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The three most important issues facing
the Campbell Union High School District are
(1) quality of education, (2) the potential
division of the district due to unification
efforts, and (3) the district's communication
with parents.
(1) Quality of education is always the
first issue. It has been recently equated
with average test scores. This has led to
considerable political jockeying about which
test to use and confusion about what the test
scores mean. Some of my neighbors are
determined to move their children out of the
district into schools with higher test
averages. The fact that everyone needs to
keep in mind is that the best predictors of
test scores are socio-economic indices. These
are largely out of the control of the schools.
One should expect higher average scores in
wealthier communities like Los Gatos and
Saratoga. The advantaged students that they
teach make the task of achieving high
standardized test scores a lot easier for
teachers in these districts. Of course, some
Campbell District students have always done as
well on these tests as the best students in
wealthier surrounding communities. However,
due to the fact that socio-economic factors
are so important in these tests, average
scores are not a very good way to determine
the quality of schools.
Gain scores on tests would also be an
inadequate way of assessing the quality of
schools. Here the advantage would go the
other way. For example, most schools in the
lowest quartile would find some improvement in
test scores by statistical regression alone.
They would also have more "room" to improve
whereas those schools with many students who
are near the highest possible score are
brushing against the "ceiling," and the
average score in these schools would be very
difficult to improve.
How then do you judge high school
quality? I would suggest that interested
districts and parents should track two very
important considerations: teacher quality and
program options. These are directly related
to student achievement and should be assessed
directly. When teacher quality is high and
program options are maximized, even schools in
poor districts can deliver an outstanding
education. Although these two cannot
eliminate the influence of socio-economic
factors, they can reduce their importance.
Research reported by Kati Haycock,
Director of the Education Trust, documents the
impact of teachers' depth of content knowledge
and strong verbal and math skills on student
achievement. They rank the states in terms of
classes taught by teachers working out of
their major field. The range is from 10%
(Minnesota) to 29% (Alaska) of the classes.
Of the 51 jurisdictions (50 states plus D.C.),
California ranks 50th, just ahead of Alaska,
with 27% of its classes taught by teachers
teaching outside their major field.
The problem is exacerbated by the
statewide teacher shortage. There are
approximately 30,000 non-credentialed teachers
working with emergency permits. Estimates are
that there will be a need for approximately
300,000 new teachers in California in the next
few years, making teacher recruitment and
quality of education high on the list of
issues facing every high school in the state.
Thus, the recruitment of quality teachers is
the most serious challenge facing the Campbell
Union High School District.
It is a particularly vexing problem here
because of the housing shortage and pricey
real estate market. A thoughtful recruitment
plan with teacher and parent collaboration is
called for. Expanding the current internship
plan and developing partnerships with key
university departments can help to give the
CUHSD its fair share of new teachers with deep
subject matter knowledge.
(2) The second most important issue, an
obvious one, is how to prepare for the
potential division facing the district due to
unification efforts. This is an important
issue simply because it has become such a
contentious one. Not only is there a
significant group of parents in the Moreland
District who are disaffected from the high
school district, but we now have the spectacle
of district administrations and school boards
battling one another. Educational programs
hang in the balance.
Unlike the first issue discussed above,
it is not clear whether unified districts
provide significant advantages for students,
parents, and other important stakeholders. It
is abundantly clear that some groups favor
unification and others do not. The main
advantage of unification is that the community
can start over and build another school
district(s). Also, the main disadvantage is
that the community would have to start over.
Starting over is a good idea if you
believe that the present district cannot be
fixed. If it is true that things are so bad
in the district high schools that even a
change in district administrative personnel
would not solve the problem, then an
opportunity to start over would be a happy
event. It would require a huge investment of
time, effort, and money, but a committed
community could conceivably construct a better
local educational system. This would be a
radical change. It would take clear heads
that could forge a local consensus and appeal
effectively for outside help. Although it
would be a formidable undertaking, the result
might be worth it. A sense of community and
identity might be established that would last
for generations.
Starting over would require a massive
readjustment. New school boards would have to
be elected for new districts. New
administrations would have to be hired. The
cost of present levels of classified staff,
according to the law, would have to be borne
for two years. Since high school teachers'
salaries are higher, the new district would
have this disparity to cope with. Under the
current law, it appears that only a unified
Union Elementary District would likely qualify
for state dollars to make up the difference.
They would have a high enough proportion of
high school teachers to qualify. Unified
Moreland and Campbell districts apparently
would not qualify for additional salary
dollars. It is not clear whether Cambrian
would qualify. They might have to make up the
salary adjustment out of current dollars.
Under some scenarios that would split the
district, most of the high school teachers
might try to opt for the district with the
higher salary schedule. If the district
parents and residents were not solidly behind
the change, the ensuing confusion and
contention could seriously detract from the
task of education.
Planning for possible unification is
complicated by the fact that it is difficult
to predict how many districts would result.
If the Moreland proposal is approved by the
state and the voters, the old elementary
district would likely gain the two high
schools within its borders, Prospect and
Blackford. If this unified district were the
only one approved, the Campbell Union High
School District would need to contract by one-
third. However, the Campbell elementary
district has also started to push for
unification. If their proposal is also
approved, it seems likely that the Union and
Cambrian elementary districts would follow
like dominoes.
Distributing the high school district
resources equitably under any of the
unification scenarios would be a challenge.
Take the district office as one example. That
site stands within the borders of the Union
Elementary district. Would a unified Union
district be entitled to that site and the
ensuing revenues if that site were leased or
sold? Could the new unified districts
cooperate in resolving these issues or would
years of litigation eat up precious education
dollars? These puzzles must be anticipated in
the planning.
As noted above, if unification is to be
successful, it will need the committed support
of parents and community members. The voters'
decision should be expeditiously carried out.
Those involved should supply the voters with
the best information possible about the legal
and financial implications of their choices.
The voters will need better estimates of the
cost of the various scenarios. The county
committee consultant's report is too vague and
superficial to be of much help. The voters
deserve to see the missing figures that
underpin those vague conclusions. The high
school board and administration will need to
cooperate fully in supplying the data needed
to make these calculations.
(3) Communication with parents seems to
be an issue in the district. Arguably, if the
board and administration had been more
forthcoming with information, more willing
early on to meet with elementary boards, more
capable listeners, more attentive to concerns,
there would not be a significant group of
parents wanting to start over with a unified
district. The district arranged for a
communication audit some time ago which
advised that the district should bolster its
efforts toward better communication. The
problem is how to proceed.
At present district communication is
being treated primarily as information
provided to parents and community members.
Leaflets are sent home to parents via
students. If the students don't deliver the
flyers, the parents are often left in the
dark. While this is a serious problem and
methods of information diffusion need to be
expanded, the most important need is for the
district to encourage and systematically
process messages FROM parents. The
administration and board need to demonstrate
that parents have been listened to and that
efforts will be made to accommodate them. The
highest communication priority is to expand
the number of channels and forums through
which this might be done. The district needs
to ask for feedback. The attitude must be one
of "complaints are welcome here." Board
members or administrators could hold "office
hours" for parents in addition to their
regular meetings. A web-site modification
permitting the asking of questions and the
lodging of complaints could be established.
Verbatim transcripts of these could be e-
mailed to board members and administrators.
Research shows that organizations with
multiple opportunities to give this kind of
feedback enjoy more satisfied stakeholder
groups than organizations with minimal
opportunities to do so. If money were not
available to free up faculty or staff time for
these functions, some of this work might be
done by community volunteers.
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