of “school”. Took weeks to get them computers and internet access, so they were already behind. Then they had no one at home to help, so they didn’t attend class and fell further behind. Then those who have learning disabilities take a long time to finish any assignment, and fall even further behind. There is no way that there won’t be disparate outcomes, even if there were top notch instruction. Distance learning is never as good as in-person instruction. Besides, kids need to be together to socialize. Also, how are parents going to be able to hold a job, if there’s always a kid at home? Low-income families can’t afford childcare! And how are teachers supposed to teach, if their kids are home?

Seems to me like all these plans are made without humans in mind. What are these people thinking? We’re automatons??

“…tighter rules for distance learning…”

Are they panicked parents will pull their kids out of school system in favor of home schooling ? ?

Wasn’t back to school CV-19 list for at least one district 55 pages of requirements and procedures ?

Is pathetic when I encounter new hires, in their first job, who can’t can’t logically break down a problem into smaller parts, can’t balance a checkbook and give up when they don’t understand something.

I’ve known 3 families that home schooled their kids. Two of the three graduated one and two years ahead of their contemporaries.
Homeschooling does require more participation by a parent, who doesn’t actually teach but does have to obtain the educational materials, learn where the resources are, and motivate your students. There is an invisible parallel universe around you where you collaborate with other home school parents to find the co-ops, lectures, field trips, etc. Homeschooling also occurs outside the home and requires you to provide or find transportation or carpools for your student kids. Lots of stuff online also

I’m a parent and a teacher, though I teach in an affluent area where most kids have at least one device at home (sometimes shared by several people) and consistent access to internet. What I see as a workable solution needs to be a two-tiered approach, recognizing that it is more difficult to do distance learning with elementary than with middle or high schoolers. I would have the high schoolers and middle schoolers share the high school campuses and give the middle school campus to elementary so they have more classrooms. I would make the classes cap at 15. Elementary would attend every day, unless they show symptoms. Sixth graders would join elementary school. 7th through 12th grade would attend on a rotating schedule, one week on and two weeks off. The weeks they are “off”, they would be provided with packets of work and videos to explain them. All assessments would take place during their week on campus. Special needs students would attend every day if it is a better fit for their needs, and their classrooms would be similar to an elementary model, regardless of their actual grade level.
I think this would be very doable, but it forces teachers and administrators to really look at the current model, throw it out the window, and start from scratch. That is something that might be too hard to overcome.

Good thoughts, Another Teacher.
Although I know nothing about organizing a school, or teaching, this is the first logical plan I have seen from somebody who is in the business. Maybe school districts could invite educators to brainstorming sessions where creative ideas can be put in front of everybody, and then organized into workable plans.

Thanks, Kirkwood, for the kind words. Unfortunately there won’t be brainstorming sessions with teachers, because it ends up being “too many cooks in the kitchen.” Administrators, many of whom have never taught in a classroom, will probably make the plans. Then there will be many issues and the discrepancies between the affluent and less-affluent students will divide further. It’s inevitable. The ones who suffer the most will be the students who need the most support. If I could clone myself, I’d go into educational reform, but I love the classroom too much.

A T, you’re making the unions cringe.

S, That’s why I work for a private school. I know I’m a good teacher, but I would be stunted by the bureaucracy of it all. I went to school for five years. I know when my students are ready to move onto a new topic, and I know when they can skip a few lessons. I don’t have to have formal assessments every other day. Having someone without a teaching credential tell me how to teach is ridiculous. In exchange, I don’t have public school perks, like better pay, 401K, good benefits, etc. But it’s still worth it!

We have schools here in the Mt. Diablo School District that have been terrible for +35 years. No actual business could survive with these kinds of results. The problem starts at the top… with the politicians and appointees who are supposed to guide our schools, and the teacher unions who protect bad teachers and are more interested in their own interests.

Throw in children who are not native English speakers, whose parents are mentally ill, addicted, illiterate, working 3 jobs to make ends meet, and it is no wonder we are rated 2nd or 3rd from the bottom in the nation.

Kids in our neighborhood are already playing with each other and not ‘socially-distancing’. Friends in other parts of Concord/Pleasant Hill/Walnut Creek report the same thing. Nothing except full-time, in-class instruction, is going to be even remotely successful.

Will the School Board actually speak with teachers from the worst schools in the District and HEAR what they experienced with distance learning, or will they ignore teachers the same way that they ignore parents?

Defund the Teachers Union.

Finally something that makes sense!!!!! These people only care about money, not our children.

Unions are funded by dues paid by the members, often in the form of a deduction on the paycheck.

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