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‘Already in the Door’: How One California Charter Network is Recruiting Staff as Special Education Teachers with Free Credentialing, Mentorship, and Better Salaries

Original article found here.

By Marianna McMurdock | The 74

As schools nationwide scramble to hire special education teachers after a pandemic-exacerbated shortage, a California charter network is turning to existing staff to fill classroom slots by paying for costly credential programs, boosting salaries, and providing mentors.

“I’ve seen this across systems, not just Aspire, where we have these great educators in our schools, who just need support in accessing credential programs,” said Aspire Charter Schools senior special education director Lisa Freccero. “They’re invested in our schools; they want to work with our kids; they want to work in special education.”

All but two states reported special education teacher shortages for the 2021-22 school year. With declines growing for years, states have rolled out cash incentives to retain and recruit more special needs teachers in recent months.

Facing similar vacancies, Aspire is acting fast to scale up their small grow-your-own program. So far, seven educators across their network of 36 California sites have participated.

Now in its third year, Aspire’s Education Specialist Intern Sponsorship program creates a pipeline of school volunteers and classroom aides “already in the door,” Freccero said, providing a pathway for uncredentialed staff, predominantly Black and Latino adults — who also reflect the network’s 15,000 students — to stay with the school community.

Aspire staff are hired on as first year teachers at a salary of $56-59,000. Through one-on-one coaching with administrators — including feedback from senior teachers on recorded lessons — specialist interns learn by doing, applying strategies with students in real time, with daily guidance from their senior mentor.

Even before the pandemic, Aspire’s Bay Area and Central Valley schools had persistent staff vacancies in special education. The last year saw specialist vacancies grow in their Los Angeles schools, where the Sponsorship program is now being expanded.

One East Oakland site is operating with three full-time special education aides, about half of their usual team of five to six. Their Bay Area schools have the highest shortages, currently filled by contractors or substitutes, though all regions have vacancies in every special education role — from speech pathologists and specialists/teachers to school psychologists.

Lisa Freccero

“It’s a high turnover profession… We were trying to solve for that,” Freccero added. “When we talk to them, for the vast majority, [the] barrier was having to either stop their current job or simultaneously figure out a way to pay to go back to school and do a credential program.”

Michelle Ciraulo, a teacher in one of Aspire’s 36 schools in East Oakland, was planning to do just that: save up at least $10,000, while working full-time, to enroll in a credential program. If certified, she’d have a better chance of staying with her caseload of 10th- and 11th-graders and earn higher wages.

Entrance art at Aspire’s Golden State Prep, where Michelle Ciraulo teaches, in Oakland, California.

“The cost was a hindrance. I wanted to become an ed specialist next year, but I would have probably ended up having to do that with an emergency certification, which you can only do for one year,” she said. “[This] definitely sped up the process.”

Ciraulo said she is also more in tune with general education teachers who she partners with in an inclusion class. Students with IEPs are assisted in general education classrooms.

The connection between teachers is necessary, she said, to make stronger lesson plans and better support students. The program enabled her to form deeper connections with students, too.

“It was really a big incentive for me to just become a specialist but also to stay at this school site and continue to work with my kids and get to know them really well — and their families,” Ciraulo said.

Michelle Ciraulo

Colleagues say that the model can also help prevent burnout many career educators experience around their fifth year. After juggling student caseloads, paperwork and learning to teach — often with little feedback or support networks — many feel overwhelmed from year one. Aspire’s model cuts down on learning curves via multiple mentors and gradually-increasing caseloads.

“Where do you think we should go next … What data do you want? What data do you need? What assessment should you use? … It takes a while to get that knowledge,” senior special education teacher Suzanne Williams said. “When you already have somebody right there next to you who has that knowledge, it’s beautiful, and it benefits the students the most.”

A parent of students with disabilities who started out as a volunteer in her childrens’ schools, Williams added that the first three years are typically the hardest for new teachers she’s witnessed in Modesto, a small city southeast of San Francisco. Williams said her mentee Stephanie’s first years were a success because of the Aspire model.

“She didn’t have to guess — she had somebody right there to ask. When she was writing her lesson plan, she was actually writing lesson plans that she was using each and every day […] She was all in 100% from the get go. We gave her a light caseload and then she worked her way up,” Williams said.

Suzanne Williams with one of her students.

Stephanie would record general education teachers’ classes and her own instruction, and the three educators would pour over them in detail, providing and adapting to feedback. And in built-in “dry runs,” Williams roleplayed students as Stephanie practiced lessons.

The mentorship took out the guesswork that typically comes with being the only, or one few, special education specialists at a site. By the end of the one-year program, Williams said it felt like her mentee had gained three years of experience.

“She’s not focusing on all the things she needs to learn and needs to be. She already has that mentor right there, working hand in hand […] The person is going into that situation prepared or feeling confident,” Williams told The 74. “A confident teacher brings confidence to the students.”


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Rebuilding community: Simpler than it sounds, harder than it looks

Aspire CHA assistant principal and students
Students and teachers in class at Aspire Capitol Heights Academy in Sacramento, California. CREDIT: FILMTWIST CREATIVE AGENCY; PHOTO COURTESY ASPIRE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

Original  EdSource article found here

By Tony Solina, Area Superintendant, Central Valley Region

Headshot of Anthony SolinaIn March 2020, as schools closed their doors, we were forced to adapt to the sudden shift to our daily routines and learn other strategies to make distance learning work. Now, three months back into in-person learning, we see daily examples of a new learning curve: not being able to wait to use the restroom, forgetting to raise your hand before speaking and struggling to take turns on the playground.

These things remind me just how long we were away.

While these examples may seem small, it was clear to me that they are markers of a larger challenge. After 18 months away, the fabric of our community had begun to fray. We’d forgotten what it looked like to learn together and eroded part of the foundation of trust and care on which we built our students’ education. Especially after the devastating emotional and mental toll of the pandemic, it is almost unthinkable to imagine asking students to learn to read, play an instrument or solve algebra equations without first rebuilding a nurturing and safe environment.

As superintendent of Aspire Public Schools’ Central Valley region, this was both overwhelming and energizing. I knew it would help us to focus on what really matters in our schools and that it would require immediate attention to rebuild the community that is so central to what our staff, scholars and families love about our schools.

Creating this culture is simpler than we often make it out to be. We believe learning doesn’t occur until all students feel included, loved and safe. That means we make community building and the social-emotional care of our students a priority. We treat social-emotional learning with the same focus and attention as math and history, leveraging a dedicated curriculum that we apply inside classrooms and in conversations among staff and with families. And we encourage our teachers to take time — real time, during the school day — to get to know students and listen intently to their needs and challenges. When you make it clear that relationships, belonging and wellness matter, then you build a culture that centers on community. School is not merely in the physical buildings where we learn, but it’s also in the relationships we build among adults and scholars.

And yet, simple as it may be, it takes a lot of work and investment from every person who interacts with our students to make it a reality. We have created structures across our school, within classrooms, and in partnership with parents that reinforce this value.

Our advisory classes focus on social-emotional wellness and social justice, giving students a dedicated space to honor their identities and create community. Morning-meeting circles establish a warm environment to start the day. We carve out dedicated time for teachers to collaborate, building bonds and lines of communication to more holistically support students. And we engage students and families in their learning, leaving our doors open for parents to observe classes and instituting innovative engagement models. Our student-led conferences and Saturday Schools provide students with an active role in communicating their progress and give parents a window into their students’ day-to-day learning. While these practices predate the pandemic, they have emerged post-pandemic as more essential than ever.

All of these strategies require both the simple commitment to making our community a priority and the dedicated time and effort of every team member. And I’m beginning to see the impact of our hard work. Our community is slowly stitching itself back together, in many ways stronger than it was before.

Do we have it all figured out? Of course not. But the rhythm of our days is becoming more consistent and the feelings of our community — joy, stability, belonging — are filling our hallways and classrooms again.

As schools across our country have fought our way through another confusing fall, I encourage my fellow school leaders to take a good look at the health of your school community. We are all being pulled in many directions, from urgent concerns about Covid-19 — contact tracing, independent study, staffing shortages — to the daunting challenges of learning loss. But underneath all that is the foundation we build for learning and the community we create for our students, teachers, and families.

Pay close attention to that community, make it a priority and invest in it appropriately, and I truly believe that is how we will get back on course to provide the learning and opportunities that every student deserves.

•••

Stockton native Anthony Solina is a lifelong educator and the current Central Valley superintendent for Aspire Public Schools,
a charter management organization with 36 schools in the Central Valley, Bay Area and Los Angeles.
The opinions in this commentary are those of the author. If you would like to submit a commentary, please review our guidelines and contact us.

Open Letter from ERES Parents to OUSD

Open Letter from ERES Parents to OUSD

Dear OUSD Board,

Last week, Aspire ERES Academy closed its doors for the final time. We — as parent representatives of the entire ERES community — want to share what the experience has been like for our families.

After more than a decade of denying our families access to a facility that would meet our school’s needs, in February 2021, you voted to deny ERES’ ability to grow to meet community demand and become financially sustainable. You knew your decision would force our high-quality school to close, and yet you ignored pleas from family members, the Fruitvale community and elected officials to help the school stay open. In these final days, we want you to know how your decision has impacted us.

Confusion. Sadness. Rage. These are a few of the emotions we’ve been dealing with from our children; and as parents, we feel them too. Our children are experiencing a trauma — losing ties to people with whom they have built deep trust. This rupture of our children’s safety net has caused them to develop anxiety about their school experience. At their new schools, will they receive the wraparound services that were available at ERES? Will they feel safe at school and find an adult they can trust? Will they make new friends? Will they experience bullying? Will the special education supports adequately address our diverse learners’ needs? Despite significant research about our school options, you never know what a school is like until you’ve spent time there.

It’s not just emotional challenges — it’s logistical ones too. In many cases, those of us with multiple children were unable to secure seats for each of them at the same high-quality school. With work schedules and other family commitments, navigating multiple school schedules will become nearly impossible, creating potentially unsafe situations where our young children must wait to be picked up or navigate public transportation on their own. OUSD made too few accommodations in their enrollment and transfer process to assist us in securing seats that worked for our families.

Your motivations for this decision are clear — you were concerned about the district’s finances while ignoring what’s best for Oakland’s families. By effectively closing ERES Academy, you tried to force our children into attendance at lower-performing district schools. But you miscalculated the decision-making power of our families. Fewer than one in five students from ERES will attend district schools next school year. The majority of us found other charter schools or have chosen to make the sacrifice to attend private schools or leave the district. What did you gain from ignoring parents’ voices to advance your anti-charter agenda?

This experience has enlightened our families about how power is held and how decisions are made. It was clear that our voices were never truly listened to, but that won’t be true forever. Even though ERES is closing, we’re paying more attention than ever and we are ready to fight for our communities to demand accountability from this board. And if that accountability doesn’t come immediately, we’re ready to organize at election time.

Aspire ERES Academy has been a pillar of the Fruitvale and it’s difficult to believe that it will no longer exist in just a few days. Our deep sadness over our school closing is coupled with an even deeper conviction that no other Oakland family should experience what ours did this last year. We will continue to stand up for Oakland’s children to ensure each of them has access to the high-quality education they deserve. We’re ready to do that in partnership with the OUSD board, or in spite of it.

Signed,

Reyna Morales, ERES parent to two rising 6th-grade students
Lucy Paredes, ERES parent to rising 3rd, 4th, and 6th-grade students
Francisco Rodriguez, ERES parent to rising 3rd, 4th and 6th-grade students
Maria Sanchez, ERES parent to a rising 3rd-grade student
Monica Torres, ERES parent to rising 2nd and 6th-grade students


Estimado Consejo de OUSD,

La última semana Aspire ERES Academy cerró sus puertas por última vez. Nosotros, como padres representantes de la comunidad ERES, queremos compartir cómo ha sido la experiencia para nuestras familias..

Después de más de una década de negar a nuestras familias el acceso a una instalación que satisfaría las necesidades de nuestra escuela, en febrero de 2021, votaron a favor de negar la capacidad de ERES de crecer para satisfacer la demanda de la comunidad y volverse financieramente sostenible. Sabían que su decisión obligaría a cerrar nuestra escuela de alta calidad y, sin embargo, ignoraron las súplicas de nuestras familias, la comunidad de Fruitvale y los funcionarios electos para ayudar a que la escuela permaneciera abierta. En estos últimos días, queremos que sepan cómo nos ha impactado su decisión.

Confusión. Tristeza. Furia. Estas son solo algunas de las emociones con las que hemos estado lidiando con nuestros hijos y, como padres, también las sentimos. Nuestros hijos están viviendo un trauma: están perdiendo los lazos con las personas con las que han construido una profunda confianza. Esta ruptura de su red de seguridad les ha hecho desarrollar ansiedad sobre su experiencia escolar. En sus nuevas escuelas, ¿recibirán los servicios integrales que estaban disponibles en ERES? ¿Se sentirán seguros en la escuela y encontrarán un adulto en quien puedan confiar? ¿Harán nuevos amigos? ¿Sufrirán acoso escolar? ¿Los apoyos de educación especial abordarán adecuadamente las diversas necesidades de nuestros estudiantes? A pesar de la investigación significativa sobre nuestras opciones escolares, nunca se sabe cómo es una escuela hasta que no ha pasado un tiempo allí.

No se trata solo de desafíos emocionales, también se incluyen las logísticas. En muchos casos, las familias con varios hijos no pudimos asegurar asientos para cada uno de ellos en la misma escuela de alta calidad. Con horarios de trabajo y otros compromisos familiares, navegar por múltiples horarios escolares será casi imposible, creando situaciones potencialmente inseguras en las que nuestros niños más pequeños tendrán que esperar a que los recojan o navegar por el transporte público por su cuenta. OUSD hizo muy pocas adaptaciones en su proceso de inscripción y transferencia para ayudarnos a asegurar asientos que funcionaron para nuestras familias.

Sus motivaciones para tomar esta decisión son claras: estaban preocupados por las finanzas del distrito mientras ignoraba lo que era mejor para las familias de Oakland. Al cerrar ERES Academy de manera efectiva, esperaba obligar a nuestros niños a asistir a las escuelas del distrito de bajo rendimiento. Pero calcularon mal el poder de decisión de nuestras familias. Menos de uno de cada cinco estudiantes de ERES asistirá a las escuelas del distrito el próximo año escolar. La mayoría de nosotros encontramos otras escuelas autónomas o hemos optado por hacer el sacrificio para asistir a escuelas privadas o dejar el distrito. ¿Qué ganaron al ignorar las voces de los padres para avanzar en su agenda anti-charter?

Esta experiencia ha iluminado a nuestras familias sobre cómo se ejerce el poder y cómo se toman las decisiones. Estaba claro que nuestras voces nunca fueron realmente escuchadas, pero eso no será cierto siempre. Aunque ERES está cerrando, estamos prestando más atención que nunca y estamos listos para luchar por nuestras comunidades para exigir responsabilidad de esta junta. Y si esa responsabilidad no llega de inmediato, estaremos listos para organizarnos para las próximas elecciones.

Aspire ERES Academy ha sido un pilar para la comunidad de Fruitvale y es difícil creer que ya no existirá en unos pocos días. Nuestra profunda tristeza por el cierre de nuestra escuela se combina con una convicción aún más profunda que ninguna otra familia de Oakland debería vivir lo que la nuestra vivió el año pasado. Continuaremos defendiendo a los niños de Oakland para asegurarnos de que cada uno de ellos tenga acceso a la educación de alta calidad que merecen. Estamos listos para hacerlo en sociedad con el distrito y el consejo de OUSD, o a pesar de ello.

Firmado,

Reyna Moralez, madre de ERES a dos estudiantes que avanzan al 6-grado
Lucy Paredes, madre de ERES a tres estudiantes que avanzan al 3, 4, y 6-grado
Francisco Rodriguez, padre de ERES a tres estudiantes que avanzan al 3, 4, y 6-grado
Maria Sanchez, madre de ERES a un estudiantes que avanzan al 3-grado
Monica Torres, madre de ERES a dos estudiantes que avanzan al 2 y 6-grado