Multiplying teacher totals
Michael Miller
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger joined higher education leaders Tuesday in
announcing a new program to increase the number of science and math
teachers in California’s public schools.
At the Bren Events Center on campus, the governor, along with
University of California president Robert Dynes and California State
University chancellor Charles Reed, announced the program, which aims
to recruit and train more undergraduates to enter teaching careers in
math and science, two areas where California has lagged in recent
years.
“Nothing is more important than education,” Schwarzenegger said.
“That is why, this coming year, we will spend billions of dollars
more on education than ever before. But money alone is not enough.”
Last year, the National Science Foundation reported that
California’s eighth-graders scored last in the country in sciences
and seventh from last in mathematics. Schwarzenegger attributed the
problem to a lack of qualified science and math teachers, noting that
many classes were taught by instructors with no credentials or a
credential in a different subject.
Under the new system, UC leaders plan to quadruple annual numbers
of credentialed science and math teachers by 2010, while leaders of
CSU -- currently the state’s largest provider of teachers -- will
expand its preparation programs as well. Math and science majors at
both university systems can earn a bachelor’s degree and a teaching
credential in four years.
UC and CSU schools offer additional incentives to the program. At
UC, science, engineering and math majors will undergo field
experience in kindergarten through 12th-grade classrooms, summer
internships in industry settings and a yearlong paid teaching
internship upon graduation. CSU plans to place undergraduates in
tutoring positions in low-performing schools and also talk to middle
and high school students about entering teaching careers.
Funds for the program are expected to come from the state and from
corporate donors. Schwarzenegger pledged $1 million to the program in
his May revised budget. SBC and Intel Corp. presented checks for $1
million and $2 million, respectively, at Tuesday’s press conference.
According to the governor’s office, 18 companies so far have
committed funds toward the program, including Qualcomm, Boeing, US
Bank, Apple and Amylin Pharmaceuticals.
“The private sector will join us to make this a true partnership
for California,” Schwarzenegger said. “The California of tomorrow
will be shaped by what we do in the classroom today.”
According to Schwarzenegger’s office, the program -- dubbed
“California Teach” at UC and unnamed at CSU -- will be rolled out in
phases beginning next year.
The governor asked UC and CSU to collaborate on the math and
science initiative in May 2004. At the news conference, Dynes, Reed
and UCI chancellor Ralph Cicerone all spoke in favor of the project,
calling it a needed step not just for California, but also for the
United States, which they said had fallen off in recent years in
terms of scientific innovation.
“The signs of our decreasing lead are everywhere,” Cicerone said.
He compared America’s current status to the 1950s, when Russia
launched the first satellite into outer space.
UCI faculty members who attended the news conference voiced
approval for the governor’s plan.
“I thought it was very good, very appropriate, and it’s definitely
timely,” said Sue Bryant, dean of biological sciences. “Our state is
the capital of biotechnology in the country, so we have a huge
investment in the science and technology business. We need to have a
way for those businesses to flourish.”
While the media-only conference took place inside the Bren Events
Center, a group of several dozen educators, nurses, firefighters and
others picketed outside the doors, carrying signs deriding the
governor as “Benedict Arnold” and criticizing his school spending
policies.
Sharon Toji, an organizer for the Orange County Grassroots
volunteer group, said she invited 3,000 people on her mailing list to
come to UCI on Tuesday when she heard about the governor’s
appearance.
“Schwarzenegger needs to quit having the staged PR events like
this one,” Toji remarked, wearing a Rosie the Riveter T-shirt, as the
picketers filed next to her. “He’s borrowing a page from Bush’s book
-- only letting the cheerleaders in. It’s important for the people of
California to understand that his action-hero persona was strictly
for the movies.”
Next to the chanting protesters, two undergraduate students stood
silently with a pair of signs declaring “Join Arnold” and “We [love]
Arnold.”
“We’re not professional protesters or activists,” said Frances
Barraza, 21, a political science major. “We’re just here to support
the governor. We’re in favor of the special election. We think
teachers should be paid for merit, not just for sticking around.”
About the picketers marching by her, she added, “I don’t think
they represent the people.”
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