The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Campaign Aims to Keep Students in, Not ‘Push’ them Out
What many call the “drop out crisis,” the Dignity in Schools Campaign is calling the “push out crisis.” The nationwide coalition of students and activists is undertaking a National Week of Action, and various rallies, press conferences, even art installations will be held across Los Angeles this week to address what the group sees as the...
By Chase Niesner | October 1, 2013
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Here’s One Way to Dump the Common Core Standards

With growing opposition around the country to the Common Core State Standards, one governor found an easy way to get rid of them: Change the name. Gov. Jan Brewer of Arizona, feeling pressure from groups that believe the standards are a “federal intrusion,” has ordered state agencies to stop using the term “Common Core.’’ Instead, she has...
By LA School Report | October 1, 2013
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Another Candidate Emerges to Challenge for UTLA Presidency

The election campaign for president of the teachers union, UTLA, has expanded with a third candidate entering the race, joining the incumbent, Warren Fletcher, and a previously-announced challenger, Alex Caputo-Pearl, a member of the Progressive Educators for Action caucus within the union. The new candidate, David Garcia, is a former Navy corpsman and veteran of the first Gulf War...
By Hillel Aron | October 1, 2013
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Vladovic Willing to Meet with Groups on Spending Plan*

Richard Vladovic, president of the LA Unified School Board, has agreed to meet with a coalition of community groups that claimed Vladovic was ignoring their requests to meet over spending issues. The meeting has been scheduled for 11 a.m. Oct. 18, and it follows a sequence of events that began with a letter the coalition, known as CLASS,...
By Hillel Aron | October 1, 2013
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Morning Read: Education Money Will Flow, Even With Shutdown

What would federal shutdown mean for California education? Federal money for education will continue to flow into California, with some caveats, even with a government shutdown. The big-ticket federal education programs in California – $1.8 billion a year for low-performing schools and $1.4 billion a year for special education – will be unscathed, according to...
By LA School Report | October 1, 2013
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Unions Ask Court to Dismiss ‘Bad Teacher’ Suit

The state of California and its two biggest teachers unions are asking a state Superior Court to throw out a case about getting rid of “ineffective teachers,” saying passage of a bill now before Gov. Jerry Brown would make the lawsuit unnecessary. Lawyers for the plaintiffs responded by calling the request a “sham,” arguing that the...
By LA School Report | September 30, 2013
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Should the Teachers Union Vote Online? Members Will Decide

A proposal to require the Los Angeles teachers union (UTLA) to adopt an online voting system for electing its leaders has qualified as a ballot measure (see petition wording here), LA School Report has learned. It must now be taken to the rank and file for a vote. Megan Markevich, a middle school English teacher who...
By LA School Report | September 30, 2013
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A Note to our Readers: Let’s Keep the Comments Civil
As we grow and expand here at LA School Report, we hope to continue to bring helpful information and fresh perspectives on the important education challenges facing our city. While we know some readers don’t always agree with our coverage, we welcome all comments, both positive and critical, and we always encourage healthy debate and...
By LA School Report | September 30, 2013
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Local Groups to LA Unified Board: Let Schools Decide Spending

A broad coalition of more than 40 community and advocacy groups is jumping into LA Unified’s prolonged spending debate, urging the board to allow individual schools, rather than centralized administrators, to decide how to spend the billions of dollars coming into the district from Gov. Jerry Brown‘s Local Control Funding Formula program. Organized by the...
By Michael Janofsky | September 30, 2013
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Morning Read: CA ‘Attendance Crisis’ Jeopardizing Futures

California truancy is at ‘crisis’ level, says attorney general One out of every four California elementary school students — nearly 1 million total — are truant each year, an “attendance crisis” that is jeopardizing their academic futures and depriving schools of needed dollars, the state attorney general said in a report to be released Monday....
By LA School Report | September 30, 2013