Cause for Pause

AUGUST 13, 2011 11:05PM

A candid letter from Your Local School District

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BREAKING: Coming to a district near you! Watch for it.

At this time of year, it’s customary for many school districts to send parents a Back-to-School letter.  These letters typically express excitement about the upcoming school year; tout campus renovations and technology upgrades; and provide a list of classroom supplies.  This year, that letter probably will read a little differently.

  Andy Welch offers the following as the appropriate message for parents to hear this year.  Welch recently retired as  communication director for the Austin Independent School District.  He previously worked as a reporter at the State Capitol, and as a communication officer for both the Texas Department of Agriculture and the State Comptroller of Public Accounts

 Dear  Parents:

  We would like to tell you that we are excited about the start of the upcoming school year.  But that would not be entirely true.

  This past summer, the Texas Legislature cut $4 billion in overall funding for public education, and the impact will be felt in classrooms across the state.  Regardless, we pledge to provide your child with the best education possible, in a clean, safe school.

This will be a challenge in a state that previously ranked 44th in funding for public education, and is now likely to fall even lower among the 50 states.

 

You should know how budget cuts are likely to affect your child’s education:

~~ Statewide there will be fewer teachers.  Some teachers were laid-off; others retired, and we eliminated their positions; other teaching vacancies were simply left empty, to save money.  This will mean larger class sizes and fewer academic options, especially at the high school grades.

 ~~ The focus on the new high-stakes STAAR accountability test will likely mean that we’ll try to find savings in subjects that will not be tested, so expect to have fewer art and music teachers, especially at the elementary grades.

 ~~ While state leaders like to tout Texas’ potential in a global economy, our ability to provide students who can speak German, French, Japanese, Chinese, and other foreign languages, will be diminished.  We simply can’t afford to hire the teachers.

 ~ To continue with an effectively full-day pre-kindergarten program, some districts will now be charging tuition, based upon a family’s ability to pay.

 ~~ Because of rising transportation costs, many field trips for culturally-enriched art and music programs will be cancelled. [One district will be charging $180.00 per child per year for bus-riding privileges]

~~ School maintenance is not protected from budget cuts.  So, if your scout troop or service club is looking for a project, please contact your child’s principal.  They, undoubtedly, will have a ‘to do’ list of projects that we don’t have the money to tackle.

 ~~ Higher food prices and utility costs are causing many of us to increase cafeteria meals by 5-10 cents.  Still, it’s nutritious food, and is the only balanced meal that many students receive daily.

 ~~ For those of us without artificial turf in stadiums, we’ve done our best to keep athletic fields watered this summer, despite the drought.  That’s not because we want them to be lush, but because if they are nothing but rock-hard patches of dirt, our young athletes are at greater risk of injury.

 ~~ Speaking of athletics, some of us are moving into the era of “pay to play,” in which athletes and band members may be required to pay a fee to participate.  We recognize that these fees will present a hardship for many of our students, especially those from low-income families. [An Ohio district has cancelled its entire football program for the year due to low student participatio]

  We would like to think these financial challenges are temporary.  We would like to think that, when it convenes in 2013, the Texas Legislature will restore the funding it cut.  However, we are placing greater faith in the courts.  For four decades, our lawmakers have balked at adequately funding public education, until forced to do so by threat of lawsuit.

 Only a handful of us, so far, have chosen to go to voters — who are cash-strapped as well — asking for more revenue through a Tax Ratification Election.  The rest of us will cut corners, and dip further into reserve funds, hoping it doesn’t adversely affect our bond ratings.

 We know that these are difficult economic times for most Texas families. These are also tough times for Texas schools.  Nonetheless, you have our pledge that we will do our best to provide the academic support that your child needs to succeed.  In return, we hope that you will continue to support us.

  Sincerely,

 Your Local Texas School District

 

http://blog.chron.com/texaspolitics/2011/08/a-more-candid-letter-for-school-parents/

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Sadly not only Texas schools are also affected. I don't see a great future for public schools.
You're right, Lunchlady. Every school in this country will be affected as we are just now feeling the effects of those massive cuts to Education.
texas can only hope for mass war. that's the way rich people discover the utility of poor people. right now they are getting along with hired soldiers, what used to be called 'mercenaries,' but when mexico realizes it can get california back there will be be a need for conscription and conscript soldiers often turn on their masters.

if the gummint inadvertently puts a 'chavez' in charge on the southern front, no telling what might happen. school funding and free lunches at least.
Old Chinese proverb: "The sage-king keeps bellies full and minds empty".

You know, a lot of Tea Party jargon (look at Tea Party Facebook sites) purports to be a solution to the so-called moral decline of the United States. But, not just judging from the spelling errors on Tea Party rally signs, but judging as well from the sheer anti-intellectual mentality of those wackazoids, the Tea Party is a sign of moral decline.

The urge to privatize every government function and thus hollow-out the government could and eventually will have a profound effect on quality of life in America--and Texas is a belwether example of what a dearth of adequate education can do to the citizenry. Soon, we will have government in-name-only and everything, including the armed forces, will be privatized. Could we be entering into a Second Age of Mercantilism? Or is this merely a trend borne by good times, something bad times will obliterate.

Just go to the library and look at history books written in the forties and compare them with books written in present times. The disparity is frightening. Whereas books written in the forties are clearly written and concise, books today tend to be sloppily-written examples of poor grammar skills.
Hey, Gordon - I've used many textbooks during my teaching career, grades 1 through 12, and haven't seen too many that were sloppily written. Poorly constructed and shallow, maybe, but those never made it to full adoption, where I was, anyway.

What I HAVE seen are the subtle censorships taken on by the publishers, not the infamous board, in American & British literature. Anything that was inflammatory or painted the US in a bad light was simply left out.

Another thing I know for certain is that the teavangelicals want to take all textbooks back to the McGuffey Reader days. Every page, every short story, every example were Biblically b[i]ased. When my grandmother died several years ago, we found 7 volumes in the attic.
Lack of adequate public funding for public schools has become increasingly worse and has made it much easier for the oligarchs to hijack out government and run it as they now do. Schools are only part of the destruction of quality of living standards that puts the USA at the bottom of evaluations of this category in industrialized nations.
The God giveth and For whom the bell tolls.
It's pretty much the same here in Ireland. Mine has thankfully moved on to University now, but I will never forget the NOT enjoying the beginning of the school year. and the constant cuts and price rises from school bus, books, uniforms, you name it, it cost.
I know, Fiocle. Same here.

I am thankful every day of my life that I do not have to deal with the school scene as a parent anymore, only as an Activist.
Every public school will be affected by this cut funding and we all will feel the consequences. A teacher from masters in criminology told us about this at a seminar, we should expect to see higher food prices, utility costs and so on. Things are getting uglier every day, what surprises are to be expected in the following months?
So, is OS eating comments, too??