The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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KIPP Schools API Scores Rank Among LA Unified’s Best
Among the mixed bag of Academic Performance Index scores for LA Unified released by the California Department of Education yesterday were a handful of gems. Several of the brightest, including the highest score for any school in the district as well as the highest scoring middle school, belonged to KIPP (Knowledge is Power Program) charter...
By Vanessa Romo | August 30, 2013
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Davis Guggenheim Turns His Camera Back onto Teachers

Davis Guggenheim, the director of An Inconvenient Truth and Waiting for Superman, has a new film coming out — Teach, a two-hour documentary premiering Sept. 6 on CBS (which means Time Warner cable customers may not be able to watch it). The film follows four public school teachers throughout the school year, including Joel Laguna, a 10th grade AP World...
By Hillel Aron | August 30, 2013
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Morning Read: Scores Show Charters Need Help, Too
Only about half of LA Unified charters meeting state goals For decades, charter schools have been held out as one of the great hopes of public education — private institutions funded with taxpayer dollars, but free from some of the strictures that saddle traditional public schools. And few school systems have embraced charters as much...
By LA School Report | August 30, 2013
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Deasy’s Community Meetings Take $2 Billion Funding Fight Public

The fight over the $2 billion LA Unified is getting under a new state funding program moves onto a public stage at 5:30 tonight when Superintendent John Deasy meets with a community group at Inner City Struggle in Boyle Heights. As the first of three scheduled meetings this month sponsored by CLASS, a coalition of community...
By Chase Niesner | August 29, 2013
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API Tests for LA Unified Improve Slightly, State Scores Fall

Los Angeles Unified made a marginal improvement on California standards tests while for the first time in at least a decade, the state score dropped, according to results released today by the state Department of Education (CDE). For LA Unified students, the annual Academic Performance Index (API) shows a three point increase over last year,...
By Vanessa Romo | August 29, 2013
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Morning Read: CA Schools Moving Toward Segregation

In shadow of March on DC, schools increasingly segregated in California Fifty years after the March on Washington, a major challenge facing California and the West in general is increasing segregation of black and Latino students, reviving a debate that Brown v Board of Education was supposed to resolve: whether it is possible to have...
By LA School Report | August 29, 2013
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Service Workers Close to Winning Vote in Charter Process

A bill that would allow cafeteria workers, custodians and teacher aides to vote when a public school wants to become a charter is one vote (State Assembly) and one signature (Gov. Brown) away from becoming law. Both are expected, and it could happen within days. Currently, only teachers get to vote for conversion. But the change...
By Hillel Aron | August 28, 2013
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New Law Allows Grad Students to Have a Second Year of Training
Among the 28 bills Gov. Jerry Brown signed into law yesterday, four bear directly on California educators and students. One bill, SB 5, sponsored by Sen. Alex Padilla (D, Pacoima), aims to create better teachers by allowing graduate students to spend an additional year in training before becoming a teacher. Until now, the state had limited...
By Chase Niesner | August 28, 2013
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After Months of Planning, LA Unified Distributes First iPads
Photos courtesy of LAUSD LA Unified distributed the first wave of iPads yesterday to two elementary schools, Broadacres in Carson and Cimarron in Hawthorne. Over the next 18 months, every student in LAUSD will have one, according to district officials, who are spending nearly $1 billion on the effort. From this early look, so far...
By LA School Report | August 28, 2013
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Morning Read: First iPads Reach Eager Little Hands

LAUSD launches its drive to equip every student with iPads Two local elementary schools became the first to roll out tablet computers Tuesday in a $1-billion effort to put iPads in the hands of every student in the Los Angeles Unified School District. For Broadacres, in Carson, the tablets were an exhilarating upgrade for a...
By LA School Report | August 28, 2013