California’s public school system, which purports to educate nearly 6 million students ranging from 4-year-olds in transitional kindergarten to near-adults preparing to graduate from high school, is in a world of hurt.

Its students perform poorly in national tests of academic achievement, some local school districts flirt with insolvency as unions press for raises to offset spikes in living costs, politicians wrangle over money while issuing a steady stream of mandates and demands and — on top of everything — nobody knows who is accountable for outcomes.

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(1) comment

Terence Y

Thanks for your column today, Mr. Walters, highlighting our continued issues with public education. Let’s push for allowing more and more charter schools as competition and see who makes the final cut. I’m betting charter schools will prevail. It is no wonder public education unions do anything and everything they can to handicap charter schools. Until that changes, don’t expect “the kids” to increase test scores. Sad. Those parents who want their kids to obtain a decent education should find ways to send their kids to any schools outside those of our traditional public education system. Or perhaps, move to another state.

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