Bay Area Most California teacher preparation programs flunk math instruction By Diana Lambert | EdSource | May 17, 2022 A National Council on Teacher Quality report reviewed 1,100 teacher preparation programs at tertiary institutions nationwide.
Bay Area COVID stipends cause outcry at Alameda County Office of Education By Carolyn Jones | EdSource | May 17, 2022 Managers, not union members, got the majority of the initial COVID stipends in the Alameda County Office of Education.
Schools Report raises questions about sustainability of the California public education system By Karen D'Souza | EdSource | May 16, 2022 Structural challenges in the state’s finance system, combined with flaws in education governance, threaten the long-term outlook.
Bay Area Billions more for California schools, colleges under Newsom’s revised budget By John Fensterwald, Karen D'Souza, Ali Tadayon, Michael Burke, Ashley A. Smith | EdSource | May 16, 2022 One-time and ongoing Proposition 98 funding would be an unprecedented $35 million more than the Legislature appropriated a year ago.
gavin newsom Behind Newsom’s $301 billion budget, big financial concerns By Emily Hoeven | CalMatters | May 16, 2022 California has a whopping $100 billion surplus, but looming financial threats could threaten the state’s economy in just a few years.
Bay Area Students lobby for bill to ease university housing crunch — but would it work? By Ryan Loyola | CalMatters | May 13, 2022 Student activists say SB 886 would fast-track campus housing projects, which can get tangled in lawsuits.
Arts & Entertainment Noted author Jesmyn Ward to give keynote during final Mills College commencement By Keith Burbank | Bay City News Foundation | May 12, 2022 Ward is the only woman and person of color to win the National Book Award for fiction two times.
Education Substitute teacher shortage hits California’s low-income students harder By Joe Hong | CalMatters | May 12, 2022 Teacher shortages reached a crisis point during the omicron surge, particularly for schools with many high-needs students.
Bay Area Do the rich see inequality as a zero-sum game? By Jeanne Kuang | CalMatters | May 12, 2022 A UC Berkeley inequality study finds that, although efforts to reduce inequality are popular, many people in “advantaged groups” resist equity policies, believing they’ll be harmed.
education Challenged by COVID, the Class of 2022 looks ahead to better days By Diana Lambert | EdSource | May 10, 2022 Resourceful high school seniors started businesses, took college courses during school closures.