Students at George Washington Elementary in Madera on Oct. 29, 2024. A push is on to emphasize phonics in reading instruction. (CalMatters/CatchLight Local/Larry Valenzuela)

- California ranks seventh from the bottom in federal academic testing, with a wide achievement gap.
- Political focus on cultural issues distracts from addressing the real crisis of low academic achievement.
- A new bill encourages evidence-based reading instruction, following Mississippi's successful model.
Share
This commentary was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters.
When Gov. Gavin Newsom unexpectedly voiced opposition to allowing transgender women to compete in women’s sports, he was throwing gasoline on an issue that was already burning in state and national political arenas.
“I think it’s an issue of fairness,” Newsom told right-wing iconoclast Charlie Kirk on the inaugural segment of the governor’s new podcast. “I completely agree with you on that. It is an issue of fairness. It’s deeply unfair. I’m not wrestling with the fairness issue. I totally agree with you.”
The remark generated a tsunami of media commentary about Newsom’s motives and a torrent of criticism from fellow Democrats, particularly LGBTQ rights advocates. It also focused attention on two Republican bills that would ban transgender women from women’s high school and college sports.
Related Story: White House Plans to Pause $175 Million for Penn Over Transgender Policy
Legislative Maneuvers on Transgender Sports Bills
Ordinarily, given Republicans’ lack of legislative clout, Democratic leaders would just dump both bills in the wastebasket, as they have done innumerable times.
However Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas is allowing Assemblywoman Kate Sanchez of Rancho Santa Margarita and Assemblyman Bill Essayli of Corona to present their measures, Assembly Bills 89 and 844, to the Assembly’s Committee on Arts, Entertainment, Sports and Tourism.
That’s probably as far as the measures will go. The Legislature’s influential LGBTQ caucus will see to that. But the maneuver protects Rivas from allegations that he was not willing to have at least a discussion on the issue that Newsom, for whatever reason, chose to highlight.
Related Story: Newsom Tacks Right to Oppose Transgender Athletes in Women’s Sports
Neglecting the Real Educational Crisis
While these well-orchestrated events feed political junkies’ voracious appetite for cultural conflict, they also underscore the pathetic lack of interest Capitol politicians have in a real crisis, the shamefully low levels of academic achievement in California’s schools.
California fares very poorly vis-a-vis other states in federal academic testing — seventh from the bottom — and there’s a yawning achievement gap separating low-income students from their more privileged classmates. Moreover, California is one of several states whose students still lag behind pre-pandemic achievement levels.
A few days ago, the Washington Post published an article by Rahm Emanuel, former mayor of Chicago and chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, about the neglect of educational achievement.
Emanuel called it a “Sputnik moment in education” and declared that “almost no one among the nation’s purported adults seems to want to solve the problem.”
Emanuel continued, “On both sides of the aisle, we’re caught in wild and beside-the-point education debates — whether the Education Department should be closed, which students should change in which locker rooms or participate in which sports, and whether curriculums should be stripped of diversity, equity and inclusion. All those disagreements deserve a hearing. But they are shiny baubles distracting us from the real crisis — namely, our children’s failure to meet basic standards in reading, writing and arithmetic.”
That’s precisely what’s happening in California.
Related Story: Newsom Condemned by Fresno County Democrats Over Transgender Remarks
Successful Approaches to Improving Education
Emanuel cited examples of states that have taken educational achievement seriously, one being Mississippi, where deep poverty is a way of life.
“Mississippi’s early embrace of ‘the science of reading’ — that is, the restoration of phonics in teaching literacy — has led to what some call a miracle: The state’s reading scores for fourth graders rose from 49th nationally in 2013 to ninth in 2024,” Emanuel noted. “We ought to be bringing these approaches to scale with urgency.”
Phonics has made some inroads in California, but unlike Mississippi, California has not fully embraced it, despite ranking 33rd in fourth grade reading.
That could change if the Legislature adopts AB 1121, a newly introduced measure by Assemblymember Blanca Rubio, a West Covina Democrat, with support from EdVoice and other education reform groups.
The bill would encourage school districts to adopt “evidence-based means of teaching foundational reading skills.”
It deserves at least as much legislative attention as the transgender bills.
This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.
Make Your Voice Heard
GV Wire encourages vigorous debate from people and organizations on local, state, and national issues. Submit your op-ed to bmcewen@gvwire.com for consideration.
RELATED TOPICS:
Americans Trade Michelin Stars for Mac and Cheese
5 hours ago
Andrew Tate’s Ex-Girlfriend Accuses Him of Sexual Assault and Battery in New Lawsuit
21 hours ago
Protesters Rebelling Against Elon Musk’s Purge of US Government Swarm Tesla Showrooms
21 hours ago
Plastics Are Seeping Into Farm Fields, Food and Eventually Human Bodies
1 day ago
Myanmar’s Earthquake Death Toll Jumps to 1,644 as More Bodies Are Recovered From the Rubble
1 day ago
If You Want to Ski Affordably Next Season, Buy Now
1 day ago
Merced Police Chief: Local Sexual Assault Exams ‘Worth’ Higher Cost
3 hours ago
Categories

Merced Police Chief: Local Sexual Assault Exams ‘Worth’ Higher Cost

Americans Trade Michelin Stars for Mac and Cheese
