The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Response: What NPR’s ‘hit piece’ got wrong in attacking Rocketship’s ‘impressive results’

Last month, NPR’s Education blog published what is being called a “takedown piece” on Rocketship Education. As co-founder and CEO of Rocketship, a leading network of nonprofit public charter schools, I have grown accustomed to anti-charter attacks like this. But my staff and parents are not. They flooded my inbox with outrage over the voices missing...
By Preston Smith | July 7, 2016
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Morning Read: How PUC Schools uses exit interviews to change teaching methods

Like Yelp for school: How a charter network uses student reviews to change how they teach A focus group-style exit interview has become part of the year-end ritual at PUC Schools. Over five weeks this year, co-founder Jacqueline Elliott spoke with all of the roughly 260 seniors graduating from the charter network’s high schools in...
By LA School Report | July 7, 2016
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Place top teachers in low-performing schools, LA Unified board members suggest as they ‘reimagine’ middle school

The district’s best teachers should be teaching at struggling schools, some LA Unified school board members suggested last week, with at least one board member calling for a future discussion on the issue. The comments were made during a Committee of the Whole meeting last week on how the district can improve and “reimagine” middle school,...
By Sarah Favot | July 6, 2016
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Commentary: How to weed out bad-apple teachers? Ask parents

By Lindsay Sturman The epic battle over how to improve public education in California grew more stratified last week when a bill to mildly reform California’s onerous teacher employment laws was gutted beyond recognition and quickly died. With it went the hope that our elected officials would finally decide the question which is at the...
By Guest contributor | July 6, 2016
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Morning Read: LA Unified would gain the most of any district from tax ballot measure

Los Angeles Unified has most to gain from upcoming income tax initiative Already facing an uncertain budget future, Los Angeles Unified has the most to gain of any district in the state from passage of a ballot measure in November that would extend income taxes on the state’s highest earners. By Michael Janofsky, EdSource Cloning...
By LA School Report | July 6, 2016
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JUST IN: No lawsuit for 20th Street Elementary as parents, LA Unified agree to plan by Partnership for Los Angeles Schools

After two legal attempts by parents to take over a South-Central LA elementary school they said was failing their children, an agreement has been reached for the school to join the Partnership for Los Angeles Schools. The deal averts a threatened lawsuit and ends a two-year “parent trigger” battle. The agreement moves 20th Street Elementary...
By Craig Clough | July 5, 2016
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8 things to know about education funding in the new California state budget

Gov. Jerry Brown last week signed the state’s $171 billion budget for 2016-17. Here are some highlights of education spending in the budget, including increases for additional preschool seats, efforts to address the teacher shortage and programs to prepare students for college. 1. Overall numbers The $171 billion state budget includes total funding of $88.3...
By Sarah Favot | July 5, 2016
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Morning Read: Some school districts track school climate along with test scores

Urban schools test for grit, but will it improve test scores? Something new is happening at a batch of California urban schools. Students are being asked if they are happy at school. The recent focus on the social and emotional well-being of students as a way to improve test scores is gaining statewide traction. Civil...
By LA School Report | July 5, 2016
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6 top education news stories in Los Angeles in the first 6 months of 2016

The first half of 2016 brought high stakes and high drama to Los Angeles’ education scene, from dire budget predictions to heated charter debates to attempts at overhauling teacher tenure laws. There were anniversaries to celebrate along the way — 25 years for both charter schools nationwide and Teach For America — and comings and goings of superintendents, plus the...
By Laura Greanias | June 30, 2016
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A graduation highlight: Oakland teen overcomes fears of parents’ deportation to land a spot at Yale

When Oakland’s Lorena Ortega-Guerrero starts Yale University this fall, she is looking forward to breaking out of her comfort zone. “I grew up in the Bay Area and I’ve spent the majority of my life with other Latinos,” she said, “so I’m excited to push my comfort zone and get perspectives from people who have...
By Lizzie Thompson | June 30, 2016