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Biden Supreme Court nominee, praised for ‘stellar civil rights record,’ could face conflict on upcoming Harvard admissions case

Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. President Joe Biden made history when he nominated federal appeals court Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to be the first Black woman on the U.S. Supreme Court. If confirmed, however, she’ll likely face pressure to sit out one of the most important cases involving race and education in...
By Linda Jacobson | March 7, 2022
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700 days since lockdown: Educators, students, parents and researchers reflect on pandemic’s ‘seismic interruption to education’

700 days. That’s about how long it’s been since more than half the nation’s schools crossed into the pandemic era. On March 16, 2020, Los Angles Unified and other districts across 27 states, encompassing almost 80,000 schools, closed their doors for the first long educational lockdown. Within nine days, the nation’s remaining districts followed suit. Since...
By Linda Jacobson | February 16, 2022
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New L.A. schools chief Carvalho starts Monday with immediate challenge: College readiness among Black and Latino students has plunged

Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. The percentage of Black and Latino students in Los Angeles schools completing courses that make them eligible to attend California’s state universities plunged in 2020, according to a report released Friday. Before the pandemic, almost two-thirds of Latino and more than half of Black graduates from the Los Angeles...
By Linda Jacobson | February 14, 2022
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Kids wearing masks reduces child care center closures, year-long Yale study finds

Child care centers in which children wear masks are less likely than others to shut down because of COVID-19 outbreaks, according to what’s believed to be the first large-scale, year-long study of child masking in the U.S. Conducted by researchers at Yale University, the study — involving more than 6,600 center- and home-based child care...
By Linda Jacobson | February 9, 2022
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‘Government speech’ or private prayer?: Supreme Court takes case of football coach fired over giving thanks after games

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear the case of a Bremerton, Washington, high school football coach who was fired after he refused to stop holding post-game prayers on the field. Joseph Kennedy sued his school district in 2016, claiming officials denied him his constitutional right to religious freedom. The district said students felt pressured to...
By Linda Jacobson | January 25, 2022
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From mask mandates to Omicron, Ed Secretary Cardona finishes a ‘very, very difficult’ first year

The former teacher gets high marks for building bridges to disenchanted educators and shepherding billions of dollars in federal relief funds to schools. But critics say his department has been slow to meet a fast-changing pandemic and reluctant to embrace a newly visible constituency: parents. When Education Secretary Miguel Cardona toured South Bend, Indiana’s Madison...
By Linda Jacobson | January 20, 2022
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Parents’ poll: Less than two-thirds give schools top grades for handling students’ pandemic-related academic, social-emotional needs

Less than two-thirds of parents give schools an A or B for their handling of students’ academic and social-emotional needs during the pandemic, and almost 60 percent said they haven’t seen or heard anything about additional resources their schools can provide to address these issues, according to a new poll released last month. Sixty-one percent assigned top...
By Linda Jacobson | December 28, 2021
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‘Equal treatment, not special treatment’: Conservative Supreme Court justices appear ready to strike down religious barriers to public school choice funding

Maine allows private religious schools to participate in its tuition benefit program for families that don’t have a public high school in their communities — except those that seek to instill religious beliefs in their students. That caveat is at the heart of Carson v. Makin, argued before the U.S. Supreme Court Wednesday, a case that...
By Linda Jacobson | December 14, 2021
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Facing thousands of unvaccinated students, Los Angeles district pushes back vaccine mandate until fall

Updated December 15 The Los Angeles Unified Board of Education voted Tuesday to delay its vaccine mandate for students 12 and up until next fall. The district was facing the possibility of transferring 34,000 unvaccinated students into an already understaffed remote learning program called City of Angels. Leaders of the district’s administrators union were concerned about the...
By Linda Jacobson | December 10, 2021
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Miami’s Carvalho brings rock star status to top L.A. schools job, but observers warn of ‘political black hole’ that awaits

The Los Angeles Unified school board on Thursday unanimously selected Alberto Carvalho, one of the nation’s most respected — and buzzed about — school leaders, as the district’s next superintendent. “This is like LeBron coming to the Lakers,” said Pedro Noguera, dean of the University of Southern California Rossier School of Education. “He is by...
By Linda Jacobson | December 9, 2021