The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Editorial: How to help Latino kids overcome a disadvantage

By The Los Angeles Times Editorial Board On the day they start kindergarten, Latino children are often already at a disadvantage. Their social skills and readiness to listen and learn are top-notch, but their cognitive and verbal skills, abilities that strongly predict future academic success, tend to be significantly less developed than those of their...
By LA School Report | April 7, 2015
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Morning Read: LAUSD, teachers stepping up mediation sessions

LAUSD’s union negotiations, budget woes continue this week The district and UTLA emerged from their second state-mediated gathering Monday with an agreement to meet two more times this week. Los Angeles Daily News Chicago mayoral runoff heads into the last lap Challenger Jesús “Chuy” Garcia, who is backed by the Chicago Teachers Union, says Rahm...
By Craig Clough | April 7, 2015
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CA ed spending jumps per pupil but declines in economic share

California now ranks 29th among all states and the District of Columbia in spending per student, up from 42nd two years ago, according a new report from the California Budget and Policy Center. The jump is attributed in part to Proposition 30’s tax increases, which were approved in November 2012. The new ranking is based...
By LA School Report | April 6, 2015
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Gap between rich, poor schools widens

By Jill Barshay | The Hechinger Report The growing gap between rich and poor is affecting many aspects of life in the United States, from health to work to home life. Now the one place that’s supposed to give Americans an equal chance at life — the schoolhouse — is becoming increasingly unequal as well. I’ve already...
By LA School Report | April 6, 2015
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Zimmer: immersion school is ‘game-changer’ to stem falling enrollment

Despite neighborhood opposition to a proposed $30 million Mandarin-immersion elementary school in Mar Vista, LA Unified school board member Steve Zimmer calls the project “a game-changer” in the district’s efforts to reverse years of enrollment declines that have cost hundreds of millions of dollars. “I don’t have accurate words to express how important this issue...
By Michael Janofsky | April 6, 2015
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Morning Read: LA Unified’s aging teacher workforce is expensive

Los Angeles Unified’s teachers are old and costly For every teacher under the age of 25, there are more than 19 older than 56, according to district data. Los Angeles Daily News Many LAUSD elementary schools in South LA still don’t have library staff Since January, the Los Angeles Unified School district has reopened more...
By LA School Report | April 6, 2015
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‘Parent trigger’ may be pulled at 20th Street Elementary

Parents have launched a petition at 20th Street Elementary to take over the school, force major changes and win the right to replace its staff and teachers, the Los Angeles Times reported today. If a majority of parents sign the petition, it will be the latest effort in the state to use the so-called “Parent...
By Craig Clough | April 3, 2015
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Garcia’s School Climate Committee leads LAUSD’s restorative justice era
Rarely, there’s anything more dry than an LA Unified committee meeting, where the minutia of reports and statistics are vetted before they make their way to the full school board. But as the laboratory for forward-thinking ideas surrounding school discipline, meetings of the Successful School Climate Committee are typically anything but dull. Chaired by board...
By Craig Clough | April 3, 2015
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Commentary: How the school reform movement lost its way

By Diane Ravitch | The New York Review of Books Fifty years ago, Congress passed a federal education law to help poor children get a good public education: the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965. Revised many times, it is still the basis for federal education policy today. When it was last reauthorized...
By LA School Report | April 3, 2015
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Morning Read: Supporters fight for LAUSD’s preschool program

Los Angeles Unified considers killing preschool program A proposal to eliminate a popular LA Unified preschool program for low-income families drew the ire of more than 100 people Thursday. KPCC The Snap2School application rewards students who get to class on time Snap2School works by rewarding attendance with prizes such as tickets to amusement parks, free...
By LA School Report | April 3, 2015