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Stamp honoring famed East LA teacher Jaime Escalante is unveiled

Garfield High School will forever remember its revered math teacher Jaime Escalante and now so will the U.S. post office. The U.S. Postal Service on Thursday unveiled its new forever stamp honoring the late East Los Angeles math teacher. A Bolivian immigrant, Escalante taught calculus at Garfield High from 1974 to 1991. He was recognized...
By Sarah Favot | July 14, 2016
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Commentary: California — the state of magical thinking when it comes to education

By Caroline Bermudez The great Joan Didion rose to literary fame chronicling her love-hate relationship with her native California. In Where I Was From, she unleashed a cool invective about the state’s less than firm grasp of reality that still applies today: “A good deal about California, in its own preferred terms, does not add...
By Guest contributor | July 14, 2016
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Commentary: Democrats rewrite education platform behind closed doors, abandon core party values

By Peter Cunningham The Democratic Party has always stood for one thing: we fight for the little guy. In the field of education, the little guy is the student. He can’t vote. He doesn’t have much say about his school. He mostly has to do what he’s told. And he is trusting us to do...
By Guest contributor | July 14, 2016
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JUST IN: Judge denies LA Unified request to dismiss lawsuit filed by fired teacher Rafe Esquith

A Los Angeles Superior Court judge Wednesday denied LA Unified’s request to dismiss a lawsuit filed by well-known former fifth-grade teacher Rafe Esquith, who was fired in October. Esquith filed the defamation lawsuit against the district in August after he was placed on paid leave and assigned to “teacher jail” pending an internal investigation after a...
By Sarah Favot | July 13, 2016
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San Francisco principals defy school board, hire Teach for America recruits

A handful of San Francisco elementary school principals facing an urgent need to fill positions for the fall have hired Teach for America recruits despite the school board’s vocal opposition to the organization. In May, the board severed the district’s partnership with Teach for America, which supplies enthusiastic if inexperienced teachers to thousands of schools...
By LA School Report | July 13, 2016
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How this LA Unified math teacher and blogger hooked his kids on data

*UPDATED There were three days left in the school year, and final grades had already been turned in. Benjamin Feinberg’s 8th grade algebra students at Luther Burbank Middle School in Highland Park were looking forward to graduation and officially becoming high schoolers. But despite these kids having no tangible reason to stay engaged in the lesson...
By Craig Clough | July 12, 2016
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The elementary school-turned-affiliated charter that became so popular parents fake their addresses

LA Unified has so many different kinds of schools it’s hard to keep them all straight. With such varied terms as affiliated charter, independent charter, magnet school, pilot school, continuation school, option school and others, it can be a challenge to understand what they are, what they offer and how they differ. This is the third...
By Mike Szymanski | July 11, 2016
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Response: What NPR’s ‘hit piece’ got wrong in attacking Rocketship’s ‘impressive results’

Last month, NPR’s Education blog published what is being called a “takedown piece” on Rocketship Education. As co-founder and CEO of Rocketship, a leading network of nonprofit public charter schools, I have grown accustomed to anti-charter attacks like this. But my staff and parents are not. They flooded my inbox with outrage over the voices missing...
By Preston Smith | July 7, 2016
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Place top teachers in low-performing schools, LA Unified board members suggest as they ‘reimagine’ middle school

The district’s best teachers should be teaching at struggling schools, some LA Unified school board members suggested last week, with at least one board member calling for a future discussion on the issue. The comments were made during a Committee of the Whole meeting last week on how the district can improve and “reimagine” middle school,...
By Sarah Favot | July 6, 2016
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Commentary: How to weed out bad-apple teachers? Ask parents

By Lindsay Sturman The epic battle over how to improve public education in California grew more stratified last week when a bill to mildly reform California’s onerous teacher employment laws was gutted beyond recognition and quickly died. With it went the hope that our elected officials would finally decide the question which is at the...
By Guest contributor | July 6, 2016