Lessons to learn about Common Enrollment

Wondering how common enrollment has gone in other cities? Here’s a report from Newark, NJ – where the same company that is leading Oakland’s charge, IIPSC, handled the process:

“[Superintendent] Anderson is closing the neighborhood schools. The charters are picking up students with the least problems while those with the greatest need–like special education students–are assigned to what is left of the public school stock.”

http://www.bobbraunsledger.com/camis-newark-enrollment-plan-collapses-in-the-heat/

 

Common Enrollment will divert scarce resources from our Public Schools

Big-money special interests, funded by the founders of Wal-Mart (The Walton Foundation), KB Homes (The Broad Foundation), and Dreyers (The Rogers Family Foundation), are pushing an effort to re-vamp our public school enrollment system. These are the same special interests that sunk hundreds of thousands of dollars into our last school board election – leaving us with decisions to hire high-priced executive staff, while underfunded our teachers and classrooms. Now they have decided to add privately-managed charter schools to our school enrollment system – once again directing scarce resources away from Oakland’s public school children. Ken Epstein has the story.

 

http://postnewsgroup.com/blog/2015/11/20/teachers-say-common-enrollment-funnel-students-charters/

Teachers Say “Common Enrollment” Would Funnel More Students to Charters

By Ken Epstein

The local teachers’ union and school activists are raising concerns about a proposal, backed by the school district’s administration, to dramatically change how new students are enrolled in Oakland schools, called “Common Enrollment,” a computer-based system that would channel students equally to public and charter schools.

 

While the new plan is backed by the district administration and some local pro-charter organizations, it has not yet been approved by the Board of Education, though the issue could go to the board as early as December.

 

The district administration says the plan will increase transparency and efficiency, streamlining a needlessly bureaucratic process – thereby clearing up confusion and helping parents who needlessly run around filling out multiple applications for their children to attend district schools and charter schools.

 

Overall, the plan is designed to improve equity in the enrollment process, enabling all parents to have an equal chance to send their student to high quality schools of their choice, according to the administration.

 

At present, parents who want to enroll or transfer schools must go to the Student Assignment Center at Lakeview, located near Lake Merritt. The enrollment options window is open between December and January each year.

 

Families must apply separately at each charter school, and dates of notifying parents of admission are often sent out at different times.

100312-national-oakland-school-classroom

The district’s public meetings to gather community input on the proposal are frequently run by Great Oakland (GO) Public Schools, a nonprofit that supports candidates in school board elections and is tied to the Rogers Family Foundation, which backs local charter schools.

 

“Oakland is revising its enrollment system so it’s easier to use, more assessable and transparent, improves interaction with families (and) increases engagement and outreach,” according to the PowerPoint presentation produced by GO.

 

In talking points produced by the Oakland Education Association (OEA), the teachers’ union challenged the district to focus on providing all students with quality education and equal resources, rather than “an enrollment system that undermines their capacity to improve by directing students and resources away from them.”

 

OEA agrees that the current system has many flaws but says the proposal does not fix them but “in fact perpetuates many of the problems of the current system and adds new ones.”

 

Common Enrollment would send more students to charter schools, thereby depriving public schools of students and funding for resources, ultimately forcing more schools to close or be turned over to charter school organizations, according to OEA members.

 

In the 2014-2015 school year, there were 37,147 OUSD students attending 86 public schools while 11,034 students attended the 32 district-authorized charter schools.

 

Teachers at charter schools have few rights, say teacher activists, because charter school employees are not protected by a union or union contract. Parents who have complaints cannot go to the Board of Education – their complaints must be directed to the charter’s board of directors, who may not be located in Oakland.

 

“Common enrollment is dishonest: it presents all schools in its system as public schools even though charter schools are privately run and not publicly accountable,” according to the OEA.

 

Common enrollment increases inequity, says the union. “It will boost numbers of families applying to charters but won’t require charters to alter discriminatory admissions, discipline or expulsion policies.”

images

So far, the district has not said how much the new system will cost compared to the existing one. The program would be run by a new “Deputy Chief, Innovation,” who would be paid $157,500.

 

The district has already hired three consultants to work with a district committee to develop the proposal, including the person who was formerly in charge of Common Enrollment in the Denver schools, as well as two top executives of the firm that created Common Enrollment.

 

The program is based on a complicated mathematical algorithm that looks at students’ and schools’ six top choices and assigns students to a school.

 

It is unclear at present what would happen to existing rules that give preference to families that live near a school or already sending other children to that school.

Why are we still paying $30,000 per month to Lance Jackson?

It has been nearly a year that we have been paying Lance Jackson $30,000 per MONTH to oversee OUSD’s facilities planning division, a post previously held by an OUSD employee (not a contractor) for $150,000 per year. We were assured in February that this was just a temporary situation and were told in May that the position for a reasonably paid, district employee would be filled by the end of June. It is absolutely impossible to believe that there is not a reasonable candidate within the District or without who would be qualified for this position at a reasonable salary. It looks more and more like Superintendent Wilson is more comfortable having his consultant in that position, regardless of what it costs our children. This is not acceptable.

http://postnewsgroup.com/…/high-priced-consultant-still-ea…/

The Demise of Representative Democracy in Oakland Unified

Has Representative Democracy Broken Down at Oakland Unified?

By Ken Epstein

Local residents are raising concerns about “meeting procedures” and “meeting norms” dictating the behavior of the Oakland Board of Education, which could limit board members’ ability to lead the district, as they were elected to do.

Some of the norms and procedures, adopted unanimously by the board and implemented at last week’s meeting, might sound innocuous, though they have a paternalistic air that does not seem appropriate to a body that is elected to set policy that is supposed to represent the beliefs and needs of Oakland residents.

“Five minute speaking limit, no mingling with the audience, focus on agenda items, always be respectful, no interruptions, model desired behavior, no personal attacks,” says the list says, along with “honor the time, no sidebars, technology aligned to meeting purpose.”

However, at least one of the norms for board members has members of the community worried.

“Act as a collective body – honor confidentiality,” is a norm that appears on the surface to call on board members to close ranks, refrain from publically disagreeing with each other or the administration and avoid revealing too much about district proposals. But the Board is responsible for setting policy for the district and California law requires that those policy discussions be held in public

Recognizing the public’s concerns, School Board President James Harris said the changes are not designed to limit transparency or stifle the voice of elected officials but to guarantee that meetings are conducted legally and with civility.

“Some things are confidential to board members, such as closed session things,” said Harris. “We’ve had a few board members break those rules. You’ve got to respect the laws.”

Additionally, he said, “You don’t want personal attacks on board members,” he said. “We all need to get better. We need to be better communicators. “

However, there are community members who see this new policy as symptomatic of a school board that has lost its sense of responsibility as an elected body and generally passively follows the lead of the latest superintendent and his team of administrators

The problem goes back to Oakland’s loss of local control of the school district in 2003 when the district went bankrupt and took a $100 million loan (still not repaid).

The State Supt. of Instruction installed a trustee, Randy Ward, who ran the district singlehandedly. Working closely with a team of administrative advisors from Bakersfield, Ward fired principals and veteran administrators, in one shot eliminating much of the district’s diversity and the historical memory of the institution.

Over the course of the years, despite the return of local control to the school district in 2009, the balance of power has continued to shift away from the board and to the administration.

The attorney for the district used to be an employee of the board, but that has been changed. The general counsel now reports to the board and the superintendent.

The board secretary used to be an employee of the board. The superintendent is now the board secretary and sets the agenda of board meetings in conjunction with the board president.

Like the City Council, the board used to have a number of committees, including curriculum, facilities and business and finance. With the committees, board members could gather information, listen to community input and make informed decisions.

Without the committees, they lost their eyes and ears. They were forced to rely on what staff told them at board meetings, along with some one- or two-minute presentations from the public.

In addition, the board several years ago agreed in principle that it would not ask questions or disagree with the administration in public. Instead, individual board members are supposed to ask questions or disagree by email.

As a result, many policy differences among board members never come to public attention.

Though concerns about the board not fulfilling its role as an elected body have been raised under the one-year-old administration of Supt. Antwan Wilson, the same issues existed and were compounded under former superintendents Gary Yee and Tony Smith.

While some on the board are committed to the idea that board members should “not disagree publically on things, I think people should know if we are having disagreement on things. There’s nothing bad about disagreement,” said a board member who did not want to be identified.

Jim Mordecai

Another board member, who also asked not to be identified, said she and her colleagues were under tremendous pressure not to disagree with each other or with the district staff in public.

Staff also uses pressure to try to silence teachers and students who speak up at meetings, the board member said.

According to Jim Mordecai, a retired teacher who attends and speaks at most board meetings, the erosion of democracy in the Oakland district is also occurring in other school districts around the country, related to growth of corporate involvement and privatization of public education.

Much of the erosion of democracy norms is tied to a variety of corporate reformers, who want to run the school like their companies, such as billionaire Eli Broad and his Broad Foundation and the Broad Academy, where many of the nation’s new superintendents are trained he said.

Oakland’s State Trustee Randy Ward was an early Broad trainee, and he staffed the district with a crew of Broadees (rhymes with roadies).

People coming from the corporate mindset “prefer a board that is just a rubber stamp, “ Mordecai said.

“(But) Some of the women on the board are pretty strong, and sometimes they stand up and fight back,” he said.

But they are still struggling to understand the issues, which are not simple.

Book by school board trainer Don McAdams

“It takes a lot of time to understand,” he said. “It’s complicated. (For example) they don’t come on the board understanding about Broad training.”

Making their job more difficult, he said, Oakland school board members attend retreats where they learn from “experts” that their proper role is to be a cheering team for the administration.

Oakland School board members have attended two trainings by Texas based consultant Don McAdams, who worked for Eli Broad when he was setting up his superintendent academy.

According to critics around the country, McAdams suggests that board members not “interrogate” staffers during board meetings.

Board members are encouraged to vote unanimously, if possible, on important issues, such as school closings and bond proposals, sending a message to the public and workforce that the issue is a done deal, McAadams says in his trainings according to reports.

This approach is deeply flawed says civil rights attorney Dan Siegel, who served on the school board and worked as the district’s general counsel.

“As voters, we’re entitled to hear board members express their best opinions and if they disagree and to make decisions,” he said.

In reality, the board trainings are not neutral but ideological, encouraging the board to get out of the way of the experts, said Mordecai,

“But that’s not the process. The process has to be inclusive of the community. It’s supposed to be a democratic institution.”

Hold the OUSD Board Accountable

SIGN OUR PETITION TODAY!

OUSD Parents raised many important concerns with the OUSD Administration over the past year, hoping that the Superintendent would use his new position and new state money to make the attraction and retention of quality teachers a priority, thereby creating stronger, more stable schools for our children. We looked to members of the school board to ensure that our teachers receive a contract which makes that happen.

While the new contract for our teachers is a positive step in the right direction, it is clear that most of the issues parents have raised during this contract campaign remain unaddressed including, among other things:

  • Our teachers will still be underpaid compared to other school districts in the area, even under the new contract.
  • OUSD’s central office will still be full of “Chiefs” with newly created positions, some of whom followed the Superintendent here from Denver and all of whom are making excessive salaries, including: Allen Smith, the Chief of Schools ($175,000 salary + $15,000 to move from Denver); Yana Smith, Chief of Organizational Effectiveness & Culture ($155,000 + $12,500 to move from Denver); Devin Dillon, Chief Academic Officer ($175,000 + $11,000 to move from Los Angeles); and Bernard McCune, Deputy Chief of the Office of Post-Secondary Readiness ($157,000 + $17,000 to move from Denver).
  • The District will still be paying $30,000 per month ($360,000 per year) to Lance Jackson to oversee the District’s bond-funded construction programs, and the school board has not been allowed to vote on this excessive payment.
  • The District will still be proposing to spend $100 million+ on building an administrative complex which would present a sleek and stark contrast to the crumbling schools the Administration is supposed to serve.
  • The District will still be regularly out of compliance with federal special education requirements, refusing to agree to hard caps to protect some of our most vulnerable students because they would be too expensive. The District is now facing a class-action lawsuit over system-wide violation of the rights of special education students.
  • The District will still be opening up school communities in need of intensive support to a design process that encourages outside organizations and organizations hoping to make a profit off of our children to participate.
  • The School Board will still be largely inaccessible to parents, who often must wait hours to speak during public comment periods, often waiting with young, hungry children past their bedtimes.

Oakland parents, taxpayers and voters are tired of seeing our District’s leadership throw precious resources toward excessive executive pay (and now a sleek new administrative building), while not prioritizing classroom instruction. We are tired of our Superintendent bypassing the elected school board on crucial decisions. We are tired of having an elected board that is not accessible to its electorate.

Sign this petition by  OUSD Parents United to let the School Board know that Oakland parents will not go away. This time, we are here to stay. We will stay engaged, we will hold them accountable, we will continue to fight for the schools our students deserve!

OUSD seeking approval for $100 million construction of new Administrative Complex

Oakland Post article raises questions about the new Dewey Academy project

Unanswered Questions as OUSD Moves Forward on Headquarters Development

Rendering of new OUSD headquarters,

Rendering of new OUSD headquarters, “Design Concept One.”

The Oakland Unified School District is moving ahead with its plan to tear down the district’s old administration building on Second Avenue and East 10th Street and replace it with a new educational complex.

<p>The district is currently looking at three separate “final conceptual designs” for the property, and all of them would contain office space for at least some administrators and their staff, a conference center and theater for parent and staff training, a student-run café, parking for some employees and a new school for Dewey Academy with a gym and multipurpose room.

Dewey at present is located nearby at Second Avenue and East 12th Street.

Additionally, one of the proposals includes keeping the façade or other parts of the old administration building. And another design proposes to build some units of housing, but staff has emphasized that these units would be affordable or for teachers, not market-rate housing.

The administration is taking the three conceptual designs to next Wednesday evening’s board meeting, hoping for board approval to move ahead with one of the designs, based on the superintendent’s recommendation.

To publicize the design proposals, the district held three meetings this week in different parts of Oakland. However, the meetings were poorly advertised, and only about six members of the public attended the first two of the events.

A number of questions remain to be answered.

Why is the district proposing to build a new campus for Dewey Academy?

Dewey was originally included in the project when the district was trying to sell the school property to Urban Core Development to add to its plan to build a luxury apartment tower adjacent to the school at East 12th and Lake Merritt Boulevard.

Building a new campus for Dewey – which is relatively new – significantly contributes to the estimated $100 million price tag for the new complex and may mean that other school construction projects would have to be scrapped.

What part of the central office administration would fit into this new complex?

According to the district, the new headquarters will contain office space for 300-350 people. However, a school district fact sheet said that in 2014, there were 940 central office staffers, though it did not break down what job classifications were part of that number.

Although the district has said one of its main goals was the consolidation of central office workers in one place, it would seem that it will continue to house staff at satellite locations or to lay off a huge number of administrators and their support staff.

How will the district pay for this complex?

The obvious pot of money is school bond funds, but there are legal restrictions that must be observed, and most of the money may be earmarked for other projects.

Rumors are circulating that the administration may want to sell the site of the old Lakeview Elementary School to developers. The district has already notified Community Schools and Student Services Department staff who work at the closed school that they will be transferred, mostly to OUSD headquarters at 1000 Broadway.

Will there be enough parking?

The proposals call for only about a total of 400 parking places for central office staff, Dewey staff and people utilizing the conference center.

A number of staff members will be expected to take BART or bus to work. However, many staff members have duties that require them to frequently visit school sites or other off-site meetings. Some would have difficulty doing their jobs without availability of a car.

http://postnewsgroup.com/blog/2015/05/23/unanswered-questions-ousd-moves-forward-headquarters-development/#more-34983

Letter from OUSD Parents United to the Board of Education Directors

April 29, 2015

Dear OUSD Board of Education Directors,

As parents of OUSD students, we are writing to you disappointed that the District has not yet reached a contract agreement with our teachers.  We are members of OUSD Parents United, a network of parents at over two dozen Oakland public schools. Parents in our organization believe that you – the elected leaders of the District – are responsible for assuring a contract settlement that will truly help make Oakland public schools the quality schools our students deserve.

We won’t repeat all the statistics to you, we know you know them. We also know that you agree with us that Oakland teachers are woefully underpaid and that teacher turnover is a problem we cannot afford to retain. Oakland teachers should be making some of the best wages in the Bay Area, not the worst. Every day that the District fails to reach a wage agreement that brings our teachers up to competitive levels without contingencies, is a day lost in our shared-goal of improving our schools.

Beyond wages, teachers and students need a contract with hard caps on the size of special education classes and caseloads for special education teachers.  We need a contract that provides meaningful ratios of counselors to students so that children can get the advice and guidance they require to be successful.

Finally, our teachers need to feel respected and valued. Some of this will come with competitive wages, but we need an OEA contract that assures veteran teachers that in the event of an involuntary transfer (or a return from an extended leave) they will not have to compete with less experienced (and less expensive) teachers for a classroom position.

As the elected leaders of the District, it is YOUR job to make sure that all of Oakland’s children receive the best possible education. If the District fails to honor its teachers with a more substantial raise, better support and working conditions and by recognizing the value of veteran teachers, we are leaving our children far short of the schools they deserve. The time is now, use your position as a leader of the District to demonstrate that OUSD values its teachers – and its children – by reaching an equitable, competitive contract for our teachers.

Sincerely,

Kim Davis

Joaquin Miller/Oakland Tech

Shaless Peoples

Sequoia Elementary

Michael-David Sasson

Glenview Elementary

Ann Swinburn

Melrose Leadership Academy

Stephanie McGraw

Hillcrest School

Melinda Gallagher

Kaiser Elementary

Kym McCourt

Crocker Highlands

Stephanie Pepitone

Sequoia Elementary

Nommi Alouf

Melrose Leadership Academy

Erin Proudfoot

Laurel Elementary

Vivian Chang

Crocker Highlands

Sarah Stephens

Cleveland Elementary

Kirsten Cross

Glenview Elementary

Amy Jo Evje

Peralta Elementary

Jody Christensen

Manzanita SEED

Parent letter to Superintendent Wilson

Mr Wilson,
I am the parent of two students in OUSD schools. I want you to know that I am committed to Oakland Public Schools and in particular the many wonderful teachers that my children have been fortunate to have been taught by over the last 12 years (and I still have 8 years left in the District!) I have spent many hours talking to and listening to teachers, parents, OUSD officials and Board Members in order to understand the issues and to form an intelligent, well-thought out opinion. My opinion is that our teachers are the cornerstone of this District. They have demonstrated their commitment to our children. I would like the Board and the District to show their commitment to those teachers, and by extension to our children, by offering a fair and equitable contract proposal. What has been offered publicly is simply not enough.

According to GO Public Schools Data, OUSD teachers are paid between 7.6% (first year teachers) and 15% (most senior teachers) lower than the average in Alameda County. That means that our District cannot expect to attract and retain the highest quality teachers unless and until it makes up that gap in year one. The 10.5% or (13.5% with added hours and reduction in health care package) includes a 3% raise in year one, so at a minimum our teachers will be between 4.6% and 12% below average (and that does not account for raises being given to other schools in that same year one). Even with the proposed (and contingent) 7.5 % raise phased in over the second contract year, our teachers will not catch up, and that is particularly true for our veteran teachers who are so critical in the stability of a school community (not to mention their value as educators). The last offer that we have seen is simply not enough.
I know that the District has limited resources and many obligations, and have heard you lauded for your cost cutting measures, including the much touted cuts to Central Administration of 25%, but do not feel that your team is doing enough to prioritize teacher demands. The claimed Central Administrative savings of 25% must have come at the expensive of lower level employees and programs, because at the upper end of the spectrum, there is a cost outlay of nearly $1 million that we did not have in 2013-14 for administrator salaries (including 4 new positions created this year). That does not even account for the outgo of Measure J funds now going at the rate of $30,000 per month to Lance Jackson or the Ed Fund money that pays nearly $200,000 to another new position holder, Mr Kos-Read. I come from the business world, I know that there are no doubt some important reasons for some of those changes, but I also know that it is a matter of setting priorities. While that million dollars in raises/new salaries at the upper echelon of central admin would not have provided enough funds to close the salary gap, every dollar counts and it would make a very powerful statement of commitment on the part of our leaders if our upper administrative officials had foregone raises until meaningful raises for their employees were provided.
You are obviously very passionate about changing the way OUSD does business, and I applaud you for that, but in my opinion that change needs to come from within the schools, beginning with the teachers, and in particular the veteran teachers, that are the core of most schools. The compensation package does not foster teacher retention, but even more importantly, the insistence on stripping teachers of seniority protections is a signal to veteran teachers that our District does not value the people as much as the process. Oakland is a challenging District to teach in, and school downsizing and closures are a fact of its existence. Why would a teacher choose to stay in this District for less money and more challenging working conditions if they knew that in the event of an involuntary transfer (or a return from extended leave) they would have to compete against much less expensive new hire teachers for a classroom teaching position, as if their years of dedication were unimportant? I understand the value of flexibility at the school site in the crafting of a team with a common vision, but a wholesale denial of the importance of seniority is NOT the way to do it. I spoke at length to Brigitte Marshall about the Memorandum of Understanding that she very proudly crafted which provided an advisory matching process for teachers to find a school (and vice versa) in which he or she could be a meaningful partner. The District clearly knows that there is middle ground between no seniority and total flexibility and they need to find it.
This is a critical juncture in OUSD: we have new leadership, new Board Members, new money from the state and a new commitment from parents to support change in this District. If the District fails to honor its teachers with a more substantial raise, better support and working conditions and by recognizing the value of veteran teachers, we will be unable to attract and retain not just qualified teachers, we will be unable to attract and retain families who will send their kids to our schools. The time is now, use your position as the leader of this District to demonstrate that OUSD values its teachers and its children by making an equitable, competitive offer to our teachers.
Very sincerely,
Kim Davis
Parent
Joaquin Miller Elementary
Oakland Tech

Why teachers are leaving Oakland

KALW piece on Oakland Teachers

Why are teachers leaving Oakland?

It’s 8:08am, the Friday before spring break, and under other circumstances Kathleen Byrnes would already be at work.

“We would be in our classrooms preparing for the day, which is where we would rather be,” she says.

But instead, she’s out in front of Oakland’s Cleveland Elementary School with her fellow teachers — not working. They’re waiting seven minutes until 8:15 am exactly. Since February, teachers have been protesting low pay by working from only from 8:15 to 3 pm — the minimum hours required by their contract. It’s called work-to-rule. And it means things that parents expect, like student evaluations, are not making their way home. They are sitting unfinished in baskets.

“And they’ve been sitting in baskets for about a month, because I don’t have time to get to them,” explains Byrnes.

Nobody thinks that being a public school teacher is an easy profession, or a lavishly paid one. But teachers in Oakland have really been feeling the pinch. Despite working in one of the least affordable housing markets in the country, teachers in the Oakland Unified School District have gotten only a few percent raise in the past decade. They’re currently the lowest paid public school teachers in Alameda County. And close to a fifth of them leave the district every year. Teacher turnover is a national issue as well, but in Oakland things have been getting more heated as contract negotiations drag on.

The union wants teachers to get a raise, smaller classes, and more school counselors. The district understands all that but says it doesn’t have the resources to go as far as the union is pushing.  And even without the contract problems, many, many teachers are unhappy in the Oakland Unified School District. Seventy percent of teachers stop teaching in Oakland in their first 5 years. Seventy percent. Nationwide that number is between 40% and 50% – which is already huge.

The money…

Just a few blocks up the hill from Cleveland Elementary, right where Park Boulevard meets 580, is Oakland High School. Here, teachers are still working more than the minimum hours, though they did protest by closing their classrooms to students  during lunch.

US History teacher Jesse Shapiro grew up in Oakland. Like a lot of Oaklanders, he’s committed to his city. He’s been a teacher for eight years, six of them here.

“Finally I’ve reached a point where it’s like I have a stride, where I can do the other nuances of teaching other than planning,” he says. “I’m able to give better feedback to students, help them out socially and emotionally. Kids come into the classroom and they know they’re going to get a good product because people know who I am around here. I’ve earned that.”

He’s also finally gotten the classroom he’s always wanted.

“Most of the classrooms don’t have windows, you can see that I have one,” he says. “The lovely corner penthouse suite that I inherited from Steven Moreno, who was our department head, who fled to a higher paying district just a few years ago.”

Right there is one of the main reasons that Oakland is losing its talent. With an average salary of $55,000, teachers like Shapiro could drive a few miles to San Leandro and get an immediate $15,000 raise. The teacher that left this room was one of Shapiro’s mentors. Shapiro says his mentor is now making close to six figures teaching in Redwood City. And if this teacher called him up —

“And said ‘hey, we’ve got a job out here, I want you out here, will you come?’ It would be pretty difficult for me to say ‘no, I love Oakland so much that I’m going to stay here and take a $40,000 pay cut.’ You know?”

…And beyond the money

Beyond pay, many teachers feel that the district doesn’t support them and doesn’t respect them. When she stops by Shapiro’s classroom, special education teacher Jessie Muldoon says she can’t afford classroom supplies. She has to use an online donations site.

“It feels pretty crummy that you’re begging from your friends and family to subsidize your job basically,” she says, adding that she thinks about leaving the district all the time.

Social studies teacher Emily Macy complains of not having enough support staff.

“We have a library but no librarian,” she says. “They’ve tried to decrease academic counselors down to two, so it’d be two counselors serving 1500 students.”

The state recommends that a school the size of Oakland High should have four or five counselors. Currently there are three. Two would be below the legal limit.

“I think in this school district there’s this expectation that we’re going to fulfill all those roles,” says Macy. “Because those actual jobs are not being funded the way they should be.”

That means when they need support, teachers look to each other. “The teachers run this school” says Shapiro. “And the superintendent’s office needs to understand that.”

Why no resources?

Troy Flint is the spokesperson for the district. He points to two reasons they have less cash than they might.

“Poor money management led to bankruptcy in 2003,” he says. “The state took control and we only gained local control in 2009, we’re still paying off over $50 million at $6 million a year.”

And second, there just aren’t as many students.

“We’re a district that in about a dozen years went from roughly 55,000 students down to about 38,000 students if you’re not including our charter schools,” he says. Most of that drop-off is because a lot of students who were in the district are now in those charter schools, and they’ve taken their funding with them. Meanwhile, the district still has almost as many schools now as it did before the students left.

“We have probably 60-70% more schools that the average California district our size,” says Flint.

This is great if you think small schools are important, but not so great if you want to trim down the budget. Every teacher I talked with was so upset about how much money goes to administration. And Oakland used to pay yearly fines to the state because too little of its budget went to paying for teachers. The district says that that’s not true anymore. And the new superintendent, Antwan Wilson, is planning on cutting almost a third off the budget for central office staff.

“That money is going out the teachers and out to school sites,” Flint says.

Teachers agree that they already have great benefits, and in this round of contract negotiations they will get a raise, but the issue is how much. The union is pushing to put them in the middle of what teachers get paid in Alameda County. The raise that the district is offering would keep them near the bottom.

Dedication to Oakland

Back at Oakland High, the bell rings and Jesse Shapiro starts lecturing on the Vietnam War.

“Good morning everybody! Take a look at the timeline. Based on the timeline – what do you notice about the history of Vietnam?,” he asks the students.

With few resources and better job prospects one city over, you might ask why teachers stay in this city at all. Shapiro’s at an age when many teachers either cast their lot with Oakland or move on. He can see it both ways.

“I have a friend I went to middle school with,” he says. “His daughter is a freshman at Oakland High. And she’s going to be in my class in a couple years. He chose to send his daughter here and one of the reasons is he says ‘Oh – you know, your Uncle Jesse’s going to be able to watch over you.’”

On the other hand Shapiro’s wife — who’s also a teacher, but in Hayward — is pregnant. So they need to decide not only what’s best for Oakland but what’s best for their family.

“I’d say right now I’m probably 60-40 I’m going to stay,” says Shapiro. “I feel a sense of responsibility to give back to the district that I grew up in. But on the other hand if I were to leave, I just think about like, you know, people from this community who grew up in this community who want to teach in this community don’t because they don’t feel respected.”

Contract negotiations have been going on for over a year, but will hopefully be wrapped up by June. Their outcome will help make those hard decisions for Jesse Shapiro and all the other Jesse Shapiros in the district.

http://kalw.org/post/why-are-teachers-leaving-oakland