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LA Unified officials praise Obama’s immigration order
In a rare sign of unanimity, LA Unified officials and school board member are praising President Obama‘s immigration speech last night. The order relieves the threat of deportation for up to 5 million undocumented immigrants, including parents of children who are U.S. citizens or legal residents. It also expands eligibility for those who were brought...
By Craig Clough | November 21, 2014
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Just In: LAUSD settles Miramonte civil cases for $139 million

The Los Angeles Unified School District has just announced a settlement today in civil cases stemming from the actions of a former teacher at Miramonte Elementary School. The school district resolved the remaining Miramonte litigation at issue for a total of $139,250,000. “There is nothing more important to us than the safety of the students...
By LA School Report | November 21, 2014
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LAUSD bond panel OKs another $25 million for MiSiS, devices

The LA Unified Bond Oversight Committee today agreed to approve another $25 million in bond fund spending to help the district fix MiSiS problems and equip schools with computers for standardized testing in the Spring. A team of district officials, including Superintendent Ramon Cortines, made lengthy presentations to the nine member committee, insisting that in...
By Vanessa Romo | November 20, 2014
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Report: ‘Forced’ parent work at charter schools violates state law

* UPDATED If you are required to do it, is it still “volunteering”? That is the question at the heart of a report issued yesterday by Public Advocates, which researched 555 charter schools in California and found that 30 percent of them require parents to do work at the school for a set quota of...
By Craig Clough | November 20, 2014
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Commentary: Cheers for LAUSD’s sub teacher appreciation day

Via The Huffington Post | By David Lyell In my 13 years of teaching at over 100 schools within LAUSD, K-12, regular and special education, students have asked me this question more times than I care to remember. While some question the commitment and contribution of substitute teachers, the tired cliche of a Substitute Teacher...
By LA School Report | November 20, 2014
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El Rancho might have answers for LAUSD Ethnic Studies plan

El Rancho Unified, a small, majority Latino school district of a dozen schools in Pico Rivera, is way head of LA Unified in setting up an Ethnic Studies program, which the LA Unified board approved just this week. By next year in El Rancho, a high school course in Ethnic Studies will be required for...
By Michael Janofsky | November 20, 2014
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Viramontes criticized, Common Core confusion, 5K Challenge

Earlier this month, Arnold Viramontes, an outside expert hired by former superintendent John Deasy, issued a report to LA Unified that was a scathing indictment of the new MiSiS system, finding that “red conditions” arose early and should have signified “No Go.” This week, in it’s weekly newsletter, the Associated Administrators of Los Angeles (AALA) expressed disappointment with...
By LA School Report | November 20, 2014
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Long-awaited LAUSD report calls MiSiS ‘grossly inadequate’

The long awaited Inspector General report on LA Unified’s botched MiSiS program found the development and implementation of the student data management system “grossly inadequate,” lacking sufficient resources, oversight and management. While the report, requested by board member Tamar Galatzan, took three months to complete, the overall findings by the district’s Inspector General, Ken Bramlett, largely echoed observations...
By Vanessa Romo | November 19, 2014
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Jury selection, settlement talks ongoing in Miramonte case

Jury selection resumed today in the Miramonte Elementary School sex-abuse civil case against LA Unified while settlement proceed but not yet with any results. The district school board met in a closed session yesterday reportedly to discuss a settlement offer that was made by the plaintiffs, who are former students and parents at Miramonte suing...
By LA School Report | November 19, 2014
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Teachers to petition Supreme Court in case vs. CTA over dues

In a case that has implications for millions of public employees in more than two dozen states, a group of California teachers is planning to petition the U.S. Supreme Court to hear their case against the California Teachers Association (CTA) over union dues. The case involves a state’s right to require public employees to pay...
By Craig Clough | November 19, 2014