The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Is your school in the bullet train’s path? 17 LAUSD schools could be impacted by California’s high-speed rail line
As many as 17 LA Unified schools could be impacted by California’s bullet train, district officials reported Tuesday. The high-speed rail line, which was just approved last month to begin work in the Central Valley, is intended to take riders from Los Angeles to San Francisco in 2 hours and 40 minutes. Depending on its route,...
By Mike Szymanski | April 4, 2017
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Imelda Padilla scores endorsements from two former competitors in LAUSD school board bid
Imelda Padilla has secured endorsements from two former competitors in her bid for the LA Unified seat representing the east San Fernando Valley. Araz Parseghian, who came in fourth out of six contenders in the March 7 primary, announced on social media Saturday he is supporting Padilla. Padilla said Monday that she also has the...
By Sarah Favot | April 3, 2017
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Assemblyman Tony Thurmond enters state superintendent race by vowing to fight Trump, DeVos
State Assemblyman Tony Thurmond on Monday announced he will run for state superintendent of public instruction in 2018, setting up a fight between Northern and Southern California as well as a union vs. reform battle. Thurmond vowed to fight the agenda of President Donald Trump and U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and to secure more funding...
By Sarah Favot | April 3, 2017
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Analysis: If March Madness were about schools’ graduates climbing the income ladder, UCLA would be champ
For one more day, the nation gets to continue its escape from world events via the thrills of March Madness. While important issues of governance have been tying Congress and the Trump administration into knots, a wide cross section of the population has been preoccupied instead with the Sweet Sixteen and the Final Four, fixating...
By Guest contributor | April 3, 2017
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John King on his year as ed secretary, the Trump administration, and his new role at Ed Trust
John King didn’t have long. It was October 2015, and Arne Duncan announced he would step down as President Barack Obama’s education secretary. Obama tapped King, a K-12 adviser at the federal Education Department with years of classroom and government experience, to fill the vacancy. In only about a year in the job, King, among...
By Mark Keierleber | March 31, 2017
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The certification maze: Why teachers who cross state lines can’t find their way back to the classroom
Kiersten Franz has a bachelor’s degree in math, a master’s in education, and several years’ teaching experience under her belt — excellent qualifications, presumably, for becoming a New York City high school statistics teacher. But her record wasn’t quite good enough to meet New York state’s stringent licensure requirements. Because her training was out-of-state and...
By Matt Barnum | March 31, 2017
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New coalition will advocate for LAUSD’s unified enrollment system to include charter schools
LA Unified is preparing its first-ever unified enrollment system, but signs that it’s already running off the tracks have spurred an influential group of advocates to band together to make sure the final product is equitable and accessible to all. The biggest obstacle to success they cite is leaving out charter schools, which already educate...
By Sarah Favot | March 30, 2017
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Commentary: New California accountability dashboard provides little light for poor families
By Seth Litt “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.” — James Baldwin For more than a year, families from Parent Revolution’s Parent Power Network have voiced their concerns about the direction of California’s school accountability system. They’ve met with legislators, taken multiple overnight bus...
By Guest contributor | March 30, 2017
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LA charter schools commit to students’ safety, join fight against Trump’s threat to sanctuaries
A coalition of Los Angeles charter schools announced Tuesday that they plan to join in the legal challenge against President Trump’s executive order to withhold federal money from “sanctuary jurisdictions” including LA Unified. They also reported that fewer seniors in their high schools are applying to college this year because of fears of their information being...
By Mike Szymanski | March 29, 2017
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LAUSD Valley seat gets the heat: Early campaign spending in runoff shifts from west side to Valley
Early campaign spending in the LA Unified school board runoff election has shifted to the open seat in the San Fernando Valley from the west side race, which dominated the primary election. Three weeks into the May 16 runoff contest, outside groups have spent nearly five times as much on the District 6 race compared...
By Sarah Favot | March 29, 2017