The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Inside the LA nonprofit whose ‘cradle to career’ programs helped the city’s neediest students before its abrupt closure

LA School Report was preparing to publish a story on the Youth Policy Institute’s work serving some of Los Angeles’s neediest students and families when the news broke Oct. 25 that the longstanding anti-poverty program was closing its doors. This followed the mid-October release of what the Los Angeles Times described as “a devastating audit...
By Josh Sanburn | November 3, 2019
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Teacher Spotlight: Daniel Helena brings his own experiences in helping retain more teachers of color in L.A. classrooms

This interview is one in a series spotlighting Los Angeles teachers, their unique and innovative classroom approaches, and their thoughts on how the education system can better support teachers in guiding students to success. In an attempt to find the answer to why teachers of color across the nation leave their classrooms at a higher...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | October 30, 2019
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Analysis: In pushing members to vote for endorsing Sanders, UTLA president dismisses Biden and Warren — and says Clinton and Obama weren’t so great either

Mike Antonucci’s Union Report appears weekly at LA School Report For the next three weeks, United Teachers Los Angeles will conduct a campaign targeted at its own members. The goal is to persuade them to approve a UTLA endorsement of Sen. Bernie Sanders for the Democratic Party’s nomination for president of the United States. Chapter...
By Mike Antonucci | October 30, 2019
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Analysis: California’s universities offer much better retirement plans than its K-12 districts. Why we need to offer our teachers more mobility, flexibility and fairness

Why do states give employees at public colleges and universities better retirement plans than they give their employees in K-12 schools? The root of this disconnect started a century ago, when Andrew Carnegie created the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America to provide guaranteed retirement income and life insurance, mainly to college professors who...
By Chad Aldeman | October 28, 2019
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Excerpt: Going beyond the theory that black males owe their academic success to grit and resilience

This is an excerpt from Charles Cole III’s self-published dissertation Beyond Grit & Resilience: How Black Men Impacted by the Crack Epidemic Succeeded Against the Odds and Obtained Doctoral Degrees. It’s been lightly edited. Research on Black males over the past decade has created a pervasive set of ideas that Black men are a difficult...
By Charles Cole III | October 28, 2019
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California girl kicks 30-yard field goal, wins Chick-Fil-A for a year, gives prize to opposing coach battling cancer

Pull up to bonita @7 vs Glendora #johnstrong pic.twitter.com/VKn3gSDXnW — Aalias Williams (@kingadub1) October 3, 2019 When he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the football team he coaches visited the hospital. So, when he was released a week later, John Langilotti returned the favor. Langilotti, the assistant football coach for Bonita High School in California,...
By Debra West | October 28, 2019
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Teacher Spotlight: Columbus Middle School teacher Carol Park on why she never left middle school, forging a college path for students and families and leading with her heart

This interview is one in a series spotlighting Los Angeles teachers, their unique and innovative classroom approaches, and their thoughts on how the education system can better support teachers in guiding students to success. Carol Park doesn’t take lightly the responsibility of teaching what she calls the “underseen” middle school student. With most of the...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | October 23, 2019
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Analysis: With Newsom vetoing three state bills co-sponsored by the California Teachers Association, will the new governor be ‘Brown’ or ‘Gray’ for unions?

Mike Antonucci’s Union Report appears weekly at LA School Report By all accounts, it’s a great time to be a California union activist. Statewide political offices are in Democratic hands. The legislature is solidly liberal. The state GOP shows no signs of life. Government revenues are up. Government spending is up. Where is there a...
By Mike Antonucci | October 23, 2019
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As California law looks to end remedial education, new studies show state’s community colleges showing uneven progress in adopting math & English reforms

California’s 115 community colleges are in the midst of a major transformation of how students are taught college-level math and English courses. A state law instituted a fall 2019 deadline for community colleges to largely end the practice of forcing students into remedial classes, which repeat coursework that students have already learned in high school....
By Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters | October 21, 2019
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Analysis: 6 education innovation trends that might surprise you

There’s no shortage of ideas about how nontraditional practices are taking off in K-12 schools, but often scant data to back them up — let alone data that can surface patterns and blind spots where we may not be paying attention. The Canopy project, a collaborative initiative led by the Christensen Institute that reimagines where...
By Chelsea Waite | October 21, 2019