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FORUM: A Ray of Hope
By Charles Taylor Kerchner
Politics may still save L.A. schools
Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s attempt to take over the Los Angeles Unified School
District (LAUSD) can be seen as an act of pure political hubris: a
charismatic, progressive newcomer running with the big dogs of urban
politics. Daley did it in Chicago and Bloomberg in New York, so why not? In
this conventional view, the mayor is a political opportunist advancing
under a cobbled-together, best-we-could-do-on-a-Thursday-night piece of
legislation of questionable constitutionality. But history reveals another
context in which to understand the mayor’s educational activism. It
also provides a ray of optimism about the future of public education in the
nation’s second-largest school district.
If we focus the lens of history back half a century,
Villaraigosa’s school takeover attempt looks like the epitaph for an
institution of public education founded by California’s political
Progressives in the first decade of the 20th century. In 1903 the Los
Angeles city charter was changed to take school governance
away from a corrupt
city government. Following that era’s Progressive ideal, civic-minded
citizens would raise the schools above politics and a corps of trained
professionals would operate them. As historian Judith Raftery noted,
“Los Angeles schools became a paradigm of Progressive
reform.”
However, for the last four decades, Los Angeles
Unified has been subjected to huge system shocks that have betrayed the
Progressive Era ideal and hollowed out the district’s authority over
its own operations. Desegregation and school finance lawsuits painted the
district as discriminatory and racist. The desegregation suit itself, filed
in 1964, dragged out for more than a quarter century. The remedy of
mandatory busing brought about a backlash, and racial politics dominated
the district. By the end of the 1960s, the storied “walkout”
and the beginnings of Chicano activism joined the desegregation issue. In
the midst of the controversy over busing, the middle class, particularly
the white middle class, took a moving van to the suburbs. Since 1950,
enrollment shifted from about 85 percent white to about 90 percent students
of color. Some 80 percent of students are poor enough to be eligible for
free or reduced-price lunch.
In 1976, collective bargaining legislation bolstered
teachers as an interest group, toughened an already hearty United Teachers
Los Angeles, and limited principals’ unchallenged authority over
teachers. Other employee groups, including the principals themselves, also
organized. An image of self-interest replaced the view of educators as
dutiful and self-sacrificing.
A successful tax equity lawsuit and a property tax
limitation initiative, Proposition 13, removed the school board’s
taxing authority and effectively moved fiscal governance of the district to
Sacramento in 1978. Although current board chair Marlene Canter may
complain that the mayor’s actions threaten the legitimate authority
of an independent school board, the reality is that the board lost control
of the purse strings long ago.
Just as political realists predicted at the time, when
taxing control moved to Sacramento, so, too, did the momentum for school
reform and control. In 1982, Bill Honig defeated a 12-year incumbent to
become state school superintendent. Education reform became political
currency that was exchanged for dollars. Over the next 20 years, a series
of laws used the power of the purse to shape the budgets of local school
districts: graduation requirements, academic standards and testing,
lengthened school days and years, and class size reduction. The link
between capitol and classroom had become much stronger and the hand of the
local school board weaker.
LAUSD has not gone quietly into the institutional
twilight. The administration itself initiated two reform plans in the
1980s. The second of these, The Children Can No
Longer Wait, was remarkable in its
self-criticism and in its analysis. It called the district’s failure
to educate Latino and African American students “racist,” and
it said more than $400 million in reforms would be needed. By the 1990s,
reform momentum had moved outside the district. LEARN (Los Angeles
Educational Alliance for Restructuring Now) created what looked like an
unbeatable political coalition of business, civic, and labor leaders
including former mayor Richard Riordan and teachers union president Helen
Bernstein. In 1993, its plan to decentralize schools gained board approval
and the support of Superintendent Sidney Thompson. The Los Angeles
Annenberg Metropolitan Project followed and bankrolled LEARN, creating what
it called families of high schools and their feeder elementary and middle
schools.
Both these projects began with great celebration and
disappeared amid a cloud of disappointment. Riordan concluded, “LEARN
failed.”
A Better Plan
Why, then, any optimism? First, despite all the
criticism, the district is actually getting better. Elementary reading and
math scores have increased faster than those in most large California
cities. A massive construction project, larger than Boston’s
“Big Dig” and one hopes better managed, will relieve
overcrowding and allow a larger variety of schools. Second, the political
fight over who should control the schools has now broadened into a
discussion over what the school district should do and how it should work.
In January 2007, Villaraigosa’s education team issued a reform plan
called The Schoolhouse, aimed at all schools in Los Angeles Unified. The Los Angeles Times labeled
the mayor’s report a fallback bully pulpit in case the courts
overturn the 2006 legislation giving him control over three clusters of
low-performing schools. It’s much more than that. Many of the
mayor’s ideas raise tough operational issues that the school district
either has not dealt with or has persistently rejected. Third, four central
reform ideas—decentralization, choice, high standards, and
grass-roots participation—have persisted for more than two decades
along with increasing sophistication about how to get them to mesh.
Decentralization turns the Progressive Era ideal of a
well-ordered hierarchy on its head. The idea of moving decisions
“close to the customer” originated in research on effective
corporations in the 1980s and the Effective Schools movement of the same
era reflects that research, so there’s nothing novel in the
mayor’s plan. But the plan displays an increasingly sophisticated
understanding of what is necessary to decentralize school operations
effectively.
Earlier systemic reform plans failed to link
decentralization and accountability for results. The mayor’s plan
does not shy away from restructuring chronically underperforming schools
and moving employees if necessary. (Some 305 LAUSD schools already face
intervention under the federal No Child Left Behind Act sanctions.) He
wants to strengthen peer review and “provide additional compensation
for those teachers that take on substantial additional responsibility and
deliver results at schools.” By linking decentralization to
accountability for outcomes, the mayor reinserts teachers into the reform
process. As teachers who have read the plan realize full well, it has
implications for their jobs as well as for relationships with their union.
It may well be that because of his impeccable political credentials
Villaraigosa is the best-positioned leader in Los Angeles to connect
reforms in the schoolhouse to the house of labor.
If decisions about employment, budget, and program
move to the schools, as the mayor advocates, this threatens everything else
in the school bureaucracy, too. The instinct to decentralize, which began
as an escape from bureaucracy, is becoming an imperative to design a
different kind of system. Autonomy is linked to accountability and support
mechanisms.
Villaraigosa’s plan is silent about expanding
charter schools and other options, but his planning team has drawn strong
support from charter operators. As Times columnist Bob Sipchen wrote, “If the board
continues to reject the mayor’s advances, his team could simply work
from the outside in and start trying to convert district schools to
charters.”
Ironically, even while Los Angeles Unified has
tightened central controls over the last six years, it has allowed 104
charters. There are more than 50 magnet schools, and there is a virtual
charter district composed of a high school and surrounding elementary
schools in the Pacific Palisades. Like decentralization, the idea of
providing variety and choice has been part of every reform plan. Much of
the energy behind charter schools has come from the leaders of earlier
reforms.
High standards are the first pillar in the
mayor’s plan and have been part of every reform of the last 20 years.
What’s different now is that higher expectations of all students have
been hard-wired into educational policy. State standards and the federal No
Child Left Behind Act provide the mayor with an achievement cudgel that
earlier reformers lacked. (California actually abandoned its assessment
program during part of the 1990s reforms.) LAUSD has adopted what is called
an A though G requirement that would place all high-school students in
courses that would give them the basic entrance requirement for public
colleges, but it is behind schedule in implementing it. The fact that fewer
than 15 percent of students complete a college-ready curriculum has become
a political issue that is already rallying reformers and civil rights
advocates.
All the reform projects tried to find some way of
engaging parents in their children’s education and in the operations
of schools. Villaraigosa’s plan endorses a new breed of community
organizations such as the Boyle Heights Learning Collaborative and similar
organizations in the Belmont High School area, South Central, and the San
Fernando Valley. These seek to combine increased direct parental
involvement in education—parent as a child’s first
educator—with increased advocacy that is pressuring the district for
new construction and attention to both the A through G mandate and the
achievement problems of English-language learners. Grass-roots pressure was
key to bringing about a recent agreement for charterlike schools in what is
called the Belmont Zone of Choice, a series of smaller schools that will
gain wider autonomy over curriculum, staffing, and budget.
No one knows whether the mayor will be successful in
hammering together political agreements that advance these four historic
reform ideas. He may well, as others have predicted, tire of the battle and
decide to pave potholes or fix LAX. But this much is known. Villaraigosa is
not a one-trick pony whose education agenda will rise or fall depending on
the court’s view of last year’s legislation. He has options at
the ballot box, in the legislature, and with his considerable skill at
bringing contending forces together.
The prize for success is huge. In Los Angeles, at the
turn of the 20th century, a Progressive movement forged by businesspeople,
philanthropists, and unionists created the school system that gained the
reputation as one of the best in the country. At the start of the 21st, the
city faces many similar problems: a changing economy, a population of
immigrants, and institutions that do not perform as they should. The
reformers of the last century transformed local and state government and
provided the intellectual and policy foundation for the New Deal. The time
is ripe for a new transformation.
Charles Taylor Kerchner is senior research professor
at Claremont Graduate University. This research has been supported by a
generous grant from the Annenberg Foundation.
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