Personal tools
You are here: Home News Press Releases 2014 Press Releases Education Tool Guides Districts and Schools on Using LCFF to Narrow EL Achievement Gaps

Education Tool Guides Districts and Schools on Using LCFF to Narrow EL Achievement Gaps

Date Published: September 11, 2014
A new educational guide is available that helps California schools, districts and teachers target the best ways to implement California's Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), so that it narrows the achievement gaps between the state’s English Learners (ELs) and all other students. The guidance recommends research-based practices that innovate and reshape ways for addressing the educational needs of ELs.
 
*** NEWS RELEASE ***

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                CONTACT:  Laurie Russman

September 11, 2014                                                                       russman@gseis.ucla.edu or 310-267-5562

 

UCLA Civil Rights Project Education Tool Guides Districts and Schools on Using LCFF

Research-based Interventions Seen as the Best at Closing EL Achievement Gaps


LOS ANGELES—At an education forum held today by the UCLA Civil Rights Project (CRP), a new educational guide was unveiled that helps California schools, districts and teachers target the best ways to implement the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), so that it narrows the achievement gaps between California’s English Learners (ELs) and all other students.  Seizing the Opportunity, by CRP Co-director Patricia Gándara with Maria Estela Zárate, a faculty at CSU Fullerton, recommends research-based practices that innovate and reshape ways for addressing the educational needs of ELs.

The new guidance explains that funding under LCFF, which became law in 2013, should be “spent carefully on interventions that are supported by solid research.” In fact, the authors cull their recommendations from current research on English Learners and organize them according to the eight Local Control Accountability Plan priorities outlined in LCFF. 

Those recommendations fall under the priorities of basic services, implementation of standards, parental involvement, pupil achievement and engagement, school climate, course access and other pupil outcomes.  The guidance offers “a menu of research-based options… that provide the best odds of making a significant difference for the education of EL students.”

Speakers from the LAUSD and Moreno Valley school boards, MALDEF, Californians Together and The Advancement Project gathered at the California Community Foundation in downtown Los Angeles and hailed the historic importance of the LCFF -- as long as it is used as an agent of change for the students for whom it was intended

CRP’s Gándara warned that, “California now has a chance to narrow longstanding achievement gaps, but we have to recognize that this opportunity can slip away if newly available LCFF funds are not spent carefully and directly on those students who generate them.” 

Educators can download the guidance here.

 

About the Civil Rights Project at UCLA

Founded in 1996 by former Harvard professors Gary Orfield and Christopher Edley, Jr., The Civil Rights Project/Proyecto Derechos Civiles is now co-directed by Orfield and Patricia Gándara, professors at UCLA. Its mission is to create a new generation of research in social science and law on the critical issues of civil rights and equal opportunity for racial and ethnic groups in the United States. It has monitored the success of American schools in equalizing opportunity and has been the authoritative source of segregation statistics. CRP has commissioned more than 500 studies, published more than 15 books and issued numerous reports from authors at universities and research centers across the country. The U.S. Supreme Court, in its 2003 Grutter v. Bollinger decision upholding affirmative action, and in Justice Breyer’s dissent (joined by three other Justices) to its 2007 Parents Involved decision, cited the Civil Rights Project’s research.  

####

Document Actions

Copyright © 2010 UC Regents