Saturday, October 11, 2014

LAUSD OFFICIALS DISCUSS CLASS SCHEDULING PROBLEMS AT JEFFERSON HIGH

Troubled school

Los Angeles Unified School District officials spent time Thursday discuss class-scheduling problems at Jefferson High School in South Los Angeles after a judge Wednesday ordered the state Department of Education to step in and solve the problems.

By Wave Wire Services | Los Angeles Wave | http://bit.ly/Zli5fn

Courtesy photo Troubled school >

Posted: Saturday, October 11, 2014 11:00 am | LOS ANGELES — A team of Los Angeles Unified School District staff members met with administrators and teachers at Jefferson High School Thursday to discuss class-scheduling problems that prompted a judge to order the state Department of Education to immediately intervene and resolve.

According to the district, participants in the meeting “identified any resources needed to meet the academic needs of students. The district looks forward to sharing this plan with the state, as outlined by the court.

 

Where's the story? 

South Korea >

PointsMentioned Map

2 Points Mentioned

< Los Angeles

9,580 km - Distance from Seoul to Los Angeles, CA

On Wednesday, Alameda Superior Court Judge George Hernandez Jr. issued a temporary restraining order requiring the state to resolve the problem, requiring the state education officials to meet with LAUSD Superintendent John Deasy by Monday to develop a plan and then present options to the district’s Board of Education by Tuesday.

Deasy was scheduled to leave Thursday for a trip to South Korea.

The order was prompted by scheduling problems that have persisted since the beginning of the school year, leaving some students unable to attend courses they need to graduate, and other students assigned to so-called “content-less” classes or even sent home. Some students were assigned to classes they had already passed.

Hernandez wrote in his ruling that the scheduling problems at Jefferson High School are due “in part to Jefferson’s [and/or LAUSD's] inability to implement new scheduling software,” a reference to the district's troubled MiSiS computerized student information system that has made Deasy a target of criticism by the teachers' union and some students.

Deasy and the district were even rebuked by the judge, who wrote there was “no evidence of any organized effort to help those students who have been assigned to courses several weeks into the semester to catch up to their peers.”

Deasy on Wednesday called the court’s order a “victory for youth.”

“This is why I fought two years ago to have students have a full schedule, and why we are trying to negotiate the right to set a master schedule that meets individual school needs. We especially look to state Superintendent Tom Torlakson to support full and rigorous schedules for all youth,” he said.

But the teachers' union, United Teachers Los Angeles, lashed out at his handling of the Jefferson High situation, and said his decision to support the lawsuit was an effort to “mask his own culpability.”

In August, hundreds of students staged a protest at Jefferson High over the scheduling problems and demanded that steps be taken to resolve the problem.

“How could John Deasy possibly not have known [about the scheduling problems] when students walked out of class in protest and the media was filled with reports on the chaos for weeks?” UTLA President Alex Caputo-Pearl said.

Caputo-Pearl lashed out at Deasy on the topic last week, saying it was hypocritical for the superintendent to speak in support of the lawsuit “when he is singularly responsible for having rushed headlong into implementing MiSiS, which still, multiple weeks into the school year, has students without schedules and prospective college students without transcripts.”

Issues with the MiSiS system, coupled with the troubled rollout of the district's $1 billion effort to provide iPads or laptops to all students and staffers, have raised questions about Deasy's future with the district.

The school board met behind closed doors recently to discuss Deasy’s upcoming performance review, and sources told the Los Angeles Times the board instructed its attorneys to meet with the superintendent and discuss a possible deal for his departure.

Deasy's employment is scheduled to be discussed in another closed-door session this coming Tuesday, although Deasy will still be on his South Korea trip. His performance review is scheduled for Oct. 21.

Deasy's contract with the district lasts until June 2016, but it can be terminated by the board at any time with 30 days notice.

No comments:

Post a Comment