Search The Tattler

Friday, February 3, 2023

New Emery School District Test Scores Plummet

 Emery School District Slides Precipitously

Department of Education Shows Emery on Bottom Academically


School Board Election Claims Shown to be False


Board Member Brynnda Collins
She got the endorsement of the
Alameda County Democratic Party
and she told voters to "Keep Emery
on track".
The California Department of Education has released new test score data that tracks an academically plummeting Emery Unified School District, getting worse over last year’s results which already had Emery in the basement.  The plunging test scores reveal Emery to be once again, in last place among all Alameda County school districts, a position the district has inhabited for several years running.  

The district fell from 23% proficiency in math last year to a new low of 14% proficiency, a dreadful nine point slide; making Emery the worst performing district in the county.  English proficiency wasn’t much better.  That plunge from 37% to 34% proficiency, makes Emery now second only to San Lorenzo Unified School District, a district with a much lower number of students with English as their primary language.  When that is factored, Emery performs lower than San Lorenzo in English (as well as math).

The test results show while Emery is taking up last place outright in math and very nearly in last place in English proficiency, the rate of ‘English learners’ at Emery (22%) is much lower than at the second and third worst placing districts, Hayward and San Lorenzo.  Those two districts show a rate of 28% and 30% of students classified as English learners.  Emery is shown to have a ‘Hispanic’ student population of 24% while Hayward and San Lorenzo have 64% and 28% Hispanic population.  Both those two districts show Hispanics as the primary student demographic. 

Board President
Susan Donaldson

During the election campaign
she told voters the district's test score
data was 
"misinformation being
shared by someone running for
School Board". 
Now what does she say?
When the two primary test scores in math and English, tracked by the State are numerically combined, Emery registers at 48 while Hayward and San Lorenzo total 53 and 62 respectively, making Emery the worst performing school district in Alameda County (even before factoring in the English learners handicap).

Emery is also unique among East Bay school districts with its high administration cost.  Emery has the highest ratio of administration to students of any district in the East Bay.  The data reveals that even though Emery spends by far the most money per student, they spend only 19% on actual instruction, the lowest amount of the money taken in of any district in the East Bay.  The lion’s share of revenue at Emery goes to administration salaries and election consultants.

The disheartening new data from the Department of Education comes after a November School Board election that featured three incumbents gushing over how good they are at their jobs and how the voters must not risk putting in a new person with different ideas about how to run the district.  School Board President Susan Donaldson told voters in October the three incumbents were doing a “great job” and that Emery is a “top rated” school district, never mind the actual data from the State.  Board member Brynnda Collins warned voters not to listen to anybody who brings up test data but instead insisted we must keep Emery “on track”. 

School Board member Regina Chagolla
She insisted voters re-elect her and the 
other incumbents because new ideas 
must not be allowed to take hold at Emery.


The Tattler editor Brian Donahue, who ran a low cost insurgent campaign for the Board countering the three incumbents, told the voters the top down, administration heavy Emery should try a new path by putting teachers in a higher position and paying them more.  It was a stance the three incumbents strongly refuted, stating the teachers were happy with what they have at Emery.  Mr Donahue ran on the three incumbent’s records, reminding voters of the low test scores putting Emery in last place, a charge the three refuted.  Hiding the fact that Emery’s English language learner rate is much lower than San Lorenzo and Hayward, President Donaldson made a case that Emery is only the third worst district in Alameda County and that is part of what makes Emery “great”.  

Notably, the three incumbents refused to answer the Tattler election questionnaire for voters last October, a first in Emeryville electoral politics, and none of the three would comment on the new State of California Department of Education data for this story.


Straight From The State
These numbers are as critical for Emeryville residents to know as they are 
 inconvenient for the three incumbents.



23 comments:

  1. OMG this district can never seem to turn the corner. It just keeps getting worse. What can we do to get a decent school district in Emeryville? We pay enough money, so it can't be that. What is it? This is a serious question.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is embarrassing!! Why these officials are not getting fired for their poor performance?

    ReplyDelete
  3. It IS embarrassing. The school board never changes in attitude. Only the faces change. Their friends are always appointed and outsiders are never let in. Brian is right people with different ideas are not allowed. Parents that are angry are never listened to. Look how they attack people who aren't part of their group.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Emeryville Not For KidsFebruary 4, 2023 at 5:20 PM

    There will never be a fix to this. Emeryville is not family friendly. No parks here or things for kids. People don't have kids here. The few that do send their kids to private school because Emery is so bad. The only way to turn this around is to make Emeryville family friendly and that's not happening because it's too expensive and the apartments are almost all one bedroom.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Emery Unified can teach a graduate level course in abject failure. A district small enough to be nimble and address problems, and yet barely a tenth of students can read at grade level. DISBAND EMERY. Let Oakland or Berkelely run it.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Well, one thing every Tattler reader could do next time is help Brian get more than 900 votes the next time he runs for school board. The poor guy had to go door-to-door by himself (I don't think he has any friends), when he could've had at least 5 people helping him who feel the same way he does. We should all be doing our part in helping Brian win next time, and not just letting him do all the work and getting just 900 votes.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Doesn't Brian live in Berkeley or Oakland now? He can't be on the school board if he doesn't even live in Emeryville.

      Delete
    2. Brian doesn’t live in Emeryville you say! That’s a story for Rob, the guy that loves Emeryville so much he lives in Contra Costa County. Pitch that to Rob…see if he goes with it. Just don’t be critical of his blog because unlike the Tattler, he won’t post negative comments.

      Delete
  7. The missing part of the story is why does only 19% of the $27k/student make it to the classroom? The state average is 52%

    ReplyDelete
  8. How come you never link to or cite the source of your data? Is this a chart you made or a screen capture from a reputable source? This is what bloggers do, not journalists (which nobody would accuse you of). This site has a reputation of blending fact and opinion so I can’t read anything you write without questioning if it is true or made up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. OK Scheffer, here you are:

      Source: The California Department of Education

      Definition of Journalism: ‘Journalism is the collection, preparation, and distribution of news and related commentary and feature materials through such print and electronic media as newspapers, magazines, books, blogs, webcasts, podcasts, social networking and social media sites, and e-mail as well as through radio, motion pictures, and television. ‘
      Source: Encyclopedia Brittanica

      Delete
    2. He’s a journalist in the basic term I guess, just not a very good one. He just writes op-ed pieces basically. One person said this was a grown man diary. Another person compared it to the Onion. Both seem pretty accurate to me.

      Delete
    3. Ok, so you’re not going to provide a link (url) to it because the data has been editorialized. Got it.

      Here’s another definition for you (notice how it doesn’t say anything about “journalism”):
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blogger_(service)?wprov=sfti1

      Also, give this a read in your ample free time:
      https://www.spj.org/ethicscode.asp

      Delete
    4. Can we get a link to these numbers?

      Delete
    5. Those two people are you, Scheffer. And if you hate the Tattler so much, why are you always reading it? May I suggest something lighter for you? May I suggest Rob’s blog? It’s much lighter fare over there. I suggest you go there.

      Delete
    6. Hey Scheffer, I already gave the source, the California Department of Education. If your Google button is broken, here’s that link: https://www.cde.ca.gov/
      Here’s another useful link that also sources the CA Dept of Ed: https://www.greatschools.org/

      Delete
    7. Here's a sample deep dive: https://www.greatschools.org/california/emeryville/emery-unified-school-district/#academics*Test_scores*Math

      Delete
    8. I'm not that person. Surprise, there's more than one person in Emeryville that doesn't think the Tattler is the best publication in the world. I come here like I stop to see an accident on the highway. I know I'm not supposed to, but I can't help myself. It's also funny to me to see a "journalist" (who ran for the same election that he's covering!) put a screenshot of data and nothing to support it. Even if you're right, it's still funny to me.

      Delete
    9. The people of Emeryville have an interest in who is running for their school board. That’s newsworthy every day of the week.
      I cited the source for the data here and in the story.

      Delete
  9. Hi Other Anonymous, isn't it hilarious that he thinks we're the same person? I have to admit though, I thought it was him replying to his own story when I saw those people agree with him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You should probably wrap your head around the idea that there are people in Emeryville that care about having a functional school district (even if you don't).

      Delete
  10. A good journalist also doesn't resort to name-calling when the slightest bit of pushback arises. They also don't say the reader's "Google button" must be broken when a reader asks for a link to the data used for a news story.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. But as you can see, that’s a prima facie false statement: because this good journalist does resort to ‘name-calling at the slightest bit of push back’. I correct untruthful or incorrect comments and I’m a good journalist. So your comment is false on its face.

      Delete