The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Ravitch and Rhee: Same Goals, But Very Different Approaches
You don’t find approaches more AM and FM to America’s public schools – their successes and failures – than in new books by two of the nation’s leading voices on the subject, “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools” by Diane Ravitch and “Radical: Fighting to Put...
By LA School Report | September 23, 2013
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Morning Read: Parents Find Common Core a Mystery

In Push For ‘Common’ Standards, Many Parents Left Uneducated Forty-five states have adopted the Common Core State Standards, the first-ever national academic standards for students. But opposition is growing, and some lawmakers are having second thoughts about their states’ support. Meanwhile, proponents of the standards are still struggling to explain the initiative to parents, many...
By LA School Report | September 23, 2013
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Garcetti Names His Board of Library Commissioners

More appointments from Mayor Eric Garcetti. Today he announced his choices for the Board of Public Library Commissioners. The five members serve five-year staggered terms and are confirmed by the City Council. Gregory Bettinelli — a venture partner for Upfront Ventures, an Affiliated Executive for Freeman Spogli & Co., Co-Founder of MucklerLab, and venture advisor for Mucker...
By LA School Report | September 20, 2013
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A Think Tank Plan to Boost Pay for LA Unified Teachers*

Teachers in Los Angeles Unified schools could make an additional 7.15 percent a year in salary, with 60 percent of them achieving greater retirement security, if the district applied a cost neutral shift in their compensation package, according to a new report from the Manhattan Institute. “Better Pay, Fairer Pensions: Reforming Teacher Compensation” examines the...
By LA School Report | September 20, 2013
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LA Unified Dropped as Defendant in Vergara Lawsuit
Via LA Daily News After a settlement agreement with the plaintiff, Los Angeles Unified was dropped as a defendant in a lawsuit that claims students’ rights to equal educational opportunities are being violated by state laws governing teacher tenure, job security and seniority. The dismissal came Wednesday in a suit filed 16 months ago by...
By LA School Report | September 20, 2013
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Morning Read: ‘Parent Trigger’ Law Needs Amending
Fix the ‘parent trigger’ Editorial: The Los Angeles Unified School District did the right thing by setting some new requirements for “parent trigger” petitions for school reform. But the small changes a local district can make don’t go nearly far enough to amend a sloppily written and poorly implemented state law. After years of ignoring...
By LA School Report | September 20, 2013
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LAUSD to Shift Money from Substitutes to Phys Ed Program*

Following a contentious discussion at the Sept. 10 board meeting, LA Unified announced today that it will fully fund the Physical Education Teacher Incentive Program by siphoning off $1.6 million from the budget that now pays for substitute teachers. The shift in money satisfies a resolution offered by Bennett Kayser and Steve Zimmer that passed...
By LA School Report | September 19, 2013
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Coalition Calls on Gov. Brown to Veto Testing Bill, AB 484

A coalition representing “tens of thousands” of parents, teachers and education reform organizations is petitioning Governor Jerry Brown to veto a bill letting California schools off the hook for testing students while the state transitions to a new curriculum and testing model. Gov. Brown has expressed his support for AB 484 and has has until...
By Vanessa Romo | September 19, 2013
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Chargers Superstar Brings Vision To Baldwin Elementary
San Diego Chargers football star Dwight Freeney was at Baldwin Hills Elementary on Tuesday, not to teach students how to cream quarterbacks, but to celebrate Vision To Learn, a local non-profit that has provided 10,000 low-income students across Los Angeles with free vision care. Freeney was joined by Vision To Learn founder, Austin Beutner, and Los Angeles...
By Chase Niesner | September 19, 2013
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LA Unified Blames ‘Cumbersome’ Law for Dismissal Delay

The Los Angeles Unified School District today blamed state laws for why it took the district so long to dismiss an El Sereno Elementary School teacher who is facing a lawsuit accusing him of sexually abusing students as long ago as 2007. David Holmquist, the district’s chief lawyer, said in a press release today Armando Gonzalez was removed from...
By LA School Report | September 19, 2013