The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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LA education leaders react to Great Public Schools Now’s plan to expand successful schools

The much-anticipated Great Public Schools Now (GPSN) plan to expand successful schools in the Los Angeles area was released today, and education leaders are weighing in. GPSN says it will fund the expansion and replication of successful schools in 10 high-needs neighborhoods, including charter schools, magnet schools, pilot schools and Partnership for Los Angeles Schools...
By Craig Clough and Sarah Favot | June 15, 2016
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‘Doomsday scenario’ cutting health benefits and increasing class sizes at LA Unified may be averted

The self-described “Doomsday scenario” laid out by LA Unified’s chief financial officer at Tuesday’s school board meeting could have resulted in the loss of 2,000 teacher and administrator jobs by next spring, an increase of up to nine students per classroom, and a halt to saving for teacher retirement benefits. But then, like the cavalry...
By Mike Szymanski | June 15, 2016
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Where is the new money for schools going? A look at the 10 neighborhoods in the Great Public Schools Now plan

*UPDATED A plan unveiled today by Great Public Schools Now identifies 10 low-income neighborhoods where the nonprofit will focus its efforts on expanding access to high-performing schools for kids close to where they live. The neighborhoods were chosen after examining the performance of all LA Unified schools and independent public charter schools in the city...
By Sarah Favot | June 15, 2016
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JUST IN: Great Public Schools Now unveils plan to fund expansion of successful schools to serve 160,000 low-income LA students

*UPDATED A massive undertaking to increase access to high-quality education for tens of thousands of low-income students in Los Angeles was revealed today in a long-awaited plan by Great Public Schools Now, a well-funded nonprofit organization formed last year. The goal is to expand access for 160,000 students GPSN has identified as attending failing schools in 10...
By Craig Clough and Sarah Favot | June 15, 2016
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By the numbers: Did ‘all hands on deck’ save LA Unified’s sinking graduation rate?

LA Unified began the new year facing a formidable challenge, as only 54 percent of its senior class was projected to be on track for passing all their A through G standards, a series of courses required for acceptance into California’s public universities. The new, higher graduation standards went into effect for the first time...
By Craig Clough | June 14, 2016
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School board pays emotional tribute to Orlando victims and LGBTQ students

All seven of the LA Unified school board members, along with Superintendent Michelle King and Executive Officer Jefferson Crain, read the names of the 49 victims of the Orlando shooting massacre at the opening of the school board meeting Tuesday afternoon before each board member then read part of a resolution re-emphasizing their commitment to...
By Mike Szymanski | June 14, 2016
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Union protests 10,000 LA Unified workers shut out of health care benefits

Before today’s afternoon school board meeting, the union representing teachers assistants, after-school workers and playground supervisors protested outside the LA Unified headquarters asking that the board reconsider health care benefits for 10,264 employees now shut out of those benefits. The union representatives plan to speak at the afternoon session of the school board. The district...
By Mike Szymanski | June 14, 2016
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Livestream of today’s LA Unified school board meeting

The LA Unified school board is scheduled to hold an open session meeting today. The agenda includes a vote on approval of revisions to a year-old teacher evaluation system and a public hearing on next year’s Local Control Accountability Plan. Click here to watch the livestream of the meeting.
By Craig Clough | June 14, 2016
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Commentary: Unified enrollment levels the playing field for high-need public schools

By Mauro Bautista Most of us who grew up in Los Angeles in the 20th century had limited choices as to which school we attended. Most attended the local public school as determined by a zone of residence. Some of us, like me, attended a magnet high school and a few others attended private high schools....
By Guest contributor | June 14, 2016
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Morning Read: California expands computer science in schools

California moves to catch up on K-12 computer science curriculum After years of lagging behind Arkansas, West Virginia and several other states, California is expanding computer science in public schools across the state and training teachers to teach it. By Pat Maio, EdSource Less test-iness over LA teacher evaluations, LA Times LAUSD gets $1M to...
By LA School Report | June 14, 2016