I had posted on July 6th of this year about Locke High School and Green Dot.
At Locke High School in LA, they kicked out the teacher union. It was not easy.
I had submitted a post about this topic on July 6th.
On July 23rd, the LA Times wrote an article worth reading. While you're doing that, take a look at their website. Not bad.
There hasn't been a fight yet, says Michael McElveen, another senior. Two weeks without a fight is a good sign at Locke, his pals admit, even if it is usually quieter in summer. The students also agree that the uniform has its advantages -- you don't have to waste time and money on the fashions of the day.
Zeus Cubias, who has taught at Locke for 14 years after graduating from the school and going on to UC Santa Barbara, says the early indicators are encouraging. There were skeptics who said the uniforms alone would doom the experiment. Not only has there been compliance, but only a couple of the boys seem to feel bold enough to test the ban on sagging pants.
But will higher pockets mean higher grades?
"Part of it is setting the right tone," says Cubias. Right off the bat, you step onto campus knowing there's control, discipline and high expectations, and the reality is that's something most kids wanted.
"We had to step up our game, too," Cubias says. "I'm wearing a tie every day now."
Cubias is one of the Locke teachers who originally felt insulted by Green Dot chief Steve Barr's claim that he could do a better job than L.A. Unified. Cubias spoke up about it, telling Barr he and other teachers had made strides despite great challenges.
It is much too early to get excited, but I like everything they are doing. While we're finding ways to increase taxes, the people of LA may have found a much better solution.
Here in Champaign we are hearing reports that because of Conscent Decree compliance, certain disruptive students are sent to hallway. Why? Because sending them to the principles principal's office would demonstrate that schools are reprimanding certain students a a non-proportionate manner.
A few weeks ago I talked to a Central High School student who got "shanked" during a fight. She literally got stabbed by a makeshift weapon by another girl. I didn't read about that in the newspapers. Maybe it was just another day in the hallways?
Rather than make do in the current system, maybe we should drop the system.
Rather than have all these discussions about how to make do in the current system, maybe we should start talking about scrapping the system.
It sounds radical, but by the time the suggestion starts to sound reasonable we might have ourselves an example of something that works. If you can transform an urban LA school district, it would probably work anywhere. God, I hope it works! If anyone else has any positive reports on any education progress, can you please share?