Editorial: Report cards for schools? Only if done thoughtfully
California voters made a pact in 1988 when they approved Proposition 98.
The state would provide a guaranteed minimum level of funding for public schools. In exchange, schools would be held "accountable for the job they do and the tax dollars they spend." Every year each school would publish a School Accountability Report Card – the SARC.
A generation later, that report card still is not very readable and has little role in driving school improvement. A 2004 UCLA report concluded, "Running the school system without a useful and understandable SARC is like driving a $100,000 sports car with a broken speedometer, temperature gauge and gas gauge."
Unfortunately, political leaders faced with the overly complex, confusing system seem to lunge in opposite directions.
At one end, we have Gov. Jerry Brown, who famously said in October, "Adding more speedometers to a broken car won't turn it into a high-performance machine."
At the other end is Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson, who announced in his State of the City