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LAUSD Board Appoints Longtime Administrator Andres Chait as Next Superintendent

This story was originally published on LAist. The Los Angeles Unified Board voted unanimously to appoint Andres Chait, a longtime district administrator, as superintendent days after his predecessor resigned. “This board’s decision reflects the confidence in Mr. Chait’s leadership, his decades of service to Los Angeles Unified, and his demonstrated ability to guide the district...
By Mariana Dale, LAist | June 24, 2026
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Hope, Sadness and Uncertainty Follow After Carvalho Resigns as LAUSD Superintendent

This story was originally published on EdSource. With Alberto Carvalho’s resignation now official, Los Angeles Unified faces a new challenge: finding a superintendent to lead the nation’s second-largest school district through mounting budget deficits, declining enrollment and political uncertainty. Acting Superintendent Andrés Chait will continue leading the district in the interim, but board members have...
By Mallika Seshadri | June 24, 2026
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Alberto Carvalho Resigns as LAUSD Superintendent After Four Months on Leave

This story was originally published on LAist. Superintendent Alberto Carvalho has resigned as leader of the Los Angeles Unified School District, four months after the FBI searched his home and office. “Placing students first has always guided my work,” Carvalho wrote in his resignation letter, provided to LAist by his attorney. “Because I believe our...
By Mariana Dale, LAist | June 23, 2026
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Findings Offer a Math Playbook for California Schools

Math improvement rarely stalls because districts aren’t taking action. More often, it stalls because well-intentioned supports accumulate faster than schools can turn them into a coherent, actionable instructional plan. The instinct to seek additional support is understandable. Students need help immediately. Teachers deserve time and training. Families want progress they can see. So districts invest...
By Guadalupe Guerrero and Kristin Umland | June 18, 2026
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California’s Learning Recession Won’t Be Solved with More Test Prep

Recently, researchers at Dartmouth, Harvard and Stanford released the annual Education Scorecard, which points to a long-entrenched learning recession in American K-12 education.The latest reading achievement data tells a troubling story: Reading scores remain below pre-pandemic levels in many of the nation’s most under-resourced school districts. Equally concerning, researchers found that declines in reading achievement...
By Jaime Balboa | June 17, 2026
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California Lawmakers Pass Budget With Billions More for Education as Newsom Negotiations Begin

This story was originally published on EdSource. Marking the start of two weeks of intensive negotiations, the Legislature passed a state budget Monday with higher revenue projections than those proposed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, providing several billion dollars in additional spending for TK-12 and community colleges in 2026-27. Several other significant issues remain unresolved. Chief among...
By John Festerwald and Zadiee Stavely, EdSource | June 16, 2026
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California School Districts Battle for $3.9 Billion They Argue Is Due Now, Not Later

This story was originally published EdSource. In coming days, school districts will find out whether their pressure campaign worked to persuade Gov. Gavin Newsom to turn over the $3.9 billion he planned to withhold, for now, from next year’s state funding for schools and community colleges. By midnight Monday, June 15, the state Legislature must pass...
By John Fensterwald, EdSource | June 16, 2026
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Long-Term NAEP Shows Growth for 9-Year-Olds, More Disappointment for Teens

Newly released data from America’s longest-running measure of student learning have delivered a decidedly split verdict on the state of schools. Math and reading scores from the “Long-Term Trends” edition of the National Assessment of Educational Progress — a federally administered test commonly referred to as the Nation’s Report Card — offer some of the...
By Kevin Mahnken | June 11, 2026
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Businesses Want Bilingual Workers, Families Want Bilingual Kids, So Why the Gap?

For a few years now, the United States has been marinating in a particular version of the American story. Specifically, we’ve been awash in warnings about the country’s alleged vulnerability in the face of cultural change. In this conservative telling, America grows stronger when it is monocultural, wealthier when it goes it alone, and better...
By Conor Williams | June 10, 2026
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How a California District Is Transforming Education in a Rapidly Changing World

Public education, in red and blue states alike, is being pulled apart by student disengagement, mental health needs, culture war battles, voucher expansion, budget uncertainty and the disruptive force of artificial intelligence. New data prompt renewed handwringing over standardized test scores and their decade-long decline. Meanwhile, Republicans who seek more choice in public education and...
By Barnett Berry, Mike Matsuda and Michael Fullan | June 9, 2026