The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Morning Read: Some California schools still lack Internet

Some schools still waiting for Internet connection A handful of California schools are located in areas so remote that there are no providers. SI&A Cabinet Report L.A. County supervisors OK $450,000 payment for father of slain boy A wrongful-death complaint is still pending against the Los Angeles Unified School District. Los Angeles Times One Anaheim school...
By LA School Report | May 6, 2015
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Money still flowing for LAUSD board races, but does it matter?

* UPDATED Two weeks from the May 19 runoff elections, outside money continues to pour in for two incumbents on the LA Unified board — Tamar Galatzan in District 3 and President Richard Vladovic in District 7. A third incumbent — Bennett Kayser in District 5 — still trails far behind his challenger, Ref Rodriguez....
By LA School Report | May 5, 2015
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CCSA: Waiting list for CA charter schools hits record high

More than 158,000 students are currently on waiting lists to get into charter schools in the state, according to an estimate released by the California Charter Schools Association. The number is a record high. “Evidence over the past five years argues that the public has never been more supportive of charter public schools than they...
By Craig Clough | May 5, 2015
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John Oliver’s take on standardized tests, Pearson, talking pineapples

The HBO show “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” took on the issue of standardized tests on Sunday, criticizing the pressure it creates for students, teachers and administrators. Oliver made no secret of where he stood, pointing out that some test booklets include instructions on what a teacher should do if an anxious student vomits...
By Craig Clough | May 5, 2015
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Junk food laws on campus to fight obesity have slim results

By Eryn Brown and Teresa Watanabe Since state laws made it harder for California elementary school kids to get their hands on sugary drinks and junk food snacks on campus, researchers found, students’ risk of becoming overweight or obese fell slightly — but mostly if they came from higher-income neighborhoods. Examining body mass index measurements...
By LA School Report | May 5, 2015
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Morning Read: LAUSD to investigate PUC Schools’ contracts

L.A. Unified will investigate food-service contracts at PUC charters The findings of a state investigation into PUC Schools showed an alleged conflict of interest in the awarding of millions of dollars in food contracts. Los Angeles Times Commentary: LA Unified must recommit to goal of college for all The goal of college access for all at...
By LA School Report | May 5, 2015
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LAUSD board committees take on Student Bill of Rights, pre-K cuts

LA Unified school board members will be busy this week in a series of committee meetings as a prelude to the board’s monthly meeting next week. The Successful School Climate Committee, chaired by Monica Garcia, will be gathering tomorrow to discuss the implementation of the Student Bill of Rights. The district passed the new set...
By Vanessa Romo | May 4, 2015
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LAUSD preschool program in peril with help still 2 years away

LA Unified is on the brink of cutting a highly-successful preschool program for some of the district’s poorest children at the same time that members of the California state assembly are trying to expand early education programs for all low-income pre-Kindergarten students. The district’s School Readiness Language Development Program (SRLDP) is just one of a...
By Vanessa Romo | May 4, 2015
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Does testing cause or solve America’s education problems?

By Patricia Levesque and Kevin Welner | New York Times It is much easier to correctly identify a problem than to come up with a workable solution. When No Child Left Behind was signed into law in 2002, the United States did indeed have a problem — one that was identified, at least partially, by...
By LA School Report | May 4, 2015
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Morning Read: PUC Schools gave contract to employee’s company

LAUSD charter group gave food contract to an employee’s firm The probe involved Jacqueline Duvivier Castillo, who works for PUC Schools and is a part-owner in Better 4 You Meals. Los Angeles Times Democrat’s teacher tenure law gets killed The legislature is faced with changing longstanding California laws for evaluating, firing and laying off teachers....
By LA School Report | May 4, 2015