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Charter, district schools team up to offer dual-immersion ‘unconference’

The principals of a charter and a district elementary school that share a Baldwin Village location have teamed up to bring dual-language educators together this weekend to learn from each other and share best practices, strategies and resources. About 60 educators from the LA area have signed up to attend Saturday’s free half-day “unconference,” in...
By LA School Report | March 10, 2016
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Charter school scores hard-won approval despite objections by board staff, president and superintendent

To help a model charter school expand into high school, the LA Unified school board took unprecedented steps Tuesday night to cobble together a plan, concocting at least half a dozen proposals and amendments during a lengthy and at times contentious discussion. District staff had recommended that the board reject the school’s petition. Ultimately, the charter...
By Mike Szymanski | March 9, 2016
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‘What’s Princeton?’ Two South LA grads tell how they made it to the Ivy League and what it takes to stay

By the time Alvaro Quintero and Jose Rodriguez reached the end of their senior year, they were no longer Alvaro and Jose. “Before we left, we got our names changed to Harvard and Yale, respectively,” Rodriguez recalled. “That is how we were referred to.” At once they had lost their familiar identity in the halls...
By Kathy Moore | March 9, 2016
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LAUSD expects ‘healthiest year’ in a decade for budget, but future deficit raises sharp concern

LA Unified expects this to be its best budget year in a decade, school officials said Tuesday, but board members urged immediate action to address a deficit in three years that could reach half a billion dollars. “This is the healthiest year in the past decade,” Chief Financial Officer Megan Reilly said in a report to...
By Mike Szymanski | March 8, 2016
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LIVESTREAM of today’s LA Unified 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 include consideration of major upgrades at school sites throughout the district. Other potential board actions include staff recommendations for the denial of the charter petition for WISH Academy High School and the renewal of the charter for...
By LA School Report | March 8, 2016
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School-by-school breakdown shows continued improvement on LAUSD’s projected grad rate

LA Unified’s $15 million credit recovery program has already been making a big impact on its projected high school graduation rate this year, and a school-by-school breakdown report released by the district shows that the progress is across the board. The report, which highlights how many students are on track to complete their “A through...
By Craig Clough | March 8, 2016
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Major school and kitchen upgrades could be approved Tuesday

The LA Unified school board will consider major upgrades at school sites throughout the district at their regular meeting Tuesday. The Facilities Services Division is asking the board to approve district bonds for projects including replacing a half-century-old canopy over a stairwell, replacing 60-year-old bleachers, upgrading walk-in freezers at 305 schools and replacing ovens, ice machines and...
By Mike Szymanski | March 7, 2016
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A movie, a principal and a turnaround school: 30 years since ‘The George McKenna Story’

George McKenna doesn’t talk about it much, but Denzel Washington played him in a TV movie called “The George McKenna Story.” Fellow LA Unified school board members may occasionally rib him about it, and on a recent tour of an elementary school, Superintendent Michelle King pointed it out to impress the students. “This man had...
By Mike Szymanski | March 7, 2016
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Synopsis of ‘The George McKenna Story’: He risked it all to make the grade

The tag line of the film “The George McKenna Story” (also known as “Hard Lessons”) is a punny George McKenna-ism characteristic of the man it profiled. “He risked it all to make the grade,” is how the movie was advertised. In it, the heroic principal sacrifices relationships, career and safety to do the right thing for...
By Mike Szymanski | March 7, 2016
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Truancy, suspension rates drop in greater Los Angeles area schools

By Nadra Nittle As evidence mounts that punitive discipline makes students more likely to go to prison than to college, school districts in greater Los Angeles, such as Long Beach Unified and Lynwood Unified, are shifting away from suspending students or citing them for truancy. Instead, they’re making greater use of restorative justice programs, as...
By Guest contributor | March 7, 2016