LAUSD and Teacher's Union Reach Tentative Agreement
The Girls Academic Leadership Academy will open at the Los Angeles High School campus in 2016.
The LAUSD needs to investigate the Principal who either bullied a parent or did not adequately warn parents of a legitimate threat.
The University of Southern California Marshall School of Business created an online MBA program focusing on emerging online business topics.
Nobel Middle School once again finds itself at the center of a controversy regarding a parent’s right to be involved in the education system
The Board of Education voted to suspend the Academic Performance Index and to evaluate alternatives for measuring school performance.
Paramedics were called to the school after the students got sick.
Tamar Galatzan spent $24.51 per vote and is still facing a runoff. While not on the ballot, I’ll still be fighting for the LAUSD’s students.
Police investigated reports of shots fired near the campus today.
After seven years in office, Tamar Galatzan should be doing more than registering complaints. She should be offering solutions.
Tau Kappa Epsilon is the latest fraternity to be suspended from Cal State Northridge amid a crackdown on hazing following a teen's death.
Students from outside the school's local area will face tougher academic admission standards to reduce enrollment over the next four years.
For the fourth time in five years, Granada Hills Charter High School won the Los Angeles Unified School District Academic Decathlon.
The LAUSD Board approved a policy allowing its attorneys to help students, who came to the U.S. without their parents to, fight deportation.
Incumbent uses office to divert attention from previously scheduled candidate forum.
Starting in 2017 all incoming UC students will have to be vaccinated against measles and a variety of other diseases.
The man who oversees L.A. Unified’s $354 million food program denies allegations of wrongdoing lobbed by the Office of the Inspector General
Despite the lower vaccination rates among affluent communities, there has been no sign of measles in LAUSD schools.
On Saturday, the North Valley Democratic Club awarded Carl Petersen with the North Valley Nova Award.
About 70,000 cases of melanoma are diagnosed annually in the United States, and about 8,000 of those people eventually die of the disease.
Powerful and controversial former school board President Caprice Young takes helm at cash-strapped Magnolia Public Schools.
Too often the LAUSD seems to focus more on branding than actually improving the education that our students receive.
The Board of Education and the Superintendent need to adhere to their assigned roles if change is going to be brought to the LAUSD
Ronald McDonald House Charities of Southern California is offering $338,000 in college scholarships.
This bigger heart comes in the form of a beautiful "Spirit Girl" named Kendall Reitenbach.
Some of the nation's largest school districts jointly banned meals with chicken fed animal byproducts, antibiotics or raised inhumanely.
Can the LAUSD’s massive bureaucracy only serve 640,000 students in 900 schools spread over 720 square miles by blindly enforcing policy?
The approved proposal will raise tuitions for the UC system as much as 5 percent over the next five years.
Students across various University of California campuses have been protesting the proposal.
The Calahan Street School has found the formula to make their school work. In response, the LAUSD has tried to dismantle their success.
The grant will be used as a scholarship for students.
They lag behind the state averages in fitness.
Veterans Day Celebration at Lawrence Middle School Monday, November 10, 2014 10:30 am - 12:30 pm
Is testing more important than learning? Obsessive testing is stealing instructional time from our students.
Sunday, November 23, 2014 from Noon to 4:00 pm
Students have had trouble getting transcripts, and being able to enroll in classes they need.
One fraternity, Pi Kappa Alpha, is suspended.
The money will fund Build at CSUN, a program that aims to inspire students and address racial disparities in biomedicine.
Cortines’ contract with the district calls for him to receive an annual salary of $300,000, which is $50,000 less than John Deasy’s salary.
The agreement covers more than 23,000 instructional faculty, coaches, librarians and counselors on the 23 CSU campuses.