Guest Blog: Funding Education in Washington

By Senator Rosemary McAuliffe and Senator Eric Oemig

Untitled1Redefining the funding
formula for Basic Education is the critical catalyst for moving our K-12 educational
system into the 21st century. It is our responsibility as Chair and Vice Chair
of the Washington State Early Learning & K-12 Committee to identify and implement policies that allow all children the opportunity
to learn and to support educators with the resources they need to deliver a
quality education for every child.
In the 2009 session we redefined
Basic Education (House Bill 2261)
which sets a pathway for essential improvements needed in our educational
 system.


We started work this summer and fall
by traveling around the state and conducting listening tours — the sole purpose
being to listen to what teachers on the ground have to say and make sure our
objectives align with real needs. We realize every classroom and school has
unique needs
and that one size does not fit all. By speaking with multiple
teachers from across the state, we have gained insight into the types of reform
that will be meaningful for teachers in different classrooms.

Here is some of what we heard from
teachers:

  • The real discussion that needs to happen is about
    how the state is going to revamp the tax structure in order to fund our schools
    better and increase revenue.
  • Over the years the education budget has become a
    smaller percentage of the overall budget and yet schools are being asked to do
    more.
     
  • Both the professional development and
    certification process needs to be something that helps teachers in the
    classroom, not just more process and more hoops to jump through. 
  • Evaluation needs some focus on the administrator's
    role rather than always focusing all the attention on the teachers.  
  • Procert seems like it was a “bandaid” response to
    the underlying problem of lack of quality control.  One of the values of
    Procert is the introspective aspects of it, but that would potentially be more
    helpful later in the career of a teacher.
  • An accountability system must look at all that
    impacts a student's learning: parental and societal responsibilities, state
    obligations, and federal obligations.
  • Districts need some accountability in terms of how
    they allocate the money to the schools and how that impacts student
    achievement.
  • Policy makers need to understand the realities of
    all students as you create new standards and measures of accountability — one
    size does not fit all.  
  • Basic Education must be more broadly defined than
    just Math, English, and Science.  
  • Smaller class sizes is the most important part of
    improving education in Washington.
  • Teachers are not opposed to data collection or use
    of data, just make sure you are using and looking at the right data and that
    the data is accurate.
  • Administrators don't have the time they need to
    really be an effective instructional leader and work with teachers.
  • The state is accountable for funding education and
    shouldn't be holding teachers accountable when the state isn't giving schools
    the money needed to do the job.
  • Need to blend the early learning programs with the
    K-12 system.  
  • Community and parent involvement in the classroom
    is a valuable resource that needs to be encouraged but in a way that does not
    create additional burdens for teachers.

We have brought these thoughts, and others, back to the Quality Education
Council
(QEC). One of the main short term
objectives is to address the "implementation" of the new definition
of Basic Education and the policies and funding necessary to support it. The
long-term objective of the QEC is to build the constantly evolving 10-year plan
for
Washington K-12 education — establishing goals and priorities for
education in order to make sure all students have the opportunity to learn.  


By listening to the hundreds
of teachers around the state and discussions through the QEC, we plan to move
forward with the following steps:

  1. Recommendations to the Legislature for how to
    convert the current funding formula into a prototypical school funding formula
    at current levels of state spending (The
    "Crosswalk").
  2. Recommend a Program of Early Learning for at risk
    children.   
  3. Recommend a schedule for phasing-in any increases
    in program requirements concurrently with increases in funding, with full
    implementation by 2018. 
  4. Consider a phase-in schedule for a new pupil
    transportation funding formula.  
  5. Work with the Achievement Gap Oversight Committee
    to integrate programs that address the achievement gap into everything we do.
  6. Closely monitor work on the Accountability System
    and the Education Data Improvement System and consider recommendations from the
    QEC to the Legislature to support continued progress on these objectives. Also,
    monitor the development and implementation of the new certification system.
  7. Consider a statewide beginning teacher mentoring
    and support system.
     

There are many steps involved with
bringing policy to practice and the above steps are just a start. As we move
forward with the effort to redefine Basic Education, we want to continue
engaging teachers and administrators around the state. We recognize the state
needs to provide the necessary resources and tools to ensure that policy can
become practice. This is a shared responsibility
of everyone involved.

Warm Regards,

Sen. Rosemary McAuliffe, 1st District, Chair of Early Learning & K-12 Committee


Sen. Eric Oemig, 45th District, Vice Chair of Early
Learning & K-12 Committee

9 thoughts on “Guest Blog: Funding Education in Washington

  1. kristin

    Senators McAuliffe and Oemig,
    I admire that you’ve taken so much feedback and managed to narrow it down to a short list of things you’re planning to accomplish. That makes sense, and fills me with hope that you will be successful.
    I ask you to consider the importance of early learning for all children, not only those who are “at risk.” You don’t have much time to support a child before kindergarten – five quick years. The resources that would be spent identifying which children are “at-risk” and tracking the program’s effectiveness in reducing those risks would be better spent providing support to every child.
    Offer early learning opportunities to every child, and let parents who choose other options for their child opt out of the public pre-K program. Every child in our state deserves access to quality pre-K care.

  2. Sean

    Thank you, Senators McAuliffe and Oemig, for taking the time to understand the realities of schools and teaching.
    As a teacher-librarian, I’m glad that you’ve looked at the educational program holistically. You seem to understand that students aren’t widgets and classroom teachers aren’t assembly-line workers (sadly, too many aspects of the system are still based on that industrial model). Instead, all teachers, parents, administrators, support staff, and other stake-holders must work collaboratively to ensure that our schools provide all students with 21st century skills.
    I’m hopeful that the current work of the funding formula, data governance, PESB, OSPI, and other groups can build on good things already happening in schools–as well as support our efforts to improve and reform to better help our students learn.

  3. Aleta Matteson

    I appreciate the comments and bulleted summaries. Thanks to a caring community. I work with middle school ELLs and see a huge challenge ahead of us to better meet their needs. I also appreciate the essential need for consistent arts education and more user-friendly texts and resources. The trend toward technology is important, but a balance is needed. I think a better funding model is critical. Relying on Campbell’s soup labels (for example) is embarrassing. I think we can do better, and I will be watching to see our progress.

  4. Tom

    If you want my opinion (or even if you don’t) start where it starts: Early Learning.
    As a third grade teacher, I consistently see a heartbreaking gap between those students who had an adequate preschool experience and those who didn’t.
    From my perspective, there is no better investment in the future of our state than to provide a rich Early Learning experience to every child in Washington.

  5. Nancy

    Thank you so much for your efforts, Senators, and for sharing this information. I specifically want to speak to one of the bullet points from your listening sessions:
    “Evaluation needs some focus on the administrator’s role rather than always focusing all the attention on the teachers.” As a teacher who works with many different buildings in my district, I see the impact on teaching quality (and thus student learning) that a strong principal makes. Accountability has to start with principals and district administrators, who form the policy, distribute the funding, and determine priorities. Poor decisions leave teachers to adapt to environments that may go against their better instincts, as the ones who are in the trenches.

  6. Kim

    Thank you, Senators, for taking time to communicate directly with teachers on this forum. There is a daunting lists of tasks ahead of you, and I thank you for taking it on.
    I would love to see some specific mention of arts and vocational programs in your agenda. There is a bullet point that states: Basic Education must be more broadly defined than just Math, English, and Science. However, while we need to make sure that every student has the option of college, we also need to acknowledge that for many, their formal education will end with graduation from high school. There are many skills that can be taught in high school vocational programs that will prepare our kids for the work force, but many of the students for whom those programs would be most useful are prevented from participating because the must take remedial programs that are geared towards passing a very flawed state test.
    As Mark mentioned above, one of the most important things you can do is to keep teachers involved in all legislative issues that relate to public education.
    Thank you again for sharing your time and information.

  7. Brian

    I think it is clear that one of the factors that can have the biggest impact on student learning is the quality of their teachers. So I think one of the most important things you heard in your listening tour was that administrators don’t have the time they need to really be effective educational leaders, or to work with teachers. I would add that the desire to leave the classroom and become an administrator says something about their commitment to teaching. Maybe they aren’t the people in the system who are best qualified to evaluate or mentor teachers.
    So I would urge you to do more than “consider” a statewide beginning teacher mentoring and support system. I would like to see this state’s growing cadre of National Board Certified Teachers used as mentors, and not just with beginning teachers. Let’s use people who have demonstrated their commitment to the classroom. If the purpose of the evaluation process was to increase teacher effectiveness, rather than just check the boxes so they can keep their job another year; now that would be true reform.
    Thank you for taking the time to listen. That in itself is a huge step forward.

  8. Mark

    I have no doubt that the tasks described in the post were quite the undertaking. The bulleted points and recommendations encapsulate much of what I think is important to remember as we move forward with education reform in Washington.
    The tough part will be negotiating the vast array of stakeholders whose own interests and contexts create their lens for considering the funding and reform priorities you describe above.
    I think the fact that we’ve maintained a strong set of state Standards (GLEs/EARLs) despite changes in assessment models, keeps our focus squarely on what we want students to learn, and now the rest of the system can be shifted toward a model where effective teaching can facilitate student progress toward those well-established learning outcomes.
    I, for one, appreciate your emphasis on keeping teachers involved in this evolving ten-year reform process.
    The recommendations you describe, especially the phased-in rollout of different parts, makes good sense. How do you foresee teachers being able to further help facilitate continued reforms?

  9. Bob Heiny

    Dear Honorable Senators,
    Thank you for the concise, easy to read summary of your legislative efforts on behalf of student learning in Washington public schools. It’s good to see you refer to assisting all public school students, I assume to meet state measured minimum academic performance standards. Given the sources you cite, the summary makes sense.
    I note two absences in the summary. Your attention to these will assist interested parties to understand more clearly a core part of the rationale for revising funding.
    1. The absence of direct references to what legislators expect students to learn. This reference will assist educators and parents to know what to watch in order to identify if revised funding accomplishes anything for students.
    2. What does it cost for a student to learn /a/? This question addresses the monetization of learning, an inferred rationale teachers and others use to describe what resources they need to increase student learning. Even a quick estimation would provide a useful index against which educators can plan what and how much to adjust to fulfill state expectations from funding revisions.
    Best wishes with your effort, and thank you for listening to teachers.

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