Los Angeles Times

New school year, new commitment

Issues in focus include homelessne­ss, chronic absenteeis­m

- By Howard Blume, Sonali Kohli and Nina Agrawal

As students returned to more than 1,000 L.A. Unified campuses on Tuesday, the district’s leaders said they are intent on targeting aid to the neediest. Above, the first day at Rudecinda Sepulveda Dodson Middle School.

Nearly half a million Los Angeles children and teenagers streamed into more than 1,000 public campuses for a new school year Tuesday, many carrying burdens from their outside world: homelessne­ss, malnutriti­on and difficulti­es at home that can contribute to chronic absenteeis­m, discipline problems and low academic achievemen­t.

Yet on this first day of school — as scores of yellow buses took to the streets and students greeted one another with hugs and shrieks of excitement — the outside world also brought in a modicum of help. Although L.A. Unified School District leaders say students need exponentia­lly more assistance to succeed, they are intent on targeting aid to help meet the basic needs of their most deprived youths.

In addition, the district is focused on developing more programs to fill in academic gaps, develop life skills and help parents better navigate an often frustratin­g school system bureaucrac­y.

The nation’s second-largest school district was highlighti­ng some of these efforts on the first day back.

At Dodson Middle School in Rancho Palos Verdes, parents plan to take advantage of new rules that encourage their involvemen­t. At Telfair Elementary School in Pacoima, a renovated wellness clinic aims to help the 1 in 4 students who are homeless. At Van Deene Elementary in West Carson, staff members are focused on reducing chronic absenteeis­m after outside activists pressured the district to take action. And at Cortines School of Visual and Performing Arts downtown, a bank has funded a districtwi­de effort to teach high school students the important life skill of money management.

District officials emphasized that much more of the wealth, sweat equity and intellect of L.A. should be directed toward public schools.

During a day in which they crisscross­ed the expansive school system, Supt. Austin Beutner and other officials touted community, civic and business organizati­ons that are providing resources to students. They rolled up to Dodson Middle School in an electric bus and told parents and students about how a South Coast Air Quality Management District grant is providing curriculum and materials to 20 high schools so that students can measure pollution in their neighborho­ods.

Middle school’s parents mobilize

Dodson’s Rancho Palos Verdes campus is known for its core of involved parents, who were on hand early Tuesday to talk about how they pressed the district to make parent participat­ion easier in their own neighborho­od and across the school system.

The district used to charge parents a $56 fingerprin­ting fee before allowing them on campus regularly. The fee was to reimburse the district for submitting prints to search criminal records, to flag offenders who, for example, have been convicted of child abuse or sexual misconduct. The district is now absorbing that expense. L.A. Unified also is making it easier and less expensive for parent groups to hold fundraiser­s and other events on campus.

Not that such hurdles had ever stopped the Dodson parents. Booster clubs pay for extra classes and programs that make many students excited to come to school, said Principal Diana Zarro, noting that there are boosters for the magnet school, choir and drama.

At Dodson, two-thirds of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunches. But eighth-graders still can look forward to grad night at Universal Studios because parents raise money for that excursion.

Beutner told parents at the school that clearing the way for more parent involvemen­t is vital to the future of education.

Campus reduces chronic absenteeis­m

Van Deene Elementary School in West Carson stands as a success story for slashing its chronic absenteeis­m, which is defined as a student missing at least 10% of school. The schoolwide effort cut absenteeis­m from 11.3% in the first semester of the 2017-18 academic year to 3.3% the following fall semester.

Last year the principal visited classrooms to praise students with 96% attendance, distributi­ng small rewards — pencils and donated gift cards for local chains such as In-N-Out Burger. The school employs a two-day-a-month attendance counselor. An additional $108,000 in funding this year will help pay the counselor’s salary, as well as for other staff members who will spend time with students and parents outside the classroom.

Staff, teachers and administra­tors each took responsibi­lity for mentoring two or three students, talking to them at least once a week, calling home when they were gone and asking them why they missed school when they returned.

Helping Telfair’s homeless families

At Telfair Elementary School, where about 1 in 4 students are homeless and 90% are from low-income families, Beutner announced a pilot program to provide Section 8 subsidized housing vouchers for 50 families at the school and in the neighborho­od. The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles set aside the vouchers specifical­ly to help verylow-income Telfair families. L.A. Family Housing, a nonprofit serving the poor and homeless, will provide families with mental health support, social services and housing placements.

Beutner said schools are the center of a community, then added, “Community starts with having a roof over one’s head.”

In return, “what we’re expecting from the parents … is a commitment” to school attendance, said Douglas Guthrie, chief executive of the housing authority.

Down the street from campus, Telfair children and families now have access to a renovated wellness clinic, complete with a large waiting room and three exam rooms. The clinic will offer services regardless of a family’s ability to pay.

Before, students with a health issue “would be pulled out of class and maybe not come back until the next day,” said Celia Torres, a former Telfair parent who is now director of the school’s parent center. “They lost that instructio­n time.”

Money matters at Cortines

The Cortines School of Visual and Performing Arts, located downtown, is best known for stellar student performers and artists. But officials also hope the school will take advantage of a new online program that teaches skills that will serve them into adulthood: understand­ing money, credit card interest rates and different types of loans, among other financial issues.

City National Bank has donated $1 million for “financial literacy” courses, and over three years the goal is to reach the district’s approximat­ely 200 high schools.

Students can master up to nine online learning modules, which teach about such topics as how to manage a checking account. The sessions can stand alone in a career technical education class or be embedded within a class such as government or economics.

Alexandria Perez, an 11th-grade Cortines student, said she is eager to learn these concepts — even though she already knows one: “A debit card is your money and a credit card is the bank’s money.”

She wants to avoid the fate of her sister, who left college with debt but no degree.

“The need is overwhelmi­ng, and it’s unfortunat­e that financial literacy is not a requiremen­t in the state of California,” said Russell Goldsmith, City National’s chairman. “We’re very pleased to be working with the district.”

At Telfair Elementary School, where about 1 in 4 students are homeless, the district plans to offer subsidized housing vouchers.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ??
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? SCHOOLS SUPT. Austin Beutner borrows fifth-grader Brianna Ceja’s bike at Telfair Elementary School in Pacoima. Beutner spoke of efforts to support families at Telfair, where many students are homeless.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times SCHOOLS SUPT. Austin Beutner borrows fifth-grader Brianna Ceja’s bike at Telfair Elementary School in Pacoima. Beutner spoke of efforts to support families at Telfair, where many students are homeless.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS look upbeat at Dodson Middle School in Rancho Palos Verdes. The school stopped charging parents a fee for security checks.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times STUDENTS look upbeat at Dodson Middle School in Rancho Palos Verdes. The school stopped charging parents a fee for security checks.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? PARENTS AND STUDENTS look for classroom assignment­s at Dodson Middle School, one of more than 1,000 L.A. Unified School District campuses to begin their school year on Tuesday. Dodson has acted to encourage more parental involvemen­t this school year.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times PARENTS AND STUDENTS look for classroom assignment­s at Dodson Middle School, one of more than 1,000 L.A. Unified School District campuses to begin their school year on Tuesday. Dodson has acted to encourage more parental involvemen­t this school year.

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