In Spanish colonial California, a prerequisite for promotion above the rank of corporal and the core criteria for promotion beyond, was literacy.[1] This formed an incentive to both learn to read and write for oneself and provide this for one's children through whatever means possible. The Spanish policy at the time, as a means of controlling their citizens, was in opposition to popular education.[2] The first recorded school in California was opened in 1795 by Manuel de Vargas, a retired sergeant, in San Jose.[3][4] Small schools taught by retired soldiers continued to operate through the revolution years and independence from Spain in 1821. José Antonio Carrillo is one of the few school teachers known by name from this time.
Attempts were made to import educators to California from elsewhere in New Spain. Though at that time, fairly serious prison sentences were commuted in exchange for immigrating to California. Governor Pablo Vicente de Solá made education a core priority. After requests for government funds for school teachers went unanswered, he used his own wealth to fund a fellowship for two Spanish professors to establish a high school in Monterey. After several weeks they concluded life in California as unbearable and left. Subsequent governors continued to address the education issue but failed to gain traction for higher education. The first truancy law was issued in 1828 by Governor José María de Echeandía, ordered the commanding officers to compel parents to send their children to the schools which he had established.
In 1829, throughout Alta California, there were 339 students in 11 primary schools. During this time a noted educator in San Diego was Friar Antonio Menendez and his 18 pupils. Private schools operated throughout this time. An example was opened by Don Guillermo Arnel near present-day Salinas on December 10, 1833 on his plantation Rancho El Alisal. He named his university preparatory school "El Seminario del Patrocinio de San Jose" or "Colegio de San Jose". For the following 20 years of Mexican administration the public school system ebbed and flowed. At times there were few schools operating due to a revolving lack of funds, lack of interest, politics, and lack of educators.
In 1847 California was annexed from Mexico and become incorporated into the United States of America. At the time of American annexation there were only a few hundred literate residents in the state [5] out of a population of 26,000[6] for a 2% literacy rate. There were now funds available if the school existed. From 1854 onwards there was a steady public education system present throughout the state of California. Attendance was not compulsory or universal, for example, in San Diego attendance hovered at 25%. The classes taught at the primary level were orthography, reading, writing, grammar, geography, arithmetic, algebra, history, French, and Spanish. From this foundation the California education system expanded to form secondary schools, and institutions of higher learning.[2]
California is the most populous state of the U.S. and has the most school students, with over 6.2 million in the 2005–06 school year, giving California more students in school than 36 states have in total population and one of the highest projected enrollments in the country.[7] About 25% of school students are English learners, compared to 9% nationally. A major problem for K-12 education in California[who?] is the high level of high school dropouts, especially among minority students. Approximately 22% of African Americans and Hispanic Californians are living in poverty and only 68% of students living below the poverty line will graduate from high school.[8] The state of California has in place the Dropout Recovery and Prevention Act (SB 65) as a governmental way of dealing with the high dropout rate in California. It was implemented in 1985 and was expanded in 2004 due to its success in lowering the state's dropout rate. Senate Bill 65 initiated three new dropout prevention efforts: the Pupil Motivation and Maintenance Program, the Alternative Education Outreach Consultant (AEOC) Program, and the Educational Clinic Program.[9]
According to Governor Jerry Brown in 2014, "almost 30% are either undocumented or don't speak English."[10]
In 2016, California's K–12 public school per-pupil spending was ranked 22nd in the nation ($11,500/student vs. $11,800 for the US average).[11]
For 2012, California's public schools ranked 48th in the number of employees per student, at 0.102 (the US average was 0.137), while paying the 7th most per employee, $49,000 (the US average was $39,000).[12][13][14]
California public schools are funded through four main revenue streams: Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF), Federal Revenue, Other State revenue, and Other Local revenue.[15] LCFF makes up the largest chunk of public school funding, including property and local taxes. Federal revenue is a significantly smaller portion of funding, given as part of free or reduced lunch programs and other federal-based aid programs.[16]
Other state and local revenue make up less significant revenue streams. Schools receive a general, “basic aid” amount, based on a formula for the grades a school holds, number of students, etc… In a "basic aid" district, property taxes generate more revenue than the funding limit, a benchmark set by the state to qualify for additional funding.[16] Of the 944 school districts in California, 80 are labeled basic aid, 40 of which are in the Bay Area.[17]
Because LCFF is the largest portion of public school funding, schools capable of generating more LCFF funding often have more overall funding per student, but it’s those same districts that already have well-off families and students. This issue is prominent in East San Jose, CA, where Alum Rock Union School District receives about 25% less funding than Saratoga Union School District per student. Homes in the Alum Rock region sell for between $589,100 and $686,100 and Saratoga homes sell for over $2 million.[18]
Public school facilities
Many public school facilities throughout California are in various stages of disrepair. In a report to the public, the federal government noted that 75% of California schools, 13,096 in total, were in need of renovation and modernization. Furthermore, the renovations and modernizations needed were required to elevate the schools standing/rating to "good".[19] In a 2007 financial analysis report, published by the U.S. General Accounting Office, it was estimated that it would cost $112 billion to bring all K–12 public school buildings in line with building codes.[19][failed verification]
In 2014 at a meeting of the Fremont School Board, it was made public that students could not study effectively due to the Heating and Air Conditioning (HVAC) not working.[20]
In 2003 students at Fremont High School in Los Angeles voiced their feelings of humiliation with regards to the needed repairs at their school.[21]
Nonpublic Nonsectarian Schools
“Nonpublic, nonsectarian school” (NPS) means a private, nonsectarian school that enrolls individuals with exceptional needs pursuant to an individualized education program and is certified by the department.[22] Unlike private schools, tuition for the NPS is paid for by the Local Educational Agencies (LEA) and the schools must conform to California Department of Education standards.[23]
The ten major campuses of the University of California are located in Berkeley, Los Angeles, San Diego, Davis, Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, Irvine, Riverside, Merced and San Francisco. The University of California, San Francisco, teaches only graduate health-sciences students. The UC Hastings College of the Law, also in San Francisco, is affiliated with UC, but is not administered by the UC Regents. The UC system was originally intended to accept students from the top one-eighth (1/8th) of California high school graduates, however several of the schools in the UC system have become even more selective. The awarding of doctoral degrees from California public universities was originally intended to be the sole domain of the UC system, however several doctoral degrees are now also awarded by the Cal State system.
The California Community Colleges system provides lower division "General Education" courses, whose credit units are transferable to the CSU and UC systems, as well as vocational education, remedial education, and continuing education programs. It awards certificates and associate degrees. It is composed of 112 colleges organized into 72 districts, serving a student population of over 2.9 million. The system also provides the education certification, basic training, and some advanced training to all police officers, fire fighters and Emergency Medical Tech's in the state either directly (via on campus academies) or indirectly (via affiliations with police / sheriff department's and fire department's "in house" academies).
Private universities
California has hundreds of other private colleges and universities, including many religious and special-purpose institutions. This leads to many unique entertainment and educational opportunities for residents. The San Francisco Bay area and greater Los Angeles have an abundance of these private universities, with some of the highest densities of post-secondary institutions in the world.
^Harrow, Neal; "California Conquered: The Annexation of a Mexican Province, 1846-1850"; p. 14-30; University of California Press; 1989; ISBN978-0-520-06605-2
^Jerry Brown & Neel Kashkari (2014). California Gubernatorial Debate (video). C-SPAN. Event occurs at 41:50. Retrieved 7 September 2014. I think that will building for the future because so many of our kids almost about 30% are either undocumented or don't speak English.
^"Education Spending Per Student by State". Governing. 2018-06-01. Archived from the original on 2018-07-02. Retrieved 2018-07-18. NOTE: Adult education, community services and other nonelementary-secondary program expenditures are excluded.
^Gordon, Tracy; Iselin, John (2017-01-01). "What Everyone Should Know about Their State's Budget". Urban Institute. Retrieved 2018-07-16. This chart includes two places, District of Columbia, and the US average, so the number rankings rank 52 total entities; this needs to be understood when viewing these rankings.
^Gordon, Tracy; Iselin, John (2017-01-01). "What Everyone Should Know about Their State's Budget"(PDF). Urban Institute. p. 7. Archived(PDF) from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2018-07-16. For state and local government spending, we rely primarily on the US Census Bureau's Census of Governments Annual Survey of State and Local Government Finances for fiscal year 2012, as revised and released on October 23, 2015.1. For state and local government employment and payroll, we draw from the US Census Bureau's Census of Governments Government Employment and Payroll survey for full-time equivalent employees in March 2012.
^Woolfolk, John (2018-01-15). "Why do Californians pay more state and local taxes than Texans?". San Jose Mercury News. Archived from the original on 2018-02-08. Retrieved 2018-07-16. ... California spending per resident on K–12 schools was about average among the states, but while teacher pay was among the highest, the state trailed others in teachers and support staff per student.
^ ab"Schools Lack Repair Funds". Sacramento Observer. p. B1. ProQuest367548033. According to a federal study, 75 percent of schools in California, a total of 13,096 schools, reported that they needed funds for repairs, renovation and modernization, just to bring their schools up to a level they would consider "good."
^Sohrabji, Sunita (October 19, 2012). "School Bd. Contender Wants Budget Restructured". India West. p. A10. ProQuest1117364798.
^"CSU Facts 2017"(PDF). The California State University. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
Further reading
Benson, Charles. From Mass to Universal Education : The Experience of the State of California and Its Relevance to European Education in the Year 2000 (M. Nijhoff, 1976)
Benveniste, Guy, and Charles Benson. From mass to universal education: the experience of the state of California and its relevance to European education in the year 2000 (Springer Science & Business Media, 2012) online.
Bracco, Kathy Reeves; Callan, Patrick M. "Competition and Collaboration in California Higher Education" (2002) online
Cloud, Roy W. Education in California: Leaders, Organizations, and Accomplishments of the First Hundred Years (Stanford University Press, 1952) online
Douglass, John Aubrey. "Politics and policy in California higher education: 1850 to the 1960 Master Plan" (PhD dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1992. 9237800).
Ferrier, William Warren. Ninety Years of Education in California 1846-1936 (1937) online
Fuller, Bruce. When Schools Work: Pluralist Politics and Institutional Reform in Los Angeles (JHU Press, 2022)
Hendrick, Irving G. California education : a brief history (1980) online
Hendrick, Irving G., “From Indifference to Imperative Duty: Educating Children in Early California,” California History 79#2 (2000): 226–49;
Hendrick, Irving G. “Federal Policy Affecting the Education of Indians in California, 1849-1934.” History of Education Quarterly 16#2 (1976), pp. 163–85. online
Hendrick, Irving G. "The Education of Non-Whites in California, 1849-1970." (ERIC, 1977). online
Higgins, Andrew Stone. Higher Education for All: Racial Inequality, Cold War Liberalism, and the California Master Plan (2023) summary
James, Thomas. “State Politics and Educational Leadership in California: The Ebb and Flow of the Nineteenth Century.” The Pacific Historian 30#3 (fall 1986): 18-33.
Kelly, Matthew Gardner. "Schoolmaster's Empire: Race, Conquest, and the Centralization of Common Schooling in California, 1848–1879" History of Education Quarterly (2016) 56(3), 445-472. doi:10.1111/hoeq.12198
Myers, James Edward. “The Educational Work of Andrew Jackson Moulder in the Development of Public Education in California, 1850-1895.” (PhD. diss., University of California; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing, 1961. 0222484).
Nations, J. "How Austerity Politics Led to Tuition Charges at the University of California and City University of New York" History of Education Quarterly (2021). 61(3), 273-296. doi:10.1017/heq.2021.4
Polos, Nicholas C. "A Yankee Patriot: John Swett, the Horace Mann of the Pacific." History of Education Quarterly 4#1 (March 1964): 17-32. online
Smelser, Neil J., and Gabriel A. Almond, eds. Public Higher Education in California (1974; reprint 2022) ISBN9780520314337
Swett, John. Public education in California: its origin and development, with personal reminiscences of half a century (1911) online; called the "Father of the California public school system"
Wollenberg, Charles. "Mendez v. Westminster: Race, nationality and segregation in California schools." California Historical Quarterly 53.4 (1974): 317-332.