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Another Casualty of Trump Research Cuts? California Students Who Want To Be Scientists
This article was originally published on CalMatters This spring, the National Institutes of Health quietly began terminating programs at scores of colleges that prepared promising undergraduate and graduate students for doctoral degrees in the sciences. At least 24 University of California and California State University campuses lost training grants that provided their students with annual stipends...
By Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters | June 5, 2025
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California Schools See 9% Surge in Homeless Students as Funds Decrease
This story was originally published on EdSurge. The number of students experiencing homelessness who were enrolled in California’s TK-12 public schools has jumped over 9% for yet another year, even as overall enrollment rates continue on a downward trend. Nearly 20,000 more homeless students were enrolled by the first Wednesday in October, known as Census Day,...
By Betty Márquez Rosales, EdSource | June 4, 2025
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Los Angeles School Board Moms Push For Paid Parental Leave
Three moms on the L.A. Unified School Board have assembled a resolution to improve benefits for pregnant teachers and other district employees who don’t qualify for California’s state-paid family leave. The board passed the resolution unanimously last month — and now the district is putting together a preliminary plan, with a deadline of February, 2026...
By Ben Chapman | June 3, 2025
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LA Invested Millions in Preschools. Less Than Four Years Later, It’s Offloading Most. What Happened?
This story was originally published at LAist In 2021, the city of Los Angeles took some of its COVID-19 relief money and put it toward a big plan: expanding and running its own childcare centers. The City Council approved $20 million dollars of American Rescue Plan Act federal funds to renovate and reopen 10 licensed...
By Libby Rainey, LAist | June 2, 2025
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School Reform Program, Known for Science of Reading Approach, Looks to Grow
Success For All, a teaching approach using the science of reading, could expand to 150 more schools in the next three years with the help of $13.5 million in grants from an anonymous donor. Success For All, developed in the late 1980s by two Johns Hopkins University professors, relies heavily on phonics and group learning,...
By Patrick O'Donnell | May 28, 2025
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Q&A: L.A. High School Counselor On What Students Want After Graduation
Once upon a time, college was the dream destination and a guiding goal for high school seniors in Los Angeles and beyond. But nowadays things are more complicated, said Christina Sanchez, a school and college counselor at Triumph Charter High School in the San Fernando Valley. Sanchez, who has worked as a counselor for more...
By Jacob Matthews | May 27, 2025
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LAUSD Preschool Enrollment is Up After Changes to Toilet Training Requirements
This article was originally published by LAist Enrollment at Los Angeles Unified School District’s preschools is up more than 10% since December. It’s a significant jump for the public preschool system, which has struggled to fill its classrooms since the COVID-19 pandemic and the expansion of transitional kindergarten for 4-year-olds. The additions bring enrollment up from 70%...
By Libby Rainey, LAist | May 22, 2025
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Immigrants Learn English for Free at California Colleges. Under Trump, Some are Skipping Class
This story was originally published on CalMatters.org. They speak Farsi, Cantonese, Spanish and at least two dozen other languages. Some earned master’s degrees in their home countries, while others never finished middle school. At California’s community colleges, more than 290,000 students take free, non-credit English as a Second Language classes. As immigrants, many of these...
By Delilah Brumer, CalMatters | May 21, 2025
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Top LAUSD Schools with Empty Seats Shut Out Needy Students, Report Says
Dozens of highly-rated Los Angeles Unified schools in wealthy neighborhoods have empty seats — but most students can’t access them, according to a new analysis of state enrollment data. “Crisis in the School House,” a 36-page report published by Available To All, a nonpartisan nonprofit led by Tim DeRoche, an author and parent who lives...
By Ben Chapman | May 20, 2025
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In California, We Need Superheroes Who Choose Kids, Not Billionaires
California needs superheroes. Children, families and child care providers are in danger of losing access to healthcare and early childhood education funding. Yet the only ones being saved now are corporate billionaires known as the “Silicon Six,” who paid $278 billion less in taxes than they should under statutory rates. Our working class has helped...
By Mary Ignatius | May 19, 2025