Google

Sunday, June 21, 2009

An "in-debt"ed education

There's a thought-provoking article from AP on Yahoo- "Budget crisis forces deep cuts at Calif. schools - Calif. budget crisis forces schools to slash programs, fire teachers, expand class sizes" by Terence Chea. The piece leads off by saying that "California's historic budget crisis threatens to devastate a public education system that was once considered a national model but now ranks near the bottom in school funding and academic achievement. Deep budget cuts are forcing California school districts to lay off thousands of teachers, expand class sizes, close schools, eliminate bus service, cancel summer school programs, and possibly shorten the academic year. Without a strong economic recovery, which few experts predict, the reduced school funding could last for years, shortchanging millions of students, driving away residents and businesses, and darkening California's economic future. "California used to lead the nation in education," U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said during a recent visit to San Francisco. "Honestly, I think California has lost its way, and I think the long-term consequences of that are very troubling." The budget cuts will be especially painful for struggling schools such as Richmond High School, where more than half of its 1,700 students are English learners and three-quarters are considered poor. The East Bay area school has failed to meet academic standards set by the federal No Child Left Behind Act for more than four years.Now Richmond High stands to lose 10 percent of its 80 teachers. Electives such as French and woodshop will be scrapped. Some classes will expand to more than 40 students. And many special education and English-language students will be placed in mainstream classes..."

In Naperville, our real estate taxes have gone up quite a bit, despite home values declining by 30% or more over the past couple of years. School districts have spent money very generously, while the federal government and many state governments have run up debt. Many facilities are duplicated across schools that are closely located. Nice gym facilities, arts classes and the fun extra or co-curricular stuff, are luxuries.

Hopefully frugality will stay with us for a while- memories can be short.

No comments: