Adolescent Depression and the Schools We Need

Roughly 11% of US adolescent students suffer from clinical depression according to a recent study. To quote the findings, “Studies estimate that each year up to one in five U.S. children experience a mental disorder. Approximately $247 billion is spent addressing the mental health challenges of children. Depression is one of the most common emotional health…


What to look for in 2016 from OUSD

Last week we recapped OUSD’s 2015, reviewing the Good the Bad and the Ugly, this week we look forward to the year that could be, and what success could look like.  So in no particular order are our priorities for 2016. Fix/improve special education services Simplify enrollment for families and facilitate matching Stabilize high needs…


The Good, the Bad, and the ugly in OUSD’s 2015

Hope, change, tragedy, success and rancor marked Oakland Unified’s 2015.   The arc is seeming to bend towards justice, but given the persistence and depth of inequality, nobody can be satisfied with the rate of progress, or that any better outcomes are guaranteed unless we work for them. The Good The Board Hired a Strong, Visionary…


Post’s Op-Ed on charter schools and special education doesn’t serve reality or students

It’s disappointing to continually hear the half-truths and what I will call “misconceptions” around charter schools and special education students in Oakland.  A little fact checking would have helped—but let me do some here. Many of these were raised in a recent op-ed in the Oakland Post in the op-ed, Charter Schools in Oakland do…


Parent’s Voice-Let’s Make Our Voices Heard on Improving School Enrollment in Oakland

Part of what makes Oakland great is how our city celebrates equity and diversity. But there is a major part of public education in our city that does not fit with our values: the way families find and enroll in Oakland’s public schools. The current process is unfair, disproportionately disadvantaging parents who work multiple jobs,…