Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Counting Kids at MCS

City Council should demand an end to alibis and vague numbers.

Posted by John Branston on Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 12:12 PM

Nothing connects people to a community like public schools. That connection took a huge hit in 1973 from court-ordered busing, and I don't think Memphis has ever really recovered.

Memphis City Schools lost 28,500 white students in one year, many to private schools. A racially balanced system with 148,000 students became a de-facto segregated system with 100,000 students, give or take a few thousand, today.

Shelby County Schools went from 17,000 students after Memphis annexed Raleigh in 1975 to more than 47,000 students today. The more recent beneficiary of Memphis flight is DeSoto County, where enrollment has increased from 23,000 to 31,000-plus in eight years.

Bill and Melinda Gates grants and other foundation funds and moral support are fine, but nothing connects you to a big school system like eating the cooking. The time invested in pride, anguish, transportation, car pools, booster club meetings, sports, field trips, and PTA is life changing. Plus, over 12 years, public school saves you $100,000 to $200,000 per kid, which makes those high Memphis property taxes bearable.

Selling Memphis City Schools to people in Memphis and Shelby County who don't use them but pay for them with their property taxes is a hard sell. Which is why it is so important for MCS to honestly and openly report its enrollment, which is the basis for most of its funding. MCS is losing the support of people who live in Memphis but no longer eat the public school cooking or never ate it at all.

People of good will want everyone's children to have a decent education, but they don't want to be billed for phantoms. School enrollment should not be like pegging attendance at Glenn Beck's rally or a sports event "packed" with no-shows. Counting kids in a big district is complicated but not impossible. FedEx counts millions of packages, stores count SKUs, and the Census Bureau counts us.

Prompted by the $57 million in court-ordered back payments to MCS, the Memphis City Council, which has to fund the schools, is taking a hard look at enrollment. The early estimates have ranged from 92,000 to 120,000. In other words, as many as 28,000 students could be "tardy." If they are, instead, phantoms, it's a difference of about $300 million in state and local funding, at the going rate of $10,300 per student.

Here's a summary of the different enrollment numbers provided by various state and local sources:

The 2009 Tennessee Report Card says the enrollment at that time was 104,829.

The 2007 Tennessee Report Card said the enrollment then was 110,753.

The Tennessee Court of Appeals, in a January ruling that said Memphis is obligated to fund the schools an additional $57 million, said, incorrectly and without attribution, that MCS "serves approximately 112,000 students."

Two weeks ago, Superintendent Kriner Cash told the school board the enrollment in the first week of class was 92,378.

By the end of that week, an MCS spokesman had reported that the enrollment was 96,678. And Cash said that late enrollees could bring the number to 118,000 or even 120,000.

If so, where do they come from?

Private schools? Not likely. Someone who can afford private school either stays put or transfers to a city optional school and reserves a spot as early as possible and gets to school on time.

DeSoto County Schools? Again, not likely.

"I see them coming this way," says DeSoto Superintendent Milton Kuykendall. His district cracks down on illegal interlopers, requiring proof of residency such as a utility bill, mortgage statement, or car tag. About 30 percent of those who get reviewed by the residency committee get booted. Some are from Memphis. But we're not talking thousands of kids making an exodus back to Memphis.

Shelby County? Maybe. Memphis annexed Chimney Rock Elementary and part of Dexter Elementary this year, adding about 1,200 kids. But no evidence suggests the county system, with 28 new schools since 1990, is bleeding students to MCS.

"Our enrollment is pretty stable," said SCS spokesman Mike Tebbe, who estimates it will exceed 47,000 this year.

That leaves the streets. If Cash's upper estimate is correct, than as much as one-fifth of MCS enrollment doesn't believe in starting school until after Labor Day. How they expect to learn anything is a mystery.

Or else MCS is padding the numbers. Either way, MCS has some explaining to do.

Comments (7)

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A call to action. Shea Flinn and Jim Strickland have "a tiger by the tail" on this issue. These two brave souls need our help and support. Guys, keep fighting.

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Posted by tomguleff on 09/02/2010 at 12:59 PM

In order to continue as the Full Employment Agency For Otherwise Underqualified Overpaid Administrators, MCS needs that extra funding from those nonexistent students.

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Posted by Packrat on 09/02/2010 at 1:22 PM

Alot of kids sadly do not start school until after Labor day this is far from a new occurrence. This is due to the large numbers of low income families within the district. Those on government assistance don't have money for new clothes and school supplies until the first of the month which would be early September.

That being said..there's also some padding going on here and some negligent parents as well.

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Posted by Brad Watkins on 09/02/2010 at 1:24 PM

I won't get into padding numbers, but I can say with firsthand knowledge that large numbers of kids register after school has been in session for weeks. I'm a teacher and I'm still getting new students daily. I generally continue to until just after Labor Day.

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Posted by davidkentholt on 09/02/2010 at 2:32 PM

Way back in the day, teachers would take roll in the morning. They would then send this to the office. I imagine the office did something with it. I think they had a computer in there. It may have been used for something.

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Posted by 38103 on 09/02/2010 at 2:58 PM

I imagine there are a few parents who still aren't aware that the school schedule has changed since the days when they dropped out of school. Or they just don't get around to it. Or just don't care.

You also have parental visitation to take into account. Some parents may get their kids for the summer, and traditionally summer lasts until Labor Day, so to piss off their ex-spouses, they keep the kids in Oregon or wherever until Labor Day. This is true of a family close to where I live. The kids disappear the day after the end of term and don't reappear until after Labor Day.

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Posted by Jeff on 09/03/2010 at 7:37 AM

Thanks to John Branston for bringing attention to this issue(more than once), and to Shea Flinn and Jim Strickland for their efforts. This is one issue the residents of Memphis and Shelby County should not be indifferent about, considering the amount of money involved and the ridiculous discrepancies in the enrollment numbers.

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Posted by squeeznoutsparks on 09/04/2010 at 3:41 PM
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