The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Report: More-low income kids take ACT, but results are stagnant
There’s a little good news/bad news in a new report analyzing the college-readiness of low-income students who took the ACT test. More low-income students than ever took the test in 2014, according to the report, and a high level of them expressed a plan to attend college. But the bad news: performance by low-income students...
By Craig Clough | July 20, 2015
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To speed up probes, LAUSD has doubled investigation team
The staff that investigates allegations against residents of LA Unified’s “teacher jail” has doubled since the team started last year, with the aim of clearing cases faster. The Student Safety Investigation Team (SSIT) now has 15 members, including six full-time investigators, four LA school police, two forensic specialists and one supervising investigator. The team is...
By Mike Szymanski | July 20, 2015
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Kids learn to hack and crack in cyberspace at NSA summer camp
By Nicholas Fandos This is not your typical summer sleepaway camp. Bonfires and archery? Try Insecure Direct Object References and A1-Injections. The dozen or so teenagers staring at computers in a Marymount University classroom here on a recent day were learning — thanks to a new National Security Agency cybersecurity program that reaches down into the ranks...
By LA School Report | July 20, 2015
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Morning Read: Man wins $25,000 for voting in LAUSD board election
Voter in L.A. school board race wins $25,000 for casting a ballot An experiment in boosting chronic low-turnout local elections ended Friday when Rojas, a 35-year-old security guard, received a check. Los Angeles Times Commentary: LAUSD still persecuting one of the nation’s best teachers Esquith is being treated like a Wall Street cheat. Washington Post...
By LA School Report | July 20, 2015
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Most in LAUSD ‘jail’ facing charges of sexual misconduct, violence
Despite persistent concerns about teachers sexually harassing or abusing students in the classroom, only slightly more than a third of the teachers and other school personnel currently in LA Unified’s so-called “teacher jail” have been accused of sexual misconduct, according to the district’s latest accounting. Almost the same number are facing accusations of “violence.” As of...
By Mike Szymanski | July 17, 2015
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Senate NCLB rewrite gets lots of praise, some yawns, a few boos
The Senate passed a rewrite of the expired No Child Left Behind law yesterday with broad, bipartisan support. The George W. Bush-era law is controversial due to the high-stakes standardizing testing it ushered in, and the Senate’s bill would strip away much of the federal government’s test-and-punish powers. The bipartisan support it received is in...
By Craig Clough | July 17, 2015
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New National PTA president wants to move beyond bake sales
By Caitlin Moran These days, parent-teacher associations are about more than bake sales and art projects. Individual regions and councils tackle concerns that range from cyber-bullying to achievement gaps and from the importance of early reading skills to including families that speak a language other than English at home. Laura Bay says she’s ready to...
By LA School Report | July 17, 2015
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Morning Read: Vergara group brings new lawsuit over teacher evaluations
Group sues 13 districts for not using test scores in teacher evaluations The lawsuit targets school systems in the state that have barred the use of test results through collective-bargaining agreements with teachers unions. Los Angeles Times CA law bars consent as a defense in child sexual-abuse lawsuits Gov. Brown announced he signed legislation introduced...
By LA School Report | July 17, 2015
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Senate approves bill to revamp ‘No Child Left Behind’
By Jennifer Steinhauer WASHINGTON — For this first time in 14 years, the Senate on Thursday approved a revised version of No Child Left Behind, the signature Bush-era education law that ushered in an era of broadly reviled, high-stakes standardized testing. But the passage of the bill on an 81-17 vote, coming just a week...
By LA School Report | July 16, 2015
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Report: Majority of school districts lack LGBT anti-bullying policies
A majority of American school districts have no policies protecting LGBT students from bullying, with California also coming in on the low-end, according to a new report that looked at the anti-bulliing policies of districts across the nation. The Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network (GLSEN) analyzed the policies of 13,000 districts in all 50 states...
By Craig Clough | July 16, 2015