L.A. charter school expansion could mean huge drop in unionized teaching jobs
If a proposal for a massive expansion of charter schools in Los Angeles moves forward, the casualties would likely include the jobs of thousands of teachers who currently work in the city’s traditional public schools.
As new charters open, regular schools would face declining enrollment — and would need fewer teachers.
Under the $490-million plan being spearheaded by the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, 260 new charters would be opened in the city in eight years. The goal is to more than double the number of students attending these schools, which are independently run and mostly non-union.
The “Great Public Schools Now” proposal makes no mention of recruiting instructors from the ranks of L.A. Unified — even though the foundation acknowledged this week that the charter growth would require about 5,000 instructors. The plan talks about hiring from an expanded Teach For America program and other groups that work with young, inexperienced instructors.
If the plan is carried out, “Los Angeles will have the strongest set of teacher and leader development programs of any city in the state of California,” according to the proposal.
The Broad Foundation said this week that teachers are key to the success of the proposal.
“We are in the process of listening to educators and community members to determine how best to support the dramatic growth of high-quality public schools in Los Angeles,” said spokeswoman Swati Pandey. “We know that without great teachers, there can be no great public schools. We’re eager to engage and support teachers as part of this work.”L.A. charter school expansion could mean huge drop in unionized teaching jobs - LA Times: