-
Ethnic studies classes get renewed after stalling

Although an ethnic studies mandate was approved by the school board in 2014, LA Unified is only now taking steps to fulfill their hope of getting ethnic studies into every high school. But it won’t be a graduation requirement any time soon, and it won’t be a requirement for the class of 2019, as the school...
By Mike Szymanski | April 13, 2016
-
Why aren’t independent charters part of the CORE accountability system?

LA School Report on Monday published a comprehensive top-to-bottom list of all 714 schools that were evaluated by a new accountability system LA Unified developed along with five other California districts, but missing from the data were independent charter schools. With over 210 of these kinds of schools and 101,000 students enrolled in them at...
By Craig Clough | April 12, 2016
-
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 up for discussion are two resolutions aimed at identifying, encouraging and replicating successful schools within the district. Other potential board actions include approval of a $40 million operating budget for MiSiS, the district’s student data computer system, and discussion...
By LA School Report | April 12, 2016
-
The Accidental Activist: One mom’s unlikely crusade to bring better schools to Northern California

Often, big social movements start with just one worried parent. That’s the case in Redwood City, just south of San Francisco, where two new charter schools recently opened their doors. In Redwood City, that worried parent was Maritza Leal, a mother of three who, along with her husband, played a major role in bringing a...
By Richard Whitmire | April 12, 2016
-
Board to consider pair of resolutions to expand successful schools

Members of the LA Unified school board are taking the lead in identifying, encouraging and replicating successful schools with two resolutions that will be discussed at Tuesday’s board meeting. One, sponsored by Monica Garcia and Ref Rodriguez, called Offering Families More – Promoting, Celebrating and Replicating Success Across LAUSD, asks that the district identify best strategies...
By Mike Szymanski | April 11, 2016
-
New data reveal best and worst of LAUSD schools

According to an analysis of a new school accountability system developed by six California school districts including LA Unified, the district’s 13 lowest performers are all elementary schools, the best high school is Harbor Teacher Prep Academy and the worst high school is Jordan High. These conclusions were made following an LA School Report analysis of LA Unified schools evaluated...
By Craig Clough | April 11, 2016
-
Cook-off victory wins Santee students a free D.C. trip and a place on LAUSD’s lunch menus

What’s for lunch? How about Sweet Potatoes Chicken Quesadilla, a healthy slaw with cumin-lime crema and a Grilled Pineapple Downtown with graham crackers, cinnamon and apple reduction? And it’s all less than 730 calories and costs $1.14! Sounds like an impossible gourmet meal, but that’s the recipe that a team from Santee Education Complex cooked up...
By Mike Szymanski | April 8, 2016
-
Parents fear for dual-language Mandarin program if charter joins campus

Angelica Lopez Moyes is amazed that her 1st-grade son can speak Mandarin. But she is concerned that his dual-language immersion program at Castelar Street Elementary School could be jeopardized if a charter is co-located on the campus. Castelar, founded in 1882 and the second-oldest school in Los Angeles, has 570 students and is at about 75 percent...
By Mike Szymanski | April 8, 2016
-
Morning Read: Pollution devices help monitor schools close to freeways
To fight an invisible problem, researchers and health advocates give teens pollution monitors A science teacher from Lincoln High School in East Los Angeles brings the portable pollution monitoring devices to the classroom to find real world applications. There are health concerns for about 90 K-12 schools operating within 500 feet, or about one city...
By LA School Report | April 8, 2016
-
Nutritious, delicious and cheap: Lunch is a challenge for both students and LAUSD

On Friday, 19 students from seven LA Unified schools will participate in a cook-off that will send a team to compete nationally in Washington, D.C. Their task: to create a nutritionally balanced school meal for $1.14, the district’s lunch budget. Their challenge is not unlike one the massive LA Unified Food Services division is facing: how to feed more than...
By Mike Szymanski | April 7, 2016