Patterson
Education
High School football scores, highlights – Week 7 (Oct. 4th)
(KTXL) – Every Friday at 11:15 p.m. through the section championship games on Nov. 29, you can get high school football scores and highlights from around the Sacramento, Stockton, and Modesto areas (as well as feature stories and interviews) in Final Quarter. Game of the Week: Folsom def Oak Ridge, 35-7 Rocklin def Whitney, 42-0 […]
A year after Oct. 7 attack, Jewish teachers say LA union promotes antisemitism
(The Center Square) – Exactly one year after the terrorist attack on Israel, a group of Jewish California teachers is suing state officials and the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District over regulations they say force them to associate with a union that promotes anti-Israel rhetoric. The federal lawsuit against Alberto M. Carvalho, LAUSD superintendent, and the California Public Employee Relations Board argues the teachers in the Los Angeles Unified School District should not be forced to be a part of the teachers...
California adds college financial aid options
From CalMatters community college reporter Adam Echelman: If colleges worked the way they should, Joe Villa would have thousands of dollars of federal financial aid by now. But he’s never received a penny. I’ve been talking to Villa for over a year now, trying to figure out why. He’s one of roughly four million Californians […]
California's Prop 2, explained: Borrow $10 billion to build schools, colleges
CALIFORNIA, USA — Proposition 2 would provide $8.5 billion to K-12 schools and $1.5 billion to community colleges to renovate, fix and construct facilities. The money would be distributed through matching grants, with the state paying a greater share of costs for less affluent districts and those with higher numbers of English learners and foster youth. Some of the money would be set aside for removing lead from water, creating transitional kindergarten classrooms and building career and technical education facilities.
Horowitz: Patrick Ahrens is denying the truth on tuition hikes
The rising cost of education is one of the biggest challenges facing California families. As someone who has spent years advocating for affordable and accessible education, I know how devastating tuition hikes can be for students who are already struggling to make ends meet. That’s why I was disappointed to see Assembly District 26 candidate Patrick Ahrens claim in a recent campaign email that it’s a “big lie” he voted to raise tuition. Let me be clear: it’s not a lie. Ahrens has repeatedly voted to raise nonresident tuition at Foothill-De Anza Community College, and that decision has placed an additional burden on the very students he claimed to represent.
All California students should be empowered to be ready for UC and CSU admission
There is a troubling trend in California that makes affordable and quality higher education — which is meant to be a public good — not even an option for most students, particularly Black and Latino students. It’s the inequity of students completing the “A-G” courses required for admission to the University of California and California State University systems. More than half of all students, and over two-thirds of Black and Latino students, did not meet these requirements — too often because the courses were not offered or the students didn’t know they were needed. This means they are ineligible for admission into...
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.