The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Study shows more education won’t help the income inequality
By Neil Irwin | The New York Times Suppose you accept the persuasive data that inequality has been rising in the United States and most advanced nations in recent decades. But suppose you don’t want to fight inequality through politically polarizing steps like higher taxes on the wealthy or a more generous social welfare system....
By LA School Report | April 1, 2015
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Morning Read: 4 Garfield students in national Academic Decathlon
Four Garfield High students are in national Academic Decathlon final Four Garfield High students will participate this month in the final round of the national Academic Decathlon. Los Angeles Times How students with top test scores actually hurt a teacher’s evaluation Imagine that you are a doctor and your evaluation is based on patients you...
By LA School Report | April 1, 2015
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LA Unified files for NCLB waiver without teacher evaluation deal
* UPDATED LA Unified met today’s deadline and filed an application for a No Child Left Behind waiver without one of the key requirements of the U.S. Department of Education — an agreement with the teachers union on a three-level teacher evaluation system. If approved, the California Office to Reform Education (CORE) Waiver would clear...
By Vanessa Romo | March 31, 2015
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Westside group outraged over proposed immersion school
A group of Mar Vista community members and parents is mounting a protest againt LA Unified school board member Steve Zimmer over his support for a Mandarin immersion elementary school slated to be built in their Westside neighborhood. The $30 million school, currently dubbed the Mandarin and English Dual-Language Immersion Elementary School project, was approved by the...
By Craig Clough | March 31, 2015
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LAUSD planning summer school for special ed, struggling students
With more than two months remain before the end school year, LA Unified officials are making summer school plans for special education students and students who have failed at least one mandatory class for graduation. It is the second straight year the district is offering struggling students the opportunity to catch-up on subjects after years...
By Vanessa Romo | March 31, 2015
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The high cost of the revolving door of teachers
By Owen Phillips | National Public Radio Every year, thousands of fresh-faced teachers are handed the keys to a new classroom, given a pat on the back and told, “Good luck!” Over the next five years, though, nearly half of those teachers will transfer to a new school or leave the profession altogether — only...
By LA School Report | March 31, 2015
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Morning Read: Common Core opposition not common in CA
In California, opposition to Common Core relatively minimal The superintendents of six California districts uniformly reported that opposition to Common Core has been relatively minor. Ed Source Long Beach students prepare for higher-paying jobs with Linked Learning The school district has strategized since 2009 to create curricula relevant to the workforce. Long Beach Press Telegram...
By LA School Report | March 31, 2015
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Charter group makes initial spend for Rodriguez LAUSD board seat
They’re off… and spending. Over the last 10 days the California Charter School Association political action committee has resumed pumping in money to help Ref Rodriguez win the District 5 seat on the LA Unified school board in the May 19 runoff. The group has spent $18,347 on two flier mailings and one phone banking session....
By Vanessa Romo | March 30, 2015
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‘Ed Talk with Dr. Bob Bravo’ explores innovative teaching at LAUSD
With 154 schools under his supervision, Robert Bravo can never be in as many places as he wants or talk to as many educators as he’d like. But every Thursday, Bravo reaches hundreds of teachers and principals from around the district, and even some from as far away as Pakistan and Russia, with his weekly...
By Craig Clough | March 30, 2015
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Commentary: Cool kids at Mendez High are in the Reading Club
By Steve Lopez | The Los Angeles Times They meet on Mondays at lunch. They remove their earbuds, hide their smartphones and communicate without the aid of electronic devices. They are the coolest kids at Mendez High School in Boyle Heights. They are the Reading Club. “This is truly the biggest club on campus,” said...
By LA School Report | March 30, 2015