- LOS ANGELES TIMES
Friday, June 5, 1998
- Texas Tries to Lure Away Teachers
Bilingual education: After Prop. 227 victory, school
district with growing Spanish-speaking population is
sending recruiters to California.
By LIZ SEYMOUR, Times Staff Writer
In the wake of Proposition 227's passage, a Texas school district is sending recruiters to
Southern California to hire away bilingual teachers.
"This is a wonderful opportunity both for the teachers . . . and for this district," said
Mac Bernd, superintendent of the Arlington Independent School District.
Bernd, a former Orange County school superintendent, said the idea came to him while
reading newspaper accounts Thursday about the statewide ballot measure, which
essentially dismantles bilingual instruction in California classrooms. It was approved by
61% of the voters in Tuesday's election.
Bernd's district in Texas plans to send six officials to Southern California June 15 to
17, interviewing teachers in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties. Bernd was
superintendent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District for four years before
moving to Arlington in January.
The Arlington schools hope to hire an estimated 20 bilingual teachers and nearly 25
teachers of English as a second language to handle a rising population of Spanish
speaking students. About 54,500 students are enrolled in schools in Arlington, a growing
suburb equidistant from Dallas and Fort Worth. Latino students account for 18% of the
student population, double the percentage of a decade ago.
"We figure that there will be so many displaced teachers in California, maybe we can
entice a few out here," said Charlene Robertson, a spokeswoman for Arlington schools.
Some educators speculated that other school districts outside California might follow
Arlington's lead.
"It makes sense if you need those teachers, you will come to a source that has them," said
Day Higuchi, union president of United Teachers Los Angeles, which opposed Proposition
227.
In Arlington, teacher salaries start at $26,900 a year, Robertson said, with an average
of $33,304 annually. That is lower than the $32,000 starting salary of a Los Angeles
Unified School District teacher. The average Los Angeles salary is $45,924, Higuchi
said, not including the $2,500 or $5,000 pay differentials given to bilingual
instruction teachers.
The cost of living is lower in Texas, however, and the salaries might be high enough to
draw teachers who are committed to bilingual instruction, Higuchi said.
"There is a high likelihood that they will go somewhere else because the new law says
you cannot teach it at all," Higuchi said.
A spokesman for another teachers group that vehemently opposed Proposition 227 said
California teachers probably would not leave in large numbers.
"I don't really want to say anything bad about Texas, but Southern California is the place
where the teaching of recent immigrant students is the most dynamic of any place in the
country," said Steve Zimmer, an organizer of the teachers group On Campus. The Los
Angeles-based coalition of bilingual and English as a second language teachers has
gathered 1,500 pledges from teachers to continue bilingual instruction despite the
proposition's passage.
Educators also pointed out that with California's current shortage of teachers, employed
teachers probably would not be looking for a job.
Officials in Bernd's previous school district in California said they don't expect to lose
their bilingual teachers to schools in Texas or any other state.
"They're committed to teaching these kids whatever way we're told to by the state," said
James M. Ferryman, school board president of Newport-Mesa schools.
But he was impressed by Bernd's savvy. "He doesn't miss a beat, does he?" Ferryman
said.
- Copyright Los Angeles Times