For years, Florida lawmakers have looked for a way to blunt the impact of the voter-approved 2002 class-size reduction amendment. Education leaders, also worried about how much meeting the requirements might cost, have pushed for changes too.
Working together, they think they've found an answer - one that wouldn't need voter approval.
During a meeting of the House Committee on 21st Century Competitiveness, lawmakers and representatives of various education organizations hashed out a proposal that they suggest would meet the spirit and the word of the amendment without forcing schools to take drastic action whenever the 19th - or 23rd or 26th - student appears, pushing a classroom over the limit.
The plan would have school districts conduct an annual count every fall to determine enrollment. Then schools would have to "true" their classrooms to meet the amendment rules. From that point on, the schools could allow individual classrooms to exceed the class-size limit by up to five students, so long as the school's class-size average does not exceed the law's mandate of 18 in grades K-3, 22 in grades 4-8 or 25 in grades 9-12.
"Do we have to count every day?" said committee chairman state Rep. David Simmons of Altamonte Springs (left), calling such a concept illogical and absurd. "This is just trying to solve everything so we have a rational solution to a very real problem."
Simmons, who has been pressing for class-size amendment changes since 2003, told the Gradebook he plans to have a bill "the stakeholders have agreed on" ready to view within three weeks. He suggested Senate Education chairman Don Gaetz, who has testified about the need to scale back the amendment before the Florida Taxation and Budget Reform Commission, is the likely standard bearer for the idea in the Senate.
To see the documents the House committee reviewed, including possible bill language, click here.


Get inside the world of Florida education with St. Petersburg Times staff writer Jeffrey S. Solochek and the rest of the Times education reporting team. We'll bring you up-to-date information about the latest education trends, fads and news and dig deep into Tampa Bay area school issues.
I was at a party the other night. My friend, who teaches Kindergarten was telling me about class sizes at her school.
class #1 -23
class #2 - 23
class #3 - 24
class #4 -23
class #5 -30 (co-teaching)
Now, let me talk about the co-teaching. It is not what parents believe. There is not one teacher walking around helping and another instrucing. Or two instructors...at least not in Kindergarten. There is one teaching and one documenting. What a giant farce!
Posted by: stepbystep | February 12, 2008 at 07:19 AM
Vote 'em OUT!
Posted by: Timmy! | February 07, 2008 at 04:38 PM
I wonder if they will try to ignore the Save Marriage Act as much as they have tried to ignore CSR? You see, parts of the Constitution reflect "the will of the people" while other parts were mistakes. In other words, they like the Constitution when they like it and ignore it when it suits them.
This is minor compared to the Florida Schools of Excellence, attempts to expand the VOUCHER programs in the state, etc., but it is instructionary.
Posted by: | February 07, 2008 at 11:09 AM
When will we ever get politicians who deal in reality and not in #'s they try so hard to skew? The Class Size amendment was a mandate of the people- so our Leg. just decides to try and find a way around it?
BE WARNED! This is prime fodder for any opponent of lawmakers who vote to circumvent the will of the people. Hope they kept their day jobs....
Posted by: | February 07, 2008 at 07:31 AM
When will we ever get politicians who deal in reality and not in #'s they try so hard to skew? The Class Size amendment was a mandate of the people- so our Leg. just decides to try and find a way around it?
BE WARNED! This is prime fodder for any opponent of lawmakers who vote to circumvent the will of the people. Hope they kept their day jobs....
Posted by: WTF? | February 07, 2008 at 07:31 AM
I belive the stakeholders agreed upon
18 students in K-3, not up to 23;
22 students in 4-8, not up to 27; and
25 students in 9-12, not up to 30. Thanks for reinforcing my decision to vote out incumbents, except in rare circumstances.
Posted by: | February 07, 2008 at 12:20 AM