Monday, November 20, 2000
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Section: Part A
Page: A-1
Year-Round Discontent at Hollywood High
Education: Staff, students say learning suffers. But schedule spreads in
district.
By: DUKE HELFAND
TIMES EDUCATION WRITER
Hollywood High School keeps its doors open 12 months a year to ease
overcrowding. The year-round schedule allows the campus to run hundreds more
students through its cramped classrooms. It also chips away at their
education.
Teachers skip pages of material, assign less homework and give fewer tests
because their school year has been slashed by 17 days.
Hundreds of pupils take the Stanford 9 exam shortly after returning from an
eight-week vacation. Others will take the state's new high school exit exam
just two days after they return from their winter break.
Many teenagers can't get critical summer internships and jobs that look
good on college applications because they're in school, while others must
return to campus during their vacations to participate in extracurricular
activities such as band and yearbook.
Ask nearly any teacher at Hollywood High whether students are getting a
first-class education and the answer is a resounding no.
"If you wanted to destroy public schools, you'd start with year-round
schedules," said English teacher Richard Cunningham.
Hollywood High offers a glimpse into the future of education in Los
Angeles.
Within five years, every high school in L.A. Unified must convert to a
schedule like Hollywood High's, casualties of explosive growth and the
district's failure to build schools. More than half of middle-schools will
have to run year-round.
Twelve-month schedules have become a primary solution to overcrowding in a
growing number of districts because they allow schools to serve additional
students in shortened, overlapping terms.
Use of the year-round calendar has grown steadily in Los Angeles over two
decades. L.A. Unified now has more year-round campuses than New York, Chicago,
Philadelphia, Miami and Houston combined.
The experience at Hollywood High shows how multitrack schedules present
students with hurdles that do not exist at other schools. The setbacks, while
not crippling on their own, take a cumulative toll on learning, spawning what
many call a two-tiered system of education.
"In a well-intentioned effort to solve overcrowding, we have exacerbated
inequities in schools," said Jeannie Oakes, associate dean of UCLA's Graduate
School of Education and Information Studies. "People with more privilege and
political clout don't want their children in these schools."
California has 1,035 multitrack campuses serving more than 1 million
students, primarily in poor and minority communities. Most multitrack
calendars are found at the elementary level.
In those grades, studies have shown a mixed impact on achievement. Little
analysis has been done on the effect of year-round schedules at middle and
high schools, perhaps because so few exist outside Los Angeles.
But among those who have experienced the impact, it's hard to find
defenders of multitrack, year-round education, particularly when it comes to
secondary schools.
Los Angeles schools Supt. Roy Romer calls year-round calendars a "handicap"
for students, an opinion shared by Hollywood High's principal.
When asked to cite the advantages of the year-round schedule at her campus,
Floria Anderson Trimble offered just two: Teachers can earn extra money
working during their vacations, and those whose breaks land in the spring or
fall can travel during off-peak periods.
"As far as I'm concerned, the year-round calendar is not an optimum
learning situation," Trimble said.
Hollywood High senior Walkiria Quiroa agrees. The aspiring high school
teacher began her eight-week vacation in late October, right in the middle of
college application season.
Quiroa is missing a chance to meet recruiters, whose visits are well
publicized on campus. If she were in school, she could walk down the hall to
the college advisor's office and get help filling out her application for Cal
State Northridge.
"When you're not there, you don't hear what's going on," said Quiroa, a B
student who transferred to Hollywood High from a parochial school. "I should
have gone to a private high school."
Yohanna Figueroa worries that her vacation in January and February will
cost her valuable time to prepare for Advanced Placement exams in the spring.
With a 3.5 grade point average and half a dozen AP courses on her
transcripts, she is setting her sights on USC. High AP scores could earn
Figueroa college credit and save her thousands of dollars in tuition. With so
much at stake, she plans to spend her eight-week vacation at school studying
with friends.
"It would be easier if we were like everyone else," she said. "The playing
field would be level."
Civil rights advocates are trying to level the playing field through the
courts.
In a lawsuit filed in May, the American Civil Liberties Union argued that
tens of thousands of poor and minority students in California are denied an
equal education because they attend schools that lack adequate resources and
operate on multitrack calendars. The lawsuit cited the shorter school year at
high schools in Los Angeles and elsewhere as a primary obstacle to learning.
The suit did not target the state's 482 year-round schools that keep all
students on a single track. In those schools, children take several shorter
vacations in place of the long summer break. That schedule is advocated by
officials who say long vacations hinder learning.
Leading educators say the lawsuit's attack on multitrack schools casts a
spotlight on a pressing issue that has attracted little public attention.
"Why aren't these schools everywhere?" asked Eugene Garcia, dean of the
Graduate School of Education at UC Berkeley. "In the suburbs, we make
arrangements. We build facilities."
Statewide, the poverty rate in multitrack schools is nearly double the rate
at campuses on traditional calendars. The rate of students still learning
English is nearly three times greater.
L.A. Unified's year-round students are among the neediest in the state.
Nearly all qualify for federal lunch assistance, the leading indicator of
poverty among schoolchildren. Almost two-thirds are still learning English.
The multitrack schedule was introduced in Los Angeles at a single school a
quarter-century ago as a temporary fix for overcrowding. Today year-round
campuses account for more than one-third of the district's regular schools.
According to the latest state data, L.A. Unified is the only district in
California that runs high schools on staggered, year-round schedules, with one
exception. Vista Unified in San Diego County has one charter school on a
multitrack schedule.
The Los Angeles district also has relied on busing to relieve overcrowding.
But as an enrollment bulge moves up the grades, officials will be forced to
expand the year-round program.
Eighteen of L.A. Unified's 49 high schools are year-round, and district
officials say the remaining 31 will follow by 2006. Similarly, 17 of 72 middle
schools are year-round, but officials expect the number to more than double in
the next five years.
The district is developing an ambitious school construction program that
calls for 15 new high schools and seven new middle schools over the next five
years. But those 33,000 new seats will hardly keep pace with growth, and plans
call for those campuses to run year-round.
Hollywood High is one of the latest to join the club. It switched in 1994,
after more than 90 years on a traditional calendar. As a crowded urban high
school, Hollywood faces many problems regardless of its schedule. But the
calendar here, as at other year-round schools, creates another layer of
difficulty. 2 Tracks in Session, 1 on Vacation
The cramped, 13-acre campus sits a block from the Hollywood Walk of Fame
and Mann's Chinese Theatre. Busloads of tourists mix with students on the
sidewalks around the Sunset Boulevard campus, where Mickey Rooney, Carol
Burnett and dozens of other celebrities attended school.
Like most year-round campuses in Los Angeles, Hollywood High divides
students into three staggered tracks. Two are in session at a time while one
is on vacation. The rotating schedule has allowed the school of about 3,000
students to increase its capacity by 41%--nearly 900 extra students.
But squeezing three tracks onto the campus has required the school to pare
17 days from its calendar. It has made up the difference by adding 39 minutes
to each day. That amounts to 6 1/2 extra minutes per class.
Teachers dismiss the additional time as logistic sleight-of-hand with
little educational value. Students, they say, can't concentrate through class
periods that now run 62 minutes.
"They chopped up the days and minutes but weren't thinking about the
consequences," said chemistry teacher Patricia Barker. "Just because you have
a couple more minutes added onto class doesn't mean you can do more."
Standing in her classroom on a recent day, amid sinks without running water
and gas valves that didn't work, Barker ticked off the topics she won't have
time to cover this year: biochemistry, organic chemistry, chemical
equilibrium, the electron's role in the atom.
"My students are not being exposed to material that will allow them to
achieve," said Barker, whose classroom is still overcrowded with 40 students,
some sitting on counter tops, stools and at her desk.
"The kids are like my clients," she said. "I'm doing them a disservice. I
feel so frustrated."
Teachers also complain about losing several days reviewing work from the
previous term each time students return from the two eight-week vacations.
It's not uncommon to start the year with a review; the difference at Hollywood
High is that it happens more often.
Some instructors say the more frequent breaks are rejuvenating, keeping
them fresh in the classroom.
"I constantly recharge the battery," said English teacher Janie Chapman.
"Academically," she added, "it's not ideal."
The complexities and tight schedules of a year-round calendar lead to other
problems.
Teachers must change classrooms every time they come back from vacation.
Some must change classrooms in the course of a single school day because of
the lack of space, storing their supplies in the trunks of their cars.
Maintenance is difficult to schedule when school is nearly always in
session. Grass can't grow on much of the football field because it's
constantly in use, turning it into a hard patch of dirt in summer and a wet
slog in winter.
Getting books into students' hands also becomes more difficult. The school
took several days to collect and tally textbooks from students who went on
break Oct. 24. The next track started class Oct. 25, giving officials little
time to redistribute the materials.
On the first day back, Chapman's 11th-graders were waiting for their class
novel: John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men." Chapman let the students chat
quietly as she took roll. Then, without anything for them to read, she offered
to talk about her recent trip to Egypt.
"You guys, we don't have our books. We won't get them until Friday,"
Chapman told the class on a Wednesday. "So sit back and relax. Since we don't
have books, I'm going to show you my slides."
Many of Hollywood's students have only known year-round schedules because
they came from crowded elementary and middle schools.
Several students said they're happy at Hollywood. Some are grateful for the
opportunities to make up classes during vacations. Others like the school's
menu of specialized programs.
"I came to Hollywood because of the acting," said Andrew Farkas-Jones, who
travels from the Westside to attend the school's Performing Arts Magnet.
"People say that Hollywood High is not a good school for academics, but we
don't miss out on learning," said the senior, who dreams of becoming a
professional actor but also speaks of attending a community college or UCLA.
"Teachers do a really good job. I can't really complain."
Still, teachers and administrators worry that the schedule fragments the
school, creating three campuses in one. The tracks act like fault lines,
fracturing students by abilities and talents.
The A track includes the arts magnet and closely resembles the traditional
September to June calendar. B track is home to students who are still learning
English. C track encompasses the New Media Academy, a program that teaches
high-tech skills such as how to produce computerized videos.
Administrators freely acknowledge that the schedule creates inequities
within the school. They say B track is the biggest loser, even questioning
whether it is "academically sound."
The track offers fewer honors and Advanced Placement courses than the other
two, a gap the school is trying to close. B track students also have had to
take the Stanford 9 exam just three days after returning from eight weeks of
vacation. Beginning next spring, these students will take the Stanford 9 about
3 1/2 weeks after returning from vacation, the result of new state rules that
push back the testing dates.
Teachers welcome the additional time, but they say the students still won't
be as prepared as others at the school.
"How can you expect these kids to be on the same par as kids who have been
in school all semester?" asked Trimble, the principal. "It's criminal."
B track suffers one additional detriment: more disruptions during the year.
While the two tracks are in session for 16 weeks and then are off for eight, B
track goes on vacation after only eight weeks of school, in the middle of its
term. Students with a limited command of English say the stop-and-start
schedule interferes with their progress.
"It would be much better if we didn't have this system," said junior Jaman
Ymeri, a Kosovar Albanian who has been in the United States about a year.
Television is Ymeri's teacher during his vacations. He practices English by
watching videotapes of his favorite films, the Indiana Jones movies and
"Braveheart."
He also reads the closed-caption words that run across the screen of his
television. It's about the most English he gets at home, where his family
primarily speaks Albanian.
"If I were in school," he said, "I would probably learn more and do
better."
PHOTO: Yohanna Figueroa in English class at Hollywood High. She
hopes her January-February vacation doesn't hinder her studies.
PHOTOGRAPHER: RICK MEYER / Los Angeles Times
PHOTO: (2 photos) Richard Cunningham, above, teaches Advanced
Placement English at Hollywood High. At left, the quad is crowded during
nutrition period. The campus has been on a 12-month school year since
1994 because of overcrowding, and critics say the nontraditional
classroom and vacation schedules present students with problems that
don't exist at other schools.
PHOTOGRAPHER: RICK MEYER / Los Angeles Times
PHOTO: (A2) STAR SCHOOL--With its year-round classes designed to
ease over-crowding, Hollywood High is the future of education in L.A. But
critics say the students are suffering. Above, the school's wall of fame,
with the names of famous alumni. A1
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