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Black, Latino students continue to fall behind White, Asian counterparts

By Elizabeth Lee White and Asian students in the United States continue to outperform their black and Latino counterparts nationwide, according to the U.S. Department of Education’s 2015 Nation’s Report Card that assesses nationwide student achievement. Latino and black students are most effected by socio-economic challenges that keep them from excelling when compared to their...
By Letter to the Editor | November 6, 2015
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Report: CA 1 of 5 states without linking teacher reviews to learning

A report out this week from the National Council on Teacher Quality (NCTQ) found that California is just one of five states that has no formal policy requiring that teacher evaluations be tied in some way to student achievement measures. The report — State of the States 2015: Evaluating Teaching, Leading and Learning — took a look...
By Craig Clough | November 5, 2015
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Contrary to recent reports, arts in LAUSD starting to expand, says director

Despite recent media reports that the arts are doing poorly at LA Unified schools, the director of the district’s arts programs, Rory Pullens, said quite to the contrary, things are better than they have been in a long time; it’s just that nobody knows it. “We are really encouraged and really excited about what’s been...
By Mike Szymanski | November 5, 2015
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LAUSD relying on credit recovery to halt steep decline in graduation rate

After years of rising graduation rates, LA Unified is facing a stunning reversal this year, with recent estimates showing that no more than 49 percent of seniors are on pace to receive a diploma in 2016. But there may be a chance to avoid the sudden drop. With graduation rates growing steadily over the last four...
By Craig Clough | November 5, 2015
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CA reaches settlement with 6 schools over no-instruction classes

The state Board of Education today approved a settlement in a lawsuit brought on behalf of students who lost valuable learning time because they were placed in classes that lacked any instructional value. Under the agreement reached in Cruz v. State of California, the state will provide immediate assistance to six high schools, including three...
By LA School Report | November 5, 2015
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Some call for new transitional kindergarten age requirements

By Lillian Mongeau What if you were told that your child didn’t qualify for a spot in second grade because he didn’t have freckles? Ridiculous, right? But there’s a law on the books in California that is exactly this arbitrary. Aspen Erickson, 5, is a kindergartener at Lakewood Elementary School in Sunnyvale, California, one of...
By LA School Report | November 5, 2015
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LA Times gives Villaraigosa ‘medium chance’ to succeed Cortines

The Los Angeles Times today listed former LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa as having a “medium chance” of becoming a finalist for the job of next superintendent of LA Unified. As the district’s search moves into a phase for identifying potential finalists, the story features a list of 43 possible candidates, based on what it called “interviews...
By Craig Clough | November 4, 2015
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Anti-bullying campaign gets personal for LAPD and students

An LA Unified anti-bullying campaign for at-risk youth that includes an innovative arts program culminated today in an emotional speech by a father, whose 11-year-old son killed himself after being bullied. Students, teachers, even police officers had tears in their eyes at Bret Hart Preparatory Middle School. For some of the officers, it got personal....
By Mike Szymanski | November 4, 2015
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LAUSD plans to expand computer science to every grade by 2020

At a time of high employment demand for computer experts, fewer than half of LA Unified’s 98 traditional high schools offer computer science classes. “We could have students go through LAUSD without any access to computer science at all,” Suyen Moncada-Machado, a district instructional specialist told a district board committee yesterday as part of a...
By Mike Szymanski | November 4, 2015
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Is it schools or society failing our students?

By Eduardo Porter Here’s the good news: American schools may not be as bad as we have been led to believe. Ah, but here’s the bad news: The rest of American society is failing its disadvantaged citizens even more than we realize. The question is, Should educators be responsible for fixing this? The perennial debate about...
By LA School Report | November 4, 2015