EdCal EdCal v49.22 3/25/19

March 25, 2019 EDCAL   1 Education California | The official newspaper of the Association of California School Administrators Volume 49 | Number 22 | March 25, 2019 High schools challenged by political climate At the mid-point of the presidency of Donald Trump, a new survey finds America’s high schools greatly impacted by political incivility and riven by untrust- worthy information and the omnipresent use of social media. In this highly charged environment, schools are struggling to address many of the same critical issues confronting the nation, including opioid abuse, immigration and gun violence. These issues are impacting students and schools and taking needed time away from the efforts of school principals to strengthen teaching and learning. “School and Society in the Age of Trump,” a nationally representative survey of 505 high school principals conducted by the Institute for Democracy, Education and Access at UCLA, examines how a broad set of social issues at the forefront of the Trump presidency are felt and affect students and educators within America’s high schools. Responding to the survey, almost nine in 10 principals report that incivility and contentiousness in the broader political environment has considerably affected their school community. An overwhelming majority of principals report problems such as contentious classroom environments, hostile exchanges outside of class, and demeaning or hateful remarks over political views. More than eight in 10 principals re- port that their students have made deroga- tory remarks about other racial or ethnic groups, and more than six in 10 principals say their students have made derogatory remarks about immigrants. In interviews See SURVEY, page 3 CTC discusses disciplinary guidelines, credentialing The recent meeting of the California Com- mission on Teacher Credentialing was attend- ed by ACSA CTC Liaison Doug Gephart, who filed the following report. Proposed disciplinary guidelines The Office of the Attorney General adjudicates the more serious cases and, in the interest of fairness and clarity for the credential holder and all concerned, has recommended that the Commission adopt disciplinary guidelines in the interest of providing clarity to the range of potential consequences. In response CTC staff com- piled 10 years of data to reflect a pattern of past practice to serve as the basis for the guidelines. Over this period of time, the Commis- sion has made varying determinations of disciplinary action based upon the severity of the misconduct and the preponder- ance of evidence to support their actions. Minimum and maximum adverse actions represent the range of disciplinary action taken by the Commission providing the basis for the proposed guidelines and are not intended to serve as binding on any future case. While the recommended guidelines are based on prior CTC actions and serve as guidance for decision-making bodies, interested stakeholders such as ACSA, CTA, AFT, CSBA, PTA, child advocate groups, or other interested parties have not vetted them. Action on the proposed guide- lines are pending until CTC staff conduct a public review and discussion among stakeholder representatives prior to the next Commission meeting on April 11 and 12. Appointment to Committee on Credentials ACSA’s Legislative Policy Committee met recently to review dozens of bills that affect state schools. ACSA committee tackles education-related bills ACSA’s Legislative Policy Commit- tee met recently to review dozens of legislative bills that are being considered in the state Capitol. The Legislature has introduced more than 2,500 bills this session, many of which have an effect on schools. The committee is determin- ing ACSA’s position on all the educa- tion-related bills, which will be posted on ACSA’s Advocacy page at www.acsa. org/advocacy. “Our Legislative Policy Committee is a great group of hard workers, and we truly appreciate and value their service to ACSA,” said Senior Director of Gov- ernmental Relations and Policy Edgar Zazueta. “We have a huge amount of bills for them to consider and it really Periodicals Dated Material takes a lot of work to get through them all.” The Legislative Policy Committee’s stated purpose is to identify and study areas of needed legislation impacting ACSA members and public education, to solicit sponsorship requests from ACSA members and sponsor bills improving conditions in California schools, to study proposed legislation and, based upon ACSA’s Legislative Platform and additional input from the Board of Directors, establish ACSA’s position on state and federal legisla- tion. The committee also assists in the establishment of the ACSA Legislative Platform. See BILLS, page 4 The Commission, following their interview and selection process, appointed Jacob Guthrie, assistant director, Certif- icated Workforce Management for Los Angeles Unified School District, to serve as the administrative representative on the Committee on Credentials. Members of the Committee on Credentials are appoint- ed by the Commission to review individ- uals for fitness to receive and/or retain credentials. The COC is comprised of seven members and consists of one elementary teacher, one secondary teacher, one school board member, one school administrator, and three public members. Guthrie began his career in education in New York City as a math and physical ed- ucation teacher prior to serving as a teacher in the same capacity with Los Angeles USD and later as an assistant principal. In addition to his current administrative assignment, Guthrie has also served on the Employee Relations Administrative Review Committee for LAUSD and has served as the district’s liaison to the CTC for the Assessment conference. Reg- istration is now open for the 2019 California Assessment Conference. The CAC, scheduled for October 16-18, is a unique opportunity for classroom educators to explore the connection between assessments and classroom instruction and to learn how other California educators use assessments to improve teaching and learning. For more information and to register, visit the CAC webpage at www.cdecac.org. Preconditions due. For institu- tions in the Red and Blue cohorts, Preconditions submissions are due on or before March 31. An Evidence Guide for submitting preconditions for the Preliminary Multiple and Single Subject credential programs has been posted on the CTC’s preconditions page. For institutions submitting preconditions this spring, this evidence guide will be very helpful in understanding what kind of evidence is acceptable. The Evidence Guide is available on the Commission’s Preconditions webpage at: http://bit.ly/2ueXaNm. VAPA panels. The CTC is seeking applications for educators who wish to participate on subject matter expert panels to align CSET assessments in the visual and performing arts with the newly adopted California Arts Stan- dards for Public Schools. VAPA teach- ers and teacher educators, as well as individuals who advance VAPA educa- tion and programming for school-aged children outside of traditional school settings, are needed for the following areas: art, dance, music and theatre. Those interested in applying can complete the application form found at http://bit.ly/2HGD9XW. Bias review committee. The CTC is seeking applications and nomi- nations for educators who wish to participate in bias prevention activities for California state certification assess- ments. Those interested in applying can complete the application form at http://bit.ly/2UKQRws. See CTC, page 8 22 schools honored for exemplary arts, CTE, physical ed and nutrition Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond has announced additional honors for 22 California Distinguished middle schools and high schools selected as having an Exemplary Program in Arts Education, Career Technical Education, or Physical Activity and Nutrition. Distin- guished Schools applied separately for these honors. This year’s honorees include 10 schools for Arts Education, nine for Career Technical Education, and four schools for Physical Activity and Nutrition — with one school receiving honors in two catego- ries.  “We know that closing the achievement gap includes world-class instruction, in- cluding access to STEAM, career technical education, physical education, and nutrition education,” Thurmond said. “Instruction outside of core academic subject areas — like job training, entrepreneurship and STEAM — helps all students prepare for 21st century jobs and sparks creative and healthy minds. I congratulate these 22 Ex- emplary Program Award winners for their outstanding work.” The Exemplary Program Award winners, along with other California Distinguished Schools, Exemplary Districts, California Green Ribbon Schools, Civic Learning Award Schools, Model Continuation High Schools, National Blue Ribbon Schools, and National ESEA Distinguished Schools, all will be honored in April during a ceremony at the Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. More information on Exem- plary Program Awards is available at the See AWARDS, page 5