The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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Most Teach For America Teachers Will End Up at Charters

Over the next couple of years, Los Angeles will see an influx of more than 700 teachers from Teach for America, a non-profit that recruits college graduates, trains them, and places them in public schools across the country. Most of them will end up in charter schools. Of the 340 teachers teaching in Los Angeles this...
By Hillel Aron | August 1, 2013
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Morning Read: No LAUSD Layoffs This Year, Says Zimmer
Prop 30 Means a Year of ‘Stabilization’ When the 2013-2014 school year kicks off on Aug. 13, the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) will begin a year of “stabilization,” board member Steve Zimmer, 4th District, said. With a potentially longer school year and other changes being mulled for the 2014-2015 school year, the district is...
By LA School Report | August 1, 2013
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Brown’s New Funding Formula Sets Student Limit for K-3 Classes

Governor Brown’s Local Control Funding Formula increases funding for grades K-3 by about 10.4 percent, but districts could lose all that additional funding if one school exceeds the required average class size of 24 students. A new report from the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office says that districts have to maintain an average class size to...
By Brianna Sacks | July 31, 2013
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High-Quality Pre-K Top Priority for Americans, New Poll Shows

A national poll released Wednesday found that voters ranked quality early childhood education as a national priority, second only in importance to job growth. They said the U.S. should be doing more to prepare children for kindergarten. The bipartisan research team of Public Opinion Strategies and Hart Research, commissioned by the early education advocacy group...
By Brianna Sacks | July 31, 2013
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Haddon Parents Abandon Trigger, Still Get Changes

In California public education, you sometimes don’t have to pull the trigger. Parents of students at Haddon Avenue Elementary in Pacoima have ended their ‘parent trigger’ campaign to take over their school because they got what they wanted without it. “I’m very happy that this resulted in some changes at the school,” Martha Martinez, the...
By Hillel Aron | July 31, 2013
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Low-Income Schools Getting First Wave of New iPads

When school starts on August 13, students on 47 campuses will receive back-to-school gifts: brand new iPads, courtesy of LAUSD’s $30 million first phase of its technology plan, which aims to give every student and teacher an iPad by the end of 2014. And many of the campuses are located south of the 10 freeway....
By Hillel Aron | July 31, 2013
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Morning Read: Walton Funding 700 New Teachers for LA
Foundation’s Grant Will Bring 700 New Teachers to LA The Arkansas-based Walton Family Foundation announced Wednesday that it was donating $20 million to a nonprofit that recruits talented college graduates to teach in public schools for two years. The largest number of instructors, more than 700, is slated for Los Angeles. LA Times School Districts Invited to...
By LA School Report | July 31, 2013
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LA Arts School Gets the Principal It Always Wanted, From NYC
The beleaguered Ramon C. Cortines School for the Visual and Performing Arts has a new principal. As Los Angeles Downtown News reports, the $232 million school will be helmed by Kim Bruno, the former principal of New York City’s LaGuardia High School of Music, Art and Performing Arts, which provided the inspiration for the musical Fame. As...
By Hillel Aron | July 30, 2013
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Two Weeks from School and No Word on ‘No Child’ Waiver

With another month passing and the first day of school just two weeks away, the No Child Left Behind waiver request from LAUSD and eight other California school districts remains unfinished. A final submission must go to the U.S. Department of Education for approval. Last week, representatives from the California Office to Reform Education, which represents the...
By Brianna Sacks | July 30, 2013
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Apple to Replace LAUSD iPads if Broken, Stolen or Damaged*

Thanks to LAUSD’s deal with Apple, 30,000 retina display iPads — those are the latest — will land in student hands starting next month in a $400 million deal that will dramatically change how kids learn reading and math. By next August, the district says every LA Unified student will have access to a $678...
By Brianna Sacks | July 30, 2013