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Cook-off victory wins Santee students a free D.C. trip and a place on LAUSD’s lunch menus

What’s for lunch? How about Sweet Potatoes Chicken Quesadilla, a healthy slaw with cumin-lime crema and a Grilled Pineapple Downtown with graham crackers, cinnamon and apple reduction? And it’s all less than 730 calories and costs $1.14! Sounds like an impossible gourmet meal, but that’s the recipe that a team from Santee Education Complex cooked up...
By Mike Szymanski | April 8, 2016
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Parents fear for dual-language Mandarin program if charter joins campus

Angelica Lopez Moyes is amazed that her 1st-grade son can speak Mandarin. But she is concerned that his dual-language immersion program at Castelar Street Elementary School could be jeopardized if a charter is co-located on the campus. Castelar, founded in 1882 and the second-oldest school in Los Angeles, has 570 students and is at about 75 percent...
By Mike Szymanski | April 8, 2016
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Morning Read: Pollution devices help monitor schools close to freeways
To fight an invisible problem, researchers and health advocates give teens pollution monitors A science teacher from Lincoln High School in East Los Angeles brings the portable pollution monitoring devices to the classroom to find real world applications. There are health concerns for about 90 K-12 schools operating within 500 feet, or about one city...
By LA School Report | April 8, 2016
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Nutritious, delicious and cheap: Lunch is a challenge for both students and LAUSD

On Friday, 19 students from seven LA Unified schools will participate in a cook-off that will send a team to compete nationally in Washington, D.C. Their task: to create a nutritionally balanced school meal for $1.14, the district’s lunch budget. Their challenge is not unlike one the massive LA Unified Food Services division is facing: how to feed more than...
By Mike Szymanski | April 7, 2016
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Remedial courses come with steep price tag — and low-income students aren’t the only ones footing the bill

Each year, students cram into lecture halls to take classes that won’t get them any closer to a college degree — shelling out $1.5 billion to learn concepts they should’ve mastered in high school. One in four college freshmen who enroll in college directly after high school enroll in remedial classes. Remedial students who begin at four-year...
By Mark Keierleber | April 6, 2016
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Commentary: College remediation is not just a problem for those ‘other’ kids

This is college acceptance season, the weeks when millions of high school seniors pore over their offers and agonize about which campus offers the best fit and the best financing. The real pressure is off, the essays and test scores a distant memory. Until you consider the results of a new study that revealed this: More than...
By Tracy Dell’Angela | April 6, 2016
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It costs students $1.5 billion per year to take high school courses in college

By Anya Kamenetz When Andrea Diaz was applying to colleges, she got good news and bad news. The good news was that American University, a private four-year university in Washington, D.C., wanted her. The bad news was that it required her to come to campus early to take two summer developmental-level courses in math and...
By LA School Report | April 6, 2016
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LAUSD: Summer school is expanding. More seats, more fun classes, plus sleep later!

Summer school is expanding, plus it’s going to be fun again. That’s the message Janet Kiddoo, LA Unified’s intervention administrator for Beyond the Bell, brought Tuesday in a report to the Curriculum, Instruction and Educational Equity Committee. “Whoever thought people would get excited about summer school?” Kiddoo said. “People are very excited, and there are such passionate and...
By Mike Szymanski | April 5, 2016
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Steve Barr on weighing a mayoral run and what education reform is getting wrong

By Caroline Bermudez When Steve Barr founded Green Dot Public Schools, a network of charter schools in the Los Angeles area, the district had gone more than 30 years without creating a new high school even as enrollment skyrocketed. And he did so in a no-holds-barred fashion. For example, in 2008, after the school district...
By Guest contributor | April 5, 2016
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5 key lessons from the successes (and failures) of President Obama’s teacher evaluation reforms

The passage of the Every Student Succeeds Act and the waning of the Obama administration bring to a close federal efforts to improve teacher evaluation — a practice once widely derided for its infrequent and pro forma observations, inflated ratings and lack of consequences. Today most states combine different measures, including classroom observations and student test data,...
By Matt Barnum | April 4, 2016