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Special ed: a big drain on the district’s budget, but a potential for attracting more students

Special education students present one of the biggest costs for LA Unified, but administrators are considering ways to capitalize on the district’s successes with that population. Half of the school board’s all-day special budget session at USC on Tuesday was spent discussing the costs of dealing with students with mild and severe disabilities. Special ed is identified...
By Mike Szymanski | May 18, 2016
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Anatomy of a top-scoring magnet school: Inside King/Drew Medical Magnet High

Updated Feb. 10, 2021 | This is part of an LA School Report series taking an in-depth look at the different categories of schools that exist within the massive LA Unified school district. Today we conclude a three-part mini-series on magnet schools. Check here for Part I and Part II. Jai’Myah Henderson may have fallen right...
By Craig Clough | May 17, 2016
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LAUSD puts millions into its magnet expansion

The LA Unified school board put its money where its mouth is at its May 10 meeting and approved a $3 million expansion of its growing magnet program. The move comes after months of public comments from district leaders pointing to the popular magnet program as a way to increase enrollment in the district. Two...
By Craig Clough | May 17, 2016
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Commentary: Does LAUSD want to protect children or a bloated bureaucracy?

By Peter Cunningham Across America, parents are demanding more and better educational options for their children while teachers unions and bureaucrats desperately fight to retain their monopoly over public school students. The latest front in the war against charter schools is in Los Angeles, where a study funded by United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA) tallied up...
By Guest contributor | May 16, 2016
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A failing high school in one of America’s richest counties

By Naomi Nix (Bridgeport, Connecticut) —When veteran Bridgeport journalist Nancy Hendrick greeted the start of 1961 with a blistering column called “What’s Wrong With Bridgeport,” the inequalities that afflict the city today were already evident everywhere she looked. “Suddenly we are all aware of the sharp contrast between private opulence and public squalor that exists within...
By LA School Report | May 16, 2016
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LAUSD makes money from charters, contradicting UTLA-funded study, documents show

* UPDATED May 13 As district officials and other analysts pick apart the UTLA-funded study released Tuesday that claims that independent charter schools drain half a billion dollars from LA Unified, the district’s own numbers show LA Unified actually makes money from charters. The first finding of the 42-page union-funded Cost of Charter Schools report states that the revenue collected from...
By Mike Szymanski | May 13, 2016
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$18 million OKd for charter classrooms housed at district schools

LA Unified’s school board this week approved spending $18 million on more than 900 classrooms and office spaces for 25,000 charter school students using classrooms that are co-located on 94 traditional district school sites. The money is coming from Prop. 39 funds. Prop. 39, passed by California voters in 2000, allows charter schools to use under-utilized...
By Mike Szymanski | May 13, 2016
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Commentary: UTLA says ‘unmitigated’ charter growth hurts LAUSD? Inconceivable!

By Michael Vaughn The Los Angeles teachers union just spent $82,000 on a report that concludes that the thousands of Los Angeles families who are choosing to send their children to charter schools are costing the LA school district a half-billion dollars annually. The report “doesn’t fault charters,” according to the LA Times, “saying that...
By Guest contributor | May 13, 2016
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Sylmar students stage walk-out in solidarity; principal says the brawl wasn’t race related

Although the brawl that took place on the Sylmar High School campus Monday is garnering national attention, it’s for the wrong reasons. “It was not race related, it was not about bullying,” said principal James Lee, who came to the school four years ago. Lee allowed students to take over the stage on Wednesday night at...
By Mike Szymanski | May 12, 2016
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San Francisco Unified opts out of new Teach for America contract

By Jill Tucker The taxpayer-supported Teach for America program, which supplies enthusiastic if inexperienced teachers to thousands of schools in lower-income areas across the country, has fallen out of favor in San Francisco. The city’s school board made clear this week that staffing some of the city’s neediest classrooms with recent college graduates who are...
By LA School Report | May 12, 2016