Education is Challenger's challenge - latimes.com
Challenger Memorial Youth Center in Lancaster is both Los Angeles County's largest juvenile detention camp and its greatest failure.
It costs as much as $50,000 a year to house a youth at Challenger -- about the same amount as tuition and room and board at an Ivy League university. But that's where the comparison ends. The facility's school is appalling, with 95% of its students scoring below proficiency on state exams.
Challenger is the target of a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into mistreatment and poor supervision of the 650 students housed at the facility's six juvenile camps. It was cited in a 2009 county Probation Commission report as operating a "broken" school system. And this month, our coalition of nonprofit organizations filed a lawsuit asking that the county be ordered to meet at least minimum standards in educating our community's most at-risk youth.
A young man we identify in court papers as Casey A. was kept in custody at Challenger during his high school years and given a high school diploma late last year, despite being unable to read or write. Rather than coming up with a strategy that would teach him to read, a teacher at Challenger appointed a "para-educator" to read assignments out loud to him. Knowing that Casey was illiterate, the staff fed him answers so that he could pass the required state exams.