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Santa Cruz County Education Digest



Tired of Wait Lists at California’s Public Universities, Nursing Students Flock to Pricey Private Programs

12/17/2023

The number of nursing students enrolling in high-priced private programs has nearly doubled over the past 10 years as the state’s public universities have stagnated in growth. Private universities charge up to seven times the tuition of public schools for a bachelor’s degree, but nurses say their starting salaries are worth the cost.

Are the Kids All Right? New California K-12 Performance Data is Out

12/15/2023

Despite a few improvements, results show students are still struggling on several fronts.

CA AG Backs Motion to Oppose Actions of SoCal School Board

12/13/2023

California Attorney General Rob Bonta has formally backed an August motion by two law groups to keep the Temecula Valley Unified School District from being able to notify parents about transgender children or censor instruction about race. A hearing for the motion is scheduled for Jan. 24.

School Superintendent Compensation Is Rising

12/11/2023

Salaries for school superintendents in California have risen as much as 60 percent in the past decade. This comes as good superintendents have become more difficult to hire and retain.

Research Explores Capacity of Biochar to Combat Climate Change, Improve Forest Soils

12/08/2023

A Cal Poly Humboldt professor is partnering with USDA researchers to study biochar, which results from heating dry plant-based materials at high temperatures without oxygen. The CO2 in the charcoal then stays in the soil for hundreds of years, rather than in the atmosphere.

Nearly Twice as Many Kids Since 2017 Are Being Homeschooled in San Diego County

12/06/2023

Homeschool students in San Diego County are up by 88 percent since the 2017-18 school year, based on Washington Post data analysis. This tops an overall increase in the United States of 50 percent for this same timeframe.

Bay Area School District, Superintendent Clash Over Palestine Lesson

12/06/2023

Oakland School District teachers planned lessons for students related to the history of Gaza. District superintendent Kyla Johnson-Trammell emailed parents and staff to say the teaching isn’t approved or sanctioned by the district.

Cal State Faculty Begins Walkouts Over Salary Hikes

12/04/2023

The California Faculty Association is seeking a 12 percent pay increase, while university officials counter with 5 percent in each of the next three years.

Cal Poly Pomona Faculty Members Walk Out in Rolling Strike

12/04/2023

Faculty at four California State University campuses are striking this week for higher pay as part of contract negotiations. Walkouts at the first campus, Cal Poly Pomona, began Dec. 4.

State Invested $53 Million in Teaching Low-Performing Kids to Read. Here's How it's Paying Off

12/03/2023

In 2020, the state agreed to a settlement in a lawsuit that claimed too many students were not learning to read. As part of that agreement, the state spent over $50 million on 75 schools with the lowest reading scores.

Cabrillo College Trustees Consider New Committee to Support Native American Students, Studies

12/02/2023

The Cabrillo College Board of Trustees will consider creating a new ad hoc committee tasked with exploring initiatives and programs in support of Indigenous students and Native American studies at the school.

Right-Wing Takeover of SoCal School Board Stirs Angst

12/01/2023

Students and teachers alike are decrying the actions of the Temecula Valley Unified School District board, which became conservative in majority following the recent elections of three members. The board’s actions include banning critical race theory and mandating parental notification if their child is transgender.

With DACA Eligibility for Undocumented Students Dwindling, California Colleges Struggle to Find New Ways to Help

11/29/2023

Most undocumented college students in California are not eligible for DACA anymore, creating new dilemmas for students and colleges around employment, financial aid and the threat of deportation.

UCSC Gets Boost in Metro Service With Extra-Long Buses

11/27/2023

In response to a significant surge in ridership at UC Santa Cruz, the local transit agency has begun rolling out a new fleet of specialized buses it believes can meet the moment.

Central Coast Collaborative Seeks to Improve Education-to-Career Pathways

11/27/2023

A partnership between regional educational institutions has been awarded funding that will strengthen local economies. The Central Coast K-16 Regional Collaborative, encompassing agencies from the counties of Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, San Benito, Monterey, San Luis Obispo and Ventura, has secured $18.1 million from the state’s Community Economic Resilience Fund.

USC Grad Students Avoid Strike After Reaching Deal with University

11/27/2023

A graduate student workers union and the University of Southern California have agreed to a three-year labor contract that averts a looming strike. The deal calls for pay increases each of the three years.

California Schools Need Funding for New Math Guidelines

11/27/2023

State officials passed a 1,000-page document in July outlining new guidelines for teaching math in California. Funding has not been allocated, though the state superintendent intends to introduce legislation that could change this.

UC Santa Cruz Researchers Build AI to Prevent Drownings

11/26/2023

Alex Pang and Fahim Hasan Khan are working on algorithms that can monitor shoreline change, identify rip currents, and alert lifeguards of potential hazards.

School Board Members Who Banned Pride Flag Face Recall Campaign

11/19/2023

Two members of the Sunol Glen Unified School District board have been served with recall notices. This came after the board approved a resolution that banned schools in the Alameda County district from flying the LGBTQ+ pride flag.

Backlash Politics: How Conservatives Have Success Rolling Back California Progressivism

11/14/2023

Lacking power at the state level, conservatives are leaning into local governance to protest California’s progressive politics. The fight in Huntington Beach could be a harbinger of what’s to come.

It's About to Get Easier for California College Students to Study in Their Own Language

11/13/2023

Assembly Bill 1096, taking effect Jan. 1, will let community colleges in the state provide courses in non-English languages, regardless if a student is also taking ESL. Previously, a student had to sign up for the latter to qualify for the former.

Community College Enrollment Rebounding Post-Pandemic, and Students Over 50 Are a Big Reason Why

11/12/2023

California’s community colleges are seeing enrollment gains for the first time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Older students—those over 50—are some of the first to return.

Kresge Renewal Phase I Unveiled, Construction Continues

11/10/2023

Beyond the whirring of power tools and sprawling construction of Old Kresge, new residence halls and academic centers stand among the redwoods. These are the buildings that have sprouted out of the first phase of the Kresge Renewal project.

Hartnell Instructors Demand Better Working Conditions

11/09/2023

Hartnell College Faculty Association members organized a rally at the Main Campus on Oct. 25 to protest against working conditions for part-time teachers and to ask administrators for improvements.

California’s Young Workers Are Essential to the Economy. Why are They Stuck in Low Wage Jobs?

11/08/2023

Young people are stuck earning low wages, working long hours—often while going to school—and often without benefits or work protections. Their hardships may hamper the state’s economy for years to come, researchers say.

Israel-Hamas War Stirring Disputes on College Campuses in California

11/07/2023

UC Berkeley, Stanford and UC Davis are among the schools that have had incidents related to the Israel-Hamas war. Schools are working to keep students safe and prevent disputes escalating to violence.

UC Berkeley to Relinquish More Than 4,000 Ancestral Remains

11/03/2023

Tribes like the Muwekma Ohlone have been asking UC Berkeley for decades to give back ancestral remains from burial sites around the Bay Area. The school is in the process of repatriating 4,400 remains and 25,000 tribal items.

What’s Next for Seymour Center’s Iconic Whale Skeleton?

11/02/2023

After taking a beating from the elements at UC Santa Cruz’s Seymour Marine Discovery Center, the structure supporting the blue whale skeleton known as Ms. Blue has been deemed unsafe. But the bones are staying, and the center wants input on Ms. Blue’s next chapter.

New UC Davis Research Explores Why Males and Females Respond Differently to Social Stress

11/02/2023

Women are nearly twice as likely as men to be diagnosed with an anxiety disorder, but among boys and girls, the likelihood is the same.

De Anza College Faculty, Students Begin Push to Discuss Renaming School

10/30/2023

De Anza College is the latest Bay Area institution where students, faculty and community members are pushing for a name change to honor indigenous people who were harmed and pushed out by Spanish colonizers several centuries ago.

Community College Student Services: An Urgent Need. But Has California Law Kept Up Since the ’60s?

10/30/2023

State law requires community colleges to spend at least half their general fund on instructors. But administrators say they want more flexibility to pay for the growing need for student services.

Food, Race, Empacadoras, and Everything in Between

10/27/2023

Looking at a dearth of accessible textbooks reflecting the diversity of Chicano/Latino/Mexican American/Latinx lives, two local professors set out to write one.

Featured

View of the architectural detail on the Palomar Hotel.
Santa Cruz Online County Historical Resources
History, writ both small and large, has been made in Santa Cruz County. Use these online resources to learn more.
California's library system dates back 171 years.
How Cool Are Libraries?
California has gone from one library to more than 1,100 in the last 171 years.
California's sprawling public education system encompasses approximately 10,500 schools.
California’s Education System: How the Bureaucracy Works
How California's extensive public school system is organized and managed, explained.
More than one in 20 California students attend school in Santa Cruz County.
Santa Cruz County’s School System, Explained
Almost half of Santa Cruz County students attend school in a single district.
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