Monday, March 12, 2012

A new way for parents to make their feelings known?: PARENTS AT HACIENDA LA PUENTE USD OPT CHILDREN OUT OF STATE TESTS IN PROTEST OF UNPOPULAR EARLY START CALENDAR

By Steve Scauzillo, San Gabriel Valley News |  http://bit.ly/AkCFMJ

3/11/2012 07:04:21 AM PDT  ::  Several parents have sent letters to schools in the Hacienda La Puente Unified School District saying their children will not be taking the upcoming state standardized tests that determine a school's API score.

The boycott is in protest of the district's decision to institute an early calendar year that cuts into family vacations and requires students to be in class during the hotter months of the year, parents say.

Documents show the parents participating in the boycott have children at Los Molinos Elementary School in Hacienda Heights.

"There are still more coming in. We are even hearing from parents at the high schools," said Manuel Acosta, a leader of the loose-knit group Concerned Parents of Hacienda La Puente Unified School District.

The group has repeatedly spoken against the early start school year, saying it won't benefit the district's 21,000 pre-K-12 students, will hurt the school's Average Daily Attendance (ADA) and funding, and is only being done at the behest of some labor groups.

The school board by a 4-1 vote approved the early start calender in December. The 2002-13 school year will begin Aug. 8 and end May 21, 2013. The beginning of the school year is two weeks earlier than in previous years. In 2013-14, school will start Aug. 7 and end around the same time in May, instead of late June.

The district has said the early start will give students longer to prepare for tests and help high school students focus on AP tests by separating them from other tests. By ending the first semester at winter break, homework and group assignments will not stretch into the break. And ending sooner "allows high school students to get a jump on summer jobs," according to the district's website.

Acosta said he's seen opt-out letters for five students attending three different schools, including Los Molinos as well as Los Altos Elementary School and Newton Middle School.

As of Friday, emailed letters obtained by this newspaper were only from parents with children at Los Molinos. If the district reverses its early start calendar vote, the parents indicated they would allow their students to take the standardized tests.

Acosta said the group has asked the school board to revisit the issue. They have formally asked for the early calendar to be placed on a future board meeting agenda. It's not clear whether the item will be on the agenda of the next meeting March 22.

Board member Jay Chen, who supports the early calendar, objected to the group's boycott tactic. "I don't think they should be using their children's education as bargaining chips," he said in an interview last week.

In a district survey last year, almost two-thirds of respondents said they "did not like" the early calendar, while only 34 percent indicated they "like it." The district said the number of survey responses was too small for the results to be significant.

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