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California teachers summit attracts 20,000 educators statewide

In what organizers call the state’s largest teacher training ever attempted, more than 20,000 educators gathered for the California Teachers Summit at 33 sites across the state on Friday. “It’s so exciting to bring teachers teaching teachers in this unprecedented collaboration,” said Ellen Moir, of the nonprofit New Teacher Center who helped organize the Better Together campaign. Among...
By Mike Szymanski | August 3, 2015
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House version of NCLB revise would cost LA Unified $78.7 million

LA Unified’s chief lobbyist, Edgar Zazueta, told the school board last week that the House of Representatives version of the revised No Child Left Behind bill could cost the district $78.7 million in Title I money for low income schools, which translates to 22.9 percent of its funding. The board has voted to protest the House...
By Mike Szymanski | August 3, 2015
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Zimmer appoints board’s newest members to lead committees

LAUSD School board president Steve Zimmer has given the board’s two newest members committee chairmanships. Ref Rodriguez will be taking over the Early Childhood Education and Parent Engagement Committee, which was previously run by Bennett Kayser, whom Rodriguez defeated in the June runoff. Zimmer named the other new board member, Scott Schmerelson, chairman of the Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment Committee....
By Mike Szymanski | August 3, 2015
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Caputo-Pearl calls for UTLA dues increase in face of ‘dangers’ ahead

Alex Caputo-Pearl, president of United Teachers Los Angeles, used his state of the union speech Friday night to call for a raise in union dues of $19 a month, an increase he said would enable the union to prepare for future challenges “greater and more dangerous” than those of recent years. Reminding members that UTLA has not...
By Michael Janofsky | August 3, 2015
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Editorial: It is time for California to rethink the parent trigger law

By The Editorial Board Five years after California’s parent-trigger law was passed, it has not had the dramatic effect on public schools that its proponents hoped it would. Yet it is already at a crossroads in its young life. The law, passed in haste in 2010 in an effort to empower parents at lower-performing schools,...
By LA School Report | August 3, 2015
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Commentary: LAUSD board meeting lost in transparency

For more than a year, students, parents, community groups and even LA Unified members, themselves, have demanded greater transparency in how the board conducts the business of the nation’s second-largest school district. Too often, critics say, the board moves with no apparent effort to broaden the conversation or even allow the public to watch the...
By Michael Janofsky | July 31, 2015
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Students face LAUSD board, demanding end to military weapons

The LA Unified board endured a long and unusual protest last night as about 50 students demanded specific actions to get military-style weapons out of the hands of district school police. The students, some of them wearing bullet-proof vests, chanted for 20 minutes at the start of a meeting — “Back to school, no weapons”...
By Mike Szymanski | July 31, 2015
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LAUSD board votes to request bids for superintendent search

The LA Unified board voted last night to start the search for a new superintendent by issuing a request for bids to firms that would aide in the selection process. The move is the first step toward identifying candidates to replace the current superintendent, Ramon Cortines, who has expressed a desire to step down by...
By Mike Szymanski | July 31, 2015
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Survey: Majority of students feel unprepared for college, careers

By Fermin Leal More than half of high school juniors and seniors across the country don’t feel they’re ready for college and careers, even though these remain top goals for students, according to a survey released Thursday. Results from a multi-year College and Career Readiness survey of 165,000 high school students conducted by YouthTruth, a San Francisco-based nonprofit,...
By LA School Report | July 31, 2015
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Morning Read: AP U.S. history course gets a ‘positive’ revision

Revised AP U.S. history standards will emphasize American exceptionalism The move comes after significant pushback from conservatives who claimed the redesigned course fpainted American history in too negative a light. Newsweek San Diego Unified’s had some dark days with solar Despite its struggles with solar so far, the district is preparing to ramp up its...
By LA School Report | July 31, 2015