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1 in 4 LAUSD graduates head to four-year college, data show

*UPDATED About 1 in 4 LA Unified graduates in the Class of 2016 enrolled in a four-year college or university, lagging behind the national average, according to an analysis of data on college enrollment for the district. Twenty-seven percent of LAUSD graduates in the Class of 2016 enrolled in a four-year college immediately after high...
By Sarah Favot | July 10, 2017
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Los Angeles targeted for first state-run STEM school

A state legislator is eyeing downtown Los Angeles as home to the first state public school focused on teaching students from low-income and ethnically diverse areas science, technology, engineering, and math. State Assemblyman Raul Bocanegra, D-San Fernando, has introduced legislation that would establish the school that would serve 800 students in grades 6 through 12....
By Sarah Favot | July 10, 2017
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Exclusive: Charter co-locations across multiple school campuses are down by more than half, but LAUSD process still lacks transparency

LAUSD charter schools on multiple sites have gone down. The number of LA Unified charter schools that will be splitting their classrooms across two or more traditional school campuses will drop by more than half this fall. According to district data provided to LA School Report, 63 independent charter schools will share space at 74...
By Mike Szymanski | July 10, 2017
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LA voters and parents want the school board to put kids first, poll shows. First test of new board will happen Thursday.

Los Angeles voters and parents overwhelmingly agree that the LA Unified school board should put kids first when it comes to the district’s budget and policies, according to a new poll. And the board will have the chance to signal its commitment to that priority when it votes Thursday on a “kids first” resolution in...
By Sarah Favot | July 5, 2017
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Best of June: Highlights from LA’s graduation and budget season

*UPDATED June is graduation and budget season. If you were busy preparing for either of those, here’s a quick look at what happened this month, as reflected in some of our top stories. To make sure you get all the news, sign up for our newsletter at the bottom of our website. And don’t forget...
By Laura Greanias | June 29, 2017
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Alliance charter network cleared of six more teacher union complaints but found in violation of one for not responding to a letter

A judge has dismissed more complaints lodged by the local teachers union against Los Angeles’ largest charter school network. In a ruling Tuesday that covered seven allegations that Alliance College-Ready Public Schools was unlawfully preventing United Teachers Los Angeles’ efforts to organize, six were dismissed. The administrative law judge with the Public Employee Relations Board...
By Sarah Favot | June 29, 2017
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LAUSD loses ground in its fight against chronic absenteeism, but foster youth attendance is up

Despite a concerted effort to increase student attendance, the number of LA Unified students who missed 16 or more days of school in 2015-16 grew by 1 percent from the previous year, this month’s budget documents show. The increase in the number of students who were chronically absent cost the district $45 million in state...
By Sarah Favot | June 28, 2017
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East LA Latino youth learn how to tell their stories and defend immigrants’ rights

Latino students from East Los Angeles, community activists, and immigrant youth gathered last weekend at East LA College to discuss topics on immigrant rights and youth empowerment through community news at the “How to Empower Your Community With Mobile Stories” workshop presented by the East Los Angeles College Student Equity Program, the Spanish weekly newspaper...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | June 28, 2017
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LAUSD charter division looking into complaints brought by former school board candidate

LA Unified’s charter school oversight division has confirmed it will look into complaints about three independent charter high schools made by a parent whose daughter attends one of the schools and who ran for school board this spring. The charter division confirmed Tuesday that staff is looking into the complaints and will report back to...
By Mike Szymanski | June 28, 2017
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Education highlights of California’s new state budget

Gov. Jerry Brown on Tuesday signed the state budget for the next fiscal year, which includes an additional $3 billion for K-12 education and community colleges, bringing total state spending on education to $74.5 billion for 2017-18. LA Unified is the largest school district in the state. The majority of its budget, as other public...
By Sarah Favot | June 27, 2017