Los Angeles Times

LAUSD’s charges

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Re “Two leaders at turning point to set schools’ fate,” Oct. 17

I taught in Los Angeles in the 1960s. I chose to work in the “inner city” because I hoped to make a difference.

One year I was assigned 43 sixth-graders in a bungalow with no cross breeze and, of course, no air conditioni­ng. Some students were still struggling to write their own names while others were as much as two grade levels ahead in reading. Some students didn’t come to school because they lacked enough clothing; others used a local gas station’s bathrooms. Some things have improved; others have not. My point is that not just teaching is at the root of low test scores. It is extremely challengin­g for educators to help students who struggle just to get the the basic necessitie­s of life. Charter schools have more control over which students attend their campuses, while teachers at traditiona­l public schools have a lot more on their plates than creating lessons and grading papers.

Teachers deserve higher pay and more support. Carol Kohler Agoura Hills

Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Austin Beutner seems to worry a lot about money. He says the school district is “teetering on the edge of insolvency” and therefore cannot fulfill every contract proposal made by United Teachers Los Angeles.

The teachers union president, Alex CaputoPear­l, wants the district to spend some of its $1.7billion reserve to reduce class sizes and fully staff schools.

Those of us who live paycheck to paycheck or have no paycheck at all worry about money too. Beutner, a millionair­e many times over, draws an annual salary of $350,000. Why are we paying him so much? Clive Leeman

Ojai

If a teachers strike does happen, the students and the district will be the losers.

The money appears to be there for teacher raises and the increased staffing that is necessary for schools to operate effectivel­y. To blame teachers for low test scores is not the answer to improving the district, and the teachers do deserve more support.

Charters have been allowed to drain students and funding from the district, preventing LAUSD from being a viable option for many students and parents. Blame should fall not only on teachers, but also on everyone who allowed this to happen.

However, Beutner needs to know a little more about Caputo-Pearl, who “recounts his distress at being transferre­d from his beloved job at Crenshaw High.” I was the principal at Crenshaw then, and Caputo-Pearl organized several student protests. So much for valuable instructio­nal time.

I do not doubt that Caputo-Pearl is ready for a strike. Charles T. Didinger

Manhattan Beach The writer was an LAUSD employee for 40 years.

 ?? Los Angeles Times ?? L.A. UNIFIED Supt. Austin Beutner, left, and United Teachers Los Angeles’ Alex Caputo-Pearl.
Los Angeles Times L.A. UNIFIED Supt. Austin Beutner, left, and United Teachers Los Angeles’ Alex Caputo-Pearl.
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Los Angeles Times

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