The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Some races, English learners struggling with A-G standards but have come a long way

There is a wide gulf of disparity when it comes to the performance of races and subgroups in LA Unified’s A through G completion and graduation rates, but these groups have come a long way and are doing better than ever before. Recent district reports breaking down the graduation rate as it heads into the final...
By Craig Clough | April 29, 2016
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It’s graduation time — for parents. Garcetti, board member Garcia to join hundreds at weekend ceremony

April is graduation month, at least for parents in LA, and tomorrow more than 400 parents will be honored in their own graduation ceremony with a keynote address by Mayor Eric Garcetti and welcome from LA Unified board member Monica Garcia. Saturday morning’s event at Roosevelt High School is the last of three graduations taking...
By LA School Report | April 29, 2016
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Morning Read: LA community advocates push early childhood education to ensure success

Los Angeles service providers push for early childhood education At a recent symposium, community advocates declared that early childhood education can spell the difference between future failure and success in school and life. They also stressed the importance of parental engagement at home and the community in shaping a child’s future. By Hiyasmin Quijano, Inquirer.net LA...
By LA School Report | April 29, 2016
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16,000 seniors failing with 6 weeks to go: The double-edged sword of LAUSD’s raised bar for graduation

The LA Unified school board faced a difficult decision in June. It had previously voted to raise the bar on its graduation requirements starting in 2016 in an effort to get more students into college, but it was clear not enough students were ready for the challenge and graduation rates would plummet if aggressive action...
By Craig Clough | April 28, 2016
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Renowned educator warns that LA Unified’s future is ‘dire’

Internationally renowned education expert Pedro Noguera warned members of the LA Unified school board and superintendent that unless more serious measures are taken, the nation’s second-largest school district is destined to lose more students. “The future is dire,” Noguera told the Committee of the Whole on Tuesday afternoon. He pointed to entire neighborhoods in Philadelphia...
By Mike Szymanski | April 28, 2016
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Morning Read: LAUSD school cop charged with attempted sex trafficking of a minor

LAUSD police officer charged with attempted sex trafficking of a child A Los Angeles Unified School District police officer surrendered to federal agents Wednesday morning after he was accused of attempting to have sex with a minor, officials said. Los Angeles Times Charter schools sharing LAUSD campuses: Nobody loves it, everyone has to live with...
By LA School Report | April 28, 2016
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Projected grad rate continues to rise for LAUSD, even with thousands failing at midterm

While LA Unified’s projected graduation rate continues to tick up this spring as seniors complete extra credit recovery courses to make up those they previously failed, 30 percent of those the district considers “on track” for graduation currently aren’t because they are failing at least one A through G class. To be labeled “on track” a...
By Craig Clough | April 27, 2016
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12th-graders’ federal tests scores dip in math and reading while more manage to graduate

The nation’s 12th-grade students did slightly worse on national math and reading tests in 2015 than high school seniors did in 2013, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress results released today, even as high school graduation rates got better. The overall score decreases were quite small — roughly two points in math and a single...
By Matt Barnum | April 27, 2016
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Morning Read: Kids in LA County live in more economically segregated neighborhoods

Kids in LA County grow up more segregated by income Children in Los Angeles County are growing up in more economically segregated neighborhoods than their parents did, as affluent families move to where the best-performing schools are, according to a new USC study. By Josie Huang, KPCC Railroad crossing arm crashes through school bus windows...
By LA School Report | April 27, 2016
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Stark differences for LAUSD elementary schools in the CORE accountability index

As it was with middle schools, demographics contrast starkly at the top and bottom LA Unified elementary schools on the California Office to Reform Education’s (CORE) accountability index. The schools with the lowest five scores are located in economically challenged neighborhoods and have higher levels of disabled students, English learners and non-white students. Like with middle schools, but...
By Craig Clough | April 26, 2016