La Verne Magazine
Spring 1999
"Education in La Verne"
Students Reap Benefits of 20:1, Proposition 227 ... Or Do They?
by Erin Grycel
photography by Michael P. Bailey

From a child's perspective, the effects of class-size reduction are insignificant.
But to Lisa Young, a second-third grade combination teacher at Oak Mesa
Elementary School, the 20:1 student-teacher ratio has mandated that she
balance the workload of two curriculums.
Silently ticking in the back of the classroom, the clock moves forward.
Tick ... Tick ... Tick ... Brrng! At 2:05 p.m, students scramble from their
desks and are released from school, but, for teachers and administration
at Bonita Unified School District (BUSD), the day seems to have just begun.
With two new state measures, class-size reduction and the end to bilingual
education, teachers have been bombarded with permission slips, planning
curriculums and budget management.
According to Lorna Horton, Ph.D., assistant superintendent at BUSD,
the "district was overjoyed when the state inaugurated the K-3 Class
Size Reduction Initiative in California." Nevertheless, she adds, "We
had to make changes. I don't think anyone was really ready in the state
of California."
As class sizes are reduced to the 20:1 ratio, BUSD has had to hire nearly
30 new teachers to meet the state requirements.
Anita Flemington, Ed.D., former principal of Roynon Elementary School,
says, "We literally had to scrape the bottom of the barrel."
Now an assistant professor of education at the University of La Verne,
Flemington looks back and says, "Even though we had to hire some of
the teachers on emergency credentials, they have come out to be excellent
teachers."
"It is dangerous to say that just because someone is on an emergency
credential they are not good," adds Flemington.
Despite the individual attention that students are guaranteed with the
mandate, panic has risen within the District about teacher competency. Susan
Brown, principal at Roynon Elementary School, affirms that the new teachers
"came in with a lot of enthusiasm and new ideas."
"I would put them against any teacher that has been through the
program," she says.
Taking a step back, Tom McGuire, chair of the Education Department at
ULV, analyzes the overall impact of the new measure. "It is a step
in the right direction, but there are some immediate problems," McGuire
says.
With emergency credentialed teachers, he says, "Someone has to
be in front of every new classroom, but that someone might not know much
about teaching."
Another immediate concern is the amount of money that has been expended
by the district to cover the influx of teachers and classrooms.
"The state provided $800 per pupil to offset the costs," says
Horton. "Of course, it did not cover everything," she adds.
Brown simply replies, "Thousands and thousands of dollars came
out of the regular BUSD budget." In fact, 24 portable classrooms were
built in the 1997-'98 school year for the additional classes.
Higher test scores have also been one of the main goals to reducing
class size.
"This problem is not a quick-fix situation," says McGuire.
"We cannot reduce class size one year and expect to see [immediate
progress]."
Regardless of what level students have placed on national test scores,
employees throughout BUSD agree that a change has taken place within the
children. "Teachers are noticing that students work at a harder pace;
there is not much review, and they are more at grade level," says Horton.
To look at the panoramic view of teaching, Flemington says, "We
looked back at teaching. We had to change our teaching [methods] because
the [former] strategies were just not working."
Christina Serra, a third grade teacher at Roynon Elementary School,
comments on her own teaching strategies. "The class is more productive
because there are smaller groups [of students] and more individual time."
Thinking for a moment, Brown affirms that "the greatest benefit
is the one-on-one attention that students receive, whether for acceleration,
tutoring, or feedback."
There appears to be few, if any, drawbacks to the state measure. However,
Lisa Young, a second-third grade combination teacher at Oak Mesa Elementary
School, faces an additional challenge as a result.
With nine second graders and nine third graders, Young balances twice
the amount of regular curriculums and lesson plans within half the time.
Students chosen for this type of learning environment are "independent
and have few behavioral problems," she adds.
Although this provides an opportunity for Young to grow professionally,
"There should be some sort of an incentive [for the job]," Young
says.
Proposition 227
Reduction in class size, individual attention and higher student performance
are the new visions for education. But what if the child does not understand
English? The demise of bilingual education occurred with the passage of
Proposition 227, which stipulates that teachers instruct children in English.
With the new mandate, these teachers were given the right to assist
students who had difficulty with the transition to English. But even this
opportunity was excusable for a year-long period.
"We have a very low number of LEP (Limited English Proficient)
children in the district," says Horton. With 3.6 percent of the student
population enrolled in bilingual education, she adds, "We have not
been affected very much; we qualify as an English-only district."
There is a Spanish-Assisted Learning Program that allows teachers to
provide support for children who do not understand a concept in English.
"There was a lot of anxiety in the District. Parents must sign
a form that allows a child to be helped with certain concepts in Spanish,"
Horton replies. However, the lesson "cannot be taught in Spanish."
Although there is a small number of children who were enrolled in bilingual
education, Flemington says, "Some of the children are going to fall
between the cracks.
"It has been proven that children learn best in their primary language
instruction, transitioning to English."
The real confusion of the new measure does not lie within the political
state arena, however, but within the everyday classroom. "I have seven
LEP students; only two parents signed the permission slip, which means that
five other students cannot be helped at all with concepts in Spanish,"
says Serra.
"Countless money was wasted on a new reading series that can no
longer be used because it is in Spanish," she continues.
Beyond the stipulations of the mandate, the main emphasis of the measure
is to create an effective learning environment for Spanish-speaking children.
"Even though the situation is not ideal, we should turn it and make
it into a positive one," says Flemington.
Within the classroom, Serra says she has tried to provide new learning
methods for her students. "I teach lessons with more vocabulary, move
at a slower pace and use numerous visuals."
In previous years, there was an increase in B-CLAD (Bilingual Cross
Cultural Language and Academic Development) credentials as a result of the
rise in bilingual education. Aside from the implementation of Proposition
227, Flemington affirms, "We are still granting B-CLAD credentials.
We still have to look and see how we are going to best educate these children,"
she says.
"Even though the law changes, the children do not change; they
still cannot speak English," says Serra. "I will still have to
find [innovative] ways to teach these children."
It appears that change is the dominant word throughout the educational
system of the state of California. Perhaps just as the seasons change, so
do the laws. In some cases, the results of these changes drastically altering
classroom policies and student development.
Reducing class size and providing English-only policies have created
refreshing and innovative strategies to teach children, along with a half
dozen new quandaries to solve within the system.
Education may never reach complete perfection because there will always
be inevitable changes within teaching theories.
But, as the morning bell rings for a new school day to start, the 20:1
ratio and English-only policies fade from the minds of many teachers. Anxious
children will begin to occupy their seats with yearning eyes, waiting to
learn new things.
Throughout the day, they may begin to explore the history of the United
States and the Civil War, learn how to solve word problems, begin reading
their favorite "Goosebumps" book ... but not before they can anxiously
recite "The Pledge of Allegiance" with fellow classmates.
At that moment, teachers may begin to realize that they have met their
destination. For most educators, that is to take a journey with their students,
all the while helping to develop and cultivate their young minds along the
way.

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