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Commentary: Understanding “Common Core” Backlash

Earlier today, veteran LAUSD teacher and Incubator School founder Sujata Bhatt posted some thoughts about the backlash against a set of new standards and tests called the Common Core: There’s been a lot of hullaballoo suddenly about the Common Core. Symptomatic of the strange political times we live in, the Tea Party Right and the...
By Alexander Russo | June 26, 2013
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Commentary: Board & Deasy Both Over-Reached

While laid-off teachers and ardent school reform critics may be all aglow over LAUSD School Board member Steve Zimmer’s “Pacino-esque” speech on behalf of the proposed teacher hiring/ class size reduction resolution last week, perhaps it’s not quite yet time for anyone to declare victory. Last Tuesday, the LAUSD Board debated and ultimately passed a...
By Alexander Russo | June 25, 2013
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Commentary: Why Teachers Might Leave a Triggered School

This is a guest commentary written by LAUSD math teacher (and Hope Change Choices blog host) Rustum Jacob about some teachers’ decision to transfer out of Weigand Avenue Elementary School: As a teacher , if I’d been in the same shoes as the Weigand teachers, I would have left because of loyalty and respect for...
By Alexander Russo | June 11, 2013
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Commentary: Why Fixing Teacher Prep is So Difficult
This is a guest commentary written by Paul Bruno (@MrPABruno), a middle school science teacher in Southern California, about the possibility of new energy surrounding teacher preparation reform: I don’t know if — as LA School Report editor Alexander suggests — we are on the cusp of a national rethinking of teacher preparation programs. I do, however, agree...
By LA School Report | June 10, 2013
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Commentary: Teachers’ Letter to Mayor Garcetti

This is a guest commentary written by LAUSD teachers Jeff Austin and Edward Kusell-Zigelman to Mayor-elect Garcetti about what he can do to be a leader on education issues in City Hall: Dear Mayor-Elect Garcetti, A few weeks ago, residents of Los Angeles made their voices heard by voting you into office. We’d like to...
By Alexander Russo | June 5, 2013
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Commentary: Sad Educators vs. Poor Parents

The latest LA Times piece on the parent trigger process at Weigand Elementary focuses its attention on the principal being pushed out (and the teachers who may go with her) rather than on the dismal results under her leadership and the frustrated low-income parents who petitioned for her removal. The debate over the merits of the Weigand...
By Alexander Russo | May 29, 2013
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Commentary: Why Your Vote Matters in the East Valley

This is a guest commentary from Ama Nyamekye, Executive Director, Educators for Excellence (E4E) Los Angeles: School Board races can sometimes seem like inside-baseball, but they actually define the leadership and agenda of Los Angeles Unified School District, which serves over 660,000 children. With that in mind, Educators 4 Excellence and EdVoice recently interviewed both...
By LA School Report | May 21, 2013
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Commentary: In Praise of the LA Times’ Karin Klein

Two of my favorite education writers right now write a lot about education but you may not know their names because they don’t usually have bylines. Karin Klein of the LA Times (right) and Kate Grossman(@kategrossman1) of the Chicago Sun-Times (left) are editorial page writers whose work often comes out in the form of unsigned editorial page positions....
By Alexander Russo | May 10, 2013
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Commentary: Clear Choice for School Board Race
This is a guest commentary from LAUSD District 6 teachers Pearl Arredondo and Hector (@educatorla) Perez-Roman, following up on a recent TeachPlus meeting with candidate Monica Ratliff: With so much at stake for the LAUSD Board District 6 runoff election, it was surprising that only one candidate, Monica Ratliff, attended the only scheduled public candidates’ forum...
By LA School Report | May 6, 2013
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Observations: Lessons from San Diego
This is a guest commentary from longtime journalist Richard Lee Colvin comparing the current debate over the leadership of LAUSD to a similar one that took place nearly a decade ago in San Diego: School board elections typically are low-cost, low-turnout, low-visibility exercises in democracy. But, in this one, philanthropists and other moneyed interests spent...
By LA School Report | April 30, 2013