Senin, 21 Desember 2015

adult history From Save Your Adult School: A Look at AB 104: The Adult Education Blok Grant Program - japraklupo

2015 - Hallo sahabat fashion, Pada Artikel yang anda baca kali ini dengan judul 2015, kami telah mempersiapkan artikel ini dengan baik untuk anda baca dan ambil informasi didalamnya. mudah-mudahan isi postingan Artikel Legislature, Artikel Regional Consortia, Artikel Save Your Adult School, yang kami tulis ini dapat anda pahami. baiklah, selamat membaca.

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2015

December 21, 2015


From Kristen Pursley's "Save Your Adult School" Blog:

A Look at AB 104: The Adult Education Block Grant Program

As  2015 comes to a close, adult schools have just completed their first fall term under the new Adult Education Block Grant.  The Regional Consortia turned in their first three-year plan at the end of October.  2015-2016 is a transitional year; things will change again at the end of this fiscal year, at which time funds for adult schools will begin to be distributed to the consortia rather than being distributed directly to school districts as they were this year.  It seems like a good time to take a look at the language in AB 104 that establishes the Adult Education Block Grant (AEBG) in order to see what lies ahead.
AB 104 addresses funding for all K-12 schools. The portion that establishes the AEBG begins with Section 39, Article 9.  The entire legislation can be viewed here: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160AB104
Here are some salient features of the language that creates the AEBG.
Joint Administration by the Community College Chancellor's Office and the state Department of Education
The first section of Article 9, 84900, provides that the AEBG is under the administration of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges and the Superintendent of Public Instruction.  The inclusion of the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the state Department of Education in the oversight of the AEBG is in itself a victory for adult schools, since Governor Brown's original adult education proposal would have eliminated adult schools altogether and hand over all responsibility for the education of adults to the community colleges.  Adult school advocates need to keep a sharp eye on legislation relating to adult education and make sure the Department of Education remains involved.
Adult Education Regions Could Change
Section 84903 provides that the Community College Chancellor's Office and the Superintendent of Public Instruction will divide the state into adult education regions based on economic and demographic factors, the boundaries of regions used to distribute other funds for other state programs, and the presence of adult education providers that have demonstrated effectiveness in meeting the educational needs of adults.
Until otherwise determined by the chancellor and the Superintendent, the physical boundaries of the adult education regions shall be the same as the physical boundaries of the regions established for the purposes of providing planning and implementation grants pursuant to Section 84830.
This would indicate that the boundaries of the current consortia could possibly be changed by the Chancellor and Superintendent. For those of us who have been working hard to coordinate with our community colleges and the other adult schools in our community college districts, this comes as something of a surprise, as the possibility that the boundaries of our consortia might change was never mentioned during the planning process. This is not to say that reconfiguring of consortium boundaries might not be a good thing in some cases; it is only to say that the idea is new and was not much discussed with practitioners.
Since so much time, effort and money has gone into the planning for the regional consortia, one can only surmise that in  practice the boundaries will probably remain the same for the foreseeable future, or will be changed only under extraordinary circumstances.  However, it is interesting that the boundaries can be changed.  And it must be said that, for those of us who work for adult schools and have had to weather so many changes, the possibility that the consortium boundaries could be changed does raise the unwelcome specter of yet more disruption.
Who Can Be a Consortium Member?
Section 84905 defines who can be a member of a consortium:
Any community college district, school district, or county office of education, or any joint powers authority consisting of community college districts, school districts, county offices of education, or a combination of these, located within the boundaries of the adult education region shall be permitted to join the consortium as a member
Note that only schools, either community colleges, school districts or county offices of education, can actually be consortium members. This will be important later.
Decision Making
Section 84905 provides that all members of a consortium shall participate in any decision made by the consortium and that all proposed decisions must be considered in an open, properly noticed meeting at which members of the public may comment.
This is an excellent requirement and will go a long way towards making sure that consortium decisions are open and transparent.  However, it is not clear how decisions by the consortia will interact with decisions by other key decision making bodies for both adult schools and community colleges, like  K-12 boards of education and community college boards.  It would seem that they would have to be involved somehow. but their role is not spelled out.  The role that would be played by unions, another important factor in education decision making, is also never mentioned anywhere in AB 104.
Section 84905 also requires that a consortium must request comments about proposed decisions from "other entities" in the region that provide education and workforce services for adults.  These other entities would include local public agencies, workforce investment boards, libraries and community based organizations.  The idea of including all of these entities in a network of educational services for adults is new and laudable. However, it is important to point out that the requirements for teachers at some of these organizations may not be the same as they are for teachers at community colleges and adult schools.  Unlike schools, community based organizations are free to hire teachers who are not credentialed, or may use volunteers to do the teaching. Needless to say, schools cannot do this, and must operate under more stringent rules as to who can teach for them.  As all these adult education providers begin to work more closely together in a network serving adults, these differences must be kept in mind.
Adult Education Plan
Evaluation of Needs and Resources
Section 84906 provides that, in order to receive an apportionment of funds of a fiscal year, the members of a consortium must approve an adult education plan for that fiscal year.  This plan must be very comprehensive.  It has to include an evaluation of the educational needs of adults in a region and a list of the entities that provide education and workforce services in the region together with a description of services they provide. The plan must also list  entities that have a fundamental interest in the provision of adult education services; one has to assume that local businesses and industries would almost certainly be a major component of this list.
Evaluation of Available Funds
The plan must also include an evaluation of funds available to consortium members and "entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region" (some of whom might not be consortium members).
Integration of Services
The plan must also describe actions that consortium members will take to address the educational needs of adults in the region and to improve the effectiveness of their services.  In addition, the plan must describe actions that consortium members and other "entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region", as well as entities with a fundamental interest in adult education services, will take to improve integration of services and improve transitions into postsecondary education or the workforce.
The actions consortium members are supposed to coordinate with "other entities" include "Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults" and "Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults."
Questions about the Plan
The purpose of the adult education plans required by AB 104 is commendable; the plans would seek to establish a seamless network of education services for adults.  However, the language of the statute does raise some questions, as follows:
1. Alignment of standards
Alignment of standards between consortium members certainly makes sense, although in practice it is not always easy.  Remember, consortium members are all schools of one kind or another; they must be either school districts (adult schools), community colleges, or county offices of education, all of which must employ credentialed teachers, adopt curriculum, etc.
Alignment of standards between consortium members and other entities that provide education and workforce services to adults is a bit more problematic.  Remember that according to Section 84905, this can include community based organizations, etc.  These other education providers cannot be members of the consortium, and do not receive consortium funds, but consortium members must include them in the plan. They are not bound by the same rules as schools and may not have the resources to align their curricula with school districts and community colleges.
Particularly troubling is the requirement that community colleges, school districts and other entities must adopt common standards for instructor qualifications.  This could either involve more stringent requirements for some entities that had been using uncredentialed paid teachers or volunteers, or a relaxation of requirements for school districts and community colleges.  Either one could cause difficulties.  More stringent requirements for "other entities" could require them to hire credentialed teachers that would break their budgets.  And how could they be induced to adopt these more stringent standards when they don't even receive monies from the AEBG?
On the other hand, relaxation of standards for community college teachers and school districts would result in a general deskilling of the adult education teaching force.
It is unlikely that the intent of AB 104 is actually to either force school-type qualifications on entities that are not schools nor to cause community colleges and adult school to relax their standards for teachers.  But it is important to point out that the text of the legislation seems to allow for these possibilities.  There may be a need for some adjustment to the language of the legislation to clarify its intent.
2. Evaluation of Funds
As part of the Adult Education Plan, consortia are required to evaluate all funds available to both consortium members and other entities that provide adult education services in the region.  The statute makes it quite specific that the plan must include "funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article".
This means that the consortia must enumerate funds that are not available to them, and that they do not control, because they have to include funding available to "other entities" that provide adult education and workforce services, including community based organizations that may have private funding, etc.
One hopes that the intent of this requirement is just that consortia make very sound adult education plans based on all the available resources and funding. But, given how stingy the state has been to adult schools, (and the AEBG is the only state money available to adult schools), one can't help but be a bit suspicious.  Is the state planning to give less money to, say, a consortium in an area where some community based organization has a big  private grant to do some workforce -related work, on the grounds that this is money available in the area for adult education?  Would that be fair, when none of the money would be available to consortium members?
Also, if the state includes other monies available to consortium members in its calculations as to how much a consortium will get, it might mean that the consortia, and particular the adult schools within the consortia, can never get ahead.  For example, consortia would have to report the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), formerly Workforce Investment Act (WIA) money that adult schools work extremely hard to earn.  WIOA money is "pay for performance"; adult schools get this federal money when students make benchmarks on standardized tests.  Every year, adult schools work hard to improve the number of benchmarks they earn.  The program is exacting, and it takes a lot of funding and effort to administer it.  But if the state takes the WIOA money into account when distributing AEBG funds, deducting the amount schools earn in WIOA funds from the total to give more state money to districts that are not  earning as much from WIOA, adult schools will be running as hard as they can to stay in the same place.
The state should be asked to clarify its purpose in requiring the consortia to report on other funds available.  To a certain extent, other funds should be none of the state's business.  Does the state require any other state supported institutions to report other financial resources?  Do the prisons have to do this? Just asking.
Apportionment of Funds
Section 84908 will become inoperative in July of 2016.  It provides that, just for this year, AEBG funds for each adult school will be distributed directly to school districts or county offices of education.  In 2016-2017, AEBG funds will be apportioned to the consortia.
Those of us who work for adult schools cannot help but be somewhat nervous about next year.  It seems that legislators don't understand that we still work for school districts.  The superintendent of schools for our district signs our checks.  We usually work in buildings owned by the school district.  The district processes our payroll.  Many of us are represented by unions that also represent the K-12 teachers in our districts.  We need our districts to be invested in us, and the more layers there are between adult school funds and school districts, the more likely the districts are to feel that we are somehow not their problem.
It remains to be seen how all this will work out in practice.  The language of the legislation actually provides that funds will be apportioned either to a fund administrator designated by members of a consortium or to consortium members (presumably for consortia that have opted not to have a fund administrator).  School districts are consortium members, so maybe they would still receive funds directly unless their consortium has selected a fund administrator.  For those consortia that have a fund administrator, one assumes that the administrator would apportion funds to the school districts within the consortia.
Eligible Programs
Section 84913 enumerates the programs for which Adult Education Block Grant Funds can be used.  They are:
  1. Elementary and secondary basic skills programs. This includes Adult Basic Education (the equivalent of an elementary school education), High School Diploma and high school equivalency (such as GED) programs.
  2. English as a Second Language, Citizenship and workforce preparation programs for immigrants.
  3. "Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce."
  4. "Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school."
  5. Programs for adults with disabilities.
  6. Programs in career technical education.
  7. Apprenticeship programs.
AB 104 defines the programs authorized for state funding more broadly than the consortium planning legislation, AB 86, did.  Yet AB 104 is more restrictive than Education Code Section 41975, which previously established state funding for adult school programs and included funding for Parent Education, programs for Older Adults, Home Economics and Health and Safety.
AB 86 made no mention at all of Parent Education, Older Adults, Home Economics or Health and Safety.  These programs were excluded from the consortium planning process, almost certainly with the intention that these programs would no longer be funded by the state.  Though the reason for defunding  the four programs was never directly stated,  the programs AB 86 authorized for consortium planning were all related to workforce development.  Since several state policy documents released during the early 21st Century recommended that the state refocus all adult education funding directly on workforce development, it seems reasonable to assume that AB 86 was meant to refocus adult school funding in this way. Hence the exclusion of Parent Education, Older Adult, Health and Safety, and Home Economics.  The case for this view is strengthened by the fact that Adults with Disabilities was originally excluded from AB 86 also, though it was added  back in later.
AB 104 seems to soften this exclusive focus on workforce preparation, but it might be more accurate to say that AB 104 recognizes that  K-12 elementary and secondary education is also workforce preparation, and that whatever adult schools can do to support elementary and secondary students can also be considered workforce development. So AB 104 provides for state funding for adult school programs that support elementary and secondary students.
What Adult School Programs Are Now Excluded from State Funding?
Health and Safety and Home Economics Programs
Health and Safety and Home Economics programs, always small, are now excluded from state funding.  While these programs were small, they were not necessarily unimportant.  Arguably, it might be desirable to expand them rather than eliminate them. Education in both Health and Safety and Home Economics might be very effective in combating the obesity epidemic, for example.  But they are excluded from funding under AB 104. The money saved is probably negligible, given the size of the programs.
Parent Education for Preschool Children
By authorizing classes for adults supporting elementary and secondary school children, AB 104 restores Parent Education to some extent.  Hopefully the state will interpret "knowledge and skills" necessary to help school children succeed academically broadly, recognizing that classes that improve family communication or help parents address discipline issues can be just  as important to children's school success as classes that teach adults about the latest craze in math instruction so they can help their children with homework.
But AB 104 would seem to exclude state funding for education for parents of preschool children, which flies in the face of growing evidence about the importance of the first five years of life.  Providing support to families of young children, and enriching the home environment in which these children grow, can make both the job of parenting these children and the job of educating them easier when they begin elementary school.  An investment in education for the parents of young children would pay off handsomely for the state.  AB 104 is short-sighted in its exclusion of state funded education for these parents; hopefully this lack of vision will be corrected in later legislation.
What about Older Adults?
It's good that Older Adults get a mention in AB 104; AB 86 pretended they don't exist.  The manner in which they are included is a bit strange, however.  They are included in items 3 and 4, which provide for state funding for programs "including, but not limited to, older adults" for adults desiring to enter or reenter the work force, or acquire skills to help children to succeed in school.
First of all, to say these programs include older adults is just to say that they are adult school programs.  The phrase "including, but not limited to, older adults"  could have been added to every one of the 7 programs enumerated in Section 84913, because there is no upper age limit on any adult school program.  Students over 55 years of age are regularly to be found in English as a Second Language and Citizenship classes, adults with disabilities come in all ages, and it is probable that every adult school can boast a few septuagenarian and even octogenarian high school graduates.
Since AB 104 specifically mentions older adults in the language regarding workforce entry/reentry and support for school-age children, it would appear that the state wants to especially encourage older adults to enter these programs.  That in itself is laudable. It's good that the state recognizes that older adults can and should join or rejoin the workforce if they so desire, and that they can make valuable contributions as grandparents, school volunteers, etc. to the education of children.
But this emphasis on older adults as potential employees or supporters of K-12 students implies that seniors who are too frail or simply not inclined to go back to work or become classroom volunteers do not deserve educational services.  AB 104 would seem to skew adult school services for older adults towards a younger, more able older adult population, pushing seniors with health issues to the side.
Older adults can be great supporters of school children, but not every older adult is a grandparent of a school age child, and not all feel called to work with school children.  And if they don't feel that call, you don't want them working with children.  Yet they might  be able to offer very valuable service in some other volunteer capacity.
And then there are older adults who just need classes that help them keep from falling, or teach them how to avoid scams, or give them a place to go where they can meet others and avoid becoming isolated.  The value that older adults bring to a community just by being companionship and support for each other needs to be recognized.
As with the elimination of parent education that focuses on preschool children, the elimination of state funding for classes specifically focused on the needs of older adults is shortsighted.  Education can play a crucial role in keeping seniors active and healthy, an outcome that benefits the whole community, not just seniors.  AB 104 makes a step in the right direction by at least mentioning older adults, but the role it spells out for older adult education is much too limited.
Apportionment of Funds
Section 84914 provides that each consortium must approve a distribution schedule that includes the amount of funds to be distributed to each member plus a narrative justifying how the planned allocations are consistent with the adult education plan.
The section also provides that, in years when the consortium receives funding greater than the amount allocated the prior fiscal year, the funds distributed to each member must be equal to or greater than the amount received by that member the previous year. But there are exceptions. Under the following circumstances, the amount can be reduced
1.If the member no longer wishes to provide services consistent with the adult education plan.
2. If the member cannot provide services consistent with the adult             education plan.
3. If the member has been consistently ineffective in providing services that address the needs of the adult education plan and reasonable interventions have not resulted in improvements.
In years when the allocation of funds to the consortium is less than the amount allocated in the prior year, the amount distributed to an individual consortium member cannot be reduced by a percentage greater than the percentage of the total reduction, except under circumstances 1-3, above.
Some Concerns about Conditions Under which Apportionment Can Be Reduced
The conditions under which an apportionment can be reduced indicate that adult schools have entered a new, and perhaps treacherous, landscape, as follows:
#1 If a member no longer wishes to provide services ... This indicates that the Maintenance of Effort, which required that districts continue to fund their adult schools from 2012-2013 to 2014-2015, is over.  Districts can now opt out of the adult school business if they choose.  Hopefully districts would not want to opt out, now that adult schools have their own funding through the Adult Education Block Grant.  But the option is there. Will some districts decide that the consortium process is onerous and a drain on their resources?  That the adult education plan for their consortium makes unreasonable demands on them? If so, they have an out. Is it possible we will see another rash of adult school closures in the coming years?
#3 The member has been consistently ineffective in providing services ...The question arises -- who decides?  What will be the process for determining that a consortium member has been consistently ineffective?  Will there be an appeals process, and what would that look like?  Item 3 on the list of conditions seems to imply an entire process for determining ineffectiveness, trying to address the problem, and then deciding whether or not interventions have worked. But the process is not spelled out.  Would it be up to each consortium to decide how to determine this?  If so, the results across the state could be very inconsistent.
Hopefully the option of reducing funding for a consortium member is there to provide a remedy only in extreme cases.  Those who framed the language probably thought that hardly any consortium members would ever wish to stop providing services, and that failure would be very easy to recognize and that everyone would agree that it was failure when they saw it.  But things are rarely that simple.
One can only hope that the state has not set up an incentive for consortium members to struggle with each other over money, accusing each other of ineffectiveness, trying to push each other out, etc.  After all, AB 104 is silent on what would happen to the extra money within a consortium when one member leaves or has its allocation reduced.  One would assume that would mean more for the other consortium members.
Report on Use of Funds and Outcomes
Section 84917 provides that the chancellor and Superintendent shall prepare a report to the state Director of Finance, Board of Education and Legislature by September 30 following any fiscal year for which funds are appropriated for adult education.  The report will include a summary of the adult education plan for each consortium, a distribution schedule for each consortium, the types and levels of services provided by each consortium, the effectiveness of each consortium in meeting student needs, and recommendations related to delivery of education and workforce services for adults.
Section 94920 provides that the chancellor and Superintendent will identify common measures for determining the effectiveness of each consortium in meeting the educational needs of adults.  At a minimum, the chancellor and Superintendent will define specific data each consortium must collect and a menu of common assessments and policies regarding placement.
The chancellor and Superintendent are charged with identifying measures for assessing the effectiveness of consortia no later than January 1, 2016.  So we should know soon what those measures will be.

December 21, 2015


From Kristen Pursley's "Save Your Adult School" Blog:

A Look at AB 104: The Adult Education Block Grant Program

As  2015 comes to a close, adult schools have just completed their first fall term under the new Adult Education Block Grant.  The Regional Consortia turned in their first three-year plan at the end of October.  2015-2016 is a transitional year; things will change again at the end of this fiscal year, at which time funds for adult schools will begin to be distributed to the consortia rather than being distributed directly to school districts as they were this year.  It seems like a good time to take a look at the language in AB 104 that establishes the Adult Education Block Grant (AEBG) in order to see what lies ahead.
AB 104 addresses funding for all K-12 schools. The portion that establishes the AEBG begins with Section 39, Article 9.  The entire legislation can be viewed here: http://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160AB104
Here are some salient features of the language that creates the AEBG.
Joint Administration by the Community College Chancellor's Office and the state Department of Education
The first section of Article 9, 84900, provides that the AEBG is under the administration of the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges and the Superintendent of Public Instruction.  The inclusion of the Superintendent of Public Instruction and the state Department of Education in the oversight of the AEBG is in itself a victory for adult schools, since Governor Brown's original adult education proposal would have eliminated adult schools altogether and hand over all responsibility for the education of adults to the community colleges.  Adult school advocates need to keep a sharp eye on legislation relating to adult education and make sure the Department of Education remains involved.
Adult Education Regions Could Change
Section 84903 provides that the Community College Chancellor's Office and the Superintendent of Public Instruction will divide the state into adult education regions based on economic and demographic factors, the boundaries of regions used to distribute other funds for other state programs, and the presence of adult education providers that have demonstrated effectiveness in meeting the educational needs of adults.
Until otherwise determined by the chancellor and the Superintendent, the physical boundaries of the adult education regions shall be the same as the physical boundaries of the regions established for the purposes of providing planning and implementation grants pursuant to Section 84830.
This would indicate that the boundaries of the current consortia could possibly be changed by the Chancellor and Superintendent. For those of us who have been working hard to coordinate with our community colleges and the other adult schools in our community college districts, this comes as something of a surprise, as the possibility that the boundaries of our consortia might change was never mentioned during the planning process. This is not to say that reconfiguring of consortium boundaries might not be a good thing in some cases; it is only to say that the idea is new and was not much discussed with practitioners.
Since so much time, effort and money has gone into the planning for the regional consortia, one can only surmise that in  practice the boundaries will probably remain the same for the foreseeable future, or will be changed only under extraordinary circumstances.  However, it is interesting that the boundaries can be changed.  And it must be said that, for those of us who work for adult schools and have had to weather so many changes, the possibility that the consortium boundaries could be changed does raise the unwelcome specter of yet more disruption.
Who Can Be a Consortium Member?
Section 84905 defines who can be a member of a consortium:
Any community college district, school district, or county office of education, or any joint powers authority consisting of community college districts, school districts, county offices of education, or a combination of these, located within the boundaries of the adult education region shall be permitted to join the consortium as a member
Note that only schools, either community colleges, school districts or county offices of education, can actually be consortium members. This will be important later.
Decision Making
Section 84905 provides that all members of a consortium shall participate in any decision made by the consortium and that all proposed decisions must be considered in an open, properly noticed meeting at which members of the public may comment.
This is an excellent requirement and will go a long way towards making sure that consortium decisions are open and transparent.  However, it is not clear how decisions by the consortia will interact with decisions by other key decision making bodies for both adult schools and community colleges, like  K-12 boards of education and community college boards.  It would seem that they would have to be involved somehow. but their role is not spelled out.  The role that would be played by unions, another important factor in education decision making, is also never mentioned anywhere in AB 104.
Section 84905 also requires that a consortium must request comments about proposed decisions from "other entities" in the region that provide education and workforce services for adults.  These other entities would include local public agencies, workforce investment boards, libraries and community based organizations.  The idea of including all of these entities in a network of educational services for adults is new and laudable. However, it is important to point out that the requirements for teachers at some of these organizations may not be the same as they are for teachers at community colleges and adult schools.  Unlike schools, community based organizations are free to hire teachers who are not credentialed, or may use volunteers to do the teaching. Needless to say, schools cannot do this, and must operate under more stringent rules as to who can teach for them.  As all these adult education providers begin to work more closely together in a network serving adults, these differences must be kept in mind.
Adult Education Plan
Evaluation of Needs and Resources
Section 84906 provides that, in order to receive an apportionment of funds of a fiscal year, the members of a consortium must approve an adult education plan for that fiscal year.  This plan must be very comprehensive.  It has to include an evaluation of the educational needs of adults in a region and a list of the entities that provide education and workforce services in the region together with a description of services they provide. The plan must also list  entities that have a fundamental interest in the provision of adult education services; one has to assume that local businesses and industries would almost certainly be a major component of this list.
Evaluation of Available Funds
The plan must also include an evaluation of funds available to consortium members and "entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region" (some of whom might not be consortium members).
Integration of Services
The plan must also describe actions that consortium members will take to address the educational needs of adults in the region and to improve the effectiveness of their services.  In addition, the plan must describe actions that consortium members and other "entities that provide education and workforce services to adults in the region", as well as entities with a fundamental interest in adult education services, will take to improve integration of services and improve transitions into postsecondary education or the workforce.
The actions consortium members are supposed to coordinate with "other entities" include "Alignment of academic standards and curricula for programs across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults" and "Qualifications of instructors, including common standards across entities that provide education and workforce services to adults."
Questions about the Plan
The purpose of the adult education plans required by AB 104 is commendable; the plans would seek to establish a seamless network of education services for adults.  However, the language of the statute does raise some questions, as follows:
1. Alignment of standards
Alignment of standards between consortium members certainly makes sense, although in practice it is not always easy.  Remember, consortium members are all schools of one kind or another; they must be either school districts (adult schools), community colleges, or county offices of education, all of which must employ credentialed teachers, adopt curriculum, etc.
Alignment of standards between consortium members and other entities that provide education and workforce services to adults is a bit more problematic.  Remember that according to Section 84905, this can include community based organizations, etc.  These other education providers cannot be members of the consortium, and do not receive consortium funds, but consortium members must include them in the plan. They are not bound by the same rules as schools and may not have the resources to align their curricula with school districts and community colleges.
Particularly troubling is the requirement that community colleges, school districts and other entities must adopt common standards for instructor qualifications.  This could either involve more stringent requirements for some entities that had been using uncredentialed paid teachers or volunteers, or a relaxation of requirements for school districts and community colleges.  Either one could cause difficulties.  More stringent requirements for "other entities" could require them to hire credentialed teachers that would break their budgets.  And how could they be induced to adopt these more stringent standards when they don't even receive monies from the AEBG?
On the other hand, relaxation of standards for community college teachers and school districts would result in a general deskilling of the adult education teaching force.
It is unlikely that the intent of AB 104 is actually to either force school-type qualifications on entities that are not schools nor to cause community colleges and adult school to relax their standards for teachers.  But it is important to point out that the text of the legislation seems to allow for these possibilities.  There may be a need for some adjustment to the language of the legislation to clarify its intent.
2. Evaluation of Funds
As part of the Adult Education Plan, consortia are required to evaluate all funds available to both consortium members and other entities that provide adult education services in the region.  The statute makes it quite specific that the plan must include "funds other than those apportioned pursuant to this article".
This means that the consortia must enumerate funds that are not available to them, and that they do not control, because they have to include funding available to "other entities" that provide adult education and workforce services, including community based organizations that may have private funding, etc.
One hopes that the intent of this requirement is just that consortia make very sound adult education plans based on all the available resources and funding. But, given how stingy the state has been to adult schools, (and the AEBG is the only state money available to adult schools), one can't help but be a bit suspicious.  Is the state planning to give less money to, say, a consortium in an area where some community based organization has a big  private grant to do some workforce -related work, on the grounds that this is money available in the area for adult education?  Would that be fair, when none of the money would be available to consortium members?
Also, if the state includes other monies available to consortium members in its calculations as to how much a consortium will get, it might mean that the consortia, and particular the adult schools within the consortia, can never get ahead.  For example, consortia would have to report the federal Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), formerly Workforce Investment Act (WIA) money that adult schools work extremely hard to earn.  WIOA money is "pay for performance"; adult schools get this federal money when students make benchmarks on standardized tests.  Every year, adult schools work hard to improve the number of benchmarks they earn.  The program is exacting, and it takes a lot of funding and effort to administer it.  But if the state takes the WIOA money into account when distributing AEBG funds, deducting the amount schools earn in WIOA funds from the total to give more state money to districts that are not  earning as much from WIOA, adult schools will be running as hard as they can to stay in the same place.
The state should be asked to clarify its purpose in requiring the consortia to report on other funds available.  To a certain extent, other funds should be none of the state's business.  Does the state require any other state supported institutions to report other financial resources?  Do the prisons have to do this? Just asking.
Apportionment of Funds
Section 84908 will become inoperative in July of 2016.  It provides that, just for this year, AEBG funds for each adult school will be distributed directly to school districts or county offices of education.  In 2016-2017, AEBG funds will be apportioned to the consortia.
Those of us who work for adult schools cannot help but be somewhat nervous about next year.  It seems that legislators don't understand that we still work for school districts.  The superintendent of schools for our district signs our checks.  We usually work in buildings owned by the school district.  The district processes our payroll.  Many of us are represented by unions that also represent the K-12 teachers in our districts.  We need our districts to be invested in us, and the more layers there are between adult school funds and school districts, the more likely the districts are to feel that we are somehow not their problem.
It remains to be seen how all this will work out in practice.  The language of the legislation actually provides that funds will be apportioned either to a fund administrator designated by members of a consortium or to consortium members (presumably for consortia that have opted not to have a fund administrator).  School districts are consortium members, so maybe they would still receive funds directly unless their consortium has selected a fund administrator.  For those consortia that have a fund administrator, one assumes that the administrator would apportion funds to the school districts within the consortia.
Eligible Programs
Section 84913 enumerates the programs for which Adult Education Block Grant Funds can be used.  They are:
  1. Elementary and secondary basic skills programs. This includes Adult Basic Education (the equivalent of an elementary school education), High School Diploma and high school equivalency (such as GED) programs.
  2. English as a Second Language, Citizenship and workforce preparation programs for immigrants.
  3. "Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily related to entry or reentry into the workforce."
  4. "Programs for adults, including, but not limited to, older adults, that are primarily designed to develop knowledge and skills to assist elementary and secondary school children to succeed academically in school."
  5. Programs for adults with disabilities.
  6. Programs in career technical education.
  7. Apprenticeship programs.
AB 104 defines the programs authorized for state funding more broadly than the consortium planning legislation, AB 86, did.  Yet AB 104 is more restrictive than Education Code Section 41975, which previously established state funding for adult school programs and included funding for Parent Education, programs for Older Adults, Home Economics and Health and Safety.
AB 86 made no mention at all of Parent Education, Older Adults, Home Economics or Health and Safety.  These programs were excluded from the consortium planning process, almost certainly with the intention that these programs would no longer be funded by the state.  Though the reason for defunding  the four programs was never directly stated,  the programs AB 86 authorized for consortium planning were all related to workforce development.  Since several state policy documents released during the early 21st Century recommended that the state refocus all adult education funding directly on workforce development, it seems reasonable to assume that AB 86 was meant to refocus adult school funding in this way. Hence the exclusion of Parent Education, Older Adult, Health and Safety, and Home Economics.  The case for this view is strengthened by the fact that Adults with Disabilities was originally excluded from AB 86 also, though it was added  back in later.
AB 104 seems to soften this exclusive focus on workforce preparation, but it might be more accurate to say that AB 104 recognizes that  K-12 elementary and secondary education is also workforce preparation, and that whatever adult schools can do to support elementary and secondary students can also be considered workforce development. So AB 104 provides for state funding for adult school programs that support elementary and secondary students.
What Adult School Programs Are Now Excluded from State Funding?
Health and Safety and Home Economics Programs
Health and Safety and Home Economics programs, always small, are now excluded from state funding.  While these programs were small, they were not necessarily unimportant.  Arguably, it might be desirable to expand them rather than eliminate them. Education in both Health and Safety and Home Economics might be very effective in combating the obesity epidemic, for example.  But they are excluded from funding under AB 104. The money saved is probably negligible, given the size of the programs.
Parent Education for Preschool Children
By authorizing classes for adults supporting elementary and secondary school children, AB 104 restores Parent Education to some extent.  Hopefully the state will interpret "knowledge and skills" necessary to help school children succeed academically broadly, recognizing that classes that improve family communication or help parents address discipline issues can be just  as important to children's school success as classes that teach adults about the latest craze in math instruction so they can help their children with homework.
But AB 104 would seem to exclude state funding for education for parents of preschool children, which flies in the face of growing evidence about the importance of the first five years of life.  Providing support to families of young children, and enriching the home environment in which these children grow, can make both the job of parenting these children and the job of educating them easier when they begin elementary school.  An investment in education for the parents of young children would pay off handsomely for the state.  AB 104 is short-sighted in its exclusion of state funded education for these parents; hopefully this lack of vision will be corrected in later legislation.
What about Older Adults?
It's good that Older Adults get a mention in AB 104; AB 86 pretended they don't exist.  The manner in which they are included is a bit strange, however.  They are included in items 3 and 4, which provide for state funding for programs "including, but not limited to, older adults" for adults desiring to enter or reenter the work force, or acquire skills to help children to succeed in school.
First of all, to say these programs include older adults is just to say that they are adult school programs.  The phrase "including, but not limited to, older adults"  could have been added to every one of the 7 programs enumerated in Section 84913, because there is no upper age limit on any adult school program.  Students over 55 years of age are regularly to be found in English as a Second Language and Citizenship classes, adults with disabilities come in all ages, and it is probable that every adult school can boast a few septuagenarian and even octogenarian high school graduates.
Since AB 104 specifically mentions older adults in the language regarding workforce entry/reentry and support for school-age children, it would appear that the state wants to especially encourage older adults to enter these programs.  That in itself is laudable. It's good that the state recognizes that older adults can and should join or rejoin the workforce if they so desire, and that they can make valuable contributions as grandparents, school volunteers, etc. to the education of children.
But this emphasis on older adults as potential employees or supporters of K-12 students implies that seniors who are too frail or simply not inclined to go back to work or become classroom volunteers do not deserve educational services.  AB 104 would seem to skew adult school services for older adults towards a younger, more able older adult population, pushing seniors with health issues to the side.
Older adults can be great supporters of school children, but not every older adult is a grandparent of a school age child, and not all feel called to work with school children.  And if they don't feel that call, you don't want them working with children.  Yet they might  be able to offer very valuable service in some other volunteer capacity.
And then there are older adults who just need classes that help them keep from falling, or teach them how to avoid scams, or give them a place to go where they can meet others and avoid becoming isolated.  The value that older adults bring to a community just by being companionship and support for each other needs to be recognized.
As with the elimination of parent education that focuses on preschool children, the elimination of state funding for classes specifically focused on the needs of older adults is shortsighted.  Education can play a crucial role in keeping seniors active and healthy, an outcome that benefits the whole community, not just seniors.  AB 104 makes a step in the right direction by at least mentioning older adults, but the role it spells out for older adult education is much too limited.
Apportionment of Funds
Section 84914 provides that each consortium must approve a distribution schedule that includes the amount of funds to be distributed to each member plus a narrative justifying how the planned allocations are consistent with the adult education plan.
The section also provides that, in years when the consortium receives funding greater than the amount allocated the prior fiscal year, the funds distributed to each member must be equal to or greater than the amount received by that member the previous year. But there are exceptions. Under the following circumstances, the amount can be reduced
1.If the member no longer wishes to provide services consistent with the adult education plan.
2. If the member cannot provide services consistent with the adult             education plan.
3. If the member has been consistently ineffective in providing services that address the needs of the adult education plan and reasonable interventions have not resulted in improvements.
In years when the allocation of funds to the consortium is less than the amount allocated in the prior year, the amount distributed to an individual consortium member cannot be reduced by a percentage greater than the percentage of the total reduction, except under circumstances 1-3, above.
Some Concerns about Conditions Under which Apportionment Can Be Reduced
The conditions under which an apportionment can be reduced indicate that adult schools have entered a new, and perhaps treacherous, landscape, as follows:
#1 If a member no longer wishes to provide services ... This indicates that the Maintenance of Effort, which required that districts continue to fund their adult schools from 2012-2013 to 2014-2015, is over.  Districts can now opt out of the adult school business if they choose.  Hopefully districts would not want to opt out, now that adult schools have their own funding through the Adult Education Block Grant.  But the option is there. Will some districts decide that the consortium process is onerous and a drain on their resources?  That the adult education plan for their consortium makes unreasonable demands on them? If so, they have an out. Is it possible we will see another rash of adult school closures in the coming years?
#3 The member has been consistently ineffective in providing services ...The question arises -- who decides?  What will be the process for determining that a consortium member has been consistently ineffective?  Will there be an appeals process, and what would that look like?  Item 3 on the list of conditions seems to imply an entire process for determining ineffectiveness, trying to address the problem, and then deciding whether or not interventions have worked. But the process is not spelled out.  Would it be up to each consortium to decide how to determine this?  If so, the results across the state could be very inconsistent.
Hopefully the option of reducing funding for a consortium member is there to provide a remedy only in extreme cases.  Those who framed the language probably thought that hardly any consortium members would ever wish to stop providing services, and that failure would be very easy to recognize and that everyone would agree that it was failure when they saw it.  But things are rarely that simple.
One can only hope that the state has not set up an incentive for consortium members to struggle with each other over money, accusing each other of ineffectiveness, trying to push each other out, etc.  After all, AB 104 is silent on what would happen to the extra money within a consortium when one member leaves or has its allocation reduced.  One would assume that would mean more for the other consortium members.
Report on Use of Funds and Outcomes
Section 84917 provides that the chancellor and Superintendent shall prepare a report to the state Director of Finance, Board of Education and Legislature by September 30 following any fiscal year for which funds are appropriated for adult education.  The report will include a summary of the adult education plan for each consortium, a distribution schedule for each consortium, the types and levels of services provided by each consortium, the effectiveness of each consortium in meeting student needs, and recommendations related to delivery of education and workforce services for adults.
Section 94920 provides that the chancellor and Superintendent will identify common measures for determining the effectiveness of each consortium in meeting the educational needs of adults.  At a minimum, the chancellor and Superintendent will define specific data each consortium must collect and a menu of common assessments and policies regarding placement.
The chancellor and Superintendent are charged with identifying measures for assessing the effectiveness of consortia no later than January 1, 2016.  So we should know soon what those measures will be.

adult history Kids Versus Parents - Who Wins and Why? - japraklupo

2015 - Hallo sahabat fashion, Pada Artikel yang anda baca kali ini dengan judul 2015, kami telah mempersiapkan artikel ini dengan baik untuk anda baca dan ambil informasi didalamnya. mudah-mudahan isi postingan Artikel Affirming Adult Ed, Artikel Press, Artikel Public vs. Private, yang kami tulis ini dapat anda pahami. baiklah, selamat membaca.

Judul : adult history Kids Versus Parents - Who Wins and Why? - japraklupo
link : adult history Kids Versus Parents - Who Wins and Why? - japraklupo

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2015

Too frequently, Adult Schools have been pitted against K-12 schools, as if the populations they serve are utterly separate entities, with utterly separate needs and agendas. 

This competition is framed as war for the same precious and/or dwindling resources. 

Because we are a culture that claims to value the family, the kids generally "win."

In fact, Adult Schools and K-12 schools serve the same families.  Educating children and parents empowers families faster than educating only parents or only children.

Which brings up the questions: 

Hit the link to see them.



*  Why is it framed as a competition? 

*  Who wins when it's framed that way?

*  Is California, one of the top ten economies in the world, really so short of money that it can't educate both parents and children?

*  What sort of value underlies the perception of children as separate from their parents and other family members? 

* Who wins when they are seen that way?

All good questions to ponder as you read this article about the battle for a campus in Los Angeles.

save our school resized.jpg

School Daze: LAUSD Adult School Pushes Back at Encroaching Charter School


The long-running battle between charter schools and traditional public schools has heated up nearly to a boiling point, with business magnate Eli Broad recently unveiling a campaign to charter-ize public ed in L.A. once and for all. The drama is happening mostly at the top between the Broad camp and public school advocates--notably the teacher's union, which has stepped up protests and criticism of Broad and his so-called reforms. But beneath the drama is the story of one campus's attempt to resist the takeover of a charter school, a story that illustrates the political complexity of the battle--the limitations of both sides, and how what almost always gets sacrificed in the struggle is what's best for students.

The campus is Emerson Adult Learning Center, a dedicated adult-school campus that sits at a dead end of a leafy block off of Manchester Boulevard in Westchester. Because it's an adult-school campus and not elementary or secondary, it tends to get overlooked--adults just aren't as compelling as kids as characters in the ongoing education wars. In fact, adult schools are de facto stepchildren of Los Angeles Unified; the campuses have been decimated by cutbacks in recent years, with Emerson's teaching staff shrunk down to 15 from a peak of 150. The school has practically no office staff. Yet in this still-unforgiving economy, the services offered by Emerson, which include classes in GED and pharmacy training, is perhaps greater than ever. Emerson is at capacity and California has an adult-ed wait list of 14,000, with the bulk of that number waiting in L.A. Unified.

Patrick Meyer is a teacher and reading lab director who's spent his entire 28-year career here. Like so many other students and staff, he calls Emerson a special place where a highly motivated, tight-knit community of learners and teachers function as a family. (I wrote about Emerson a while back when I profiled the unique, enduring friendship between Patrick and a career student, Phil Sparks). The majority of students here are black and Latino and many hail from other, less affluent parts of town: Inglewood, Long Beach, South Central. That's in stark contrast to the population of Westchester itself, which like many beachside communities is chiefly white and increasingly gentrified. More on that in a bit.
Emerson student Phil Sparks and teacher Patrick Meyer. Photo by Erin Aubry Kaplan.
Emerson student Phil Sparks and teacher Patrick Meyer. Photo by Erin Aubry Kaplan.

The trouble started a couple of months back, when Patrick noticed a crew of facilities workers from L.A. Unified walking around Emerson, sizing up the place. When he asked what they were doing, he got no answers. He asked his principal and got the same. Eventually he circulated a petition amongst Emerson students demanding information from the district about what was afoot. School board member Steve Zimmer, who represents Westchester, admitted there was a crush of school space on the westside, but told Patrick not to worry about the adult classes. Unconvinced, Patrick persisted in trying to get more specific information, though with little luck. "There was secrecy on all sides," he says.

Then, district superintendent Ramon Cortines showed up suddenly at school, though not to reassure Patrick and the Emerson community. Quite the opposite. Cortines didn't talk to any students, and in response to questions from Patrick only said there was "a shortage of classroom space 'in the area.'" Patrick kept pressing with questions, insisting that students at such a critically important adult campus that's been around 35 years deserve to know its fate.

Finally he got an answer: Emerson was going to be displaced by a charter school operation known as WISH or Westside Innovative School House. WISH had been operating at Orville Wright Middle School and Cowan Elementary, two of several Westchester campuses that depopulated in the years after massive white flight that started in the '70s. Yet the proposed move by WISH to Emerson is not simply a case of a charter looking to displace a regular public school: the school district is driving a game of musical chairs that starts not in Westchester, but nearby Playa Vista. Patrick learned that the district is telling parents at the new public elementary school campus in Playa Vista is oversubscribed, and that additional students have to be put up at Orville Wright. The WISH middle-school charter students currently at Wright are being offered Emerson. The plan thus far is that the Emerson school student body of 400 will be split between Wright and Westchester High School, located further west down Manchester.
Patrick and others at Emerson say such a split will destroy the cohesion of the school. They have other concerns, including the fact that Wright is not as conveniently situated as Emerson--a short walk from a bus stop on Manchester--and the appropriateness of adult students sharing a campus with middle-school age kids at all.
Patrick says it's all part of a blatant disregard and disrespect for the future of Emerson and the largely minority clientele that it serves. Board member Zimmer, who is famously anti-charter, says he supports adult ed but has not officially opposed the plan. Nor has the teacher's union, UTLA, which disappoints Patrick more. A UTLA rep himself, Patrick has participated in union protests against charters and the privatization of public ed. "In a perfect world, this situation at Emerson would be a great opportunity to stand against charter expansion, especially after Broad announcement," he sighs. "But so far we're kind of on our own."
Story Continues Below

Support KCET
Of course, he's gotten kind of used to that. As the district gutted adult ed over the years, Emerson lost core classes such as parent education as well as popular craft classes like knitting, art, literature and quilting. But the place still regularly works miracles, or maybe it just does its job. Emerson alumni go on to higher education or otherwise change their lives dramatically; essentially they get over the infamous hump that keeps so many under-educated people mired in poverty or in a vicious cycle of low-wage work. Several students testified about this in spirited detail at a rally held earlier this month at Emerson that was meant to send a message to the district and charter advocates alike that they will not leave quietly. "Adults matter, too," said Antonio Ramirez, 37, an Emerson student and former Crenshaw High dropout who's completing his GED and plans to go on to college. "This place is so key, closing it would be messed up. I want to teach my son that what I've done is important. I'm living proof that you can change your life."
The standoff highlights an uncomfortable but unspoken dynamic: white middle-class residents are seeking to populate the public school campuses again, but not necessarily with blacks and Latinos who have become the education demographic. Emerson Learning Center is certainly large enough to accommodate a charter operation--that is, it could share its campus--but that scenario doesn't seem to be on the table. Patrick says he thinks it's less about charter vs. public than it is about the district trying to facilitate the local repopulating that Westchester wouldn't mind having. The good news is that Patrick and others have been showing up to community meetings in Playa Vista and to district board meetings downtown, making their views known. The pitch seems to be getting a bit of traction, especially among Zimmer's fellow board members.
The bad news? The whole Save Our School campaign is costing Patrick, a lifelong surfer, some serious down time. But he says it's been worth it. "I haven't surfed in eight days," he says. "This fight is that important."

About the Author

Journalist and op-ed columnist Erin Aubry Kaplan's first-person accounts of politics and identity in Los Angeles, with an eye towards the city's African American community, appear every Thursday on KCET's Departures blog.
RSS icon

Too frequently, Adult Schools have been pitted against K-12 schools, as if the populations they serve are utterly separate entities, with utterly separate needs and agendas. 

This competition is framed as war for the same precious and/or dwindling resources. 

Because we are a culture that claims to value the family, the kids generally "win."


In fact, Adult Schools and K-12 schools serve the same families.  Educating children and parents empowers families faster than educating only parents or only children.

Which brings up the questions: 

Hit the link to see them.



*  Why is it framed as a competition? 

*  Who wins when it's framed that way?

*  Is California, one of the top ten economies in the world, really so short of money that it can't educate both parents and children?

*  What sort of value underlies the perception of children as separate from their parents and other family members? 

* Who wins when they are seen that way?

All good questions to ponder as you read this article about the battle for a campus in Los Angeles.

save our school resized.jpg

School Daze: LAUSD Adult School Pushes Back at Encroaching Charter School


The long-running battle between charter schools and traditional public schools has heated up nearly to a boiling point, with business magnate Eli Broad recently unveiling a campaign to charter-ize public ed in L.A. once and for all. The drama is happening mostly at the top between the Broad camp and public school advocates--notably the teacher's union, which has stepped up protests and criticism of Broad and his so-called reforms. But beneath the drama is the story of one campus's attempt to resist the takeover of a charter school, a story that illustrates the political complexity of the battle--the limitations of both sides, and how what almost always gets sacrificed in the struggle is what's best for students.

The campus is Emerson Adult Learning Center, a dedicated adult-school campus that sits at a dead end of a leafy block off of Manchester Boulevard in Westchester. Because it's an adult-school campus and not elementary or secondary, it tends to get overlooked--adults just aren't as compelling as kids as characters in the ongoing education wars. In fact, adult schools are de facto stepchildren of Los Angeles Unified; the campuses have been decimated by cutbacks in recent years, with Emerson's teaching staff shrunk down to 15 from a peak of 150. The school has practically no office staff. Yet in this still-unforgiving economy, the services offered by Emerson, which include classes in GED and pharmacy training, is perhaps greater than ever. Emerson is at capacity and California has an adult-ed wait list of 14,000, with the bulk of that number waiting in L.A. Unified.

Patrick Meyer is a teacher and reading lab director who's spent his entire 28-year career here. Like so many other students and staff, he calls Emerson a special place where a highly motivated, tight-knit community of learners and teachers function as a family. (I wrote about Emerson a while back when I profiled the unique, enduring friendship between Patrick and a career student, Phil Sparks). The majority of students here are black and Latino and many hail from other, less affluent parts of town: Inglewood, Long Beach, South Central. That's in stark contrast to the population of Westchester itself, which like many beachside communities is chiefly white and increasingly gentrified. More on that in a bit.
Emerson student Phil Sparks and teacher Patrick Meyer. Photo by Erin Aubry Kaplan.
Emerson student Phil Sparks and teacher Patrick Meyer. Photo by Erin Aubry Kaplan.

The trouble started a couple of months back, when Patrick noticed a crew of facilities workers from L.A. Unified walking around Emerson, sizing up the place. When he asked what they were doing, he got no answers. He asked his principal and got the same. Eventually he circulated a petition amongst Emerson students demanding information from the district about what was afoot. School board member Steve Zimmer, who represents Westchester, admitted there was a crush of school space on the westside, but told Patrick not to worry about the adult classes. Unconvinced, Patrick persisted in trying to get more specific information, though with little luck. "There was secrecy on all sides," he says.

Then, district superintendent Ramon Cortines showed up suddenly at school, though not to reassure Patrick and the Emerson community. Quite the opposite. Cortines didn't talk to any students, and in response to questions from Patrick only said there was "a shortage of classroom space 'in the area.'" Patrick kept pressing with questions, insisting that students at such a critically important adult campus that's been around 35 years deserve to know its fate.

Finally he got an answer: Emerson was going to be displaced by a charter school operation known as WISH or Westside Innovative School House. WISH had been operating at Orville Wright Middle School and Cowan Elementary, two of several Westchester campuses that depopulated in the years after massive white flight that started in the '70s. Yet the proposed move by WISH to Emerson is not simply a case of a charter looking to displace a regular public school: the school district is driving a game of musical chairs that starts not in Westchester, but nearby Playa Vista. Patrick learned that the district is telling parents at the new public elementary school campus in Playa Vista is oversubscribed, and that additional students have to be put up at Orville Wright. The WISH middle-school charter students currently at Wright are being offered Emerson. The plan thus far is that the Emerson school student body of 400 will be split between Wright and Westchester High School, located further west down Manchester.
Patrick and others at Emerson say such a split will destroy the cohesion of the school. They have other concerns, including the fact that Wright is not as conveniently situated as Emerson--a short walk from a bus stop on Manchester--and the appropriateness of adult students sharing a campus with middle-school age kids at all.
Patrick says it's all part of a blatant disregard and disrespect for the future of Emerson and the largely minority clientele that it serves. Board member Zimmer, who is famously anti-charter, says he supports adult ed but has not officially opposed the plan. Nor has the teacher's union, UTLA, which disappoints Patrick more. A UTLA rep himself, Patrick has participated in union protests against charters and the privatization of public ed. "In a perfect world, this situation at Emerson would be a great opportunity to stand against charter expansion, especially after Broad announcement," he sighs. "But so far we're kind of on our own."
Story Continues Below

Support KCET
Of course, he's gotten kind of used to that. As the district gutted adult ed over the years, Emerson lost core classes such as parent education as well as popular craft classes like knitting, art, literature and quilting. But the place still regularly works miracles, or maybe it just does its job. Emerson alumni go on to higher education or otherwise change their lives dramatically; essentially they get over the infamous hump that keeps so many under-educated people mired in poverty or in a vicious cycle of low-wage work. Several students testified about this in spirited detail at a rally held earlier this month at Emerson that was meant to send a message to the district and charter advocates alike that they will not leave quietly. "Adults matter, too," said Antonio Ramirez, 37, an Emerson student and former Crenshaw High dropout who's completing his GED and plans to go on to college. "This place is so key, closing it would be messed up. I want to teach my son that what I've done is important. I'm living proof that you can change your life."
The standoff highlights an uncomfortable but unspoken dynamic: white middle-class residents are seeking to populate the public school campuses again, but not necessarily with blacks and Latinos who have become the education demographic. Emerson Learning Center is certainly large enough to accommodate a charter operation--that is, it could share its campus--but that scenario doesn't seem to be on the table. Patrick says he thinks it's less about charter vs. public than it is about the district trying to facilitate the local repopulating that Westchester wouldn't mind having. The good news is that Patrick and others have been showing up to community meetings in Playa Vista and to district board meetings downtown, making their views known. The pitch seems to be getting a bit of traction, especially among Zimmer's fellow board members.
The bad news? The whole Save Our School campaign is costing Patrick, a lifelong surfer, some serious down time. But he says it's been worth it. "I haven't surfed in eight days," he says. "This fight is that important."

About the Author

Journalist and op-ed columnist Erin Aubry Kaplan's first-person accounts of politics and identity in Los Angeles, with an eye towards the city's African American community, appear every Thursday on KCET's Departures blog.
RSS icon

Senin, 26 Oktober 2015

adult history Adult Education Task Force: Working Together for Common Good Purpose - japraklupo

2015 - Hallo sahabat fashion, Pada Artikel yang anda baca kali ini dengan judul 2015, kami telah mempersiapkan artikel ini dengan baik untuk anda baca dan ambil informasi didalamnya. mudah-mudahan isi postingan Artikel A4CAS, Artikel Adult Education Task Force, Artikel Legislature, Artikel No Lawmaker Left Behind, yang kami tulis ini dapat anda pahami. baiklah, selamat membaca.

Judul : adult history Adult Education Task Force: Working Together for Common Good Purpose - japraklupo
link : adult history Adult Education Task Force: Working Together for Common Good Purpose - japraklupo

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2015

Working together for common good purpose is powerful and brings results. 

To that end, John Mears, long time activist for Adult Education and Adult Schools, has helped to pull together the Adult Education Task Force.  John teaches at West Valley Occupational Center, a division of Adult and Career Ed in Los Angeles.  He is a long time and very active UTLA member, started the No Lawmaker Left Behind Campaign, and was an integral member of the Alliance for California Adult Schools.

Advocates for Adult Education meeting with Assembly Member Patty Lopez
John Mears is sleeves-rolled-up at the desk of Assembly Member Lopez

Here, in his own words, is a description of the Adult Education Task Force:
The Adult Education Task Force (AETF) was formed when adult-ed activists in the San Fernando Valley concerned about the lack of funding for our programs met with Assemblywoman Patty Lopez (39th Dist.), who used to work at the North Valley Occupational Center.  Now, as an elected member of the California State Assembly, Ms. Lopez is vocally supportive of our programs.  In fact, she ran for office in part because of frustration that her predecessor -- former Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra -- did not seem supportive of our programs when we were threatened with elimination in 2012.  

Hit the link to learn more.



Here's a brief timeline:
August 20 & 21:  AETF videotaped long lines of adult students hoping to register for ESL classes at West Valley Occupational Center, and collected letters from students, addressed to Patty Lopez, asking for help in restoring our program to a level that fully serves our communities.  I turned the video into a DVD for advocacy purposes (available upon request).
August 26:  LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines wrote a letter to the Chancellor of the L.A. Community College District (LACCD), Dr. Francisco Rodriguez, expressing concern about delays in allocations from the L.A. Regional Adult Education Consortium (LARAEC).
September 4:  AETF worked with Patty Lopez's office to write a letter and send a package of supporting material (student letters and a DVD) to LACCD Chancellor Rodriguez, in support of Superintendent Cortines's Aug. 26 letter, emphasizing the urgency for LARAEC to decide on the allocation of Adult Education Block Grant funds to address the unmet needs in our communities. (The unmet needs were shown by the long lines of students in the DVD:  550 students waiting to be one of 60 students that could be tested each day.)
Sept. 14, I accompanied two of Patty Lopez's district office staff members on a trip to Sacramento to visit with Ms. Lopez and CDE representatives for adult education: Chris Nelson and Alejandro Espinoza.  There, we were told unequivocally that adult education is underfunded.  At that meeting, Patty Lopez told the CDE people that she would like to have a conversation with Gov. Brown.  AETF decided to focus on lobbying Gov. Brown for greater funding.
Oct. 23, I attended a LARAEC meeting, where I made a public comment on behalf of the Adult Education Task Force about the unmet needs in LAUSD.  The LARAEC meeting had two "action items": 
  1. "Governance structure" (i.e. Establish a governance structure for LARAEC to allocate state funds from the Adult Education Block Grant or "AEBG")
  2. "Funding distribution" (i.e. Decide how to distribute the approximately $28 million LARAEC was receiving for its AEBG.)

Representing Burbank USD, Emilio Urioste moved that the governance structure for LARAEC be "one vote per district."  Before there was any discussion, L.A. Trade Tech President Larry Frank (representing LACCD) immediately said, "I'd like to make a second motion."  He moved that the governance structure be "consensus."  He said, "Our biggest problem is the legislation, which doesn't really tell us how to work together."  Of course, he was talking about AB 86 and AB 104.  "There are unanswered questions in the legislation," he said, suggesting we need new legislation.  In the following discussion, it came out that sixty-five consortia in California still don't have a formal governance structure.  There was back-and-forth about one vote per district vs. consensus, but finally a vote was called, and it was four to one (five members present) in favor of one vote per district.  Larry Frank voted "No."

On to action item #2.  Different districts offered their apportionment distribution proposals, but Larry Frank said, "My understanding is that what we agree today is not an agreement of the consortium."  Five different plans were presented and discussed -- one for each consortium member -- with amendments and votes, but with each vote, Larry Frank said, "We do not have a governance structure that would allow me to participate." 

Finally Culver City USD's proposal was passed by three to one, with Larry Frank again repeating the above statement.  The meeting closed without a clear indication whether Larry Frank's protests had legal/procedural weight, i.e. whether they actually prevented the vote from having validity and allowing disbursement to proceed.

It became clear to me at that meeting that we need legislative clarity on the governance structure for regional adult education consortia in California, so I came home and wrote the first draft of a bill to establish clear governance structures for all consortia.  The second draft of that proposed bill is attached.

On Wed., Oct. 28 there will be an AETF meeting at North Valley Occupational Center, where Patty Lopez used to work. The meeting will be recorded on video by the State Assembly's AV department, to show other assembly members what we're doing.


Click here to "like" the Adult Education Task Force Facebook page.

Working together for common good purpose is powerful and brings results. 

To that end, John Mears, long time activist for Adult Education and Adult Schools, has helped to pull together the Adult Education Task Force.  John teaches at West Valley Occupational Center, a division of Adult and Career Ed in Los Angeles.  He is a long time and very active UTLA member, started the No Lawmaker Left Behind Campaign, and was an integral member of the Alliance for California Adult Schools.

Advocates for Adult Education meeting with Assembly Member Patty Lopez
John Mears is sleeves-rolled-up at the desk of Assembly Member Lopez

Here, in his own words, is a description of the Adult Education Task Force:
The Adult Education Task Force (AETF) was formed when adult-ed activists in the San Fernando Valley concerned about the lack of funding for our programs met with Assemblywoman Patty Lopez (39th Dist.), who used to work at the North Valley Occupational Center.  Now, as an elected member of the California State Assembly, Ms. Lopez is vocally supportive of our programs.  In fact, she ran for office in part because of frustration that her predecessor -- former Assemblymember Raul Bocanegra -- did not seem supportive of our programs when we were threatened with elimination in 2012.  

Hit the link to learn more.



Here's a brief timeline:
August 20 & 21:  AETF videotaped long lines of adult students hoping to register for ESL classes at West Valley Occupational Center, and collected letters from students, addressed to Patty Lopez, asking for help in restoring our program to a level that fully serves our communities.  I turned the video into a DVD for advocacy purposes (available upon request).
August 26:  LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines wrote a letter to the Chancellor of the L.A. Community College District (LACCD), Dr. Francisco Rodriguez, expressing concern about delays in allocations from the L.A. Regional Adult Education Consortium (LARAEC).
September 4:  AETF worked with Patty Lopez's office to write a letter and send a package of supporting material (student letters and a DVD) to LACCD Chancellor Rodriguez, in support of Superintendent Cortines's Aug. 26 letter, emphasizing the urgency for LARAEC to decide on the allocation of Adult Education Block Grant funds to address the unmet needs in our communities. (The unmet needs were shown by the long lines of students in the DVD:  550 students waiting to be one of 60 students that could be tested each day.)
Sept. 14, I accompanied two of Patty Lopez's district office staff members on a trip to Sacramento to visit with Ms. Lopez and CDE representatives for adult education: Chris Nelson and Alejandro Espinoza.  There, we were told unequivocally that adult education is underfunded.  At that meeting, Patty Lopez told the CDE people that she would like to have a conversation with Gov. Brown.  AETF decided to focus on lobbying Gov. Brown for greater funding.
Oct. 23, I attended a LARAEC meeting, where I made a public comment on behalf of the Adult Education Task Force about the unmet needs in LAUSD.  The LARAEC meeting had two "action items": 
  1. "Governance structure" (i.e. Establish a governance structure for LARAEC to allocate state funds from the Adult Education Block Grant or "AEBG")
  2. "Funding distribution" (i.e. Decide how to distribute the approximately $28 million LARAEC was receiving for its AEBG.)

Representing Burbank USD, Emilio Urioste moved that the governance structure for LARAEC be "one vote per district."  Before there was any discussion, L.A. Trade Tech President Larry Frank (representing LACCD) immediately said, "I'd like to make a second motion."  He moved that the governance structure be "consensus."  He said, "Our biggest problem is the legislation, which doesn't really tell us how to work together."  Of course, he was talking about AB 86 and AB 104.  "There are unanswered questions in the legislation," he said, suggesting we need new legislation.  In the following discussion, it came out that sixty-five consortia in California still don't have a formal governance structure.  There was back-and-forth about one vote per district vs. consensus, but finally a vote was called, and it was four to one (five members present) in favor of one vote per district.  Larry Frank voted "No."

On to action item #2.  Different districts offered their apportionment distribution proposals, but Larry Frank said, "My understanding is that what we agree today is not an agreement of the consortium."  Five different plans were presented and discussed -- one for each consortium member -- with amendments and votes, but with each vote, Larry Frank said, "We do not have a governance structure that would allow me to participate." 

Finally Culver City USD's proposal was passed by three to one, with Larry Frank again repeating the above statement.  The meeting closed without a clear indication whether Larry Frank's protests had legal/procedural weight, i.e. whether they actually prevented the vote from having validity and allowing disbursement to proceed.

It became clear to me at that meeting that we need legislative clarity on the governance structure for regional adult education consortia in California, so I came home and wrote the first draft of a bill to establish clear governance structures for all consortia.  The second draft of that proposed bill is attached.

On Wed., Oct. 28 there will be an AETF meeting at North Valley Occupational Center, where Patty Lopez used to work. The meeting will be recorded on video by the State Assembly's AV department, to show other assembly members what we're doing.


Click here to "like" the Adult Education Task Force Facebook page.

Senin, 05 Oktober 2015

adult history CCAE Call for Presentations for 2016 State Conference. - japraklupo

2015 - Hallo sahabat fashion, Pada Artikel yang anda baca kali ini dengan judul 2015, kami telah mempersiapkan artikel ini dengan baik untuk anda baca dan ambil informasi didalamnya. mudah-mudahan isi postingan Artikel CCAE, yang kami tulis ini dapat anda pahami. baiklah, selamat membaca.

Judul : adult history CCAE Call for Presentations for 2016 State Conference. - japraklupo
link : adult history CCAE Call for Presentations for 2016 State Conference. - japraklupo

Baca juga


2015

CCAE 2016 State Conference Call for Presentations

The call for presentations at the CCAE - California Council for Adult Education - 2016 State Conference is now open.

Proposals must be received by the deadline of 11:59 p.m. PST, on November 20, 2015, for consideration for the 2016 CCAE State Conference. 

Click here to submit your proposal.

This year the State Conference will be held at the San Francisco Airport Marriot and will be hosted by the CCAE Bay Region Chapter. 

CCAE State Conferences are always rich with resources, connections, information, and opportunities.

If you have great ideas, information, or experiences that can benefit others, now is the time to submit a proposal to share them!



CCAE 2016 State Conference Call for Presentations

The call for presentations at the CCAE - California Council for Adult Education - 2016 State Conference is now open.

Proposals must be received by the deadline of 11:59 p.m. PST, on November 20, 2015, for consideration for the 2016 CCAE State Conference. 

Click here to submit your proposal.

This year the State Conference will be held at the San Francisco Airport Marriot and will be hosted by the CCAE Bay Region Chapter. 

CCAE State Conferences are always rich with resources, connections, information, and opportunities.

If you have great ideas, information, or experiences that can benefit others, now is the time to submit a proposal to share them!



Minggu, 27 September 2015

adult history Perspective: Kristen Pursley on Keeping ESL & Citizenship Free - japraklupo

2015 - Hallo sahabat fashion, Pada Artikel yang anda baca kali ini dengan judul 2015, kami telah mempersiapkan artikel ini dengan baik untuk anda baca dan ambil informasi didalamnya. mudah-mudahan isi postingan Artikel Community College, Artikel fees, Artikel K12 and CC Coordination, Artikel Legislature, Artikel Perspective, Artikel Regional Consortia, yang kami tulis ini dapat anda pahami. baiklah, selamat membaca.

Judul : adult history Perspective: Kristen Pursley on Keeping ESL & Citizenship Free - japraklupo
link : adult history Perspective: Kristen Pursley on Keeping ESL & Citizenship Free - japraklupo

Baca juga


2015

From Kristen Pursley's Save Your Adult School blog:


Adult School English as a Second Language and Citizenship Classes Must Be Offered Free Again – Let’s Keep It That Way!

by kpursley
Under California law, adult school English as a Second Language (ESL) and Citizenship classes must once again be offered free of charge. AB 189, a 2011 emergency measure allowing adult schools to charge for these classes until July 2015, expired this year, and was not renewed or extended.  AB 189 legitimized a haphazard pattern of charging for ESL and Citizenship classes that sprang up in the wake of California’s 2008 budget crisis and the resulting “categorical flexibility” that removed protections on state adult school funds.  While some districts chose not to charge for adult school ESL and Citizenship classes, others worked out their own systems for charging with no overall coordination at the state level or, often, consultation with neighboring districts. The result was a patchwork system of charges  that varied greatly from region to region as to whether students paid,  how much they  paid if there were fees,  and whether they paid by the year, by semester or by class.  This system has now been dismantled, at least for the present, and adult schools are again mandated to offer ESL and Citizenship classes free of charge.

Hit the "read more" link to learn more.
The battle over whether to charge fees for adult school ESL and Citizenship classes is far from over.  During the 2015-2016 school year, while adult schools are adjusting to once again offering these classes free of charge, the California Department of Education  (CDE) and the Community College Chancellor’s Office  will be developing recommendations regarding  a statewide fee policy for adult education.  In current California policyspeak, “adult education” refers to both adult schools and community colleges, so community college noncredit programs should take note: the CDE and Chancellor’s Office may recommend fees for noncredit community college ESL classes as well.
If fees for both adult school and noncredit community college ESL and Citizenship classes go into effect permanently, California stands to lose an infrastructure of free ESL instruction that has been in existence, in one form or another, since the late 19th Century.  In a state with a large immigrant population, and a great reliance on immigrant labor, destroying this infrastructure would be a risky gamble, to say the least.
However, the CDE and the Chancellor’s Office could also recommend that adult school and community college noncredit ESL and Citizenship classes continue to be offered free of charge.  There are indications that there may be support at the state level for keeping these classes free.  The fact that AB 189, which would originally have permanently legalized fees for ESL and Citizenship, could not pass without a sunset date is one such indication.  The fact that AB 189 was not extended is another.
At a March 11, 2015 joint hearing before the California Assembly Education, Assembly Higher Education, and Senate Education committees, representatives of the CDE and Community College Chancellor’s office made a final report on the AB86 consortia.  One of their findings was that the financial burden on adult students needs to be reduced, and they reported that they had initially recommended that there be no fees for classes offered through the consortia, which include ESL and Citizenship classes.  While this recommendation was resisted by adult schools , who said they could not survive without the fees, the fact that the CDE and  Community College Chancellors’ Office  made this joint recommendation is yet another indication that there may be support at the state level for keeping ESL and Citizenship classes free.
Undoubtedly, the loss of the ability to charge has been a blow to at least some districts that had come to rely on student fees for ESL classes.  The state has finally restored protected funding for adult schools, but just barely.  The Adult Education Block Grant (AEBG) funds adult schools in the amount their districts were funding them at the very nadir or their decline, in 2012-2013.  The block grant funding doesn’t come anywhere near giving California’s devastated adult schools the money they need to rebuild.  And, of course, it does not take into account funds they were getting from other sources in order to survive, such as student fees.
However, charging fees for ESL and Citizenship classes was never more than an inadequate band aid over the gaping wound of woefully inadequate funding for adult schools. It may have allowed adult schools to do a little more than they might otherwise have been able to do; it certainly didn’t save them if their districts decided to take all their state funds. Now that charges for ESL and Citizenship classes are again illegal, the best course of action is to advocate for adequate funding for adult schools, rather than putting a lot of energy into trying to get the fees restored.
The CDE/Community College Chancellor’s Office recommendation that fees be abolished was consistent with the mandate of the AB86 Consortia, which is to remove barriers to education for California’s adults.  Because financial considerations can definitely be a barrier, arguing for the reinstatement of fees that have been abolished will be an uphill battle at best.
AB 189 was discriminatory.  It allowed fees for ESL and Citizenship classes, but did not authorize fees for adult school Basic Skills and High School Diploma programs.  Almost certainly the marginalized status of immigrants played a role in the decision to charge for classes that serve them while providing that other kinds of classes must still be offered free.
It is easy to see why school districts, and some policymakers, would favor charging ESL students for their classes.  There are a lot of them.  ESL programs are usually by far the largest program in any adult school; in tough times, administrators must look at all the ESL students and think, “If only we could make them pay!”  So, during the economic crisis, the state passed a temporary law that allowed California’s financially ravaged  adult schools to balance their budgets on the backs of ESL students who were also suffering grievously from the financial collapse.  Immigrants, partly because they did not speak English well and did not have adequate access to information about how things work in the US, were prime targets of scams associated with the financial crisis.  Many lost jobs and homes at the same time they were having to come up with money for ESL classes.
Now, ESL students have helped adult schools weather their crisis. Adult schools have dedicated funding again, inadequate though it may be. California is experiencing a strong economic recovery.  We are no longer dealing with an emergency, and are instead in a position to make sound educational policy.  In this calmer situation, hopefully, educational leaders and policymakers will start looking at California’s large population of adult English learners as a group of students with unique educational needs and challenges, rather than simply as so many cash cows.  In considering whether to charge fees for ESL classes, policymakers should consider the following:
  1. It takes between 5 and 7 years to learn a second language well. Learning a new language is a long haul, and takes persistence over time. ESL students are busy adults, and their learning is often interrupted by changing work schedules, family responsibilities, and health issues. Charging for classes would add yet another interruption for low income students, who would have to stop coming to school whenever they were strapped for funds.  In the course of 5 to 7 years, such a situation is likely to come up at least once, if not multiple times, for students of modest means.
  2. Twelve to fifteen hours of class time a week is optimal for language learning. This means the students who learn the fastest are those who take more than one ESL class at a time. Students sense this, and students who have the time will sometimes enroll in morning, afternoon and evening classes in order to accelerate their learning. Charging by the class would put this effective learning strategy beyond the reach of many.
  3. ESL students need classes in their communities. ESL students often lack access to transportation; many walk or bike to class. Mothers of school age children fit in their learning around their children’s school schedule, and need classes near schools their children attend so they can pick their kids up after class.  Classes embedded in communities where immigrants live and work, in local K-12 school classrooms, churches, or community based organizations, are an excellent way to overcome the transportation barrier and serve these students.  But charging fees puts pressure on adult schools to centralize their services.  There are financial accountability and safety concerns with teachers collecting money in class, so students need to go to a central site to pay.  Those who cannot make it to the central site are locked out of classes.
  4. ESL students have plenty of skin in the game. One argument for charging fees is that you want students to have “skin in the game”, in other words, they won’t try hard in classes they haven’t paid for. But no one has more skin in the game than an immigrant trying to survive in a country where she doesn’t speak the language. She is surrounded every day by spoken and written language she doesn’t understand. She’s afraid to answer the phone because she might not be able to understand the caller.  And when her child asks her for help with homework she can’t read, her heart is in the game, too.  An extra $15, $30 or even $50 isn’t going to make much of a difference in terms of her commitment.
  5. Publicly funded ESL classes are a good investment. Educated workers earn more and bring more money into the community. Educated parents become involved in their children’s schools and help their children succeed academically. ESL classes connect families to services and information; students become involved in their communities and even have better health outcomes because they learn about nutrition , learn safety measures and  find out where to get medical attention.  ESL instruction does not benefit the student alone; it benefits the entire community in which the student lives.  Public money invested in ESL classes pays off handsomely in the form of stronger families, improved community health, and a more skilled workforce.
  6. ESL instruction for adults is properly part of public education. Without being able to read the minds of the authors of AB 189, it isn’t possible to know exactly why the bill authorizes charges for adult ESL classes, but not for Adult Basic Education (the equivalent of an elementary school education) or High School Diploma classes. One possible explanation is that Adult Basic Education and High School Diploma programs complete the mission of the K-12 schools by providing free instruction for adults equivalent to what children receive in the public schools.  This is a very sensible policy decision, but it is important to realize that ESL students are also receiving a basic education.  ESL students are often promoted into Adult Basic Education programs when they reach the top level of ESL.
Free classes for immigrant adults, including English classes, grew up right alongside public education for children in California, and are not separate from it.  The first free evening program for adults, established in San Francisco in 1871, predates free public high school by several decades.  Implementing fees for adult ESL classes would constitute a radical break from a tradition that goes back to California’s first few decades as a state.  California has been through financial ups and downs before, many times since 1871, without having to break with this tradition.  Even during the Great Depression of the 1930s, free ESL classes were maintained.  In the midst of a strong economic recovery, and with a mandate to bring down barriers for adult learners, what excuse do we have to start charging now?
Whatever your thoughts about fees for adult ESL classes, for or against, lawmakers and policymakers need to hear from you.  Here is a list of public officials who should be contacted about this issue:
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson
California Department of Education
1430 N Street
Sacramento, CA  95814-5901
California Community College Chancellor’s Office
Karen Gilmer, Assistant to Chancellor Brice Harris
(916) 322-4005
Senator Kevin de León
Senate President Pro Tempore
State Capitol, Room 205
Sacramento, CA  95814
Assembly Member Toni G. Atkins
Speaker of the Assembly
State Capitol
P.O. Box 94549-0078
Senator Carol Liu
Chair, Senate Education Committee
State Capitol, Room 5097
Sacramento, CA   95814
Assembly Member Patrick O’Donnell
Chair, Assembly Committee on Education
State Capitol, Room 4166
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0070
Assembly Member José Medina
Chair, Assembly Higher Education Committee
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0061
Assembly Member Luis Alejo
Chair, Latino Legislative Caucus
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0030
Assembly Member Das Williams
Chair, Asian and Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0037
And your local representatives.  For Richmond, San Pablo, El Cerrito, Berkeley, and part of Oakland these are:
Senator Loni Hancock
1515 Clay Street, Suite 2202
Oakland, CA  94612
Assembly Member Tony Thurmond
1515 Clay Stret, Suite 2201
Oakland, CA 94612
You can find your local representative here: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/

From Kristen Pursley's Save Your Adult School blog:


Adult School English as a Second Language and Citizenship Classes Must Be Offered Free Again – Let’s Keep It That Way!

by kpursley
Under California law, adult school English as a Second Language (ESL) and Citizenship classes must once again be offered free of charge. AB 189, a 2011 emergency measure allowing adult schools to charge for these classes until July 2015, expired this year, and was not renewed or extended.  AB 189 legitimized a haphazard pattern of charging for ESL and Citizenship classes that sprang up in the wake of California’s 2008 budget crisis and the resulting “categorical flexibility” that removed protections on state adult school funds.  While some districts chose not to charge for adult school ESL and Citizenship classes, others worked out their own systems for charging with no overall coordination at the state level or, often, consultation with neighboring districts. The result was a patchwork system of charges  that varied greatly from region to region as to whether students paid,  how much they  paid if there were fees,  and whether they paid by the year, by semester or by class.  This system has now been dismantled, at least for the present, and adult schools are again mandated to offer ESL and Citizenship classes free of charge.

Hit the "read more" link to learn more.
The battle over whether to charge fees for adult school ESL and Citizenship classes is far from over.  During the 2015-2016 school year, while adult schools are adjusting to once again offering these classes free of charge, the California Department of Education  (CDE) and the Community College Chancellor’s Office  will be developing recommendations regarding  a statewide fee policy for adult education.  In current California policyspeak, “adult education” refers to both adult schools and community colleges, so community college noncredit programs should take note: the CDE and Chancellor’s Office may recommend fees for noncredit community college ESL classes as well.
If fees for both adult school and noncredit community college ESL and Citizenship classes go into effect permanently, California stands to lose an infrastructure of free ESL instruction that has been in existence, in one form or another, since the late 19th Century.  In a state with a large immigrant population, and a great reliance on immigrant labor, destroying this infrastructure would be a risky gamble, to say the least.
However, the CDE and the Chancellor’s Office could also recommend that adult school and community college noncredit ESL and Citizenship classes continue to be offered free of charge.  There are indications that there may be support at the state level for keeping these classes free.  The fact that AB 189, which would originally have permanently legalized fees for ESL and Citizenship, could not pass without a sunset date is one such indication.  The fact that AB 189 was not extended is another.
At a March 11, 2015 joint hearing before the California Assembly Education, Assembly Higher Education, and Senate Education committees, representatives of the CDE and Community College Chancellor’s office made a final report on the AB86 consortia.  One of their findings was that the financial burden on adult students needs to be reduced, and they reported that they had initially recommended that there be no fees for classes offered through the consortia, which include ESL and Citizenship classes.  While this recommendation was resisted by adult schools , who said they could not survive without the fees, the fact that the CDE and  Community College Chancellors’ Office  made this joint recommendation is yet another indication that there may be support at the state level for keeping ESL and Citizenship classes free.
Undoubtedly, the loss of the ability to charge has been a blow to at least some districts that had come to rely on student fees for ESL classes.  The state has finally restored protected funding for adult schools, but just barely.  The Adult Education Block Grant (AEBG) funds adult schools in the amount their districts were funding them at the very nadir or their decline, in 2012-2013.  The block grant funding doesn’t come anywhere near giving California’s devastated adult schools the money they need to rebuild.  And, of course, it does not take into account funds they were getting from other sources in order to survive, such as student fees.
However, charging fees for ESL and Citizenship classes was never more than an inadequate band aid over the gaping wound of woefully inadequate funding for adult schools. It may have allowed adult schools to do a little more than they might otherwise have been able to do; it certainly didn’t save them if their districts decided to take all their state funds. Now that charges for ESL and Citizenship classes are again illegal, the best course of action is to advocate for adequate funding for adult schools, rather than putting a lot of energy into trying to get the fees restored.
The CDE/Community College Chancellor’s Office recommendation that fees be abolished was consistent with the mandate of the AB86 Consortia, which is to remove barriers to education for California’s adults.  Because financial considerations can definitely be a barrier, arguing for the reinstatement of fees that have been abolished will be an uphill battle at best.
AB 189 was discriminatory.  It allowed fees for ESL and Citizenship classes, but did not authorize fees for adult school Basic Skills and High School Diploma programs.  Almost certainly the marginalized status of immigrants played a role in the decision to charge for classes that serve them while providing that other kinds of classes must still be offered free.
It is easy to see why school districts, and some policymakers, would favor charging ESL students for their classes.  There are a lot of them.  ESL programs are usually by far the largest program in any adult school; in tough times, administrators must look at all the ESL students and think, “If only we could make them pay!”  So, during the economic crisis, the state passed a temporary law that allowed California’s financially ravaged  adult schools to balance their budgets on the backs of ESL students who were also suffering grievously from the financial collapse.  Immigrants, partly because they did not speak English well and did not have adequate access to information about how things work in the US, were prime targets of scams associated with the financial crisis.  Many lost jobs and homes at the same time they were having to come up with money for ESL classes.
Now, ESL students have helped adult schools weather their crisis. Adult schools have dedicated funding again, inadequate though it may be. California is experiencing a strong economic recovery.  We are no longer dealing with an emergency, and are instead in a position to make sound educational policy.  In this calmer situation, hopefully, educational leaders and policymakers will start looking at California’s large population of adult English learners as a group of students with unique educational needs and challenges, rather than simply as so many cash cows.  In considering whether to charge fees for ESL classes, policymakers should consider the following:
  1. It takes between 5 and 7 years to learn a second language well. Learning a new language is a long haul, and takes persistence over time. ESL students are busy adults, and their learning is often interrupted by changing work schedules, family responsibilities, and health issues. Charging for classes would add yet another interruption for low income students, who would have to stop coming to school whenever they were strapped for funds.  In the course of 5 to 7 years, such a situation is likely to come up at least once, if not multiple times, for students of modest means.
  2. Twelve to fifteen hours of class time a week is optimal for language learning. This means the students who learn the fastest are those who take more than one ESL class at a time. Students sense this, and students who have the time will sometimes enroll in morning, afternoon and evening classes in order to accelerate their learning. Charging by the class would put this effective learning strategy beyond the reach of many.
  3. ESL students need classes in their communities. ESL students often lack access to transportation; many walk or bike to class. Mothers of school age children fit in their learning around their children’s school schedule, and need classes near schools their children attend so they can pick their kids up after class.  Classes embedded in communities where immigrants live and work, in local K-12 school classrooms, churches, or community based organizations, are an excellent way to overcome the transportation barrier and serve these students.  But charging fees puts pressure on adult schools to centralize their services.  There are financial accountability and safety concerns with teachers collecting money in class, so students need to go to a central site to pay.  Those who cannot make it to the central site are locked out of classes.
  4. ESL students have plenty of skin in the game. One argument for charging fees is that you want students to have “skin in the game”, in other words, they won’t try hard in classes they haven’t paid for. But no one has more skin in the game than an immigrant trying to survive in a country where she doesn’t speak the language. She is surrounded every day by spoken and written language she doesn’t understand. She’s afraid to answer the phone because she might not be able to understand the caller.  And when her child asks her for help with homework she can’t read, her heart is in the game, too.  An extra $15, $30 or even $50 isn’t going to make much of a difference in terms of her commitment.
  5. Publicly funded ESL classes are a good investment. Educated workers earn more and bring more money into the community. Educated parents become involved in their children’s schools and help their children succeed academically. ESL classes connect families to services and information; students become involved in their communities and even have better health outcomes because they learn about nutrition , learn safety measures and  find out where to get medical attention.  ESL instruction does not benefit the student alone; it benefits the entire community in which the student lives.  Public money invested in ESL classes pays off handsomely in the form of stronger families, improved community health, and a more skilled workforce.
  6. ESL instruction for adults is properly part of public education. Without being able to read the minds of the authors of AB 189, it isn’t possible to know exactly why the bill authorizes charges for adult ESL classes, but not for Adult Basic Education (the equivalent of an elementary school education) or High School Diploma classes. One possible explanation is that Adult Basic Education and High School Diploma programs complete the mission of the K-12 schools by providing free instruction for adults equivalent to what children receive in the public schools.  This is a very sensible policy decision, but it is important to realize that ESL students are also receiving a basic education.  ESL students are often promoted into Adult Basic Education programs when they reach the top level of ESL.
Free classes for immigrant adults, including English classes, grew up right alongside public education for children in California, and are not separate from it.  The first free evening program for adults, established in San Francisco in 1871, predates free public high school by several decades.  Implementing fees for adult ESL classes would constitute a radical break from a tradition that goes back to California’s first few decades as a state.  California has been through financial ups and downs before, many times since 1871, without having to break with this tradition.  Even during the Great Depression of the 1930s, free ESL classes were maintained.  In the midst of a strong economic recovery, and with a mandate to bring down barriers for adult learners, what excuse do we have to start charging now?
Whatever your thoughts about fees for adult ESL classes, for or against, lawmakers and policymakers need to hear from you.  Here is a list of public officials who should be contacted about this issue:
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Torlakson
California Department of Education
1430 N Street
Sacramento, CA  95814-5901
California Community College Chancellor’s Office
Karen Gilmer, Assistant to Chancellor Brice Harris
(916) 322-4005
Senator Kevin de León
Senate President Pro Tempore
State Capitol, Room 205
Sacramento, CA  95814
Assembly Member Toni G. Atkins
Speaker of the Assembly
State Capitol
P.O. Box 94549-0078
Senator Carol Liu
Chair, Senate Education Committee
State Capitol, Room 5097
Sacramento, CA   95814
Assembly Member Patrick O’Donnell
Chair, Assembly Committee on Education
State Capitol, Room 4166
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0070
Assembly Member José Medina
Chair, Assembly Higher Education Committee
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0061
Assembly Member Luis Alejo
Chair, Latino Legislative Caucus
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0030
Assembly Member Das Williams
Chair, Asian and Pacific Islander Legislative Caucus
State Capitol
P.O. Box 942849
Sacramento, CA  94249-0037
And your local representatives.  For Richmond, San Pablo, El Cerrito, Berkeley, and part of Oakland these are:
Senator Loni Hancock
1515 Clay Street, Suite 2202
Oakland, CA  94612
Assembly Member Tony Thurmond
1515 Clay Stret, Suite 2201
Oakland, CA 94612
You can find your local representative here: http://findyourrep.legislature.ca.gov/