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Commentary: LA Unified didn’t do its homework on ethnic studies

Via The Los Angeles Times | By the Editorial Board Ideally, high school history courses would not be so overwhelmingly focused on the accomplishments of white males and would pay more attention to the roles played by others. There has been progress in that direction — in fact, the College Board has come under withering...
By LA School Report | December 12, 2014
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Cortines backpedals from statement that charters get more

UPDATED* LA Unified Superintendent Ramon Cortines has corrected a statement he made at Tuesday’s board meeting, telling the members in an email that he erred in saying charter schools receive more in state funding than traditional public schools. “One of the problems is the funding of charters versus regular schools. And the charters in the state get...
By Craig Clough | December 11, 2014
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Cost to modernize every LAUSD school? Think $40 billion

* UPDATED Members of an LA Unified board committee were told today that the district would need 10 times current funding to address the capital needs of all district schools. The board’s Budget, Facilities and Audit Committee was shown a power point presentation that said the cost of capital improvements necessary to modernize every district...
By LA School Report | December 11, 2014
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LAUSD invests in teacher prep, MLK Jr. Elementary at 100 years

At its meeting this week, the LA Unified board directed Superintendent Ramon Cortines to expand the teacher prep Career Ladder program, which helps supports district employees who want to become teachers. The resolution opens the program by another 300 participants, beginning next July. According to statistics cited in the resolution, enrollment in teacher preparation programs across...
By LA School Report | December 11, 2014
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LAUSD lawsuit over leaked Miramonte case files continues

A judge has ruled that LA Unified’s lawsuit accusing its former chief risk officer of stealing confidential documents related to the Miramonte school sex abuse case and leaking them to the media will move forward, as it does not violate the defendant’s First Amendment rights, City News Service reported. The lawsuit against Gregg Breed was filed in...
By Craig Clough | December 10, 2014
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Commentary: A closer look at board member Monica Ratliff

Via Los Angeles Times | By Steve Lopez This is not exactly a be-careful-what-you-wish-for story, but it sort of is. Monica Ratliff was a reasonably happy teacher at San Pedro Elementary School on the edge of downtown Los Angeles. “I just love the classroom,” said Ratliff, for whom teaching was a second career. The Ivy...
By LA School Report | December 10, 2014
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Fighting teen violence in LA Unified but not spending to do it

One of the more contentious moments at yesterday’s LA Unified board meeting was a debate over a resolution to “Promote Healthy Relationships and Prevent Teen Dating Violence” No one disagreed with the intent or with asking Superintendent Ramon Cortines to deliver a report to the board early next year on how to implement such a program....
By LA School Report | December 10, 2014
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LA Unified board gets a look at financial future — it’s ugly

The LA Unified school board got a first look at the district’s financial future, and what members saw wasn’t pretty. Yet, it wasn’t ugly enough to stop the board from approving millions of dollars in new expenditures. Like a town crier, Superintendent Ramon Cortines has been warning anyone willing to listen that the district is...
By Vanessa Romo | December 10, 2014
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LAUSD board, unions vow support on Obama’s immigration action

The LA Unified school board and union leaders moved today to help ensure that district schools are “safe havens” in support of President Obama‘s recent executive orders on immigration. The orders, announced last month, potentially give deportation relief to millions of undocumented immigrants and their children. A resolution introduced by board members Steve Zimmer and Monica...
By Craig Clough | December 9, 2014
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LAUSD student ‘beats the odds’ and wins $10,000 scholarship

LA Unified student Timothy Walker of Crenshaw High School was among five students honored by the Children’s Defense Fund of California with a “Beat the Odds” award at a star-studded event in Culver City last week. The award recognizes students who have overcome obstacles and adversity while achieving academic success. Each winner will receive a $10,000 college...
By LA School Report | December 9, 2014