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California Advocates Have Facts for “Year of Education”

Intent on influencing decisions on education in the 2008 legislature, Parents and Students for Great Schools, a coalition of liberal advocacy groups, entered the Sacramento spotlight in late September with their statewide survey Now That We Have the Facts. The survey results reveal a mounting concern over the state’s soaring high school dropout rate, and they mark the beginning of a grass-roots movement to get more students graduating from high school and attending college, among other goals. Moreover, results suggest an up-and-coming active approach by confirming that parents are willing to pay more taxes to improve public education if certain conditions are met, including an increase in accountability, transparency, and local involvement.

Aligned with this impetus and in response to Getting Down to Facts, a collection of 22 Stanford University studies on school finance and governance that give students and parents a voice in education reform, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has declared 2008 the “Year of Education” in California. In light of these studies and with hopes to influence the upcoming agenda, coalitions of researchers, advocates, teachers, parents, and politicians across the state think about how to improve public schools. The coalition may be gaining favorable press coverage and hopes to build momentum. The Sacramento Bee recently reported on the first of an expected series of proposals to the state legislature in their article “Cut the Dropout Rate, Aim for College.”

Student Input and Parental Involvement

Based on the survey results of 5,600 adults and teenagers in low and middle-income areas around the state, the Parents and Students coalition argues that “it is important for policymakers to consider these opinions in crafting an agenda for next year.” Across the country, increased attention has focused on students that voice their thoughts about school systems and reform. As surveys and dialogue widen in scope, educators nationwide hope that giving students a higher stake in their own education will improve their learning experience.

Likewise, the coalition is focusing on parental involvement in the classroom. As parents become more involved in their children’s schooling, they also hope to increase their input in education programs and strategies. According to one school mother and ACORN (Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now) member, “everyone in Sacramento has a voice in education reform except for those most directly affected – the parents and children of California.”

Reform and Money

The new advocacy movement is connecting student performance to family circumstances and school conditions, by aligning student needs with parent expectations and school capacities. One surveyed parent insists that “reform and more money are both necessary to ensure that every child has a high quality education.” Parents and Students for Great Schools believes that education funding in California should be used more efficiently, and they lobby for parental involvement in this reform.

According to the coalition, surveyed parents are willing to pay higher taxes for education, especially if “they could have a say locally on how schools spend money.” Elizabeth Alvarez, California mother of four and active member of PACT (People Acting in Community Together) says, “nothing is more important than my children’s education. I would even be willing to pay more in taxes to improve my children’s schools – but first I’d want to know that the money was going to be well spent.”

As 2008 approaches, the California coalition takes an important stance to ensure the education system is meeting the unique needs of each community by giving parents and students an active role in shaping how dollars are spent and how priorities are organized. Now That We Have the Facts is the first of a series of proposals to the state legislature and the beginning of an advocacy movement for change.

Prepared by Marcela Briceno, October 19, 2007