This is an archive of a past election. See http://www.smartvoter.org/ca/scl/ for current information. |
The questions were prepared by the Leagues of Women Voters of Santa Clara County and asked of all candidates for this office.
See below for questions on
Funding,
Instruction,
Future
Click on a name for candidate information. See also more information about this contest.
Answer from Patricia C. "Pat" Flot:
Answer from Viola Smith:
Answer from Christine Ellen "Chris" Koltermann, Ph.D.:
Santa Clara Unified School District (SCUSD) is a 'Basic Aid' district, which means that local property taxes are our major source of revenue. In fact, our schools receive a larger proportion of our property tax dollars than any other government agency, with 38% of our property taxes going to SCUSD.
Taxpayers have the right to know how our school district allocates its resources. The school district should at all times have publicly available information about all sources of funds coming into the district versus how those funds are allocated. Information must be written in a manner accessible to our community.
As a Trustee, I would require that our schools report how federal, state, and local funds are spent in the following ways:
Answer from Anna M. Strauss:
Answer from Ina K. Bendis, MD:
A Trustee's primary fiduciary duties are governing with fiscal responsibility, ensuring educational equity for all students, and holding Administration accountable for cost-effectively implementing the Board's direction. In the 2010-2014 term, our Board will have two immense and far-reaching jobs, both of which impinge on these fundamental duties: [1] Hiring a new Superintendent and, [2] Implementing a new long-range strategic plan.
I will advocate for a broad and robust Superintendent search, rather than merely "promoting from within" as our District has tended to do in the recent past. My professional experience in Executive Search will add value to my role as a Board Member, in this endeavor. Our District's next leader must have the courage and strength to make needed changes that narrow and ultimately obliterate our achievement gap, and truly meet the learning needs of every child. He or she will also need the team-building skills to inspire all stakeholders to embrace and take ownership of those changes. (See below).
The 2010-2014 Board will also need to develop and begin implementing a long-range strategic plan to deal with our increasing enrollment and changing demographics. This difficult and painful decision making process will necessarily involve reopening closed schools, expanding existing schools, restructuring schools, acquiring land for and building new schools, and changing some school boundaries. As the local economy recovers and developers resume previously-planned building, we will need to negotiate contracts for purchasing land and building new schools. My experience as an Attorney and Real Estate Broker, my Masters education at Stanford Business School, and my CSBA Masters In Governance training, uniquely enable me to add value to the Board's decisions and implementations.
How will I keep the Community informed?
The Board acts as a unit, so all formal reporting to the Community on behalf of the District must come from the Board through its Actions at and Minutes of Public Meetings. In that context, I will continue my advocacy for open and transparent governance on the part of the Board and the District, with full compliance with all "sunshine laws" both in their letter and in their spirit. I will also continue to ask questions when clarification is needed, to share my perspective during Board discussions and deliberations, and to actively encourage all other Trustees to do the same, to ensure our Public fully understands our reasons for voting one way or another, on any given Agenda Item.
In addition to each Trustee's responsibility to provide insight to the Community by asking questions and providing our rationales behind our votes at Board Meetings, I believe each Trustee also has the duty to reach out and be available to Community Members who have questions or concerns. This way, we stay in touch with the people whose interests it is our job to represent, and to whom we are ultimately accountable.
Answer from Patricia C. "Pat" Flot:
Answer from Christine Ellen "Chris" Koltermann, Ph.D.:
While SCUSD has seen growth in API scores at many schools, too many students remain below proficient in English/Language Arts and Mathematics. The data show that proficiencies peak in 4th grade in our district and then start a long, slow, slide downward all the way to the end of high school. Many children start middle school and high school without being proficient in the basics. I believe that we need earlier intervention for students who are struggling.
We have an achievement gap in our district at many of our schools, with many of our Title 1 schools obtaining lower API scores than our non-Title 1 schools. Following trends observed nationwide, the achievement gap shows up in standardized testing as early as 2nd/3rd grade and persists through high school.
There are instructional techniques which have been proven to help close the achievement gap, such as direct instruction, frequent readiness assessments coupled with readiness groupings. One of our district Title 1 elementary schools, Bracher, has closed the achievement gap using quarterly assessments (NWEA MAPS assessment tools) coupled with readiness groupings in English/Language Arts and Mathematics, direct instruction, and teacher collaboration. As students learn the readiness groupings are re-evaluated. The curriculum used is the same throughout the district, but the learning results differ because of the implementation of different instructional methods. Starting September 2010, more of our Title 1 schools are using the NWEA MAPS assessment tools. As a Trustee, I would want to see the successful instructional methods used at Bracher propagated to our other elementary schools. We owe it to our students and families to use the best available teaching practices throughout the district.
In addition, our district has 2 alternative elementary schools with substantial waiting lists. One school is our back to basics school, and the other is our parent participation school. The waiting lists show the popularity of these schools with district parents; SCUSD needs to expand its alternative offerings to satisfy the demand for alternative education within our district.
Finally, the number of SCUSD students who are transferred to charter schools also shows that our district parents are seeking alternative forms of education for their children. Our district has a responsibility to provide for the diverse educational needs of our families.
Many district families are asking for more educational choices at the middle school and high school level. We are in the heart of Silicon Valley, and many families are asking for more focus on math, technology, and science in our schools. In addition to meeting the needs of students who are not yet proficient in English/Language Arts and Mathematics, we need to provide a challenging educational environment for our students who are proficient or advanced in their studies. Answer from Ina K. Bendis, MD:
During my 2006 campaign I advocated passionately for expansion of our successful Basics programs and for readiness-leveled classrooms, because this combination of educational methodologies provides the most cost-efficient and effective way to attain top achievement for every child. During my first two years on the Board, I met substantial resistance on the part of Administration and some fellow Trustees, but during the past two years I've been gratified to see progress on both fronts. Our 2010 CST scores demonstrate that emphasis on mastering Basics and creating classroom environments geared to meet each child's readiness to learn, especially in Math and English, can result in total obliteration of the achievement gap with 100% proficiency before the end of elementary school, regardless of socioeconomic backgrounds, race, culture, or native language. (See below.) This year our District is expanding our readiness-leveled approach to learning in some additional Title One schools, and we plan to expand our Basics-plus Open Enrollment program at Millikin Elementary School.
This is a good start, but it is just a start. While it's true that not every child will thrive in a Direct Instruction, Basics, Readiness-Leveled Classroom environment, it's also true that every year many hundreds children whose parents see this as the best learning environment for them, are denied the opportunity to access it. Merely expanding Millikin by one or two classrooms for each grade level, or adding a section or two at Peterson Plus is not nearly enough to meet this growing need. Therefore, I will continue my impassioned advocacy for continued expansion of our Basis programs at both the Elementary and Middle School levels, until we have sufficient Basics-plus spaces to meet our children's needs.
Our budgetary challenges have necessitated reductions in staff, increased class sizes and cutbacks in important ancillary programs, and have prevented us from giving our fine teachers and staff the kinds of compensation increases they merit. Yet, I was the only Trustee who advocated and voted against spending our scarce monies on Administrator promotions with pay raises and on huge expenditures on consultants, one of whom we paid $130,000 annually for two years in a row over my strenuous objection. I will keep my firm commitment to spend whatever discretionary funds we have to support our Teachers and Staff in our classrooms and schools, rather than to promote Administrators and hire expensive consultants, so our children will directly benefit. Answer from Anna M. Strauss:
Answer from Viola Smith:
Answer from Anna M. Strauss:
Answer from Patricia C. "Pat" Flot:
Answer from Christine Ellen "Chris" Koltermann, Ph.D.:
The next superintendent must work diligently to hold administrative staff and teachers accountable for implementing instructional methods which have been shown to close the achievement gap. I want our next superintendent to propagate methods - such as the frequent assessments coupled with readiness groupings in individual subjects, direct instruction, and grade-level teacher collaboration - to all of our schools.
The next SCUSD board will also be responsible for implementing a new long-range plan for our school district. Our district is growing at a rate of 400 students every 2 years (the equivalent of one elementary school every 2 years), primarily because Santa Clara Unified is growing due to the amount of new housing being added to the cities in our district (Santa Clara, and parts of Sunnyvale and northern San Jose). Unless we take appropriate steps, our high schools are projected to increase to 3000 students each. Some of our campuses already have portables to deal with overcrowding. Our district will be re-opening some of its elementary schools that have been rented to private schools, but more space will be needed in the future, particularly at the middle and high school levels.
Our district has placed a bond measure - Measure H - on the ballot to purchase land on the north side of our district (Agnews). This land will be used eventually for a new high school and, I hope, a new middle school. The land is being sold by the state at below market rates. With the tremendous growth in housing on the north side of Santa Clara Unified, we really do need a middle and high school in that area. I hope voters will see the value in purchasing this land to keep our secondary school sizes reasonable and to strengthen our property values. Increasing the quality of our schools raises our property values and therefore increases the property taxes upon which our school district is primarily funded.
I want to see Santa Clara Unified partner with the City of Santa Clara, private businesses, and non-profit agencies to create SC2020, just as San Jose schools have partnered with the City of San Jose, private businesses and non-profit agencies to create SJ020, an organization dedicated to closing the achievement gap by 2020.
As a small business owner, I understand the need for the business community to have a well-educated workforce. As a scientist, I understand the need to strengthen the math, science, and technology teaching in our schools. As a parent who devoted more than 2000 hours to volunteering in SCUSD schools, I understand the dedicated parental involvement that helps make our schools strong and the desire of parents to have the district provide educational options for families. As a property owner within SCUSD, I understand how strongly the quality of our schools affects our property values.
For more information about my education, experience, community service history, and vision for our school district, please visit:
http://www.chriskoltermann.com Answer from Ina K. Bendis, MD:
The Board you elect will hire our new Superintendent, and by 5 years from now that person will have had ample time to analyze our strengths and weaknesses, get the Board's authorization for his or her recommended educational fiscal and management strategies, and implement changes to continue improving the education we provide our students and the accountability we owe our Community. I want to see a Superintendent in place who has expertise, creativity, vision, proven leadership qualities, and a collaborative style that invites inquiry, analytic thinking, and respect for varying views. To "get there," we will need to undertake a broad, robust search for the best-qualified candidate with proven effectiveness in implementing successful approaches to education, which will further our District's educational mission while at the same time fitting in with our District culture.
Regardless of what any Candidate "wants," the Board you elect will realistically have many more students to educate 5 years from now, due to continually increasing enrollment and continued new housing development in our District. As a Basic Aid District we depend on property taxes to survive, so our ability to continue providing the best possible education, to meet all students' needs, will necessarily depend on how quickly the Silicon Valley economy recovers from its current downturn. The money that will flow to us from the new will have started to provide some respite, but not nearly enough to meet our needs. Therefore, in addition to wanting an end to the recession, which is not something you or I have much control over, I desperately want to see passage our Bond proposition, Measure H, without which we will not have the money to provide the facilities and infrastructure our students will need in 5 years. To "get there," every current Board Member and every Candidate, whether or not running in this election, must actively advocate for passage of Measure H, and every voter should weigh the small cost against the huge benefit so we have the funds we need to do our job. Please help us "get there" by supporting our District -- Your District! -- with your Yes! vote on Measure H.
For many years we have known, from our experience at Millikin Elementary, that an educational approach using Basics, practice-makes-perfect and readiness-leveled classrooms can result in 100% proficiency in Math and English for affluent children with well-educated parents. Now, our experience at Bracher Elementary has proven these methods can achieve 100% proficiency in Math and English for all 4th graders, and nearly as high in 5th grade, regardless of socioeconomic status or other challenging demographic characteristics. What I want 5 years from now is for these kinds of effective practices to become our District norm rather than our District exception. The only way to "get there" is for our 2010-2014 Board to search for and hire a Superintendent with the courage and skills to institute the changes we need to accomplish this throughout the District, and then hold Administration accountable for providing all children the top achievement we have proven is possible for us to deliver, regardless of whether they win a lottery at Open Enrollment time and regardless of what school boundary they reside in. This means that, to "get there," our Voters must elect candidates who have consistently advocate for the kinds of changes we need, and who have consistently demonstrated the courage to hold Administrators accountable. Answer from Viola Smith:
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