The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Just in: Vergara appeal filed to California Supreme Court
Attorneys representing the students in Vergara v. California filed a petition Tuesday to take the case to the California Supreme Court. Last month the Court of Appeal overturned a Los Angeles Supreme Court ruling in the case, which challenges teacher tenure, layoff laws and dismissal policies. “The Court of Appeal flatly got it wrong,” said Josh Lipshutz, one...
By Mike Szymanski | May 24, 2016
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Morning Read: Fact-checking UTLA’s charter schools cost estimate
How much do charter schools cost LA Unified? Fact-checking the teachers union’s estimate The study commissioned by Los Angeles’ teachers union determined that charter schools cost the LA Unified School District more than $591 million annually. A closer look at the calculation of fixed costs left behind when students leave LAUSD, whether those students would end up...
By LA School Report | May 24, 2016
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Report: Students in LA get far less bang for their educational buck
California may spend more on its students, but the high cost of living means students in the state — and particularly in Los Angeles — are getting far less on average than those in the rest of the nation, a new study shows. But even if there’s less purchasing power for education in California, at...
By Craig Clough | May 23, 2016
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LA School Report welcomes reporter Sarah Favot
LA School Report is thrilled to welcome Sarah Favot to the team as writer/reporter. Favot’s data-driven, investigative and political reporting will bolster the breadth and depth of education coverage in California for LA School Report and nationwide for The 74. Favot comes to LA School Report from the Los Angeles Daily News where she covered Los...
By LA School Report | May 23, 2016
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Valley charter principal’s $100K in credit card charges triggers review
By Mike Reicher Just a 10-minute drive from the school, the waiter brought the table a $95 bottle of fine Syrah wine. Dimly-lit Monty’s Prime Steaks & Seafood, with its red booths and white linen, doubled as a high school meeting room that Wednesday night, Principal David Fehte says. And on many other nights. In 2014...
By LA School Report | May 23, 2016
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Morning Read: A turnaround at Artesia High School
Turning around Artesia, Part 2: This school figured out how to make it ‘cool’ to succeed Almost 12 years ago, Sergio Garcia became principal of Artesia High School, a school smack in the middle of a neighborhood in Southern California that has seen its share of gang violence. At Garcia’s first meeting with the staff,...
By LA School Report | May 23, 2016
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How do you monitor homeschooling parents? Welcome to the Wild West of education regulation
When school district administrators call parents at home it can often lead to tension-filled conversations. But in the case of Laura and Michael McIntyre, it led to criminal charges and a lawsuit. In 2004, the McIntyres decided to take their nine children out of private school and homeschool them in an empty space inside a...
By Naomi Nix | May 20, 2016
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‘We’re fighting over shades of Democrat’ in California
By Laurel Rosenhall A group that lobbies to change public education is pouring money into a handful of Northern California legislative races ahead of the June 7 election, aiming to influence the kind of Democrats who hold power in the state Capitol. Democrats make up a solid majority of the Legislature, but they do not...
By LA School Report | May 20, 2016
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Morning Read: UTLA vote includes adding one teacher to every secondary school to lower class size
Teachers will vote on contract reopener beginning June 1 The union says it’s a student-focused agreement and there will be one more full-time teacher at every secondary school to help alleviate large class sizes. The reopeners are part of the current 2014-17 contract, which last year included a 10 percent salary increase. A member ratification vote will...
By LA School Report | May 20, 2016
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LA Unified announces record grad rate for last year as it grapples with tougher standards this year
LA Unified increased its official graduation rate to a new high last school year, with 72.2 percent of students receiving a diploma, the district announced this week. The number is a two-point increase over the previous year, which was also a record high. Since 2009-10, when the state began using four-year cohort rates as the official...
By Craig Clough | May 19, 2016