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Lahaina teachers say more help is needed for struggling West Maui schools
Teacher retention and student safety are top of mind for West Maui families and school and union leaders as an academic year marked by deadly wildfires comes to a close. Since August, enrollment at Lahaina’s four public schools has dropped by roughly 1,000 students. Some families are still hesitant to return their children to the...
By Megan Tagami | June 10, 2024
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An early education rebound: After COVID disruptions, report shows pre-K enrollment hitting record levels
Four-year-olds entering pre-K in Mississippi’s Lamar County Schools don’t spend their days on worksheets or bent over papers practicing their letters. But they do have plenty of books, Play-Doh and time for friends. And some leave for kindergarten knowing how to read. “But it’s not because we’re hounding them,” said Heather Lyons, the program’s coordinator....
By Linda Jacobson | June 6, 2024
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LA parents concerned over school safety as violence spikes around campuses
Emily Juarez no longer feels safe letting her two older children ride public transportation or walk to their LA Unified school after an increase in reports of violence near district campuses. “I stopped maybe a couple of weeks ago,” Juarez said last month. “I see the stuff that’s happening. I do see the news and...
By Jinge Li | June 5, 2024
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Will AI be your next principal? Probably not. But it’s here to stay
When I was a principal, if you had told me I would be working with artificial intelligence on a daily basis, I would have conjured visions of the Terminator and Skynet in my head. Fortunately, we’re not there (yet?) but the introduction of AI amplifies risks and opportunities attached to school leaders’ decisions. Education leaders...
By Gene Pinkard | June 4, 2024
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California schools want more shade trees to combat extreme heat
Schoolyards are hot and getting hotter, but only a tiny fraction of California’s grade school students can play in the shade. Researchers and advocates are pushing the state to allocate money for green schoolyards, which can include trees, grass or gardens in place of the flat asphalt or rubber play surfaces at most schools. With the...
By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde | June 3, 2024
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For stronger readers in third grade, start building knowledge in preschool
In joyful preschool classrooms, three- and four-year-olds play and pretend together. They sing and dance, listen eagerly at story time, and ask endless questions. Nearly everything is new, which fuels an intense enthusiasm for learning. High-quality preschool supports social skills, fosters friendships, and builds a sturdy foundation for kindergarten and beyond. As researchers specializing in...
By Susan B. Neuman & Lily Wong Fillmore | May 30, 2024
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‘Tip of the iceberg’: Student homelessness in LAUSD worse than data show, warns Carvalho
LA Unified senior Kamryn Williams is studying for finals this week — in the Chrysler sedan where she lives with her mother and their dog. Kamryn, 18, who graduates next month from Hamilton High School in Culver City and will attend college in the fall, is one of about 15,000 homeless students enrolled in Los...
By Ben Chapman | May 29, 2024
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How does a school district go broke with $1.1B in revenues? When it spends $1.3B
Question: How does a school district go broke with $1.1 billion in revenues? Answer: When it spends $1.3 billion. This macabre joke is all-too real for San Francisco Unified, where this spring a state oversight panel took control of all budget decisions until the district balances its spending. After reviewing the district’s budget, the oversight...
By Chad Aldeman | May 28, 2024
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Data reveals few community college transfers complete a bachelor’s degree
A recent report has revealed only 16 percent of community college transfers earn a four-year degree with Black, Latino and low-income students taking the brunt of the completion outcomes. The data, released by the Community College Research Center and the Aspen Institute College Excellence Program, found about one-third of community college students transfer to a...
By Joshua Bay | May 23, 2024
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70 years later, the untold history of Brown v. Board: Meet all the families behind the 5 school cases that swayed the Supreme Court
Seventy years ago this month, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in Brown v. Board that racial segregation of children in America’s public schools was unconstitutional. Today, we’re commemorating the anniversary by relaunching our special Untold Stories of Brown v. Board microsite, dedicated to sharing the stories of the lesser-known students, parents and plaintiffs who joined...
By Steve Snyder | May 22, 2024