EDUCATIONALLY SPEAKING
Gay Geiser-Sandoval
Class size reduction is having an impact on our school district’s
budget, which was passed last Tuesday night. This impact will be felt
even more in the next two years. The question that remains is whether the
expense will result in corresponding student improvement. A recent
article in the Los Angeles Times suggests that, in most cases, the
benefit is not worth the cost. The students that benefit the most are
those who escape a disruptive child in their class. But a class of 27
well-behaved kids may not receive enough educational benefit to warrant
the additional costs.
As I sat through the budget meeting, which was attended by three
parents, I tried to identify those additional costs. There are 859.40
teachers this year as compared to 802 last year. While the budget
anticipates 300 additional students in the district, more teachers were
needed for the reduction of class size in kindergarten and ninth-grade
English and math classes. This year, the average teacher’s salary in our
district is $48,592, with benefits of $10,942, for a total of all teacher
salaries of almost $50 million. In 1998-99, those numbers included a
salary of $44,375, benefits of $10,224, for a total of $47.3 million. So,
the district needed an additional $2.3 million for teacher salaries this
year.
As you will recall, the teachers renegotiated their contract to allow
bigger increases for those at the beginning of their teaching careers.
Due to an enticing retirement package two years ago, coupled with
class-size reduction, many of our teachers are at the beginning of their
teaching careers. Over the next two or three years, the district will
need to come up with considerably more money for teachers’ salaries than
it did last year. The money provided by the state for class-size
reduction has remained almost constant, which means that teachers’
salaries will eat into the rest of the budget pie.
Another added cost of class-size reduction is the need for more
classrooms. Since most schools do not have modular construction, a room
that once served 27 students now houses 20 students. As more of the lower
grades are reduced, schools that could once house 900 students will be
able to house only half that amount. As a result, school sites have been
reopened, programs have moved from one site to another, and expensive
portable classrooms have been added to some campuses.
More indirectly, where a principal’s salary covered working with more
than 900 students three years ago, that same labor cost is now serving
half as many students. More principals are needed as more school sites
open up. Our elementary schools now range in size from 264 to 865
students. Only the largest school has an assistant principal, even though
the other schools range in size from 264 to 737 students.
A more surprising comparison is in the clerical staff positions
assigned to each elementary school. One school with 264 students has
2.057 clerical positions, while one with 528 students has 1.28 positions.
The school with 737 students has less clerical staff than the one with
264; the school with 865 students has only 2.68 clerical, even though it
has more than three times the number of students as the smallest school,
which has 2.057.
The issue of classified staff, which is essentially everyone but the
head honchos and teachers, came up at the board meeting, with respect to
the high schools. Those numbers are even more skewed at the high school
level than at the elementary school level. The clerical positions at the
four largest high schools are either 9 or 10, even though the student
population doubles from largest to smallest. In other words, at one high
school, the ratio of clerical to students is 1:122, while at another it
is 1:247. However, it is more skewed if you add in the other secondary
schools, where the ratios are 1:88 and 1:80. The principal/assistant
principal ratio also varies at the conventional high schools between
1:595 and 1:368, down to 1:80 at one of an alternative school. The
counseling staff varies from a high of 1:556 to a low of 1:40. The
highest counselor-to-student ratio may explain why that school’s students
had a six-hour wait to change their schedules.
This year, district funding may change from one where the funds come
from the state, based upon the number of students we have enrolled and
seated in desks (i.e., seat time) to one where the funds come from
district property taxes, plus $120 per student from the state. If
property tax funds rise, the district will have the same amount of funds
available, whether the students it serves are from inside or outside the
district borders. For this reason, the district has decided not to accept
student transfers from other districts without a good reason. However,
those already enrolled can stay throughout their K-12 education.
Interestingly, the secondary school listed above with the most favorable
ratio of clerical, principal, and counselors to students, draws 30% of
its students from outside the district. Its general fund allocation per
student is over $5,000.00, whereas another high school’s general fund
allocation is about $2,732.00 per student.
The inequities in clerical and classified staff with respect to the
conventional high schools were pointed out by one of the board members.
She makes the point every year. Once again, district staff agreed to look
into it. The budget was passed unanimously. I’m wondering if the
inequities will ever be rectified. Maybe that’s why just about everybody
stayed away from the budget meeting. I might be happier if I hadn’t
mathematically analyzed the budget figures. Or, if my ninth-grader didn’t
have 36 kids in her math class. Does that equal 20 to 1?
GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL is a Costa Mesa resident. Her column runs Mondays.
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