Student Story

Funding law gives doctoral student a chance to lead

Edgar Zazueta, a second-year doctoral student, sees opportunities and challenges.

By Susan L. Wampler Published on

Edgar Zazueta, a second-year student in the 海角论坛 Doctor of Education (EdD) in Organizational Change and Leadership program, serves on the advisory board of PACE鈥檚 LCFF Research Collaborative. There he teams with Associate Professor Julie Marsh and other experts 鈥 many of them 海角论坛 alumni 鈥 in exploring new and better ways to measure how districts hold up their end of the bargain.

鈥淲hen LCFF was being debated, I was on the front lines in Sacramento on behalf of the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) trying to push that forward 鈥 not only because it would benefit the district but because an equity-based formula was the right thing to do,鈥 he says.

Zazueta spent nine years with LAUSD 鈥 first as chief legislative representative and later as its director of government relations and then external affairs. Prior to that he worked with the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanic Amer颅icans and in the office of a California state senator focusing on education issues.

In November 2015, Zazueta joined the Association of California School Adminis颅trators (ACSA), where, as senior director of policy and government relations, he led the organization鈥檚 advocacy efforts in Sacramento and Washington, D.C.

鈥淚鈥檝e seen the opportunities and challenges of LCFF from the perspective of California鈥檚 largest district to now hearing from ACSA members around the state,鈥 he says.

Among those challenges is a lack of sufficient resources. 鈥淭he system is still very much underfunded,鈥 Zazueta notes. 鈥淚 visit schools and districts around the state, and I鈥檝e yet to encounter a teacher, school administrator or superintendent who says, 鈥極K, we鈥檙e good. We don鈥檛 need any more.鈥 LCFF really has to be the mechanism to go to your community and, in a time of scarce resources, determine what to prioritize.鈥

Another issue is measuring whether the new approach is driving accountability and stakeholder engagement. 鈥淚n some places, the LCAP is being used as a strategic planning document for school leaders,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n others, it does feel like a compliance exercise.

This is an experiment in many ways, about the whole notion of local control and giving so much authority to those districts. We all have a responsibility to continue to evaluate that, analyze it and draw on best practices to ensure we鈥檙e really driving systemic change.鈥

Zazueta鈥檚 path may have taken him away from his original dream to teach, but he has de颅voted his entire career to advancing education.

鈥淏eing on this side of things, getting my doctorate and getting to work with these researchers, I have a better appreciation that the data is so underutilized,鈥 Zazueta adds. 鈥淲hether it鈥檚 LCFF, charter schools or other public policy issues, we really should rely on the best thinking and research. That鈥檚 what I find exciting now.鈥

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