Topic: Los Angeles Unified School District
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Photos of the Day: Photos of the Day 04/12
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Miramonte sex abuse: Schools facing Catholic Church-like wave of scandal?
The Miramonte School scandal could be a wakeup call about the prevalence of sexual abuse in schools nationwide, experts say – adding that scandals could sweep though education world the way they did though the Catholic Church.
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Who is to blame for LA school sex abuse? Push for answers poised to escalate. (+video)
Three suits involving 23 students have been filed in an L.A. court in the wake of the Miramonte school sex abuse scandal, but the those numbers are expected to rise dramatically in a push for accountability.
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Miramonte School sex abuse scandal: Was replacing entire staff too extreme? (+video)
Students at the Miramonte School, which was rocked by allegations that two teachers sexually abused children, return to a newly staffed school Thursday. Some parents and education experts say L.A. overreacted.
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Lesson of L.A. teacher sex-crime case: Heed children who report abuse
Mark Berndt, who taught at a Los Angeles school for more than 30 years, is charged with 23 counts of committing lewd acts on children since 2005. Two former students say they reported him 20 years ago.
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Why unions are livid about L.A.'s new teacher-evaluation experiment
The Los Angeles Unified School District is testing a pilot program for teacher evaluation that includes parent feedback and peer review. But unions are not happy.
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Jamie Oliver gets rude awakening in LA
Jamie Oliver had smashing successes in England and Huntington, W. Va., where he has hosted his 'Food Revolution' show in past seasons. This season he's in LA, and the city has yet to embrace him. Will a dejected Jamie Oliver give up on the City of Angels?
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Photos of the Day: Photos of the Day 04/12
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The beatings will continue until teacher morale improves
Teachers are facing unrivaled criticism from all sides. The education reform movement has targeted them as the culprits behind failing schools. This culture of disrespect, little support, and unrelenting demands takes a toll on teachers – and on our students.
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Gardena High shooting raises question: How to keep guns out of school?
The Los Angeles school district will review its security policies after the apparently accidental shooting of two students at Gardena High School. But experts are split on whether big-money projects like metal detectors and surveillance cameras are the way to go.
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US public schools are going broke, yet some spend like a kid in a candy store
The $578 million price tag for the Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools complex in Los Angeles is hard to justify at a time when many schools are turning to desperate measures to save teachers' jobs. Voters must respond by pushing profligate public schools to be as frugal as charter schools.
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Education secretary Arne Duncan: headmaster of US school reform
As students head back to school, educators nationwide are implementing controversial school reform wrought by Arne Duncan. Pushing competitive market approaches and armed with unprecedented funding and support from the president, he is possibly the most powerful education secretary ever.
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How does a $578 million school get built amid cuts, layoffs in L.A.?
Construction of the imposing Robert F. Kennedy School Complex west of downtown Los Angeles was approved by voters in 2006, leaving school officials no choice, they say.
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Constance McMillen case: proms as gay-rights battleground
A federal judge said a Mississippi high school violated Constance McMillen's rights when it said she couldn't bring a girlfriend to prom. But the school is avoiding the gay rights issue by canceling prom and allowing parents to sponsor a substitute dance.
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Obama’s Race to the Top competition won’t fix public schools
Competition may bring out the best in business and sports, but that logic doesn’t necessarily apply to public schools. The practical way to mend the educational system is by implementing economic and social reforms that focus on the children.
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The city that said 'no' to pollution
Maywood, Calif., has become a ‘culture of participation’ to help solve its pollution problems, particularly with contaminated water.
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Not safe from layoffs in this recession: the public sector
The unemployment report on Friday showed 53,000 fewer government jobs in September.
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Grade for charter schools? 'Needs improvement'
Without safeguards, they could become martyrs in the reform movement, instead of pioneers.
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School vouchers leave too many children behind
Choice is good, but some parents are busy worrying about food and shelter.
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Artists in survival mode as market crumbles
As galleries cut back and sales plummet, many artists are struggling to scrape by with odd jobs.
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Rethink the value of college
In a world where a degree no longer means a job, we need to prepare students for challenges ahead.
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Obama's call to arts
The president-elect's proposed Artists Corps is one plank in his push to revitalize the arts in education.
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Want more accountable schools? Look to Finland's peer approach.
Finland's model protects the judgment of teachers.
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College is not a must
Mandated college-prep classes inhibit high-schoolers' futures.
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Do better schools help the poor?
Data suggest they don't. A better approach is investment in communities.
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Good teachers teach to the test
That's because it's eminently sound pedagogy.







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