Mike SwansonBoard backs new books for students...
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Mike Swanson
Board backs new books for students
The school board unanimously voted to adopt new reading and
language arts textbooks Tuesday for grades K through 11 that address
needs from English as a second language to Gifted And Talented
Education and replace materials that Asst. Supt. Steven Keller called
obsolete.
Funded with $219,777.65 earmarked solely for instructional
materials, Keller said the majority of the new books are consumable,
or can be written in, and the district will receive replacements each
year at no cost for seven years. Teachers at all four of the
district’s schools selected the books.
“Teachers were able to taste, touch and feel these books,” Keller
said. “I think they’ve lacked the materials needed to excel the last
couple years, which is a district problem, and this adoption will
significantly enhance teachers’ ability to do their jobs.”
It’s been five to seven years since the district adopted new
reading and language textbooks, and the new state-recommended program
includes “more consumables than I’ve ever seen,” Keller said. He
added that the program is better aligned with what the state wants
and what it assesses than past programs.
The program doesn’t include 12th grade because it falls under a
different state alignment, Keller said.
School board member Jan Vickers said she was concerned about the
language in the books, hoping they didn’t follow a recent trend of
sanitized literature that adheres more to “The Language Police” than
the truth.
“It’s not just one textbook company, it’s all of them,” Vickers
said. “It’s a global problem though, so I’m not sure what to do with
it. I’ll be more concerned next year when we talk about bringing in
new history books.”
Keller said teachers’ endorsement of the new materials is the key.
“The elementary and high school process [of adoption] was the
easiest I’ve ever seen,” Keller said. “The teachers selected the
materials themselves, and that should impact how they use them in the
classroom.”
Layoffs planned but retirements on hold
Five teachers who expressed interest in an early retirement
package offered by the district last month will still be teaching
next year after district staff discovered it needed seven early
retirees to make the package economically feasible.
The district had hoped that if enough teachers agreed to early
retirement, then they might be able to rescind layoff notices issued
to four teachers with less than two years of experience in Laguna
Beach. The school board unhappily approved the final layoff notices
for the four teachers in a special 8 a.m. meeting Monday.
“These are four gifted teachers that are a good match with the
Laguna Beach school district,” Asst. Supt. Steven Keller said, “and
I’ve been in this field long enough to know that nothing’s a sure
thing, so we’re still hoping to keep them.”
Keller said it would probably take a sudden increase in enrollment
and unexpected retirements for the district to be able to keep the
teachers.
-- Mike Swanson
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