• =?UTF-8?Q?Seattle_Public_Schools=e2=80=99_woes_are_self-inflicted?=

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sun Apr 16 19:58:33 2023
    XPost: soc.support.depression.family

    from https://www.seattletimes.com/opinion/editorials/any-way-you-slice-it-seattle-public-schools-woes-are-self-inflicted/

    (My family story is a terrible indictment on our current public schools.
    I raised 4 children and all went to public schools and all graduated
    from Washington public universities. Now 3 of those have had children,
    5 in total. Two have attended public elementary schools, but by
    next fall, all will be attending private schools.)

    Any way you slice it, Seattle Public Schools’ woes are self-inflicted
    April 14, 2023 at 2:14 pm

    300 dpi Donna Grethen illustration of relates to the restructuring of
    the No Child Left Behind bill (Op Art/TNS)
    By The Seattle Times editorial board

    Seattle Schools Superintendent Brent Jones has been frank about one of
    the main challenges facing the state’s largest school district: Parents
    who have the means are pulling their kids out.

    Declining enrollment is due partly to a nationwide demographic shift.
    There are simply fewer school-age children. But Seattle has
    comparatively high rates of private school attendance, a fact not lost
    on Jones, who says the city’s public schools need to get better at
    telling their story.

    Currently, that tale begins with a looming $131 million budget hole and decisions being made in its shadows that could lock the district into a downward spiral for years.

    Consider accelerated learning. Rightly concerned about racial
    segregation between kids in so-called “highly capable” classrooms and everyone else, Seattle has been working to abolish these divisions. It
    found a creative solution — at least, at one site — by bringing the
    highly touted Technology Access Foundation to Washington Middle School,
    where most of the students are low-income children of color.

    TAF worked with all of them. There were digital literacy classes, web-
    and game-development and STEM-focused field trips. Math scores rose by double-digits for 7th and 8th graders. Results in English were, in
    general, similarly impressive — even during the pandemic’s unprecedented toll on learning.

    Yet now, just three years into their partnership, Seattle is showing TAF
    the door. “We have to operate within our means,” Associate
    Superintendent Concie Pedroza said at a February budget meeting.

    Founded by former Microsoft executive Trish Dziko, TAF had been
    contributing almost $800,000 annually to pay for its own team of 10 at Washington Middle School. Those educators worked alongside Seattle
    teachers, seven of whom were added to the middle school to enable
    smaller class sizes. But next year, the extra Seattle teachers — as well
    as half of the school’s award-winning music program — will be pulled to
    cut costs.

    The issue here is not cuts per se; schools across the district are
    weathering fiscal problems. Rather, it’s vision.

    True, Seattle faces a massive deficit. Also true: A good chunk of that
    gap comes from labor contracts eating up “significantly more” money than the district is taking in, as Jones acknowledged during the same
    February budget meeting.

    But whose fault is that? Jones and his team signed off on a three-year,
    $228 million contract with the teachers union last fall. It offered more generous raises than the previous agreement, even though everyone knew
    that declining enrollments would mean less money for schools. Six months
    later, Seattle began talking about cuts to TAF and music, two of the district’s standout attractions.

    It doesn’t take an Einstein to recognize the equation at work: Fewer
    students means less state money, which leads to cutting the very
    programs that draw families. Which leads to fewer students, and so on.

    Meanwhile, Seattle is barreling ahead with renovation plans for Alki
    Elementary School. No question, the rickety old building needs an
    upgrade. It currently holds fewer than 300 kids. The district wants to
    enlarge its capacity to 500, even though Seattle is seeing its worst
    enrollment declines in elementary grades.

    If there’s a logic to these decisions, and their timing, it’s difficult
    to decipher. Seattle Public Schools declined to make officials available
    to answer questions for this editorial.

    At a public meeting, Jones said the district needs to “go on the
    offense” and make its case to parents that they should choose Seattle schools.

    That’s what many people want, a reason to stay with public education.
    But when bureaucrats make spending decisions, seemingly without an ear
    for the long-term reverberations, they push families in the opposite
    direction.

    The Seattle Times editorial board members are editorial page editor Kate
    Riley, Frank A. Blethen, Alex Fryer, Claudia Rowe, Carlton Winfrey and
    William K. Blethen (emeritus).

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