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Trump school safety commission recommends rejection of Obama-era discipline reform, encourages more armed staff and physical security

In a highly anticipated but controversial move, the Trump administration’s school safety commission recommended on Tuesday the repeal of Obama-era school discipline guidance that pushed schools to reduce their reliance on suspensions and warned them that racial disparities in punishments could violate federal civil rights laws. The recommendation is one of many in a new...
By Mark Keierleber | December 18, 2018
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What’s in a report card? Depends on who you ask. New report shows that parents and teachers have very different understandings of grades & tests

If a child earns a B– in math on his report card, is that a good grade, or does it mean he’s the worst in the class? Ask a parent and a teacher, and you’ll likely hear very different answers. But that disconnect is just the beginning when it comes to how these two groups...
By Kate Stringer | December 17, 2018
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The 18 most popular articles we published in 2018 about Los Angeles schools & the state of education across California

For Los Angeles, 2018 ushered in a new superintendent, new promises to students, new hiring freedoms for principals and new warnings about the school district’s precarious finances. In education news around California, graduation rates rose but the state showed no improvement in getting its high school seniors eligible for state universities — even though California students...
By Laura Greanias | December 17, 2018
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As Latino and immigrant families leave the country for an early holiday, tens of thousands of LA students go missing from classrooms, costing schools millions in funding

Winter break was still almost two weeks away when a parent came into Principal Adan Martínez’s office to tell him he was taking his child out of school that day and wouldn’t be back until January. “It started today! One of our students left in the middle of the school day to go to Mexico...
By Esmeralda Fabián Romero | December 12, 2018
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Commentary: Instead of striking, our energy is better used in finding consensus and building support for our public education
In the spring of 1970, I voted with other teachers to strike for teachers’ rights. At the time, United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA) was a newly formed organization. I was in my second year as a teacher and I believed wholeheartedly that being on strike was the right thing to do. I would later come...
By Roberta Benjamin Edwards | December 12, 2018
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New look for the California School Dashboard is ‘an improvement’ — but it’s still not geared toward parents, advocates say

The much-anticipated redesign of California’s maligned school dashboard is live — but some education advocates aren’t convinced it went far enough to improve usability for parents. The California School Dashboard is a state-run platform that rates districts, schools and student groups on indicators such as test scores and student suspensions — and, as of this...
By Taylor Swaak | December 11, 2018
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Commentary: Progress on unified enrollment creates the opportunity for Los Angeles to work toward a system based on equity
Thousands of families across Los Angeles have just finished submitting applications for the schools they hope their children will attend next year. The decision of where to send your child to school is one of the most important decisions that a family makes. For many children in our city, the school that they attend will...
By Seth Litt and Oscar Cruz | December 11, 2018
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Antonucci: LAUSD support employees union claims it can hold ‘sympathy strike’ with UTLA
Mike Antonucci’s Union Report appears weekly at LA School Report. With no hope of a settlement in sight in the contract dispute between LA Unified and United Teachers Los Angeles, attention has turned to the conduct of the expected teacher strike in January. The district distributed a “family resource guide” to parents to help them prepare for...
By Mike Antonucci | December 11, 2018
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LAUSD’s plan to stave off financial ruin and a potential county takeover: Cut 15 percent of central office staff and save $86 million

Updated Dec. 11 L.A. Unified is facing a new deadline to prove to its county overseers that it will be able to stay afloat. By Monday, Dec. 17, the district must submit a revised plan to show how it will address its structural deficit that could render L.A. Unified insolvent within three years, meaning it...
By Laura Greanias | December 10, 2018
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Commentary: Our schools need more funding — but we also need to be able to make sure the money is spent on the children it’s meant to help
Steve Lopez’s series in the Los Angeles Times shines a light on two important issues that are far too easy for the public to ignore: The reality of poverty that too many California children experience and the absolute imperative that schools, teachers and principals have the resources they need to fully support children growing up...
By Seth Litt | December 10, 2018