Bilingual education fight plays out off stage

by Chris Reed | October 25, 2016 8:12 am

handout-yes-58California’s crowded Nov. 8 ballot is leading the media to perform a kind of triage and focus on only a handful of the measures deemed most crucial. This has lead to a spotlight on proposals to make it easier for some prison inmates to gain parole (Proposition 57), to legalize adults’ recreational use of marijuana (Proposition 64) and to either scrap the death penalty (Proposition 62) or streamline death penalty appeals (Proposition 64).

This approach may make sense in a year with 17 state ballot measures. But it is a source of great frustration for advocates or opponents of other measures involving important issues.

A prime example is Proposition 58[1], which would return bilingual education to California schools 18 years after it was scrapped by Proposition 227. The measure was put on the ballot by the Legislature at the behest of state Sen. Ricardo Lara, D-Bell Garden. It would allow schools to enroll students in Spanish-only or other language classes without parental consent. Presently, parents must sign a waiver for students to receive such instruction.

With the strong support of teachers unions and the state Democratic Party, Lara has framed the measure as being about creating a cosmopolitan bilingual workforce. He notes the measure allows the Legislature to modify or eliminate it if it isn’t working well. And he cites provisions in the measure that would ensure it avoids the biggest problem of the previous version of bilingual education in California: students never learning English, spending their school days hearing only Spanish.

“All kids should learn English. What we’re questioning is the method we use to get there,” he told the Bay Area News Group.

Ballot rebuttal knocks claim 227 was successful

The ballot argument for Proposition 58 frames the measure as being about improving the instruction of English. The pro-58 side’s rebuttal argument also questions claims that Proposition 227 was broadly successful, citing a survey showing test scores didn’t improve in a five-year span after 227’s approval.

This deeply frustrates Ken Noonan, the former Oceanside Unified superintendent who co-signed the ballot argument against Proposition 58 along with Ron Unz, the Silicon Valley entrepreneur who sponsored Proposition 227 in 1998. Noonan was a skeptic of 227 until he saw how quickly Spanish-speaking students made gains in English-immersion classes.

“Why screw up a good thing?” Noonan told[2] the Sacramento Bee in August. “This is working. This is working so well.”

While test scores may not present a clear picture of failure or success, some other metrics support the idea that Proposition 227 has been successful, starting with the sharp decline in the number of Latinos who quit high school before graduation.

In 1999, according to methodology developed by the Urban Institute, the graduation rate [3]for California Hispanics was 58 percent. (Official state records from before 2005 are considered unreliable. A sweeping study[4] released that year by the UCLA Civil Rights Project concluded that state metrics sharply exaggerated the percentage of students graduating, leading to major reforms.)

According to the statistics released by the state Department of Education earlier this year, the rate of Hispanic graduation reached 78.5 percent[5] in 2015, an all-time high.

Nonetheless, Lara and the well-funded yes on Prop. 57 campaign appear to be coasting to victory in polls. In an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, he depicted his measure as a triumph of common sense.

The senator said California should not have “non-educators dictating how we teach, in a one-size-fits-all approach. We should give that right back to the teachers, who are the experts.”

Endnotes:
  1. Proposition 58: http://voterguide.sos.ca.gov/en/propositions/58/
  2. Noonan told: http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article94068542.html
  3. graduation rate : http://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/alfresco/publication-pdfs/900794-Who-Graduates-in-California-.PDF
  4. sweeping study: https://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/school-dropouts/confronting-the-graduation-rate-crisis-in-california
  5. 78.5 percent: http://www.cde.ca.gov/nr/ne/yr16/yr16rel38.asp

Source URL: https://calwatchdog.com/2016/10/25/bilingual-education-fight-plays-off-stage/