The superintendents and elected school boards of 11 Texas districts โ€” including Dallas, Houston and Fort Worth โ€” have been ordered by the state education agency to attend two-day training programs to learn how to fix their failing schools.

Deputy Commissioner of Education A.J. Crabill sent letters to theย 11 school boards Oct. 10 saying they need additional governance training because their districts submittedย unsatisfactory plans for turning around floundering campuses. All 11 superintendents and boards have agreed to the training, with several members expressing frustration about what they saw as an unfair and vague request.

The letters were sent about two months after TEAย released 2016 accountability ratings showing that 467 campuses statewideย โ€”ย including 42 in the targeted districts โ€”ย were labeled โ€œimprovement required,โ€ a decrease from 603 campuses last year.ย The notices were sent toย Brazosport, Corpus Christi, Dallas, Fort Worth, Hearne, Houston, Lubbock, Midland, Nacogdoches, Tyler and Waco.

Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath has promised to crack down on low-performing schools and to halve the number of failing schools over the next five years.

State lawย requires districts to submit detailedย plans in the spring to fix problems atย schools labeled โ€œimprovement requiredโ€ for two or more consecutive years. The districts are supposed to include parents and the community in drafting the proposed fixes.

Morath has the final say on approvingย the plans โ€” by mid-to -late June, according to a TEA timeline โ€” so districts can startย implementing themย the following school year.

But forย theย 11 school districts, that implementation will have to wait until board trustees and superintendents attend a two-day, 24-hour governance training session.

In the letters, Crabill said he wasn’t sure the plans the districts submitted would address problems โ€” including low test scores, low graduation rates, high dropout rates, and poor college readiness โ€” within two years. The training sessions will helpย trustees identify and fix weaknesses in their plans, the letter said.

If Morath decidesย not to approve a plan, he canย replace the board of trustees, replace the principal of a school or shut the school down completely, Crabill wrote.

Houston Independent School Districtโ€™s board of trustees told Crabill itย will likely vote to attend the training.ย But itย also admonished the agencyย for leaving little time to actually turn around its schools. The commissioner said he would respond to the plans in June, but now it’s possible he won’t approve them until trainings are completed in December.

โ€œOur ability to make significant changes to the plans for these seven schools at this date may be somewhat limited,โ€ the Houston boardย wrote Oct. 25. โ€œSince TEA has missed its own published deadline for responding to the turnaround plans by four months, we ask that you provide us with specific concerns that TEA may have with the plans for these seven schools, so that we may begin considering how to make any appropriate adjustments in a way that will cause the least disruption during the school year.โ€

At an Oct. 27 Dallas Independent School District board meeting, a few trustees said the request for training was too vague.

โ€œWhile I donโ€™t have a problem with training, I do have a problem with a demand that I implement what it is we are going to be trained on, when I donโ€™t even know what it is,โ€ said trustee Joyce Foreman. โ€œWe need to know the specifics of what is wrong. We need to know specifics about the training. We need to know specifics of why these eight schools.โ€

The commissioner did approve campus turnaround plans in other districts around the state, TEA spokesperson Laurenย Callahan said. She could not say what the difference was between those plans and the ones the commissioner flagged.

After receiving a flood of questions from district officials across the state, Crabill included a few key explanations in a follow up email to all 11 superintendents. He slashed the training from four days to two, after trustees said it was too hard for them to fit into their schedules. He presented six different dates and locations for the training, in Kilgore, Waco, Fort Worth, Midland, El Paso and Houston, on weekdays and weekends between Nov. 9 and Dec. 17.

All trustees and superintendents from all 11 boards must attend the entire workshop, Crabill said.

โ€œThis is a team event, so just like in other team events, the whole team has to win together. Completion means that all trustees and the superintendent were present at the same workshop for the entirety of the workshop,โ€ Crabill wrote.

Though all 11 boards have agreed to attend the training, it is not clear whether all trustees will show up.

A veteran Lubbock board trustee said he voted yes to the resolution agreeing to training โ€“ but now heโ€™s not sure whether he will actually attend. He called the demand for governance training โ€œunprecedentedโ€ in his 14 years on the board.

He said he is not sure whether he can get away from his day job for two 12-hour days. Districts have to cover the cost of any travel required for board members to attend the training session.

TEA does not have a plan in place in case board members don’t show up, Callahan said. โ€œSo far, TEA is receiving confirmation that board members will attend and complete the training. As a result, discussions on failure to participate have not been necessary,โ€ she wrote in a statement Tuesday. โ€œAny talk of penalties is premature.”

Read related Tribune coverage here:

  • Education Commissioner Mike Morath on Tuesday outlined plans to crack down harder on chronically low-performing schools, saying he wants to cut in half the number of them that end up on the stateโ€™s failing list over the next five years.
  • More Texas school districts and charter schools are failing in 2016, though the number of individual campuses that received that label decreased.

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Aliyya Swaby was the public education reporter for The Texas Tribune, where she worked from 2016 to 2021. Previously she worked at the hyperlocal nonprofit New Haven Independent, where she covered education,...