Heads Up!

I have written many posts where I express to readers my utter frustration, dismay, shock and anger over actions by various assemblages of the Seattle School Board and various superintendents over my decade+ of being a public education blogger. You'd think I'd be used to it. 

In my defense, nothing really surprises me anymore so there's that. But the sheer hubris of what comes out of the mouths of the directors and superintendent and senior staff is sometimes breathtaking.

But this post is really about giving you a heads up. As you may recall, the district seems bound and determined to change transportation from two-tiers to three-tiers ALL because of money. That would be bad enough. (I note that the petition against the change has over 800 signatures in 3 days.)

However, the Board had a Budget Work Session yesterday that was very disturbing. Details below but here's my big takeaway hunch:

The district is on a very steady downward enrollment trend, losing hundreds and hundreds of students and guess what? They care that they are losing money but they have no real desire to figure out why. 

I believe that the district is flirting with the idea of closing some schools, primarily in the north end. 

Work Session

I sat through an hour and a half of this Work Session but stopped when there was a lengthy discussion of the African American Male Achievement (AAMA) initiative in the middle of it. I didn't listen to the last 20+ minutes but I will today. They did not say anything about closing schools directly but it seemed fairly clear to me. 

The key issue - as always - is money. The documentation has several early slides on enrollment.

State enrollment has declined by 3.46% since October 2019.

SPS enrollment has declined 6.41% since October 2019, very particularly in K-5.

The slide on page 7 has the district's projections and they have not done well over the last 4 years.

2017-2018 - under by nearly 800 students. 2018-2019, under by over 700 students. 2019-2020 over by nearly 1400 students, 2020-21 under by over 1600 students. This year's projection was under by by nearly 2,000 students.

Enrollment head Ashley Davies had this to say:

- There was slowed growth through 2018-2019 BEFORE the pandemic began.

- No, they don't have a demographer any longer because "we have different people who do parts of that." Well, if your projections in normal years are off, maybe you need that person.

- They use cohort progression rates (how many students move to next grade), birth rates, long-range resident projections and annual school projections (where students enroll) for their projections.

- Seattle has experienced a decline in birth rates, housing costs and inflation (and these are nationwide trends). Also mentioned but not explained "other social issues." What's interesting is that during this time, Seattle continued to grow with more people moving here.

-They are projecting a very steady decline in enrollment thru 2025-2026. 

Director Liza Rankin asked an interesting question - "Does the district adjust and adapt or do their need to proactively retain or increase enrollment?" And, what will boundary changes mean (which are coming because of the dissolving of the current HCC model)? 

Plus, as one astute reader recently pointed out, doesn't the new Census data mean that the Board should be working on board district boundaries?

HOWEVER, the question was raised by Director Leslie Harris and Director Rivera Smith about finding out where these students all went and why. I note that this question has been asked, over and over, for more than a decade with the district saying, "We'll have to look into that" and they NEVER do. It was noted that there is kinda a way to do it, depending on whether the parent/guardian lets the school or the district know. Harris pointed out that it is likely that the district could glean some of this data from OSPI and the enrollment of Seattle private and charter schools. No takers on that.

HOWEVER, Ashley Davies says this is a cycle that happens so... If that's true, there's one GLARING problem.

Why, if enrollment comes and goes in cycles and the district was due for a down cycle, did the district invest MILLIONS in fixing up and reopening 8 schools AND adding capacity to several more? What was the point of that? (Sadly, no one asked this question while I was listening in.) Here's just the latest on that issue on Alki Elementary. To be clear, Alki is in bad shape so this makes sense. Adding on capacity does not.

It's pretty damn sad that there are buildings that continue to be in poor shape but the district just HAD to build new ones.

What was even more upsetting is that basically Directors Hersey and Hampson don't care where these students have gone. Almost like, "They are not our concern any longer." They said that they have to be directing the resources they do have to the African American Male Achievement Initiative.

There are two key slides in the documentation on pages 11 and 13. One is about enrollment and one is about capacity used at each school. To be clear, they don't name schools but you can pretty much figure it out if you use the OSPI website and the district's website. I will suss all that out later today. As well, some schools are not at capacity by the hand of the district, not because of enrollment. See Cleveland High School. 

But they state that there are seven elementary schools, not in "Equity Tiers 1 & 2" that have less than 200 students. There are 15 that have less than 250 and only three of those are in those equity tiers.

There are two K-8 with less than 200 students. I know for certain one is Licton Springs and there are many reasons - district-driven - why that is.

There are no middle schools with fewer than 200 students.

There are 2 high schools with fewer than 200 students. However, as Director Leslie Harris aptly pointed out (I paraphrase), "How do you put a price on schools that save lives?" These two high schools are Sugiyama High School for teen parents and Middle College which is a last resort for students who have issues that cannot be met in a comprehensive high school. Both serve largely Black and brown students. However, two high schools that have just over 200 students are Nova High School (229) and The Center School (268) serving mostly white students (albeit many LGBTQ students).

Hampson asked if the student outcomes at smaller schools different than larger ones? I would say that depends on if you are speaking of purely academic outcomes or outcomes that keep kids in schools. I'll break down the four smallest high schools:

                           size   cost per pupil   graduation rate   attendance rate

Nova                  229   20K.                 52%                     99%

Center                268.  18K                  87%                     92.6%

Middle College  94.    32K                  82%                     85%

Sugiyama           25     39K                  61%                     17.3%

I'll just note that Middle College and Sugiyama deal with students in crisis, hence the higher costs.

To contrast:

Roosevelt.       1580   15.5K.                94%                     93.5%

Cleveland         980.   17.3K.                97%.                    94.6%

West Seattle.    908.    17.3K                97%.                     94,6%

Harris had several questions but only three got answered. What about families with IEPs who left? Ukrainian refugee children coming in?

Superintendent Jones asked, "How do we hold on to current students, recapture those we lost (disgruntled about services?)" and how to show "we are the best thing in town?" He said they would look at the data and understand projections and be realistic about using space.

But then Hampson and Hersey both chimed in about "not being economists" but Song Maritz who actually does have a background in economics, asked about "a pattern of underestimating and do we need to reexamine the model?" Budget head JoLynn Berge said that Seattle is "so complicated and it's tough." A bullshit answer if ever there was one.

There was discussion that perhaps kindergarten was so underenrolled because of parents' fears about COVID and that the district will see a bigger 1st grade the next school year. Director Hersey said "Yo, as a former 2nd grade teacher, he saw more kids start in 1st and 2nd." That may be true but for many working parents, they need their student in kindergarten. Not all parents have the choice to keep their child at home (if indeed, that's where those kids are).

He continued on, "I'm not sold on exit surveys or what is causing to leave will impact our ability to serve black boys and teens. Are they the ones leaving?" Kind of breathtaking in its myopic viewpoint but wait, it continues.

He said they need "a clear understanding of how all schools are and their outcomes." We should "tie this back to our Strategic Plan and see what is working and what is not." "There is no guarantee we can convince anyone to come back and we should focus resources on who is here."

Hampson said that Hersey's statements were an "excellent refocusing of comments." She said they need to be proactive, not reactive.

Harris came back, saying that asking where students are going doesn't preclude working on the Strategic Plan.

Jones said he liked Harris and Hersey's framing and "where we need to start the analysis." BUT IT'S ALMOST MAY? NOW YOU'LL START THIS WORK?

Then, for whatever reason there was a lengthy discussion of the work and the money being spent on the AAMA initiative.

Interestingly, Hampson says, "I just received this info yesterday so I apologize for not having questions ready." What?! Why should Board members apologize when staff gets info to them very late? It's disturbing to hear Hampson bow to district staff like that.

She asked if "continuous improvement costs money" and the answer was yes. She then said that she wanted Berge to let her know if additional resources are being used "for goals and guardrails." (See the slides in the documentation.)

She also referenced "spending extra money" to learn to be a Board that frames everything through student focused outcomes governance and that "they made it cheap for us." I assume she means the Council on Great City Schools" and it's $45K a year just to be a member. How much is being spent on consultants is unknown.

Hersey said he was going to take the budget "to community" and "ID the thru-line to our goals."

I gave up at an hour and 40 minutes (for a two-hour meeting) because the discussion on the Strategic Plan was very long. No talk about transportation and the last section had a single page for Special Education. 

There's a slide in that section on page 25 labelled Department and Program Budgets. One section is "districtwide leadership" and I'll be darned if I know what that means.

Also, on page 26 there is a slide that shows for the "Schools and Continuous Improvement" portion of the budget with $122M+ in "reserves." The next slide states:

School reserves includes capacity for fundraising, annual underspend, potential new grants received during the year and start of school adjustments.

I will have to ask exactly what that all means but it sure sounds like a very slushy reserve of dollars.

Key dates:

June 6 - BAR(Board Action Report) to Audit&Finance Committee

June 15 - Introduce Budget to board at Board meeting

June 22 - Budget work session

July 6 - Public hearing on the budget

July 6 - Board adoption

Lastly, I don't know what was up with Director Michelle Sarju but she declined to ask any question and spend a great deal of time, stretching and pacing in the background. I have no idea why but she clearly wasn't taking any notes. 

Comments

Anonymous said…
Big picture economic and demographic shifts are in play here. But so is the abysmal performance of the district in COVID-times. And it’s a bit annoying to be treated as a pile of dollars and not individual student needs when the district talks enrollment.

The financial reckoning needs to happen. It was never a great idea to retain staff as students left the district starting in 2020. They are not coming back. I am very curious what the unions’ take is at the prospect of schools closing and staff layoffs. SEA has been strangely quiet for a few months. What’s up with that?

It will be an interesting dance to see Board members posture about shifting the burden to well resourced schools, when the reality is that they already carry lots of the financial burden (per the student cost numbers you provided) and the district needs their enrollment to subsidize other schools. The district needs to get over its aversion to engaging with families if they’re serious about keeping the wheels on over the next few years.

Times Up



Seattle Parent said…
According to US News, the top-rated Public High School in the Seattle area is SPS Garfield at #10, then SPS Roosevelt at #11. According to Niche, Garfield ranks #17 in the state and Roosevelt #18. The University of Washington is rated the top college in Washington state. Yet, one graduating senior I spoke with said almost no one got into the UW this year from Roosevelt. In other words, if you want your kids to go to a top high school and attend the UW, don't send them to Seattle Public Schools.

Seattle Public Schools has made national news for calling math "racist" and refusing to remove a homeless encampment from a local elementary. And it has ended walk-to-math, three years of middle school foreign language, advanced science, and history, honors English, and countless other advanced classes and programs that served over 25% of all students, all in the name of equity.

I know multiple doctors, law professors, tech executives, and health research directors who have all pulled their kids out of Seattle Public Schools. All support equity, and all except for one are liberals. Where do district leaders think these hiring managers tell their new recruits with families they should enroll their students?

Ninety percent of SPS Rainier Beach High School students failed their state math tests last year, while 100% received As in math.

This should be no surprise because, during COVID, Seattle Public Schools didn't require students to turn on their cameras in class while giving them all As, meaning the district has no idea who showed up, even though every student was given a laptop and those who needed it were provided free internet. Just because someone has a Ph.D. in education doesn't mean they know what a virtual background is. All done in the name of equity.

My students are doing great because when our family was told that class was limited to 20 minutes a day total at the start of COVID, we were fortunate enough to be able to backfill aggressively. But the disastrous policies have not ended, the disastrous leadership has not changed, and we continue to backfill, which we can afford to do, but this is not equity.

I believe School Board Director Eden Mack was right when she resigned from the school board last year, calling Seattle Public Schools dysfunctional and calling for state intervention.

Thank you, President Chandra Hampson, School Board Director Liza Rankin, Chief Academic Officer Keisha Scarlett, Superintendent Janet Juneau, and Superintendent Brent Jones for ruining so many kids' lives. I realize you are well-intentioned, but your policies have been a disaster.

Yes, please hire a data scientist to understand why enrollment is down.
Anonymous said…
Thanks for such a great post for so many of us with no time (or inclination) to attend such a meeting. Following the politics of the Seattle School Administration is more morbidly fascinating than slowing down to see a wreck on the freeway. I just wish there wasn't the accompanying fear of our children being passengers in the involved vehicles.

Veteran Parent of Seattle Schools with 7 down and 10 to go!


Veteran Parent, yes, there is a "what will they do/say next?!" appeal to it.

Seattle Parent, you said:

"I believe School Board Director Eden Mack was right when she resigned from the school board last year, calling Seattle Public Schools dysfunctional and calling for state intervention."

I think Mack was right but I also think she was a coward. I perceive her action might have been a mental health issue but she sure left the Board in a lurch.

As for what else this all might be, I have another theory. That maybe, just maybe there are those in the district who want to see the district fail so that the City will take it over. Keeping Brent Jones as superintendent, of course, and the Mayor appointing the Board directors.
Outsider said…
Seattle has always been a paradox -- soaring housing prices and a knowledge worker economy but public schools being relentlessly dumbed down in the name of equity. I couldn't imagine putting a child in elementary school now, and it seems that a lot of others feel the same way. Declining enrollment must be a combination of two trends:
1) everyone moving into Seattle now with children, and buying multi-million dollar houses, must be able to afford private school
2) Seattle is undergoing a transition from families to single people and gen-Z dog couples who don't have and don't want children

Generation Z is famous for virtue signaling, and they have a hundred excuses for not having children, but I am guessing a key unstated one is: public schools no longer offer any sort of good education. If you wanted your children to replicate your knowledge-worker status, you would need a half million dollars in cash per kid for private school, even before considering college, and not everyone has that, or wants to commit themselves to the corporate treadmill for 25 years to make it possible.
Northender said…
It seems like forever ago but it's only been about 5 years since north-end schools were having capacity issues - so one way of looking at this situation is that the board has found a creative way to address the capacity problem! SPS seems on track to continue to provide a marginal education to students who are not self- or family-driven to study.

Although federal funding decreases with reduced enrollment, Seattle voters have always come through when asked to pass a levy to fund schools. My cynical impression is that SPS will not have serious concerns about fewer students until a levy fails. But what would it take for a levy to fail?

Melissa, an argument can be made that SPS is failing, that big changes are necessary, and that someone, anyone, should take over. Do you have any sense if the city taking charge would be an overall improvement?
Anonymous said…
Lots of odd comments here...but let's be clear: any effort to close schools will cause a massive upheaval that will sweep away Brent Jones, Chandra Hampson, Liza Rankin, and the entire SCPTSA crew.

The last time SPS tried to close schools, in the mid-2000s, it led to the ouster of one superintendent and several board members. And if one looks at Oakland, the public reaction to school closures has been furious.

It is entirely possible that Chandra sees herself as an agent of destruction whose goal is to put the district in the hands of the City and charter schools. That certainly would explain her behavior here.

But if the current SPS leadership think they're going to try and close schools and keep their jobs...well, they're even more deluded than we ever thought possible.

No Closures
Anonymous said…
AAMA? What is it? What is it supposed to do? They have THREE full time admins and I have never seen a real description of what it is, looks like, or does?
Anonymous on AAMA (next time give yourself a name or moniker, no anonymous comments): here's a link to the AAMA office.
https://www.seattleschools.org/departments/aama/
I forgot to add on the AAMA office. The slides from the Budget Work Session show the office costs $2M. Well, the district - at least for awhile - is not paying that cost. The Alliance for Education is. Why that isn't noted in the PowerPoint is not clear.
Anonymous said…
There is a Lake Washington School District report online from Oct 2020, that illustrated declining pandemic related enrollment trends at nearly all school districts. Pandemic impacted districts from -1 to -5.8%. For example, Spokane saw a -5.8% drop, Kent -5.1%, Seattle -2.3 and LWSD -1.5 as one of the lowest to experience a drop. I would be interested to see how each of the districts have rebounded this past year, or if the declining trend has continued. https://resources.finalsite.net/images/v1603754852/lwsdorg/obk6vuwtzuwhoayvpw94/201026EnrollmentUpdateFinal.pdf

For comparison.
Strategic Plan said…
@For Comparison, Per SPS, the district is on track to loose students for the next four years.

Hersey would be smart to look at students meeting state standards in his district. Results are abysmal and results are abysmal when the district is focusing on Hersey's area. One elementary school does NOT have 95% of students passing math. His high school has 90% of students failing math. Unless these numbers increase, Jones, Hampson and Hersey should consider themselves to be failures. Without basic math skills, kids don't have a chance.

Thanks for documenting this train wreck, Melissa.
Anonymous said…
The whole jargon-filled nonsense swirling around "student-outcomes focused governance" is mystifying. Likewise "goals and guardrails." As beguiling as these words might all sound, it's all double-speak. This is an academic exploration with no real-world applicability to Seattle Public Schools. Whatever they are spending on it is too much. Even worse is the amount of time it sucks up.

If the Directors don't understand how a board should function, then they shouldn't have run for the School Board in the first place. We don't have time for them to learn on the job. We live in urgent times -- the kids are in crisis and the curriculum is falling apart while the directors are indulging themselves in personal improvement. Enough already.

NE Parent





old salt said…
Now we're really sorry that we didn't elect Eric Blumhagen to the board. The board seems to cycle between activists & wonks. This would be a good time to have a board of wonks,especially those that already understand the budget, WSS, and SAP.

District Watcher said…
We need better leadership and proven curricula. There is too much division between board members and staff and nobody seems to care about the drop in enrollment. Folks at the Stanford Center are experts with educational jargon but limited in what students need to succeed at higher math, have good writing skills and get into either the college of their choice or a trade.

Our sons graduated some years ago. They needed intensive tutoring in math but did make it into college and one is getting his doctorate. I am still angry at how bad the math is in SPS.
Oh yeah, if Eric had been elected, we would not be in this time and place.
Greg said…
Have they already removed most of the portables, especially the ones in poor condition?

That seems like the obvious way to adjust capacity in the short-term, especially since so many portables are old and in poor condition, and the experience for teachers and students in them is generally not very good.

But I absolutely agree with the broader point is that the administration needs to be more concerned about why people leave the district. And they need to do a better job of both forecasting and smoothing demand so capacity can be changed well in advance at lower costs.
Anonymous said…
@Greg

Portables are a great way to avoid building another school, but it doesn’t work well in reverse. If you can consolidate schools and close some, you save in overhead staff costs (like principals, office etc), building heating/maintenance, and possibly also transportation. Schools may be able to lease or sell facilities for revenue. It’s a really hot button topic though, and I’m not sure our board has the stomach to go through with it. We will see.

Sacred Cows
Anonymous said…
We need to recall several members of the school board, starting with its immediate past and present leadership. The response to COVID has been abysmal. The dumbing down of school has been idiotic. One thing to focus on those furthest away from educational justice by improving opportunities and outcomes. No change in outcomes yet demonstrated. Another thing to minimize the gap by dumbing things down for top students. That we have so few national merit scholars compared to any district of our size is a true embarrassment. Either the students are not being taught in a way to make them succeed or those who would otherwise reach these top levels are being driven away - either way, its atrocious that this is what Seattle schools has aspired to. Our attendance at top schools is abysmal.

It's obvious why students are leaving. The solution is to give reasons for students to stay - not to close schools as students leave.

How is it remotely a good thing to encourage high achieving students leave the system through utter failure in delivering for student? Money leaves and schools need to be closed - this is the desired outcome? Astounded at the idiocy of the current school board.

You can't give excellence to those furthest away from educational justice if you have a destitute district needing to close schools.

Melissa - thanks for all you do - but your posts are not good for my blood pressure. I am so saddened for our Seattle school students. Look how utterly we are failing them at every level. And our only answer to equity is 'let's lower the ceiling' so that it's only as tall as the shortest person.

Just disgusted. Recall the school board en masse.

BLUE SKY

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