The Morning Read
Your Daily Roundup of LAUSD news from across the web | 10.05.21
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With Costs Rising and Relief Money Gone, LAUSD Taps Reserves to Pay for New Budget
This story was originally published at the LAist The Los Angeles Unified board unanimously approved a $18.8 billion budget that relies on diminishing reserves to make ends meet. “There is a tempest ahead, uncertainty, instability, a threat to public education as we know it,” Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said as he gave updates to the district’s...
By Mariana Dale, LAist | June 26, 2025
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LAUSD Agrees to Issue $500 Million in Bonds to Settle Sexual Abuse Claims
The Los Angeles Unified School District board has quietly authorized issuing a half-billion dollars in bonds to settle decades-old sexual abuse cases involving former students. And that will likely not be enough to settle all the claims the nation’s second-largest school district is facing under 2019 legislation that allows victims of abuse by school employees to seek...
By Thomas Peele and Mallika Seshadri, EdSource | June 25, 2025
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Last School Year Was the Hottest on Record. How Do We Protect Students?
As spring showers give way to rising temperatures, teachers and families across the country are bracing for another record-breaking hot summer — and this time, they’re heading in with even fewer resources and protections. A slew of funding cuts from the Trump administration impact everything from school heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems to...
By Paige Shoemaker DeMio | June 18, 2025
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L.A. Families Are Mostly Satisfied With Their Schools, Survey Says
Families are mostly satisfied with their LAUSD schools — although they want improvements in school safety and better mental health services for students, an annual survey of district parents has found. The 79-page “Family Insights” report found LAUSD families saw improvements in their schools in the past year, with support for leadership of the nation’s...
By Ben Chapman | June 17, 2025
Across All Ages & Demographics, Test Results Show Americans Are Getting Dumber
Parents, Medical Providers, Vaccine Experts Brace for RFK Jr.’s HHS Takeover
After Declaring NAEP Off-Limits, Education Department Cancels Upcoming Test
Interactive: Data From 9,500 Districts Finds Even More Staff and Fewer Students
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How My California Middle School Uses Glyphs to Teach English Learners to Read
In the agricultural regions of California’s San Joaquin Valley, schools like Firebaugh Middle School are surrounded by fields. But many of Firebaugh’s students struggle to read that word. If they were to see “field” on the board, they would likely pronounce it as “filed,” a reflection of their unfamiliarity with the varied pronunciations in English....
By Gerrett Suárez | June 16, 2025
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L.A. Unified Sees ‘Major Gains’ in Fight Against Chronic Absenteeism — But Problem Persists
Chronic absenteeism remains a problem for LAUSD, but the school district is making gains, Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said on his last house visit of the year aimed at driving student attendance. The district made progress this year with the tricky challenge, Carvalho said during the home visit last month, but officials could not say how...
By Jacob Matthews | June 12, 2025
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The California Mom at the Center of Trump’s Crackdown on School Gender Policies
In 2022, near the end of her youngest child’s freshman year in high school, a Southern California mom spotted an unfamiliar male name on an online biology assignment: Toby. When she asked the teacher about it, he shrugged it off as a nickname. While scrolling through Instagram, the mother noticed her child’s friends also called...
By Linda Jacobson | June 11, 2025
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L.A. Schools Create ‘Perimeters of Safety’ Against ICE Agents
Los Angeles Unified School District Superintendent Alberto Carvalho said Monday school police will create “perimeters of safety” around high school graduation ceremonies to keep out immigration enforcement agents after federal raids rocked the city last week. Speaking at a press conference at LAUSD headquarters, Carvalho also said the district would offer transportation to graduation events,...
By Ben Chapman | June 9, 2025
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It’s Expensive to Become a Teacher in California. This Bill Would Pay Those Who Try
This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. When Brigitta Hunter started her teaching career, she had $20,000 in student loans and zero income – even though she was working nearly full time in the classroom. “We lived on my husband’s pathetic little paycheck. I don’t know how we did it,”...
By Carolyn Jones, CalMatters | June 9, 2025
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Another Casualty of Trump Research Cuts? California Students Who Want To Be Scientists
This article was originally published on CalMatters This spring, the National Institutes of Health quietly began terminating programs at scores of colleges that prepared promising undergraduate and graduate students for doctoral degrees in the sciences. At least 24 University of California and California State University campuses lost training grants that provided their students with annual stipends...
By Mikhail Zinshteyn, CalMatters | June 5, 2025