Leadership magazine Sept/Oct 2014 V 44 No 1 | Page 28

ONE DISTRICT’S STORY Community engagement takes work, but the outcome is a plan for student success that is rich, thoughtful, and truly based on local needs. 28 Leadership T his time last year, we were all trying to make sense of the newly adopted Local Control Funding Formula, and the Local Control Accountability Plan was only a vague concept at best. What a difference a year can make! We now have a three-year LCAP adopted and in place. After several years of budget cuts, new funding is flowing into the district. We are able to restore and even add additional services for the traditionally underserved students in our district. More importantly, the LCAP community engagement process has established an ongoing expectation for systematic community input in district goal-setting and budget development. If you have ever played an accordion, or perhaps just listened, you know that there is a considerable amount of movement in and out required to produce the sounds that reach our ears. The accordion opens wide to scoop in air, and then – with a constant push – the reward is the sound of the accordion. It also requires the talent of the musician to play the right key to turn otherwise unconnected sounds into pleasing musical notes. This process is repeated over and over to play a song. The accordion doesn’t play itself, and the musician can’t simply look at the accordion to play it. It takes that opening up to draw air in, and the push to compress the air into musical notes. The LCAP process is similar to playing an accordion. It requires us – as educational musicians – to open the LCAP accordion and draw in the thoughts and ideas of the community. Then, those thoughts and ideas are pressed through the keys of the state goals and local district data by the educational professionals to create an LCAP song that addresses the needs of our students. We are very excited about the LCAP song composed by the Visalia Unified School District and community, and we would like to share what we have learned during this process. By Craig Wheaton and Jim Sullivan