Sunday, March 24, 2013

'This is not a crisis!'


Onward! 4LAKids
4LAKids: Sunday 25•Mar•2013 ¡Spring Break!
In This Issue:
 •  INCUBATOR SCHOOL IN L.A. SPARKS DISCORD OVER LOCATION, TEACHERS + more
 •  INSTEAD OF CLOSING (or reconstituting, charterizing, privatizing, magnetizing or pilotizing) SCHOOLS - HOW ABOUT (…are you sitting down?) SAVING THEM?
 •  IS HEALTH AND SAFETY REALLY A TOP PRIORITY? + MOURNING THE LOSS OF A STUDENT
 •  HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest (but not necessarily the best) of the Stories from Other Sources
 •  EVENTS: Coming up next week...
 •  What can YOU do?


Featured Links:
 •  OUR CHILDREN, OUR FUTURE: What will California schoolchildren, your school district and YOUR School get when the initiative passes?
 •  Follow 4 LAKids on Twitter - or get instant updates via text message by texting
 •  4LAKids Anthology: All the Past Issues, solved, resolved and unsolved!
 •  4LAKidsNews: a compendium of recent items of interest - news stories, scurrilous rumors, links, academic papers, rants and amusing anecdotes, etc.
‘Twas the week before Spring Break, and all through The District….

ON MONDAY AFTERNOON 14-year-old Nobel Middle School honor student Aria Dougherty’s sister came home to find Aria dead from “huffing” – inhaling computer cleaner. This is classic needless, senseless tragedy – a young life ended from pure reckless adolescent behavior every bit as dangerous as playing ‘chicken’ in Rebel Without a Cause, And the fatal flaw, in Shakespearean fashion, lies in our adult selves and the failure of our educational mission to educate Aria to the dangers – and her family, friends, teachers and student colleagues to the warning signs of inhalant abuse. Even though the teaching materials and student handouts are in a warehouse somewhere; and the curriculum is in a binder. Seven percent of middle schoolers abuse inhalants; one+ kid in every classroom. There are 2430 students at Nobel, predictably 170 huffers. There are about 84 middle schools in LAUSD. And elementary kids and high school students huff too. Don’t do the math, do the Health Education. [US Consumer Product Safety Commission - A Parent's Guide to Preventing Inhalant Abuse | http://1.usa.gov/X0SLcK]

THE BOARD MEETING ON TUESDAY WAS INTERESTING – and couple of things that came out of it couldn’t have delighted the powers that be.

• A NEW BOARD RULE forbids a boardmember from serving more than two successive one year terms as president – a move opposed by six-times-in-succession board president Monica Garcia. The rule does not apply to this board and it cannot be binding on the board that will be installed next July – but the four-to-three vote shows waning confidence in Ms.Garcia’s leadership. The quote o’ th’ week goes to outgoing boardmember Nury Martinez – who said: “I think this is about something else.”

• Similarly the superintendent’s mission to install a PILOT SCHOOL AT VENICE HIGH SCHOOL (whether they want one or not) met with determined community resistance - and a vote by the board to approve the pilot …but not at Venice! [Incubator School in L.A. Sparks Discord Over Location, Teachers] Thursday the superintendent was back at Venice –Tearing down signs and proclaiming “This is not a crisis!”...while pleading, cajoling or bullying the community to reconsider. Maybe he was sweetening the deal – but some voices say he was threatening to impose a Prop 39 charter school co-location on the campus if they didn’t accept the pilot. This one gets the 4LA Kids understatement-of-the-obvious o’ th’ week, from the LA Times article cited above: “District officials acknowledged their communication efforts fell short.”


I am beginning to suspect that the superintendent sees schools that don’t agree with his vision of their future as nails in need of pounding down – and all the tools in his Public School Choice/NCLB/®eform toolbox - whether reconstitution, charterization, privatization, magnetization or pilotization - as a hammer. There are a couple of articles and a report referencing “Community Schools” following.(“Instead of Closing…”) They need to be read.

WEDNESDAY THE BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE MET, discussed+approved the list of potential Prop 39 charter co-locations (Venice is not on the list) as well as safety upgrades at early childhood centers and to talk about the final settlement with the insurance company over the settlement of the Garfield Fire and the building of the new admin building and auditorium.

THURSDAY The Chicago mayor’s office and Chicago Public Schools (which are running a near one billion dollar deficit) announced that they are closing 55 schools, potentially saving $43 million a year – cutting the deficit less than-one-half-of-one-percent per year.- - if you don’t factor in the $230 million one-time-cost of the shut down. (The CEO/superintendent and the CPS board are appointed by the mayor, essentially making the entire system completely accountable to Mayor Emanuel - who is on a skiing vacation.). Thursday morning there was an impromptu press conference on the sidewalk in front of Beaudry as more allegations of cover-up of wrongdoing at De La Torre Elementary School came to light. Is it all true? There are so many shades of truth; they change depending on where you stand – but the questions are coming around to: “What did the superintendent know?…and when did he know it?”

UP IN SACRAMENTO on Thursday Senator Padilla’s “Bad Teacher” Bill (SB10) – hand crafted by LAUSD – died a early death and was replaced by Assembly Ed Chair Buchanan’s “Not so Bad Teacher” Bill (AB375) which may be more acceptable to teachers even though it still limits right of appeal – but is accompanied by AB1338 – which 4LAKids supports with a happy dance – because it requires school districts to teach and inform school staff of the rules about mandatory reporting of child abuse. (Last month the Brentwood USD superintendent in Contra Costa County was fired in because his staff failed to report child abuse| http://bit.ly/14doYQ0)

Also Thursday the State Assembly Budget Subcommittee on Education Finance shot down Governor Brown’s proposal to realign Adult Ed from K-12 to the Community Colleges. While that vote isn’t final – it doesn’t portend well for the Governor’s plan.

And as we are in a happy dancing mood: Thursday afternoon was the ribbon cutting for New Central Elementary School #21- one of the last of the new schools – with boring speeches by adults and fabulous student performances and the best space shuttle ever made from pizza boxes!. A grand time was had by all. The superintendent should really come to these things – there is joy when the community receives the gift it has made to future generations of its own children. And no one is more joyful than the young recipients themselves!

AND FRIDAY? I’m starting to write this Friday afternoon – and so far so good – though there should be something to report from the forced call* of the Venice High School/School Based Management Committee meeting soon.

UPDATE: The Venice High School School Based Management Committee – - which ostensibly has the authority to approve/disapprove The Incubator Charter siting agreement convened in an emergency meeting Friday – but lacked a quorum. They tried to reschedule the vote for Tuesday but no one is available (Next week is Spring Break, so the three components of SBM: Teachers/Staff, Parents/Community, and Students are all off campus) - so the same problem would arise. A teacher recommended not to reconvene until April 2nd when school is back in session.
April 2nd is the day after the deadline that Deasy ordered (so to speak)
A SBM member declared a victory of sorts: -“We will not be bullied by impossible-to-meet deadlines that were not outlined in the amendment at the LAUSD Board of Ed meeting this past Tuesday.”.

And so it was and is and doesn’t always have to be.

¡Onward/Adelante! - smf


*A “Forced Call” is a show biz expression for when the production manager makes you come back early from a late night overtime shoot – essentially not giving the cast and crew enough time to sleep. You may be dirty and sleepy and grumpy (you may be all the dwarfs) …and you’re certainly not very productive – but you are making compound overtime!


INCUBATOR SCHOOL IN L.A. SPARKS DISCORD OVER LOCATION, TEACHERS + more
THE PILOT MIDDLE SCHOOL, WHICH IS SLATED TO OPEN NEXT YEAR BUT LACKS A SITE, WILL TEACH STUDENTS HOW TO LAUNCH A BUSINESS IN ADDITION TO ACADEMICS.

By Teresa Watanabe, Los Angeles Times | http://bit.ly/11wdzdF

March 20, 2013 :: Sujata Bhatt uses online games to encourage her students at Grand View Boulevard Elementary School to aim higher: "Don't just play games, make them."

Now Bhatt will get the chance to teach middle school students how to launch their own businesses at a new campus approved this week by the Los Angeles school board. The Incubator School marks the latest effort in L.A. Unified to spark innovation through "pilot" schools, where district educators are given autonomy over their curriculum, budget, staffing, training and other elements.

Despite enthusiasm for the school's concept, however, the plan became entangled in disputes over its location, union concerns over job placement rules and political tensions.

The board backed off from locating the new campus at Venice High School after parents and students complained they were not informed about it until last week. Sara Roos, a Venice High parent, told the board she wanted more details about the plan, although she sharply criticized it in online comments as an "experiment indoctrinating children in the tricks of an unregulated, free capitalistic market."

Lisa Sobajian, 10th-grade class president, submitted a petition signed by 1,000 students opposed to sharing their campus with the new school.

Bhatt said that she met with Venice High's principal and teachers union representative last October, but that requests to present the idea to the faculty drew no response. District officials acknowledged their communication efforts fell short.

In any case, under an amendment by board member Steve Zimmer, the board approved the school but directed the district and Venice community to work together to seek a location.

That did not disappoint Bhatt, who said she felt "relief and joy" over the board's approval.

"I want students to be excited about learning," Bhatt said. "It's about creating quality schools for kids."

United Teachers Los Angeles, however, has not weighed in on the new school. The union has looked carefully at the 49 pilot schools approved in L.A. Unified because they require one-year teaching contracts that do not place seniority as the top factor in job placement, giving administrators greater power to transfer teachers.

To control the quality of the new school, union President Warren Fletcher said those proposing it should operate it for a year to "get the kinks out" before seeking pilot status and a faculty vote on the shorter contract.

But Mohammed Choudhury, policy manager of Future is Now Schools, a not-for-profit group supporting pilot campuses, disagreed that schools should be required to operate for a year before becoming a pilot. Choudhury said that delaying pilot status would give the union a chance to lobby teachers against signing the shorter contract.

"It's an attempt to protect mediocrity," he said.

The not-for-profit, started by former Green Dot Public Schools chief Steve Barr, contributed $150,000 in stipends for Incubator School's design team. Barr said it was better to place a pilot school on campuses with extra space, such as Venice High; otherwise, the district would be legally required to offer it to a charter school, which is publicly financed but independently run.

Bhatt, a teacher for 11 years who has been credited with boosting student achievement in English and math, said she came up with the idea for the school while working as an advisor for a New York start-up aiming to develop a science application for the iPad. The young entrepreneurs — many of them in their 20s who already had started their own firms — inspired her to think about how to refashion teaching to better prepare students for the accelerated advances in the digital world, she said.

"There's a disconnect between a textbook-based world, the excitement of problem solving and the energy and innovation of the digital economy," she said. "The reason students disconnect from school is that it's not connected to the real world."

The school is scheduled to open next year with an initial class of 225 sixth- and seventh-graders drawn from diverse ethnic and economic backgrounds. The students will learn such real-life skills as financial literacy and time management and they will combine academic learning with hands-on tinkering. They also will work with entrepreneurial mentors in the Westside's growing Silicon Beach and be guided to produce their own start-up business by 8th grade. The school will eventually expand through 12th grade under current plans.

Aside from the Incubator School, the board also approved two other pilot schools, Francis Polytechnic High School in Sun Valley and WISH Secondary Media Arts School in Los Angeles.

ALSO SEE:
• The Incubator Pilot @ Venice High: A PARENT WRITES TO SUPERINTENDENT DEASY: by Mary Smith, reprinted with perm... http://bit.ly/11zIx4O

• Hear Venice HS PTA President Kristen Duerr on KPFK’s “Politics or Pedagogy” from March 21: KPFK 90.7 FM Archive http://bit.ly/10BxeGu

• INSTEAD OF CLOSING (or reconstituting, charterizing, privatizing, magnetizing or pilotizing) SCHOOLS - HOW ABO... (next article - keep reading!)


INSTEAD OF CLOSING (or reconstituting, charterizing, privatizing, magnetizing or pilotizing) SCHOOLS - HOW ABOUT (…are you sitting down?) SAVING THEM?
GIVEN THAT SCHOOL REFORMERS ARE ALWAYS TALKING ABOUT THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVING PARENTS “SCHOOL CHOICE,” YOU’D THINK THEY’D LISTEN TO THE PEOPLE WHO WANT THEIR NEIGHBORHOOD SCHOOLS SAVED.

. . . YOU’D THINK.

By Valerie Strauss, The Washington Post/Answer Sheet | http://wapo.st/WTfWoo

Updated: March 22, 2013 :: When Michelle Rhee told D.C. school residents that she, as chancellor of public schools in the nation’s capital, was closing 23 under-enrolled schools, she promised that a lot of money would be saved that could be plowed back into academic programs in remaining schools. It didn’t happen; an audit years later found that the closings actually cost the city $40 million.

It remains to be seen how the most recent round of announced closings will shake out: Chicago just said it was closing 54 public schools this year in what seems to be the largest mass closing of schools in U.S. history; Philadelphia said it was closing more than 20 schools, and Washington D.C., 15 schools. School closings have become a tool of school reformers who say the action is needed either because the targeted schools have too few students or are failing academically — even while they support the opening of charter schools in the same neighborhoods. In Chicago’s case, both arguments for closing schools were made in recent years.

Yet promises made by school reformers who close schools — either because they are under-enrolled or labeled academically failing — are rarely kept, studies have shown. The money savings are most frequently less than promised or non-existent, and most students don’t do any better academically in their new schools, researchers who have looked at closings in cities around the country say.

This is not an argument that no schools should ever be closed. Communities change and school systems have to change, too. But in many, perhaps most cases, there are better alternatives than closing schools, ones that school reformers have so far been reluctant to do because they go well beyond the myopic view of teaching and learning as being driven by standardized tests.

There is a reason that a new study by Public Agenda and the Kettering Foundation (link follows) shows that there is a divide “between leaders and parents on whether it is more important to preserve neighborhood public schools, even those that are struggling, or whether it is more important to give parents more choice.” Parents, it says, largely want their neighborhood schools improved rather than be closed, it says.

Given that school reformers are always talking about the importance of giving parents “school choice,” you’d think they’d listen to the people who want their neighborhood schools saved. One way is to actually start to address the real reasons that many kids don’t perform well in school: Their lives. Living in poverty has consequences. Living in an unstable family has consequences.

Why not turn under-enrolled schools into community schools? Such a school would offer students the physical, mental and emotional support they need, meals, and extracurricular activities. Parents could take classes, too, and the facility would be open during the weekend too, offering activities and classes that can keep young people engaged. Why not better integrate health services and education services in a way that can actually help students be better prepared to learn? That would not only help individual schools and families but preserve neighborhoods too. Is this the only answer? No. Is it part of the answer? Absolutely.

Decades of standardized-test based school reform hasn’t worked. It has made an unsatisfactory situation in urban public schools far worse. It’s time for a more humane approach. And given that school closings don’t usually save the promised amount

To those who insist there are bad teachers and bad principals who get in the way of students who want to learn, yes, there are bad teachers and bad principals, and no, they shouldn’t be allowed to keep their jobs. But to focus school reform on that issue, when the bigger problems are elsewhere and largely being ignored, is, frankly, shameful.


►ACCOUNTABILITY DILEMMAS: SCHOOLS PLAY MANY ROLES IN COMMUNITIES, AND THE PROSPECT OF CLOSING ONE UNDERMINES MOST OF THOSE.

By Chester E. Finn, Jr. / The Thomas B. Fordham Institute | http://bit.ly/Yu5umr

March 21, 2013 :: A useful new report from Public Agenda and the Kettering Foundation (link follows) underscores the painful divide between parents and education reformers on the crucial topic of what to do about bad schools.

In a nutshell, if the neighborhood school is crummy, parents want it fixed. So do community leaders. Ed reformers are far more apt to want to close it and give families alternatives such as charter schools.

As Andy Smarick has perceptively written, schools play multiple roles in communities, and the prospect of closing one undermines most of those. Hence, shuttering a school affects more than the convenience of keeping one’s own kids in a familiar (and generally close-at-hand) facility, maybe even with that nice Ms. Greensleeves who teaches fourth grade there. As Jean Johnson writes on behalf of Public Agenda, based on a recent series of focus groups (as well as much other research), “Most parents see local public schools as important community institutions and viscerally reject the idea that closing schools—even those that are persistently low-performing—is a good way to improve accountability in education.”

On the reform side, however, Johnson writes, “In many communities, school leaders are closing or drastically reorganizing low-performing schools. Many districts are turning to charter schools to replace traditional public schools. Charters are often viewed as more accountable, because if the school does not meet its academic goals, its charter can be revoked. From a leadership perspective, these reforms propel the kind of change that will help more students succeed….”

Yes, she oversimplifies. A lot of school closures (as I’ve noted previously) have more to do with enrollments, capacity, and finances than with performance. And a lot of education leaders have, in fact, done everything they can to avoid drastic interference in low-performing schools—hence the widespread use of the “any other major restructuring” loophole for Title I schools needing “corrective action” due to their persistent failure to achieve “adequate yearly progress.”

The charter part of her reform model isn’t quite right, either. Yes, there are a handful of situations in the charter world—e.g., Ohio’s “sudden death” provision—where test scores alone might cause a charter school to be shut down. But conscientious authorizers do look at other information (e.g., signs of progress, graduation rates, student- and staff-turnover rates, parent and student satisfaction indicators, community circumstances, what sorts of schools would the kids go to instead, and so on). And, of course, heedless or simply greedy authorizers don’t close schools anyway—because they don’t much care, can’t stand the heat, or depend on the school fees for their own revenues.

At the same time, Johnson’s conversations with parents add some important nuance to the school-accountability discussion. They fret that overemphasis on testing fosters dull, drill-centric classrooms and gives rise to incentives to cheat. And it’s clear to parents that there’s more to school quality than test scores, which understandably makes them wary of moves to close or radically restructure schools solely on the basis of such scores. Yes, they favor testing as a useful way of knowing how a school is doing academically, but they lament that too much testing is underway and that test-based data reveal nothing about other important school features and outcomes (examples include character development, creativity, student engagement, and school leadership). Indeed, there’s valuable overlap between the other factors that matter to parents and those that conscientious authorizers (see previous paragraph) apply to their charter schools.

So there is a divide, with merit—and blind spots—on both sides. Yes, it’s ridiculous to judge a school (and take drastic action to intervene in it, even to close it) exclusively on the basis of test scores. Ditto for judgments about teachers. (“Value-added” scores—where feasible and meaningful—are better than absolute test scores, but still are not the full measure of an educational institution or classroom instructor.) On the other hand, student learning is the bottom line, and for too long American public education has paid far too little heed to it when evaluating schools and teachers.

But have we swung too far in the opposite direction? As least as perplexing, do we have—or can we create—additional metrics that tap into these other features of schools and teachers in valid ways, avoiding total subjectivity, favoritism, and caprice?

Such dilemmas deepen as states and schools prepare for new tests being developed to accompany Common Core standards for English language arts and math, as well as new tests that may follow for science. The developers claim that the next generation of assessments will do more than today’s tests to gauge a broader swath of educational attainment. The PARCC consortium, for example, asserts that its “next-generation assessment system will provide students, educators, policymakers and the public with the tools needed to identify whether students—from grade 3 through high school—are on track for postsecondary success and, critically, where gaps may exist and how they can be addressed well before students enter college or the workforce.”

If all of that comes true—and at reasonable cost in dollars and time commitments—we can fairly suppose that test-leery parents may be more satisfied, and that test-weary teachers may find that the assessment results are valuable, not just judgmental.

Today, however, there’s no way to know for sure how it will turn out. We still have two years to wait before the new assessments are administered for the first time. We have no idea where their “cut scores” will be set. And we have no idea how—or when or even whether—Congress will figure out how all of this factors into the next generation of ESEA.

As if that weren’t complexity enough, some educators have asked whether this period of change and uncertainty in standards and assessments should be accompanied by some sort of accountability moratorium, even a testing hiatus. Let the education system—and the teachers—gear up for the new arrangement (and master the new standards and pedagogical “shifts” that are built into them) without having to look over their shoulders at the same time for fear they’ll lose their jobs—or their schools—on the basis of scores on the old tests. Call it the education version of “quantitative easing,” if you will.

It’s not a crazy suggestion. Neither is it a perfect proposal, because “suspending” accountability (and testing) for two years, just as people are getting accustomed to it, would smack of a return to the bad old days and would likely provide cover for some dreadful schools and instructors to continue unchanged, damaging kids for two more years.

I wonder, though, if there isn’t some way to turn down the heat a bit during this transition period and encourage school systems and educators to focus on what’s coming rather than on the academic expectations that are going out of style.

I’m not clever enough to devise that interim arrangement. But it’s worth smart people thinking through, maybe even before the spring 2013 test scores come in.



•Report: “WILL IT BE ON THE TEST?” by Public Agenda and the Kettering Foundation



IS HEALTH AND SAFETY REALLY A TOP PRIORITY? + MOURNING THE LOSS OF A STUDENT
From the Associated Administrators of Los Angeles Weekly Update | Week of April 1, 2013 | http://bit.ly/166dFHV

21 March 2013 :: The health and safety of our students and employees is a top priority for the District.

How often have you heard that statement in response to the crisis of the moment? It’s a favorite reply whenever top leadership in any industry is pressed about something detrimental that has occurred. In LAUSD, we hear it all of the time. But, in reality, if health and safety were really the District’s top priority, its schools would be appropriately staffed, not operating with the skeleton crews of today. AALA has been very vocal in citing the need for an assistant principal at every school, regardless of the level or the enrollment. And we mean a generic assistant principal who does not also have the myriad responsibilities of the APSCS. Managing the master program, student scheduling and counseling is more than enough for one person; we cannot expect them to assume all other assistant principal activities.

The assistant principal is not only integral to the smooth and efficient functioning of a school, he/she is critical for the health and safety of students. APs are typically heavily involved in the day-to-day operations of the school as they relate to students and faculty as a whole. Their primary duty is to supervise students, before, during and after school. In addition, they complete reports, enforce policy; assist the principal in the supervision of instruction; observe classrooms; participate in the selection and evaluation of teachers and other staff; order materials; plan staff development; participate in budget development; discipline and counsel students; handle attendance issues; work with parents; liaison with community and civic organizations; oversee paraprofessionals; make schedules and do a plethora of other things. Assistant principals generally cannot plan their days; they must deal with issues as they arise and most of those that do arise tend to involve the health and safety of students. They are the “fix it” people when an emergency occurs, allowing the principal to deal with parents, teachers and the public.

We must emphasize that health and safety of students is the paramount reason why it is imperative that each and every school have an assistant principal. The principal cannot possibly do everything alone and certainly cannot be everywhere. Currently, elementary schools must have 1,110 students before an AP is assigned, which means the great majority of K-5 schools have only a principal. What happens at these single administrator sites when the principal must leave for one of the myriad “required” meetings? Who is in charge? The designee who is frequently a classroom teacher? The SAA? What if there is an emergency—who makes the critical decision to call for assistance? Who takes control? How does the work get completed? It is virtually impossible for principals who have no other administrative support to accomplish everything that must be done when running a school. Even when they work evenings and weekends, they never seem to catch up, leaving them in a consistent state of stress and exhaustion.

In these turbulent times, our students and staff deserve more support at the school site. AALA demands that the District immediately provide adequate administrative and support staff for all schools by improving the norms at all levels.


MOURNING THE LOSS OF A STUDENT

AALA would like to thank Dr. Lori Vollandt, Coordinator, Health Education Programs, for writing this article.

21 March 2013 :: On Monday afternoon, Aria Doherty, an honor student at Nobel Middle School, died from cardiac arrest due to inhalant abuse.

Nothing is more tragic than the death of a child; nothing more important than a child’s health. Just ask any parent or a teacher who has lost a student …or a principal who has received the call of a student passing.

When I was a teacher at Marshall HS, I lost students to shootings, overdose, suicide and accidents. Each one, every single one, was painful. The news, the sinking feeling that dropped me to my knees, the idea that I had to keep it together while I wanted to just grieve. I became even more determined to try and prevent preventable deaths.

When opening our school- based health clinic at Marshall, my then colleague, Board Member Steve Zimmer, said, “I have attended more funerals of students than the amount of times I have attended graduation ceremonies. I hope with the opening of this clinic, we can change those numbers.”

Fewer funerals and more graduations.” A simple but very powerful statement.

Many times, most times, death is preventable, especially for adolescents and young adults. Often, I am asked to show the statistics when I promote health education. Fair enough. The results of the California a Healthy Kids Survey of LAUSD elementary and secondary students provides some alarming facts regarding their self - admitted high risk behaviors.

• Elementary: Key Findings 2009/10 | http://bit.ly/YwPuNz
| Main Report 2009 /10 | http://bit.ly/16NXekN
• Middle School/High School: Key Findings 2009/10 | http://bit.ly/11tmPiK
Main Report 2009/10 | http://bit.ly/1666QWJ
• Supplemental Questions Findings (Secondary) | bit.ly/YwR95z

Prevention isn’t sexy. It doesn’t get the headlines.

It is the day-to-day work of all of us as parents and educators to ensure children’s health. LAUSD has adopted health standards that can be accessed at http://bit.ly/11qRny0
and those for the State of California are located at http://bit.ly/X0jPIZ.

T he following topics are included : • Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs (inhalant prevention starts in grade 2) • Nutrition and Physical Activity • Growth and Development • Mental, Emotional and Social Health (including social - emotional skill building) • Personal and Community Health • Injury prevention and safety (including sexual abuse prevention)

Health standards are skills based and must be practiced. It is not enough to just tell students what they are supposed to do and then send them on without any practice or skill.

Good health habits have to be practiced. Math problems are practiced, plays are practiced, test taking is practiced and avoiding high risk behaviors has to be practiced.


HIGHLIGHTS, LOWLIGHTS & THE NEWS THAT DOESN'T FIT: The Rest (but not necessarily the best) of the Stories from Other Sources
STOP READING ANYTIME YOUR DISBELIEF KICKS IN : (from LA Schools Report) A new report|http://bit.ly/13oaYUm out from a Washington DC think tank closely associated with the Democratic Party takes a look at the history of “mayoral control” of big-city school systems in which City Hall runs a district rather than an independently elected Board of Education.
According to the report, written by a pair of academics from Brown University and the University of Minnesota (and funded by the Broad Foundation), mayoral control doesn’t work everywhere but is associated with rising test scores and “can be a catalyst for reform.”
••smf: “…can be?” – The Broad Foundation couldn’t even buy a “maybe should...?” What's become of 'Academia for hire'?

The Incubator Pilot @ Venice High: A PARENT WRITES TO SUPERINTENDENT DEASY: by Mary Smith, reprinted with perm... http://bit.ly/11zIx4O

LAUSD TEACHERS SET TO VOTE ON CONFIDENCE IN DISTRICT, UNION POLICIES: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer | LA Dail... http://bit.ly/11zIwxA

Carpenter Community Charter: THE DOWNSIDE OF SUPERSTAR SCHOOLS: It's no surprise that parents go to great leng... http://bit.ly/YpcxiZ

CALIFORNIA VOTERS SPLIT ON JERRY BROWN SCHOOL PLANS + smf’s 2¢: Good policy meets bad process: Fifty percent a... http://bit.ly/15HLNYu

INCUBATOR SCHOOL IN L.A. SPARKS DISCORD OVER LOCATION, TEACHERS: The pilot middle school, which is slated to o... http://bit.ly/11wdzdF

GOOD NEWS FOR ADULT EDUCATION IN CALIFORNIA: from the AALA Update | http://bit.ly/166dFHV 21 March 2013 ... http://bit.ly/10u1YJz

INSTEAD OF CLOSING (or reconstituting, charterizing, privatizing, magnetizing or pilotizing) SCHOOLS - HOW ABO... http://bit.ly/Z8K1yT

SENATOR PADILLA DROPS HIS TEACHER DISMISSAL BILL, SB10 - IN FAVOR OF ASSEMBLY ED CHAIR BUCHANAN’S AB 375: By J... http://bit.ly/15AV9VX

ALLEGATIONS OF COVER-UP + FAILURE TO REPORT CHILD ABUSE @ DE LA TORRE ELEMENTARY IMPLICATE SENIOR LAUSD OFFICI... http://bit.ly/11sdY0J
Expand

smf deconstructs the LAUSD school board election, plus Ground Zero reports from Venice High and more than you ever wanted to know about the the Common Co®e on “Politics or Pedagogy” w/John Cromshow live tonight 3/21 @ 8pm KPFK 90.7 - ARCHIVE: http://bit.ly/10BxeGu


ARIA DOHERTY, 14, DIES OF “HUFFING” COMPUTER CLEANER + smf’s 2¢: Aria Doherty, 14, died on Monday, March 18, ... http://bit.ly/Y8MYTl

THE POLITICAL FUTURE OF THE TEACHING PROFESSION: Commentary By Arthur E. Wise & Michael D. Usdan/Education wee... http://bit.ly/10l1Z2n


MORE FROM TUESDAY’S BOARD MEETING: Magnets Redux + Security in Early Childhood Ed: LAUSD considers allowing s... http://bit.ly/15tnQnC

WHY ANTONIO VILLARAIGOSA FELL SHORT AS LA’s EDUCATION MAYOR: Adolfo Guzman-Lopez| Pass / Fail | 89.3 KPCC | ht... http://bit.ly/ZvEzpz

US DEPT OF ED INSPECTOR GENERAL FINDS INADEQUATE CHARTER SCHOOL OVERSIGHT AT FEDERAL & STATE LEVEL: by smf for... http://bit.ly/10hDROe

COMMITTEE WRESTLES WITH INCORPORATING GRAD RATES INTO API: By John Fensterwald | EdSource Today http://... http://bit.ly/11ijKC3

GRANADA HILLS & EL CAMINO HIGH SCHOOLS ADVANCE TO NATIONAL ACADEMIC DECATHLON: Two California teams advance to... http://bit.ly/11igGG8

TUESDAY LAUSD BOARD MEETING: 3 PILOT SCHOOLS APPROVED, GARCIA REPUDIATED: New school to teach entrepreneurship... http://bit.ly/15pYC9I

LAUSD CAN BALANCE BUDGET THIS YEAR, BUT POTENTIAL LOSSES LOOM + smf’s 2¢: By Barbara Jones, Staff Writer, LA D... http://bit.ly/YU9o7q

Thursday April 11: PUBLIC HEARINGS ON LAUSD’s COMPLIANCE WITH SPECIAL EDUCATION LAWS: from the Office of the I... http://bit.ly/15myTPn

FRANKLIN HIGH SCHOOL WINS ACA-DECA SUPER QUIZ, FALLS JUST SHORT OF NATIONAL FINALS + smf’s 2¢: FHS had the thi... http://bit.ly/YRzibT

Opinion: LET’S SHELVE THE CSTs SO THE REAL WORK CAN BEGIN: By Merrill Vargo / commentary in EdSource Today | ... http://bit.ly/114Yxro
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Scott Folsom Scott Folsom ‏@4LAKids 18 Mar

CDE, TORLAKSON LEAD EFFORT TO FORGE AHEAD ON COMMON CORE DESPITE CHALLENGES: By Tom Chorneau. SI&A Cabinet Re... http://bit.ly/107EiKW
110SGn2


EVENTS: Coming up next week...


*Dates and times subject to change. ________________________________________
• SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION BOND OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE:
http://www.laschools.org/bond/
Phone: 213-241-5183
____________________________________________________
• LAUSD FACILITIES COMMUNITY OUTREACH CALENDAR:
http://www.laschools.org/happenings/
Phone: 213-241.8700


• LAUSD BOARD OF EDUCATION & COMMITTEES MEETING CALENDAR



What can YOU do?
• E-mail, call or write your school board member:
Tamar.Galatzan@lausd.net • 213-241-6386
Monica.Garcia@lausd.net • 213-241-6180
Bennett.Kayser@lausd.net • 213-241-5555
Marguerite.LaMotte@lausd.net • 213-241-6382
Nury.Martinez@lausd.net • 213-241-6388
Richard.Vladovic@lausd.net • 213-241-6385
Steve.Zimmer@lausd.net • 213-241-6387
...or your city councilperson, mayor, the governor, member of congress, senator - or the president. Tell them what you really think! • Find your state legislator based on your home address. Just go to: http://bit.ly/dqFdq2 • There are 26 mayors and five county supervisors representing jurisdictions within LAUSD, the mayor of LA can be reached at mayor@lacity.org • 213.978.0600
• Call or e-mail Governor Brown: 213-897-0322 e-mail: http://www.govmail.ca.gov/
• Open the dialogue. Write a letter to the editor. Circulate these thoughts. Talk to the principal and teachers at your local school.
• Speak with your friends, neighbors and coworkers. Stay on top of education issues. Don't take my word for it!
• Get involved at your neighborhood school. Join your PTA. Serve on a School Site Council. Be there for a child.
• If you are eligible to become a citizen, BECOME ONE.
• If you a a citizen, REGISTER TO VOTE.
• If you are registered, VOTE LIKE THE FUTURE DEPENDS ON IT. THEY DO!.


Who are your elected federal & state representatives? How do you contact them?




Scott Folsom is a parent leader in LAUSD and is Parent/Volunteer of the Year for 2010-11 for Los Angeles County. • He is Past President of Los Angeles Tenth District PTSA and represented PTA on the LAUSD Construction Bond Citizen's Oversight Committee for ten years. He is a Health Commissioner, Legislation Team member and a member of the Board of Managers of the California State PTA. He serves on numerous school district advisory and policy committees and has served as a PTA officer and governance council member at three LAUSD schools. He is the recipient of the UTLA/AFT 2009 "WHO" Gold Award for his support of education and public schools - an honor he hopes to someday deserve. • In this forum his opinions are his own and your opinions and feedback are invited. Quoted and/or cited content copyright © the original author and/or publisher. All other material copyright © 4LAKids.
• FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. 4LAKids makes such material available in an effort to advance understanding of education issues vital to parents, teachers, students and community members in a democracy. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.
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