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UTLA plans ‘Big Red Tuesday’ and monthly ‘escalating actions’

As part of a plan to increase pressure on LA Unified as it negotiates for a new contract, United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) is planning monthly “actions” to take place on campuses around the district. In preparation for the actions, which are to begin in October, UTLA is dubbing Tuesday, Sept. 30 as “Big Red Tuesday,”...
By Craig Clough | September 25, 2014
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Study finds online literacy gap reflects family income

A new study confirms conventional thinking, that an online literacy gap is emerging among students in America, with lower-income students lagging behind their more affluent peers in the ability to navigate the Internet and use it to enhance their studies. According to the New York Times, the study, led by Donald J. Leu at the...
By Craig Clough | September 24, 2014
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LA’s first ‘Summer of Learning’ touted as success

With around 50,000 students participating, the first Los Angeles Summer of Learning is being hailed as a success by officials involved with the program. Modeled after a similar program launched last year in Chicago, Summer of Learning provided access for LA Unified students to 100 learning opportunities, online and in person, at LA parks, libraries,...
By Craig Clough | September 24, 2014
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Winding path to teaching leads Garfield teacher to Yale award

As a boy, Kevin Murchie saw the award-winning film “Stand and Deliver,” the true story of Jaime Escalante, the Garfield Senior High math teacher who inspired his Latino students to overcome gang violence and poverty in east Los Angeles. A Caucasian boy growing up in the upper class community of La Cañada Flintridge, Murchie said there...
By Craig Clough | September 24, 2014
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Teachers union hiring 6 in ‘groundbreaking’ plan to organize

During his first State of the Union speech at the United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) leadership conference last week, President Alex Caputo-Pearl promised that the union was “gearing up for this fight” as he works to negotiate a new contract with LA Unified. Near the end of his remarks, as if to prove he wasn’t just talking tough, he announced...
By Craig Clough | September 23, 2014
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After early influx, lines dwindling at LA Unified’s immigrant center

LA Unified’s Immigrant Guidance Assessment & Placement Center saw long lines when it opened its doors in August, but concerns that the influx of students would be a problem for the district to handle appear unfounded. During its first month of operation following the summer recess, the center processed 360 children from Aug. 12 to...
By Craig Clough | September 23, 2014
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LA Unified sets record with 5 county ‘Teachers of the Year’

A record five LA Unified teachers have been named Los Angeles County Teachers of the Year for 2014-15. The honorees are among 16 teachers in the county to receive the award, and they are all now in the running for the California Teacher of the Year award, according to a district press release. “These teachers...
By Craig Clough | September 22, 2014
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In State of the Union, Caputo-Pearl hints at strike, targets Deasy

In his first State of the Union speech as the United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) president, Alex Caputo-Pearl delivered a careful, balanced address at the union’s annual Leadership Conference on Friday night, leaving most of the fiery rhetoric to one of his predecessors, Wayne Johnson, who energetically recalled the 1989 strike, which he led. While Caputo-Pearl...
By Craig Clough | September 22, 2014
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Deasy, Garcetti help kick off City Year in 25 LAUSD schools

LA Unified Superintendent John Deasy and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti were on hand today to help 288 City Year Los Angeles members kick off a year of service in LA schools during a high-energy ceremony on the south lawn of City Hall. The ceremony began as the City Year members, dressed in matching yellow...
By Craig Clough | September 19, 2014
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LA teachers group offers solutions for a post-Vergara world

While state teacher unions are spending time, energy and money fighting the landmark Vergara v. California ruling through appeal, one group of teachers in Los Angeles is helping shape what a post-Vergara world could look like. In a presentation yesterday at the California Community Foundation, former Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa joined L.A.-based teaching policy fellows with...
By Craig Clough | September 19, 2014