-
What California Teachers Are Trying, Building, and Learning with AI
One California teacher used an artificial intelligence tutor to support students below grade level. Another used AI to create lesson plans. A third tried the technology for sorting students into small groups. AI has the potential to address many fundamental barriers in education — if it’s implemented effectively. Headlines tout its rapid adoption and a...
By Chelsea Waite, Lisa Chu and Steven Weiner | August 12, 2025
-
Several Contenders Enter Race for California Schools Chief
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. As California intensifies its fight with the Trump Administration, the race for the state’s top schools job is becoming ever more crowded. Today, former Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon formally entered the race to succeed Tony Thurmond as State Superintendent of Public Instruction. He...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | August 7, 2025
-
California’s Culturally Divisive Conflict is Costing Schools Too Much
These are lean times in public education. Public school enrollment is declining nationwide and in California. Major federal funding cuts to public education are looming, and California’s own budget woes mean that it will not be able to backfill these shortages. Lean times should call for intentionality in allocating scarce resources and conservation of the...
By Huriya Jabbar and Rachel White | August 6, 2025
-
“It’s a Victory” – Behind the Charter Sector’s Big Court Win in Los Angeles
Correction: An earlier version of this story misidentified the court that struck down Los Angeles Unified’s policy banning charters from using classrooms. The judge was from the California State Superior Court. The article also incorrectly identified the institution where Yvette King-Berg works. She is the executive director of Youth Policy Institute Charter Schools. The nation’s...
By Ben Chapman | August 5, 2025
-
Girls’ STEM Skills Slipped During COVID. Here’s What to Do
This story was originally published on EdSource. For nearly 20 years, academic strategies, support and policies focused on closing long-standing achievement gaps in STEM between boys and girls. These efforts paid off, and by 2019, girls’ achievement in math and science equaled or exceeded boys’. Then the pandemic hit, and the gaps that took two decades to...
By Megan Kuhfield | July 31, 2025
-
Judge Rules LAUSD Broke State Law Denying Charter Co-Location Access
This story was originally published on EdSource. The Los Angeles Unified School District’s board overreached in declaring hundreds of schools off-limits from sharing their facilities with charter schools, a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge has ruled. Judge Stephen Goorvitch wrote in a June 27 decision that the trustees of the state’s largest school district...
By Mallika Seshadri | July 30, 2025
-
WATCH: Inside Grammy Camp, Where Teens Learn the Music Biz
Where did stars like Billie Eilish get a head start on the music industry — while still in high school? Grammy Camp! The Grammy Museum earlier this month hosted nearly 200 high school students from across the country to participate in its week-long Grammy Camp. The national program ran in three cities this year: Los...
By Trinity Alicia and Jim Fields | July 29, 2025
-
LAUSD’s Carvalho: ‘We’ve Got More Resilience Than Taylor Swift’
Updated July 28 Los Angeles Unified superintendent Alberto Carvalho struck a defiant tone in his back-to-school address Tuesday, pitting the district against federal authorities while praising its resilience from recent wildfires and the pandemic. Three weeks before half a million L.A. Unified students return to classes, Carvalho used the annual speech to preview new initiatives...
By Ben Chapman | July 24, 2025
-
White House Releases Part of Money Withheld from California School
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. California after-school and summer programs will get some of their funding back after the federal government said on Friday that it would restore grants it had previously withheld. But the money is contingent on states complying with Civil Rights laws – a cudgel...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | July 23, 2025
-
California Shows How States Can Step Up for Young Students With Disabilities
Imagine being 4 years old and ready to start preschool, eager to learn, play and make friends, only to find out there’s no classroom available to you because you have a disability. That’s a reality for too many young children despite the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), which for 50 years has mandated a...
By Sarah Johns | July 22, 2025