The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Meet an LAUSD Roosevelt High School teacher who is a 2023 California Teacher of the Year
As LAUSD high school English teacher Jason Torres-Rangel finishes his second year at Theodore Roosevelt High School he looks back on a time filled with accomplishments. In October, he was named one of five 2023 California Teachers of the Year, and nominated as California’s representative for the National Teacher of the Year competition. Torres-Rangel, who...
By LeeAnna Villarreal | April 25, 2023
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Commentary: 40 years ago ‘A Nation at Risk’ warned of a ‘rising tide of mediocrity’ in US schools – has anything changed?
The National Commission on Excellence in Education’s release of a report titled “A Nation at Risk” in 1983 was a pivotal point in the history of American education. The report used dire language, lamenting that “the educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very...
By Morgan Polikoff | April 24, 2023
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Case studies: 6 principles for using student-powered improvement in your school
In a small conference room off the main office of a large high school near Tulsa, Oklahoma, eight students gathered with a language arts teacher and a youth development specialist to identify a problem that they could tackle in their school. Students immediately talked about the mental health crisis among their peers. “When hard things...
By Kari Nelsestuen | April 21, 2023
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The education community braced for guidance on student discipline. It never came
During a heated Senate confirmation hearing in July 2021, civil rights attorney Catherine Lhamon made clear her goal to confront longstanding, dramatic racial disparities in school discipline at a moment when racial inequities — in policing, education and society more broadly — were at the center of the national discourse. She’d done it before, to fanfare...
By Mark Keierleber | April 20, 2023
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Q&A: Psychologist Deborah Offner on educators as first responders
Every day, adults are tasked with supporting young people showing behavioral changes or experiencing a mental health crisis. The problem? Many are unprepared to do so. It’s a challenge Deborah Offner came up against so often, as a consulting psychologist for schools in and around Boston, she decided to write a guide. Urgency is only...
By Marianna McMurdock | April 19, 2023
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Coliseum Street Elementary teacher named 2023 California Teacher of the Year
Since being named a 2023 California Teacher of the Year, Bridgette Donald-Blue said kindergarteners she has never taught have eagerly approached her in the hallways at Coliseum Street Elementary School. They will say, “Hey Ms. Blue, you’re a teacher leader, I have you as a screensaver on my iPad, we watched your video at home,”...
By Cari Spencer | April 18, 2023
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Opinion: Education is one area where ‘domestic realists’ agree. Let’s build on that
The education culture wars on issues like critical race theory and how to teach history create a false narrative and collective illusion on K-12 issues among Americans. The stubborn fact is that voters’ opinions and governors’ statements show broad agreement on a collection of practical education issues that offers a common-sense K-12 governing agenda, according...
By Bruno Manno | April 17, 2023
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Q&A: Shannon Watts on the power moms wield to stop school shootings
It was the 2012 school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, that brought Shannon Watts to action. From her Indiana home, the former communications executive and stay-at-home mother of five created a Facebook group for women who supported heightened gun laws. What began as a modest community on the social media platform quickly grew into the political...
By Mark Keierleber | April 13, 2023
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Analysis: Declines in math readiness underscore the urgency of math awareness
When President Ronald Reagan proclaimed the first National Math Awareness Week in April 1986, one of the problems he cited was that too few students were devoted to the study of math. “Despite the increasing importance of mathematics to the progress of our economy and society, enrollment in mathematics programs has been declining at all levels of...
By Manil Suri, The Conversation | April 12, 2023
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LAUSD has a college enrollment problem – but there are solutions
For years, LA Unified has struggled to increase its college enrollment rate for high school graduates, which has hovered around 60%. Now, three organizations are working with students in LAUSD high schools to increase the district’s college enrollment, with strategies such as helping students write college essays, hear from professionals, and be mentored through high...
By Sara Kahn | April 11, 2023