Too many California high school graduates are not college ready. Recent SAT data reported in the LA Times, showed that only 41% of test takers were college ready, with sadly predictable achievement gaps. A paltry 20.2% of Latinos and 21.4% of African American met the standard. Mind you not every student takes the test, only…
Dirk Tillotson
OUSD’s Strong Year That Has Gone Unnoticed
Though you might not hear it through the grumbling, Oakland schools had a pretty darn good year last year. To recap, OUSD signed a strong multi-year agreement with labor, begun to address the most challenged schools, utilized data in a more robust and public way, hired a strong and visionary superintendent, expanded learning time, and…
Return to New Orleans
10 years ago, I drove into a darkened New Orleans. Literally. The streetlights were off, traffic lights non- functional, and there were still large swaths of the city with no power. It’s hard to explain what it was like. Driving down the I-10, and seeing the increasing devastation in the countryside, as you approach, and…
Witness to New Orleans- republishing a photo essay I did in NOLA post Katrina
WITNESS TO NEW ORLEANS by Dirk Tillotson Not even the birds have returned to the Ninth Ward. Warm summer winds lap through the scores of neighborhoods that lay in rubble in what was once New Orleans. Driving through block after block, hardly a sign of life. Homes ripped from their moorings, perching…
The Upcoming Pain from the Common Core, and Why it’s Worth it
“I feel like a failure”, one of our top teachers muttered with downcast eyes. They had just gotten a glimpse of the data trickling out from the latest tests in California, the first that reflected the new, more rigorous, Common Core curriculum standards. This from a teacher who is on top of their game, has…