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California voters more dissatisfied with local schools after pandemic than voters in other states, new poll finds
This article is part of a collaboration between The 74 and the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter. From their dislike of local teachers’ unions to a lack of confidence in school administrators, California voters are more disillusioned with the state of education than voters nationally, a...
By Rebecca Katz | April 26, 2022
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National Teacher of the Year winner Kurt Russell to emphasize diversity as lawmakers in his home state of Ohio rail against ‘divisive’ topics
Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter Kurt Russell, a Black history teacher and high school basketball coach from Oberlin High School in Ohio, has been known to give up his planning periods to sit with one of his players in class — just to make sure the student is meeting academic expectations. A...
By Linda Jacobson | April 25, 2022
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This teen shared her troubles with a robot. Could AI ‘chatbots’ solve the youth mental health crisis?
This story is part of a series produced in partnership with The Guardian exploring the increasing role of artificial intelligence and surveillance in our everyday lives during the pandemic, including in schools. Fifteen-year-old Jordyne Lewis was stressed out. The high school sophomore from Harrisburg, North Carolina, was overwhelmed with schoolwork, never mind the uncertainty of living in a pandemic...
By Mark Keierleber | April 21, 2022
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Reville & Canada: The time has come for truly personalized learning — with a navigator to make sure each child succeeds
Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter For the past two years, schools, families and students have grappled with a COVID-induced crisis. Not just of health, but of continuous disruptions, school closures, remote schooling and extraordinary stresses, interruptions and obstacles to children’s education and well-being. Relationships fractured as students were torn from the normalcy...
By Paul Reville and Geoffrey Canada | April 20, 2022
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As Nation’s Report Card resumes for first time since pandemic, federal testing chief admits she’s ‘a little nervous’ about results
Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter Almost 600,000 U.S. fourth- and eighth-graders are currently taking national reading and math tests for the first time since the pandemic began. The prospect makes the federal official in charge of measuring student progress a bit anxious. “The likelihood that the scores would be anything but down...
By Linda Jacobson | April 18, 2022
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Embracing the ‘tough conversation’: Teacher of the Year finalists speak out on ‘divisive’ history, students’ mental health and why educators are not superheroes
April 19 Update: The Council of Chief State School Officers named Kurt Russell the 2022 National Teacher of the Year. About 40 students at Oberlin Senior High School won’t be taking courses on Black history, race and gender oppression this fall — not because they’ve been canceled due to conservative opposition, but because Kurt Russell...
By Linda Jacobson | April 18, 2022
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To close pandemic academic gaps, experts point to a ‘cascade’ of skills young kids will need to work on
Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter At his Kumon Math and Reading Center Franchise in San Antonio, Sarit Kapur is used to working with kids who are at risk of falling behind. Now, said the tutor, after the effects of the pandemic, not only is the risk a reality, but the gap is...
By Bekah McNeel | April 13, 2022
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New Superintendent Alberto Carvalho plans to fill hundreds of classroom teacher vacancies by reassigning LAUSD school staff
Updated April 12 This article is part of a collaboration between The 74 and the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. New Los Angeles Unified school superintendent Alberto Carvalho plans to fill hundreds of teaching vacancies by reassigning school staff to classrooms for the remainder of the year. “The adults may feel inconvenienced by...
By Rebecca Katz | April 11, 2022
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More productivity or ‘zombied out’ students? Congress ponders permanent daylight saving time, but sleep experts say they’ve got it backwards
Sign up here for LA School Report’s newsletter As a member of PBS NewsHour’s Student Reporting Lab at Venice High School, near Los Angeles, Zoe Woodrick often stays at school past 5 p.m. recording podcasts and videos. When her interviews run late in the winter months, the sun is already setting over the Pacific, less...
By Linda Jacobson | April 11, 2022
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Meet the LAUSD school board candidates: Gentille Barkhordar is running ‘to give parents a seat at the negotiating table, so that important decisions are made … with families first in mind’
This article is part of a collaboration between The 74 and the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. This profile is part of “Meet the LAUSD school board candidates,” a series focusing on the candidates running for three open seats on the seven-member school board. LAUSD is the largest school district in the country...
By Destiny Torres, Veronica Sierra, and Rebecca Katz | April 7, 2022