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Monday, Feb. 04, 2013

Dan Walters: Education code may get longer

An amusing -- or appalling -- incident occurred in the Legislature in 1995, involving the state's Education Code, the body of law that purports to manage how 6 million school kids are educated.

Delaine Eastin, the state's superintendent of public instruction, and the Legislature's most prominent education authority, Assemblywoman Deirdre Alpert, staged a news conference to decry the length and complexity of the "Ed Code," as it's called, and called for streamlining its provisions.

But just 21 hours later, Alpert arose on the Assembly floor to support a bill that would add even more verbiage to the Ed Code provisions she had said should be simplified.

And that's why the Ed Code fills an entire shelf of law books with legal decrees that even the most diligent educator cannot fathom, much less obey.

While Gov. Jerry Brown is frontally assaulting how schools are financed -- seeking to shift more state support to schools with many poor and-or non-English speaking students -- his attack on centralized curriculum control is more oblique.

The guts of the control system -- scoring schools and school districts on their "academic progress" as measured by student testing -- was the biggest accomplishment of former Gov. Gray Davis, who was Brown's chief of staff during his first governorship.

Davis was recalled by voters for his mishandling of budget and energy crises, but has clung to school accountability, as it has been dubbed, as his major positive step.

Brown has already signed one bill changing the accountability system for high schools and has signaled that he'd like to go further -- which also puts him in league with teacher unions, which have been battling the notion that test scores should be used to judge teacher competence and-or be used by parents to take over failing schools and convert them into charters.

Meanwhile, however, there are more new bills to add more complexity to the Ed Code, including one that would mandate teaching the contributions of Filipinos to California society and another that adds teaching personal finance as a mandate.

Email: dwalters@sacbee.com. Twitter: @WaltersBee.

THE SACRAMENTO BEE

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