Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
How Newsom Would Close the Achievement Gap in California Schools
By admin
Published 3 years ago on
June 1, 2022

Share

 

When Gov. Gavin Newsom unveiled his revised state budget last month, he boasted about increasing public school spending to $128.3 billion or nearly $23,000 per pupil with a goal of “completely reimagining the education system.”

What does that mean?

Newsom envisions universal access to pre-kindergarten care and education and transforming neighborhood schools into “community schools” that “partner with education, county, and nonprofit entities to provide integrated health, mental health, and social services alongside high-quality, supportive instruction, with a strong focus on community, family, and student engagement.”

Dan Walters

CalMatters

Opinion

The budget describes the “California for All Kids” plan as “a whole-child support framework designed to target inequities in educational outcomes among students from different demographic backgrounds, and empower parents and families with more options and more services.”

Its promise of integrated services mirrors another Newsom program to overhaul Medi-Cal, the state’s system of health care for the poor that serves a third of the state’s population. The new approach, dubbed “CalAIM,” would “move the whole person care approach that integrates health care and other social determinants of health, to a statewide level with a clear focus on improving health and reducing health disparities and inequities, including improving and expanding behavioral health care.”

Medi-Cal providers would not only be responsible for medical services but helping clients with other aspects of their lives, such as housing and income support.

Universal pre-kindergarten, community schools and CalAIM, if fully implemented as imagined, would move California toward more comprehensive — or perhaps intrusive — involvement in the lives of the roughly 14 million Californians who live in poverty or near-poverty with the goal of improving their lives and perhaps breaking the cycle of poverty. The interventionist approach also extends to another Newsom initiative called “care courts” that would compel mentally ill homeless people to undergo treatment.

They are experiments in social engineering that conceptually mimic Western Europe’s tradition of cradle-to-grave services.

The new vision’s education component might be the most difficult to implement because of schools’ historic focus on classroom instruction and the money to deliver it. Getting kids through 12 years of schooling is difficult enough, educators might say, without saddling them with responsibility for their families.

However, it’s unmistakably clear that California’s schools are plagued with a stubborn “achievement gap” separating poor and English-learner students from their more privileged peers, one that surely widened during the COVID-19 pandemic.

A decade ago, then-Gov. Jerry Brown persuaded the Legislature to take a different approach by reforming the school finance system to give more money to school systems with large numbers of students at risk of academic failure.

Newsom’s new budget builds on the concept by requiring local schools systems, beginning next year “to offer expanded learning opportunities to all low-income students, English language learners, and youth in foster care…”

So, one might wonder, what would it really take for the 60% of students who fall into those “high needs” categories to catch up with the 40% who flourish in the public schools?

Would integrating education with family-oriented social and health services do the trick? Or would it take billions more dollars on top of the budget’s $128.3 billion?

The Public Policy Institute of California recently released a report on that question, summarizing the many academic studies of the relationship between money and educational achievement. Generally, it concluded, more spending does have positive educational impacts, but closing California’s achievement gap could cost as much as $10,000 more per pupil each year.

That would boost current spending by nearly 50% and cost up to $60 billion a year, probably a politically impossible amount.

About the Author

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers. He began his professional career in 1960, at age 16, at the Humboldt Times. For more columns by Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

The TikTok Effect: Viral Videos Create the Next Travel Hotspots

DON'T MISS

‘The Studio’ Knows the Real Reason Movies Are Bad

DON'T MISS

US-China Tariff Talks to Continue Sunday, an Official Tells The Associated Press

DON'T MISS

Has America Given Up on Children’s Learning?

DON'T MISS

Could Trump Team Suspend Habeas Corpus to Expedite Deportations?

DON'T MISS

Two Teens Charged in Shooting Death of Caleb Quick

DON'T MISS

India and Pakistan Agree to a Ceasefire After Their Worst Military Escalation in Decades

DON'T MISS

Ukraine and Allies Urge Putin to Commit to a 30-Day Ceasefire or Face New Sanctions

DON'T MISS

Soviet-Era Spacecraft Plunges to Earth After 53 Years Stuck in Orbit

DON'T MISS

Tax the Rich? Slash Spending? Republicans Wrestle With Economic Priorities in the Trump Era

UP NEXT

Jerry Springer — Yes, That Jerry Springer — Can Save the Democrats

UP NEXT

Other States Are Showing California How to Protect Its Budget Without Cutting Needed Services

UP NEXT

State Bar’s Botched Exam for New Lawyers Is CA’s Latest Entry to the Hall of Shame

UP NEXT

I Applaud Fresno Unified’s New Focus, but the Plan Needs Work

UP NEXT

Iran’s Leader Hopes America Can Save His Faltering Regime

UP NEXT

Clash Over Teen Sex Solicitation Reveals the Rift Within CA Democratic Party

UP NEXT

This Is the Moment of Moral Reckoning in Gaza

UP NEXT

The Valley is Driving California’s Economic Growth

UP NEXT

Trump Is About to Steal My Friend’s Christmas … and Yours

UP NEXT

Newsom Jabs at Trump and Musk, but Will AI Make California More Efficient?

Has America Given Up on Children’s Learning?

1 day ago

Could Trump Team Suspend Habeas Corpus to Expedite Deportations?

1 day ago

Two Teens Charged in Shooting Death of Caleb Quick

1 day ago

India and Pakistan Agree to a Ceasefire After Their Worst Military Escalation in Decades

1 day ago

Ukraine and Allies Urge Putin to Commit to a 30-Day Ceasefire or Face New Sanctions

1 day ago

Soviet-Era Spacecraft Plunges to Earth After 53 Years Stuck in Orbit

1 day ago

Tax the Rich? Slash Spending? Republicans Wrestle With Economic Priorities in the Trump Era

1 day ago

Israeli Airstrikes Kill 23 in Gaza as Outcry Over Aid Blockade Grows

1 day ago

Experts Call Kennedy’s Plan to find Autism’s Cause Unrealistic

1 day ago

Trump’s Trip to Saudi Arabia Raises the Prospect of US Nuclear Cooperation With the Kingdom

1 day ago

The TikTok Effect: Viral Videos Create the Next Travel Hotspots

A recent study from TripIt and Edelman Data & Intelligence discovered 69% of millennials and Gen Z use social media to find inspiration ...

9 hours ago

https://www.communitymedical.org/thecause?utm_source=Misfit+Digital&utm_medium=GVWire+Banner+Ads&utm_campaign=Branding+2025&utm_content=thecause
9 hours ago

The TikTok Effect: Viral Videos Create the Next Travel Hotspots

9 hours ago

‘The Studio’ Knows the Real Reason Movies Are Bad

24 hours ago

US-China Tariff Talks to Continue Sunday, an Official Tells The Associated Press

1 day ago

Has America Given Up on Children’s Learning?

1 day ago

Could Trump Team Suspend Habeas Corpus to Expedite Deportations?

The Clovis Police Department identified two suspects they have arrested in connection with the murder of Caleb Quick, 18, at a Saturday, May 10, 2025, news conference. (GV Wire Composite)
1 day ago

Two Teens Charged in Shooting Death of Caleb Quick

1 day ago

India and Pakistan Agree to a Ceasefire After Their Worst Military Escalation in Decades

1 day ago

Ukraine and Allies Urge Putin to Commit to a 30-Day Ceasefire or Face New Sanctions

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend