Sub Promotion

?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄 수정 삭제
?

단축키

Prev이전 문서

Next다음 문서

크게 작게 위로 아래로 댓글로 가기 인쇄 수정 삭제
Extra Form
제목 ebonygertz@yahoo.de
예약자 42|@|5609|@|36102
ATLANTA (AP) - It was during the Great Recession when Catoosa County first shortened its school year, from 180 to 175 instructional days, as it began years of furloughs due to budget cuts. As a result of the coronavirus pandemic, the next school year will be shorter still, with only 170 classroom days.

The 10,000-student system in northern Georgia will also be sending its 1,700 employees home for 10 unpaid days to help make up a projected $12.6 million budget gap.

"It was a great day when we didn´t have furloughs anymore," Catoosa County Superintendent Denia Reese said. "It´s disheartening right now because I see it happening again."

The financial crisis wrought by COVID-19 has left America's more than 13,000 school systems wrestling with the likelihood of big budget cuts. In some, it already has spoiled dreams of expanded funding and teacher pay raises. Advocates are pushing for more federal aid to schools as researchers warn budget woes could lead to massive teacher layoffs - and less learning.

The cuts will add to the strain on districts like Catoosa County that never recovered fully from the 2008 recession, which led to sharp staffing declines at American public schools over a period of rising student enrollment.

With cuts expected to a budget that relies on the state for over half its funding, Reese and school board Chairman Don Dycus said the shortened year and accompanying 5.5% reduction in teacher pay were the best of bad options. Dycus said board members didn´t want to raise property taxes because of residents´ economic troubles. And Reese said it was important to avoid laying off employees because she wants a full workforce when students return to help them overcome this year´s lost instructional time.






First grade teachers, Ellie Morgan, 25, left, Hannah Sprayberry, 28, right, pose for a portrait, and say they are taking around 5 per-cent pay cut on Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. With sharp declines in state spending projected because of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, America's more than 13,000 local school systems are wrestling with the likelihood of big budget cuts. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)


"Right now we need every teacher and every paraprofessional we can afford to be ready when the kids get here because there are going to be gaps," Reese said.

Educators bracing for cuts include those who pushed for better wages and more school resources in a national groundswell of activism that began with a 2018 teacher walkout in West Virginia, a movement that had roots in some states in austerity measures imposed during the last recession.

In Nevada, which was among the states that saw teacher rallies, lawmakers last year approved a significant increase in education spending and 3% raises for teachers. Now they're talking about a 4% budget cut before the current year is over, and another cut of 6% to 14% in the year beginning July 1. That could mean giving up last year´s hard-won gains and then some.

The National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers are advocating for additional federal aid for state budgets and tour thác bản giốc education. Both backed the House Democrats´ $3 trillion relief proposal, an effort Senate Republicans and President Donald Trump dismissed as bloated when it passed on May 15.

AFT President Randi Weingarten said schools will need more money, not less, to protect students and teachers from COVID-19 and help students.

"If you don´t have this, states are going to be doing huge budget cuts for schools, which would necessarily mean more layoffs and fewer services," Weingarten said. "At the same time, this is a bridge year when kids have more instructional needs and need more services."

If spending drops 15% this year, public schools could employ 319,000 fewer teachers nationwide, according to Michael Griffith, a senior fellow with the Learning Policy Institute in California who says that number accounts for federal relief already appropriated to schools.

That would mirror the experience of the Great Recession, which saw public school employment fall by almost 300,000 from 2008 through 2012, according to a study published last year. Pew Charitable Trusts researcher Barb Rosewicz said that state spending per student still hasn´t reached pre-recession levels in 24 states after adjusting for inflation, according to the most recent data.

Reduced funding has consequences. Financial pressure has led more than 550 districts nationwide to squeeze instruction into four-day weeks. And a study last year found spending cuts during the recession were associated with lower academic achievement, especially in poorer districts. A quarter of expected learning was wiped in out in the hardest-hit districts, compared to districts where spending fell the least.

In Arizona, which had some of the lowest-paid teachers in the country, lawmakers promised 20% raises after teachers went on a five-day strike in 2018. State Sen. David Livingston, a Republican, said the raises are not in jeopardy but other education-related expenses like maintenance and new school construction could be on the chopping block.

Kelly Wendland Fisher, a kindergarten teacher and organizer of Arizona Educators United that led the strike, still has a whopping 25 kindergartners in her suburban north Phoenix classroom and spends nearly $3,000 out of her own pocket each year for supplies. She fears difficult years ahead.

"In Arizona, the first thing that they bring up in the Legislature when we have a budget shortfall is to cut education and balance it on the backs of our kids," Fisher said.

___

Associated Press writers Bob Christie in Phoenix and Scott Sonner in Reno, Nevada, contributed.

___

Follow Jeff Amy on Twitter at website






First grade teachers, Ellie Morgan, 25, left, Hannah Sprayberry, 28, right, pose for a portrait, and say they are taking around 5 per-cent pay cut on Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. With sharp declines in state spending projected because of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, America's more than 13,000 local school systems are wrestling with the likelihood of big budget cuts. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)







Superintendent Denia Reese, left, and school board Chairman Don Dycus, right, pose for a portrait on Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. With sharp declines in state spending projected because of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, America's more than 13,000 local school systems are wrestling with the likelihood of big budget cuts. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)







First grade teachers, Ellie Morgan, 25, left, Hannah Sprayberry, 28, right, pose for a portrait, and say they are taking around 5 per-cent pay cut on Thursday, May 28, 2020, in Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. With sharp declines in state spending projected because of the economic fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, America's more than 13,000 local school systems are wrestling with the likelihood of big budget cuts. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 최근 수정일 날짜
233456 otiliahair@gmx.net OtiliaHair0900093812 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233455 elizbeth.arellano@yahoo.com ElizbethArellano66 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233454 macwhittell@gmail.com Mac02S12548019344 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233453 melodee_herman@gmail.com MelodeeHerman4474 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233452 jameyanstey@gmail.com JameyAnstey35668 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233451 franklynkerns@fastmail.fm FranklynKerns648 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233450 alenakahn@gmail.com AlenaKahn506337 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233449 irvingaguilar@gmx.net IrvingAguilar50799 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233448 richellebrownrigg@inbox.com RichelleBrownrigg3 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233447 winonamccrea@gawab.com WinonaMcCrea7165 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233446 jocelyn.plain@bigstring.com JocelynPlain29269 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
» ebonygertz@yahoo.de EbonyGertz3131745 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233444 valorie.derrington@freenet.de JZKValorie246384 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233443 tarenbreedlove@googlemail.com Taren82P311411068 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233442 jerilynkoss@gmail.com Jerilyn75O2725154272 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233441 lucaswilliamson@gmx.net LucasWilliamson51 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233440 frankie.blohm@gmail.com FrankieBlohm5011050 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233439 virgiliofleming@yahoo.de VirgilioFleming0791 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233438 joannaodonnell@gmx.net Joanna49U2242158016 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233437 stantonbaudin@bigstring.com StantonNuo98366393319 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233436 lenamustar@gmail.com KOOLena23810747188497 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233435 dannyguercio@t-online.de DannyGuercio70359 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233434 portermead@web.de PorterMead243752 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233433 carey_gill@gmail.com CareyDtd2404746722 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233432 kurtisjohns@gmx.de KurtisLbs185893 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233431 anton_partridge@gmail.com AntonPartridge4851 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233430 lila_casas@bigstring.com LilaCasas141068 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233429 franciscacrumpton@googlemail.com FranciscaCrumpton 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233428 mapletitheradge@web.de MapleTitheradge4 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233427 elvisgreenwood@gawab.com ElvisGreenwood550698 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233426 deweydowling@bigstring.com DeweyDowling39140485 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233425 delbertcarne@inbox.com Delbert16N24861 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233424 mariamstraub@yahoo.de MariamStraub2924994 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233423 elana.beauvais@gmail.com ElanaBeauvais00065 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233422 joesphbaylor@gmail.com JoesphBaylor4909 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233421 iris_feagin@gmail.com IrisFeagin828328 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233420 latianieves@hotmail.com LatiaB95746533586 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233419 dellabrassell@gmail.com DellaBrassell7356 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233418 suzannerowlandson@yahoo.de SuzanneRowlandson6 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233417 salmccready@t-online.de SalPkr996612894 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233416 emilminaya@gmail.com EmilMinaya1091843865 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233415 latonyakobayashi@gawab.com LatonyaKobayashi660 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233414 sallie.chapman@gmail.com SallieJ277897794447 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233413 lashundasparkes@gmx.net LashundaQ4622142 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233412 jackirandell@freenet.de Jacki27K48493086 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233411 mirareeder@arcor.de MiraReeder561802676 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233410 altacreamer@t-online.de AltaCreamer7536635 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233409 andreashoffman@gmail.com AndreasHoffman90 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233408 jadeshipman@gmail.com JadeWhn913601128248 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
233407 clement_moniz@gawab.com Clement992351777 2020.06.22 2020.06.22
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 ... 4736 Next
/ 4736

bodum2ro 43,sejong, Korea / Copyrightⓒ. All Rights Reserved By fone

© k2s0o1d4e0s2i1g5n. All Rights Reserved