Allan Hancock College is
a California public community college located in northern Santa Barbara County.
Not exact matches
As the largest
public policy association for
California wine, and the only group representing the industry at the state, federal and international levels, Wine Institute's Officers, Board of Directors and professional staff work to create an environment where the wine
community can flourish and contribute in a positive fashion to our nation, state and local
communities.
CSWA's mission is to ensure that the
California wine
community is recognized globally as the leader in sustainable winegrowing in the marketplace and
public policy arena through the development and promotion of sustainable practices, tools for education and outreach, partnerships with key stakeholders, and prioritizing research.
California Association of Winegrape Growers (CAWG) is an advocate for farmers, providing leadership on
public policies, research and education programs, sustainable farming practices and trade policy to enhance the
California winegrape growing business and our
communities.
* Day 1 Monday, February 22, 2016 4:00 PM -5:00 PM Registration & Networking 5:00 PM — 6:00 PM Welcome Reception & Opening Remarks Kevin de Leon, President pro Tem,
California State Senate Debra McMannis, Director of Early Education & Support Division,
California Department of Education (invited) Karen Stapf Walters, Executive Director,
California State Board of Education (invited) 6:00 PM — 7:00 PM Keynote Address & Dinner Dr. Patricia K. Kuhl, Co-Director, Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences * Day 2 Tuesday February 23, 2016 8:00 AM — 9:00 AM Registration, Continental Breakfast, & Networking 9:00 AM — 9:15 AM Opening Remarks John Kim, Executive Director, Advancement Project Camille Maben, Executive Director, First 5
California Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of
Public Instruction,
California Department of Education 9:15 AM — 10:00 AM Morning Keynote David B. Grusky, Executive Director, Stanford's Center on Poverty & Inequality 10:00 AM — 11:00 AM Educating
California's Young Children: The Recent Developments in Transitional Kindergarten & Expanded Transitional Kindergarten (Panel Discussion) Deborah Kong, Executive Director, Early Edge
California Heather Quick, Principal Research Scientist, American Institutes for Research Dean Tagawa, Administrator for Early Education, Los Angeles Unified School District Moderator: Erin Gabel, Deputy Director, First 5
California (Invited) 11:00 AM — 12:00 PM «Political Will & Prioritizing ECE» (Panel Discussion) Eric Heins, President,
California Teachers Association Senator Hannah - Beth Jackson, Chair of the Women's Legislative Committee,
California State Senate David Kirp, James D. Marver Professor of
Public Policy, University of
California, Berkeley Assemblyman Kevin McCarty, Chairman of Subcommittee No. 2 of Education Finance,
California State Assembly Moderator: Kim Pattillo Brownson, Managing Director, Policy & Advocacy, Advancement Project 12:00 PM — 12:45 PM Lunch 12:45 PM — 1:45 PM Lunch Keynote - «How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character» Paul Tough, New York Times Magazine Writer, Author 1:45 PM — 1:55 PM Break 2:00 PM — 3:05 PM Elevating ECE Through Meaningful
Community Partnerships (Panel Discussion) Sandra Guiterrez, National Director, Abriendo Purtas / Opening Doors Mary Ignatius, Statewide Organize of Parent Voices,
California Child Care Resource & Referral Network Jacquelyn McCroskey, John Mile Professor of Child Welfare, University of Southern
California School of Social Work Jolene Smith, Chief Executive Officer, First 5 Santa Clara County Moderator: Rafael González, Director of Best Start, First 5 LA 3:05 PM — 3:20 PM Closing Remarks Camille Maben, Executive Director, First 5
California * Agenda Subject to Change
We are a
community - based 501 (c)(3) non-profit
public charity 509 (a)(2) located in Los Angeles,
California.
One of Ernst's major
public - facing efforts for the past several years has been partnering with the Centers for Disease Control to develop Kidenga, a
community - based surveillance mobile app to help detect mosquito - borne disease in Texas, Florida, Arizona, and
California, and provide users with the latest information on their area.
«There's an entrenched view in the
public community that glaciers only lose ice when icebergs calve off,» says Eric Rignot at the University of
California, Irvine.
Rob Simmons has been a
public health educator and health promotion leader for 45 years working with government,
community health organizations, private health foundations, healthcare organizations and academic
public health programs in
California, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and in Latin America.
Stay tuned to the grant winners: Academy 21 at Franklin Central Supervisory Union in Vermont, which is focused on a high - need, predominantly rural
community; Cornerstone Charter Schools in Michigan, which seeks to prepare Detroit students for college and health - focused careers; Da Vinci Schools in
California, which will integrate blended learning, early college, and real - world experiences with its existing project - based learning approach; Education Achievement Authority in Michigan, which, as part of the statewide turnaround authority is trying to create a student - centric system for students in Detroit; Match Education in Massachusetts, which already operates high - performing schools in Boston and will now focus on using technology to increase the effectiveness of its one - on - one tutoring; Schools for the Future in Michigan, which will serve students significantly below grade level; Summit
Public Schools in
California, which aims to build off its experiments in blended - learning models to launch a competency - based school; and Venture Academies in Minnesota, which is a new charter organization that will focus on accelerated college credit attainment and cultivation of entrepreneurial leadership.
Beginning with the Serrano court case in
California, advocates for changing the way
public schools were financed argued that reliance on local property taxes denied children living in property - poor
communities the right to a good education.
Author Bio: Preston Smith is Co-Founder & CEO of Rocketship Education, a non-profit network of
public elementary charter schools serving low - income
communities in
California, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Washington, D.C..
Preston Smith is Co-Founder & CEO of Rocketship Education, a non-profit network of
public elementary charter schools serving low - income
communities in
California, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Washington, D.C..
Los Angeles — By a razor - thin margin,
California voters last week approved a measure giving
public schools and
community colleges hundreds of millions more in revenues this year and assuring them a set percentage of the state's budget in future years.
Jennifer has built PCY into an influential policy - development and advocacy organization that has improved the effectiveness of
public funding for youth programs in low - income
communities across
California.
Aspire
Public Schools and High Tech High have won welcomes in multiple
California communities.
Their successes have led
community organizers and a growing number of education policymakers to see
California's fledgling
community schooling movement as a holistic, bottom - up reform that can restore equality of opportunity and the democratic promise of the state's system of universal
public education.
Aaron Vanderwerff is the Creativity Lab & Science Director at Lighthouse
Community Charter School, a K — 12
public charter school in Oakland,
California.
She taught junior high school math in Los Altos,
California, before attending law school, and she served as a
public defender for over six years in New York City before joining the charter school
community.
In 2010, Steve formed Future Is Now Schools, built on the successful secondary Green Dot
Public Schools model, union reform and systemic district change, to take the foundational principles, lessons learned and successes achieved on the local level of Southern
California and expanded this base to other
communities around the country.
Last year, the
California charter school
community supported new legislation, Assembly Bill 1137, that gave charter schools new flexibilities, but would shut down charter schools that did not score within the top 60 percent of all similar
public schools on the state's Academic Performance Index.
This webinar was hosted by
Public Profit on February 24, 2017 specifically for the
California Community Schools Network, looking toward the upcoming release of the Request for Proposals for the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Fund: Learning Communities for School Success (Prop 47) grants.
CCSA Advocates is a nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing the involvement of the charter school
community in the political process, creating a pipeline of charter school supporters and activists, electing
public officials who support
California charter
public schools, and growing the political influence of the
California charter
public school movement.
The caucus also selected the following school board members: Lillian Tafoya, a member of the school board of Bakersfield City School District in
California as Chair - Elect; Jesus Rubalcava of Arizona's Gila Bend Unified School District as Vice-Chair; Lydia Hernandez of the Cartwright School District 83 in Arizona as Secretary; Steve Corona of Fort Wayne
Community Schools in Indiana as Treasurer; Jesse Gomez of School City of East Chicago, Ind., as Central Region Director; Marcela Diaz - Myers of Lower Dauphin School District in Harrisburg, Pa., as Northeast Region Director; and Andrew Chavez of the Española
Public School District in New Mexico as Western Region Director.
Before joining the Education Fund he worked at
California Tomorrow as Senior Associate for
Public Education, Advocacy, and Alliance Building for the
Community College Access and Equity Initiative.
Respectfully, Action United Alliance of Californians for
Community Empowerment Alliance for Multilingual Multicultural Education American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education American Association of State Colleges and Universities American Federation of Teachers ASPIRA Association Association of University Centers on Disabilities Autistic Self Advocacy Network Bay Area Parent Leadership Action Network
California Association for Bilingual Education
California Latino School Boards Association Californians for Justice Californians Together Campaign for Fiscal Equity Campaign for Quality Education Center for the Future of Teaching and Learning Center for Teaching Quality Citizens for Effective Schools Coalition for Educational Justice Council for Exceptional Children Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund Easter Seals ELC, Education Law Center FairTest, The National Center for Fair & Open Testing Higher Education Consortium for Special Education Justice Matters Latino Elected and Appointed Officials National Taskforce on Education Lawyers» Committee for Civil Rights Under Law Learning Disabilities Association of America Los Angeles Educational Partnership Movement Strategy Center NAACP National Alliance of Black School Educators National Center for Learning Disabilities National Council for Educating Black Children National Council of Teachers of English National Disability Rights Network National Down Syndrome Congress National Down Syndrome Society National Education Association National Latino / a Education Research and Policy Project National League of United Latin American Citizens Parent - U-Turn Parents for Unity Philadelphia Education Fund
Public Advocates Inc..
The
California Charter Schools Association (CCSA) has repeatedly gone on record debunking and factually proving that charters are
public schools, kids in charters are achieving academically, charters are non-profits, comply with federal and state laws, are held to exceptionally high standards of accountability, and supports anyone from the
community whose primary concern is advocating and creating high quality education opportunities for students.
But this is exactly what happened in Oakland,
California, where years of on - the - ground organizing —
community meetings, relationship building, and
public actions — led to the creation of forty - eight new small schools, fundamentally transforming the district landscape.
Even as
public schools are closing due to falling enrollment, new Rocketships will be opening at an impressive clip, dominating
community's education from offices in distant
California.
On May 12, Pulitzer Prize - winning journalist Sonia Nazario will join Facing History in Berkeley,
California for a
Community Conversation — one in a series of
public talks held across the country in partnership with The Allstate Foundation.
About Aspire
Public Schools * Aspire Public Schools is a nonprofit organization that currently operates 34 high - performing open - enrollment public charter schools throughout California with an emphasis on serving low - income commun
Public Schools * Aspire
Public Schools is a nonprofit organization that currently operates 34 high - performing open - enrollment public charter schools throughout California with an emphasis on serving low - income commun
Public Schools is a nonprofit organization that currently operates 34 high - performing open - enrollment
public charter schools throughout California with an emphasis on serving low - income commun
public charter schools throughout
California with an emphasis on serving low - income
communities.
This webinar was hosted by
Public Profit on February 24, 2017 specifically for the
California Community Schools Network looking toward the Prop 47 grants.
«Request for Title and Summary for Proposed Initiative: Kindergarten Through
Community College
Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 2016,» Office of the
California Attorney General, January 12, 2015, accessed June 28, 2015, https://oag.ca.gov/system/files/initiatives/pdfs/15-0005%20 (Education % 20Bond % 20Act).
California law prohibits
community college districts and K - 12 school districts from using
public funds or resources to campaign in support or opposition to bond measures.
The annual event brings together
California's growing and diverse charter
public school
community to advocate for urgent legislative priorities focused on preserving and growing a thriving and accountable nonprofit charter school sector.
American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO) American Association of State Colleges and Universities (AASCU) Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U)
California Community College Chancellor's Office Center for Innovation in Education (CIE) College Board College Transition Collaborative Colorado Department of Education ConnectEd Del Lago Academy Digital Promise EdImagine EdInsights Education First EducationCounsel Envision Learning Partners Farmington
Public Schools Great Schools Partnership Harvard Innovation Lab Hillsdale High School Internationals Network for
Public Schools Irvine Foundation Ithaca College James Graham Brown Foundation Jobs for the Future June Jordan School for Equity Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights Learning Policy Institute Los Angeles Unified School District Lumina Foundation Maker Ed Making Caring Common Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Mastery Transcript Consortium Microsoft Montpelier School District NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) National Urban League New Haven Academy New York Performance Standards Consortium Oakland Unified School District Pomona College Raikes Foundation Riverdale Country School San Francisco International High School Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium Smith College Southern New Hampshire University Stanford Center for Assessment, Learning, and Equity (SCALE) Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education (SCOPE) Stuart Foundation Summit
Public Schools The City University of New York The Education Trust The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights Trovvit UC Riverside UNCF University of
California, Office of the President University of Florida University of Michigan University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill University of Southern
California University of Texas, Austin University of Washington Virginia Beach City
Public Schools
Allegheny Intermediate Unit (aiu3) Alliance for Excellent Education (AEE) American Alliance of Museums (AAM) American Association of Classified School Employees (AACSE) American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE) American Association of
Community Colleges (AACC) American Association of School Administrators (AASA) American Association of State Colleges & Universities (AASCU) American Council on Education (ACE) American Counseling Association (ACA) American Educational Research Association (AERA) American Federation of School Administrators (AFSA) American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) American Federation of Teachers (AFT) American Institutes for Research (AIR) American Library Association (ALA) American Medical Student Association (AMSA) American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) American School Counselor Association (ASCA) American Speech - Language - Hearing Association (ASHA) American Student Association of
Community Colleges (ASACC) Apollo Education Group ASCD Association for Career & Technical Education (ACTE) Association of American Publishers (AAP) Association of American Universities (AAU) Association of
Community College Trustees (ACCT) Association of Jesuit Colleges & Universities (AJCU) Association of
Public and Land - grant Universities (APLU) Association of
Public Television Stations (APTS) Association of School Business Officials International (ASBO) Boston University (BU)
California Department of Education (CDE)
California State University Office of Federal Relations (CSU) Center on Law and Social Policy (CLASP) Citizen Schools Coalition for Higher Education Assistance Organizations (COHEAO) Consortium for School Networking (COSN) Cornerstone Government Affairs (CGA) Council for a Strong America (CSA) Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Council for Opportunity in Education (COE) Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO) Council of the Great City Schools (CGCS) DeVry Education Group Easter Seals Education Industry Association (EIA) FED ED Federal Management Strategies First Focus Campaign for Children George Washington University (GWU) Georgetown University Office of Federal Relations Harvard University Office of Federal Relations Higher Education Consortium for Special Education (HESCE) indiCo International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) Johns Hopkins University, Center for Research & Reform in Education (JHU - CRRE) Kent State University Knowledge Alliance Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) Magnet Schools of America, Inc. (MSA) Military Impacted Schools Association (MISA) National Alliance of Black School Educators (NABSE) National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) National Association for Music Education (NAFME) National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP) National Association of Federally Impacted Schools (NAFIS) National Association of Graduate - Professional Students, Inc. (NAGPS) National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities (NAICU) National Association of Private Special Education Centers (NAPSEC) National Association of School Psychologists (NASP) National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP) National Association of State Directors of Career Technical Education Consortium (NASDCTEc) National Association of State Directors of Special Education (NASDSE) National Association of State Student Grant & Aid Programs (NASSGAP) National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA) National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD) National Center on Time & Learning (NCTL) National Coalition for Literacy (NCL) National Coalition of Classified Education Support Employee Unions (NCCESEU) National Council for
Community and Education Partnerships (NCCEP) National Council of Higher Education Resources (NCHER) National Council of State Directors of Adult Education (NCSDAE) National Education Association (NEA) National HEP / CAMP Association National Parent Teacher Association (NPTA) National Rural Education Association (NREA) National School Boards Association (NSBA) National Student Speech Language Hearing Association (NSSLHA) National Superintendents Roundtable (NSR) National Title I Association (NASTID) Northwestern University Penn Hill Group Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey School Social Work Association of America (SSWAA) Service Employees International Union (SEIU) State University of New York (SUNY) Teach For America (TFA) Texas A&M University (TAMU) The College Board The Ohio State University (OSU) The Pell Alliance The Sheridan Group The Y (YMCA) UNCF United States Student Association (USSA) University of
California (UC) University of Chicago University of Maryland (UMD) University of Maryland University College (UMUC) University of Southern
California (USC) University of Wisconsin System (UWS) US
Public Interest Research Group (US PIRG) Washington Partners, LLC WestEd
Brian has also worked at
California Tomorrow as Senior Associate for
Public Education, Advocacy, and Alliance Building for the
Community College Access and Equity Initiative.
The first major charter question that came to the board this year - Aspire
Public School's statewide benefit charter - pitted the charter community against most of the state's large representatives of traditional public schools, including the California School Boards Association and th
Public School's statewide benefit charter - pitted the charter
community against most of the state's large representatives of traditional
public schools, including the California School Boards Association and th
public schools, including the
California School Boards Association and the CTA.
Proposition 39 will direct about $ 2.5 billion in new revenues over five years to fund projects by
California's K - 12
public schools, charter schools, county offices of education and
community colleges.
(1) The Vergara Decision: This case pits nine Oakland
public school students against the State of
California, arguing that (a) granting tenure after less than two years, (b) retaining teachers during layoffs based on seniority instead of merit, and (c) the near impossibility of dismissing incompetent teachers, is harming
California's overall system of
public education, and is disproportionately harming
public education in low income
communities.
Fallout from the
public spending scandal in the southern
California community of Bell has resulted in a number of bills passing out of the Legislature during the last days of session aimed at reforming pensions and salaries of government officials.
«While the Administration's announcement is a setback to
California's education reform overall vision, it will not deter CCSA's commitment to transform
public education, and bring high - quality education choices to families and children in the
communities that most need it.»
Already eligible for the ballot is the «Kindergarten Through
Community College
Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 2016,» which would authorize $ 9 billion in general obligation bonds, including $ 3 billion for new construction and $ 3 billion for modernization of K - 12 public school facilities, $ 1 billion for charter schools and vocational education facilities and $ 2 billion for California Community Colleges facil
Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 2016,» which would authorize $ 9 billion in general obligation bonds, including $ 3 billion for new construction and $ 3 billion for modernization of K - 12
public school facilities, $ 1 billion for charter schools and vocational education facilities and $ 2 billion for California Community Colleges facil
public school facilities, $ 1 billion for charter schools and vocational education facilities and $ 2 billion for
California Community Colleges facilities.
Aspire
Public Schools is a nonprofit organization that currently operates 34 high - performing, open - enrollment public charter schools serving 12,000 students in underserved communities across California and will open schools in Memphis, TN in fall,
Public Schools is a nonprofit organization that currently operates 34 high - performing, open - enrollment
public charter schools serving 12,000 students in underserved communities across California and will open schools in Memphis, TN in fall,
public charter schools serving 12,000 students in underserved
communities across
California and will open schools in Memphis, TN in fall, 2013.
Innovate
Public Schools» staff bring more than 40 years of professional experience in grassroots
community organizing, with significant demonstrated success in building long - term reform efforts led by low - income parent leaders in
California.
California public schools annually provide information about their district school sites to the
community allowing the
public to evaluate and compare schools for student achievement, environment, resources, and demographics.
Lighthouse
Community Public Schools are located in Oakland,
California and include two contiguous schools - Lighthouse
Community Charter School and Lodestar.
Her professional focus is on building the capacity of teachers, leaders,
public schools, and
communities to meet the needs of
California's diverse student body.
Campaign for Quality Education v.
California was filed that same summer by the nonprofit law firm
Public Advocates on behalf of a coalition of
community groups serving low - income and minority students.