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The ‘Science of Reading’ Won’t be Required in California Schools, At Least for Now
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. A bill that could reshape literacy education in California elementary schools cleared a major hurdle in the Legislature this week after dueling sides reached a compromise that provides funding for phonics-based instruction but stops short of requiring it. The compromise between English learner...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | May 5, 2025
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A Thoroughly Modern L.A. Unified Principal Uses Instagram to Build School Spirit — And Win Awards
An LAUSD principal recently named a top school leader uses social media to build enthusiasm for her high school — and a strong spirit is spilling over into excellent academic outcomes, as well as strong enrollment. Rebecca McMurrin, principal of venerable Ulysses S. Grant High School in L.A.’s San Fernando Valley, takes a creative approach...
By Jinge Li | May 1, 2025
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L.A. Says It Will No Longer Have Most of its Free Childcare Centers
This story was originally published on LAist. The city of Los Angeles says it will no longer have the money to run most childcare centers launched during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, the city allocated federal relief dollars to renovate and reopen 10 licensed childcare centers for young kids in economically disadvantaged areas. Eight of those centers...
By Libby Rainey, LAist | April 30, 2025
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Q&A: LAUSD Board Member Nick Melvoin on the Wildfires, Trump and Smartphones
Sharp and independent, Brentwood native Nick Melvoin has served on the LAUSD school board since 2017. But the attorney and former teacher said he’s never seen anything like this year, where he’s currently helping to guide the nation’s second-largest school system through some rough situations. That includes federal agents turning up at schools, looking for...
By Ben Chapman | April 29, 2025
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How Do High Schoolers in Your Area Really Fare After Graduation? A New California Tool Lets You Know
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. Want to know how students at your child’s school district are performing five or even 10 years down the line? Today, California released a new tool that aims to make that question — and many others — much easier to answer. Known as...
By Adam Echelman, CalMatters | April 28, 2025
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LAUSD’s Oscar Winning ‘Last Repair Shop’ Gets $1 Million and Yo-Yo Ma Visit
L.A. Unified’s famed ‘Last Repair Shop’ for students’ musical instruments just got tuned up, with a $1 million donation and a visit from the world’s most famous cellist. The beloved shop, which was featured in an Oscar-winning short documentary last year, repairs students’ school instruments across the district: taking in, fixing up and and sending...
By Jacob Matthews | April 24, 2025
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How L.A.’s Gabriella Charter School Founder Turned Family Tragedy Into a Legacy
After more than 20 years, 10,000 students, and countless lives changed, Liza Bercovici stepped down last year as executive director of Gabriella Charter Schools — a network she built from heartbreak. In 1999, Bercovici lost her daughter Gabriella, 13, in a tragic bike accident while the family was on vacation in Grand Teton National Park....
By Jinge Li | April 23, 2025
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Five Years On, COVID-Era Enrollment Declines Decimate L.A. Schools
Five years after COVID-19 shut down all the schools in Los Angeles, enrollment declines in the nation’s second largest district are worsening again. Since the pandemic, the Los Angeles Unified School District has lost more than 70,000 students. Enrollment has fallen to 408,083, from a peak of 746,831 in 2002. Losses steepened this year, too,...
By Ben Chapman | April 22, 2025
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As More High Schoolers Earn College Credit, Some Miss Out
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. Students tap on their keyboards as a professor lectures at the front of the room. It looks like any other college course, except that it’s taking place at a high school. This year, more than 150,000 California teens are earning college credit in dual enrollment courses....
By Delilah Brumer, CalMatters | April 21, 2025
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‘I’m Capable of Doing… This’: L.A. Students Career and Tech Success
These days, success in today’s job market doesn’t necessarily mean going to college. With the nation’s second largest school district now offering nearly 450 Career and Technical Education programs across 160 schools, Los Angeles Unified students are embracing CTE. More than 47,000 students have access to programs that range from internships and dual enrollment courses...
By Jacob Matthews | April 17, 2025