The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Supreme Court to hear case of teachers vs. CTA over union dues

The Supreme Court announced today it will hear a case that could deal a major blow to the financial power of public sector unions. The case, Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, involves 10 California teachers who say their being forced to pay union dues violates their right to free speech. The teachers are asking the...
By Craig Clough | June 30, 2015
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Commentary: Vaccine opponents sincere yet misleading

By Robin Abcarian Despite all the noise around mandating vaccinations for schoolchildren, most California adults — some 67 percent, according to a recent poll — think it’s a good idea. We will soon know whether Gov. Jerry Brown agrees. On Monday, the Legislature sent him a bill that would end the personal belief exemption, a routinely abused loophole that has seriously...
By LA School Report | June 30, 2015
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Morning Read: State’s alternative schools have little oversight

There’s no good way to know how CA’s alternative schools are working Thousands of low-income students flood schools designed for the most vulnerable students, but no one is keeping track of what happens to them. Hechinger Report LBUSD teachers call for pay hikes, class-size reductions The teachers’ contract in Long Beach Unified set to expire...
By LA School Report | June 30, 2015
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LAUSD teacher elected as CTA secretary-treasurer

* UPDATED LA Unified elementary school teacher David Goldberg has been elected as secretary-treasurer of the California Teachers Association. Goldberg, 43, spent most of his 19 years at Murchison Elementary, where he is a bilingual teacher who is fluent in Spanish and American Sign Language. He was one of dozens of educators who spent a night in...
By Mike Szymanski | June 29, 2015
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LA Unified schools soon to come alive with the sound of music

Los Angeles’ schools are alive with the sound of music, or at least, they will be come fall when LA Unified’s new-and-improved arts budget is put into practice. Last week, the school board approved the district’s 2015-2016 spending plan, which allocates $26.5 million to arts education, said Rory Pullens, executive director of arts education for the...
By Hayley Fox | June 29, 2015
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Editorial: California school district reserve cap is ‘bad policy’

By The Los Angeles Times Editorial Board Despite broad bipartisan support, legislation to repeal an onerous cap on school district reserve funds didn’t have much of a chance in the Democrat-controlled California Legislature. The bill by Assemblywoman Catharine Baker (R-San Ramon) died in the Assembly Education Committee faster than you can say “opposed by the...
By LA School Report | June 29, 2015
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Morning Read: SoCal schools grapple with teacher shortage

SoCal schools may see more interns, substitutes in classrooms School is out for the summer, but for some in education, the work is just beginning on a problem that is growing more acute: the teacher shortage. KPCC Best school districts for your buck in Southern California To find the best schools in Southern California, we...
By LA School Report | June 29, 2015
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Does Vladovic get a third term leading LAUSD board? Ask Vladovic

OK, so let’s play this out. One of the Mónicas — Ratliff or García, or maybe both — offers a resolution next week waiving the rule that sets term limits at two, enabling Richard Vladovic to serve a third one-year term as the LA Unified board president. The effort needs four votes to pass. How do...
By Michael Janofsky | June 26, 2015
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Investigation into acclaimed teacher includes sexual abuse allegations

The investigation by LA Unified officials into acclaimed elementary school teacher Rafe Esquith includes allegations that he sexually abused a child 40 years ago. Esquith, a best selling author who has also received national awards and media attention for his work at Hobart Avenue Elementary School, was removed from the classroom in April in response...
By Craig Clough | June 26, 2015
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Schools consider implications after vaccine bill passes Assembly

By Jane Meredith Adams In the pockets of California where hundreds and even thousands of kindergartners are not fully vaccinated, school districts are starting to think seriously about how a proposed law requiring vaccinations – which the Legislature approved Thursday – could affect their enrollment and in turn, their funding. The proposed law, Senate Bill 277,...
By LA School Report | June 26, 2015