The Oakland Education Week in Review: 2/17-2/23

Last week, lots on the Mack closure and underlying issues, the science of reading, and some personal stories, the data on API students, the rise in autism cases and the need to reform SpEd in Ca, the other Prop 13, and how you can help Mack students travel to HBCUs, and much more, please read, share and get involved

Oakland:

California:

Other Stories:

How You Can Help:

Oakland:

  • Why Aren’t Kids Reading: Science Denial & Racism’s Impact on Black Students
    • Topics: Structured Literacy, Integration and Expectations, Learner’s Bias, Dyslexia, K-12 Finances, Science & Research Consensus, Educator Prep, and Vulnerability.
  • Parents graduate college after overcoming drug addiction
  • One Grandmother’s Struggle with Reading, and the Push for Literacy for All
    • Connie Williams shares her story of graduation from an Oakland high school unable to read or write.
    • “You shouldn’t have to live like that.” She has been pushing for better for her family.
    • “I’ve been singing the same song for so long, from my kids to my grandkids.” And she finally feels like she is being heard, when she connected with The Oakland REACH and their Literacy for All campaign.
  • Rocquel Johnson, Foster Youth Advisory and Parent Student Advisory Committees in Oakland Unified School District
    • “One of the things I always tell any parent—whether they’re foster youth or not—jump in. Jump into the work. We really need to have people who care enough about our students, who want to see policies that support them to….be the best they can.” RocQuel Johnson, a long-standing leader on the Foster Youth Advisory and Parent Student Advisory Committees in Oakland Unified School District has plunged into the work locally.
  • Overcoming History; How the Cole Family Moved from Shelters to Graduate Degrees
    • Podcast from Dr. Boyce Watkins, talking history, challenges, the hustle and overcoming with our own Dr. Charles Cole III. Please take a look.
  • How are Oakland schools serving Asian Pacific Islander students?
    • At first glance, most people would categorize me as being a part of the “model minority,” a term used to describe Asian Americans, including Indian Americans, as being a shining example of hard work whose example other minority groups should follow. It’s a myth rooted in deeply harmful stereotypes. Look a layer deeper and that myth is quickly dispelled. In the 1800s, my ancestors were taken from India to the Fiji Islands by British colonists to work as indentured laborers on the islands’ sugar cane fields. My family spent over a century in Fiji before my parents migrated to the Bay Area. While I was born and raised in the Bay, I can feel the islands coursing through my blood, and it’s the place I feel most at home. 
  • OUSD Spelling Bee Winners Are Now Preparing for Alameda County Spelling Bee
    • Some excited OUSD students are getting ready for the next phase of their competition in their chosen craft, spelling. Six young people from across the District took first, second and third place honors in different divisions at the 2020 OUSD Spelling Bee on February 6.
  • Councilmember McElhaney Weighs in on the Mack Closure
    • Today, OUSD announced a precautionary closure of McClymonds High School after tests revealed that a cancer-causing chemical called trichloroethylene (TCE) was found in the onsite groundwater. Director Jumoke Hinton Hodge contacted me to let me know that teachers and students were notified of the temporary closure on Wednesday night. 
  • Community meeting hastily called over McClymonds campus contamination
    • California EPA officials told community members Thursday that they will do extensive testing after a chemical linked to cancer was found in groundwater underneath McClymonds High School in West Oakland. 
  • Cancer-Causing Chemical Found At Oakland McClymonds High School; Campus Closed For Testing
    • A leaching, cancer-causing chemical has been found at McClymonds High School in Oakland, prompting the temporary closure of the campus, according to officials.
  • Environmental Racism is the Cause, Mack’s 38 Nearby HazMat sites, and the Debt the City Owes West Oakland
    • The closure of McClymonds High School for toxic groundwater is a predictable tragedy.  Government policies around redlining and zoning created “ghettos” and put hazardous industries next to and within these communities.  Things that would never happen in the Hills happened as matter of policy in the West. As a result Mack has 38 Hazardous Materials sites within a half mile of its campus. 
  • Black History Month: A Celebration of African Heritage at EOYDC
    • Please join us at the East Oakland Youth Development Center for this free community event celebrating African Heritage this Black History Month. Featuring performances and presentations by EOYDC Youth and special guests
  • Air Testing Underway at McClymonds High School This Weekend; Preliminary Tests Results Are Promising
    • Days after McClymonds High School was shut down to students and staff, the campus was bustling with activity for much of Saturday, February 22, as experts in toxic materials and environmental health took dozens of air samples throughout the school buildings. Because of a special piece of equipment, the test results could be seen within minutes. Although these are preliminary test results, they have the experts breathing a sigh of relief. “There is no indication of TCE (trichloroethylene) in any of the areas we have tested so far,” said Cheryl Prowell from the California Department of Toxic Substances Control.All the test locations show no evidence of TCE in the air. Prowell added that they didn’t expect to see TCE in the air on campus. “Based on the groundwater results, high concentrations in indoor air would be unlikely but we wanted to use caution and check.”
  • Oakland Parents Demand Answers After Toxic Groundwater Forces McClymonds High To Close
    • Emotions were raw Thursday night among parents demanding answers to questions surrounding toxic groundwater found under McClymonds High School in Oakland.

California:

Other Stories:

  • Michael Bloomberg is running for president. What you should know about the billionaire’s education record in New York City
    • Curious to learn more about Michael Bloomberg’s education views since he announced his bid for the presidency? You can read the latest on his proposals — as well as what other presidential candidates have said about education — in our 2020 tracker.
  • The Law of School Catchment Areas
    • While legal and economics scholars have assessed the drawing of school district lines, and others have examined the education policy effects of school catchment areas, this paper’s unique contribution is in describing and assessing the legal and theoretical underpinnings of school catchment areas. First, I will use three large urban school districts – those in New York City, Washington, D.C., and San Francisco – as case studies to analyze the use of catchment areas for school assignments. Next, I will examine the conceptual justifications for using school catchment areas in the context of local government theory. Finally, I will evaluate potential reforms for catchment areas that would decrease racial segregation. In sum, this paper will argue that reliance on school catchment areas for student assignment is a persistent yet unjustified public policy choice.
  • ‘The Secret Shame’: Educators say student achievement rates are divided along racial lines
    • Places like San Francisco, Seattle, Minneapolis—which boast a very strong economy and very strong levels of education for white kids—are doing so poorly for kids at the bottom of the well.

How You Can Help:

  • McClymonds High School HBCU Tour 2020
    • Located in West Oakland, CA, McClymonds has a long tradition of brilliance, from Hall of Fame basketball player Bill Russell to MC Hammer. In an area with prestigious schools like UC Berkeley,  Stanford and San Francisco State, however, our mostly black student population has shared that these local colleges and universities lack a large black student population. As a result, students are also seeking out colleges that represent and reflect black culture, history, entrepreneurship and struggle.
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