The short, self-serving “highlights” already made clear the deal is a sellout that provides no real improvements in either teacher compensation or school conditions. The release of the full details of the agreement this past Tuesday only further confirms this.
“It’s a system that has forever counted out young people and I’m here to say I’m not just a student voice," said Triston Ezidore, a member of the Culver City Unified School District Board of Education.
Two years after Los Angeles Unified's launch of the Black Student Achievement Plan, critics say that there’s still much work to be done by the district and its schools.