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Reducing gun violence, making college more affordable and addressing the teacher shortage again are on the minds of California voters, who also said they would support raising teachers’ pay and spending more for schools, according to a new PACE/USC Rossier poll.
PACE, an independent research nonprofit affiliated with several California universities, and the USC Rossier School of Education released their annual poll on Friday. The survey of 2,000 registered voters was representative of the state’s ethnic makeup, geography and party affiliation; 28 percent of the respondents were parents with children under 18. The poll organization Tulchin Research conducted the survey in early January.
Perhaps reflecting a rise in pessimism about education, fewer voters gave schools high grades this year, and the proportion of people who said they’d encourage young people to become a teacher dropped significantly compared with four years ago.
Among other findings in the poll:
School shootings are extremely rare in California, and school lockdowns as a result of threats of violence are infrequent, but the fatal shooting of two students by a 16-year-old schoolmate at Saugus High in Santa Clarita last November was a shocking reminder of the random possibilities. Given a range of possible options to reduce gun violence in local schools, expanding mental health care services and prohibiting the sale and ownership of assault rifles and other high-capacity firearms received the strongest support — ahead of increasing active shooter drills, installing metal detectors and hiring armed security guards.
The survey listed a dozen issues currently facing California and asked voters to rank them from 10 (very important) to not important (1). Reducing gun violence, making college more affordable and reducing the teacher shortage were the top three priorities, just as last year. This year supporting struggling schools and improving education funding was not far behind. But even the lowest-rated priorities — increasing access to early education, improving services for English learners and increasing the diversity of the teaching workforce — received strong support, as indicated in answers to other questions.
Regarding early education, voters were about evenly split between increasing taxes to expand more access for young children and spending less on other programs to make room for more early ed; 1 in 5 voters said the state should do neither option.
Coming in the wake of the college admissions scandal that consumed headlines last year, more voters felt that the admissions process to the state’s public universities “is stacked in favor of wealthy students” (40 percent) than view it as a fair process (34 percent), with the rest indicating they were uncertain or no opinion. African-American voters expressed more confidence in the process than whites and Latinos.
Two-thirds of voters said they strongly or somewhat support college admissions preferences for children from rural communities or other underserved areas. Slightly less than two-thirds (63 percent) indicated support for admissions preferences for children from underrepresented populations, such as blacks and Latinos.
Asked how much debt is reasonable for a college student to obtain a 4-year bachelor’s degree, 63 percent said $20,000, with 20 percent saying students shouldn’t have to take out any loans. The average debt across the nation for a college grad is $29,000, according to the survey.
Starting in 2013, when more post-recession revenue flowed to K-12 schools, voters’ perceptions of schools improved and peaked in 2016, when 45 percent of voters gave their local schools an A or B grade. That dipped to 36 percent this year. Heather Hough, PACE’s executive director, speculated that messages to the public, that schools are underfunded, college is unaffordable and teachers are underpaid and mistreated — a theme of teacher strikes in 2019 — left more people feeling more pessimistic. Parents gave better grades, however: 48 percent graded their local schools A or B and 25 percent said their schools had gotten better over the past few years, compared with 15 percent of overall voters.
Still, 56 percent of voters — down from 65 percent in 2018 — believe the state should be spending more on education. And this year, that includes 68 percent of Democrats, 66 percent of parents and 39 percent of Republicans.
Three-quarters of voters said they were strongly or somewhat in favor of raising teacher salaries — for all teachers, new teachers and teachers in subjects facing shortages. Low pay was the primary reason fewer voters said they would definitely or probably encourage young people to become teachers. The number fell from 71 percent in 2016 to 56 percent this year.
Of those who would definitely or probably discourage young people from becoming a teacher, 47 percent cited not enough pay while 24 percent cited undisciplined and out-of-control students.
A grassroots campaign recalled two members of the Orange Unified School District in an election that cost more than half a million dollars.
Legislation that would remove one of the last tests teachers are required to take to earn a credential in California passed the Senate Education Committee.
Part-time instructors, many who work for decades off the tenure track and at a lower pay rate, have been called “apprentices to nowhere.”
A bill to mandate use of the method will not advance in the Legislature this year in the face of teachers union opposition.
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Heather 4 years ago4 years ago
There is a teacher shortage for many factors which a few include:
1. Too many hoops to jump through to become a teacher (CBEST/ CSET/ RICA exams, renewing credential)
2. Salary (Too much work, stress, responsibility for the pay)
3. The educational system (students have all the rights, behaviors, no support)
Todd Maddison 4 years ago4 years ago
As SD Parent notes very well, this survey is tremendously flawed. Surveys that ask people who don't know much about an issue what needs to be done to solve it are somewhat useless anyway as a guide to policy, all they do is gauge sentiment. If I needed medical treatment I would not take a survey of my neighbors to determine the best plan, I would want to focus on those with "MD" behind their … Read More
As SD Parent notes very well, this survey is tremendously flawed.
Surveys that ask people who don’t know much about an issue what needs to be done to solve it are somewhat useless anyway as a guide to policy, all they do is gauge sentiment.
If I needed medical treatment I would not take a survey of my neighbors to determine the best plan, I would want to focus on those with “MD” behind their name instead. What my neighbors think might be interesting, but somewhat useless as a guide to a successful cure.
One notable survey recently actually looked at this – asking people whether they thought teacher pay should be raised, with and without first telling them what teachers actually make.
Without any knowledge of the real facts, 61% said “yes.” When told what the average teacher pay in Californiais first, that support dropped to 36%.
Perhaps we should focus on real facts in these discussions? It would certainly lead to better policy decisions.
https://www.educationnext.org/edstat-informed-teachers-current-salaries-36-public-favors-pay-raise-teachers/
SD Parent 4 years ago4 years ago
The poll questions certainly provide room for significant bias in the responses. For example, the questions about whether to require an ethnic studies class go into significant detail about the reasoning and the topics covered – but neglect to state that this course would be given in lieu of a school elective course such as Visual and Performing Arts, an Advanced Placement class, or a third year of a foreign language (because anyone who has … Read More
The poll questions certainly provide room for significant bias in the responses. For example, the questions about whether to require an ethnic studies class go into significant detail about the reasoning and the topics covered – but neglect to state that this course would be given in lieu of a school elective course such as Visual and Performing Arts, an Advanced Placement class, or a third year of a foreign language (because anyone who has seen a high school 4-year plan knows that in the age of A-G and CTE graduation requirements plus PE, there are very few open slots in a high school student’s schedule for anything else). That realization may have swayed the support for the requirement.
Some questions gave background information (e.g. citing research on the performance gap and how much student debt the average college graduate carries) before asking a relevant survey question, but other questions gave respondents no information before asking a survey question, relying instead on what a respondent might have heard. For example, if survey respondents were first told that the average teacher in CA is now paid more than $82,700 (for 37 weeks of work), which is higher than the California’s average household income, perhaps the respondents might have responded differently to the questions ranking proposed changes to teacher pay and the aspects of why to discourage someone from becoming a teacher.
The most laughable “result” was the conclusion that 76% of the respondents had a favorable impression of the CA Schools Dashboard. Only 9% had actually visited the CA School Dashboard website to be able to form an opinion, whereas 63% had never heard of it (or didn’t know) and another 23% had only heard or read about it.
From a parent perspective, there are ample reasons to be pessimistic regarding education in our state. For starters, the 49% of California’s students do not meet the standards in ELA and a 60% don’t meet the standards in Math and 70% don’t meet standards in Science – and the year-to-year gains in ELA and Math have been so low that at this pace it will take a generation before we reach acceptable ranges of proficiency. Meanwhile, the achievement gap also persists despite the promises of LCFF to these students (possibly because LCFF supplemental and concentration grant funds can be – and have been – used to increase employee pay in lieu of more services for those students). So it’s not surprising that folks gave schools lower “grades”.