How will L.A. schools handle remote learning during COVID? Ask L.A. Times reporters
How will L.A. schools handle remote learning during COVID? Ask L.A. Times reporters
When instruction resumes at Los Angeles’s public schools this month, students and teachers will experience a drastically different school day, all thanks to the coronavirus pandemic. Reporters Howard Blume and Paloma Esquivel have been covering the scramble to restart schools as well as the pandemic’s impact on colleges, students of color and teachers.
At 1 p.m. PDT, Blume and Esquivel will be live on YouTube and Facebook to answer your questions about their work, their recent coverage of the LAUSD’s tentative remote-learning deal, and their reporting about disparities in online learning.
Visit our YouTube page or our Facebook page to share your questions ahead of time and to sign up to receive an alert when the video begins. You may also leave your questions in the comments at the bottom of this article.
Here is some of Blume’s recent work:
L.A. Board of Education approves agreement with union for structured online teaching. Critics say it needlessly shortens the traditional school day.
Reactions ranged from relief to disbelief from some LAUSD parents after the district and United Teachers Los Angeles struck a deal Monday for online learning.
Students will have a more predictable learning schedule under an agreement between the teachers union and L.A. Unified amid the coronavirus outbreak.
Officials released on Friday the latest draft of an ethnic studies curriculum, nearly a year after the original version became controversial. The latest iteration retains a primary focus on four racial/ethnic groups but attempts to be more inclusive, while trying to avoid flashpoints related to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict.
Here is some of Esquivel’s recent work:
A first-of-its-kind LAUSD analysis of distance learning shows deep disparities in online learning.
The newly formed alliance will train college representatives on topics like hiring and retaining faculty of color, fostering inclusive classrooms and integrating race across the curriculum.
UCLA described some of its plans for classes in the Fall.
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