All the Ed news fit to link in Oakland and beyond–this week–setting the record straight on West Oakland schools, the Kaiser drama continues, some great stories on reducing gun violence in Oakland, the Curry’s invest in Oakland, the NAACP’s role in keeping reading standards, the crisis in Latinx education, depression and Black boys, research on suspensions and their long term effects, all that and much more please read, share, and get involved
Oakland:
- School Boardmember Hodge Responds to Coach Tapscott
- Oakland parents push back against plan to close school
- Lessons from Oakland’s Citywide Effort that Dramatically Reduced Gun Violence
- “Regaining My Identity, The Unique Insights of Being Bilingual” Tech Senior Dagney Ochoa’s Speech Upon Earning the CA Seal of Biliteracy
- 2019 OUSD Teachers of the Year to Throw Out First Pitch at Tonight’s Oakland A’s Game
- McClymonds New Principal Announcement
- New Oakland development to provide housing for former prisoners
- A wide ranging conversation with Bay Area high school students
- Stephen and Ayesha Curry commit to Oakland with new foundation for kids
- “Freedom without literacy is like being in a rowboat without paddles.“–How the Oakland NAACP Led the Fight for Black Children, Standards, and Reading Science, and Won
- Q&A: She gives Oakland youth a place to share their truths
- Curry’s announce new foundation to help under-served Oakland youth
- Oakland’s 3 O’Clock Rock music education program heading to Memphis
- Ersie Joyner Fights for Rome
California:
- California charter school regulations pass Senate Education Committee after marathon session and intervention by Gov. Newsom
- Walters: Criticism kills California bill to nix reading teacher test
- Nearly All of California’s Crises Are Worse in Latino Communities, New Report Says
- California Teachers Association board votes out executive director
- California preschool teachers are asking why ‘cashiers at McDonalds’ get better pay
Other Stories:
- Students Move Further Down School-to-Prison Pipeline With Every School Suspension
- Black and Hispanic students should take iodine tablets and head east
- ‘This is the agenda of white nationalists’: Four minority congresswomen condemn Trump’s racist remarks
- Certain Groups of Students Attend Alternative Schools in Greater Proportions Than They Do Other Schools
- Depression in Black Boys Begins Earlier Than You Think
- Most Students of Color Have White Teachers. Here’s Pete Buttigieg’s Plan to Change That
- A Girl, 15, Reported a Sexual Assault, Then the Detective Abused Her, Too
- For Teacher Professional Growth, Study the Soil
- Op-Ed: Get children out of cages at the border and into school
- In This War to Educate Black and Brown Kids, Are You in or Are You Out?
- Here’s Why President Trump’s Tweets About ‘The Squad’ Are Nothing New for Black Women in Education
- Children Face Foster Care Over School Meal Debt, District Warns
Resources:
Oakland:
- School Boardmember Hodge Responds to Coach Tapscott
- In an interview this week, Oakland Board of Education member Jumoke Hinton Hodge challenged some of the assertions made by public schools’ advocate Ben “Coach” Tapscott in a recent Oakland Post article, in which he said the school district is “dismantling” public schools in West Oakland “piece by piece.”
- Oakland parents push back against plan to close school
- They say Kaiser’s culture of acceptance and inclusiveness can’t be easily replicated
- Lessons from Oakland’s Citywide Effort that Dramatically Reduced Gun Violence
- Oakland, considered for many years to be among the most dangerous cities in America, gives us reason to hope that remarkable reductions in gun violence are possible.
- “Regaining My Identity, The Unique Insights of Being Bilingual” Tech Senior Dagney Ochoa’s Speech Upon Earning the CA Seal of Biliteracy
- For me, obtaining the Seal of Biliteracy is a very important accomplishment, and I can imagine that a lot of us feel the same way about it. I learned English when I was in second grade. After realizing in high school that I was having a hard time speaking my native language, I decided to take Spanish courses to not only develop myself more in the language but be able to communicate with my parents and learn parts of my Latina heritage and history that I had not been previously exposed to.
- 2019 OUSD Teachers of the Year to Throw Out First Pitch at Tonight’s Oakland A’s Game
- Tonight, July 16, is Teacher Appreciation Night at the Oakland Coliseum as the Oakland A’s host the Seattle Mariners. The A’s are graciously hosting teachers from across OUSD and the Bay Area for tonight’s game, complete with free tickets and parking. Three OUSD teachers will get an even bigger treat, too. Before the game, the 2019 Teachers of the Year will get to throw out the ceremonial first pitch.
- McClymonds New Principal Announcement
- It is with great pleasure that I welcome Mr. Jeffrey Taylor as the new principal of McClymonds High School!
- New Oakland development to provide housing for former prisoners
- A new housing project is aimed at helping people recently released from prison, by offering them a roof over their heads and resources to get back on their feet.
- A wide ranging conversation with Bay Area high school students
- On this edition of Your Call, Bay Area high school students join us to discuss issues they care about, including education, social media, politics, and more.
- Stephen and Ayesha Curry commit to Oakland with new foundation for kids
- The Warriors are leaving. Some key players have packed up and exited.
- But Stephen and Ayesha Curry are committed to Oakland…On Thursday, the Bay Area’s first couple of sports will unveil their new family foundation, Eat. Learn. Play. The mission of the nonprofit organization, focused on children in Oakland, is to address three vital elements of a healthy, active childhood: nutrition, education and recreation.
- “Freedom without literacy is like being in a rowboat without paddles.“–How the Oakland NAACP Led the Fight for Black Children, Standards, and Reading Science, and Won
- Last I saw 14% of Black OUSD elementary school kids read on grade level and it was 15% in the charters. If students aren’t reading in elementary school it becomes increasingly unlikely they ever will be proficient readers, so the last thing we need to do is lower the bar on who can teach reading and the required understanding of reading science. “We must better prepare educators to meet the bar – not eliminate it.” To quote the letter.
- Q&A: She gives Oakland youth a place to share their truths
- Janet Heller is the co-founder of Chapter 510, a youth writing center in Oakland. The nonprofit, part of the 826 Valencia national network, offers free writing workshops, tutoring services, book publishing and field trips, and gives K-12 students the opportunity to write, publish and perform their own work. Chapter 510’s retail storefront is the Dept. of Make Believe, a “magical bureaucracy” where you can pick up items like a License to Dream.
- Curry’s announce new foundation to help under-served Oakland youth
- The Golden State Warriors may have moved to San Francisco. But for Stephen and Ayesha Curry, their hearts are still in Oakland.
- Oakland’s 3 O’Clock Rock music education program heading to Memphis
- An East Bay man has turned his love for rock music into an after-school program and summer camp. It’s called 3 O’Clock Rock. Founder Billy Ribak’s goal to inspire and teach students about music is taking them to new heights as they’ll head to Memphis next week for a concert series where students will perform live gigs themselves.
- Ersie Joyner Fights for Rome
- Oakland’s most decorated police officer is retiring this August, leaving a legacy of substantially reduced gun violence.
California:
- California charter school regulations pass Senate Education Committee after marathon session and intervention by Gov. Newsom
- After a seven-hour hearing and in a room inundated with advocates in color-coordinated T-shirts, the California Senate Education Committee narrowly passed two bills this week that will more strictly regulate charters, including giving local districts greater leeway to deny charter applications.
- Walters: Criticism kills California bill to nix reading teacher test
- SB 614 died a quiet death after being blasted by academic, civil rights and reading disorder groups
- Nearly All of California’s Crises Are Worse in Latino Communities, New Report Says
- Five years ago this month, the demographic face of California changed for the first time in its modern history. Latinos became the state’s largest ethnic group — gaining a newfound dominance, though one that had been expected for decades.
- California Teachers Association board votes out executive director
- In an abrupt and unexpected move, the board of directors of the California Teachers Association, the state’s largest teachers’ union, has voted to terminate Joe Nuñez as its executive director.
- California preschool teachers are asking why ‘cashiers at McDonalds’ get better pay
- More attention paid to childhood education, but still no more money
Other Stories:
- Students Move Further Down School-to-Prison Pipeline With Every School Suspension
- On the school-to-prison pipeline, school suspensions may be a key shut-off valve…That’s because, regardless of students’ past behaviors, every school suspension weakens their connection to school and increases their odds of committing theft, assault, and other crimes. This is the conclusion of a new national longitudinal study published Friday in Justice Quarterly, a journal of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences.
- Black and Hispanic students should take iodine tablets and head east
- To say that the American public education system works for many kids would be true; but saying three of the reactors at Chernobyl never detonated also would be true. Whether you’re looking at PISA, NAEP – you name it, the graphite is on the roof – the reactor is exposed. American Black and Hispanic students in particular should take one iodine pill a day for as long as they last and get as far east as they can.
- ‘This is the agenda of white nationalists’: Four minority congresswomen condemn Trump’s racist remarks
- After being targeted by President Trump with racist tweets — following days of scolding from their own party leaders — four Democratic congresswomen chose to stand together before the cameras and defend their vision for their country.
- Certain Groups of Students Attend Alternative Schools in Greater Proportions Than They Do Other Schools
- Students may attend alternative K-12 public schools due to issues like poor grades and disruptive behavior. Some students attend for a few days to a few years, while others cycle in and out.
- Among other things, we found:
- Enrollment at these schools dropped between school years 2013-14 and 2015-16. Declines in White and Hispanic enrollment accounted for most of the drop
- Some groups, such as Black boys and boys with disabilities, were overrepresented—particularly in schools with a discipline focus
- A lower percentage of alternative schools had support staff (such as counselors and social workers) than nonalternative schools
- Depression in Black Boys Begins Earlier Than You Think
- From 2001 to 2015, the suicide risk for Black boys between the ages of 5 and 11 was two to three times higher than that of White boys, according to a new research letter in JAMA Pediatrics (Bridge, 2018). This concerning trend continues through adolescence as reported by the Nationwide Youth Risk Behavior Survey (Kann et al., 2017). The rates of attempted suicide, including attempts that resulted in an injury, poisoning, or overdose, are 1.2x higher among Black males compared to White males.
- Most Students of Color Have White Teachers. Here’s Pete Buttigieg’s Plan to Change That
- While a majority of U.S. public school students are children of color, most teachers are white women, data show. Would new federal requirements for accountability and transparency about educator hiring practices help change that?
- A Girl, 15, Reported a Sexual Assault, Then the Detective Abused Her, Too
- The investigator, Neil David Kimball, pleaded guilty to a charge of unlawful sexual intercourse with a teenager he met when she reported a sexual assault to the authorities.
- For Teacher Professional Growth, Study the Soil
- To cultivate growth in teachers, we need to understand our teachers and the context in which they work. This simple idea, which teachers apply when designing learning opportunities for students, can get lost when it comes to teacher learning. There seems to be no shortage of cookie cutter professional development that districts purchase to address everything from teaching literacy across the content areas to blended learning to project-based learning. While many outside PD providers have content expertise, most lack what I call contextual expertise.
- Op-Ed: Get children out of cages at the border and into school
- The Trump administration’s campaign of terror against immigrants and asylum seekers worsens by the day.Parents and children continue to be forcibly separated, children sleep in cages and in freezing rooms, some are so traumatized they no longer speak. Late last month, an administration lawyer argued that maintaining “safe and sanitary conditions” for the 13,000 migrant children in U.S. government custody doesn’t necessarily require providing them with soap and a toothbrush.
- In This War to Educate Black and Brown Kids, Are You in or Are You Out?
- Listen, we want and need to be in partnership to alleviate the system of inequity that plagues millions of Americans daily. However, if you are claiming to be an “ally”, then be a good ally. It is completely fine to spend your money however you want but be honest. If you no longer want to help fund this struggle then say that, but to say that you have just now discovered economic inequality is intellectually and morally dishonest.
- Here’s Why President Trump’s Tweets About ‘The Squad’ Are Nothing New for Black Women in Education
- The president’s assault on these four women of color continued well into Monday. I am a Black woman and I’m here to tell you—the microaggression is not all that micro. As I processed the racist rhetoric tweeted from our nation’s highest office, I could not help but think about the words Malcolm X spoke more than 50 years ago: “The most disrespected person in America is the Black woman. The most unprotected person in America is the Black woman. The most neglected person in America is the Black woman.”
- Children Face Foster Care Over School Meal Debt, District Warns
- A Pennsylvania school district notified parents, whose children had a meal debt of $10 or more, of the potential consequence but officials said the letter was not sanctioned by the superintendent.
Resources:
- West Oakland Block Party and School tour next week on 7/26
- Join us for our open house and community BBQ!
What do you think?