PATT MORRISON SCHEDULE
Monday, September 12, 2011
1-3 p.m.
CALL-IN @ 866-893-5722, 866-893-KPCC; OR JOIN THE CONVERSATION ONLINE ON THE PATT MORRISON BLOG AT KPCC-DOT-ORG
1:06 – 1:18
OPEN
1:23 – 1:39
Education
Tough times and tough questions face the Los Angeles Unified School District: slashed budgets have caused teacher and staff layoffs, increased class sizes, and cancellation of arts and career training courses; test scores are low and drop-out rates high; conflict over evaluations threatens the relationship between teachers and the district; and it’s a constant challenge to reach parents who want to be involved but struggle with busy schedules or language barriers. With nearly 700,000 K-12 students in the second largest school district in the nation, all parties involved are feeling the urgent need for reform. KPCC’s Patt Morrison recently sat down with the leaders of LAUSD and the teacher’s union in a KPCC-sponsored Education Summit to discuss community concerns about the state of public education in the city. College-readiness was the primary worry of many parents in attendance, who wondered whether passing classes approved by the state and graduating were really enough to prepare students for the academic challenges of university life. Getting students college-ready has proved a challenge for LAUSD since its inception, and with massive budget cuts and limited support for teachers, it is more difficult nowadays to offer the rigorous material and extracurricular activities that students need for admission to selective colleges. Teachers agreed that more had to be done to prepare kids, but firmly voiced their need for more educational resources, less job uncertainty, and less administrative interference. A combination of these factors, replicated at school districts throughout
ON TAPE
Guests:
LAUSD
John Deasy, superintendent, Los Angeles United School District (LAUSD)
LAUSD BOARD
Monica Garcia, president, LAUSD Board of Education
UTLA
Warren Fletcher, president, United Teachers Los Angeles (UTLA)
PARENT VOICE
Pilar Buelna (boo-ELL-nah), former director of the Parent Information and Resource Center with the educational non-profit sector at Families In Schools, where she worked in partnership with Los Angeles Unified School District to promote parental involvement for increase student achievement.
1:41:30 – 1:58:30
OPEN
2:06 – 2:39
Ask the Chief: LAPD’s top cop, Charlie Beck on security, crime and keeping Angelenos safe
The 10th anniversary of 9/11 was a sad reminder of the American lives lost that fateful day, but also of the subsequent transformation in our nation’s security procedure. How did the terrorist attacks change the way the LAPD does business? Police Chief Charlie Beck is here to tell us how, and to inform us about the challenges his organization will face with the early release of some state prisoners. With the Supreme-court ordered move of some 7,000 low-level felons from state prison to 58 county jails and probation departments, experts are predicting a significant crime wave, while Angelenos are wondering whether they should start barring their windows and dead bolting their doors. Social media sites like Twitter are becoming venues for resistance to law enforcement crowd control methods, while new-fangled tech devices like red-light cameras have proved a resource-wasting filter for insignificant crime. Resistance to Obama’s Secure Communities initiative is widespread; gold theft is on the rise; and a controversial new disciplinary system is being implemented throughout the LAPD. It’s clear that
Guest:
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck
IN STUDIO
2:41:30 – 2:58:30
OPEN
Jonathan Serviss
Senior Producer, Patt Morrison
NPR Affiliate for
626.583.5171, office
415.497.2131, mobile
jserviss@kpcc.org / jserviss@scpr.org
www.scpr.org
Thank you KPCC!!
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