THROUGH MY EYES -- Ron Davis
I’ve been getting serious pressure from some readers to provide an update
on Bobo. For those of you who missed it, Bobo is a small, albeit a very
smart, canary who apparently enjoys “reading” my column.
According to his owner, Bobo enjoys having my column, and particularly my
column photo, placed at the bottom of his cage, so that he can target my
views.
In response to the pressure, I contacted Bobo’s owners who advise me that
he is still an avid “reader.” In fact, they report that he is actually
relieved every time my picture hits the bottom of his cage.
I received an e-mail from a reader who took me to task over my support
for Measure A (the high school bond measure), arguing that other school
districts in Orange County have done better than the Huntington Beach
Union High School District.
The reader asserts that since all of the districts receive the same
amount from the state per student, and other districts get better
results, our district must have misspent the money and doesn’t deserve
our support on the bond measure.
The reader set up as their example some of the premier districts in our
area, which I consider somewhat unfair. It is somewhat like arguing that
Billy, who is an A-minus student, is actually failing, when compared to
Nancy, who is an A student.
The appropriate comparison isn’t district to district, but how our
district compares to Orange County, and how we both compare to the
national averages.
We need to remember that education is not only a function of textbooks
and teachers, but is affected by parental involvement, which varies from
district to district.
Thus, it is never surprising when students who come from higher income
homes, with a greater percentage of parents who have a college education,
generally do better than other students without those benefits.
Moreover, we have to recognize that national testing, such as the
Stanford 9 test, while certainly better than a bunch of administrators
telling us how well we’re doing, is in its infancy and is not a science.
Thus, relying on those test scores as a complete answer with regard to
where any of the districts stand educationally is pretty iffy.
But in answer to the reader’s challenge, here’s what I found out
utilizing the test scores:
On a grading scale, the state of California should get a D for education
spending when compared to the national average. As I reported earlier,
California is 37th in the nation on per-pupil spending and well below the
national average.
Accordingly, one would expect that with a D grade for spending, our high
school system would produce kids who achieve only D grades when compared
to the national average.
Actually, Orange County is doing a heck of a job with the money and
producing kids with educational skills just a hair above the national
average.
Huntington Beach Union High School District is doing a little bit better
than the county average, and just a hair below the premier districts the
reader uses as an example.
But the differences between the premier districts in the area, the
county, and our district are almost negligible. What is important is that
while our high school district receives D money, they are producing
results more than a letter grade above what we should expect them to
produce.
However, none of us in this area, or in the state for that matter, should
be satisfied with producing kids with average educational skills, even if
accomplished with a below-average budget.
If our goal as a community is to produce kids with an average education,
mission accomplished -- at less than it should have cost.
On the other hand, if we want to start our kids out in life equipped with
the educational tools that allow them to compete effectively rather than
exist in the middle, we have to pay to renovate our deteriorating high
schools.
To say it more succinctly, we have no hope of ever getting A’s without
supporting Measure A.
* Ron Davis is a private attorney who lives in Huntington Beach. He can
be reached by e-mail at ronscolumn@worldnet.att.net.
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