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Morning Read: Restore California’s parent trigger

Editorial: California should restore the trigger allowing parents to force change at low-performing schools An editorial challenges the arguments that LA Unified has had against the parent takeover of the failing 20th Street Elementary School. The editorial muses: “Had the parents been hard-nosed from the start, they’d have transformed the school by now.” Los Angeles...
By Mike Szymanski | March 18, 2016
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More concussions reported among LAUSD athletes, but also better monitoring

Rising concussion numbers have spurred LA Unified to examine how to better monitor head injuries and ensure the safety of student athletes. “I love football,” said board member Richard Vladovic, who noted that this week the NFL for the first time recognized a link between football and brain disorders. “But I’m very concerned about long-term effects on...
By Mike Szymanski | March 17, 2016
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Commentary: Cirque du LAUSD

By Nick Melvoin Last week’s Los Angeles Unified School Board meeting was a political circus. Scores of parents, students and advocates in a packed boardroom vied for a chance to speak as the board debated their futures in real time. And while the politics may interest an arm-chair social scientist—“everyone is in such a bunkered...
By Guest contributor | March 17, 2016
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CCSA honors LA schools and charter leaders with Hart Awards

The California Charter Schools Association handed out nine Hart Vision Awards Tuesday at the 23rd Annual California Charter Schools Conference, and five of them were given to schools or leaders from the Los Angeles area. Among the winners at the event, which is taking place Monday through Thursday at the Long Beach Convention Center, was The CHIME Institute for Charter...
By Craig Clough | March 16, 2016
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After denying parent trigger, district meets with school but some parents are still unhappy

About 100 parents from 20th Street Elementary School met Tuesday night in the auditorium with more than a dozen school administrators after the district denied a “parent trigger” that would allow them to make sweeping changes to the school. Some of the parents were still unhappy, however. “It was like a big cheerleading session,” said parent...
By Mike Szymanski | March 16, 2016
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Porter Ranch schools probably won’t move back until end of the school year

The two schools with 1,850 students that were relocated due to a methane gas leak in Porter Ranch probably won’t be moved back to their locations before the end of the school year. Although the district continues to weigh options about returning the students back to their schools, there are no plans to move the...
By Mike Szymanski | March 15, 2016
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Magnet schools: The answer to LAUSD’s enrollment problem?

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 first part...
By Craig Clough | March 15, 2016
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Yes, you can drink the water. No lead scares here, LAUSD says

Last week officials shut off water taps at 30 schools in Newark, N.J., after lead levels were found to exceed federal standards. Lead from aging pipes created a water crisis in Flint, Mich., in January and may do so next in cities in Ohio and Mississippi. So what about LA? “Yes, our water is safe,...
By LA School Report | March 15, 2016
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LAUSD rejects 20th Street parent trigger, says no triggers valid in state

LA Unified has rejected a parent petition to take over a failing elementary school in South Central Los Angeles, reversing district policy and essentially asserting that no California school qualifies under the state “parent trigger” law. Parents of 20th Street Elementary School were informed of the district’s rejection in a letter late Saturday, the last day...
By Mike Szymanski | March 14, 2016
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Morning Read: California educators disagree on Common Core implementation

Superintendents, but not teachers, give high grades to Common Core rollout Most California teachers, principals and superintendents view the Common Core as more rigorous and more relevant to students than the previous state standards but disagree over how well the Common Core has been implemented, researchers from the nonprofit education agency WestEd have concluded. EdSource,...
By LA School Report | March 14, 2016