Calling the cops: Policing in California schools
Black teachers: How to recruit them and make them stay
Superintendents: Well paid and walking away
Keeping California public university options open
College in Prison: How earning a degree can lead to a new life
California leads the nation in many areas of higher education, including educating the largest number of state university students at 458,000 and community college students at 1.9 million.
The state is also grappling with issues that are being tackled by other public universities across the country, such as academic freedom, improving graduation rates especially among underrepresented students; making it easier for students to transfer from community college campuses to public universities; and harnessing the power of dual admission as two colleges are doing in Northern Virginia.
This is a continuing EdSource series on issues and innovations in higher education that relate to the problems facing California’s higher education systems.
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March 07, 2024
As California tries to improve its dismal transfer results, a dual admission program in Virginia could be a model.
Read the StoryAn EdSource investigation of school policing reveals the vast presence of police in California.
Research shows having a Black teacher in the classroom has a positive impact on students, but the number of Black teachers is declining.
Politics, stress and threats — leftovers from pandemic school closures — are making it easy for many veteran California superintendents to leave for other jobs, or to retire.
In 2023, more than half of high school seniors failed to meet these requirements, which means that they were not eligible to apply to California’s public universities.