So begins the countdown to Thanksgiving. We found a few events tonight that you can take advantage of before leaving town or the guests arrive. Tonight in LA: ALOUD welcomes Margaret Wertheim and Jim Carter on Alternative Science; a beagle fundraiser at Tony’s Darts Away; a documentary panel discussion and seminar; and It’s a School Night at Bardot. Read on for all the details. more › Read more from the original source: Pencil This In: The Music of Bob Mould at Walt Disney Concert Hall and a Beagle Rescue
Posts Tagged ‘ school ’
Week in Review: Mills Act Pilot Program, Subway Spending and School Board Election Results
The City Council allocated extra funding to fight a subway from going under Beverly Hills High School while the latest ballot tally in the school board election identified the three candidates with the most votes. Read about that and more in the top stories from Nov. 13-19. 1. The council has marked Dec. 19 as the date it will approve or reject the Jim Falk Lexus dealership’s bid to expand its Wilshire Boulevard facility . 2. A nonrefundable application fee of $1,500 has been established for those who want to participate in the city’s Mills Act Pilot Program. 3. In more council news, the panel has appointed an additional $650,000 to fund efforts to stop a subway from going under BHHS. 4. The latest tally of the Beverly Hills Unified School District Board of Education election indicates that Brian Goldberg, Noah Margo and Lewis Hall made the cut . 5. The city’s Bicycle Ad Hoc Committee met to discuss the development of bike routes in Beverly Hills . Also, shop local this holiday season at places like Tom’s Toys to support small businesses in Beverly Hills . Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . Visit link: Week in Review: Mills Act Pilot Program, Subway Spending and School Board Election Results
Extra, Extra: Fraternity Hazing, College Rivalry Week and Free Pie
In tonight’s Extra, Extra, a UC Davis student sues the school, UCLA and USC gear up for the big game, and we’re told there will be pie. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › View original post here: Extra, Extra: Fraternity Hazing, College Rivalry Week and Free Pie
Write-In Candidate’s Camp Is Confident in School Board Victory
Beverly Hills voters are poised to make history if they elect a write-in candidate in the Nov. 8 Beverly Hills Unified School District Board of Education race. “As of tonight the official numbers are not yet announced. But round-the-clock canvassing and some back-of-napkin tallying indicates that we’re headed to the School Board!” Noah Margo , the election’s only write-in candidate, posted on his Facebook campaign website late Friday. Should Margo get elected, he would become the second person in Beverly Hills to win a public office through a write-in campaign. Such campaigns are challenging because voters must be educated how to properly fill in a candidate’s name on a ballot. Also, a write-in candidate does not have his or her statement printed on the ballot. Mayor Barry Brucker was the first resident to win a write-in campaign when he was elected to the BHUSD Board of Education in 1997. Margo, a Beverly Vista parent who announced his write-in candidacy on Sept. 23, has spent two days watching the vote count at the Los Angeles Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk’s office, according to his campaign website. Also in the race for three seats on the five-member Board of Education are incumbent Brian Goldberg , El Rodeo parent Frances Bilak and educator/producer Lewis Hall . Because write-in and provisional ballots were not counted until after the polls closed Tuesday, no final election tally is available. Preliminary results released Friday afternoon on the Registrar-Recorder website show that Goldberg has 1,247 votes (40.04 percent), Bilak has 683 votes (21.93 percent) and Hall has 642 votes (20.26 percent). Andy Licht, who dropped out of the race—though his name and statement remained on the ballot —has 542 votes (17.41 percent). The next election tally is scheduled to be posted at 1 p.m. on Monday. More than 1,000 write-in ballots were received by the Registrar-Recorder’s office, making it possible that Margo will come in second after Goldberg’s commanding lead in the vote count. Some Margo supporters are already predicting a second-place finish. “Goldberg, Margo and…? The real drama now is in the race for third. Too close to call,” Planning Commissioner Brian Rosenstein wrote Friday on Margo’s campaign website. Rosenstein, who endorsed Goldberg and Margo, accompanied the latter to the Registrar-Recorder’s office on Thursday, according to Margo’s site. Bilak, who recently lost several high-profile endorsements over a controversy involving a candidate debate, feels confident she will get a seat, according to her campaign blog . “As of 4:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 11, 2011, I am still in second place for one of the three seats for the Beverly Hills School Board,” she wrote. “Hopefully, Monday will be the final counting of the remaining 100 or so ballots and I will remain in second place.” Neither Goldberg nor Hall had any election comments on their websites. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . Follow this link: Write-In Candidate’s Camp Is Confident in School Board Victory
Police Release Sketch of Elysian Park Sexual Assault Suspect
Porn Star Sasha Grey Reads to Compton First-Graders, School Denies It
When you think of Sasha Grey, a number of things might come to mind: violent sex. Playing a prostitute for Steven Soderbergh. Going buck naked on “Entourage.” But if you don’t immediately conjure up an image of her reading a storybook to a group of first-graders, you will now. TMZ reports that Grey was brought in to Emerson Elementary School in Compton on November 2 as part of the Read Across America program… more › See original here: Porn Star Sasha Grey Reads to Compton First-Graders, School Denies It
Academy Confirms: Billy Crystal Will Return As Oscars Host For 9th Time
Agustin Duran: Education Window: An Option to Start Getting Involved in Our Kids’ Future
If you live in Los Angeles and your child goes to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the chances that he/she will not be able to participate in a high school ceremony are high. Forget about them going to college and obtaining a bachelor’s degree. For years, the second largest district with the most Latino students in the whole country has been fighting to increase their graduation rate that not too long ago reached 43%. Today, it is at 56% according to Monica Garcia, LAUSD president. This means, that for every two students who start elementary or kindergarten at the LAUSD, one would not be able to graduate from high school and probably putting an end to their education. Currently, the district has over 700,000 students from which almost 75% are Latinos and 92% of the kids that are part of the English as a second language program speak Spanish (most of them from Mexico). In other words, if you are an immigrant in Los Angeles and speak Spanish at home, your kids have a big risk of not finishing their academic goals. If we don’t do something about it, they may become part of that 50% that won’t graduate in the future. The worst part is that the problem does not end there because after many congratulations for the students who finally graduate, less than 50% will finish with a bachelor’s degree. This situation reduced the opportunity for our children to become a doctor, engineer, teacher or whatever career they want to pursue because out of 10 kids that start school today, only 2.5 may end with a bachelor degree. As a Latino parent this is not acceptable. But what should we do: blame the teacher, the district or ourselves? Probably a better question may be: Can we afford to keep blaming and pointing fingers while our children keep dropping out of school and in a worst case scenario ending pregnant, in jail or drugs? I’ve had the opportunity to cover and follow the LAUSD for years and until now, there is not one board member, teacher or administrator that hasn’t said that they will do the impossible to increase the graduation rates, but so far and after 10 years we still have the same ups and downs. Should we wait until the school district does things right? Recently, I was at the Mexican Consulate in Los Angeles where dignitaries inaugurated the Education Window, an office where parents will have the opportunity to get involved in their kids’ education and help them to accomplish their academic goals. In the window they have preschool, elementary, intermediate, high school and college information and according to the Mexican Consul David Figueroa, every day close to 800 people visit the facility, hoping they will be interested in participating in their kids’ education. Also, one person will be there providing information on how to get parents involved, the options parents may have to get their kids into programs that will help children to not get behind and how to encourage them to continue all the way; to finish their higher education. The day of the inauguration, five aggressive advocators for the education delivered their speech and almost every single one of them had a story of sacrifice and story where they remembered their parents encouraging them to go to school; stories where they had to live with extreme limitations and sometimes work at an early age. They didn’t speak about the good or the bad school system they went during their first years of school. They remember the sacrifices, the support and the work their parents did for them to finish college; those images and memories always fed their will to continue their education until they finished with a Bachelor degree on their hands. David Figueroa grew up in Sonora while his dad was working as a bracero in San Jose California. With the support of his mother, he obtained his master degree in business administration and years later he went back to San Jose, California as a Consul representing his country. Now, he is the consul in Los Angeles and he is the one that after a couple months leading the office realized the risk that LAUSD was taking so he launched the Education Window. “We know education is the way to empower our community and this is what we are going to do here, but we need your help”, the consul challenged the parents to use the Education Window not only for their kids’ benefit, but for the whole family and community. The stories continued the rest of the evening, all of them inspired and praising their parents for what they are today. If we do not want to see our children as another statistic we need to get involved in our children’s education. Otherwise, in 10 years we will continue to talk about the bad situation of the school district still is. It does not matter how poor we are, where we come from or what language we speak, if our kids see the sacrifice we are doing to put food on the table and a roof over their head and hear our words of encouragement for them to finish school all the time. With those memories, I believe our children will have enough to continue and not only to finish high school but to finish college. If you do not know how to do it or where to start, go to the Education Window at the Mexican Consulate in Los Angeles. I am sure they will give you enough support to make the difference in your child’s future. Agustin Duran is an editor at Latinocalifornia.com and has been a journalist for the last 15 years in LA. Visit link: Agustin Duran: Education Window: An Option to Start Getting Involved in Our Kids’ Future
S.B. COUNTY: Breads of the World exhibited
In a new exhibit titled ” The World of Breads ,” culinary school students at The Art Institute of California-Inland Empire have elevated loaves of bread to the status of art work in the school’s visual arts gallery. View original post here: S.B. COUNTY: Breads of the World exhibited
Letter to the Editor: Demand for Tutors Reflects Poorly on City Schools
Dear Editor, Regarding the Nov. 8 school board election ; why has there been so little discussion of why Beverly Hills parents have to spend so much money hiring tutors to teach their children? During a recent KBEV broadcast of a Q & A session with the school board candidates, one parent exclaimed she was “paying tutors up the wazoo!” From my own observations, a shockingly high number of BHUSD students have tutors, even in kindergarten. Why? From what I hear on the “parents grapevine,” it’s because our children are not being taught the necessary academic material or not taught it well enough, so concerned parents hire tutors. Besides being expensive for parents, this need for tutors indicates something is wrong with the district’s administration, teaching and curriculum. One way to uncover what is wrong is for a simple (and anonymous) survey to be sent to every BHUSD parent asking them about their use of tutors for their children. The survey will help inform school administrators about teaching quality and curriculum weaknesses. And it will clarify who is teaching our children and what. I further believe such a survey will reveal that the curriculum in B.H. schools is weak and often confusing. (Has the school board tried to understand the current third grade math curriculum?) Too many Beverly Hills parents are falsely comforted by the district’s high end API scores. BHUSD’s 2010 average API score was 891 out of a possible 1,000. API scores, however, are not always an accurate gauge of a school’s quality. API scores don’t, for example, account for factors such as wealth. In wealthy areas like Beverly Hills, all parents speak English and so can communicate easily with teachers and can read their children’s school work. Our parents are focused on education and have the time to help their children, such as supervising their homework. Most importantly, Beverly Hills parents can afford to hire tutors. Compare these circumstances to a less-wealthy immigrant area, where the parents don’t speak English, don’t understand the school system, are working two or three jobs so cannot help with their child’s homework and cannot afford to hire tutors. If Beverly Hills parents were to stop hiring tutors or spending so many hours “supervising” their children’s homework, Beverly Hills schools’ API scores would collapse. Now is the time for parents to learn why the use of tutors is so rife in the district. Until that happens, local parents will be paying dearly for tutors and our children won’t be receiving the education they deserve to get—at their school. Scott McConnell BHUSD Parent Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . See the original post: Letter to the Editor: Demand for Tutors Reflects Poorly on City Schools