Kindergarten to See Class-Size Reduction
- Share via
Five-year-olds will no longer have to be cramped in classrooms, as the Simi Valley Unified School District’s Board of Education unanimously voted to add kindergarten to its class-size reduction program.
“It’s kind of a no-brainer,” said board President Norm Walker, after listening to several kindergarten teachers describe the benefits of teaching 20 children, instead of a larger class.
“I support it,” said board member Diane Collins. “How could you not?”
At least two of the schools in the 19,400-student district, Vista and Park View elementary schools, however, have said they do not have sufficient space for the smaller classes.
In August, the state Legislature increased funding from $650 to $800 per student for all classrooms that have 20 or fewer children. First- through third-graders in Simi Valley began the class-size reduction program last year.
To meet state deadlines for the funding, the extra Simi Valley kindergarten teachers must be on the payroll by Nov. 1 and begin teaching classes by Feb. 16.
The board seemed especially compelled by kindergarten teacher Neelu Stafford, who said she has taught up to 34 children at a time.
She told of one mother who had erroneously thought that Simi Valley kindergartens were classes of 20 students or less. The woman brought what she believed was a generous amount of cupcakes--24--to a party at school.
Stafford said she had to tell the mother that kindergarten wasn’t part of the smaller class-size program, and so she began cutting the cupcakes in half to make sure there was enough to accommodate the overcrowded classroom.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.