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Board asks for analysis of UTLA report that says independent charters cost LAUSD millions

LA Unified board members asked Tuesday for an in-depth analysis of a union-funded report stating that the district loses more than half a billion dollars because of independent charter schools. A response from the California Charter Schools Association, delivered after an hours-long recess while the school board met in closed session to address litigation against the district, called...
By Mike Szymanski | May 10, 2016
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Sylmar High quiets down after school brawl

Sylmar High School has quieted down and an assembly is planned after a lunchtime brawl disrupted the campus on Monday. The 20-minute incident involving at least 40 students was captured on cellphone video and posted on YouTube. Principal James Lee told LA School Report, “This was an incident that just snowballed, and it had to do...
By Mike Szymanski | May 10, 2016
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LIVESTREAM of today’s LAUSD school board meeting

The LA Unified school board is scheduled to hold an open session meeting today at 1 p.m. Items on the agenda include a teachers union-commissioned report on the financial impact that independent charter schools have on the district, and a resolution from board members Monica Garcia and Ref Rodriguez calling on the district to more aggressively court...
By LA School Report | May 10, 2016
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Commentary: Is California failing its dual language learners?

These days, Washington, D.C., policymakers are focused on working through the details of implementing the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), which is replacing No Child Left Behind as the nation’s preeminent federal education legislation. The deliberations have included some conversations about how the law treats multilingual students. It’s early days to know how ESSA — and...
By Conor Williams | May 10, 2016
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Trump’s education legacy: A rise in school bullying? New teacher survey shows election’s dark impact

The 2016 presidential campaign has hardly lived up to the ideal of a civil exchange of ideas facilitating a peaceful democracy. But a new report from the Southern Poverty Law Center suggests that the acrimony from the campaign trail may be having a broader, negative effect on society — particularly in American schools. An online survey of...
By Carolyn Phenicie | May 9, 2016
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Commentary: A challenge to elite colleges to set aside more seats for low-income achievers

Many high school seniors think of spring as college admission season. Yet the nation’s most selective colleges seem determined to rebrand it as rejection season. Increasingly, the marketplace has rewarded colleges that turn away the most students, and the competition to be competitive has become white-hot. Winning that competition may be great for colleges, but...
By Richard Barth | May 9, 2016
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Alliance College-Ready Public Schools announces Teacher of the Year

In honor of Teacher Appreciation Week, LA School Report spent some time recently talking with Brendan Wallace, a math teacher at Alliance Marc and Eva Stern Math and Science High School. On Thursday, Wallace was named the Teacher of the Year for Alliance College-Ready Public Schools, an organization that runs 27 charter schools in Los Angeles. (Check...
By Craig Clough | May 6, 2016
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The 74 interview: Prof. Matt Delmont on how northern whites used busing to derail school integration

Arizona State University history professor Matt Delmont’s recent book, “Why Busing Failed,” challenges the conventional narrative around why school integration fell so short — that segregated neighborhood schools were naturally occurring, that busing could never effectively change that — and examines the calculated backlash, including from a complicit media, that doomed desegregation before it began. Delmont and...
By Matt Barnum | May 6, 2016
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Case study: Rainshadow H.S., a haven for Nevada’s at-risk teens, now finds itself at risk of closure

The 74 marks National Charter Schools Week (May 1-7) with a series of articles about America’s charter leaders, students and policies. See the full series. At the beginning of 2016, Rainshadow Charter High School in Reno, Nevada, was on its last legs. The Washoe County school board had granted Rainshadow just a one-year charter extension to...
By Max Eden | May 6, 2016
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District puts renewed emphasis on required ethnic studies courses

Anti-immigrant rhetoric going on in presidential politics and a potential state law have added a renewed emphasis on developing required ethnic studies classes in the LA Unified curriculum. An expert from the University of Arizona spoke to an LA Unified school board committee this week to explain the importance of ethnic studies in education. He brought...
By Mike Szymanski | May 5, 2016