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California’s surprising primary: 6 ways this year’s races for governor & superintendent resurfaced a north-south divide in education politics

June 6 update: Gavin Newsom and John Cox will advance to a blue-red contest in November’s general election for governor; Marshall Tuck and Tony Thurmond finish one and two for state superintendent. Read more about the results, the demographics, and the reactions in this Wednesday morning dispatch. In a state as sprawling and diverse as California, most political...
By Mario Koran | June 4, 2018
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Your #EDlection2018 primer: The facts, figures, and faces that will shape Tuesday’s primary

Tomorrow is California’s long-awaited primary, and education watchers are all-eyes on two races. At the top of the ticket is the governor, with 27 candidates. The most important question won’t be who comes in first — Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom maintains a commanding lead — but who makes it to the No. 2 spot. In...
By Laura Greanias | June 4, 2018
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What if my child isn’t ready for the next grade but her school plans to move her up anyway? Here’s what parents can — and can’t — do

With the end of the school year nearing, students are celebrating as they move up to the next grade level. But not all parents are sure their kids are ready. Fewer than 4 in 10 LA Unified students are reading at grade level, even fewer are at grade level in math. But parents can’t hold...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | May 29, 2018
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Starbucks shuts down Tuesday for racial bias training. Schools and teachers have been doing the same training for years — with mixed results

They were educators, not baristas, and copies of How Bear Lost His Tail lined the wall rather than promotions for the Ultra Caramel Frappuccino. But on a recent Friday afternoon, the staff of Coney Island Prep Elementary School in Brooklyn engaged in the same activity nearly 175,000 Starbucks employees will participate in today: racial bias...
By Brendan Lowe | May 29, 2018
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#EDlection2018: Your quick guide to the 4 candidates running for state superintendent & highlights from their interviews

*Updated May 29 A week from today is California’s primary, and four candidates are running for state Superintendent of Public Instruction. LA School Report interviewed all four on what makes for a high-quality school, how to engage parents, how to help the lowest-performing schools, why they’re running, and more. Here are edited highlights from each...
By Laura Greanias | May 29, 2018
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#EDlection 2018: Steven Ireland on why he’s running for state superintendent as ‘the parent candidate’

Steven Ireland is one of four candidates running for state Superintendent of Public Instruction. Ireland, 59, was the last to enter the race. He is nonpartisan, has never run for office before, and is running as “the parent candidate.” The only position he has held in education was PTA president at Toluca Lake Elementary School,...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | May 23, 2018
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#EDlection 2018: Lily Ploski on why she’s running for state superintendent as ‘the progressive third option’

Lily E. Ploski is one of four candidates running for State Superintendent of Public Instruction. She is running as an independent. Ploski, 44, was raised in public schools in Orange County and Riverside County and attended community college at Diablo Valley College in the Bay Area, where she found her life’s passion to work in...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | May 23, 2018
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#EDlection 2018: Tony Thurmond on well-trained teachers and why he’s running for state superintendent

*Updated May 29 Tony Thurmond is one of four candidates running for state Superintendent of Public Instruction. Thurmond, 49 and a Democrat, is in his second term representing Richmond in the state Assembly. He was born at Ford Ord in Monterey. After his mother, a Panamanian immigrant, died when he was 6 years old, he...
By Laura Greanias | May 22, 2018
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#EDlection 2018: Marshall Tuck on good school leadership and why he’s running for state superintendent

*Updated May 21 Marshall Tuck is one of four candidates running for state Superintendent of Public Instruction. He spent two years as educator-in-residence at the New Teacher Center, from 2015 to 2017. The Santa Cruz-based nonprofit seeks to improve student learning by accelerating the effectiveness of new teachers, experienced teachers, and school leaders. Previously, he led...
By Laura Greanias | May 20, 2018
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At special children’s forum, California governor candidates lament state’s treatment of kids & point to education as the way forward

*Updated June 21 If Tuesday night’s California gubernatorial candidate forum had been a debate, the hands-down winner would have been a slender 11-year-old in a mint-green dress shirt. “It really bothers me to see homeless people on the streets or kids begging,” Eric Dory, a fifth-grader from South Los Angeles who attends Open Magnet Charter...
By Beth Hawkins | May 16, 2018