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A similar past, a hoped-for future: Two lawyers each strive to open their own LA charter schools

Update: Los Angeles County’s board of education on Tuesday denied Denon Carr’s charter application but urged him to make changes to the proposal and resubmit it as quickly as possible to either the Inglewood School Board or the state board. Carr says he will appeal, though he is not yet sure to which entity. For...
By Beth Hawkins | October 16, 2017
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LA County now lets teachers make some child abuse reports online

This article first appeared in The Chronicle of Social Change. Teachers and school staff in Los Angeles County will now be able to make child abuse reports online, thanks to a motion approved this week. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday signed off on a plan that will allow the county’s Department...
By Jeremy Loudenback | October 13, 2017
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Ballooning pension costs mean LAUSD and other California school districts are headed for cuts, Stanford study says

Pension payouts are growing so fast that California’s school districts are being forced to lay off staff and close schools, a Stanford professor and author of a new study says. LA Unified will have to cut spending by about 3 percent in 12 years in order to pay for the ballooning cost of its retirees’ pensions,...
By Sarah Favot | October 12, 2017
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Ed Trust-West’s Ryan Smith: It’s time for education leaders to take a knee for California’s students

In the historic “Is the American Dream at the Expense of the American Negro?” debate in 1965, author James Baldwin locks horns with conservative leader William F. Buckley Jr. about the significance of the American flag. “It comes as a great shock around the age of 5, 6, or 7 to discover that the flag...
By Ryan J. Smith | October 12, 2017
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LAUSD sports education teacher named among California’s Teachers of the Year

Kirsten Farrell, who teaches life-saving techniques as a medical technology teacher at Venice Senior High School, has been named one five California Teachers of the Year for 2018. Three of the five winners are in the Greater Los Angeles area, and all five are in Southern California. A teacher for 21 years, Farrell created one...
By Mike Szymanski | October 12, 2017
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LA district schools lost 13,100 students this year — here’s what they plan to do about it

When board members heard Tuesday that the number of students who have left LA Unified schools was even worse than they’d been told, they wanted to know what was being done. Here’s what they heard: • launching the unified enrollment system • offering a broader range of school options • reducing absences. And here...
By Mike Szymanski | October 12, 2017
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LAUSD needs to meet now with labor groups to ‘save the district,’ board member says

LA Unified urgently needs a sit-down with union representatives to make sure everyone is on the same page about the budget before the district falls off a fiscal “cliff,” longtime school board member Richard Vladovic said at Tuesday’s board meeting. “Our labor partners see the budget differently from the way we do, and I would...
By Mike Szymanski | October 12, 2017
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Tempers flare at LAUSD school board — ‘I feel disenfranchised,’ one board member says

It was college appreciation day Tuesday at the LA Unified school board, so all the board members wore their school shirts. But they may as well have worn their football jerseys because it erupted into a verbal brawl. In a few seemingly innocuous votes involving committee meetings, two board members not part of the new...
By Mike Szymanski | October 10, 2017
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‘Now is the time’ — Pepperdine gathers education policy voices to foster collaboration

“If ever there was a time to talk about collaboration, now is the time.” — Ryan J. Smith, executive director, The Education Trust-West Collaboration was the theme and aim of Pepperdine’s School of Public Policy’s first education conference, held Friday at the Malibu campus. The event brought together education policy leaders from Los Angeles...
By Sarah Favot | October 10, 2017
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Fewer kids than expected are in LAUSD schools this year – that means $17M less in the budget

LA Unified’s enrollment is dropping even faster than the district projected. There are 12,604 fewer students than last year, a 2.51 percent decline, last month’s official head count showed. The district had anticipated only a 2.1 percent drop. The difference means there will be $17 million less in the 2018-19 budget, and an additional $18...
By Mike Szymanski | October 9, 2017