Monday, August 20, 2012

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Education Headlines

Monday, August 20, 2012

State's 'the check is in the mail' forces schools districts to break out credit card

Like a homeowner living beyond their means, California is paying some of its bills late, by months or even years. And this "the check is in the mail" method of balancing the state budget has forced many of California's 977 public school districts to either dip into shrinking financial reserves or pay borrowing fees and interest on short-term loans to cover their expenses in the meantime.

Superintendent recommends leasing classrooms to private school

School officials in Carlsbad have struck a deal with a private school to lease 16 classrooms at Magnolia Elementary School for almost $250,000 a year, substantially less than the amount the private school offered earlier this month.

As year begins, Marin schools use new national standards

There is still much uncertainty about how instruction may change because teachers and administrators are still analyzing the standards and their implications.

Charter schools fighting for survival

As state budget cuts ravage schools districts across California, some charter schools have been hit particularly hard, said Vicky Waters, a California Charter Schools Association spokeswoman.

O.C. schools may cut up to 1 month if tax hikes fail

Orange County's public schools plan to cut the school year by up to four weeks if California voters reject tax increases this fall, even as most will continue providing automatic pay raises to teachers and other school staff.

High cost of school bond shocks Poway Unified

Residents of the Poway Unified School District are dealing with a bad case of sticker shock after realizing a $105 million bond deal struck by school officials last year left them on the hook for nearly $1 billion.

In an era of teacher layoffs, some districts are still hiring

Before the first bell of the school year is to ring at Ekstrand Elementary School, the "new kids" at Bonita Unified gathered last week on the school's grassy quad, introducing themselves over breakfast.

Charter school group's chief blamed for 2010 cheating scandal

Educators say John Allen asked Crescendo principals to show teachers the state standardized test.The Los Angeles Unified School District was going to suspend him, but the board voted to fire him and close the campuses.

New law to require concussion training for high school coaches

High school coaches in California will be required to receive training in concussions under legislation signed into law today by Gov. Jerry Brown. Assembly Bill 1451 requires high school coaches to receiving training every two years on recognizing the signs of concussions and responding to them appropriately. The training can be acquired online.

California Teachers Assn. a powerful force in Sacramento

The union, backed by an army of 325,000 teachers and a war chest as sizable as those of the major political parties, can make or break all sorts of deals.

Walters: Complexity obscures California school money

When Gov. Jerry Brown labeled the state budget a "pretzel palace of incredible complexity," he almost certainly had in mind the budget's largest, most complicated piece – financing schools.

Rosenblatt: Having gone to school doesn’t mean we all can run a school

There is a fundamental difference between being involved intimately in supporting schools and actually running a school or educating children. We’ve all had the experience of believing we can run the restaurant better because we all eat. But intellectually, we know it’s very different to actually run a restaurant than to patronize one. Yet we are all too easily tempted to believe that we better understand how to educate children because we all went to school.

LAUSD truancy-diversion program keeps violators out of the courts

Chronically truant students will be referred to city-run youth centers rather than funneled into the criminal justice system under a program debuting Monday in the Los Angeles Unified School District.

Buchanan takes reins of Assembly Ed, voices caution about common core

Joan Buchanan, newly appointed chair of the Assembly’s Education Committee, has grown skeptical about the state’s progress in bringing the new common core curriculum standards into California classrooms.

AB 18, once praised funding overhaul bill, moves as mere study request

The last major effort to overhaul the state’s school funding system has been formally scaled-back into legislation authorizing only a new study of the issue. AB 18 by Assemblywoman Julia Brownley, once held promise as the vehicle for simplifying the state’s byzantine education funding formulas while bringing more equity into the system.

Fensterwald: District settles with ACLU over program for English learners

While insisting that it did nothing wrong, a Central Valley school district has quickly settled a lawsuit filed by several chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of a half-dozen parents and teachers who charged that the district had adopted a destructive program for English learners, which the state, in turn, failed to monitor.

Steinberg seeks to change report cards for California schools

California schools spend all year grading student performance, but lawmakers are turning the tables with an issue that strikes at the heart of education: How should a school be graded? Parents have a right to know if their child's campus is passing or failing; the current yardstick is based entirely on standardized test scores, sparking a Capitol push for change.
Friday, August 17, 2012

School board endorses STEM education plan

The Vista Unified School District board agreed to prioritize science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, education during its meeting Thursday.

New Bonita High School gym to open Aug. 28; other bond projects on the way

Bonita High School principal Robert Ketterling said sports teams will benefit the most when the school's new gym is completed Aug. 28.

Student who revealed election-rigging seeks post

The Troy High School senior who was suspended from school and stripped of his student-government post after he broke into a school database to reveal a teacher altered election results is seeking to undo some of the discipline imposed on him.