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Rosen: To build a pipeline of workers for the economy of the future, high school students need CTE training in green jobs. Federal funding can help

Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. The movement to green the American economy is gaining momentum. At the federal level, as well as in places like Illinois, Maine and New York City, lawmakers have passed legislation designed to reduce carbon emissions while creating green jobs in diverse industries such as transportation, construction, environmental management and agriculture. These have...
By Rachel Rosen | March 2, 2022
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Analysis: Pandemic pods were everywhere — until they weren’t. Here’s what their popularity means for the future of education

Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, Holly Daniels’ third grade son and second-grade daughter could be found in the backyard building a treehouse. After spending the morning completing school assignments remotely with help from a hired instructor, they would join a handful of other kids in...
By Jennifer Poon, Travis Pillow and Ashley Jochim | February 28, 2022
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We need Black teachers and the breakout hit sitcom ‘Abbott Elementary’ shows us why

Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. At a critical time when the U.S. education sector is facing high teacher attrition rates fueled by the pandemic and a stream of legislative restrictions around classroom content and teaching methods, the new and much-loved Abbott Elementary tells a more nuanced story of how a group of passionate, tenacious...
By Mimi Woldeyohannes | February 24, 2022
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Commentary: Young people facing challenges need schools & services to work together to support and nurture them as they build their futures

When I first saw West Side Story, one moment brought me back to my high school principal’s office. The Jets were singing, “We ain’t no delinquents, we’re misunderstood. Deep down inside us there is good!” I could have said the same thing when my principal was suspending me for truancy. He told me I would never...
By Mishaela Durán | February 2, 2022
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Lerum: Study found teacher evaluation reforms had no effect on student outcomes. But that means doing them better, not giving up

Researchers from Brown University, the University of Connecticut, the University of North Carolina and Michigan State recently released a very interesting study that examined the effects of teacher evaluation reforms on student outcomes across the country. While prior studies have looked at the effects of changes to evaluation in various individual districts, this new research is...
By Eric Lerum | January 19, 2022
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New USC data: With students back in school, latest data find parental support for state testing rebounding

What a difference a year can make. In fall 2020, COVID-19 vaccines were still months away from availability, and most students (57 percent) were enrolled in fully remote schooling, with just 25 percent attending schools fully in person. By fall 2021, vaccines were available to all adults and teens, with approval for children aged 5...
By Daniel Silver and Morgan Polikoff | January 11, 2022
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Tracking how 232 innovative schools are challenging 5 big assumptions about American education

This school year, recovery is the name of the game in K-12 education. Although COVID-19 persists, schools have reopened and are focusing on getting students back on track. But plenty of the challenges schools are tackling have long predated COVID. Indeed, schools are not just facing the need to recover from the pandemic — they...
By Chelsea Waite | January 10, 2022
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Analysis: Tutoring, mentoring & personalized learning — how to help students reconnect to teachers, peers and give them the social-emotional support they need

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, survey after survey showed teens in the United States were facing high, rising levels of stress and anxiety. The alarm now rings loudly for us to wake up to their situation. The pandemic has only exacerbated the challenges for youths in America. September polling from EdChoice and Morning Consult shows...
By Paul DiPerna | January 6, 2022
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Analysis: Pandemic learning loss could cost U.S. students $2 trillion in lifetime earnings. What states & schools can do to avert this crisis

Over the past two years, virtually every American has suffered loss. Many have lost loved ones. Others have lost jobs or homes. In most instances, the only option is to accept fate and try to return to a sense of normalcy. However, when it comes to addressing students’ learning loss, we must resist the temptation...
By Dan Goldhaber, Thomas J. Kane and Andrew McEachin | January 4, 2022
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Analysis: Traditional measures of school quality tell only part of the story. So GreatSchools is adding school climate data to profiles

Across the country, school board meetings have become ground zero for political and ideological debates. COVID protocols, mask policies and differing philosophies of how to teach American history have garnered much of the headlines — and even been cited as a winning political strategy. After 18 months of unpredictable (and often frustrating) pandemic schooling, education...
By Jon Deane | January 3, 2022