Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
15.2.17
State must expand school choice in Caddo
It’s time for Louisiana’s Department of Education
to intervene more forcefully with struggling Caddo Parish schools.
After some period of treading water, CPSD as a whole took a
step backwards last year as it slid solidly
into ‘C’ territory (in absolute terms; for years "grading" of schools has occurred on a curve) according to the state’s district accountability measure.
What comfort came from its overall performance as not absolutely dismal hides
the fact that a majority
of its schools rank as ‘D’ or ‘F’ and these enroll over half of all district
students.
Yet despite a history of having a significant portion
of its school performing below par, unlike the other two major metropolitan districts
in the state little educational choice developed in the parish. The state
oversees only one charter school there, Linwood, and only three charters
operate independently (one with two campuses). Several other schools operate
under a memorandum of understanding model that leaves the district in charge of
these but having to meet certain objectives negotiated by the state.
None of these schools rate highly – alternative schools
aside, a couple scored D and the remainder F – but expectedly so, since when
these underwent these new reorganizations all had a history of abysmal scoring.
For those with more than a year’s worth of history, the charters showed some to
significant progress over the past couple of years while the others only one
regressed with remainder making good progress.
Contrast this with the remainder of the district
schools that remained open or merged. Most overall performance gain from the previous
year came from the higher-scoring schools, while those scoring F collectively
barely budged upwards. Worse, most F schools had slipped over the previous two
years, remaining far away from achieving a higher rank, and more D schools fell
into the F category than vice versa.
In other words, several schools for years under traditional
district management have continued persistently underperforming. Some were
closed and others merged, such as in north Caddo last year, and this upcoming year
Fair Park and Booker T. Washington will combine. But the district has typified
these decisions as responses to demographic patterns and cost considerations,
even as most involved D and F schools.
Over this period, in Caddo LDOE has kept a
remarkably hands-off approach. By comparison, it took over most schools in
Orleans Parish years ago and all, regardless of state or local control, will
operate as charters, while in East Baton Rouge – which includes the city and
other unincorporated areas in that parish – which has district-wide scores
similarly to Caddo, last year it oversaw seven schools with eight other
charters operating.
And Caddo has become less capable of making the
necessary financial investments to turn around the persistently struggling
schools. After years of deficit spending, its general fund reserve was budgeted
to sink under
$19 million by the end of last fiscal year from almost $45 million
unreserved a decade ago.
Last
week, state Superintendent John White held a community meeting to discuss
recommendations for improving district performance. While next month the Board
of Elementary and Secondary Education will decide what to do, it appeared to
signal that White would suggest more aggressive remediation of the several
failing Caddo Schools.
At the very least, LDOE should offer these schools
to charter operators and as a fallback position pursue more MOU with Caddo concerning
these. Too many years have gone by with too little progress; only one in 50 students from a failing high school typically qualify for a
Taylor Opportunity Program for Students award. Multiple Caddo superintendents
and a School Board essentially turned over in membership since public school
choice came to Caddo have not gotten the job done. The district needs applied
to it a different approach.
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