News
Celebrating ĢƵ’s First Black Graduation
This significant event underscores our commitment to ensuring all scholars not only graduate "college ready" but also with deep pride in their racial, cultural, and personal identities...
U.S. News & World Report: More amazing news
This week, we are proud to announce that the U.S. News & World Report has also ranked all 9 ĢƵ middle schools in the top 20% of...
U.S. News & World Report: ĢƵ Among Top 10% in the Nation
In the latest rankings by U.S. News & World Report, all 17 ĢƵ high schools were recognized among the nation’s best. Nearly...
In Case You Missed It
The ĢƵ Foundation was in community with LACEPS (Los Angeles Coalition for Excellent Public Schools), which brings together a select group of charter school networks to collaborate, advocate for policies that accelerate learning, and ensure the highest-quality education to the most vulnerable kids.
On September 20, Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB 49 and SB 98 into law, strengthening protections for students and families in schools, colleges, and universities. Both laws took effect immediately.
While math, reading, and science scores have fallen 3–4 points over the past five years for our nation’s middle schoolers and 12th graders, ĢƵ scholars show continuous growth the longer they remain in ĢƵ schools. Our research shows that dedicated and valued educators, combined with high standards and strong support for scholars, lead to academic growth and a college-ready student body, where 84% of our scholars are accepted to four-year colleges.
While math, reading, and science scores have fallen 3–4 points over the past five years for our nation’s middle schoolers and 12th graders, ĢƵ scholars show continuous growth the longer they remain in ĢƵ schools. Our research shows that dedicated and valued educators, combined with high standards and strong support for scholars, lead to academic growth and a college-ready student body, where 84% of our scholars are accepted to four-year colleges.
the U.S. Supreme Court has lifted a temporary restraining order that had paused immigration enforcement in Los Angeles. This decision, issued over the dissent of all liberal justices, means that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) can resume actions that disproportionately impact people based on their appearance, ethnicity, language, or type of work, while the case continues in lower courts.
"The Justice Department has challenged several states that offer in-state tuition to unauthorized immigrants, contending that the policies discriminate against U.S. citizens."