Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

KPBS Midday Edition

San Diego Unified To Move Year-Round Schools To Traditional Calendars

San Diego Unified To Move Year-Round Schools To Traditional Calendars
San Diego Unified To Move Year-Round Schools To Traditional Calendars
San Diego Unified To Move Year-Round Schools to Traditional Calendars GUESTS:John Lee Evans is vice president of the board of the San Diego Unified School District.Amy Redding chairs the San Diego Unified District Advisory Council. She also has a child going to school in the district.

The San Diego Unified School District board of education voted unanimously Tuesday night to implement the first phase of a four-year, $12.2 million plan to shift its 54 year-round schools to traditional academic calendars.

In an interview with KPBS Midday Edition on Wednesday, school trustee John Lee Evans said the shift was a long-awaited plan.

"We've had a longtime interest in getting all the schools on the same calendar, and there are various reasons," Evans said. "It really is an operational issue that can improve the academics for the kids. This isn't about whether year-round or traditional is better. It's if all the schools are on the same schedule, it would be better for all families and kids."

Advertisement

Most of the affected campuses are at the elementary level, though a couple are middle schools. The first schools to be shifted during the 2015-16 school year will be Dewey, Ericson, Hancock, Hardy, Jerabek, Johnson, Mason, Miller, Porter, Sequoia, Tierrasanta, Valencia Park and Walker elementary schools, and Knox and Farb middle schools.

The initial moves are expected to cost the district around $3 million. The district plans to transition additional schools to traditional calendars in each of the following three years.

"This is not a perfect plan," Evans said. "A perfect plan would be that we would next year put all schools on the same schedule — if we had the money to do it."

District staff studied the transition since last year and were directed to give priority to campuses that serve military families and those that feed into middle and high schools with traditional calendars.

Courtney Rizzo, principal of Farb Middle School, said school administrators had been passionate about the schedule change because "it impacts our students' academic future."

Advertisement

Military families are often relocated in May or June, which forces parents to pull their children out of classes up to 10 weeks before the end of the year-round session.

"Since schools across the country have ended, students cannot finish their school year somewhere else," Rizzo said. "Therefore, there are major consequences for students when they are pulled out early."

Col. John Farnam, commanding officer of Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, told the board that service members' moves between duty stations were timed to line up with traditional school calendars, which causes some to take their children out of school early or enroll them late.

"For military families, the No. 1 family concern is — no matter where we move — is our children's education," Farnam said.

The trustees also considered starting the 2015-16 school year on Aug. 31 instead of early September at Tuesday night's meeting. However, they voted unanimously to maintain the status quo until staffers could look further into the issue. The district normally starts its year after Labor Day. District staffers were given 90 days to return to the board with their recommendations for the 2016-17 academic year.

Evans said not enough research was provided to support the proposal.

"We just need to take more time for people to really understand why that was proposed and to get adequate input," Evans said. "The board and the staff have the responsibility to look at what's best for the students. We really want a chance for it to be vetted by the public."

Evans said Superintendent Cindy Marten was directed to get feedback from parents before the proposal is reconsidered by the board.

Also at Tuesday night's meeting, board members selected Marne Foster as their president and Evans as vice president. They also approved the first of two state-required financial reports that reflect some uncertainty over the district's fiscal condition.

The state requires financial declarations of "positive," in which a district projects that it will be able to pay its bills in the current and the two following fiscal years; "qualified," reflecting some uncertainty, or "negative," which says the district will not be able to uphold its obligations.

San Diego Unified will file a qualified certification because of insufficient information on the spending plan that will be proposed by Gov. Jerry Brown next month.

"If the governor's budget comes in higher than anticipated, we'll be able to meet our funding priorities more fully," Marten said. "If it comes in lower than projected, we will scale back but keep the priorities in place."