This article was originally published in the January 19, 1999 edition of the Los Angeles Times
© 1999 The Sacramento Bee

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Legislature Opens Session on Education
By Amy Pyle
Times Staff Writer
SACRAMENTO -- Amid little fanfare, the state Legislature launched a special
session on education Tuesday, introducing four bills initiated by Gov.
Gray Davis to combat problems ranging from illiteracy to poor teaching.
Details of the legislation flesh out Davis' $444-million plan to
reform public education through a system of reward and punishment. The
most urgent bill--which would take effect immediately if passed and
signed by Davis, provides $93 million to improve reading.
"The purpose of these bills is to ask more of teachers, students,
principals and parents," Davis said during a briefing on his plan before
it was submitted to the Legislature. Then, reciting a quote from Martin
Luther King Jr. about seizing the moment, the governor said, "I hope it
is not said of us that we flinched, that we missed the moment."
All four bills are to be shepherded by Democratic lawmakers, but Davis
said he hopes for bipartisan support. Within an hour of the plan's
unveiling, however, Republican dissent developed on some issues.
Assembly Minority Leader Rod Pacheco (R-Riverside) said the reading
plan and some of the teacher training proposals sound palatable, but
Davis' accountability measures are not comprehensive enough.
"This entire process has to be overhauled," Pacheco said of the state
school system. "It fails students on a daily basis."
At his direction, 15 Republicans in the Assembly introduced 22 bills
under the heading Checklist for Real Education Reform.
However, the political reality in a Legislature dominated by Democrats
is that although some of the GOP ideas may become part of the final
agreement on education, Republicans are pushing bills that have failed in
the past and are likely to meet the same fate this year.
Two of the Democrats' proposed measures directly relate to students:
the one to improve reading, which would provide more training for reading
teachers, and a new high school exit exam. Two measures relate to
teachers and school performance, including a teacher evaluation system
and school accountability plan.
Details emerged Tuesday about the three areas that are likely to be
the most controversial:
* Peer review: Beginning with $17 million to train exemplary teachers
to assist and review other teachers, this program would replace the
state's $83-million mentor teacher program in July 2000.
Decisions on how to set up the system would be negotiated locally
between school districts and teachers unions, which pleases the unions.
But the state would withhold the annual cost-of-living increase from
districts that refuse to participate.
"My wife's a teacher. I want to do something that works for teachers .
. . but I also want something that works for kids," said Assembly Speaker
Antonio Villaraigosa (D-Los Angeles), a former Los Angeles teachers union
activist who introduced the peer review bill.
* Exit exams: Students would be allowed to take the test as many times
as they wish, beginning in 10th grade in 2001. Beginning in 2003, only
students who pass the exam, which would test knowledge of reading,
writing and mathematics, would graduate from high school.
Davis said his goal is not to make the test so hard that large numbers
of students fail, but rather to "gauge them in a way that stretches them"
to try harder.
* Academic Performance Index: The index, which would be used to rank
all California schools and determine whether they meet statewide
improvement goals, would be a combination of student test scores and
graduation and attendance rates.
The data also would be broken down by socioeconomic status to ensure
that all groups of students improve, not just the traditional
higher-income, high achievers. All schools would be expected to show at
least a 5% annual improvement rate, and lower-performing schools would
have higher targets.
The competing GOP legislation ranges from some familiar
targets--automatic expulsion for having drugs on campus--to a teaching
methods test for new teachers, which also would be used to rank the
teaching programs that trained them.
The sheaf of Republican bills also includes another run at vouchers
for private schools. The "Expanded Parental Choice" bill by Assemblyman
Steve Baldwin (R-El Cajon) would provide private school scholarships to
students at the consistently lowest performing schools.
Pacheco criticized Davis' proposal for letting teachers review each
other. Peer review is just one tool, Pacheco said, and should be
bolstered by reviews of administrators and others.
"I would love to have my fellow legislators decide if I get reelected
[to the Assembly], but that's not going to happen," he said.
The special session that convened Tuesday is an outgrowth of Davis'
campaign promise to reform public schools. He had vowed to call such a
session, which speeds up the process of making bills into laws.
The session allows a waiver of the 30-day waiting period before bills
can be considered in legislative committees.
If Davis is successful in urging the Legislature to wrap up the
special session by the end of March, as he has said he wants to do, most
of the new laws would take effect 90 days later. That would be in time
for the start of the 1999 school year at most campuses, instead of next
January.
Among other new proposals to emerge Tuesday:
* Reading academies that would operate four hours a day for six weeks
during the summer or when school is otherwise out of session. Schools
also could opt to offer this instruction after school or on weekends.
Distribution of the $75 million to pay for the program would assume
that about one in 10 students would require such intensive help--far
below the need level at many inner-city schools, where a majority of
students may be struggling with reading.
* An intervention program for 200 schools scoring below the 50th
percentile on state achievement tests, based on spring 1998 and 1999 test
scores.
Schools would be asked to apply to the program and by doing so would
invite a state-appointed evaluator onto campus to work with a school
team. The incentive would be a $150-per-student grant for every year the
school participates.
Acceptance would be limited to 140 elementary schools, 36 middle
schools and 24 high schools, unless additional state money becomes
available.
Times staff writers Dan Morain and Carl Ingram contributed to this
report.
* * *
Highlights of the Bills
School accountability
* Creates academic performance index to rank schools by state
achievement test results, student and school personnel attendance, and
graduation rates.
* Provides $42.3 million for intervention program for 200
underachieving schools over the next three years.
* Allocates $150 million for cash awards to high-achieving and
improving schools.
By Sen. Dede Alpert (D-Coronado).
* * * Teacher peer review and evaluation
* Allocates $17 million to begin peer assistance training, institutes
peer review program in 2000-'01 school year.
* Requires principals to use peer reviews in annual teacher
evaluations; negative reviews must be reported to local school.
By Assembly Speaker Antonio Villaraigosa (D-Los Angeles).
* * * Children's reading, teacher and principal preparation programs
* Provides $75 million for intensive reading instruction in
kindergarten through fourth grade.
* Uses $12 million to create summer training in reading instruction
for up to 6,000 beginning teachers.
* Sets up a $2-million Governor's Reading Awards program at up to 400
elementary and middle schools.
* Allocates $4 million for a "Call to Action" reading campaign.
By Assemblywoman Kerry Mazzoni (D-San Rafael).
* * * High school exit exam
* Provides $2 million for development of exit exams in reading,
writing and math.
* Requires students to pass exams to graduate, beginning in 2003.
* Requires state Board of Education to adopt exam performance
standards by July 2000.
By Sen. Jack O'Connell (D-San Luis Obispo).
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