This week–SF’s challenges with desegregation, narratives from students, a sentencing of a former school leader, OUSD budget answers, honor rolls are coming out, celebrating a young man’s 6 years of perfect attendance, research on Black teachers a roadmap for early childhood, all that and more with links, please read share and get involved
Oakland:
- San Francisco Had an Ambitious Plan to Tackle School Segregation. It Made It Worse.
- Seniors Reflect on their Experiences, “I Didn’t Know Anything about the A-G”- An Energy Convertor Podcast
- A conversation with OMI’s Johnna Grell
- At these 7 Bay Area schools, more than half of the students are unvaccinated
- Answering your questions about the OUSD budget
- Oakland 5th grader receives praise and $1,500 for 6 years of perfect attendance
- Backers of Oakland’s Measure AA vow to fight in court to defend the embattled tax
- A Charter-School Principal Won’t Go to Prison
- My PE Experience as a Trans Student; Swim Class, Changing Rooms and Sometimes Ignorant Adults
- Report: BART officer lied in death of Grant
- Answering Your Questions about the OUSD Budget; School Funding, Cost Savings in Closings, Salaries, ACOE’s Role, and More
- E Pluribus Unum: Out of Many One; A Student’s Journey- Episode 2 of The Young and Woke Podcast
- Summer Reading Mini Grants
- Controversial charter school director avoids jail after fraud charges dropped
- A homeless Oakland couple moved into a $4 million Piedmont home. Then came the calls to police
- Student Reflections on Quality in Post-Strike Oakland and What We Need to Do
- 18th Annual African American Honor Roll Celebration
- OUSD Celebrates Asian Pacific Islander Honor Roll Students
- Intersection of the “Other”: Bias & Dis/ability in Education
- Friday Five: Weekly news for Oakland charters
California:
- Legislative plan provides ‘roadmap’ for boosting early ed access in California
- California Wants to Fix Its Early Learning System. Here’s How
- California is weighing bills — some helpful, others vicious — to rein in charter schools
- The Research on the Importance of Black Teachers and the Troubling Numbers in CA
- The Latest Polling Data Is in; Most Californians Favor Charters, Numbers are Even Higher for Public School Parents AND Most Worry About District Finances Too
- How California Teens Wound Up at Pennsylvania School Accused of Battering Students
- After years of avoidance, time to take on challenges posed by California charter schools
- Margaret Fortune: How California’s Legislation Targeting Public Charter Schools Shows That Blue States Can Oppress Black People Too
- First on new California state superintendent’s long agenda: getting more men of color in the classroom
- 3 California NAACP chapters break with state and national leaders, calling for charter moratorium to be overturned
- California’s pension debt is harming teachers and students now—and it’s going to get worse
- Oakland Unified: Lead in tap water issue taken care of
Other Stories:
- Wage gap between teachers and other college graduates exacerbates teacher shortages
- Student Voices: Hearing and Supporting Native/Indigenous Students
Resources:
- Award-Winning Public Schools in Oakland You Might Still Get Into—And Those You Won’t
- The 2 Real Rules of Expulsion Hearings
Oakland:
- San Francisco Had an Ambitious Plan to Tackle School Segregation. It Made It Worse.
- Like many parents in San Francisco, Melvin Canas and Delfina Ramirez described applying to public kindergarten as a part-time job. They researched schools all over the city for their daughter, Cinthya; took unpaid hours off their jobs as cooks to tour over a dozen; and ultimately ranked 15 of them on her application.
- Seniors Reflect on their Experiences, “I Didn’t Know Anything about the A-G”- An Energy Convertor Podcast
- In this episode, we have 2 special guests graduating this year and will be attending college in the fall. They delve deep into their experiences and offer their expertise and advice for students still on the high school grind. They also offer advice to parents and teachers about how to help students build better agency. Powerful advice from students that completed the A-G and those that didn’t. Please take a listen. And follow the Energy Convertors for more great student centered content.
- A conversation with OMI’s Johnna Grell
- Charter renewals are stressful and time-consuming. School leaders already pressed for time face endless paperwork and a process that can feel daunting. The public scrutiny and the political environment are harsh. It’s no doubt difficult for any school to go through. The process can also be affirming, highlighting areas where a school is thriving and can feel proud, as well as areas of growth the school is addressing.
- At these 7 Bay Area schools, more than half of the students are unvaccinated
- At seven schools in the Bay Area, more than half of the students are unvaccinated, according to the most recent data available from the California Department of Public Health.
- Answering your questions about the OUSD budget
- We recently reached out to Oaklanders – parents, educators, and community members – to find out what questions they had about OUSD’s budget and finances. Read on for the top six questions we heard and our answers to them:
- Oakland 5th grader receives praise and $1,500 for 6 years of perfect attendance
- Carlan Samuels was honored at his school, Allendale Elementary in East Oakland, for achieving perfect attendance– and that streak was not just for this school year, but for every year that he’s been enrolled. Including kindergarten, that’s six years, 1,080 days.
- Backers of Oakland’s Measure AA vow to fight in court to defend the embattled tax
- Two proponents of Measure AA, Oakland’s embattled plan to fund early childhood education and college readiness, intervened Tuesday in the city’s battle over the legality of the measure and promised to “vigorously defend it.”
- A Charter-School Principal Won’t Go to Prison
- When Ben Chavis became principal of the American Indian Public Charter School in 2000, it was among the worst middle schools in Oakland, Calif.
- My PE Experience as a Trans Student; Swim Class, Changing Rooms and Sometimes Ignorant Adults
- Being transgender and trying to comfortably take a PE class is nearly impossible. So much of it revolves around gender, whether it be the changing rooms, teams, or simply passing the class.
- Report: BART officer lied in death of Grant
- A former BART police officer who pulled Oscar Grant from a train 10 years ago and ordered his arrest before a second officer fatally shot Grant in the back lied repeatedly to investigators, telling them he felt he was “fighting for my life” when in fact he was the aggressor in the notorious incident, according to a newly released report.
- Answering Your Questions about the OUSD Budget; School Funding, Cost Savings in Closings, Salaries, ACOE’s Role, and More
- We recently reached out to Oaklanders – parents, educators, and community members – to find out what questions they had about OUSD’s budget and finances. Read on for the top six questions we heard and our answers to them:
- E Pluribus Unum: Out of Many One; A Student’s Journey- Episode 2 of The Young and Woke Podcast
- On this episode, you will meet Julisa Liang, a senior at Oakland High School in the Law and Social Justice Academy. Her life is like that American motto found on much of our money – “e pluribus unum” – out of many, one. She seems to be able to find common ground with whomever she meets, whether she’s riding AC transit, ringing up customers at Target, buying tacos in the Fruitvale, or discussing controversial topics in school. This notion that we as human beings can be different, and still unified, feels so important in this moment.
- Summer Reading Mini Grants
- Summer can be a powerful time to share the joy and fun of reading with children and spark a love of language and learning. Oakland Reads wants to help you bring to life your ideas for promoting reading with the children and families in your programs.
- Controversial charter school director avoids jail after fraud charges dropped
- A former Oakland charter school director known for boosting student test scores through humiliation and harsh discipline has avoided jail time following a six-year federal investigation into allegations of fraud.
- A homeless Oakland couple moved into a $4 million Piedmont home. Then came the calls to police
- Greg Dunston and Marie Mckinzie lived on Oakland’s streets for almost 10 years, pushing their carts around with all their belongings and sleeping in the doorway of an Alameda County building. But for the past three months, the couple have lived among the wealthy — on a nearly $4 million property in one of the Bay Area’s most exclusive neighborhoods in Piedmont. The homeowner, Terrence McGrath, did something few in his position would dare do: He opened his doors to homeless people in need.
- Student Reflections on Quality in Post-Strike Oakland and What We Need to Do
- This a deep reflection on mental health, the state of quality and what our students are experiencing and what they need. Please take a listen. And follow the Energy Convertors for more great student centered content.
- 18th Annual African American Honor Roll Celebration
- Next Monday is the night that African American students from across OUSD will come together to be honored for their ongoing hard work and dedication in the 18th Annual African American Honor Roll Celebration.
- OUSD Celebrates Asian Pacific Islander Honor Roll Students
- Hundreds of Oakland’s young people came together to be recognized for all their hard work and good grades at the second Annual Spring Celebration for OUSD’s Asian Pacific Islander Honor Roll
- Intersection of the “Other”: Bias & Dis/ability in Education
- Intersection of the “Other”: Bias & Dis/ability in Education…”explore equity, inclusion, and bias as it relates to diverse learners, students with disabilities, and Oakland’s school communities.”
- Friday Five: Weekly news for Oakland charters
- We have great content to share with you this week, including: one quarter of the top 100 public schools in US News’ latest rankings are charters; Aspire faces a lawsuit in San Mateo County Superior Court alleging it violated a Prop 39 contract and must return $4 million; a Q&A from GO Public Schools on the OUSD budget (ex: “can OUSD afford the teacher raise?”); an OUSD student has had perfect attendance for six (!) years; and much more.
California:
- Legislative plan provides ‘roadmap’ for boosting early ed access in California
- With California lagging behind other states in early ed, lawmakers are considering bills related to funding and preschool teacher pay.
- California Wants to Fix Its Early Learning System. Here’s How
- It took two years, eight public hearings, over 70 meetings and four focus groups, but California finally has a new plan to improve care and education for its kids.
- California is weighing bills — some helpful, others vicious — to rein in charter schools
- California has needed better regulation and tighter oversight of its charter schools for years, but state policymakers have been curiously deadlocked over making meaningful change. It took until last fall for the state to enact a law requiring charter schools to provide free lunches to the students who qualify financially, something that should have happened decades ago. Oversight of charter schools has often been lax and meaningful regulation has been slow to pass.
- The Research on the Importance of Black Teachers and the Troubling Numbers in CA
- One relatively simple and costless reform could decrease Black dropout rates by roughly a third, increase all Black students’ expectations around going to college, increase significantly the percentage of Black students in gifted classes and also increase student engagement for youth of all races.
- The Latest Polling Data Is in; Most Californians Favor Charters, Numbers are Even Higher for Public School Parents AND Most Worry About District Finances Too
- The latest poll numbers are in on charters, and they show a nuanced and thoughtful electorate, that defy the us versus them mentality of the two main combatants in the public school wars and their politicians. This is encouraging and points towards some policy solutions.
- How California Teens Wound Up at Pennsylvania School Accused of Battering Students
- For years, counties throughout the Bay Area and California have been sending teenage boys in trouble with the law to a Philadelphia-area institution that is now the target of allegations of widespread physical abuse.
- After years of avoidance, time to take on challenges posed by California charter schools
- Our new State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond deserves high praise for his eagerness to fix California’s charter school law, which has been on the books since the fall of 1992, the year that I became the 11th superintendent in the 110-year history of the Long Beach Unified School District.
- Margaret Fortune: How California’s Legislation Targeting Public Charter Schools Shows That Blue States Can Oppress Black People Too
- Blue states oppress black people too. Nowhere is this more obvious than in policing and public education in California.
- First on new California state superintendent’s long agenda: getting more men of color in the classroom
- Four months into his first term, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond is creating 13 work groups that he expects will recommend strategies for addressing some of the state’s thorniest education challenges. The issues include the need for an extensive student data system, college affordability, special education, teacher development, student health and safety, the teacher shortage and the issue he ran on but has little direct power to effect — more funding for schools.
- 3 California NAACP chapters break with state and national leaders, calling for charter moratorium to be overturned
- NAACP branches in three California cities that have some of the state’s largest populations of black students are calling to end the charter school moratorium adopted by their national board in 2016.
- California’s pension debt is harming teachers and students now—and it’s going to get worse
- Rising pension contribution rates are causing great angst among school districts in California. The rates are not rising because benefits are improving—in fact, the benefit formula for new teachers today is much less generous than for teachers hired prior to 2013—but because the California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRS) has amassed substantial debt. As of the latest actuarial valuation report, the CalSTRS’ total unfunded liability is over $100 billion.
- Oakland Unified: Lead in tap water issue taken care of
- After years of public outcry and the discovery of dozens of lead-tainted drinking water taps throughout the city’s public schools, Oakland Unified has tested every single drinking water tap at its schools, and is fixing or replacing those with dangerous lead levels.
Other Stories:
- Wage gap between teachers and other college graduates exacerbates teacher shortages
- Teachers are continuing to fall behind other college graduates in the wages they earn, contributing to the difficulties many school districts in California and the nation face in filling positions in key subject areas, according to a new analysis.
- Student Voices: Hearing and Supporting Native/Indigenous Students
- I was born and raised in the central part of the Navajo Nation in a town called Chinle, which is near the Canyon De Chelly national monument in Arizona. For most of my life, I was surrounded by people who looked like me. Growing up, the only time I left the Navajo Nation was to purchase clothes, food, and other necessities in towns that were two or more hours away.
Resources:
- Award-Winning Public Schools in Oakland You Might Still Get Into—And Those You Won’t
- Oakland families should have received their offers for Round 2 of enrollment already, and most high-demand schools are full or filling up. If you aren’t sure about your top choice, or if you just want to see what else is out there, we have a list of schools that you should take a look at.
- The 2 Real Rules of Expulsion Hearings
- Four hours in an expulsion hearing gives you time to think. And afterwards, you are wrapped tight so it takes a little time to unwrap and you need to think more. I do these things too often as part of my work. Well I don’t get paid for it, so “work” may not be the right word… as part of my duty. Experience has taught me that two rules govern the vast majority of these proceedings, proceedings that can forever change a child’s life.
What do you think?