The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Report: State by state, how segregation legally continues 7 decades post-Brown
Seventy years after the Supreme Court outlawed separating public school children by race, a new report breathes life into an old question: how the most coveted public schools are able to legally exclude all but the most privileged families. In the first of its kind state-by-state breakdown by nonprofits Available to All and Bellwether Education,...
By Marianna McMurdock | May 16, 2024
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What’s the right goal for student achievement? Is 50% proficiency enough? 63%?
New York City districts with above-average reading scores have asked for flexibility from Chancellor David Banks’s new literacy curriculum mandates. This raises an important question for school leaders nationwide: What’s the right goal for student achievement? Is 50% of students reading and writing proficiently good enough? Is 63%? What is the right number? Edwin Locke...
By David Wakelyn | May 15, 2024
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Bill to mandate ‘science of reading’ in California classrooms dies before reaching legislature
A proposed bill to increase child literacy rates in California has died in the legislature this year after objections from the state teachers union and English learner groups. A December 2023 policy brief by EdVoice, Decoding Dyslexia CA and Families In Schools found that 60% of California students aren’t reading at grade level skills by...
By Angelina Hicks | May 14, 2024
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Schools are more segregated than 30 years ago. But how much?
Racial segregation in classrooms edged upward over the past three decades, according to the work of two prominent sociologists. Across America’s largest school districts, the expansion of school choice and the winding down of court-mandated desegregation decrees have resulted in white students being more racially isolated from their non-white peers, the authors find. Timed to...
By Kevin Mahnken | May 13, 2024
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Study: 40% of 2013 HS grads who started on a degree or credential didn’t finish
A new report from the National Center for Education Statistics found that about 40% of high school graduates who enrolled in college or a certification program in 2013 hadn’t received a degree or credential eight years later. The study followed 23,000 students starting with their freshman year of high school in 2009. Though 74% enrolled...
By Sierra Lyons | May 10, 2024
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Who you know: Social capital is key for first-gen students’ career success
A growing New York nonprofit is using a newly released report to cement data around the axiom that social capital — or who you know — is key for first-generation college graduates searching for their first job. The report by Basta, an organization that connects first-generation college graduates with careers, tracks the experiences of young...
By Lauren Wagner | May 9, 2024
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LA’s charter school wars are headed to court. Here’s what’s at stake
The California Charter Schools Association last month filed a lawsuit against LA Unified over its controversial new policy barring charters from using classrooms in certain district school buildings. It’s unclear if the CCSA will prevail in court, but the suit is already making an impact on the nation’s second-largest district. LAUSD’s new colocation rules were...
By Ben Chapman | May 8, 2024
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Can school choice improve civil society? New study shows it can
Looking at our country in 2024, it seems like Americans can barely talk to each other anymore, much less understand and navigate differences to come up with solutions that benefit us all. Heading into another election cycle, everyone from talking heads on television to community leaders are worrying about bringing American adults together. But it’s...
By Denisha Allen | May 7, 2024
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How well do schools, families communicate? Study sees parent-district disconnect
A few weeks ago, many were pointing out the four-year anniversary of the last “normal” week of our lives. Some pandemic-era reflections acknowledged the “silver linings” like more time with family, flexible work arrangements, gratitude for one’s health. With respect to education, however, it’s harder to find such perspectives, as stunted K-12 academic achievement poses...
By Jon Deane | May 6, 2024
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Survey: Many Gen Zers say school lacks ‘sense of purpose’ and isn’t ‘motivating’
Pursuing her passion for a career in medicine, California high schooler Ella Mayor found fulfillment working as a part-time pharmacy technician — tapping into skills she could never practice in school. Mayor, a 12th grade student at Santa Susana High School in Simi Valley, said she is often just going through the motions in her...
By Joshua Bay | May 2, 2024