Will billions close California’s educational equity gaps?
Los Angeles Unified had the largest disparity among non-charter schools: The rate of fully credentialed teachers was 22 percentage points higher at schools serving more affluent families than at schools serving more low-income students, according to the CalMatters analysis. Saroja Warner of the research nonprofit WestEd :“It’s sort of this perfect storm in high-poverty communities. Teachers are another thing they don’t have access to.” Kai Mathews of UCLA’s Center for the Transformation of Schools :“There are counties where there isn’t a teacher preparation program in a 50-mile radius. … It’s almost impossible to get teachers to go to these areas.”
Deanna Niebuhr, California policy director for the Opportunity Institute and who has worked to develop community schools, told the Los Angeles Times :“It’s an important moment, and a serious moment, with this amount of money. It’s not clear that this will work. But we believe it’s our best chance for real change in education.”
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