The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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UTLA announces new contracts for teachers at 4 charter schools
United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) has announced that it negotiated new contracts for teachers at four LA Unified charter schools — Palisades Charter High, Pacoima Charter Elementary, Ivy Academia and Granada Hills Charter High. Two of the contracts include raises for teachers. UTLA currently represents more than 1,000 educators at 13 charter schools. They include six...
By Craig Clough | August 5, 2015
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Program has educators from LAUSD, Mexico teaching together
By Sarah Tully A group of Los Angeles students who are new to the United States spent part of their summer break learning algebra in a pilot program with materials that are lacking in most places nationwide – Common Core-aligned lessons in Spanish. For five weeks, high school students completed an algebra class given in both...
By LA School Report | August 5, 2015
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Morning Read: Billions wasted on teacher training, study says
Study: Billions of dollars in annual teacher training is largely a waste The study found no evidence that any particular approach or amount of professional development consistently helps teachers improve. Washington Post Good news for New Orleans The city has provided the first direct test of an alternative to the system that has dominated American...
By LA School Report | August 5, 2015
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Sen. Rand Paul hammers LAUSD — over report that is 2 years old
The headline on the press release yesterday From Senator Rand Paul, a Republican of Kentucky and 2016 presidential hopeful, screams for attention: “Sen. Rand Paul Highlights LAUSD Reallocating Funds from National School Lunch Program to Feed Lawns, Not Children.” The message got the attention of The Hill, a DC paper that covers Congress, which went with “Paul:...
By Craig Clough | August 4, 2015
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LAUSD headed for future showdown with UTLA over health benefits
When LA Unified and its teachers union agreed to new three-year deals on a contract and health benefits this spring, one strike was averted. But another may be on the horizon. UTLA President Alex Caputo-Pearl took the stage over the weekend at the union’s annual leadership conference and made another strike threat in his State of the Union...
By Craig Clough | August 4, 2015
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Cedars-Sinai helps 28 LA Unified schools with trauma programs
As the school year kicks off this month, 28 LAUSD schools will get free psychological services on site, thanks to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. “Unfortunately, violence and trauma is a regular thing in the lives of children in some parts of Los Angeles, and teachers are just not trained to handle that — they should be...
By Mike Szymanski | August 4, 2015
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What makes 96th Street Elementary such a success?
By Jill Stewart By all rights, 96th Street Elementary School in Watts shouldn’t be busy on a summer morning. School doesn’t start until Aug. 18, and the front door is hemmed in by construction fencing to boot. But parents keep popping by the plain brick complex under the roaring flight path of LAX. One mother...
By LA School Report | August 4, 2015
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Morning Read: LAUSD arts plan concerns teachers
LAUSD plan cuts arts instruction to nine weeks per subject The program, known as the Creative Network Pilot, launched last year in 31 schools and will expand this fall to an additional 10 schools. KPCC Is studying the arts in school important? This twelve-minute film explores the stories of artists, educators, parents, administrators, politicians and...
By LA School Report | August 4, 2015
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LAUSD food ‘guru’ retires following highly critical report
David Binkle, the embattled food services director for LA Unifed, has resigned from the job he held through last December before he was removed under a cloud of controversy. Binkle had become a celebrity in the food world the last few years after appearing on talk shows and receiving praise from First Lady Michele Obama for...
By Craig Clough | August 3, 2015
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California teachers summit attracts 20,000 educators statewide
In what organizers call the state’s largest teacher training ever attempted, more than 20,000 educators gathered for the California Teachers Summit at 33 sites across the state on Friday. “It’s so exciting to bring teachers teaching teachers in this unprecedented collaboration,” said Ellen Moir, of the nonprofit New Teacher Center who helped organize the Better Together campaign. Among...
By Mike Szymanski | August 3, 2015