The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Morning Read: Charters post strong scores for low-income students
Charters’ clout grows as top performer to disadvantaged Half of the top-performing schools serving low-income students in California are charters, according to a new analysis of test scores. Cabinet Report, by Kimberly Beltran Principal churn highlights tension in in San Diego school district Since San Diego Unified Superintendent Cindy Marten took over in 2013, about...
By LA School Report | October 22, 2015
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Broad names former Louisiana ed chief to lead LA charter plan
The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation said today Paul Pastorek, a former superintendent of public education in Louisiana who joined the foundation in an executive role earlier this year, has been appointed to lead the group’s efforts to expand charter schools in Los Angeles Unified. Pastorek, a former general counsel to NASA, joined the Broad...
By LA School Report | October 21, 2015
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Zimmer undecided about fate of closed west SFV school sites
As the operators of El Camino Real Charter School High School prepare to ask the LA Unified board for approval to turn three vacant elementary school sites into new charter schools, one of the main hurdles they face is the growing skepticism of board President Steve Zimmer. The sites are located in the western San Fernando...
By Craig Clough | October 21, 2015
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New ‘diversion’ program helping keep LAUSD students out of court
A new LA Unified police diversion program, which replaces arrests with counseling, is keeping hundreds of students out of the city’s criminal justice system. “If we didn’t have this program, a lot would have gone into a courtroom and before a judge,” said LAUSD police chief Steven Zipperman, in a presentation yesterday to the district’s school...
By Mike Szymanski | October 21, 2015
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Oakland Unified’s unaccompanied minors: One year later
By Jasmine Garsd It’s been a year since thousands of unaccompanied minors surged into the U.S., overwhelming some school districts. These children, many of whom don’t speak English and have lived through violence, trauma and abuse, pose a serious challenge to schools. Some districts weren’t ready. Oakland, Calif., was. It was spring of 2014, well...
By LA School Report | October 21, 2015
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Morning Read: Friedrichs v. CTA, a threat to union dues — and power
Friedrichs v. CTA: What you need to know about challenge to union dues The lawsuit challenges the authority of the CTA and other public-employee unions to collect mandatory fees, a main source of their income and, by extension, their power. EdSource, by John Fensterwald More than half of LGBT students have felt unsafe at school...
By LA School Report | October 21, 2015
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LA Unified preparing for possible floods from El Niño
LA Unified plant managers are putting together a things-to-do list for every school in the district to prepare for a possible record El Niño. Everything from cleaning out gutters to replacing a roof could help schools weather a strong storm system that is forecast to start this winter and last through spring. The concerns were...
By Mike Szymanski | October 20, 2015
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LASR poll results: Supporters of Broad on top in photo finish
Folks, this one was down… to… the… wire! Our poll asking readers to share their opinions on the Broad Foundation‘s massive charter expansion plan got lots of votes and even some national attention (thank you, Diane Ravitch). In the end, it was a virtual tie between readers responding with answers that strongly favored the Broad...
By LA School Report | October 20, 2015
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A slow start for LAUSD’s first public meeting on next superintendent
In a room set to accommodate 300, fewer than 50 signed in at the Roybal Learning Center auditorium last night to give their input into what they want to see in LA Unified’s next superintendent. “We are just beginning,” said Hank Gmitro, president of the firm conducting the search, Hazard, Young, Attea & Associates. “We provide...
By Mike Szymanski | October 20, 2015
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Labor board seeking injunction over Alliance anti-union efforts
The California Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) will be seeking an injunction in Los Angeles County Superior Court to stop what it says is illegal interference by officials at Alliance College-Ready Public Schools against a unionization effort by some of its teachers. The LA teachers union, UTLA, is currently attempting to unionize the teachers at...
By Craig Clough | October 20, 2015